In message <20130221225540.ga99...@numachi.com>, Brian Reichert writes: > I'm trying to nail down some terminology for doc purposes. > > The issue: most resources on the net freely describe a fully-qualified > domian name ('FQDN') as to exclude the root domain; i.e, they exclude > the trailing dot as mandated by some RFCs such as RFC 1535:
RFC 1535 is Informational. It has no status to mandate anything. > http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1535.txt > > An absolute "rooted" FQDN is of the format {name}{.} A non > "rooted" domain name is of the format {name} > > I'm trying to come up with some human-facing terminology that names > these two forms: > > "a.b.c." > "a.b.c" > > Many resources on the net use the term 'rooted domain name' for the > former, but they're collectively ambigious about what the other > form should be called. > > Does anyone here have any solid advice, or can point me to a resource > that would call out useful conventions? > > This was all fueled by Microsoft's client code apparently stripping > the root domain from PTR record results; I'm separately trying to > track down why that's occuring... RFC 952 as modified by RFC 1123 describe the legal syntax of a hostname. There is no trailing period. > -- > Brian Reichert <reich...@numachi.com> > BSD admin/developer at large > -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org