After some consideration, I also applied this convention to every site I build - including content negotiation: Clients can either send an Accept header with their preference, or append an explicit extension (.md|.markdown for Markdown, .json for JSON API responses, or .html for the human HTML page). Together with the content negotiation part, it feels very much like HTTP was intended to work - especially the fact that API clients, AI agents, and humans all use the same URLs, but get the content in the shape they need.
I've done this off and on for various sites over the years too, and probably should be more consistent about it. A number of sites do or used to do some variation of this, and I wish it was more widespread. E.g. Reddit will serve up a json version of a sub-dreddit if you do /r/subreddit.json
(It includes the grandparent's head link suggestion, but it's not just "change .html to .md" because I'm old skool and as a wee nerd was told that URLs ending in .html or .php or whatever we're frowned on, so the above link's markdown is available by appending /index.md )
My point was that llms.txt not working is no different from them ignoring everything else that came before and probably everything that is yet to come.
If they want it, they will take it, polite directives in text files will have no effect.
No, in fact I don't. But this post wouldn't be of any help anyway. It feels like it's about nothing, there is no substance, just stating some obvious facts. Without examples that lead to some real recommendations, this whole expertise claimed by the author is of no use.
I do think it is important to have autonomous discoverability with domain-anchored trust, whether through .well-known or DNS records or DNS over HTTP. It looks like cloudflare has already added a bunch of observability into their products around this area, and I am investigating too [1]. It seems like the number of services needing these, and the amount needed per org should both go up with more agentic use cases.
I believe auth.md is also a recent example that uses .well-known
The password-reset well-known endpoint is used by password managers to show a "Change password..." button in their interface, which magically links to the password change page described in that well-known file.
If the website implements it. What about email preferences? Removing account links? There are many use-cases you might want to redirect a user to, but having to make their own well known for it seems dumb instead of using a more generic one. I guess the more flexible it is, the harder adoption becomes as the usage within a spec might diverge, or it grows outside of the spec and becomes unofficial. So maybe password-reset is correct level of specification.
Anyway discord domain verification can tell in their onboarding docs to put it anywhere. It being well known does nothing. If there was a root level domain verification, then you might as well put it under that. But otherwise why go through a process?
It’s just easier for everybody to implement. Password manager opens https://<some-website>/.well-known/change-password in the user’s browser, it gets redirected to the actual page where password change form is located. You could make the password manager look it up in a link tree and then open a correct page, yes, but...
> I guess the more flexible it is, the harder adoption becomes
Yeah. If there is one account management related URL that password managers care about, it’s the change password page. You don’t really need to change email on your account that often, but it is probably a good idea to rotate your password once in a while. So I guess it’s a good idea to make it as easy as possible to adopt – which means just a single URL redirecting to another.
> If the website implements it.
That’s a good catch, though. I guess right now password managers would still have to make a “preflight” request just to see if /.well-known/change-password is implemented before showing it to the user. (But that can go away if most websites adopt it.)
> That’s a good catch, though. I guess right now password managers would still have to make a “preflight” request just to see if /.well-known/change-password is implemented before showing it to the user. (But that can go away if most websites adopt it.)
It’s not really a catch? Like robots.txt it’s just something you probe if you have the capabilities to use it. You can just cache the info afterwards.
> Why discord domain verification instead of domain-verifications with a dynamic list on entries?
The TXT record itself is already a dynamic list of entries. It's far simpler and easier to iterate through the list and compare the start of each value with your search string until you find "discord domain verification" directly than it would be to do anything else.
