Roy Arends wrote:
<proto police hat on>
<protopolice division="internal affairs">
There is no such thing as in-bailiwick glue or out of bailiwick glue.
The term "GLUE RECORDS" is defined in rfc-1033 (yeah, dusted off):
That's probably using illegal evidence, 1033 has no formal status. </protopolice>
If the name server host for a particular domain is itself inside the domain, then a 'glue' record will be needed. A glue record is an A (address) RR that specifies the address of the server. Glue records are only needed in the server delegating the domain, not in the domain itself.
in-bailiwick glue is a pleonasm while out-of-bailiwick glue is an oxymoron.
There are different glue policies in place. DE is using a strict one (matching your definition above), while COM/NET apply a less strict (in fact IIRC even a combined one). The paragraph cited above is correct, but it doesn't limit glue to that case. But this is all only about differentiating between servers below the delegating or the delegated domain. The presentation is in fact about "trustworthy additional information". But let's wait until tomorrow ... -Peter