2
0
mirror of https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9 synced 2025-08-29 21:47:59 +00:00

minor updates

This commit is contained in:
Brian Wellington 2001-02-05 20:15:28 +00:00
parent 15bc0af6a1
commit ebb48478db

View File

@ -21,7 +21,8 @@ a device or file containing entropy/random data can be specified.
Serving Secure Zones
When acting as an authoritative name server, BIND9 includes KEY, SIG
and NXT records in responses as specified in RFC2535.
and NXT records in responses as specified in RFC2535 when the request
has the DO flag set in the query.
Response generation for wildcard records in secure zones is not fully
supported. Responses indicating the nonexistence of a name include a
@ -75,16 +76,16 @@ version does not make use of any platform-specific assembly language
routines.
On many platforms, particularly i386 and SPARC, a significant
improvement in signing and verification speed can be achieved linking
BIND 9 with a separate OpenSSL library that uses hand-optimized
improvement in signing and verification speed can be achieved by
linking BIND 9 with a separate OpenSSL library that uses hand-optimized
assembly language routines. To do this, you need to install OpenSSL
version 0.9.5a or newer separately from the BIND 9 tree prior to
building BIND 9, using the default openssl configuration settings
which will cause it to be built with assembly language routines. Then
specifying the "--with-openssl" option to the BIND 9 configure script
specify the "--with-openssl" option to the BIND 9 configure script
to make BIND 9 link against the system openssl library rather than its
own. For example, if openssl was installed under /usr/local, use
"configure --with-openssl=/usr/local".
$Id: dnssec,v 1.10 2001/01/09 21:50:26 bwelling Exp $
$Id: dnssec,v 1.11 2001/02/05 20:15:28 bwelling Exp $