The term domain name has multiple related meanings:
* A name that identifies a computer or computers on the internet.
These names appear as a component of a Web site's URL, e.g.
wikipedia.org. This type of domain name is also called a hostname.
* The product that domain name registrars provide to their customers. These names are often called registered domain names.
* Names used for other purposes in the Domain Name System (DNS), for
example the special name which follows the @ sign in an email address,
or the Top-level domains like .com, or the names used by the Session
Initiation Protocol (VoIP), or DomainKeys.
They are sometimes colloquially (and incorrectly) referred to by marketers as "web addresses".
This
article will primarily discuss registered domain names. See the Domain
Name System article for technical discussions about general domain names
and the hostname article for further information about the most common
type of domain name.
The
most common types of domain names are hostnames that provide more
memorable names to stand in for numeric IP addresses. They allow for any
service to move to a different location in the topology of the Internet
(or an intranet), which would then have a different IP address.
By
allowing the use of unique alphabetical addresses instead of numeric
ones, domain names allow Internet users to more easily find and
communicate with web sites and other server-based services. The
flexibility of the domain name system allows multiple IP addresses to be
assigned to a single domain name, or multiple domain names to be
assigned to a single IP address. This means that one server may have
multiple roles (such as hosting multiple independent Web sites), or that
one role can be spread among many servers. One IP address can also be
assigned to several servers, as used in anycast and hijacked IP space.
Hostnames
are restricted to the ASCII letters "a" through "z" (case-insensitive),
the digits "0" through "9", and the hyphen, with some other
restrictions. Registrars restrict the domains to valid hostnames, since,
otherwise, they would be useless. The Internationalized domain name
(IDN) system has been developed to bypass the restrictions on character
allowances in hostnames, making it easier for users of non-english
alphabets to use the Internet. The underscore character is frequently
used to ensure that a domain name is not recognized as a hostname, for
example with the use of SRV records, although some older systems, such
as NetBIOS did allow it. Due to confusion and other reasons, domain
names with underscores in them are sometimes used where hostnames are
required.
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