Cliff
Brian Rosen wrote:
I'm not sure I buy this argument.
DNS is sufficiently distributed that I wouldn't consider it
centralized, and
its real life situation is that it is highly reliable and highly
available,
and of course, essentially free (you're paying for DNS service
somewhere,
but it's usually built into your access bill).
If the solution relied in dynamic DNS, then we have a little less of
the
"highly reliable" and "highly available" and "free". You can get one
of
those for sure, and two out of three often, but usually not all three.
Nevertheless I suspect even dynamic DNS is good enough.
I'm not much of a purist. I think Juha's ideas might work and merit
more
thought.
Brian
-----Original Message-----
From: sipping-bounces at ietf.org [ mailto:sipping-bounces at ietf.org ] On
Behalf
Of Brijesh Kumar
Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2005 9:10 AM
To: Juha Heinanen
Cc: sipping at ietf.org
Subject: Re: [Sipping] P2P why not DNS for discovery?
Juha:
----- Original Message -----
From: Juha Heinanen <jh at tutpro.com>
Date: Wednesday, February 2, 2005 9:21 pm
Subject: [Sipping] P2P why not DNS for discovery?
there must be some ery good reasons for inventing all those new p2p
protocols we have read on this mailing list, but i would still
like to
hear why an existing protocol, namely DNS, is not good for discovery?
DNS is good for discovery, but is it P2P?
P2P applications need to run without relying on centralized servers in
networking
infrastructure. So, clearly the use of centralized DNS to resolve
does't
fullfill
that requirement. Actually, there is a project called Distributed DNS
which is
a P2P version of DNS based on DHT. While P2P based DNS is useful idea,
it
is
is n't designed or meant to replace sip registrar function. The
efficiency
of
DHT based search, makes P2P sip a good proposition to explore.
my sip uri is sip:jh at tutpro.com . if someone wants to get my contact
information, they could simply make a sip srv query on jh.tutpro.com,
which my sip ua is keeping up to date via dynamic dns updates either
directly or indirectly using xmlrpc, for example.
what is wrong with this kind of DNS approach?
Nothing wrong. But, this clearly is not P2P approach being
pursued in P2P SIP.
cheers,
--bk
--
Cliff McCollum, M.Sc.
Vice-President Technology and Development, Voice Mobility Inc.
cliff at voicemobility.com
www.voicemobility.com
Voice, Mobile, Fax: (250) 978 4255
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