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Table of Contents IDN allows you to use all the characters (or even non-characters such as ideograms) of all human scripts in your domain names. The DNS protocol allows non-ASCII characters for a very long time but DNS usage reduced the set of acceptable characters to a subset of US-ASCII. To allow more characters, thus enabling you to have domain names properly written in your language, the IETF decided not to change the DNS protocol but rather to ask applications to transform IDN into US-ASCII. The repertoire of characters used by IDNA is Unicode[1]. The current IETF standard is represented by four RFCs:
You can try these transformations online at EUREG, IBM or Josefsson. For a registry, if you want to register IDN, you will have to address some policy issues. For instance:
These policy issues are discussed in the idn-reg-policy mailing list. You can register IDN with no tools at all if you just store the ACE strings. But if you want to perform nameprep and punycode yourself, or if you want to implement bundles (the set of all names that are simple variants of the registered name), you will need to write some code.
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Last news THIS IS THE TITLE HOWTO setup a domain registry Anycast, une nouvelle technique de gestion d'un parc de serveur de noms NDI (Noms de Domaines Internationaux) Changing the IP address of the TLD name server Setting up a DNS registry with XML and XSL Checking your domaine: why and how The choices for a nameserver The zone file generator Modélisation de données The whois service |
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