No. But you can use a public (commercial or non-commerical) secondary DNS service.
Google "secondary dns" or "free secondary dns". You will find a number of services and reviews. Be careful in selecting - many charge or limit you based on the number of queries and/or zones. QOS and reliablity vary, as do levels of support. Note that not all secondary services use BIND. Many of the free services don't yet support DNSSEC, don't accept NOTIFY (polling instead) or are un-reliable. Most don't support IPV6 and don't have any QOS guarantee. Also, for any serious use, you want geographic separation for disaster-tolerance. Nonetheless, you can find reasonable free services. Commercial services also vary the same parameters as well as price and support. I settled on puck.nether.net/dns for my personal domain, which seems to stay current with BIND, has been reliable, supports IPV6 and NOTIFY and is located in Chicago. But your milage (and criteria) may vary. --------------------------------------------------------- This communication may not represent my employer's views, if any, on the matters discussed. -----Original Message----- From: terry [mailto:te...@list.dnsbed.com] Sent: Monday, March 28, 2011 08:26 To: bind-users Subject: can I set the second nameserver to a public dns cache? Hello, I have only one nameserver for a domain. Can I set the second nameserver for this domain to a public dns cache? for example: abc.com. IN NS ns1.abc.com. abc.com. IN NS ns2.abc.com. ns2.abc.com. IN A 8.8.8.8 # 8.8.8.8 is google's public dns server Since DNS cache does a rec-resolver, so it will also answer with the correct result? Thanks. _______________________________________________ bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users