On Mon, Apr 2, 2018 at 6:26 AM, Mukund Sivaraman <m...@mukund.org> wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 02, 2018 at 03:20:02AM -0700, internet-dra...@ietf.org wrote: > > > > A new version of I-D, draft-muks-dnsop-dns-squash-01.txt > > has been successfully submitted by Mukund Sivaraman and posted to the > > IETF repository. > > > > Name: draft-muks-dnsop-dns-squash > > Revision: 01 > > Title: DNS squash > > Document date: 2018-04-01 > > Group: Individual Submission > > Pages: 6 > > URL: https://www.ietf.org/internet- > drafts/draft-muks-dnsop-dns-squash-01.txt > > Status: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-muks-dnsop-dns- > squash/ > > Htmlized: https://tools.ietf.org/html/ > draft-muks-dnsop-dns-squash-01 > > Htmlized: https://datatracker.ietf.org/ > doc/html/draft-muks-dnsop-dns-squash > > Diff: https://www.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-muks-dnsop-dns- > squash-01 > > > > Abstract: > > This document attempts to specify current DNS protocol in squashed > > form in a single document. > > You can compare what's in section 3 (Data structure) to what's in RFC > 1034 section 3.1. (Name space specifications and terminology). > > I'll post revisions weekly. Reviews and participation (preferrably first > in the form of discussion to prepare a list of things to do) are > welcome. > > https://github.com/muks/dnssquash/ > > Mukund > 3. Data Structure .... A DNS name is printed as a concatenation left to right of the individual labels on the path from the node to the root, each label trailing with an ASCII period '.' character. Thus a complete printed DNS name ends with a period character. Not exactly. There is no period after the zero-length root zone. The last period is actually between the tld and the root zone. So 'there is a period between each zone' not 'after each zone' even though it looks like a trailing dot. -- Bob Harold
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