Thus spake jlewis@lewis.org
On 11 Jan 2000, Michael Shields wrote:
Specifically, if you have a set of well known IP addresses for common services, thus something like:
223.255.255.1 - Primary DNS 223.255.255.2 - Secondary DNS 223.255.255.3 - SMTP Mail 223.255.255.4 - Time Server
Why did you choose to have exactly 2 DNS servers and exactly 1 SMTP and "time" server?
This seems a big drawback to the standard IP number method. Think about a network sharing an IGP containing thousands of dialup ports. That's where I am. How many dialup ports can you have before one SMTP gateway just doesn't cut it? Sure you can play games with load balancing, layer 4 switches, or perhaps route filtering but why force money or effort to be wasted on such things?
Not necessarily...if you can spread your mail servers out to different parts of your network, then they're going to have the same IP address and your dialup ports will "magically" find the closest one. However, having said that...I agree, many people will want to put their mail servers in a datacenter environment sitting next to each other...and without playing network games, that wouldn't work very well. -- Jeff McAdams Email: jeffm@iglou.com Head Network Administrator Voice: (502) 966-3848 IgLou Internet Services (800) 436-4456