Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. The rest of my responses is implied by the above. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. -- Pete -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. The rest of my responses is implied by the above. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. But the bureaucratic process requires this has to be with the approval of the owners of the public ip address others this will not happen. Anyway, can you explain how you do this ? The book on DNS and BIND will not get you anywhere if that's all you will rely on. I made my living (very good living) until I retire doing Domain Name and IP address Administration back during the days when munnari.oz was the authority for Australia until 2001. So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. O Plameras -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
quote who=O Plameras So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. Sorry Oscar, we're not asking you, we're telling you: You don't know what you're talking about. Either you manage to so terribly miscommunicate, or there are deep scars of voodoo throughout your knowledge. You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. - Jeff -- Open CeBIT 2007: Sydney, Australia http://www.opencebit.com.au/ MySQL supporters are like people who believe that the moon landings were a hoax. No matter what contrary information they're confronted with, they still consider MySQL to be the best. - ttfkam -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 16:52:21 +1100, O Plameras wrote: Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. The rest of my responses is implied by the above. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. Technically aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything up to the ROOT servers. That is not the way DNS works, rather the client contacts the ROOT servers and then goes down from there (ignoring any caching). So really, aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything at all. B -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On 12/7/06, Jeff Waugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: quote who=O Plameras So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. Sorry Oscar, we're not asking you, we're telling you: You don't know what you're talking about. Either you manage to so terribly miscommunicate, or there are deep scars of voodoo throughout your knowledge. You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) DaZZa -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
Ben Leslie wrote: On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 16:52:21 +1100, O Plameras wrote: Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. The rest of my responses is implied by the above. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. Technically aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything up to the ROOT servers. That is not the way DNS works, rather the client contacts the ROOT servers and then goes down from there (ignoring any caching). So really, aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything at all. Do you mean once aarnet.edu.au enters www.example.aarnet.edu.au IN A 203.7.132.1 it will be propagated ? This is wrong. aarnet.edu.au is only a branch in the DNS trees. What does aarnet.edu.au has to do to propagate ? If you can answer this last question correctly then we can proceed with the discussion. O Plameras -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 17:08:37 +1100, O Plameras wrote: So really, aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything at all. Do you mean once aarnet.edu.au enters www.example.aarnet.edu.au IN A 203.7.132.1 it will be propagated ? This is wrong. aarnet.edu.au is only a branch in the DNS trees. What does aarnet.edu.au has to do to propagate ? If you can answer this last question correctly then we can proceed with the discussion. There is nothing to propagate! No propagation occurs. Ixnay on the opagationpray. I give up. Benno -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On 07/12/06, O Plameras [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. What rules? What law? There is nothing, technical or otherwise, preventing anyone with control over a domain name server from putting any type of record under their domain which resolves to any value they like, it happens all the time openly on the net. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. You have all these books and still didn't get something I could understand from reading the RFC's as a young programmer fresh out of high school? The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. The technical process is what matters here. bind isn't going to send cops to arrest you if it finds that you created an A record from your domain which points to an IP address which isn't under your control and for that matter, even if the cops DO come knocking at your door there is no law according to which they can charge you of any wrongdoing. How do you think dyndns and no-ip.org work? Another question - what would be the rational for a limitation such as you describe? For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. But the bureaucratic process requires this has to be with the approval of the owners of the public ip address others this will not happen. A friend of mine created an A record for my static IP address (issued to me by my ISP) from his private domain. That name was (for the sake of this discussion) xxx.bard.org.il. It still resolves to that (no longer relevant) IP address today and trace-routing to the xxx.bard.org.il will correctly reach some place which probably inherited my static IP address after I left that ISP. REVERSE mapping won't work because the ISP is the only one with control over the .in-addr.arpa sub-domain for the network block assigned to it. Maybe I could ask them nicely to add another PTR record from that IP address back to xxx.bard.org.il but it's at their discretion to decide whether they like the colour of my eyes or the font on my fax and do it or not. No laws or IETF rules involved here. Anyway, can you explain how you do this ? The book on DNS and BIND will not get you anywhere if that's all you will rely on. It will get you everywhere. No need for any beaurocracy. I made my living (very good living) until I retire doing Domain Name and IP address Administration back during the days when munnari.oz was the authority for Australia until 2001. So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. And I edited zone files of a major university already back in 1991, so what? Things change. Maybe you want to refresh your memory. Just please give a concrete pointer to substantiate your claims because so far it seems your are outnumbered 2-1. Cheers, --P -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
