RFC 1279 (rfc1279) - Page 1 of 15
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Alternative Format: Original Text Document
Network Working Group S.E. Hardcastle-Kille
Requests for Comments 1279 University College London
November 1991
X.500 and Domains
Status of this Memo
This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
community. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are
requested. Please refer to the current edition of the ``IAB
Official Protocol Standards'' for the standardization state and
status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
This RFCconsiders X.500 in relation to Internet and UK Domains.
A basic model of X.500 providing a higher level and more
descriptive naming structure is emphasised. In addition, a
mapping of domains onto X.500 is proposed, which gives a range of
new management and user facilities over and above those currently
available. This specification proposes an experimental new
mechanism to access and manage domain information on the Internet
and in the UK Academic Community. There is no current intention
to provide an operational replacement for DNS.
RFC 1279 X.500 and Domains November 1991
1 The Domain Name System
The Domain (Nameserver) System (DNS) provides a hierarchical resource
labelling system [Moc87a] [Moc87b] [Lar83]. Example domains are:
MIT.EDU
VENERA.ISI.EDU
CS.UCL.AC.UK
Entries usually have a single name, although pointers to entries (not
subtrees) may be provided by CNAME records. Information (resource
records) is associated with each entry. Name components are typically
chosen to be shortish (e.g., ``CS'').
RFC 822 mailbox names are closely related [Cro82]. For example:
[email protected]>
The local-part of the RFC 822 mailbox can be considered as one level
lower in the domain hierarchy.
2 X.500
The OSI Directory, usually known as X.500, provides a very general
naming framework [CCI88]. A basic usage of X.500 is to provide
Organisationally Structured Names. A Schema for this is defined
within the standard. Name components will typically have longish
values. This is an example directory name represented in Tabular
form:
Country GB
Organisation University College London
Organisational Unit Computer Science
Common Name Stephen E. Hardcastle-Kille
This can also be written in the ``User Friendly Name'' notation
defined in [HK91]. This syntax is used for names in the rest of this
document:
Stephen E. Hardcastle-Kille, Computer Science,
Hardcastle-Kille