- Reverse-DNS
The reverse domain name system (reverse-DNS), sometimes confused with
Reverse DNS lookup orReverse domain hijacking , is a system for naming components, packages, or types in computer systems. A characteristic of reverse-DNS strings is that they are based on registereddomain name s, only are reversed for sorting purposes. For example, if a company making a product called "MyProduct" has the registereddomain name "example.com", they could use the reverse-DNS string "com.example.MyProduct" to describe it.History
Reverse-DNS first became widely used with the
Java platform , and has since been used for many other systems.Fact|date=July 2007Examples
Examples of systems that use reverse-DNS are
Sun Microsystems 'Java platform and Apple'sUniform Type Identifier .Example of reverse-DNS strings are:
* com.adobe.postscript-font (UTI string for
Adobe 'sPostScript fonts)
* com.apple.ostype (UTI string for Apple'sOSType )
* org.omg.CORBA (Java library for CORBA)
* org.w3c.dom (Java library for W3C's DOM)References
External links
* [http://wiki.eclipse.org/index.php/Naming_Conventions Eclipse Naming Conventions]
* [http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/java/2000-04/msg00095.html Re: gnu.* namespace discussion]
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