DaZZa wrote: On 12/7/06, Jeff Waugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: quote who=O Plameras So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. Sorry Oscar, we're not asking you, we're telling you: You don't know what you're talking about. Either you manage to so terribly miscommunicate, or there are deep scars of voodoo throughout your knowledge. You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) Hi Dazza, Sorry, I have not received the post you are responding. I am not responding to your post but the Jeff Waugh's post requires a respond from me. Jeff Waugh is a person who does not know to argue on the merits of arguments. So, what does he do ? He reverts to insults and abuse. I'm not going to be sucked into this again, never. Jeff Waugh has threatened me off list before but I did not allow him to. So, he use insults and abuses. O Plameras -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On 07/12/06, O Plameras [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: DaZZa wrote: On 12/7/06, Jeff Waugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: quote who=O Plameras So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. Sorry Oscar, we're not asking you, we're telling you: You don't know what you're talking about. Either you manage to so terribly miscommunicate, or there are deep scars of voodoo throughout your knowledge. You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) Hi Dazza, Sorry, I have not received the post you are responding. I am not responding to your post but the Jeff Waugh's post requires a respond from me. Jeff Waugh is a person who does not know to argue on the merits of arguments. So, what does he do ? He reverts to insults and abuse. I'm not going to be sucked into this again, never. Jeff Waugh has threatened me off list before but I did not allow him to. So, he use insults and abuses. Here is what's behind the host Jeff is asking about: $ dig plammered.perkypants.org ; DiG 9.3.2-P1 plammered.perkypants.org ;; global options: printcmd ;; Got answer: ;; -HEADER- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 45825 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONAL: 2 ;; QUESTION SECTION: ;plammered.perkypants.org. IN A ;; ANSWER SECTION: plammered.perkypants.org. 86400 IN A 203.122.110.35 ;; AUTHORITY SECTION: perkypants.org. 58427 IN NS node.waugh.id.au. perkypants.org. 58427 IN NS spoon.solutionsfirst.com.au. ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION: node.waugh.id.au. 49784 IN A 70.85.31.216 spoon.solutionsfirst.com.au. 6179 INA 61.8.3.181 ;; Query time: 187 msec ;; SERVER: 211.29.132.12#53(211.29.132.12) ;; WHEN: Thu Dec 7 17:19:19 2006 ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 159 All Jeff did was to give a concrete example which should contradict your claim. You said that this (pointing to 203.122.110.35 from perkypants.org) is against some rules or law. Jeff did it. The record he gives resolves correctly for me (though I don't see a web site on the standard port on that address). If he broke some rules or law (as you claim) - what's going to happen to him now? Cheers, --P -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
quote who=DaZZa You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) It resolves to the IP address Oscar is posting from (which just happens to have an ssh server running on it). So, were his theories correct, I would not be able to set up plammered.perkypants.org to resolve to an IP address in his ISP's network range. I have no idea how he got that impression at all, but he has yet to explain it, or plammered.perkypants.org. So I guess we just wait for him to figure things out for himself again. :-) - Jeff -- linux.conf.au 2007: Sydney, Australia http://lca2007.linux.org.au/ One in 10 Europeans is allegedly conceived in an Ikea bed. - BBC News, 2005 -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On 12/7/06, O Plameras [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: DaZZa wrote: On 12/7/06, Jeff Waugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: quote who=O Plameras So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. Sorry Oscar, we're not asking you, we're telling you: You don't know what you're talking about. Either you manage to so terribly miscommunicate, or there are deep scars of voodoo throughout your knowledge. You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) Hi Dazza, Sorry, I have not received the post you are responding. I am not responding to your post but the Jeff Waugh's post requires a respond from me. Jeff Waugh is a person who does not know to argue on the merits of arguments. So, what does he do ? He reverts to insults and abuse. I'm not going to be sucked into this again, never. Jeff Waugh has threatened me off list before but I did not allow him to. So, he use insults and abuses. Oscar. As much as I've had my differences with Jeff in the past, and whatever as my personal opinion of him may be or not be, I can't find a single thing in his emails which I would classify as insults or abuse. He asked you a question, as a demonstrative response to a statement made by yourself which is plainly wrong. You haven't answered him. Hell, you haven't answered anyone's comments except to claim you managed DNS's for years and know what you're doing. You plainly don't understand how DNS works. I don't know if you did in the days when you claim to have managed multiple DNS servers