The ARPA Host Name Server Protocol (NAMESERVER[1]), is an obsolete network protocol used in translating a host name to an Internet address. IANA Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP) port 42 for NAMESERVER; this port is more commonly used by the Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) on Microsoft operating systems.
Application
editThe NAMESERVER protocol is used by the DARPA Trivial Name Server, a server process called tnamed
that is provided in some implementations of UNIX.[2][3][4]
Replacement
editSupport for the NAMESERVER protocol has been deprecated, and may not be available in the latest implementations of all UNIX operating systems.[5] The Domain Name System (DNS) has replaced the ARPA Host Name Server Protocol and the DARPA Trivial Name Server.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ OFFICIAL INTERNET PROTOCOLS (see "IEN 116" at top of page 31)
- ^ DARPA Trivial Name Server NeXT NEXTSTEP documentation
- ^ DARPA Trivial Name Server Sun Solaris documentation[permanent dead link]
- ^ Trivial Name Server SCO UnixWare documentation Archived July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Somewhat incomplete list of UNIX operating systems that either support or do not support the DARPA Trivial Name Server (tnetd)
External links
edit