Example:
;; ANSWER SECTION:
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "openai-domain-verification=dv-QbhxxK0G0JK0dnyZ4YTsNAfw"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "v=spf1 include:_spf.google.com include:mailgun.org a:rsweb1-36.investorflow.com include:_spf.createsend.com include:servers.mcsv.net -all"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "MS=ms37374900"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "anthropic-domain-verification-0qe2ww=yK576oHdDgyTcXgkPfj1KXgGt"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "ZOOM_verify_2ndw8KZxSRa8PT8NmdyXvw"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "google-site-verification=KsI69Y_jEVkp4eXqSQ9R9gwxjIpZznvuvrus6UolB9Y"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "ca3-4861b957e83847c188e45d04ec314ee3"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "apple-domain-verification=WG0sP5Alm7N6h1Te"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "dropbox-domain-verification=asc63coma4mv"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "google-site-verification=GJKdQskycEclAGPua3yXB9m_nVhxbrsVps_y-t9SXV0"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "Wayback verify for support request 741082"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "google-site-verification=rivq8jKu6AADGtbbEzJhmOpcqq08B7QxIzXxYV8DtyU"
ycombinator.com. 300 IN TXT "rippling-domain-verification=a660f7a4ab77a3de"
Having all those TXT records at the domain apex like that makes the TXT query reply huge, which affects, for instance, every mail recipient who merely wants to check the SPF record. This is a bad pattern to follow.
The domains with large numbers of TXT records are also used in DNS DDoS amplification attacks. Spoofed UDP requests to domains that have a large number of TXT records are used to slam other sites. In the past I would transparently strip the TXT records when I ran public DNS recursive resolvers nobody noticed except the botters but some here may be activated. Some domains with a lot of dangling records:
Whee, my chance to be the useless use of cat asshole.
Why the echo? "for" should handle a list of terms just fine.
Pedantic assholery aside, genuine question. Is this some sort of shell expansion injection countermeasure of which I am unfamiliar?
And for the record I quite enjoy employing the useless use of cat. It turns pumping a file into a pipeline from a screwball shell meta command into a command isometric to any other command. I sort of wish tee had a "suppress stdout flag" so it could be used more naturally as cat's counterpart.
Whee, my chance to be the useless use of cat asshole.
Would it be mean if I said I do that to expose cat rectum? I used to cat to tac to cat but that was too on the nose. Another fun one is mixed case HtMl elements. I miss that old dokimos site from 2001.
"Domain-verifications" is an invitation for everyone else that might need it to use the same standard and convention. "Discord-domain-verification" is not, it's what feels like polluting the global namespace with the company name that might cease to exist in a few years.
At the very least, it should be "domain-verification-discord", "-google" and so on. Maybe even "-com.discord", "-com.google"? And the first part clearly standardized and registered, instead of one entity using "domain" and another one "site".
Why reinvent the wheel differently 50,000 times instead? I'll usually even prefer a badly designed, but standard, format/encoding over a NIH one from each company - it's just less friction in the end. Heck - include a common format for the value too, then it opens up doors to automating generation with new sites & automatically validating this config for any site following the common format.
Literally the inner platform effect. We have multiple kinds of DNS record. Let's use them instead of creating a key value store inside a key value store.
Does a change-password registry actually get used, even by bots? I don't see bots checking for a .well-known/change-password url on my sites. It seems a good place to put public configs, just to have a place for them, but not as a means of discovery.
Some password managers, such as Chrome's, offer a "change password" button in the UI that informs the user if their password has been compromised. This is based on .well-known/change-password.
I spent 10 minutes searching for one in the article, in the RFC, in the wikipedia page, on google, to search for a .well-known example. Couldn't find one.
I did read one before while working with github oidc, and I did find it very useful.
What is it with technical documentations that go deep describing what it is in plenty words but refusing to give a single example? This far from the first case I've ran into either.
> I spent 10 minutes searching for one in the article, in the RFC, in the wikipedia page, on google, to search for a .well-known example. Couldn't find one.
I don't know how that can be, since you claim to have found the RFC; the RFC straight-forwardly states,
> 5. IANA Considerations
> This specification updates the registration procedures for the "Well-Known URI" registry, first defined in [RFC5785]; see Section 3.1.
& then of course directs IANA to establish a registry. We'd expect this section, given the very nature of the RFC is that it establishes a collection of things, so that there is an IANA considerations section should be wholly unsurprising…
And there's a link to a listing of every standardized .well-known URI there is.