before you retired, but you sure don't understand it now. Read what everyone else is saying in response to your ridiculous claims before you accuse Jeff of abusing you. DaZZa -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On 12/7/06, Jeff Waugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: quote who=DaZZa You've yet to explain to me what's behind plammered.perkypants.org. I hope it's nothing bad - I'd hate to piss the boss off by doing it from work. :-) It resolves to the IP address Oscar is posting from (which just happens to have an ssh server running on it). So, were his theories correct, I would not be able to set up plammered.perkypants.org to resolve to an IP address in his ISP's network range. I have no idea how he got that impression at all, but he has yet to explain it, or plammered.perkypants.org. So I guess we just wait for him to figure things out for himself again. :-) Ahhh, that's OK then. Just as long as I don't have some big bad lawyer banging on the door demanding to know why I was trying to hack their system. :-) DaZZa -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
O Plameras wrote: Ben Leslie wrote: On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 16:52:21 +1100, O Plameras wrote: *snip* I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. Technically aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything up to the ROOT servers. That is not the way DNS works, rather the client contacts the ROOT servers and then goes down from there (ignoring any caching). So really, aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything at all. Do you mean once aarnet.edu.au enters www.example.aarnet.edu.au IN A 203.7.132.1 it will be propagated ? This is wrong. aarnet.edu.au is only a branch in the DNS trees. What does aarnet.edu.au has to do to propagate ? If you can answer this last question correctly then we can proceed with the discussion. How does a query propagate? Well, to paraphrase Section 2.6.2 of that book that's right in front of you(*): - The local nameserver gets a request for www.example.aarnet.edu.au. It doesn't know where this is, but it does know where all the root nameservers are. So it picks one of those and asks it. - The root nameserver says, no, I have no idea where www.example.aarnet.edu.au is. But I do have this list of nameservers that are authoritative for the .au domain, maybe one of them can help you. The local nameserver picks one, and sends the query for www.example.aarnet.edu.au to it. - The .au nameserver says, no, I have no idea where www.example.aarnet.edu.au is. But I do have this list of nameservers that are authoritative for the edu.au domain, maybe one of them can help you. The local nameserver picks one, and sends the query for www.example.aarnet.edu.au to it. - The edu.au nameserver says, no, I have no idea where www.example.aarnet.edu.au is. But I do have this list of nameservers that are authoritative for the aarnet.edu.au domain, maybe one of them can help you. The local nameserver picks one, and sends the query for www.example.aarnet.edu.au to it. Do you see where this is going? The query keeps propagating down different levels until it finally hits a server who says Ooo! I *know* this one! and replies. It sounds like a lot of traffic, but the local nameserver also caches all of those replies it got along the way to resolving that query. So if the next query it gets is for, say, www.monash.edu.au, the local nameserver will say I don't know where that is, but I've already got this list of .edu.au nameservers that is still fresh in my cache, I'll ask one of those. In a perfect world, the root servers wouldn't get that much traffic at all, really, thanks to caching. But there's a *lot* of poorly configured nameservers out there. http://www.bind9.net/dnshealth/ makes the claim that 98% of queries to the root servers are unnecessary, and is full of lots of other interesting DNS-related factoids. Anyway, the point of all of this is, *all* of the propagation in DNS happens downwards. The root nameservers seriously don't know the first thing about subdomains of aarnet.edu.au, and you can verify this by sending a non-recursive query to one (using the +norecurse option to dig, for example). Not only do they not know whether a particular subdomain exists, they really don't care whether the object it resolves to (not all DNS records are IP addresses...) belongs to the domain owner, or Dexter Plameras, or whether it even exists on the public Internet at all. I desperately hope this clears up any misunderstandings. * I have the fourth edition. May be slightly different for others. Cheers, -- Pete -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
Penedo wrote: On 07/12/06, O Plameras [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: The authority to associate NAME to ip address has to be propagated up to the ROOT servers. You mean to say that AARNET can do this without the express approval from the owners of 203.7.132.1 ? NO, aarnet.edu.au cannot, otherwise it is against the rules and perhaps against the law. What rules? What law? There is nothing, technical or otherwise, preventing anyone with control over a domain name server from putting any type of record under their domain which resolves to any value they like, it happens all the time openly on the net. I'd strongly suggest you get hold of a good book on DNS, and find out how it works before trying to explain it to anybody else. I found the introductory chapters of DNS and BIND ( http://safari.oreilly.com/0596100574 ) to be most illuminating. I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. You have all these books and still didn't get something I could understand from reading the RFC's as a young programmer fresh out of high school? The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. The technical process is what matters here. bind isn't going to send cops to arrest you if it finds that you created an A record from your domain which points to an IP address which isn't under your control and for that matter, even if the cops DO come knocking at your door there is no law according to which they can charge you of