Hi Toshi, > I absolutely agree. > > In other word, there are typically three players, > > 1) end-host > 2) site network > 3) ISP network > > and "Stateless DNS discoery" is a zero-configuration method > mainly for 1). > > When the administrator of 2) wants to prepare DNS servers in his/her site > with assigning the well-know-site-local-uni-cast-addresses to them, 1) > simply queries to them. > > When the ISP prepares DNS servers in its backbone, the CPE router of 2) acts > as a dual-sited DNS proxy to relay queries to the the > well-know-site-local-uni-cast-addresses of the ISP's site, or to the global > addresses which are informed via ISP-to-Customer (or PE-to-CPE) > configuration mechanism such as DHCPv6, SLP or papers.
I agree with you, this is a very good and to-the-point summary. I'd just like to point out that the need is especially crucial in roaming situations. It should be possible to 'discover' DNS servers when roaming in new networks with minimal interaction from the user. John -------------------------------------------------------------------- IETF IPng Working Group Mailing List IPng Home Page: http://playground.sun.com/ipng FTP archive: ftp://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng Direct all administrative requests to [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------
