Mark.Andrews@isc.org writes: > If you never update the child then it is an *administrative* error. Changing the serial number too early is also an administrative error. Here's a summary of our three examples of administrative errors: 1. Failing to update the parent serial number after updating the glue in all the child servers. As you keep pointing out, this error can cause problems with BIND 8: the data will be inconsistent until the serial number is updated. 2. Failing to update the parent serial number after updating the glue in the parent master. This error can cause problems with BIND 9 (and BIND 8, of course): the data will be inconsistent until the serial number is updated. 3. Failing to update the data in the child master. This error can cause problems with BIND 9 (and BIND 8, of course): the data will be inconsistent until the child data is updated (and the serial numbers handled properly). In every case, the administrator is violating RFC 1034 (as you have admitted), and is creating a configuration that does not work properly with most DNS software deployed in the real world. You persist in drawing a completely unjustified line between the first error and the other two errors. You claim that allowable administrative action is defined by BIND 9---never mind what RFC 1034 says, and never mind the rest of the installed base. You cycle endlessly between ``BIND 9 is doing the Right Thing'' and ``BIND 9 handles that situation'' and ``that situation is not actually an error,'' attempting to defend each part of the BIND 9 religion by showing how it fits with the other parts. The circularity is pathetic. In situations where there's a difference between the software and the spec---for example, actions that are prohibited by RFC 1034 even though they work in the real world, or vice versa---one can reasonably discuss whether the actions should be considered errors. But the above actions do _not_ work and are _not_ allowed by the spec. If you want to support them in BIND 9, fine, but you have no basis for demanding that the rest of us support them too. ---D. J. Bernstein, Associate Professor, Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, University of Illinois at Chicago