any wrongdoing. How do you think dyndns and no-ip.org work? Another question - what would be the rational for a limitation such as you describe? For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. But the bureaucratic process requires this has to be with the approval of the owners of the public ip address others this will not happen. A friend of mine created an A record for my static IP address (issued to me by my ISP) from his private domain. That name was (for the sake of this discussion) xxx.bard.org.il. It still resolves to that (no longer relevant) IP address today and trace-routing to the xxx.bard.org.il will correctly reach some place which probably inherited my static IP address after I left that ISP. REVERSE mapping won't work because the ISP is the only one with control over the .in-addr.arpa sub-domain for the network block assigned to it. Maybe I could ask them nicely to add another PTR record from that IP address back to xxx.bard.org.il but it's at their discretion to decide whether they like the colour of my eyes or the font on my fax and do it or not. No laws or IETF rules involved here. Anyway, can you explain how you do this ? The book on DNS and BIND will not get you anywhere if that's all you will rely on. It will get you everywhere. No need for any beaurocracy. I made my living (very good living) until I retire doing Domain Name and IP address Administration back during the days when munnari.oz was the authority for Australia until 2001. So, I know what I'm talking about if that's what you're asking. And I edited zone files of a major university already back in 1991, so what? Things change. Maybe you want to refresh your memory. Just please give a concrete pointer to substantiate your claims because so far it seems your are outnumbered 2-1. Because you don't understand that to be authoritative it involves technical as well as bureaucratice processes. You only know the technical aspect of it. The technical aspect of the job is the easiest. If everybody can be authoritative by doing what J Waugh had done there will be chaos on the internet. The whole point: perkypants.org is not authoritative for plammered.perkypants.org. I know how he does this. But fortunately, perkypants.org cannot make a commercial proposition out of these activities. If perkypants.org makes money by using someone else public ip address without authority this is stealing. Again, just because you can, you do. Just as because you can hack someones Server you do. Plameras -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On Thu, Dec 07, 2006 at 06:04:03PM +1100, O Plameras wrote: Plameras Hi all, This thread is done! Any further posts to the list on this thread by 18.20 today will put the list into full moderation mode for the next 3 days. Your friendly list admins, SLUG committee -- http://slug.org.au/ (Sydney Linux Users Group) http://lca2007.linux.org.au/ (linux.conf.au 2007) http://holmwood.id.au/~lindsay/ (me) -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
Peter Hardy wrote: O Plameras wrote: Ben Leslie wrote: On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 16:52:21 +1100, O Plameras wrote: *snip* I have first, second, and third editions. I have the third edition in front of me. The book covers the technical process. Unfortunately, it does not cover the bureaucratic processes. The processes not covered by the book is the one that I am revealing to you. For example, technically aarnet.edu.au can propagate up to the ROOT Servers. Technically aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything up to the ROOT servers. That is not the way DNS works, rather the client contacts the ROOT servers and then goes down from there (ignoring any caching). So really, aarnet.edu.au doesn't need to propagate anything at all. Do you mean once aarnet.edu.au enters www.example.aarnet.edu.au IN A 203.7.132.1 it will be propagated ? This is wrong. aarnet.edu.au is only a branch in the DNS trees. What does aarnet.edu.au has to do to propagate ? If you can answer this last question correctly then we can proceed with the discussion. How does a query propagate? Well, to paraphrase Section 2.6.2 of that book that's right in front of you(*): The KEYWORD here is authority as I explained in one previous post. O Plameras -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html
Re: Elementary DNS theory (Was: Re: Why DHCP ? (WAS: Re: [SLUG] My father wants an inexpensive computer))
On Thu Dec 07, 2006 at 18:04:03 +1100, O Plameras wrote: Penedo wrote: On 07/12/06, O Plameras [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Because you don't understand that to be authoritative it involves technical as well as bureaucratice processes. You only know the technical aspect of it. The technical aspect of the job is the easiest. Please tell me the bureaucratic process. A link to some site explaining it. People set up nameservers and names all the time, it must be published somewhere. Please enlighten us! If everybody can be authoritative by doing what J Waugh had done there will be chaos on the internet. CHAOS ON THE INTERNET! SNAKES ON A PLANE ! But seriously, the internet is like this, and it seems to work reasonably well. The whole point: perkypants.org is not authoritative for plammered.perkypants.org. I know how he does this. Yes it is that is the whole point. The nameserver that is associated with perkypants.org is authoritative for plammered.perkypants.org Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name_system) explains this quite well. Ok, lets just turn this all around, if Jeff's nameserver is *not* authoritative for plammered.perkypants.org please tell me which server is. But fortunately, perkypants.org cannot make a commercial proposition out of these activities. If perkypants.org makes money by using someone else public ip address without authority this is stealing. I'm not sure where money came into this. How / why would Jeff be making a commercial proposition out of these activities? Again, just because you can, you do. Just as because you can hack someones Server you do. I don't. You might. -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html