This report found no failure in resolution nor in the ability to perform DNSSEC validation when DNAME was used in the root zone to provide isomorphism between two top-level domains (TLD), i.e. when one TLD was provisioned as a DNAME, compared to being provisioned as a distinct delegation. A variety of DNS software was tested as part of this study.
The use of DNAME in provisioning isomorphic domains is a candidate mechanism for the deployment of variant TLDs. However, the purpose of this report was not to investigate or make recommendations about whether DNAME provides a useful partial or complete solution to any problem related to variant TLDs, but rather to consider the narrower technical implications of using DNAME in the root zone. The more general requirements for variant TLD provisioning are being studied independently of this work within ICANN.
Since this study was performed using a captive replica of the public DNS, it should not be interpreted as an exhaustive answer to the question of whether DNAME can be usefully deployed in the public root zone. However, the conclusions of this report support future work which might (for example) propose the limited deployment of DNAME in the root zone for the purposes of real-world testing.
This ICANN announcement was sourced from:
icann.org/en/announcements/announcement-24may11-en.htm



