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Full Discussion: DNS registration
Special Forums IP Networking DNS registration Post 26077 by RTM on Sunday 11th of August 2002 01:37:37 PM
Old 08-11-2002
When you register the domain name, you must have dns servers set up to handle queries. If you do a whois on Network Solutions (now VeriSign) for worldcom.com and mci.com, you will see both have the same dns servers.

You can see differences in the two when you go into nslookup.
Set type to mx and put in their domain names. They share the same MX records but the DNS servers have changed (two extra for wcom.com).

To learn more, check out "DNS and Bind" by By Paul Albitz, Cricket Liu (Oreilly, visit Mr. DNS, or do a search on goggle.com. The is an abundant supply of knowledge about the subject on the Internet.

One answer to your question can be found after searching on Mr. DNS
 

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dnsextd(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						dnsextd(8)

NAME
dnsextd -- BIND Extension Daemon SYNOPSIS
dnsextd DESCRIPTION
dnsextd is a daemon invoked at boot time, running alongside BIND 9, to implement two EDNS0 extensions to the standard DNS protocol. dnsextd allows clients to perform DNS Updates with an attached lease lifetime, so that if the client crashes or is disconnected from the net- work, its address records will be automatically deleted after the lease expires. dnsextd allows clients to perform long-lived queries. Instead of rapidly polling the server to discover when information changes, long-lived queries enable a client to indicate its interest in some set of data, and then be notified asynchronously by the server whenever any of that data changes. dnsextd has no user-specifiable command-line argument, and users should not run dnsextd manually. SEE ALSO
mDNS(1) mDNSResponder(8) For information on Dynamic DNS Update, see RFC 2136 "Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)" For information on Dynamic DNS Update Leases, see http://files.dns-sd.org/draft-dns-update-leases.txt For information on Long-Lived Queries, see http://files.dns-sd.org/draft-dns-llq.txt BUGS
dnsextd bugs are tracked in Apple Radar component "mDNSResponder". HISTORY
The dnsextd daemon first appeared in Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger). Darwin June 1, 2019 Darwin
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