Kenneth Gonsalves lawgon@thenilgiris.com wrote: On Monday 25 Jul 2005 10:01 am, chirag radhakrishnan wrote:
Caching-only name servers will not have any records of their own. When it recevied a request from a client for the first time it will query on behalf of a client to a nameserver. The next time client requests the caching server, it  will answer from the date in its cache thus saving bandwidth and improving response.
no - the caching only name server directly queries the root nameservers on the internet (and of course caches the results). The 'only' refers to the fact that the other elements of a dns server do not run - ie, the machine does not have its own internal dns. bsnl, mtnl and vsnl regularly screw up their dns servers, so it is advisable to run ones own as already suggested
No- It depends on the zone that you define. If you have a zone '.' of type hint and you provide root servers, then and only then will it refer to the root servers. If instead of root servers you provide any other server it should query that and obtain a non-authorative answer.
I dont know how often vsnl/bsnl screw their dns servers but in case of production proxy servers generally you have a local caching server to improve performance. Helps when you have more than 20/30 hits per second.
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