DNS & BIND Cookbook
by Cricket Liu
Pro DNS and BIND
by Ron Aitchison
LDAP System Administration
by Gerald Carter
Postfix: The Definitive Guide
by Kyle Dent
Active Directory Cookbook, 3rd Edition
by Laura E. Hunter; Robbie Allen
Network Warrior, 1st Edition
by Gary A. Donahue
DNS and BIND, 5th Edition
by Paul Albitz; Cricket Liu
802.11 Wireless Networks: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition
by Matthew Gast
IPv6 Essentials, 2nd Edition
by Silvia Hagen
DNS and BIND is about one of the Internet's fundamental building blocks: the distributed host information database that's responsible for translating names into addresses, routing mail to its proper destination, and many other services. As the authors say in the preface, if you're using the Internet, you're already using DNS--even if you don't know it. This edition brings you up to date on the new 9.1.0 and 8.2.3 versions of BIND along with the older 4.9 version. There's also more extensive coverage of NOTIFY, IPv6 forward and reverse mapping, transaction signatures, and the new DNS Security Extensions; and a new section on accommodating Windows 2000 clients, servers and Domain Controllers. Whether you're an administrator involved daily with DNS or a user who wants to be more informed about the Internet and how it works, you'll find this book essential reading. Topics include:
What DNS does, how it works, and when you need to use it
How to find your own place in the Internet's name space
Setting up name servers
Using MX records to route mail
Configuring hosts to use DNS name servers
Subdividing domains (parenting)
Securing your name server: restricting who can query your server, preventing unauthorized zone transfers, avoiding bogus name servers, etc.
Mapping one name to several servers for load sharing
Troubleshooting: using nslookup, reading debugging output, common problems
DNS programming, using the resolver library and Perl's Net::DNS module
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Based on 63 Ratings
Great Resource - 2007-09-14
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This book is a good in-depth resource for anyone who wants a very comprehensive understanding of DNS hosting and troubleshooting. You can use it as a reference, reading sections as you need them, or read it cover to cover. I've opted for the former and am about half-way through. So, far I've read about things I've never been able to find good information for on the web. Keep up the good work!
By far the best DNS introduction - 2007-08-07
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This book is the best investment I have made in my knowledge of DNS. I think any network admin should have this book on their desk at all times. It should become a bed side reading for anybody who is serious about TCP/IP protocols. DNS may be a pretty tricky topic to understand for many people. It uses both TCP and UDP for its queries and gets pretty convoluted as you dive into it. This books demystifies it very well. There is a very clear distinction between zones and domains. I have not seen that many materials clearly explaining the difference between the two. The book gives you a taste of what threats you may face running a DNS server. It explains how to perform zone transfers and zone delegations and clearly defines which suite of protocols is used to accomplish it.
This book can be a reference as well as a textbook read. I recommend it to all people out on the internet.
DNS and BIND - 2008-09-16
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Just received this item, planned on using for reference material. Haven't gotten to read it yet though...
Good but dated... - 2008-09-06
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Most all if not all of the principles covered in this book are current although BIND 9.1 is NOT. BIND is at 9.5 now. There is a fifth edition out that is more current. Unless they discount this heavily, I'd pass.
This is the reference manual for DNS/BIND - 2007-07-09
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If you work with DNS/BIND for a living, you either already have this book, or know someone you can borrow it from. It's the one to own.
Top Level Categories:
IT Management
Networking
Sub-Categories:
IT Management > Network Management
Networking > Administration
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