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Berkeley Internet Name Domain
Last modified: Wednesday, May 28, 2008 

Abbreviated as BIND, Berkeley Internet Name Domain is the most common implementation of the DNS protocol on the Internet. It's freely available under the BSD License. BIND DNS servers are believed to be providing about 80 percent of all DNS services. BIND was developed by the University of California at Berkeley. The most current release is BIND 9.4.2, and from Version 9 onwards it supports DNS SEC, TSIG, IPv6 and other DNS protocol enhancements.

Related Categories

Domain Name System

Internet Protocols

Related Terms

architecture

Berkeley Ingres

DNS

DNS parking

domain name

Domain Name Server

dynamic DNS

IPng

namespace

OpenBSD

Unbound

  Related Links

BIND 9.4.2
BIND version 9 is a major rewrite of nearly all aspects of the underlying BIND architecture.

BIND Manual Pages, BIND 9 User Guide
The purpose of this document is to explain the installation and upkeep of the BIND software package, and we begin by reviewing the fundamentals of the Domain Name System (DNS) as they relate to BIND.

Webopedia's "Did You Know...?" Section
Use this Webopedia knowledge section for an in-depth overview of specific technologies and occurrences in the areas of Computer Science, The Internet, and Computer Hardware and Software.

Webopedia's Quick Reference Section
Use this Webopedia reference section for information on common Internet and computer facts and occurrences.







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