Page 175 - DCAP106_OPERATING_SYSTEM_TOOLS
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Operating System Tools




                    Notes          Authoritative DNS Servers

                                   Authoritative servers offer the definitive information for your DNS domain, such as the names of
                                   servers and Web sites in it. They are the last word in information related to your domain.
                                   How DNS Servers Find Out Your Site Information


                                   There  are  13  root  reliable  DNS  servers  (super  duper  authorities)  that  all  DNS  servers  query
                                   first. These root servers know all the authoritative DNS servers for all the main domains - .com,
                                   .net, and the rest. This layer of servers keeps track of all the DNS servers that Web site systems
                                   administrators have assigned for their sub domains.


                                          Example: When you register your domain my-site.com, you are in fact inserting a record
                                   on the .com  DNS servers  that point to the authoritative DNS servers  you assigned for your
                                   domain.

                                   When to Use a DNS Caching Name Server

                                   Most servers don’t ask authoritative servers for DNS directly, they generally ask a caching DNS
                                   server to do it on their behalf. These servers, through a process called recursion, sequentially
                                   query the authoritative servers at the root, main domain and sub domain levels to get eventually
                                   get the specific information requested. The most frequently requested information is then stored
                                   (or cached) to reduce the lookup overhead of subsequent queries.
                                   If you want to promote your Web site www.my-site.com to the rest of the world, then a regular
                                   DNS server is what you require. Setting up a caching DNS server is fairly straightforward and
                                   works whether or not your ISP provides you with a static or dynamic Internet IP address.
                                   After you set up your caching DNS server, you have to configure each of your home network PCs
                                   to use it as their DNS server. If your home PCs get their IP addresses using DHCP, then you have
                                   to configure your DHCP server to make it aware of the IP address of your new DNS server, so
                                   that the DHCP server can advertise the DNS server to its PC clients. Off-the-shelf router/firewall
                                   appliances used in most home networks usually can act as both the caching DNS and DHCP
                                   server, rendering a separate DNS server is unnecessary.

                                   When to Use a Static DNS Server

                                   If your ISP provides you with a fixed or static IP address, and you wish to host your own Web
                                   site, then a regular authoritative DNS server would be the way to go. A caching DNS name
                                   server is used as a reference only; regular name servers are used as the authoritative source of
                                   information for your Web site’s domain.

                                   How to Get Your Own Domain

                                   Whether or not you use static or dynamic DNS, you need to register a domain.  Dynamic DNS
                                   providers regularly offer you a sub domain of their own site, such as my-site.dnsprovider.com,
                                   in which you register your domain on their site.
                                   If you choose to create your very own domain, such as my-site.com, you have to register with a
                                   company focus in static DNS registration and then point your registration record to the intended
                                   authoritative DNS for your domain. Popular domain registrars include VeriSign, Register Free,
                                   and Yahoo.








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