On 02/19/2013 08:59 PM, Bry8 Star wrote: > ofcourse it is now visible. which is good. > so removing it would not be good. even if bind has built into it > older or latest hint. My point, what I have learned over the past few days, is that having a hint stub for the roots is an artifact of the old way in bind. Today's bind no longer needs it. The built in file will supply at LEAST on working root that would then provide the current list of root addresses. Both the IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. For this to break would require that EVERY root address to change. So continuing and old practice is just not the best thing. Even I (I am an old dog at 62; I sat in front of my first teletype in 11th grade in 1965 tied into a GE Mark IV) can learn to leave chroot behind for selinux. Likewise I can figure out that bind can now find the roots by itself and I don't need to provide the current list of hints which of course is only hints. It then learns what is real out there. So let's get with it. Eventhough Centos 6.3 comes with bind 4.8.2 which in bind releases is OLD (Redhat DOES back port security patches), it is new enough for most of our needs. > > Received from John R Pierce, on 2013-02-20 1:20 AM: >> On 2/19/2013 4:35 PM, Bry8 Star wrote: >>> they can do so bit easily if the old one is visible. >> whats not visible about /var/named/named.ca ? its even listed in >> /etc/named.conf as the root zone. >> >> >> >> >> > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos