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  2. LOC record - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LOC_record

    In the Domain Name System, a LOC record (experimental RFC 1876) [1] is a means for expressing geographic location information for a domain name. It contains WGS84 Latitude , Longitude and Altitude ( ellipsoidal height ) information together with host/ subnet physical size and location accuracy.

  3. List of DNS record types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_DNS_record_types

    This list of DNS record types is an overview of resource records (RRs) permissible in zone files of the Domain Name System (DNS). It also contains pseudo-RRs. It also contains pseudo-RRs. Resource records

  4. nslookup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nslookup

    nslookup is a member of the BIND name server software. Andrew Cherenson created nslookup as a class project at UC Berkeley in 1986 and it first shipped in 4.3-Tahoe BSD [1] In the development of BIND 9, the Internet Systems Consortium planned to deprecate nslookup in favor of host and dig.

  5. dig (command) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dig_(command)

    dig is a network administration command-line tool for querying the Domain Name System (DNS). dig is useful for network troubleshooting and for educational purposes. [ 2 ] It can operate based on command line option and flag arguments, or in batch mode by reading requests from an operating system file.

  6. Talk:List of DNS record types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:List_of_DNS_record_types

    Record Type "A" host record, www.example.com = 127.0.0.1 Record Type "porthttp" port record, www.example.com = 80 This type of resource lookup would allow the internet to host a website or service on which ever port they wanted and would prevent the world from relying on common ports as the answer of where am I going to put my service.

  7. Hesiod (name service) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesiod_(name_service)

    However, because Hesiod can leverage existing DNS servers, deploying it to a network is fairly easy. In a Unix-like system users usually have a line in the /etc/passwd file for each local user like: foo:x:100:10:Foo Bar:/home/foo:/bin/sh This line is composed of seven colon-separated fields which hold the following data: user login name (string);

  8. Zero-configuration networking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-configuration_networking

    Each service instance is described using a DNS SRV [17] and DNS TXT [18] record. A client discovers the list of available instances for a given service type by querying the DNS PTR [ 18 ] record of that service type's name; the server returns zero or more names of the form <Service>.<Domain>, each corresponding to a SRV/TXT record pair.

  9. Category:DNS record types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:DNS_record_types

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