On Thu, Nov 28, 2002 at 07:39:02PM -0800, John H. Robinson, IV wrote: > Ben Armstrong wrote: > > > Bah, that's what CNAME is for. > > that is _NOT_ what a CNAME is for. a CNAME is for when the hostname is > in a domain that is OUTSIDE of your control. > > ie: evil.debian.org -> www.msn.com = CNAME (we don't control the msn.com > domain) > forge.debian.org -> quantz.debian.org = A (we control the debian.org > domain, so we can save the internet by REDUCING THE NUMBER OF > UNNECESSARY DNS LOOKUPS AND REDUCE THE END USERS DELAY WITH DNS LOOKUP > REQUIREMENTS) > > isn't this a FAQ somewhere? > > -john
Except that every major implementation of the DNS protocol in the past ten years or so has generated a reply that had the A record the CNAME points to, if it was also authoritative for that record (which, generally, is the case if it's an in-domain indirection). And, by the way, that *is* one of the uses of a CNAME. To allow things such as service names (www, ftp, etc) to point to a single IP, which might have one of those names, or something else, as it's formal name. -- *************************************************************************** Joel Baker System Administrator - lightbearer.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://users.lightbearer.com/lucifer/
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