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Category Status Test name Information
Parent Info Domain NS records Nameserver records returned by the parent servers are:

ns1.google.com.   ['216.239.32.10'] (NO GLUE)   [TTL=28800]
ns2.google.com.   ['216.239.34.10'] (NO GLUE)   [TTL=28800]
ns3.google.com.   ['216.239.36.10'] (NO GLUE)   [TTL=28800]
ns4.google.com.   ['216.239.38.10'] (NO GLUE)   [TTL=28800]

ns1.liquidtelecom.net was kind enough to give us that information.

Warn TLD Parent Check WARNING: Looks like the parent servers do not have information for your TLD when asked. This is ok but can be confusing.
Pass Your nameservers are listed Good. The parent server ns1.liquidtelecom.net has your nameservers listed. This is a must if you want to be found as anyone that does not know your DNS servers will first ask the parent nameservers.
Info DNS Parent sent Glue The parent nameserver ns1.liquidtelecom.net is not sending out GLUE for every nameservers listed, meaning he is sending out your nameservers host names without sending the A records of those nameservers. It's ok but you have to know that this will require an extra A lookup that can delay a little the connections to your site. This happens a lot if you have nameservers on different TLD (domain.com for example with nameserver ns.domain.org.)
Pass Nameservers A records Good. Every nameserver listed has A records. This is a must if you want to be found.
NS Info NS records from your nameserversNS records got from your nameservers listed at the parent NS are:

ns2.google.com  ['216.239.34.10']   [TTL=345600]
ns1.google.com  ['216.239.32.10']   [TTL=345600]
ns3.google.com  ['216.239.36.10']   [TTL=345600]
ns4.google.com  ['216.239.38.10']   [TTL=345600]

Pass Recursive Queries Good. Your nameservers (the ones reported by the parent server) do not report that they allow recursive queries for anyone.
Pass Same Glue The A records (the GLUE) got from the parent zone check are the same as the ones got from your nameservers. You have to make sure your parent server has the same NS records for your zone as you do according to the RFC. This tests only nameservers that are common at the parent and at your nameservers. If there are any missing or stealth nameservers you should see them below!
Pass Glue for NS records OK. When I asked your nameservers for your NS records they also returned the A records for the NS records. This is a good thing as it will spare an extra A lookup needed to find those A records.
Pass Mismatched NS records OK. The NS records at all your nameservers are identical.
Pass DNS servers responded Good. All nameservers listed at the parent server responded.
Pass Name of nameservers are valid OK. All of the NS records that your nameservers report seem valid.
Pass Multiple Nameservers Good. You have multiple nameservers. According to RFC2182 section 5 you must have at least 3 nameservers, and no more than 7. Having 2 nameservers is also ok by me.
Pass Nameservers are lame OK. All the nameservers listed at the parent servers answer authoritatively for your domain.
Pass Missing nameservers reported by parent OK. All NS records are the same at the parent and at your nameservers.
Pass Missing nameservers reported by your nameservers OK. All nameservers returned by the parent server ns1.liquidtelecom.net are the same as the ones reported by your nameservers.
Pass Domain CNAMEs OK. RFC1912 2.4 and RFC2181 10.3 state that there should be no CNAMEs if an NS (or any other) record is present.
Pass NSs CNAME check OK. RFC1912 2.4 and RFC2181 10.3 state that there should be no CNAMEs if an NS (or any other) record is present.
Pass Different subnets OK. Looks like you have nameservers on different subnets!
Pass IPs of nameservers are public Ok. Looks like the IP addresses of your nameservers are public. This is a good thing because it will prevent DNS delays and other problems like
Pass DNS servers allow TCP connection OK. Seems all your DNS servers allow TCP connections. This is a good thing and useful even if UDP connections are used by default.
Pass Different autonomous systems OK. It seems you are safe from a single point of failure. You must be careful about this and try to have nameservers on different locations as it can prevent a lot of problems if one nameserver goes down.
Pass Stealth NS records sent Ok. No stealth ns records are sent
SOA Info SOA recordThe SOA record is:
Primary nameserver: ns1.google.com
Hostmaster E-mail address: dns-admin.google.com
Serial #: 616768135
Refresh: 900
Retry: 900
Expire: 1800   30 minutes
Default TTL: 60
Pass NSs have same SOA serial OK. All your nameservers agree that your SOA serial number is 616768135.
Pass SOA MNAME entry OK. ns1.google.com That server is listed at the parent servers.
Pass SOA Serial Your SOA serial number is: 616768135. The recommended format (per RFC1912 2.2) is YYYYMMDDnn, where 'nn' is the revision.
Your SOA serial appears to be the number of seconds since midnight 01 Jan 1970 when the last DNS change was made. That seems to be 1989/7/18 7:28:55
Warn SOA REFRESH WARNING: Your SOA REFRESH interval is: 900. That is not so ok
Pass SOA RETRY Your SOA RETRY value is: 900. Looks ok
Warn SOA EXPIRE Your SOA EXPIRE number is: 1800. That is NOT OK
Pass SOA MINIMUM TTL Your SOA MINIMUM TTL is: 60. This value was used to serve as a default TTL for records without a given TTL value and now is used for negative caching (indicates how long a resolver may cache the negative answer). RFC2308 recommends a value of 1-3 hours. Your value of 60 is OK.
MX Info MX RecordsYour MX records that were reported by your nameservers are:

