The JS Punycode converter library is a great tool for handling Unicode domain names, but it only implements the Punycode encoding of domain labels, not the full IDNA algorithm. In simple cases, a mere conversion to lowercase text before input would seem sufficient, but the real mapping for strings is far more complex. This library implements the full mapping for these strings, as defined by UTS #46.
Unfortunately, the situation of internationalized domain names is rather
complicated by the existence of multiple incompatible standards (IDNA2003 and
IDNA2008, predominantly). While UTS #46 tries to bridge the incompatibility,
there are four characters which cannot be so bridged: ß (the German sharp s),
ς (Greek final sigma), and the ZWJ and ZWNJ characters. These are handled
differently depending on the mode; in transitional
mode, these strings are
mapped to different ones, preserving capability with IDNA2003; in
nontransitional
mode, these strings are mapped to themselves, in accordance
with IDNA2008.
Presently, this library uses transitional
mode, compatible with all known
browser implementations at this point. It is expected that, in the future, this
will be changed to nontransitional
mode.
It is highly recommended that you use the ASCII form of the label for storing or comparing strings.
Converts a domain name to the correct ASCII label. The second parameter is an
optional options parameter, which has two configurable options. The
transitional
option controls whether or not transitional processing (see the
IDNA mess for dummies section for more details) is requested, defaulting to
false. The useStd3ASCII
option controls whether or not characters that are
illegal in domain names per the DNS specification should be omitted. The
verifyDnsLength
option controls whether or not the resulting DNS label should
be checked for length validity (i.e., no empty components and not too long). The
options parameter and its associated fields are all optional and should be
omitted for most users.
uts46.toAscii('öbb.at'); // 'xn-bb-eka.at'
uts46.toAscii('ÖBB.AT'); // 'xn-bb-eka.at'
uts46.toAscii('XN-BB-EKA.AT'); // 'xn-bb-eka.at'
uts46.toAscii('faß.de'); // 'fass.de'
uts46.toAscii('faß.de', {transitional: true}); // 'fass.de'
uts46.toAscii('faß.de', {transitional: false}); // 'xn--fa-hia.de'
uts46.toAscii('xn--fa-hia.de', {transitional: false}); // 'xn--fa-hia.de'
uts46.toAscii(String.fromCodePoint(0xd0000)); // Error (as it is unassigned)
Converts a domain name to a normalized Unicode label. The second parameter is an
optional options parameter. The useStd3ASCII
option controls whether or not
characters that are illegal in domain names per the DNS specification should be
omitted. The latter parameter is optional and should be omitted for most users.
uts46.toUnicode('xn-bb-eka.at'); // 'öbb.at'
uts46.toUnicode('ÖBB.AT'); // 'öbb.at'
uts46.toUnicode('O\u0308BB.AT'); // 'öbb.at'
uts46.toUnicode('faß.de'); // 'faß.de'
uts46.toUnicode('xn--fa-hia.de'); // 'faß.de'
uts46.toUnicode('﷼'); // "ریال"
uts46.toUnicode(String.fromCodePoint(0xd0000)); // Error (as it is unassigned)
It also does not try to implement the Bidi and contextual rules for validation: these do not affect any mapping of the domain names; instead, they restrict the set of valid domain names. Since registrars shouldn't be accepting these names in the first place, a domain that violates these rules will simply fail to resolve.