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Fully qualified domain name 1

Fully qualified domain name


A fully qualified domain name (FQDN), sometimes also referred as an absolute domain name,[1] is a domain name
that specifies its exact location in the tree hierarchy of the Domain Name System (DNS). It specifies all domain
levels, including the top-level domain and the root zone. A fully qualified domain name is distinguished by its lack
of ambiguity: it can only be interpreted one way. FQDNs first arose out of the need for uniformity as the Internet
was quickly growing in size in the late 1980s.
For example, given a device with a local hostname myhost and a parent domain name example.com, the fully
qualified domain name is myhost.example.com. The FQDN therefore uniquely identifies the device while there
may be many hosts in the world called myhost, there can only be one myhost.example.com. In the Domain Name
System, and most notably, in DNS zone files, a fully qualified domain name is specified with a trailing dot. For
example,
somehost.example.com.
specifies an absolute domain name that ends with an empty top level domain label.
The DNS root domain is unnamed, which is expressed by an empty label, resulting in a domain name ending with
the dot separator. However, many DNS resolvers process a domain name that contains a dot in any position as being
fully qualified[2] or add the final dot needed for the root of the DNS tree. Resolvers process a domain name without a
dot as unqualified and automatically append the system's default domain name and the final dot.
Some applications, such as web browsers, try to resolve the domain name part of a Uniform Resource Locator
(URL) if the resolver cannot find the specified domain or if it is clearly not fully qualified by appending frequently
used top-level domains and testing the result. Some applications, however, never use trailing dots to indicate
absoluteness, because the underlying protocols require the use of FQDNs, such as Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
(SMTP, an e-mail protocol).

The root of the tree and DNS


As a special case to the FQDN, a single dot should represent the root of the directory tree, which in turn would mean
that a hypothetical computer system would be called the root server. There is no such thing as a root server on the
global Internet, however, since there is no A record for the "." domain.[3]
There are 13 authoritative root nameservers which contain the DNS records for root name lookups. Each name server
knows the IP addresses of the name servers of first or "top level domains" (TLDs). For instance, the "com." and
"uk." domains are TLDs.
Just like the root domain, most TLDs do not resolve to an IP address, but usually have three or more distinct name
servers which answer queries for the TLD. (e.g. There is no server known by the FQDN "net." nor "uk." but there
are 13 name servers listed for "net." and 11 name servers "uk.")
An example of a TLD which resolves is "uz.", meaning that the .uz domain is an example of the shortest resolving
FQDN with a URL of http://uz/ for web access and is notable because no dot appears in the URL. Due to the
scarcity of domains without a dot, not all browsers will permit this to work[citation needed].
Fully qualified domain name 2

Notes
[1] RFC 1035, Domain names: implementation and specification
[2] Note: On Unix-like systems, this is controlled by the ndots option in the resolv.conf configuration file, specifying the number of dots
(default 1) recognized to imply a FQDN. There are some security issues in connection with this interpretation as discussed in RFC 1535.
[3] Root Zone Text file (http:/ / www. internic. net/ zones/ root. zone), retrieved on 4/12/2009

References

External links
RFC 1123: Requirements for Internet Hosts - application and support
RFC 1535: A Security Problem and Proposed Correction With Widely Deployed DNS Software
RFC 2181: Clarifications to the DNS specification
RFC 2826: IAB Technical Comment on the Unique DNS Root
Article Sources and Contributors 3

Article Sources and Contributors


Fully qualified domain name Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=589701599 Contributors: Ale2006, Amikake3, Angusmclellan, Apokrif, Austin Hair, Borgx, Bunnyhop11,
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Versageek, Weike9009, Whit537, William Avery, Wrs1864, Wwwwolf, 2, 84 anonymous edits

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