Building a fresh named.root
Warren Kumari
warren at kumari.net
Thu Feb 14 14:05:05 UTC 2013
BIND now comes with a baked in roots file (in the imaginatively named lib/dns/rootns.c )
There is no need for a named.root file, and is just another thing to go wrong…
W
On Feb 14, 2013, at 8:35 AM, Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com> wrote:
> The Centos 6.3 bind and bind-chroot do not seem to come with a named.root. Does have a named.ca, though.
>
> So from my old named.root.hints include (also not provided; where did I get this?) I tried:
>
> wget ftp://ftp.rs.internic.net/domain/named.root
>
> And got a nice looking named.root last updated 1/3/2013, with nice comments on who use to run the various root servers.
>
> Then I tried:
>
> dig . ns @198.41.0.4 > named.root
>
> I see where this addr is the A root server, anyway, the response did not have A records for B, E, I, J, or L !!! And of course no AAAA records for I, J, or L. It has NS records for A thru M.
>
> What went wrong here?
>
> Which do I use?
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Please visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from this list
>
> bind-users mailing list
> bind-users at lists.isc.org
> https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users
>
--
"Does Emacs have the Buddha nature? Why not? It has bloody well everything else..."
More information about the bind-users
mailing list