> On Mar 26, 2019, at 7:23 PM, Brian Dickson <brian.peter.dick...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> We need to start with the base requirements, which is, "I want an apex RR 
> that allows HTTP browser indirection just as if there was a CNAME there”.

Yes, THIS. 

In response to the discussion last November, I put together this draft 
outlining the views of one publisher of a set of websites (me):

https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-york-dnsop-cname-at-apex-publisher-view-01

For reasons outlined in that draft, I want to use a CDN in front of my sites, 
but I also want to retain control of operating my own DNS. (I.e. I don’t want 
to have the CDN also do the DNS hosting for me, too.).

To use a CDN while retaining DNS control, most CDNs require you to set up a 
CNAME pointing to some URL they give you.  When a person then visits that URL, 
the CDN does its own magic inside its own DNS services to provide the visitor 
with the A or AAAA record of the edge server closest to the visitor.

This all works perfectly fine if you use a subdomain such as “www.”. You just 
use a CNAME record and all is fine.

But if you want to drop the “www.” and just use the domain name (example.com), 
then we don’t have any standardized way to do a CNAME-like function at the apex 
of the zone. 

Because this is a common business requirement, most DNS hosting providers / 
operators provide some proprietary method of doing this kind of redirection. 
Either that or a company has to create their own redirection server (something 
we did). Either way, you are locked into a proprietary system with issues I 
outlined in that draft.

As Tim Wicinski mentioned in his review of documents today in DNSOP, this is 
not a simple problem to solve and there are some fundamental (and passionate) 
disagreements about the way forward. 

Tim’s suggestion of an interim (presumably virtual?) to focus specifically on 
this issue seems to make sense to me.

As I stated in the draft, I don’t personally have an opinion (yet, anyway) 
about solutions. I just want something that works and can be rapidly deployed 
and used…. so that I can be using a standard RR type instead of proprietary 
solutions.

That’s it,
Dan  (who just last month deployed a new website and immediately had people 
asking him when it would work without the “www.” in front of it… so we had to 
rapidly go and get that set up)
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