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A locally-unique host is a FQDN defined by you and resolved only by you; similar to how a hosts file is implemented. Not to be confused with canonically unique host.
You have the option to share your interpretation of how the host is resolved
(e.g., localhost
always resolves to 127.0.0.1
) but the resolution is not
canonically enforced (e.g., someone else can map localhost
to any
arbitrary IP address).
Hosts in a public subscription can be considered canonically unique host's within the I2P network but, ultimately, you are free to re-define them as you wish.
Monero primarily uses canonically unique host resolution while I2P only uses locally unique host resolution.
I2P's and Kovri's assigned top-level domain is currently .i2p
and
Kovri intends to only process/use the .i2p
top-level
domain