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Chrome To Force Domains Ending With Dev and Foo To HTTPS Via Preloaded HSTS (ttias.be)

Developer Mattias Geniar writes (condensed and edited for clarity): One of the next versions of Chrome is going to force all domains ending with .dev and .foo to be redirected to HTTPs via a preloaded HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) header. This very interesting commit just landed in Chromium:
Preload HSTS for the .dev gTLD:


This adds the following line to Chromium's preload lists:
{ "name": "dev", "include_subdomains": true, "mode": "force-https" },
{ "name": "foo", "include_subdomains": true, "mode": "force-https" },

It forces any domain on the .dev gTLD to be HTTPs.

What should we [developers] do? With .dev being an official gTLD, we're most likely better of changing our preferred local development suffix from .dev to something else. There's an excellent proposal to add the .localhost domain as a new standard, which would be more appropriate here. It would mean we no longer have site.dev, but site.localhost. And everything at *.localhost would automatically translate to 127.0.0.1, without /etc/hosts or dnsmasq workarounds.

2 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Please see RFC6761 by mysidia · · Score: 4, Informative

    .invalid and .localhost are already reserved for private usage.

  2. NOPE by cfalcon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Modded +5, Informative, but both of its statements are inaccurate. .localhost is reserved for 127.0.0.1 and no other thing. .invalid is reserved for NO use, it should never resolve.

    https://tools.ietf.org/html/rf...

    Localhost:
    Name resolution APIs and libraries SHOULD recognize localhost names as special and SHOULD always return the IP loopback address for address queries and negative responses for all other query types. Name resolution APIs SHOULD NOT send queries for localhost names to their configured caching DNS server(s).

    Invalid:
    Name resolution APIs and libraries SHOULD recognize "invalid" names as special and SHOULD always return immediate negative responses. Name resolution APIs SHOULD NOT send queries for "invalid" names to their configured caching DNS server(s).

    Neither of these are meant for use on a local internet. .localhost is meant to resolve to loopback, and .invalid is meant to never resolve but instead give NXDOMAIN.

    Maybe there are domains reserved for private usage, but it ain't these two.