4749. [func] The ISC DLV service has been shut down, and all
DLV records have been removed from dlv.isc.org.
- Removed references to ISC DLV in documentation
- Removed DLV key from bind.keys
- No longer use ISC DLV by default in delv
[RT #46155]
4445. [cleanup] isc_errno_toresult() can now be used to call the
formerly private function isc__errno2result().
[RT #43050]
4444. [bug] Fixed some issues related to dyndb: A bug caused
braces to be omitted when passing configuration text
from named.conf to a dyndb driver, and there was a
use-after-free in the sample dyndb driver. [RT #43050]
Patch for dyndb driver submitted by Petr Spacek at Red Hat.
4040. [func] Added server-side support for pipelined TCP
queries. TCP connections are no longer closed after
the first query received from a client. (The new
"keep-response-order" option allows clients to be
specified for which the old behavior will still be
used.) [RT #37821]
3983. [bug] Change #3940 was incomplete: negative trust anchors
could be set to last up to a week, but the
"nta-lifetime" and "nta-recheck" options were
still limted to one day. [RT #37522]
3535. [func] Add support for setting Differentiated Services Code
Point (DSCP) values in named. Most configuration
options which take a "port" option (e.g.,
listen-on, forwarders, also-notify, masters,
notify-source, etc) can now also take a "dscp"
option specifying a code point for use with
outgoing traffic, if supported by the underlying
OS. [RT #27596]
3506. [func] When setting "max-cache-size" and "max-acache-size",
the keyword "unlimited" is no longer defined as equal
to 4 gigabytes (except on 32-bit platforms); it
means literally unlimited. [RT #32358]
3505. [bug] When setting "max-cache-size" and "max-acache-size",
larger values than 4 gigabytes could not be set
explicitly, though larger sizes were available
when setting cache size to 0. This has been
corrected; the full range is now available.
[RT #32358]
3501. [func] zone-statistics now takes three options: full,
terse, and none. "yes" and "no" are retained as
synonyms for full and terse, respectively. [RT #29165]