The difference is that the two systems are seperate. rr-n1-tor is a pool of machines setup for general use and is 100% supported by our organization. Also, the backend points to "guaranteed" pools at the registry
batch.opensrs.net is the same code as rr-n1-tor, but it's setup to point to the "batch pools" at the registries, and NOT a guaranteed interface - but we DO allow scripting against that machine (within reason). We do NOT allow scripting against the rr-n1-tor pools Charles Daminato OpenSRS Product Manager Tucows Inc. - [EMAIL PROTECTED] What's the difference between using the https://rr-n1-tor.opensrs.net/res= ellers and https://batch.opensrs.net/resellers. The two interfaces seem to be the same. Regards, Ramy Nabil ----- http://www.mydomreg.com =A0 =A0 erol M wrote: > Nope, the RWI of the batch system is https://batch.opensrs.net/reseller= s/ > If you were to write a script to check domain availability the host wou= ld > be batch.opensrs.net, not rr-n1-tor.opensrs.net. The port, 55000 , woul= d > remain the same. > > On Mon, 9 Sep 2002, Ramy Nabil wrote: > > > Thanks, > > But this page has been moved to http://resellers.tucows.com/opensrs/ = and I think not available now. > > > > Ramy Nabil > > ----- > > http://www.mydomreg.com > > > > erol M wrote: > > > > > > Of course, if I were OpenSRS, I wouldn't take kindly to thousands= upon > > > > thousands of registration attempts that were known to be likely t= o fail. > > > > If you go ahead with something like this through OpenSRS, I sugge= st you > > > > contact your sales rep to find out if any special relationship ne= eds to > > > > be set up so that you aren't labelled an abuser.=A0 (If you're pa= ying for > > > > the extra resources you're using, I suspect they wouldn't object.= ) > > > > > > If you did want to run a series of lookups to determine the availab= ility > > > of a bunch of domains I would strongly suggest you use the batch sy= stem ( > > > batch.opensrs.net ), seeing as that is what it is there for. > > > > -- > erol M
