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This address continues with company domain name like http://redmine.company.com.tr but somehow chrome can resolve when I enter this http://redmine. I wonder how chrome does this while firefox, edge, opera can't.

Or please tell me how I can inspect this.

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Edit: nslookup results like I attached below. I wonder how these url requests are being solved by chrome?

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When I ran for bitbucket I receieve the bitbucket page with https scheme:

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    It doesn't work for me, so it has to be something on your side, likely a Chrome extension if it works only in Chrome. E.g. chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/url-alias/… allows this
    – Destroy666
    Commented Feb 28, 2023 at 10:37
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    Does this happens with any ISP and any type of network connection? Does this happens in incognito mode without any extension enabled? Is your computer administered by you or by someone else?
    – Wicket
    Commented Feb 28, 2023 at 13:39
  • What happens when you check DNS for this partial domain name? Commented Mar 2, 2023 at 4:47
  • @music2myear do you mean that did I check using by nslookup command or what?
    – uzay95
    Commented Mar 5, 2023 at 1:22
  • @Rubén I've run nslookup query and put it into question message.
    – uzay95
    Commented Mar 5, 2023 at 8:53

1 Answer 1

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Your network likely advertises company.com.tr as a "domain search suffix" through DHCP1, which the OS automatically adds to any single-label name (and sometimes to all names, uselessly).

All browsers should be capable of doing this (as it relies on an OS-level feature); some just refuse to. For example, Firefox will accept http://srv01 but not srv01 alone.

The screenshot looks like Windows – run ipconfig or ipconfig /all to check the currently active domain search suffixes.


1 The domain suffix can also be configured manually, e.g. through sysdm.cpl system-wide or through ncpa.cpl per interface; every Windows system joined to an Active Directory domain will have the AD domain set up as the system-wide search suffix. Linux systems might have it defined in /etc/resolv.conf or through resolvectl.

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