How to understand the Domain Name System
by Clare Lawrence
How to understand the Domain Name System By Clare Lawrence
13th August 2004
Ever wonder why DNS systems came into
existence? Efficiency. Every computer has a distinct IP
address, and the Internet needed an elite method for obtaining
these addresses and for managing the system as a whole. Enter
ICANN.
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Number manages the DNS root of the Internet domain namespace.
ICANN's role is to manage the assignment of identifiers,
ensuring that all users have unique names.
The DNS
system is run by a series of servers called DNS servers. ICANN
manages the root DNS domains, under which are the top-level
domains. It also manages:
Organizational domains
Geographical domains Reverse domains
Beneath the
top-level domains are other naming authorities such as
Nominet, the UK's naming authority.
How does a DNS
Query work?
The process occurs in two parts. Firstly,
a name query begins at a client computer and is passed to DNS
client service for resolution. When the query cannot be
resolved locally, DNS servers are queried.
For
example, when a web browser calls the fully qualified domain
name www.discountdomainsuk.com, the request is passed on to
the DNS client service to resolve the name by using locally
cached information. If the query is held in the cache, then
the process is complete.
If, however, the query cannot
be answered locally, the DNS client service uses a server list
(ordered in sequence) to query external DNS servers. When a
DNS server receives a query, it first checks to see if it is
authoritive for that domain name. If it is authoritive, it
resolves the name, and the process is complete.
If the
DNS server is unable to resolve the query, it in turns queries
other DNS servers, using a process known as recursion. DNS
servers make use of root hints to assist in locating DNS
servers, which are able to provide the required result. In
this way, DNS queries are minimised and the Internet is able
to operate quickly and effectively.
A typical query
may run as follows:
Client contacts Nameserver A
looking for www.discountdomainsuk.com.
Nameserver A
checks its cache, but can't answer, so it queries a server
authoritive for the Internet root.
The root server
responds with a referral to a server authoritive for the .com
domains. NameserverA queries the the .com server and gets
referred to the server authoritive for
www.discountdomainsuk.com.
Nameserver A queries this
server and gets the IP address for
www.discountdomainsuk.com.
Nameserver A replies to the
client with the IP address.
Queries can return answers
that are authoritive, positive, negative or referral in
nature. In the event of a negative answer, another DNS server
is queried.
About the Author
Clare Lawrence is CEO of Discount Domains Ltd - A leading
UK provider of Domain name registration and Web Hosting
services. Please feel free to re-publish this article provided
this reference box remains together with a hyperlink to http://www.discountdomainsuk.com
Clare can also be contacted on Clare@discountdomainsuk.com.
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