Home
About Us
FAQs
Sitemap
Contact Us
Business Articles
The History of the first servers
Web Hosting Cosolidation
Starting a web host?
Multiple Variations of Web hosting
Obstacles with business hosting
Some Workings of how hosting servers work
Types of Domain Name Hosting Servers
The Benefits of Business Web Hosting

Rating Based On
Our rankings are based on the number of signups in the past week. We update our rankings on a weekly basis. The score the hosting companies receive is based on our independent lab tests.


We hope our results will help you make the right decision in selecting the best web hosting company that will make your online presence whether it is a business or a personal website successful.


Other Web Hosting

1. Lunarpages

2. Startlogic

3. Easy CGI

4. Dot5 Web Hosting

5. Ipowerweb Hosting

6. Powweb Hosting

7. Web.com Hosting

8. Apollo Hosting

9. Jumpline Hosting

10. Website Source


Yahoo Sponsors

Welcome to Web Hosting Union

 

Types of Domain Name Servers


By Web Hosting Union


  The DNS specs define two types of name servers: primary masters and
   secondary masters. A primary master name server for a zone reads the
   data for the zone from a file on its host. A secondary master name
   server for a zone gets the zone data from another name server that is
   authoritative for the zone, called its master server. Quite often, the
   master server is the zone's primary master, but that's not required: a
   secondary master can load zone data from another secondary. When a
   secondary starts up, it contacts its master name server and, if
   necessary, pulls the zone data over. This is referred to as a zone
   transfer. Nowadays, the preferred term for a secondary master name
   server is a slave, though many people (and much software, including
   Microsoft's DNS Manager) still call them secondaries.
  
   Both the primary master and slave name servers for a zone are
   authoritative for that zone. Despite the somewhat disparaging name,
   slaves aren't second-class name servers. DNS provides these two types
   of name servers to make administration easier. Once you've created the
   data for your zone and set up a primary master name server, you don't
   need to fool with copying that data from host to host to create new
   name servers for the zone. You simply set up slave name servers that
   load their data from the primary master for the zone. Once they're set
   up, the slaves will transfer new zone data when necessary.
  
   Slave name servers are important because it's a good idea to set up
   more than one name server for any given zone. You'll want more than
   one for redundancy, to spread the load around, and to make sure that
   all the hosts in the zone have a name server close by. Using slave
   name servers makes this administratively workable.
  
   Calling a particular name server a primary master name server or a
   slave name server is a little imprecise, though. We mentioned earlier
   that a name server can be authoritative for more than one zone.
   Similarly, a name server can be a primary master for one zone and a
   slave for another. Most name servers, however, are either primary for
   most of the zones they load or slave for most of the zones they load.
   So if we call a particular name server a primary or a slave, we mean
   that it's the primary master or a slave for most of the zones it
   loads.
  
   The files from which primary master name servers load their zone data
   are called, simply enough, zone data files or just data files. We
   often refer to them as db files, short for database files. Slave name
   servers can also load their zone data from data files. Slaves are
   usually configured to back up the zone data they transfer from a
   master name server to data files. If the slave is later killed and
   restarted, it will read the backup data files first, then check to see
   whether the data are current. This both obviates the need to transfer
   the zone data if it hasn't changed and provides a source of the data
   if the master is down.
  
   The data files contain resource records that describe the zone. The
   resource records describe all the hosts in the zone and mark any
   delegation of subdomains. BIND also allows special directives to
   include the contents of other data files in a data file, much like the
   #include statement in C programming.


  

 

 

© Copyright 2001-2007 : Web Hosting Union All rights reserved.
About Us | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Copyright Info | Disclaimer | Site Map