On Wed, Jul 17, 2002 at 05:26:11PM -0400, Barry A. Warsaw wrote: > JRA> 2822 3.4.1 says that the *LHS* cannot have a trailing dot > JRA> without quoting it... but in the next graf, it seems to punt > JRA> the interpretation of "domain" to 1034. > > Which circular references back to RFC 822. :) > > But anyway I thought we were talking about the localpart.
No, I was talking about the domain part. The standard is pretty clear that the LHS can have anything in it you want, as long as you quote it. > JRA> You're right, that *is* what the standard says, and I'm > JRA> surprised they left it that way in the rewrite; that is *not* > JRA> the way it should have been done. There are good reasons why > JRA> you might want to terminate a domain name, even in email -- > --------------------------------------------------^ > Did you leave out "with a dot" ? No; domain names that end in a dot are referred to in jargon as "terminated" or "rooted". At least, the jargon I'm used to... > JRA> though mostly diagnostic ones, admittedly. > > Hmm, not a use case I've ever encountered. "localhost.localdomain" is > about as wacky as it gets. Well, diagnosing local DNS configuration, mostly. A name that does *not* end in a dot is supposed to be an invitation to apply the search list from /etc/resolv.conf. With people having things registered like com.com and edu.com, it can get a bit wacky. Cheers, -- jra -- Jay R. Ashworth [EMAIL PROTECTED] Member of the Technical Staff Baylink RFC 2100 The Suncoast Freenet The Things I Think Tampa Bay, Florida http://baylink.pitas.com +1 727 647 1274 "If you don't have a dream; how're you gonna have a dream come true?" -- Captain Sensible, The Damned (from South Pacific's "Happy Talk") _______________________________________________ Mailman-Developers mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman-21/listinfo/mailman-developers