Nice to see this here, also see the cross post on the Prossimo Blog (same just more official looking): <a href="https://www.memorysafety.org/blog/announcing-hickory-dns/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.memorysafety.org/blog/announcing-hickory-dns/</a><p>Since the title here doesn’t state so, this is a direct continuation of the work that’s been going on for the last 8 years on Trust-DNS. When Josh and the ISRG started discussing with me putting more direct effort behind the project there were some concerns about the Trust-DNS trademark. “Trust” and “DNS” being common words that appear together often when folks refer to their own DNS software or services. So then we started discussing a rebranding.<p>Over the next couple of weeks I’ll be applying the brand name to the repo and all the crates, etc., so please be patient as we perform some of the necessary tasks associated with this rebranding effort.<p>I’m personally really excited about ISRG’s involvement and their entire Prossimo project, and I’m hoping this opens a great new chapter for Hickory DNS.
If you don't know what is Trust-DNS / Hickory DNS, this seems to be the repo: <a href="https://github.com/bluejekyll/trust-dns">https://github.com/bluejekyll/trust-dns</a>
<i>The Hickory DNS project supports DNSSEC, DoT, DoH, and DoQ.</i><p>DoQ? It's DNS over QUIC.<p>QUIC? <i>Quick UDP Internet Connections (pronounced quick) is an experimental transport layer network protocol designed by Google.</i><p>Google? Is QUIC like AMP and Manifest v3, something Google created to maximize Google wealth & internet crappiness? I don't know.<p>Do you know if QUIC is awful or helpful? Ever play with DoQ?