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BIND 9 BIND version 9 is a major rewrite of nearly all aspects of the underlying BIND architecture. This re-architecting of BIND was necessitated by the expected demands of: - Domain name system growth, particularly in very large zones such as .COM - Protocol enhancements necessary to securely query and update zones - Protocol enhancements necessary to take advantage of certain architectural features of IP version 6 These demands implied performance requirements that were not necessarily easy to attain with the BIND version 8 architecture. In particular, BIND must not only be able to run on multi-processor multi-threaded systems, but must take full advantage of the performance enhancements these architectures can provide. In addition, the underlying data storage architecture of BIND version 8 does not lend itself to implementing alternative back end databases, such as would be desirable for the support of multi-gigabyte zones. As such zones are easily foreseeable in the relatively near future, the data storage architecture needed revision. The feature requirements for BIND version 9 included: - Scalability Thread safety Multi-processor scalability Support for very large zones - Security Support for DNSSEC Support for TSIG Auditability (code and operation) Firewall support (split DNS) - Portability - Maintainability - Protocol Enhancements IXFR, DDNS, Notify, EDNS0 Improved standards conformance - Operational enhancements High availability and reliability Support for alternative back end databases - IP version 6 support IPv6 resource records (A6, DNAME, etc.) Bitstring labels APIs BIND version 9 development has been underwritten by the following organizations: Sun Microsystems, Inc. Hewlett Packard Compaq Computer Corporation IBM Process Software Corporation Silicon Graphics, Inc. Network Associates, Inc. U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency USENIX Association Stichting NLnet - NLnet Foundation BIND 9.1.0a1 This is an unreleased alpha version of BIND 9.1.0. For a detailed list of user-visible changes from previous releases, see the CHANGES file. Building BIND 9 currently requires a UNIX system with an ANSI C compiler, basic POSIX support, and a good pthreads implementation. We've had successful builds and tests on the following systems: AIX 4.3 COMPAQ Tru64 UNIX 4.0D COMPAQ Tru64 UNIX 5 (with IPv6 EAK) FreeBSD 3.4-STABLE HP-UX 11 IRIX64 6.5 NetBSD-current (with unproven-pthreads-0.17) Red Hat Linux 6.0, 6.1, 6.2 Solaris 2.6, 7, 8 To build, just ./configure make Several environment variables that can be set before running configure will affect compilation: CC The C compiler to use. configure tries to figure out the right one for supported systems. CFLAGS C compiler flags. Defaults to include -g and/or -O2 as supported by the compiler. STD_CINCLUDES System header file directories. Can be used to specify where add-on thread or IPv6 support is, for example. Defaults to empty string. STD_CDEFINES Any additional preprocessor symbols you want defined. Defaults to empty string. To build shared libraries, specify "--with-libtool" on the configure command line. If your operating system has integrated support for IPv6, it will be used automatically. If you have installed KAME IPv6 separately, use "--with-kame[=PATH]" to specify its location. To see additional configure options, run "configure --help". "make install" will install "named" and the various BIND 9 libraries. By default, installation is into /usr/local, but this can be changed with the "--prefix" option when running "configure". If you're planning on making changes to the BIND 9 source, you should also "make depend". If you're using Emacs, you might find "make tags" helpful. Building with gcc is not supported, unless gcc is the vendor's usual compiler (e.g. the various BSD systems, Linux). Parts of the library can be tested by running "make test" from the bin/tests subdirectory. Documentation The BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual is included with the source distribution in HTML and plain text format, in the doc/arm directory. A PDF version can be downloaded separately at <http://www.nominum.com/resources/>. Some of the programs in the BIND 9 distribution have man pages under the doc/man directory. In particular, the command line options of "named" are documented in doc/man/bind/named.8. The man pages are currently not installed automatically by "make install". If you are upgrading from BIND 8, please read the migration notes in doc/misc/migration. Bug Reports and Mailing Lists Bugs reports should be sent to bind9-bugs@isc.org To join the BIND 9 Users mailing list, send mail to bind9-users-request@isc.org If you're planning on making changes to the BIND 9 source code, you might want to join the BIND 9 Workers mailing list. Send mail to bind9-workers-request@isc.org
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