Ben Scott wrote:
> The detective in me has to point out that doesn't necessarily prove > it's Amazon's *DNS* servers doing that. Their provisioning system > might replace potentially problematic characters with dashes when > creating DNS records. This distinction is mostly academic, but I > think we're in that territory already. ;-) Indeed. I think we can all agree that Amazon *should* NOT be using underscores in any case, for host names. >> I don't know if Amazon's web server would agree, but their DNS servers >> seem to think they are the same. > > Well, both http://thingiverse_beta.s3.amazonaws.com/ and > http://thingiverse-beta.s3.amazonaws.com/ respond with XML, but with > different content -- the latter a "not found" sort of result. I'm not > sure if that's the web server proper, or custom server-side software > running behind it, that's getting confused. Yup. Found my reason why I got identical replies from DNS queries: s3.amazonaws.com seems to have a wildcard CNAME to s3-directional-w.amazonaws.com: $ host somenamethatshouldnotexist.s3.amazonaws.com somenamethatshouldnotexist.s3.amazonaws.com is an alias for s3-directional-w.amazonaws.com. s3-directional-w.amazonaws.com is an alias for s3-1-w.amazonaws.com. s3-1-w.amazonaws.com has address 72.21.202.194 $ Brian -- --------------------------------------------------------------- | br...@datasquire.net Proprietor: http://www.JustWorksNH.com | | Computers and Web Sites that JUST WORK | | Work: +1 (603) 484-1461 Home: +1 (603) 484-1469 | --------------------------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/