User manual
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 Appendix D
Domain Name System
Basic DNS 
The Internet uses a distributed naming system called the Domain 
Naming System (DNS). DNS allows us to refer to computers by host 
names as well as by Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. 
IP addresses are hard to remember and are inconvenient to use. DNS 
allows us to use host names and domain names which can resolved to IP 
addresses. DNS servers translate host names and domain names (for 
example, www.cobalt.com) to an associated IP address (for example, 
192.168.1.10.) 
For example, Cobalt Networks has registered the domain name 
“cobalt.com” for use by our servers “mail.cobalt.com”, 
“www.cobalt.com” and others. The host names “mail” and “www” 
represent different servers registered in the same domain. 
A domain name is a computer name suffix shared by a group of 
computers in the same organization. A domain name should be 
associated with an IP address through a Forward Lookup record. 
Domain names are organized in a hierarchy; this hierarchy includes 
your company or server name, and a country code (for example, .uk 
or .ca) or a top-level domain (for example, .com or .edu). 
A Web site on the server is created with one IP address, one host name 
and one domain name that together establish the identity of that Web 
site on the Internet. 
Each domain name requires a primary domain authority on one DNS 
server. A secondary DNS server acts as a backup to the primary. DNS 
information is configurable only on the primary server, and not on the 
backup server. 










