On Saturday, June 20, 1998 12:59 AM, Lincoln Dale[SMTP:ltd§interlink.com.au] wrote: <snip> § §.. and, pray-tell, why would i want to decrease the number of root-nameservers §from (currently) 13, located at in excess of 10 locations, down to *3*, §located off two (seemingly not-particularly-well-connected) links? § The Root Name Servers do not provide very much information when operating as Root Name Servers. The 13 servers that you are referring to are doing double (and triple) duty as .COM servers as well as IN-ADDR.ARPA servers. You are much better off accessing a small number of very well connected Root Name Servers for the Root Zone information than sending traffic half-way around the world just to be able to say you have 13 servers to choose from, none of which is near you (geo-netricaly). Some ISPs move to a situation where they run their own in-house Root Name Servers. This allows them to control the contents of the Root Zone which is not hard to maintain. In the end, it all boils down to time-space tradeoffs and the economics of the situation. The more that people are educated about the DNS and various alternative configurations, the more they will avoid the knee jerk reaction of sticking to the status quou which may not provide the best egineering solution. Jim Fleming Unir Corporation - http://www.unir.com 1998 - The Year of the C+§Received on Sat Jun 20 1998 - 17:54:42 UTC
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