> What is it with technical documentations that go deep describing what it is in plenty words but refusing to give a single example?
The RFC provides an example in the form of "example", but also in the form of "robots.txt" (as a "it could have used this, had this existed", but what else could it have done?).
I've been setting up some federated servers (Matrix, activitypub) and I ran into .well_known/ paths in many of them. Webfinger resolver for activitypub and a more custom matrix server-to-server federation endpoint.
well-known is for programmatic access, it either namespaces something you’re told to look for (e.g. various types of domain markers) or it lets you discover a feature / endpoint.
In the latter case you just probe, for instance if you’re a password manager and you have a password for site A you hit A/.well-known/change-password and if they returns something you can surface a change password link to your user.
The one you found is for OIDC provider discovery (https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html#P...) so someone tells you they want to log in via Google, you hit that endpoint, and it lets you setup Google as an oidc provider rather without needing to hard-code providers. Even if you just want to support Google as a provider, you hit that and you get the entire configuration rather than have to hunt down the same information in the docs.
What RFC? The oidc discovery spec has an example, and for change-password it’s just a redirect. RFC 8615 is about the existence and management of the .well-know namespace, so examples don’t really make sense.
The great virtue of the in-band challenge types is that web servers can just handle them out of the box, without any need for a separate setup step that depends on your stack. I think this has done a heck of a lot to increase adoption of HTTPS.
Also, DNS-PERSIST-01 seems to be coming soon for Let's Encrypt, which should allow even people that can't easily dynamically update their DNS records to get wildcard certs. I assume this might become more widely used than HTTP-01 challenges.
I wish someone would write a blog post about the difference between DNS registrars and DNS hosts, because I've seen people assume they need to use a registrar that has an API in order to change their DNS records programmatically. I used to assume that too.
- registrars control NS records, however these can be changed
- NS records control other records
- registrars can also use their own nameservers to manage your DNS
Slightly less well-known than XDG directories among the developers of Linux-targeted software, it would seem.
Seriously, what an oxymoronic name. "/index.html" is a well known URL, literally: most of web-developers are aware of it. But inventing a bunch of URLs with predefined semantics and then slapping the "well-known" label on it... well, it won't magically make them actually well-known.
One disappointment you can't help but feel, having worked in technology a while, is about how people solve the same problems over and over in redundant and subtly incompatible ways.
How do you associate metadata with a public name? A SRV record! No, a TXT record! No, a meta tag! No, data attributes! No, an X.509 attribute! No, a random file at top level! No, a well known file under some schema! No, ...
It goes on forever. We're left with a mishmash of mechanisms and lowest common denominator support for them all.
It would be nice if we picked an extension mechanism and maximally enhanced it rather than having everyone invent his own
Whoever decided it would be a good idea for ".well-known" to be a "hidden" directory is a complete fool. All it does is provide the opportunity for confusion, misconfiguration, skipped backups, missed git check-ins, forgotten updates and more. Literally the only people a folder like that is hidden from is the whoever is managing the web server.
Sure, if everyone knows what they're doing, it's not a problem. But we all know how long that assumption lasts.
I think the blog author is the one who wrote the original RFC. To be fair to him, there once was a time web servers were more commonly thought of as truly being remote directories of files you can view or link to, not just domains the browser hides the rest of, and dotfiles would commonly act like dotfiles in local file listings. Nowadays, the assumption is if you go to the base URL it should only ever serve the default page and if you try to go to a directory it should throw an error. Well, unless you're one of those ancient sites like https://ftp.mozilla.org/
I'm not saying it's good or bad how things turned it, but the choice of a dotfile for this sure did not pan out well as the web went the exact opposite direction it would have been relevant in.
The main point of consideration here probably was how to avoid conflicts with URLs of existing sites, not exactly people who aren't able to serve an endpoint with a dot within its path...
TBF, those people are already hit with problems on their apache configuration and fixed their tooling long before the lack of .well-known gives them any problem.