Does ISC Bind software by native has any dns tunneling prevention embedded ?
Thanks
Wysłane z Yahoo Mail do iPhone
--
Visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from
this list
ISC funds the development of this software with paid support subscriptions.
Contact us
Thank you for all your assistance. I have made the decision to
decommission Bind9 and install Unbound in its place. There seem to be a
lot more configuration options that might help me with the problems I am
having. Problems I never had with Windows Server 2003.
Thanks anyway and take care of
Sure. Your decision, of course. But any network application is only going
to work if the underlying network supporting it doesn't do silly things
with its traffic.
On Thu, 22 May 2025 at 15:23, wrote:
> Thank you for all your assistance. I have made the decision to
> decommission Bind9 and insta
No. This is not a thing regular DNS servers do.-- Mark AndrewsOn 23 May 2025, at 00:23, Karol Nowicki via bind-users wrote:
Does ISC Bind software by native has any dns tunneling prevention embedded ? Thanks Wysłane z Yahoo Mail do iPhone
-- Visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users
Am 22.05.2025 um 14:23:05 Uhr schrieb Karol Nowicki via bind-users:
> Does ISC Bind software by native has any dns tunneling prevention
> embedded ?
Please give more info what you want to accomplish.
> Wysłane z Yahoo Mail do iPhone
Please configure your mail software not to include such lines.
On Thursday, May 22, 2025 4:23:05 PM CEST Karol Nowicki via bind-users wrote:
> Does ISC Bind software by native has any dns tunneling prevention embedded?
> Thanks
BIND on its own does not do this. Assuming that you are running it on a LAN as
a resolver meanwhile, you can make it the only thing
On Thursday, May 22, 2025 4:23:05 PM CEST Karol Nowicki via bind-users wrote:
> Does ISC Bind software by native has any dns tunneling prevention embedded?
> Thanks
BIND on its own does not do this. Assuming that you are running it on a LAN as
a resolver meanwhile, you can make it the only thing
On 5/21/25 23:38, Ben Scott wrote:
What I’ve noticed is that at startup I’m using about 33K pages as the VSZ (per
top on x86_64 hardware).
VSZ (virtual size) just counts the number of virtual memory pages associated
with the process in some way. That includes RAM, but also memory mapped fi
8 matches
Mail list logo