Why do browsers not use SRV records?

There have been two efforts to introduce this that I know of:

  1. draft-andrews-http-srv (2002)

  2. draft-jennings-http-srv (2009)

The "Open Issues" paragraph of the latter draft is illuminating:

The big open issue seems to be if one should just update the HTTP
scheme to do this SRV lookup and not create a new scheme.  The 00
version of this draft did that.  A new scheme makes this somewhat
unusable for general web surfing while using the old scheme results
in a very long transition times where different clients resolve URLs
in different ways.

and that is the crux of the matter. If your site relies on SRV records to be found, it won't work for some users until every browser supports it.

Would you take that risk, without some sort of transition mechanism?


Jonathan de Boyne Pollard provides the following Frequently Given Answer.

You've come to this page because you've said something similar to the following:

SRV record support hasn't even made it into web browsers yet, let alone clients of less-common protocols.

This is the Frequently Given Answer to such statements.


The RFC for SRV records specifies that it may not be used by pre-existing protocols which did not already specify the use of SRV records in their specifications. I.e. no SRV in the HTTP spec - browsers are, by the SRV standard, prohibited from using it.

This does not prohibit a new HTTP 1.2 standard from specifying the use of SRV records, though. However, Mark Andrews proposed this in April 2007 to the IETF HTTP working group, but got no response.

Tags:

Browser

Dns

Srv