In large, well organized, academic or ISP (Internet Service Provider) networks you
will sometimes find that the network people have set up a forwarder hierarchy of DNS
servers which helps lighten the internal network load and the load on the outside
servers as well. It's not easy to know if you're inside such a network or not. But
by using the DNS server of your network provider as a ``forwarder'' you can make the
responses to queries faster and less of a load on your network. This works by your
nameserver forwarding queries to your ISP nameserver. Each time this happens you
will dip into the big cache of your ISPs nameserver, thus speeding your queries up,
your nameserver does not have to do all the work itself. If you use a modem this can
be quite a win. For the sake of this example we assume that your network provider
has two name servers they want you to use, with IP numbers 10.0.0.1
and
10.1.0.1
. Then, in your named.conf
file, inside the
opening section called ``options
'', insert these lines:
forward first; forwarders { 10.0.0.1; 10.1.0.1; };
There is also a nice trick for dialup machines using forwarders, it is described in the qanda section.
Restart your nameserver and test it with dig
. Should still work
fine.