On Fri, Nov 08, 2013 at 09:01:52PM -0800, Rick Moen wrote:
> Quoting [email protected] ([email protected]):
> 
> > It's nice to know my initial diagnosis of a name server problem was
> > correct.
>
> If you're looking for a really fast, well behaved recursive-only DNS
> nameserver, look no further than Unbound.  (I'm a big fan of it and
> its authoritative-only sibling NSD.  My experience with PowerDNS
> Recursor and PowerDNS Authoritative Server has been a little more
> mixed.)

yep, for a recursive-only nameserver, unbound is great.

it's been years since I used them, but both maradns and dnsmasq do a
reasonable job too (dnsmasq can also do dhcp and tftp).

i can't remember if unbound can do this or not, but both dnsmasq and
maradns can also do some authoritative DNS - not as good as bind, but
good enough for maintaining local hostname entries.

powerdns just seems like massive overkill for a tiny little internet
gateway box. it's designed for very large ISP and DNS service providers,
with a need for great flexibility in where DNS data is sourced (e.g.
flat files, databases, whatever) and huge numbers of domains.


short descs from debian packages:

bind9 - Internet Domain Name Server
dnsmasq - Small caching DNS proxy and DHCP/TFTP server
maradns - simple security-focused Domain Name Service server
pdns-server - extremely powerful and versatile nameserver
unbound - validating, recursive, caching DNS resolver

craig

PS: i personally use bind9 but only because it's the only thing that
conveniently does both authoritative and recursive DNS in the one
program - and my auth dns MUST be on my gateway box's IP address of
203.16.167.1. i need both auth & recursive and don't want to run two
nameservers. if i didn't host the DNS for my own domains myself, i'd
probably run unbound or dnsmasq.


-- 
craig sanders <[email protected]>
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