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The '''DNS Hierarchical Name Space''' is a map of how ] ]s determine what ] to connect to given a ] | The '''DNS Hierarchical Name Space''' is a map of how ] ]s determine what ] to connect to given a ] | ||
== Registrars == | == Registrars == | ||
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database (imaginary)* | database (imaginary)* | ||
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Revision as of 13:52, 4 April 2006
The DNS Hierarchical Name Space is a map of how DNS servers determine what IP address to connect to given a URL
Registrars
Registrars, such as VeriSign, the operator of the .com and .net top-level domains, let any company, organization, or private individual register a TLD for any number of years. The domain name is then added to the Whois directory, and may point to a specific DNS server, which translates the domain name into an IP address.
Map
Domain names are read from right to left. Different sub-domains under a domain name are generally used to point to different servers, however, this is not always the case. For example, the[REDACTED] community might want a Spanish version of the site to be on a server in Mexico. So, es.wikipedia.org might point to 67.167.39.4, while en.wikipedia.org and database.en.wikipedia.org can both point to 24.73.285.3, just different pages.
. -----------------------|----------------------------------- / / | \ \ \ com net mil org gov int | | | | | | google nsf army [REDACTED] whitehouse fr / | \ en es sv | database (imaginary)*Category: