Hi Bill, I am speaking of this root-server system:
a.public-root.net. 900 IN A 205.189.71.2 b.public-root.net. 900 IN A 61.9.136.52 c.public-root.net. 900 IN A 68.255.182.111 d.public-root.net. 900 IN A 205.189.71.34 e.public-root.net. 900 IN A 216.138.219.83 f.public-root.net. 900 IN A 66.15.237.185 g.public-root.net. 900 IN A 199.5.157.131 h.public-root.net. 900 IN A 64.198.89.245 i.public-root.net. 900 IN A 203.187.202.205 j.public-root.net. 900 IN A 57.73.7.89 k.public-root.net. 900 IN A 81.19.74.67 l.public-root.net. 900 IN A 195.214.191.125 m.public-root.net. 900 IN A 205.189.71.26 and I am beeing told by experts that there is no difference to what other root-server operators have found on their servers. ICANNed root-server operators look with interest into what Public-Root has experienced because in the near future they will have to support more domains than they do today. We do share information.
I dont count 25% of the root server traffic a minor issue. With 90% of root server traffic used to be for localhost and with 25% of root server traffic already for local, we are looking into a major DoS attack. This might overload ISPs DNS servers it might even bring the root servers down if they let it free!i'm going to have to raise the point that Peters "root-server" system is his private "walled-garden" and not representative of the Internet's authoritative root servers. Just for clarification. --bill
-- Peter and Karin Dambier Public-Root Graeffstrasse 14 D-64646 Heppenheim +49-6252-671788 (Telekom) +49-179-108-3978 (O2 Genion) mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://iason.site.voila.fr http://www.kokoom.com/iason _______________________________________________ Ietf mailing list [email protected] https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf
