Resource Records RRs
Resource Records (RRs) are the DNS data records. Their precise
format is defined in RFC
1035 �3.2.1. The most important fields in a resource record
are Name, Class, Type, and Data. Name is a domain name, Class and
Type are two-byte integers, and Data is a variable-length field to
be interpreted in the context of Class and Type. Almost all
Internet applications use Class 1, the Internet Class. Only
those most important to DNS operation are shown here.
Address (A) RRs
Address (A) records match domain names to IP address, and are
both the most important and the most mundane aspect of DNS. See RFC
1035 �3.4.1 for a more detailed description of the A RR. The data section
consists entirely of a 32-bit IP address. Most DNS operations are
queries for A records matching a given domain name. Since hosts
can have multiple IP addresses, corresponding to multiple physical
network interfaces, so it is permissible for multiple A records to
match a given domain name. Normally, only the first one is used,
so chose a host's most reliable IP address and put it first when
constructing name server databases.
ADDRESS A 32 bit Internet address.
Canonical Name (CNAME) RR
Canonical Names (CNAMEs) are the DNS equivalent of aliases or
symbolic links. The data field contains another fully-qualified
DNS name, which should be used as the target of another DNS
operation to acquire the desired information. See RFC
1035 �3.3.1 for a more detailed description of the CNAME RR.
CNAME A <domain-name> which specifies the canonical or primary name for the owner. The owner name is an alias.
Pointer (PTR) RR
Pointers (PTRs) are like CNAMEs in their format - the data area
contains a domain name. The difference between CNAMEs and PTRs is
purely one of semantics. A CNAME specifies an alias, a PTR merely
points to another location in the domain name space. The most
important use of PTRs is to construct the in-addr.arpa
domain, used to convert IP addresses to DNS names (the reverse of
the normal process). See RFC
1035 �3.3.12 for a more detailed description of the PTR RR,
and RFC 1035
�3.5 for a explanation of the in-addr.arpa domain.
PTRDNAME A <domain-name> which points to some location in the
domain name space.
Start of Authority (SOA) RR
A Start of Authority SOA RR marks the beginning of a DNS zone, and is typically seen as the first record in a name server for that domain. See RFC 1035 �3.3.13 for a more detailed description of the SOA RR.
MNAME The <domain-name> of the name server that was the
original or primary source of data for this zone.
RNAME A <domain-name> which specifies the mailbox of the
person responsible for this zone.
SERIAL The unsigned 32 bit version number of the original copy
of the zone. Zone transfers preserve this value. This
value wraps and should be compared using sequence space
arithmetic.
REFRESH A 32 bit time interval before the zone should be
refreshed.
RETRY A 32 bit time interval that should elapse before a
failed refresh should be retried.
EXPIRE A 32 bit time value that specifies the upper limit on
the time interval that can elapse before the zone is no
longer authoritative.
MINIMUM The unsigned 32 bit minimum TTL field that should be
exported with any RR from this zone.
Name Server (NS) RR
An NS RR marks the beginning of a DNS zone and supplies the
domain name of a name server for that zone. It is typically seen
in two places - at the top of a zone, just after the SOA; and at
the start of a subzone, where an NS (and often a paired A) are all
that is required to perform delegation. See RFC
1035 �3.3.11 for a more detailed description of the NS RR.
NSDNAME A <domain-name> which specifies a host which should be
authoritative for the specified class and domain.
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