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- Network Working Group D. L. Mills
- Request for Comments: 799 COMSAT Laboratories
- September 1981
-
-
- Internet Name Domains
-
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- In the long run, it will not be practicable for every internet
- host to include all internet hosts in its name-address tables. Even
- now, with over four hundred names and nicknames in the combined
- ARPANET-DCNET tables, this has become awkward. Some sort of
- hierarchical name-space partitioning can easily be devised to deal
- with this problem; however, it has been wickedly difficult to find one
- compatible with the known mail systems throughout the community. The
- one proposed here is the product of several discussions and meetings
- and is believed both compatible with existing systems and extensible
- for future systems involving thousands of hosts.
-
- 2. General Topology
-
- We first observe that every internet host is uniquely identified
- by one or more 32-bit internet addresses and that the entire system is
- fully connected. For the moment, the issue of protocol compatibility
- will be ignored, so that all hosts can be assumed MTP-competent. We
- next impose a topological covering on the space of all internet
- addresses with a set of so-called name domains. In the natural model,
- name domains would correspond to institutions such as ARPA, UCL and
- COMSAT, and would not be necessarily disjoint or complete. While in
- principle name domains could be hierarchically structured, we will
- assume in the following only a single-level structure.
-
- Every name domain is associated with one or more internet
- processes called mail forwarders and the name of that domain is the
- name for any of these processes. Each forwarder process for a
- particular domain is expected to maintain duplicate name-address
- tables containing the names of all hosts in its domain and, in
- addition, the name of at least one forwarder process for every other
- domain. Forwarder processes may be replicated in the interests of
- robustness; however, the resulting complexities in addressing and
- routing will not be discussed further here. A particular internet
- host may support a number of forwarder processes and their collective
- names represent nicknames for that host, in addition to any other
- names that host may have. In the following an internet host
- supporting one or more forwarder proceses will be called simply a
- forwarder.
-
- Every host is expected to maintain name-address tables including
- the names of at least one forwarder for every
-
-
- Internet Name Domains PAGE 2
-
-
-
- domain together with additional hosts as convenient. A host may
- belong to several domains, but it is not necessary that all hosts in
- any domain, be included in its tables. Following current practice,
- several nicknames may be associated with the principal name of a host
- in any domain and these names need not be unique relative to any other
- domain. Furthermore, hosts can be multi-homed, that is, respond to
- more than one address. For the purpose of mail forwarding and
- delivery, we will assume that any of these addresses can be used
- without prejudice. The use of multi-homing to facilitate source
- routing is a topic for future study.
-
- 3. Naming Conventions
-
- In its most general form, a standard internet mailbox name has
- the syntax
-
- <user>.<host>@<domain> ,
-
- where <user> is the name of a user known at the host <host> in the
- name domain <domain>. This syntax is intended to suggest a
- three-level hierarchically structured name (reading from the right)
- which is unique throughout the internet system. However, hosts within
- a single domain may agree to adopt another structure, as long as it
- does not conflict with the above syntax and as long as the forwarders
- for that domain are prepared to make the requisite transformations.
- For instance, let the name of a domain including DCNET be COMSAT and
- the name of one of its hosts be COMSAT-DLM with Mills a user known to
- that host. From within the COMSAT domain the name Mills@COMSAT-DLM
- uniquely identifies that mailbox as could, for example, the name
- Mills.COMSAT-DLM@COMSAT from anywhere in the internet system.
- However, Mills@COMSAT-DLM is not necessarily meaningful anywhere
- outside the COMSAT domain (but it could be).
-
- A typical set of name domains covering the current internet
- system might include ARPA (ARPANET), COMSAT (DCNET), DCA (EDNET,
- WBNET), UCL (UCLNET, RSRENET, SRCNET), MIT (CHAOSNET), INTELPOST
- (INTELPOSTNET) and the various public data networks. The ARPA
- forwarder would use a name-address table constructed from the latest
- version of the HOSTS.TXT table in the NIC data base. The other
- forwarders would construct their own, but be expected to deposit a
- copy in the NIC data base.
