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Page "Domain Name System" ¶ 9
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BIND and was
BIND was ported to the Windows NT platform in the early 1990s.
BIND version 9 was written from scratch and now has a security record comparable to other modern DNS software.
BIND was first released with Berkeley Software Distribution 4. 3BSD, and as such, it is free and open source software.
BIND was written by Douglas Terry, Mark Painter, David Riggle and Songnian Zhou in the early 1980s at the University of California, Berkeley as a result of a DARPA grant.
One of these employees, Paul Vixie, continued to work on BIND after leaving DEC. BIND Version 4. 9. 2 was sponsored by Vixie Enterprises.
BIND 8 was released by ISC in May 1997.
It was written from scratch in part to address the architectural difficulties with auditing the earlier BIND code bases, and also to support DNSSEC ( DNS Security Extensions ).
BIND 9 was released in September 2000.
BIND 9 was a complete rewrite, in part to mitigate these ongoing security issues.
Most notably, the Internet Systems Consortium announced that it had produced a version of the BIND DNS software that could be configured by Internet service providers to filter out wildcard DNS from certain domains ; this software was deployed by a number of ISPs.
The hijacking was made possible using a DNS cache poisoning attack, exploiting a security vulnerability in versions of BIND earlier than 4. 9. 6.
ISC was originally founded in 1994 as Internet Software Consortium, Inc., to continue the work of maintaining and enhancing BIND following the footsteps of CSRG at U. C. Berkeley, Digital Equipment Corp., and Vixie Enterprises.
Some sources claim that the DNS server implementation in Windows NT 3. 51 was a fork of ISC's BIND version 4. 3, but this is not true.
As of 2004, it was the fourth most popular DNS server ( counting BIND version 9 separately from versions 8 and 4 ) for the publication of DNS data.
This format was originally used by the Berkeley Internet Name Domain ( BIND ) software package, but has been widely adopted by other DNS server software-though some of them ( e. g. NSD, PowerDNS ) are using the zone files only as a starting point to compile them into database format, see also Microsoft DNS with Active Directory-database integration.

BIND and widely
BIND (), or named (), is the most widely used DNS software on the Internet.

BIND and distributed
This file is called named. cache in the BIND nameserver reference implementation and a current version is officially distributed by ICANN's InterNIC.

BIND and on
ISC is the developer of several key Internet technologies that enable the global Internet ; such as BIND, ISC DHCP, OpenReg, ISC AFTR, an implementation of an IPv4 / IPv6 transition protocol based on Dual-Stack Lite, which is under development by several large ISPs within the IETF protocol standards development process.
( Contrast this with BIND, where when such changes are made, the list of zones, in the < tt >/ etc / named. conf </ tt > file, has to be explicitly updated on each individual server.
Yet this is a DOUBLE BIND because if you indeed stop you'll be doing what we tell you, and if you read on you'll be doing what we've wanted all along.

BIND and Unix
In 1984, four Berkeley students — Douglas Terry, Mark Painter, David Riggle, and Songnian Zhou — wrote the first Unix implementation, called The Berkeley Internet Name Domain ( BIND ) Server.

BIND and systems
In most Unix-like operating systems and others that implement the BIND Domain Name System ( DNS ) resolver library, the resolv. conf configuration file contains information that determines the operational parameters of the DNS resolver.

BIND and is
The acronym BIND is for Berkeley Internet Name Domain, from a technical paper published in 1984.
The long-obsolete BIND 4 and BIND 8 have both had a substantial number of serious security vulnerabilities over the years, and as such their use is now strongly discouraged.
The djbdns software package is a DNS implementation created by Daniel J. Bernstein due to his frustrations with repeated BIND security holes.
BIND had to be the first operation in a session in LDAPv2, but is not required in LDAPv3 ( the current LDAP version ).

BIND and DNS
Most of the features of BIND 9 were funded by UNIX vendors who wanted to ensure that BIND stayed competitive with Microsoft's DNS offerings ; the DNSSEC features were funded by the US military, which regarded DNS security as important.
* DNS and BIND, Fifth Edition by Paul Albitz, Cricket Liu.
* BIND 9 DNS Administration Reference Book: Name Server Operations and DNS Configuration using BIND.
* CircleID Interview with Cricket Liu, author of ' DNS and BIND '
* DNS BIND Editor A GUI editor for ISC BIND
* DNS & BIND Resources
BIND uses a built-in pseudo-top-level-domain in the " CHAOS class " for retrieving information about a running DNS server.
* Many technical works, such as Cricket Liu's DNS and BIND ( O ' Reilly ), Per Cederqvist's Version Management with CVS, Jesse Vincent's RT Essentials ( O ' Reilly ), and the GNU General Public License use Yoyodyne as a company name in their examples.
Application-based support includes Apache, PHP, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Perl, and BIND ( DNS ).

BIND and software
He wrote a number of software packages ( including BRL-CAD ) and network tools ( including ttcp and the concept of the default route or " default gateway ") and contributed to many others ( including BIND ).
Source port randomization via BIND backed up by a non-BIND DNS server software with intelligence blended into the BGP routing protocol mitigates the DNS Anycast cache poisoning attacks from malicious users.
Some DNS server software, such as BIND, also requires at least one additional name server record.

BIND and use
With the heavy use and resulting scrutiny of its open-source code, as well as increasingly more sophisticated attack methods, many security flaws were discovered in BIND.
IANA ( Jon Postel ) designated ISC as a root name server operator-initially as NS. ISC. ORG, later changed to F. ROOT-SERVERS. NET-to enable ISC to support the use of BIND by root name servers.
The DNS server component in all subsequent releases of Windows Server have built upon that initial implementation and do not use BIND source code.

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