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+Network Working Group A. Durand
+Request for Comments: 4472 Comcast
+Category: Informational J. Ihren
+ Autonomica
+ P. Savola
+ CSC/FUNET
+ April 2006
+
+
+ Operational Considerations and Issues with IPv6 DNS
+
+Status of This Memo
+
+ This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
+ not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
+ memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
+
+Abstract
+
+ This memo presents operational considerations and issues with IPv6
+ Domain Name System (DNS), including a summary of special IPv6
+ addresses, documentation of known DNS implementation misbehavior,
+ recommendations and considerations on how to perform DNS naming for
+ service provisioning and for DNS resolver IPv6 support,
+ considerations for DNS updates for both the forward and reverse
+ trees, and miscellaneous issues. This memo is aimed to include a
+ summary of information about IPv6 DNS considerations for those who
+ have experience with IPv4 DNS.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+ 1. Introduction ....................................................3
+ 1.1. Representing IPv6 Addresses in DNS Records .................3
+ 1.2. Independence of DNS Transport and DNS Records ..............4
+ 1.3. Avoiding IPv4/IPv6 Name Space Fragmentation ................4
+ 1.4. Query Type '*' and A/AAAA Records ..........................4
+ 2. DNS Considerations about Special IPv6 Addresses .................5
+ 2.1. Limited-Scope Addresses ....................................5
+ 2.2. Temporary Addresses ........................................5
+ 2.3. 6to4 Addresses .............................................5
+ 2.4. Other Transition Mechanisms ................................5
+ 3. Observed DNS Implementation Misbehavior .........................6
+ 3.1. Misbehavior of DNS Servers and Load-balancers ..............6
+ 3.2. Misbehavior of DNS Resolvers ...............................6
+
+
+
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+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
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+
+ 4. Recommendations for Service Provisioning Using DNS ..............7
+ 4.1. Use of Service Names instead of Node Names .................7
+ 4.2. Separate vs. the Same Service Names for IPv4 and IPv6 ......8
+ 4.3. Adding the Records Only When Fully IPv6-enabled ............8
+ 4.4. The Use of TTL for IPv4 and IPv6 RRs .......................9
+ 4.4.1. TTL with Courtesy Additional Data ...................9
+ 4.4.2. TTL with Critical Additional Data ..................10
+ 4.5. IPv6 Transport Guidelines for DNS Servers .................10
+ 5. Recommendations for DNS Resolver IPv6 Support ..................10
+ 5.1. DNS Lookups May Query IPv6 Records Prematurely ............10
+ 5.2. Obtaining a List of DNS Recursive Resolvers ...............12
+ 5.3. IPv6 Transport Guidelines for Resolvers ...................12
+ 6. Considerations about Forward DNS Updating ......................13
+ 6.1. Manual or Custom DNS Updates ..............................13
+ 6.2. Dynamic DNS ...............................................13
+ 7. Considerations about Reverse DNS Updating ......................14
+ 7.1. Applicability of Reverse DNS ..............................14
+ 7.2. Manual or Custom DNS Updates ..............................15
+ 7.3. DDNS with Stateless Address Autoconfiguration .............16
+ 7.4. DDNS with DHCP ............................................17
+ 7.5. DDNS with Dynamic Prefix Delegation .......................17
+ 8. Miscellaneous DNS Considerations ...............................18
+ 8.1. NAT-PT with DNS-ALG .......................................18
+ 8.2. Renumbering Procedures and Applications' Use of DNS .......18
+ 9. Acknowledgements ...............................................19
+ 10. Security Considerations .......................................19
+ 11. References ....................................................20
+ 11.1. Normative References .....................................20
+ 11.2. Informative References ...................................22
+ Appendix A. Unique Local Addressing Considerations for DNS ........24
+ Appendix B. Behavior of Additional Data in IPv4/IPv6
+ Environments ..........................................24
+ B.1. Description of Additional Data Scenarios ..................24
+ B.2. Which Additional Data to Keep, If Any? ....................26
+ B.3. Discussion of the Potential Problems ......................27
+
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+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 2]
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+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+1. Introduction
+
+ This memo presents operational considerations and issues with IPv6
+ DNS; it is meant to be an extensive summary and a list of pointers
+ for more information about IPv6 DNS considerations for those with
+ experience with IPv4 DNS.
+
+ The purpose of this document is to give information about various
+ issues and considerations related to DNS operations with IPv6; it is
+ not meant to be a normative specification or standard for IPv6 DNS.
+
+ The first section gives a brief overview of how IPv6 addresses and
+ names are represented in the DNS, how transport protocols and
+ resource records (don't) relate, and what IPv4/IPv6 name space
+ fragmentation means and how to avoid it; all of these are described
+ at more length in other documents.