-
- 4. Mail Transport Principles
-
- In the interests of economy and simplicity, it is expected that
- the bulk of all mail transport in the internet system will take place
- directly from originator to recipient
-
-
- Internet Name Domains PAGE 3
-
-
-
- host and without intermediate relay. A technique of caching will
- probably be necessary for many hosts in order to reduce the traffic
- with forwarders merely to learn the internet address associated with a
- correspondent host. This naturally encourages naming strategies
- designed to minimize duplicate names in the various domains; however,
- such duplicates are not forbidden.
-
- There are several reasons why some messages will have to be
- staged at an intermediate relay, among them the following:
-
- 1. It may not be possible or convenient for the originator
- and recipient hosts to be up on the internet system at
- the same time for the duration of the transfer.
-
- 2. The originator host may not have the resources to
- perform all name-address translations required.
-
- 3. A direct-connection path may not be feasible due to
- regulatory economic or security constraints.
-
- 4. The originator and recipient hosts may not recognize the
- same lower-level transport protocol (e.g. TCP and NCP).
-
- A mail relay is an internet process equipped to store an MTP
- message for subsequent transmission. A mail forwarder is a mail
- relay, but not all relays are forwarders, since they might not include
- the full name-address capability required of forwarders. In addition,
- relays may not be competent in all domains. For instance, a MTP/TCP
- relay may not understand NCP. In other words, the forwarders must be
- fully connected, but the relays may not.
-
- The particular sequence of relays traversed by a message is
- determined by the sender by means of the source route specification in
- the MRCP command. There are several implications to this:
-
- 1. Advisory messages returned to the originator by a relay
- or recipient host are expected to traverse the route in
- reverse order.
-
- 2. Relay host names follow the same naming convention as
- all host names relative to their domain. Since it may
- not be possible (see below) to use internet addresses to
- dis-ambiguate the domain, the complete standard internet
- name .<host>@<domain> is required everywhere.
-
- 3. There is no current provision for strict/loose route
- specifications. If, in fact, the "ordinary" host
- specification @<host> were used, each relay or forwarder
-
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-
-
- would use the rules outlined in the next section for
- routing. This may result in additional relay hops.
-
- 5. Forwarder Operations
-
- This section describes a likely scenario involving hosts, relays
- and forwarders and typical internet routes. When a forwarder receives
- a message for <user>.<host>@<domain>, it transforms <host> if
- necessary and forwards the message to its address found in the
- name-address table for <domain>. Note that a single host can be a
- forwarder for several independent domains in this model and that these
- domains can intersect. Thus, the names Mills@USC-ISIE,
- Mills.USC-ISIE@ARPA and Mills.USC-ISIE@COMSAT can all refer to the
- same mailbox and the names USC-ISIE, ARPA and COMSAT can, conceivably,
- all be known in the same domain. Such use would be permissable only
- in case the name USC-ISIE did not conflict with other names in this
- domain.
-
- In order for this scheme to work efficiently, it is desireable
- that messages transiting forwarders always contain standard internet
- mailbox names. When this is not feasible, as in the current ARPANET
- mail system, the forwarder must be able to determine which domain the
- message came from and edit the names accordingly. This would be
- necessary in order to compose a reply to the message in any case.
-
- In the RFC-780 model a message arriving at a forwarder is
- processed by the MTP server there. The server extracts the first
- entry in the recipient-route field of an MRCP command. There are two
- cases, depending on whether this entry specifies a domain name or a
- host name. If a domain name, as determined by a search of a universal
- table, it refers to one of the domains the server represents. If not,
- it must a name or nickname of the server's host relative to ooe of the
- domains to which the sender belongs. This allows a distinction to be
- made between the domains COMSAT and INTELPOST on one hand and the
- COMSAT host COMSAT-PLA on the other, all of which might be represented
- by the same internet address, and implies that domain names must be
- unique in all domains.
