I’m on at least 2 blocklists at this point for the crime of not having reverse DNS set up. I don’t know how rDNS works. No amount of reading Wikipedia is helping me understand what I have to do.
- I have a domain at a registrar which gives me bog standard DNS.
- I have Apache running on my network.
- I have PiHole running on my network.
My understanding is that rDNS is not set up at my registrar, but somewhere in my network. What do I do?
Thank you for your time.
Copied this from another comment I made
That is quite odd, I assume TDC is your ISP?
No, it’s Hiper using Fibia’s (Waoo) infrastructure.
Do you have a different firewall/router you can try? Even just plug your PC directly into the modem for now to bypass your router and rule that out.
~~Routing to me has been solved, my router was incorrectly dropping pings on WAN because I messed up the firewall configs. ~~The trouble users still can’t reach my website.
Any chance your firewall is dropping the packets for some reason?
Your ISP may block 80 / 443. Try moving your webserver to an alternate high port and ask the users to test with that.
But it’s only very few people. If my ISP blocks these ports, why 99% of people have no issues?
At this point I’d install wireshark and see if I’m getting their TCP connections at all.
Given your other routing issues though, I would guess you have another config issue on your firewall.
5.186.33.87 > 89.150.135.135: ICMP echo request, id 1, seq 43476, length 40 12:38:19.843890 d0:50:99:81:48:17 > 4c:6d:58:4a:97:d4, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 74: (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 21715, offset 0, flags [none], proto ICMP (1), length 60, bad cksum 0 (->1dc0)!) 89.150.135.135 > 5.186.33.87: ICMP echo reply, id 1, seq 43476, length 40 12:38:20.219177 d0:50:99:81:48:17 > 4c:6d:58:4a:97:d4, ethertype IPv4 (0x0800), length 43: (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 32958, offset 0, flags [none], proto ICMP (1), length 29, bad cksum 0 (->3f6d)!)
Packet capture from the router for 4 pings from him to me.
2 of 8 packets expected were captured andhave bad checksums. Disregard, all 8 expected packets do show up