On Wed, Oct 25, 2006 at 10:10:05PM -0400, alex@pilosoft.com wrote: ...
As pointed out by Rob Seastrom in private email, RFC2182 addresses things of biblical proportions - such as dispersion of nameservers geographically and topologically. Having 3 secondaries, only one of them on separate /24, and none of them on topologically different network does not qualify. ...
ns1.register.com. 600 IN A 216.21.234.96 ns2.register.com. 600 IN A 216.21.226.96 ns3.register.com. 600 IN A 216.21.234.97 ns4.register.com. 600 IN A 216.21.226.97 This is two pairs, each pair in a single /24 (or /26), and there are ways in which each of these hosts could be in a widely different spot from the other three, or in several different spots. Why am I saying this? Most of the folks here know this and how to do this even better than I do. I am not saying that register.com IS doing this, just that you can't say that they're NOT just from this evidence. And by now it's moot anyway. -- Joe Yao ----------------------------------------------------------------------- This message is not an official statement of OSIS Center policies.