-
- The server next extracts the second entry in the recipient-route
- field of the MRCP command and resolves its address relative to the
- domain established by the first entry. If the second entry specifies
- an explicit domain, then that overrides the first entry. If not and
- the first entry specifies a domain, then that domain is effective.
- However, if the first entry specifies the server's host, it may not be
- apparent which domain is intended. For instance, consider the
- following two MRCP commands:
-
- Internet Name Domains PAGE 5
-
-
-
- MRCP to:<@COMSAT,Mills@HOST> and
- MRCP to:<@INTELPOST,Mills@HOST> ,
-
- where Mills.HOST@COMSAT and Mills.HOST@INTELPOST are distinct
- mailboxes on different hosts. A receiving host supporting forwarders
- for both COMSAT and INTELPOST can then preserve this distinction and
- forward correctly using the above rules.
-
- Now let the forwarder host have the name FORWARDER in both the
- COMSAT and INTELPOST domains and consider its options when receiving
- the command
-
- MRCP to:<@FORWARDER,Mills@HOST> .
-
- The forwarder is being asked simply to relay within the domain of the
- sender; however, it belongs to more than one domain! The obvious way
- to resolve this issue would be to forbid the use of implicit domains,
- as represented by Mills@HOST, and require the full internet mailbox
- names Mills.HOST@COMSAT or Mills.HOST@INTELPOST. It is also possible
- to dis-ambiguate the domain by inspecting the first entry of the
- sender-route field of the MAIL command (see below).
-
- 6. Source and Return Routing
-
- In the RFC-780 model, routes can be specified in the
- recipient-route field of the MRCP command and in the sender-route
- field of the MAIL command. In point of fact, neither the
- recipient-route or sender-route is necessary if the originator
- specifies standard internet mailbox names. So long as the routes,
- when used, consist only of domain names, there is no conflict with the
- current RFC-780 specification. If for some reason forwarding must be
- done via other hosts, then the use of a complete and unambigous syntax
- like .<host>@<domain> is required in order to avoid problems like that
- described above.
-
- The present RFC-780 specification requires the receiver to
- construct a name for the sender and insert this at the beginning of
- the sender-route. Presumably, the only information it has to
- construct this name is the internet address of the sender. Consider
- the case, as in the example above, where multiple domains are
- supported by a single server on a particular host. If hosts receiving
- a message relayed via that server were to map its address into a name,
- there would be no way to determine which domain was intended. We
- conclude that the sending host must update the sender-route as well as
- the recipient-route. It does this simply by copying the first entry
- in the recipient-route as received as the new first entry in the
- sender-route.
-
- Internet Name Domains PAGE 6
-
-
-
- 7. Editing the RFC-733 Header
-
- Every effort should be made to avoid editing the RFC-733 header,
- since this is an invasive procedure requiring extensive analysis. It
- is expected that newly developed mail systems will be aware of the
- standard internet mailbox syntax and ensure its use everywhere in the
- RFC-733 and RFC-780 fields. On the occasions where this is not
- possible, such as in many current ARPANET hosts, the necessary editing
- should be performed upon first entry to the internet mail system from
- the local mail system. This avoids the problems mentioned above and
- simplifies reply functions.
-
- In the case of ARPANET hosts, the editing operations assume that
- all names in the form <anything>@<domain>, where <domain> is the name
- of a domain, are unchanged. Names in the form <anything>@<host>,
- where <host> is the name of a host in the ARPA domain, are transformed
- to the form <anything>.<host>@ARPA. Anything else is an error.
- Before handing off to an ARPANET NCP mailer, an ARPA MTP forwarder
- might optionally transform <anything>.<host>@ARPA to <anything>@<host>
- in order to reduce the forwarder traffic when local mail systems are
- available. Similar situations might exist elsewhere.
-
- 8. Concluding Remarks
-
- This memorandum is intended to stimulate discussion, not simulate
- it.
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-