I don't know much about TinyDNS,
but recently I've read a survey claiming that 70% of the name servers are 
BIND: http://www.infoblox.com/library/pdf/2007-survey-executive-summary.pdf 
(2nd paragraph)

Furthermore, BIND operates most of the ROOT SERVERS:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_nameserver (first table)

On Saturday, 9 February 2008 19:58:56 Michael Tewner wrote:
> Hasn't tinyDNS been used for super-large installations?
>
> On Feb 8, 2008 4:31 PM, Oren Held <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Maybe you should read about Dynamic DNS: it's a protocol extension (bind
> > & MS DNS support it for years).
> > When enabled, bind actually uses journal (.jnl) files for each zone, and
> > synchronises the text files only when requested to (i.e. when doing
> > service named stop). In this mode you shouldn't edit the text files
> > manually when bind is alive!
> >
> > Dynamic DNS lets you make changes live, forgetting that these text files
> > exist. It's simply a protocol extension which allows sending updates
> > (i.e. add this record, remove that, etc).
> >
> > 'nsupdate' is bind's not-too-friendly tool for doing these updates,
> > Perl's Net::DNS allows you to write your customised stuff. I once wrote
> > http://hostupd.sf.net to ease this task, although keep in mind it's not
> > maintained anymore.
> >
> > I don't see why you dislike text files so much. This simplicity has many
> > advantages. As I see it, the big disadvantages of dns-zones-as-text-files
> > are in the EDITING process (multiple edits at once, locking, mistakes
> > which ruin the whole zone). These disadvantages are solved by using
> > Dynamic DNS. As for storage in text files, sounds cool to me, even for
> > big zones.
> >
> > "Peace Sabbath",
> >
> >  - Oren
> >
> > On Thursday, 7 February 2008 14:51:06 David L. Smith wrote:
> > > Does anybody know how one goes about managing a DNS server with tens or
> > > hundreds of thousands of addresses ?
> > >
> > > >From searching around I get the impression that everybody re-invents
> > > > the
> > >
> > > wheel for themselves, and either manually edit text files, or
> > > dynamically generate them. All solutions based on more scalable
> > > technologies than textfiles seem to be either immature (eg bind-dlz),
> > > limited in features(long list) or not widely used.
> > >
> > > It seems unimaginable that a technology so established and widespread
> > > would be lacking what I would see as a sensible scalable
> > > implementation. Am I missing something ?
> > >
> > > David
> > >
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