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The Domain Name System: A Non-Technical Explanation – Why Universal
Resolvability Is Important
What is the Domain Name System?
The Domain Name System (DNS) helps users to find their way around the Internet.
Every computer on the Internet has a unique address – just like a telephone
number – which is a rather complicated string of numbers. It is called
its "IP address" (IP stands for "Internet Protocol").
But it is hard to remember everyone's IP address. The DNS makes it easier by
allowing a familiar string of letters (the "domain name") to be used
instead of the arcane IP address. So instead of typing 192.0.34.65, you can
type www.icann.org. It is
a "mnemonic" device that makes addresses easier to remember.
Translating the name into the IP address is called "resolving the domain
name." The goal of the DNS is for any Internet user any place in the world
to reach a specific website IP address by entering its domain name. Domain names
are also used for reaching e-mail addresses and for other Internet applications.
What is universal resolvability and why is it important to users?
Think of the phone system . . . when you dial a number, it rings at a particular
location because there is a central numbering plan that ensures that each telephone
number is unique. The DNS works in a similar way. If telephone numbers or domain
names were not globally unique, phone calls or e-mail intended for one person
might go to someone else with the same number or domain name. Without uniqueness,
both systems would be unpredictable and therefore unreliable.
Ensuring predictable results from any place on the Internet is called "universal
resolvability." It is a critical design feature of the DNS, one that makes
the Internet the helpful, global resource that it is today. Without it, the
same domain name might map to different Internet locations under different circumstances,
which would only cause confusion.
When you send an e-mail to your Aunt Sally, do you care who receives it?
Do you care if it goes to your Uncle Juan instead? Wait a minute…do you
have an Uncle Juan? Then whose Uncle Juan received it? Do you care if it reaches
Aunt Sally if you send it from work but my Uncle Juan if you send it from home?
Of course you care who receives it . . . that's why you wrote it in the first
place. Whether you're doing business or sending personal correspondence, you
want to be certain that your message gets to the intended addressee.
If at any point the DNS must make a choice between two identical domain names
with different IP addresses, the DNS would not function. It would not know how
to resolve the domain name. When a DNS computer queries another computer and
asks, "are you the intended recipient of this message?", "yes"
and "no" are acceptable answers, but "maybe" is not.
Where does ICANN come in?
This is where ICANN comes in . . . ICANN is responsible for managing and coordinating
the DNS to ensure universal resolvability.
ICANN is the global, non-profit, private-sector coordinating body acting in
the public interest. ICANN ensures that the DNS continues to function effectively
– by overseeing the distribution of unique numeric IP addresses and domain
names. Among its other responsibilities, ICANN oversees the processes and systems
that ensure that each domain name maps to the correct IP address.
What goes on behind the scenes?
Behind the scenes, the story becomes a little more complicated.
In an Internet address – such as icann.org – the .org part is known
as a Top Level Domain, or TLD. So-called "TLD registry" organizations
house online databases that contain information about the domain names in that
TLD. The .org registry database, for example, contains the Internet whereabouts
– or IP address – of icann.org. So in trying to find the Internet
address of icann.org your computer must first find the .org registry database.
How is this done?
At the heart of the DNS are 13 special computers, called root servers. They
are coordinated by ICANN and are distributed around the world. All 13 contain
the same vital information – this is to spread the workload and back each
other up.
Why are these root servers so important? The root servers contain the IP addresses
of all the TLD registries – both the global registries such as .com, .org,
etc. and the 244 country-specific registries such as .fr (France), .cn (China),
etc. This is critical information. If the information is not 100% correct or
if it is ambiguous, it might not be possible to locate a key registry on the
Internet. In DNS parlance, the information must be unique and authentic. Let
us look at how this information is used.
Scattered across the Internet are thousands of computers – called "Domain
Name Resolvers" or just plain "resolvers" - that routinely cache
the information they receive from queries to the root servers. These resolvers
are located strategically with Internet Service Providers (ISPs) or institutional
networks. They are used to respond to a user's request to resolve a domain name
– that is, to find the corresponding IP address.
So what happens to a user's request to reach our familiar friend at icann.org?
