On 2013-02-22, at 14:01, Andrew Sullivan <asulli...@dyn.com> wrote:

> On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 04:57:42PM +1100, Mark Andrews wrote:
>> 
>> RFC 952 as modified by RFC 1123 describe the legal syntax of a hostname.
>> There is no trailing period.
> 
> Mark is of course correct about this, but it doesn't fully help.
> 
> The basic problem is (as always) the confusion about the difference
> between a hostname and a fully-qualified domain name, which so happens
> to be also a hostname.

Actually, I think the problem is the confusion between a label string 
terminated in a dot (to indicate that no search domain should be appended) and 
a label string not so-terminated (which might mean that a search domain is 
attempted, depending on local configuration).

There is no simple terminology to distinguish between the two cases that I am 
aware of.

I think the original question's context was how to format a CN in a CSR. I 
believe the most useful answer is "single CN, fully-qualified domain name with 
no trailing dot".

The terminology "root zone" or "root domain" to explain the trailing dot is 
misleading and unhelpful, I find.


Joe


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