TVL CSS12 Q2 M8 Edited
TVL CSS12 Q2 M8 Edited
TVL CSS12 Q2 M8 Edited
This learning material hopes to engage the learners into guided and independent
learning activities at their own pace and time. Further, this also aims to help
learners acquire the needed 21st century skills especially the 5 Cs namely:
Communication, Collaboration, Creativity, Critical Thinking and Character while
taking into consideration their needs and circumstances.
In addition to the material in the main text, you will also see this box in the body of
the module:
As a facilitator you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this module.
You also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing them to
manage their own learning. Moreover, you are expected to encourage and assist the
learners as they do the tasks included in the module.
EX PECT AT I ON
PR ET EST
TRUE or FALSE
Directions: Read each statement below carefully. Write T if the statement is correct
and F if wrong in the space provided before each number.
Step to install DHCP. Write the correct word on the space provided.
Click Add Roles from the Initial Configuration Tasks Window or from
When the Add Roles Wizard comes up, you can click Next on that screen. Next,
select that you want to add the Role and click Next.
Configure some basic IP settings and configure the first DHCP Scope. It was
shown the network connection binding and asked to verify
connection,
4. Entering domain and DNS information
The wizard is asking, “what interface do you want to provide DHCP services on?”
took the default and clicked Next. Next, entered , Primary DNS
and Alternate DNS and clicked Next.
5. Adding a new DHCP Scope
Click to add a new scope. Name Scope (Scope name), configured
the starting and endingIP address and subnet default gateway, type of subnet.],
and activated the scope.
6. Choose to Disable stateless mode for this server and
click Next.Then, confirmed DHCP Installation Selections and clicked Install.
Thirty years ago, when the Internet was still in its infancy when you wanted to visit
a website you had to know the IP address of that site. That’s because computers
are and were only able to communicate using numbers. This is an IP address:
127.33.54.200. It’s long, hard to remember, and we (humans, I presume) are not
robots. We needed a way to translate computer-readable information into human-
readable. And it had to be fast, lightweight, and scalable. In the early 1980’s, Paul
Mockapetris came up with a system that automatically mapped IP addresses to
domain names and the DNS was born. This same system still serves as the
backbone of the modern Internet today.
Definition
The Domain Name System (DNS) is the phonebook of the internet. Human’s access
information online through domain names. It converts human readable domain
names (like: www.google.com) into Internet Protocol (IP) addresses (like:
173.194.39.78). Computers can only communicate using series of numbers, so
DNS was developed as a sort of “phone book” that translates the domain you enter
in your browser into a computer readable IP.
Web browsers interact through Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. DNS translates
domain names to IP addresses so browsers can load internet resources.
difficult to remember for human users. The domain name system (DNS) combines
the requirements of humans and computers by enabling a connection, for example
to a website, without having to know the corresponding IP-address. DNS servers
play an important role here.
DNS servers translate domain names, such as example.com, into IP addresses.
During this resolution process, the DNS records on the server are searched and, if
available, the domain name data set is returned. If the IP address cannot be found
on this DNS server, the query is sent to other DNS servers until the data for the
respective domain is retrieved.
When you enter a URL into your browser, it starts searching for the corresponding
IP-address in a local file stored on your PC. If it finds no information there, the
request will be redirected until the IP address will be identified. Thereby it passes
the local DNS-Server (usually your internet router), the ISP’s DNS-Server, and the
root name server, which is accountable for the respective Top Level Domain (TLD).
If there is still no information found, the request will be sent to the Network
Information Center (NIC) responsible for the zone.
The NIC’s server will send the address of the zone’s authoritative nameserver to the
ISP. The ISP will then ask this authoritative server for the IP, and send the
information through your router back to your browser. That way the website can be
accessed. If no IP address can be found, an error message is returned. The browser
then indicates that the website could not be found or may not exist.
The best way to understand how each DNS server type works is to follow the DNS
query trail.
ACT I VI T I ES
Directions: Label the routes of Domain Name System (DNS) Queries..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlZC4Jwf3xQ
1. 4.
2. 5.
3.
WR AP UP
The Domain Name System (DNS) is one of the foundations of the internet. It is use
in networking to make our life much easier. It helps people to do their jobs, check
their email or using their smartphones to explore in the internet. Domain Name
System (DNS) is a directory of names that match with numbers. The numbers, in
this case are IP addresses, which computers use to communicate with each other.
Most descriptions of DNS use the analogy of a phone book. DNS is like your
smartphone’s contact list, which matches people’s names with their phone
numbers and email addresses. Then multiply that contact list by everyone else on
the earth.
VALUI NG
We have learned the importance of Domain Name System (DNS) in accessing
information to computer network and to make our life easier in browsing internet.
Discuss how DNS work:
POST T EST
Directions: Encircle the letter of the correct answer.
1. translates domain names to IP addresses to download internet resources
A. DNS C. DHCP
B. Web browser D. URL
2. It interact through Internet protocol IP addresses
A. Web browser C. Server
B. URL D. Webpage
3. It’s typically maintained by your Internet Service Provider (ISP).
A. DNS resolve C. DNS local cache
B. Root nameserver D. TLD nameserver
4. This network keeps track of all the servers that maintain a directory of each
domain, like .com, .net, /org. and so on.
A. DNS resolver C. DNS local cache
B. Root nameserver D. TLD nameserver
5. This server essentially takes control of the DNS query, temporarily becoming
the DNS client.
A. DNS resolver C. DNS local cache
B. Root nameserver D. TLD nameserver
6. This is the final stop for the DNS query.
C. DNS resolver C. DNS local cache
D. Root nameserver D. Authoritative nameserver
7. It maintains a directory of a specific domain.
A. DNS resolver C. TLD nameserver
B. Root nameserver D. Authoritative nameserver
8. It is any temporary storage location for copies of files or data, usually the term
is used in reference to Internet technologies.
A. DNS resolver C. TLD nameserver
B. Cache D. Authoritative nameserver
9. It is another term for DNS server.
A. nameserver C. TLD nameserver
B. Cache D. Authoritative nameserver
10.It is the process of storing copies of files in a cache, or temporary storage
location, so that they can be accessed more quickly.
C. nameserver C. TLD nameserver
D. Cache D. Caching
K EY T O COR R ECT I ON
R E F E R E N CE S
Online Sites:
(access July 27, 2020)
https://dnsmadeeasy.com/support/what-is-dns/
https://www.seobility.net/en/wiki/DNS_Server
https://www.cloudflare.com/learning/dns/what-is-dns/
https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/what-is-a-dns-server/
https://www.cloudflare.com/learning/cdn/what-is-caching/
Images
(access July 27, 2020)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlZC4Jwf3xQ