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Caching Nameserver?
Does anyone find it better(faster) to use a caching nameserver rather than
either ntl name servers or their Router (pointing to NTL nameservers)? Lordy |
Re: Caching Nameserver?
What exactly do you mean by a caching nameserver ?
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Re: Caching Nameserver?
I think Lordy means DNS servers but I could be wrong.
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Re: Caching Nameserver?
Yup. A cahcing Nameserver is a local DNS Server running on your own box. So every DNS request is resolved on your own machine.
This improved things in the old 'dial-up' days. but I'm guessing even with cable/asdl every little bit helps. I was just wondering if the Linksys routers also implement their own DNS caching (unlikely) or simply pass the request through to the DNS servers provided by the ISP. Now I think about it, its very likely the latter. The good thing about a local nameserver is that it syncs with the root servers directly. No middleman. So you should get dns updates a bit quicker? |
Re: Caching Nameserver?
A local DNS server...? Nope, I've never bothered with this for home use. It has always seemed overkill to me. Even when on dial-up, the advantage of using your ISP's DNS (or any other DNS) seems outweighed by the work involved in configuring and maintaining your DNS.
I remember looking into this with the Sys Admin for the 1st company I worked for... but got made redundant before any decision was made (maybe that's why I got made redundant ;) ). |
Re: Caching Nameserver?
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"urpmi caching-nameserver" And its all installed and configured. It's not quite the same as having a local DNS server for your home network. More like a local DNS server on each machine independantly. But when you've only got one machine its a moot point :) |
Re: Caching Nameserver?
Completely pointless I would have thought, certainly in modern windows (2000/xp) as the dns resolver caches the results anyway.
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Re: Caching Nameserver?
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I also I dont run windows, so not completely pointless for me. Googleing 'Windows DNS Cache" reveals its not without its own problems though. Quote:
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Re: Caching Nameserver?
well at the moment my router is set up as my dns server so if u want to get a router then maybe that will help...
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Re: Caching Nameserver?
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given that 1)Im not overly impressed with NTLs proxies and infrastructure at the moment - so I was wondering if the DNS is up to scratch. (I've seen NTL's DNS mentioned a lot in these forums though I havent poured over it in detail) 2) some DNS servers seem to take ages to update regardless of TTL. Which was what I was getting at regarding my earlier statement that it may be better to have your own local one, properly configured.. http://ask.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/04/18/198259 Quote:
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