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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: uDNS Root Name Servers Taking Shape - on a couple ISDN lines
kook fight in the parking lot at 3 o'clock after school! On Fri, 30 May 1997, Ron Kimball wrote: > On Thu, 29 May 1997 18:03:13 -0500, Karl wrote: > > >> ;; ADDITIONAL RECORDS: > >> root.starfire.douglas.ma.us. 86400 A 208.195.108.8 > >Multi-homed condition unknown and suspect due to truncated BGP path. > > Yup, not multihomed until the new router comes in. :-( > > >Approximate bandwidth from the core to this point on the network > >from us at this point in time: 34.56kbps, or a good modem line :-) > > Gee, it's a T1 from here, must be a problem on your end. <grin> > > >THIS NAMESERVER IS RUNNING WITH RECURSION ENABLED > > Yup, until next week when we get the new box up. > > > AND IS NOT A TRUE ROOT. > > Says you, the grand high holy keeper of the ONE TRUE ROOTS. Ha! > > >> hp.manhattan.com. 172800 A 199.103.194.137 > >Aggregated by (and complete path from) Open Advisors. Appears to be > >multi-homed. > > Yup. > > >Approximate bandwidth to this point on the network: 65.28kbps, or a > > single-channel ISDN equivalent. > > You really should check your lines Karl, a multihomed server on a > single channel ISDN, I don't think so... > > >**** NOTICE: > >THIS NAMESERVER IS RUNNING WITH RECURSION > > Hmm... the name.boot file has it set off. I'll check it out. > > AND IS NOT A TRUE ROOT. > > <yawn> > > >> DONTSERF.MAKEWAVES.NET. 172800 A 204.94.43.1 > >Alternic under a different name, operated by Diane Boling, and running > >with both nameservers on the same subnet. Linked to Seanet, which appears > >to be multihomed. > > Yup. > > >Approximate bandwidth to this point on the network: 629kbps (my god, they > >have one root with a fractional T1 worth of bandwidth available!) > > Well, I guess your lines came back up! <grin> > > >**** NOTICE: > >THIS NAMESERVER IS ALSO RUNNING WITH RECURSION ENABLED > > could be. > > AND IS NOT A TRUE ROOT. > > <yawn> > > >I rest my case. Only one of these has anything approaching reasonable > >connectivity, all appear to be off single-point failure circuits (except > >possibly manhattan.com), and all are running in non-RFC2010 mode. > > Yah, we really need RFC2010 servers to run 1/2% of the internet - NOT! > > Seriously, our schedule calls for 5 dedicated, non-recursive servers > up by next week this time, with T1 of better connectivity. We plan > full RFC2010 by the time we reach 5% visibility. Feel free to market > your system's RFC2010 compliance as an absolute must for servers that > handle a fraction of a percent of the internet's DNS requests, I'd be > surprised if any of the "internet aware" people on these lists you are > posting to care... > > Take care, > Ron Kimball for the uDNS council > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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