rayan@ai.toronto.edu.UUCP (11/23/87)
CA Subdomain Application Instructions Updated November 20, 1987 Please fill out an application form and submit it to one of the networks of which your organization is a member. The network chosen is not important but only one registration form may be submitted. This document describes the form and includes a sample. It is recommended that you edit the sample form and change the information as appropriate for your organization. Please note that this registration is being made on behalf of your entire organization. As such, it is important that you are authorized to speak for your entire organization in this matter and that you obtain the agreement of all interested parties within your organization prior to submission. A list of network registries is given below. Your network may charge a fee for the registration service. Your network may also require further information. Unaffiliated organizations wishing to reserve a name for future or internal use may register directly with the CA Registrar for an annual fee of $50. Currently the registrar cannot accept telephone requests. Subdomain: The name of the subdomain applied for. This will be of the form "yourorg.location.CA". "location" is a name pre-assigned to the smallest registered geographical region covering the branches or significant activity of your organization. In the case of organizations where the smallest geographical region is deemed to be Canada, the location subdomain will not exist. These provincial and territorial abbreviations (as defined by Canada Post) will be used at the second level: AB, BC, LB, MB, NB, NF, NS, NT, ON, PE, PQ, SK, YK. Municipal subdomains, when required, will be at the third level and will use unabbreviated names of municipalities. "yourorg" is a string that encodes the proper name of your organization in a widely recognized fashion that will be unique to your parent domain. To simplify the introduction of standard directory services, "yourorg" should make sense standing alone. The use of an abbreviation is recommended, if your organization has one that has already gained national recognition, especially since subdomain names will be widely distributed and will appear on letterheads and on business cards. You may mix upper and lower case, or use all upper or all lower case. Software will ignore case, and most users will probably type all lower or all upper case, depending on their terminals. You should capitalize it as you wish it to appear in machine generated lists, such as the return address generated in your outgoing electronic mail. Hyphens may be used to separate words if necessary or consistent with normal references to the proper name of your organization. Their use is generally discouraged. Legal characters are letters, digits, and the hyphen, and upper and lower case are considered the same. In accordance with the semantics of the domain name system, the parent authority (registrar) for your subdomain is the final authority on all matters relating to registration and subsequent use of your subdomain name. In particular, the CA domain registrar has authority for all second level names. Your subdomain name must be approved by the parent authority before it is used in outgoing mail. For example: MegaCo.CA Nationally active company. WidgetCo.PE.CA Company. CityAutoLtd.Melville.SK.CA Small business or proprietorship. AlphaBetaU.CA Nationally known university. SmytheColl.ON.CA College. Organization: The full name of your organization. Type: Type of organization. For example: For-Profit Corporation Non-Profit Corporation For-Profit Partnership Proprietorship Ph.D. granting university High School Federal Government Branch Provincial Government Military Branch Description: A short paragraph describing your organization. Admin-Name: Admin-Title: Admin-Postal: Admin-Phone: Admin-Mailbox: The name, title, mailing address, phone number, and electronic address of an administrative contact for the organization. This is the contact point for administrative and policy questions. This person will rarely be contacted, and the primary reason we need this information is to know who to contact if the technical contacts have left, so we recommend that you choose someone you expect to be around and in a position of authority for many years. It is recommended that a properly maintained generic address is used to reach the appropriate contact. For example: Admin-Name: John Smith Admin-Title: Administrative Assistant Admin-Postal: Dept. of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Admin-Phone: +1 204-555-1511 Admin-Mailbox: admin@AlphaBetaU.CA Tech-Name: Tech-Title: Tech-Postal: Tech-Phone: Tech-Mailbox: The name, title, mailing address, phone number, and electronic address of two or more technical contacts. This is the contact point for problems with the subdomain