Weird...first private reply to me, someone says
they can't see the message. What I did was a cut
and past from terminal in MacOS into the Eudora
I've been using since just before it was
discontinued.
Below, what I see makes it look like there's more
than one layer of IDN messing with my mind.
At 11:39 -0400 7/9/12, Edward Lewis wrote:
Running dig on a newly built Linux machine I see
the below output (and man page explaining it).
To me this just seems wrong. Mucking with the
bare metal here is not desirable. The zone *is*
x n - - x k c 2 a l 3 h y e 2 a . , it is not
the native script version (which is unprintable
on the machine I'm on).
Comments? Should DiG's output be unchanged or
is this "good?" Should the OS vendors be asked
to stop this?
$ d i g x n - - x k c 2 a l 3 h y e 2 a . n s
; < < > > D i G 9 . 7 . 3 - P 3 - R e d H a
t - 9 . 7 . 3 - 2 . e l 6 _ 1 . P 3 . 3 < < > >
x n - - x k c 2 a l 3 h y e 2 a . n s ; ; g l
o b a l o p t i o n s : + c m d ; ; G o t
a n s w e r : ; ; - > > H E A D E R < < - o
p c o d e : Q U E R Y , s t a t u s : N O E
R R O R , i d : 2 0 8 2 3 ; ; f l a g s :
q r r d r a ; Q U E R Y : 1 , A N S W E
R : 9 , A U T H O R I T Y : 0 , A D D I T
I O N A L : 0
; ; Q U E S T I O N S E C T I O N :
;á¾ôÕï» . I N N S
; ; A N S W E R S E C T I O N : á¾ôÕï»
. 8 6 4 0 0 I N N S n s - d
. n i c . l k . á¾ôÕï» . 8 6 4 0
0 I N N S n s - l . n i c . l k .
á¾ôÕï» . 8 6 4 0 0 I N
N S n s - t . n i c . l k . á¾ôÕï» .
8 6 4 0 0 I N N S l k . c
o m m u n i t y d n s . n e t . á¾ôÕï» .
8 6 4 0 0 I N N S n i c .
l k - a n y c a s t . p c h . n e t .
á¾ôÕï» . 8 6 4 0 0 I N
N S n s 1 . a c . l k . á¾ôÕï» .
8 6 4 0 0 I N N S n s 3 . a c . l
k . á¾ôÕï» . 8 6 4 0 0 I N
N S n s - b . n i c . l k . á¾ôÕï» .
8 6 4 0 0 I N N S n s - c
. n i c . l k .
; ; Q u e r y t i m e : 2 8 1 m s e c ;
; S E R V E R : 1 7 2 . 1 6 . 0 . 2 3 # 5 3
( 1 7 2 . 1 6 . 0 . 2 3 ) ; ; W H E N : M o
n J u l 9 1 5 : 3 3 : 2 7 2 0 1 2 ; ;
M S G S I Z E r c v d : 2 4 0
It's trying to be nice (from the man page):
IDN SUPPORT
If dig has been built with IDN (internationalized domain name)
support, it can accept and display non-ASCII domain names. dig
appropriately converts character encoding of domain name before
sending a request to DNS server or displaying a reply from the
server. If you´d like to turn off the IDN support for some reason,
defines the IDN_DISABLE environment variable. The IDN support is
disabled if the variable is set when dig runs.
I like the "for some reason" quip.
--
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Edward Lewis
NeuStar You can leave a voice message at +1-571-434-5468
2012...time to reuse those 1984 calendars!
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--
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Edward Lewis
NeuStar You can leave a voice message at +1-571-434-5468
2012...time to reuse those 1984 calendars!
_______________________________________________
dns-operations mailing list
dns-operations@lists.dns-oarc.net
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations
dns-jobs mailing list
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-jobs