Network domain

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A network domain is an administrative grouping of multiple private computer networks or local hosts within the same infrastructure.[1][2][3] Domains can be identified using a domain name; domains which need to be accessible from the public Internet can be assigned a globally unique name within the Domain Name System (DNS).

A domain controller is a server that automates the logins, user groups, and architecture of a domain, rather than manually coding this information on each host in the domain. It is common practice, but not required, to have the domain controller act as a DNS server.[4] That is, it would assign names to hosts in the network based on their IP addresses.

Usage

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Use of the term network domain first appeared in 1965 and saw increasing usage beginning in 1985.[5] It initially applied to the naming of radio stations based on broadcast frequency and geographic area.[6] It entered its current usage by network theorists to describe solutions to the problems of subdividing a single homogeneous LAN and joining multiple networks, possibly constituted of different network architectures.[7]

References

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