and for updating information about the subdomain. Don't list people who hate to get electronic mail. One or more of the contacts must read their mail often enough to respond quickly, should a problem arise. For very small organizations, it is permissible to have only one technical contact. It is appropriate to have at least one contact corresponding to each of the forwarders within the organization. It is recommended that a properly maintained generic address is used to reach all the technical contacts. For example: Tech-Name: Jean Smith Tech-Title: Researcher Tech-Postal: Dept. of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Tech-Phone: +1 204-555-1512 Tech-Name: Fred Rogers Tech-Title: Computing Staff Tech-Postal: Dept of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Tech-Phone: +1 204-555-1513 Tech-Mailbox: tech@AlphaBetaU.CA Location: The latitude and longitude of the subdomain. (This can be taken as the location of the main organizational machine, or the headquarters, or the contact persons; usually the machine is used.) Give as much precision as you know; if you can only determine the location to the nearest minute, or the nearest few minutes, that's OK. Include "city" only if you are using the location of your city center, for which information is often available in an atlas, at a library, City Hall, or a nearby airport. If you are unable to determine this information, leave it blank. It is used to draw maps. For example: 52 04 05 N / 97 37 46 W or 52 04 N / 97 37 W city Forwarder: A forwarder is a host which has agreed to accept mail for your subdomain, and forward it to you by some means. Typically, a forwarder will be a host which is both on your network and another, and will forward mail via your common network to you. This should not be interpreted as permitting the transfer of arbitrary data through any network: a network's facilities are to be used strictly according to its regulations. Having forwarders is not strictly required if you just want to reserve the name, or use it internally. However, you must have forwarders to exchange mail with other networks. For each forwarder, include the electronic address of the person who has authorized you to use their host. Please contact your network administration if you need help determining your forwarder information. Each line contains one mail group definition, whose phrase is the name of the network the forwarder serves for your organization. Each forwarder is specified by an address consisting of a phrase giving the network specific node name of the forwarder, and the electronic address of the person who has authorized you to use their host. Generic addresses (like postmaster, root, or system) are not acceptable. Additional information may be given within comments. You are encouraged to provide the domain names corresponding to the network node names. For example: Forwarder: ARPAnet: uunet.uu.net <kp@uunet.uu.net>; Forwarder: NetNorth: qucdn <gl@QueensU.CA>; Forwarder: CDNnet: relay.ubc.ca <jd@ean.ubc.CA>; Forwarder: UUCP: uunet (uunet.uu.net) <kp@uunet.uu.net>, abunix (nix.AlphaBetaU.CA) <gru@AlphaBetaU.CA>; Below is a sample registration form: Subdomain: AlphaBetaU.CA Organization: Alpha Beta University Type: Ph.D. granting university Description: Alpha Beta University is a degree granting academic organization widely known for its program in Greek studies. Admin-Name: John Smith Admin-Title: Administrative Assistant Admin-Postal: Dept. of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Admin-Phone: +1 204-555-1511 Admin-Mailbox: admin@AlphaBetaU.CA Tech-Name: Jean Smith Tech-Title: Researcher Tech-Postal: Dept. of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Tech-Phone: +1 204-555-1512 Tech-Name: Fred Rogers Tech-Title: Computing Staff Tech-Postal: Dept of Computer Science 1234 Main St. Hoople, Manitoba M1B 2C3 Tech-Phone: +1 204-555-1513 Tech-Mailbox: tech@AlphaBetaU.CA Location: 52 04 05 N / 97 37 46 W Forwarder: ARPAnet: uunet.uu.net <kp@uunet.uu.net>; Forwarder: NetNorth: qucdn <gl@QueensU.CA>; Forwarder: CDNnet: relay.ubc.ca <jd@ean.ubc.CA>; Forwarder: UUCP: uunet (uunet.uu.net) <kp@uunet.uu.net>, abunix (nix.AlphaBetaU.CA) <rob@AlphaBetaU.CA>; Registrations may be submitted to the following organizations: CDNnet sites and unaffiliated organizations: CA Domain Registrar CDNnet Headquarters 309 Computer Sciences Building University of British Columbia Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1W5 cdnnet-hq@ean.ubc.ca, cdnnet-hq@ean.ubc.cdn, cdnnet-hq@ubc-ean.uucp UUCP sites: CA Registry Computer Systems Research Institute Sandford Fleming Building, Room 2002 10 King's College Road University of Toronto Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A4 registry@ai.toronto.edu, registry@utai.uucp NetNorth sites: Secretary, NetNorth Administration Committee ADMINSEC@CANADA01