+
+ The second section summarizes the special IPv6 address types and how
+ they relate to DNS. The third section describes observed DNS
+ implementation misbehaviors that have a varying effect on the use of
+ IPv6 records with DNS. The fourth section lists recommendations and
+ considerations for provisioning services with DNS. The fifth section
+ in turn looks at recommendations and considerations about providing
+ IPv6 support in the resolvers. The sixth and seventh sections
+ describe considerations with forward and reverse DNS updates,
+ respectively. The eighth section introduces several miscellaneous
+ IPv6 issues relating to DNS for which no better place has been found
+ in this memo. Appendix A looks briefly at the requirements for
+ unique local addressing. Appendix B discusses additional data.
+
+1.1. Representing IPv6 Addresses in DNS Records
+
+ In the forward zones, IPv6 addresses are represented using AAAA
+ records. In the reverse zones, IPv6 address are represented using
+ PTR records in the nibble format under the ip6.arpa. tree. See
+ [RFC3596] for more about IPv6 DNS usage, and [RFC3363] or [RFC3152]
+ for background information.
+
+ In particular, one should note that the use of A6 records in the
+ forward tree or Bitlabels in the reverse tree is not recommended
+ [RFC3363]. Using DNAME records is not recommended in the reverse
+ tree in conjunction with A6 records; the document did not mean to
+ take a stance on any other use of DNAME records [RFC3364].
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 3]
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+
+1.2. Independence of DNS Transport and DNS Records
+
+ DNS has been designed to present a single, globally unique name space
+ [RFC2826]. This property should be maintained, as described here and
+ in Section 1.3.
+
+ The IP version used to transport the DNS queries and responses is
+ independent of the records being queried: AAAA records can be queried
+ over IPv4, and A records over IPv6. The DNS servers must not make
+ any assumptions about what data to return for Answer and Authority
+ sections based on the underlying transport used in a query.
+
+ However, there is some debate whether the addresses in Additional
+ section could be selected or filtered using hints obtained from which
+ transport was being used; this has some obvious problems because in
+ many cases the transport protocol does not correlate with the
+ requests, and because a "bad" answer is in a way worse than no answer
+ at all (consider the case where the client is led to believe that a
+ name received in the additional record does not have any AAAA records
+ at all).
+
+ As stated in [RFC3596]:
+
+ The IP protocol version used for querying resource records is
+ independent of the protocol version of the resource records; e.g.,
+ IPv4 transport can be used to query IPv6 records and vice versa.
+
+1.3. Avoiding IPv4/IPv6 Name Space Fragmentation
+
+ To avoid the DNS name space from fragmenting into parts where some
+ parts of DNS are only visible using IPv4 (or IPv6) transport, the
+ recommendation is to always keep at least one authoritative server
+ IPv4-enabled, and to ensure that recursive DNS servers support IPv4.
+ See DNS IPv6 transport guidelines [RFC3901] for more information.
+
+1.4. Query Type '*' and A/AAAA Records
+
+ QTYPE=* is typically only used for debugging or management purposes;
+ it is worth keeping in mind that QTYPE=* ("ANY" queries) only return
+ any available RRsets, not *all* the RRsets, because the caches do not
+ necessarily have all the RRsets and have no way of guaranteeing that
+ they have all the RRsets. Therefore, to get both A and AAAA records
+ reliably, two separate queries must be made.
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+
+2. DNS Considerations about Special IPv6 Addresses
+
+ There are a couple of IPv6 address types that are somewhat special;
+ these are considered here.
+
+2.1. Limited-Scope Addresses
+
+ The IPv6 addressing architecture [RFC4291] includes two kinds of
+ local-use addresses: link-local (fe80::/10) and site-local
+ (fec0::/10). The site-local addresses have been deprecated [RFC3879]
+ but are discussed with unique local addresses in Appendix A.
+
+ Link-local addresses should never be published in DNS (whether in
+ forward or reverse tree), because they have only local (to the
+ connected link) significance [WIP-DC2005].
+
+2.2. Temporary Addresses
+
+ Temporary addresses defined in RFC 3041 [RFC3041] (sometimes called
+ "privacy addresses") use a random number as the interface identifier.
+ Having DNS AAAA records that are updated to always contain the
+ current value of a node's temporary address would defeat the purpose
+ of the mechanism and is not recommended. However, it would still be
+ possible to return a non-identifiable name (e.g., the IPv6 address in
+ hexadecimal format), as described in [RFC3041].
+
+2.3. 6to4 Addresses
+
+ 6to4 [RFC3056] specifies an automatic tunneling mechanism that maps a
+ public IPv4 address V4ADDR to an IPv6 prefix 2002:V4ADDR::/48.
+
+ If the reverse DNS population would be desirable (see Section 7.1 for
+ applicability), there are a number of possible ways to do so.
+
+ [WIP-H2005] aims to design an autonomous reverse-delegation system
+ that anyone being capable of communicating using a specific 6to4
+ address would be able to set up a reverse delegation to the
+ corresponding 6to4 prefix. This could be deployed by, e.g., Regional
+ Internet Registries (RIRs). This is a practical solution, but may
+ have some scalability concerns.
