RE: [NSI-RRP] IP Address Uniqueness

From: Hollenbeck, Scott (shollenb@netsol.com)
Date: Fri Jun 30 2000 - 09:11:50 EDT

  • Next message: Hollenbeck, Scott: "RE: [NSI-RRP] IP Address Uniqueness"

    Using the example you provided below, the current GRRP requirements draft
    says that a transfer of bar.com would transfer management authority for
    bar.com, ns.bar.com, and any other name servers *.bar.com from registrar A
    to registrar B. Management of ns.foo.com and ns.example.com remains with
    the registrars of foo.com and example.com.

    Scott Hollenbeck
    Network Solutions, Inc. Registry

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Patrik Fältström [mailto:paf@swip.net]
    Sent: Friday, June 30, 2000 9:03 AM
    To: Hollenbeck, Scott; rrp@nsiregistry.com
    Subject: RE: [NSI-RRP] IP Address Uniqueness

    At 08.55 -0400 00-06-30, Hollenbeck, Scott wrote:
    >I think it's important to maintain an association between a name server and
    >the parent TLD, and transferring name servers along with the parent domain
    >simplifies the transfer process quite a bit.

    You don't transfer nameservers with the parent domain, you transfer a
    domain together with the nameservers which host the domain (i.e. the
    nameservers might not be in the same domain as the one that is
    transferred).

    What do you do if you have at registrar A:

    foo.com. IN NS ns.foo.com.
    foo.com. IN NS ns.bar.com.
    foo.com. IN NS ns.example.net.
    bar.com. IN NS ns.bar.com.
    bar.com. IN NS ns.foo.com.
    bar.com. IN NS ns.example.net.
    ns.foo.com. IN A 192.168.1.11
    ns.bar.com. IN A 192.168.1.11
    ns.example.net IN A 192.168.1.11

    Now, you transfer bar.com. to registrar B. What records are moved?
    (The registry both A and B are using are registry for com and net.)
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