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Top-level domain
Domaining Guide
Top-level domain
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A top-level domain (TLD) is the last part of an
Internet domain name; that is, the letters which follow the final
dot of any domain name. For example, in the domain name
www.example.com, the top-level domain is
com
(or COM, as domain names are not
case-sensitive).
The
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) currently classifies top-level
domains into three types:
-
country code top-level domains (ccTLD): Used by a country or a
dependent territory. It is two letters long, for example .us for the United
States.
-
generic top-level domains (gTLD): Used (at least in theory) by a
particular class of organizations (for example,
.com for
commercial organizations). It is three or more letters long. Most gTLDs are
available for use worldwide, but for historical reasons .mil (military) and
.gov (governmental) are restricted to use by the respective U.S. authorities. gTLDs are subclassified into
sponsored top-level domains (sTLD), e.g. .aero, .coop and .museum, and
unsponsored top-level domains (uTLD), e.g. .biz, .info, .name and .pro.
-
infrastructure top-level domains (iTLD): The top-level domain .arpa is
the only confirmed one. .root has been known to exist without reason.
A full list of currently existing TLDs can be found at the
list of Internet top-level domains.
Historical TLDs
A .nato was added in the late 1980s by the NIC for the use of NATO, who felt
that none of the then existing TLDs adequately reflected their status as an
international organization. Soon after this addition, however, the NIC
created the .int TLD for the use of international organizations, and
convinced NATO to use nato.int instead. However, the nato TLD,
although no longer used, was not deleted until July 1996.
Other historical TLDs are .cs for Czechoslovakia, .zr for Zaire and .dd for
East Germany. In contrast to these, the TLD .su has remained in active use
despite the demise of the Soviet Union that it represents.
Pseudo-domains
In the past the Internet was just one of many wide-area computer networks.
Computers not connected to the Internet, but connected to another network such
as BITNET, CSNET or UUCP, could generally exchange e-mail with the Internet via
e-mail gateways. When used on the Internet, addresses on these networks were
often placed under pseudo-domains such as bitnet, csnet and uucp; however these
pseudo-domains implemented in mail server configurations such as sendmail.cf and
were not real top-level domains and did not exist in DNS.
Most of these networks have long since ceased to exist, and although UUCP
still gets significant use in parts of the world where Internet infrastructure
has not yet become well-established, it subsequently transitioned to using
Internet domain names, so pseudo-domains now largely survive as historical
relics.
The anonymity network Tor has a pseudo-domain onion, which can only be
reached with a Tor client because it uses the Tor-protocol (onion routing) to reach the hidden service in order to protect the anonymity of
the domain.
.local
deserves special mention as it is required by the Zeroconf protocol. It is also
used by many organizations internally, which will become a problem for those
users as Zeroconf becomes more popular. Both
.site and
.internal have been suggested for private usage, but no consensus has
yet emerged.
Reserved TLDs
RFC 2606 reserves the following four top-level domain names for various
purposes, with the intention that these should never become actual TLDs in the
global DNS:
- example — reserved for use in examples
- invalid — reserved for use in obviously invalid domain names
-
localhost — reserved to avoid conflict with the traditional use of
localhost
- test
— reserved for use in tests
TLDs in alternative roots
Alternative DNS roots have their own sets of TLDs. See that article for
details. At times, browser plugins have been developed to allow access to some
set of "alternative" domain names even when the normal DNS roots are otherwise
used.
See also
References
- Addressing the World: National Identity and Internet Country Code
Domains, edited by Erica Schlesinger Wass (Rowman & Littlefield, 2003,
ISBN 0-7425-2810-3)
[1], examines connections between cultures and their ccTLDs.
- Ruling the Root by Milton Mueller (MIT Press, 2001,
ISBN 0-262-13412-8)
[2], discusses TLDs and domain name policy more generally.
External links
Home | Up | Top-level domain | Country code top-level domain | Generic top-level domain | Sponsored top-level domain | List of Internet top-level domains | Proposed top-level domain | Pseudo top-level domain | Second-level domain
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This guide is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
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