The request is forwarded to a local resolver. The resolver splits the request
into its component parts. It knows where to find the .org registry – remember,
it had copied that information from a root server beforehand – so it forwards
the request over to the .org registry to find the IP address of icann.org. This
answer is forwarded back to the user's computer. And we're done. It's that simple!
The domain name icann.org has been "resolved"!
Why do we need the resolvers? Why not use the root servers directly? After all,
they contain essentially the same information. The answer is for reasons of
performance. The root servers could not handle hundreds of billions of requests
a day! It would slow users down.
If you are still with the story, you are already wondering about more complicated
names with more parts such as www.icann.org. Well, the DNS is a hierarchical
system. First, the resolver finds the IP address for the .org registry, queries
that registry to find the IP address for icann.org, then queries a local computer
at that address to find the final IP address for www.icann.org. Just what you
would expect.
It is important to remember the central and critical role played by the root
servers that store information about the unique, authoritative root. Confusion
would result if there were two TLDs with the same name: which one did the user
intend? The beauty of the Internet architecture is that it ensures there is
a unique, authoritative root, so that there is no chance of ambiguity.
What about "alternate roots?" How do they fit into this picture?
Anyone can create a root system similar to the unique authoritative root managed
by ICANN. Many people and entities have. Some of these are purely private (inside
a single corporation, for example) and are insulated from having any effect
on the DNS. Some, however, overlap the authoritative global DNS root by incorporating
the unique, authoritative root information, and then adding new pseudo-TLDs
that have not resulted from the consensus-driven process by which official new
TLDs are created through ICANN. The alternate root operators persuade some users
to have their resolvers "point" to their alternate root instead of
the authoritative root. Others (New.net is a recent example) also create browser
plug-ins and other software workarounds to accomplish similar effects. The one
uniform fact about all these efforts is that these pseudo-TLDs are not included
in the authoritative root managed by ICANN and, thus, are not resolvable by
the vast majority of Internet users.
Why do alternate roots create a problem?
There are many potential problems caused by these unofficial, alternate root
efforts to exploit the stability and reach of the authoritative root. These
efforts are often promoted by those unwilling to abide by the consensus policies
established by the Internet community, policies designed to ensure the continued
stability and utility of the DNS.
For example:
- First, the names of some of these pseudo-TLDs could overlap TLD names in
the authoritative root or those that appear in other alternate roots. Our
familiar friend icann.org could appear in two different roots. Your e-mail
to Aunt Sally could end up with my Uncle Juan.
- Second, the unknowing users might not be linked to one of these alternate
roots and not be able to reach these pseudo-TLD addresses at all. Your e-mail
to Aunt Sally could end up as a dead-letter.
- Third, those purchasing domain names in these pseudo-TLDs may not be aware
of these and other consequences of the lack of universal resolvability. Or
they may be under the impression that they are experiencing universal resolvability
when in fact they are not. They may be very upset to learn that the names
they registered are also being used by others, or that a new TLD in the authoritative
root will not include those names.
These problems are not significant so long as these alternate roots remain
very small, that is, house few domain names with little potential for conflict.
But if they should ever attract many users, the problems would become much more
serious, and could affect the stability and reliability of the DNS itself. Users
would lose confidence in the utility of the Internet.
What is ICANN's role?
ICANN's mission is to protect and preserve the stability, integrity and utility
– on behalf of the global Internet community – of the DNS and the
authoritative root ICANN was established to manage. ICANN has no role to play
with alternate roots so long as these and other analogous efforts do not create
instabilities in the DNS or otherwise impair the stability of the authoritative
root. But ICANN does have a role to play in educating and informing about threats
to the Internet's reliability and stability.
ICANN is a consensus development body for the global Internet community, and
its focus is the development of consensus policies relating to the single authoritative
root and the DNS. These policies include those that allow the orderly introduction
of new TLDs.
There are those–including operators of commercialized alternate roots–who
pursue unilateral actions outside the ICANN consensus-development process. Many
hope to circumvent these processes by claiming to establish some prior right
to a top-level domain name. ICANN, however, recognizes no such prior claim.
ICANN will continue to reflect the public policy consensus of the global Internet
community over the private claims of the few who try to bypass this consensus.
In Short . . . . . .
Just as there is a single root for telephone numbers internationally, there
must be a single authoritative root for the Internet, administered in the public
interest.
This page last updated 05-Oct-2002 content c/o InterNic
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