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What is a DNS Server?

DNS

The Domain Name System (DNS) Server is a server that is specifically used for matching website hostnames. (like example.com)to their corresponding Internet Protocol or IP addresses. The DNS server contains a database of public IP addresses. And their corresponding domain names. Every device connected to the internet has a unique IP address that helps to identify it. According to the IPv4 or IPV6 protocols. The same goes for web servers that host websites. For example, the IP address of one CDNetworks server located in Mountain View. California is 157.185.170.144. 

DNS servers help us avoid memorization of such long numbers in IP addresses (and even more complex alphanumeric ones in the IPV6 system) as they automatically translate the website names we enter into the browser address bar into these numbers so that the servers can load the right web pages.

Introduction to the Domain Name System

To understand the role of the DNS Server, it is important to know about the Domain Name System. The Domain Name System is essentially a phonebook of the internet. Just like how a phonebook matches individuals to a phone number, the DNS matches a website name to their corresponding IP address.

What is DNS?

The DNS is a system of records of domain names and IP addresses that allows browsers. To find the right IP address that corresponds to a hostname URL entered into it. When we try to access a website. We generally type in their domain names, like cdnetworks.com or wired.com, or nytimes.com. Into the web browser. Web browsers however need to know the exact IP addresses to load content for the website. The DNS is what translates the domain names to the IP addresses so that the resources can be loaded from the website’s server.

Sometimes, websites can have numerous IP addresses corresponding to a single domain name. For example, large sites like Google will have users querying a server from distant parts of the world. The server that a computer from Singapore tries to query will likely be different from the one a different computer from saying Toronto will try to reach. Even if the site name entered in the browser is the same. This is where caching comes in.

Caching 

DNS caching is the process of storing data on the records closer to a requesting client to be able to resolve the query earlier. This avoids the problem of additional queries further down the chain and improves web page load times and reduces bandwidth consumption. 

The amount of time that the records are stored in the cache is called time to live or TTL. This period is important as it determines how “fresh” the DNS records are and whether it matches recent updates to IP addresses.

DNS caching can be done at the browser level or the operating system (OS level).

Since web browsers generally store records for a set amount of time, it is usually the first place that is checked when a user makes a record. Being on the browser, there are fewer steps involved in checking the DNS cache and making the request to an IP address.

Once a query leaves an end user’s machine, the next stop where a match is sought is at the operating system level. A process inside the operating system called the “stub resolver” checks its cache to see if it has the record. If not, the query is sent outside the local network to the Internet Service Provider (ISP).

How Does a DNS Work?

The DNS is responsible for converting the hostname, what we commonly refer to as the website or web page name, to the IP address. The act of entering the domain name is referred to as a DNS query and the process of finding the corresponding IP address is known as DNS resolution.

DNS queries can be of three types: recursive query, iterative query, or non-recursive query.

  1. Recursive query – These are queries where a DNS server has to respond with the requested resource record. If a record cannot be found, the DNS client has to be shown an error message.
  2. Iterative query – These are queries for which the client will continue to request a response from multiple servers until the best response is found, or an error or timeout occurs. If the server is unable to find a match for the query, it will refer to a server authoritative for a lower level of the domain namespace. This referral address is then queried by the DNS client and this process continues with additional DNS servers.
  3. Non-recursive queries – these are queries that are resolved by a resolver when the requested resource is available, either due to the server being authoritative or because the resource is already stored in a cache.

The Different Types of Server

Once a DNS query is entered, it passes through a few different servers before resolution, without any end-user interaction.

  1. DNS recursor 

This is a server designed specifically to receive queries from client machines. It tracks down the DNS record and makes additional requests to meet the DNS queries from the client. The number of requests can be decreased with DNS caching when the requested resources are returned to the precursor early on in the lookup process.

  1. Root name server

This server does the job of translating the human-friendly hostnames into computer-friendly IP addresses. The root server accepts the cursor’s query. And sends it to the TLD nameservers in the next stage, depending on the domain name seen in the query.

  1. Top-Level Domain (TLD) nameserver

The TLD nameservers are responsible for maintaining the information about the domain names. For example, they could contain information about websites ending in “.com” or “.org” or country-level domains like “www.example.com.uk”, “www.example.com.us”, and others. The TLD nameserver will take the query from the root server and point it to the authoritative DNS nameserver associated with the query’s particular domain.

  1. Authoritative nameserver

 In the last step, the authoritative nameserver will return the IP address. Back to the precursor that can relay it to the client. This authoritative nameserver is the one at the bottom of the lookup process. That holds the records. Think of these as the last stop or the final authoritative source of truth in the process.

DNS Lookup vs Resolver

The process by which a server returns a DNS record is called a lookup. So It involves the query of the hostname from the web browser to. The lookup process on the DNS server and back again. The resolver is the server that deals with the first step in the DNS lookup process. And which starts the sequence of steps. That ends in the URL being translated into the IP address for loading the web pages.

First, the user-entered hostname query travels from the web browser to the internet and is received by the recursive resolver. The recursive server then queries the root server which response with the address of the TLD server responsible for storing the domains.

The resolver then makes a DNS request to the corresponding domain’s TLD. And receives the IP address of the domain nameserver. As the last step, the recursive DNS server queries the domain nameserver. And is returned with the IP address to send to the web browser. It is after this DNS lookup process is done. That the browser can request for individual web pages through HTTP requests.

These steps make up a standard lookup process but they can be shortened. With caching. DNS caching allows the storage of the lookup information locally on the browser. The operating system or a remote infrastructure. Which allows some of the steps to be skipped for faster loading.

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