"Kirk Strauser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > At 2002-11-18T18:12:13Z, "Gary Hennigan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > ...if security is *the* major concern in a DNS installation it's probably > > a good idea to stay away from BIND altogether. > > I'd disagree for one main reason: BIND is Open Source, and tinydns is not. > More security compromises have been found in the former, but it has perhaps > 100 times the number of users testing it and programmers examining it. > Frankly, as a programmer, I would not waste my time auditing tinydns when I > could make a bigger contribution to BIND.
It's not "Open Source" perhaps by some formal definition, but you can certainly look at the source code and publish patches and, according to Bernstein, modify your own copy. So if you're hard-core "Open Source" then you will probably want to avoid all the controversy surrouding Bernsteins licensing. But, he does stand behind the security of his software with cash. Granted, not a lot of cash, but it's a refreshing change from the big companies. Even open source companies that put out sendmail and bind don't do that. Also, getting away from the the licensing controversy, as someone who didn't cut his teeth on BIND, I find the configuration of tinydns much easier. Those BIND config files are not easily understandable and the fact that losing a trailing period (".") can cause the whole thing to come crumbling down was a bit frustrating. Please remember too that I'm coming from the perspective of a small home LAN sysadmin that doesn't have to do things like zone transfers and worrying about root servers. I just have a handful of computers, all locked behind an OpenBSD firewall, using 192.168.0.0/16 addresses, that I want a DNS server for. tinydns suited me much better than BIND. As an aside I also tried qmail. Uggh, what a nightmare to configure! All those small config files hanging out in weird places! After about 5 hours I surrendered and reinstalled Exim. Maybe it's not as secure but I had it up and running in less than an hour with Anomy and bogofilter for my families email. Just my opinion. Gary -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]