DNS Services for a registrar

Mark Andrews marka at isc.org
Fri Aug 12 23:09:23 UTC 2016


In message <CAGFn2k2+8zq8hjDQFwSaZ+s2Z6DTZOCWD_nnW+_4e0mgP7J5Mw at mail.gmail.com>
, Rubens Kuhl writes:
> On Fri, Aug 12, 2016 at 3:28 PM, Filip Hruska <fhr at fhrnet.eu> wrote:
> 
> > Hi,
> >
> > If you are going the IaaS route, definitely checkout KnotDNS project.
> > According to their benchmarks [1], it does much better than other DNS
> > servers in about every workload.
> >
> >
> The problem with KnotDNS/Yadifa/NSD is that they are too optimized for
> servers with a small number of zones containing large numbers of records,
> usually delegation-only. That is the use of TLD registries, but not the use
> case of registrars...
> 
> ... all those 3 are getting better in supporting large number of zones with
> small number of records, but the canonical solution in that space is Power
> DNS. Things that TLDs usually don't like, SQL-backend for instance, makes
> perfect sense for this use case.
> 
> Note that the only workload they tested is serving the root zone, not
> multiple number of zones with variable number of RR-sets... so aligning the
> testing with the actual use case is crucial to make good decisions.
> 
> What I strongly support, though, is getting out of the BIND comfort zone.

Named will support millions of zones and they don't need to be
listed in named.conf.  BIND 9.11 supports catalog zone which is a
meta zone which says what zones the server should configure itself
for and where to transfer those zones from, etc.

Mark
-- 
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742                 INTERNET: marka at isc.org



More information about the NANOG mailing list