[deployment-guide/comm-rel: 284/727] Updated the indexing.

Jaromir Hradilek jhradile at fedoraproject.org
Tue Oct 19 12:48:28 UTC 2010


commit 48d41c0c5a2fc503f8a309c66fdc7b267fe117e3
Author: Jaromir Hradilek <jhradile at redhat.com>
Date:   Mon Aug 9 13:29:45 2010 +0200

    Updated the indexing.

 en-US/The_BIND_DNS_Server.xml |   32 ++++++++++++++------------------
 1 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/en-US/The_BIND_DNS_Server.xml b/en-US/The_BIND_DNS_Server.xml
index 7197ea6..04773bd 100644
--- a/en-US/The_BIND_DNS_Server.xml
+++ b/en-US/The_BIND_DNS_Server.xml
@@ -12,24 +12,6 @@
     <primary>BIND</primary>
     <secondary>introducing</secondary>
   </indexterm>
-  <para>
-    <systemitem class="protocol">DNS</systemitem> (Domain Name System), also known as a <firstterm>nameserver</firstterm>, is a network system that associates hostnames with their respective IP adresses. For users, this has the advantage that they can refer to machines on the network by names that are usually easier to remember than the numerical network adresses. For system administrators, using the nameserver allows them to change the IP adress for a host without ever affecting the name-based queries, or to decide which machines handle these queries.
-  </para>
-  <para>
-    This chapter covers <systemitem class="service">BIND</systemitem> (Berkeley Internet Name Domain), the DNS server included in &MAJOROS;. It focuses on the structure of its configuration files, and describes how to administer it both locally and remotely.
-  </para>
-  <note>
-    <title>Note</title>
-    <para>
-      BIND is also known as the service <command>named</command> in &MAJOROS;. You can manage it via the Services Configuration Tool (<command>system-config-service</command>).
-    </para>
-  </note>
-  <section id="s1-bind-introduction">
-    <title>Introduction to DNS</title>
-    <indexterm>
-      <primary>BIND</primary>
-      <secondary>introducing</secondary>
-    </indexterm>
     <indexterm>
       <primary>DNS</primary>
       <seealso>BIND</seealso>
@@ -56,6 +38,20 @@
       <secondary>root nameserver</secondary>
       <tertiary>definition of</tertiary>
     </indexterm>
+  <para>
+    <systemitem class="protocol">DNS</systemitem> (Domain Name System), also known as a <firstterm>nameserver</firstterm>, is a network system that associates hostnames with their respective IP adresses. For users, this has the advantage that they can refer to machines on the network by names that are usually easier to remember than the numerical network adresses. For system administrators, using the nameserver allows them to change the IP adress for a host without ever affecting the name-based queries, or to decide which machines handle these queries.
+  </para>
+  <para>
+    This chapter covers <systemitem class="service">BIND</systemitem> (Berkeley Internet Name Domain), the DNS server included in &MAJOROS;. It focuses on the structure of its configuration files, and describes how to administer it both locally and remotely.
+  </para>
+  <note>
+    <title>Note</title>
+    <para>
+      BIND is also known as the service <command>named</command> in &MAJOROS;. You can manage it via the Services Configuration Tool (<command>system-config-service</command>).
+    </para>
+  </note>
+  <section id="s1-bind-introduction">
+    <title>Introduction to DNS</title>
     <para>
       <!-- RHEL5:        When hosts on a network connect to one another via a hostname, also called a <firstterm>fully qualified domain name (FQDN)</firstterm>, DNS is used to associate the names of machines to the IP address for the host. --> DNS associates hostnames with their respective IP addresses, so that when users want to connect to other machines on the network, they can refer to them by name, without having to remember IP addresses.
     </para>


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