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If you're preparing to roll out IPv6 on your network, this concise book provides the essentials you need to support this protocol with DNS. You'll learn how DNS was extended to accommodate IPv6 addresses, and how you can configure a BIND name server to run on the network. This book also features methods for troubleshooting problems with IPv6 forward- and reverse-mapping, and techniques for helping islands of IPv6 clients communicate with IPv4 resources.Topics include:DNS and IPv6Learn the structure and representation of IPv6 addresses, and the syntaxes of AAAA and PTR records in the ip6.arpa IPv6 reverse-mapping zoneBIND on IPv6Use IPv6 addresses and networks in ACLs, and register and delegate to IPv6-speaking name serversResolver ConfigurationConfigure popular stub resolvers (Linux/Unix, MacOS X, and Windows) to query IPv6-speaking name serversDNS64Learn about the transition technology that allows clients with IPv6-only network stacks to communicate with IPv4 serversTroubleshootingUse the nslookup and dig troubleshooting tools to look up the IPv6 addresses of a domain name, or reverse-map an IPv6 address to a domain name
Talks about distributed host information database that's responsible for translating names into addresses, routing mail to its proper destination, and even listing phone numbers with the new ENUM standard. This book covers BIND 9.3.2 as well as BIND 8.4.7.
DNS and BIND discusses one of the Internet's fundamental building blocks - the distributed host information database that's responsible for translating names into addresses, routing mail to its proper destination, and many other services.
This is a Windows-oriented edition of DNS and BIND, newly updated to document the many changes to DNS, large and small, found in Windows Server 2003. The system is explained in terms of the new Windows Server 2003, from starting and stopping a DNS service to establishing an organization's namespace in the global hierarchy.
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