<HEAD><TITLE>What is DNS?</TITLE> <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=utf-8"> </HEAD><BODY> <H1>What is DNS?</H1> DNS is something that the majority of internet users are not aware or or take for granted, but is essential for the internet to function. Plain simply put, without DNS, there is no internet. Anyone that wants to use the internet needs a DNS server or access to a DNS server. This is why every internet service provider provides DNS servers for their customers to use. <p> There are, however, disadvantages to using an ISP's DNS servers. The main disadvantage is that the servers might be overloaded; every single internet connection (every single email sent, every single web page accessed, etc.) requires a DNS query. With a large number of customers querying the same two DNS servers over and over again, those servers can become slow and overloaded. <p> This is why you may wish to run your own DNS server. This DNS server can run much faster than your ISP's DNS servers, allowing you to access the internet much more quickly. <p> There are actually a couple of ways of using a DNS server to speed up the internet; but first I should describe what DNS is. <p> DNS is the process of taking a name, such as "www.yahoo.com" and converting it in to a number, such as "10.22.45.32". It is, if you will, the phone book of the internet. <p> As I said before, there are two ways to have your own DNS server speed up the internet. One is to simply act as a cache: A program that queries your ISP's DNS servers once for "www.yahoo.com", and remembers the number (this number is called an "IP") for you so that you don't need to ask your ISP the number for www.yahoo.com every time you go to that web site. This is what I call a downstream DNS server. MaraDNS, naturally, fully supports this mode of operation. <p> The other way is to have your DNS servers do what your ISP's DNS servers do: Directly query various machines on the internet for the IP for "www.yahoo.com", and give you the answer after doing all of the bureaucracy needed to find out what the IP for "www.yahoo.com" is. This is what I call a recursive DNS server. MaraDNS, naturally, also fully supports this mode of operation. Indeed, this is the easiest mode of operation to set up for MaraDNS. <p> Now, as I said before, there is some nasty bureaucracy involved in converting "www.yahoo.com" from a name in to an IP (as long as you don't ask your ISP's DNS servers to do it for you). This bureaucracy involves querying various servers on the internet for "www.yahoo.com". To make a long story short, if you want to host your own domains, such as "www.yourname.com", you will need to run your own DNS server. This kind of DNS server is not used to speed up the internet, but is used so that other DNS servers can find out the IP for "www.yourname.com". This kind of DNS server is called an authoritative DNS server. MaraDNS, you guessed it, fully supports this mode of operation. </body>