The Windows Hosts file allows you to associate an IP to a host name that has far greater freedom than a normal Internet domain name. I'd like to create a function that determines if a given name would be a valid "host" file domain name.
Based on this answer and experimentation of what works and doesn't, I came up with this function:
private static bool IsValidDomainName(string domain)
{
if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(domain) || domain.Length > 255)
{
return false;
}
Uri uri;
if (!Uri.TryCreate("http://" + domain, UriKind.Absolute, out uri))
{
return false;
}
if (!String.Equals(uri.Host, domain, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) || !uri.IsWellFormedOriginalString())
{
return false;
}
foreach (string part in uri.Host.Split('.'))
{
if (part.Length > 63)
{
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
It also has the benefit that it should work with Unicode names (where a basic regex would fail).
Is there a better/more elegant way to do this?
UPDATE: As suggested by Bill, the Uri.CheckHostName method almost does what I want, but it doesn't allow for host names like "-test" that Windows allows in a "hosts" file. I would special case the "-" part, but I'm concerned there are more special cases.
How about the System.Uri.CheckHostName() method?
private static bool IsValidDomainName(string name)
{
return Uri.CheckHostName(name) != UriHostNameType.Unknown;
}
Why do the work yourself?