To:
Patrik F?ltstr?m <paf@cisco.com>
Cc:
dnsop@cafax.se
From:
Andrew Partan <post-dnsop@partan.com>
Date:
Mon, 4 Nov 2002 21:07:48 -0500
Content-Disposition:
inline
In-Reply-To:
<C7FC4174-F006-11D6-868E-0003934B2128@cisco.com>
Sender:
owner-dnsop@cafax.se
User-Agent:
Mutt/1.4i
Subject:
Re: DoS and anycast
On Mon, Nov 04, 2002 at 04:04:56PM +0100, Patrik F?ltstr?m wrote: > Because of this, for every Y, there must be an X which know where all > copies of Y is, so they can see/detect which one have wrong data -- and > fix it. The organization X should even have a warning system which > warns them when one of the copies of Y give wrong data / is out of sync. I have to agree with Patrik. If there isn't some organization that knows how this thing is deployed and knows all of the otherwise hidden stuff, then this just isn't going to work. Its going to break and you will not be able to figure out why. I remember watching the aroot experiment and there was no real method to finding out how & why something was busted. Thins just sometimes worked & sometimes didn't. --asp #---------------------------------------------------------------------- # To unsubscribe, send a message to <dnsop-request@cafax.se>.