0   smtp.google.com   74.125.71.27 74.125.71.26 108.177.15.26 74.125.133.27 74.125.133.26
0   smtp.google.com   74.125.71.27 74.125.71.26 108.177.15.27 74.125.133.27 74.125.133.26

[These are all the MX records that I found. If there are some non common MX records at your nameservers you should see them below. ]
Warning Different MX records at nameservers The MX records that are not the same at all your nameservers:
smtp.google.com with ip(s): 74.125.71.27 74.125.71.26 108.177.15.26 74.125.133.27 74.125.133.26  reported only by: 216.239.36.10 216.239.38.10
smtp.google.com with ip(s): 74.125.71.27 74.125.71.26 108.177.15.27 74.125.133.27 74.125.133.26  reported only by: 216.239.34.10 216.239.32.10
It is better to have the same MX records at all your nameservers!
Pass MX name validity Good. I did not detect any invalid hostnames for your MX records.
Pass MX IPs are public OK. All of your MX records appear to use public IPs.
Pass MX CNAME Check OK. No problems here.
Pass MX A request returns CNAME OK. No CNAMEs returned for A records lookups.
Pass MX is not IP OK. All of your MX records are host names.
Pass Number of MX records OK. Looks like you have multiple MX records. However none of your MX record is common at all your nameservers meaning every nameserver has different sets of MX records. This seems bad but if you know what are you doing it's ok.
Pass Mismatched MX A OK. I did not detect differing IPs for your MX records.
Pass Duplicate MX A records OK. I have not found duplicate IP(s) for your MX records. This is a good thing.
Pass Reverse MX A records (PTR) Your reverse (PTR) record:
26.15.177.108.in-addr.arpa ->  wr-in-f26.1e100.net
26.133.125.74.in-addr.arpa ->  wo-in-f26.1e100.net
27.71.125.74.in-addr.arpa ->  wn-in-f27.1e100.net
27.15.177.108.in-addr.arpa ->  wr-in-f27.1e100.net
27.133.125.74.in-addr.arpa ->  wo-in-f27.1e100.net
26.71.125.74.in-addr.arpa ->  wn-in-f26.1e100.net
You have reverse (PTR) records for all your IPs, that is a good thing.
WWW Info WWW A Record Your www.google.co.zw A record is:
www.google.co.zw  [216.58.206.67] 
Pass IPs are public OK. All of your WWW IPs appear to be public IPs.
Pass WWW CNAME OK. No CNAME

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