Bind 9 is a total revamp of Bind 8.
Bind8 had a bunch of security holes in it, so tinyDNS
and the others came about. Bind9 was a rewrite from scratch
with security as a goal.
Bind9 is good for all types of general DNS stuff.
Tiny-DNS is probably good for some applications,
however you are going
Bind 9 is a total revamp of Bind 8.
Bind8 had a bunch of security holes in it, so tinyDNS
and the others came about. Bind9 was a rewrite from scratch
with security as a goal.
Bind9 is good for all types of general DNS stuff.
Tiny-DNS is probably good for some applications,
however you are going
>Hello, I have just been nominated in charge for the network inside the student block
>I live in.
>My problem is the server that I will have to order, as the network is not made yet.
Good for youi. Please wrap lines at 80 characters in the future.
>What would you recommend as proxy software?
What kernel is Red Hat Linux 8.0 using.
Seeing you are simply trying to get a board to work this is more
of kernel issue than a distribution issue. If you were using something
evil like Cold Fusion, it might be a distribution issue. Of course,
all distribution issues can be worked around with sym
Some of you might find this one interesting.
In a world where IT security sometimes means keeping services out of
sight. Both Harvard and MIT advertise everything they have up and
running.
If I was a cracker running a DOS, I could use this information to
monitor the machines I knocked of the ne
The vacation program which I use on our Campus Email server
does not do this. To bad more don't use it.
>From the 'vacation' man page:
No message will be sent unless login (or an alias supplied using
the -a option) is part of either the ``To:'' or ``Cc:'' headers of
the mail. No messages from
``
6 matches
Mail list logo