Each machine on the Internet must have a unique address The Internet stores this address as a number, e g , 131 230 73 55 This number is difficult for people to work with, however, so a verbal version of each numerical address is also created, e g , reliant c-cwis siu edu When you use this name, such as to send e-mail to john@reliant c-cwis siu edu, it must be matched with the numerical address the computer understands In the early days of the Internet, a "look-up" table was stored on each machine Now, a nameserver is assigned for each LAN This nameserver knows about its own network Each nameserver knows about a domain nameserver that it goes to for addresses it does not know The domain nameserver in turn knows about the master servers for the Internet When you use an address that your local nameserver does not know, it forwards the request to the next-higher level of nameserver, until the server is found that is responsible for addresses in that local network
(name server or host server) - A program or computer that translates (maps) names from one form into another For example, Domain Name Servers (DNSs) map domain names to IP addresses
A name server is a computer that contains a list of domain names and the associated IP addresses When a domain name is typed in a web browser, the nameserver associates that with the IP address and the correct web site opens in the web browser
A machine that keeps track of what different domain names and corresponding numeric addresses are used in a network environment Also used to translate domain names into IP numbers for connection requests
A computer connected to the Internet and used to resolve domain names to IP addresses, i e it looks up domain names in its tables and returns the value of the associated IP address Most web hosting companies as well as many business have one or more machines assigned as nameservers
A computer running a program that converts domain names into appropriate IP addresses and vice versa Name Servers (also known as Domain Name Servers) are the backbone of the Internet system
In TCP/IP networking terms, a nameserver is a computer that can translate a human-readable name (such as "foo bar com") into a numeric address (such as "10 0 2 14")
Sometimes called a "host " A computer (server) that has both the software and the data (zone files) needed to resolve domain names to Internet Protocol (IP) numbers Domain names must be programmed into a minimum of two nameservers hosted on separate networks HowStuffWorks com has an excellent article about How Domain Nameservers Work It's a great read! top
A device that translates (or resolves) text hostnames (such as alex ctcorp com) into their numeric IP address equivalents (such as 192 0 1 55) IP addresses can be routed easily since hosts on the network know how to map numeric addresses to exact hosts Hosts have more trouble with names, and this is where name servers come in No Telnet connect request can be attempted until a numeric address is known for a host, so if there is no accessible name server (or the ETS has not been told of its identity with the Set Server Nameserver command), numeric addresses must be used
name server
Heceleme
name serv·er
Türkçe nasıl söylenir
neym sırvır
Telaffuz
/ˈnām ˈsərvər/ /ˈneɪm ˈsɜrvɜr/
Etimoloji
[ 'nAm ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English, from Old English nama; akin to Old High German namo name, Latin nomen, Greek onoma, onyma.