+
+2.4. Other Transition Mechanisms
+
+ 6to4 is mentioned as a case of an IPv6 transition mechanism requiring
+ special considerations. In general, mechanisms that include a
+ special prefix may need a custom solution; otherwise, for example,
+ when IPv4 address is embedded as the suffix or not embedded at all,
+ special solutions are likely not needed.
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 5]
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+
+ Note that it does not seem feasible to provide reverse DNS with
+ another automatic tunneling mechanism, Teredo [RFC4380]; this is
+ because the IPv6 address is based on the IPv4 address and UDP port of
+ the current Network Address Translation (NAT) mapping, which is
+ likely to be relatively short-lived.
+
+3. Observed DNS Implementation Misbehavior
+
+ Several classes of misbehavior in DNS servers, load-balancers, and
+ resolvers have been observed. Most of these are rather generic, not
+ only applicable to IPv6 -- but in some cases, the consequences of
+ this misbehavior are extremely severe in IPv6 environments and
+ deserve to be mentioned.
+
+3.1. Misbehavior of DNS Servers and Load-balancers
+
+ There are several classes of misbehavior in certain DNS servers and
+ load-balancers that have been noticed and documented [RFC4074]: some
+ implementations silently drop queries for unimplemented DNS records
+ types, or provide wrong answers to such queries (instead of a proper
+ negative reply). While typically these issues are not limited to
+ AAAA records, the problems are aggravated by the fact that AAAA
+ records are being queried instead of (mainly) A records.
+
+ The problems are serious because when looking up a DNS name, typical
+ getaddrinfo() implementations, with AF_UNSPEC hint given, first try
+ to query the AAAA records of the name, and after receiving a
+ response, query the A records. This is done in a serial fashion --
+ if the first query is never responded to (instead of properly
+ returning a negative answer), significant time-outs will occur.
+
+ In consequence, this is an enormous problem for IPv6 deployments, and
+ in some cases, IPv6 support in the software has even been disabled
+ due to these problems.
+
+ The solution is to fix or retire those misbehaving implementations,
+ but that is likely not going to be effective. There are some
+ possible ways to mitigate the problem, e.g., by performing the
+ lookups somewhat in parallel and reducing the time-out as long as at
+ least one answer has been received, but such methods remain to be
+ investigated; slightly more on this is included in Section 5.
+
+3.2. Misbehavior of DNS Resolvers
+
+ Several classes of misbehavior have also been noticed in DNS
+ resolvers [WIP-LB2005]. However, these do not seem to directly
+ impair IPv6 use, and are only referred to for completeness.
+
+
+
+
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+
+4. Recommendations for Service Provisioning Using DNS
+
+ When names are added in the DNS to facilitate a service, there are
+ several general guidelines to consider to be able to do it as
+ smoothly as possible.
+
+4.1. Use of Service Names instead of Node Names
+
+ It makes sense to keep information about separate services logically
+ separate in the DNS by using a different DNS hostname for each
+ service. There are several reasons for doing this, for example:
+
+ o It allows more flexibility and ease for migration of (only a part
+ of) services from one node to another,
+
+ o It allows configuring different properties (e.g., Time to Live
+ (TTL)) for each service, and
+
+ o It allows deciding separately for each service whether or not to
+ publish the IPv6 addresses (in cases where some services are more
+ IPv6-ready than others).
+
+ Using SRV records [RFC2782] would avoid these problems.
+ Unfortunately, those are not sufficiently widely used to be
+ applicable in most cases. Hence an operation technique is to use
+ service names instead of node names (or "hostnames"). This
+ operational technique is not specific to IPv6, but required to
+ understand the considerations described in Section 4.2 and
+ Section 4.3.
+
+ For example, assume a node named "pobox.example.com" provides both
+ SMTP and IMAP service. Instead of configuring the MX records to
+ point at "pobox.example.com", and configuring the mail clients to
+ look up the mail via IMAP from "pobox.example.com", one could use,
+ e.g., "smtp.example.com" for SMTP (for both message submission and
+ mail relaying between SMTP servers) and "imap.example.com" for IMAP.
+ Note that in the specific case of SMTP relaying, the server itself
+ must typically also be configured to know all its names to ensure
+ that loops do not occur. DNS can provide a layer of indirection
+ between service names and where the service actually is, and using
+ which addresses. (Obviously, when wanting to reach a specific node,
+ one should use the hostname rather than a service name.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+4.2. Separate vs. the Same Service Names for IPv4 and IPv6
+
+ The service naming can be achieved in basically two ways: when a
+ service is named "service.example.com" for IPv4, the IPv6-enabled
+ service could either be added to "service.example.com" or added
+ separately under a different name, e.g., in a sub-domain like
+ "service.ipv6.example.com".
+
+ These two methods have different characteristics. Using a different
+ name allows for easier service piloting, minimizing the disturbance
+ to the "regular" users of IPv4 service; however, the service would
+ not be used transparently, without the user/application explicitly
+ finding it and asking for it -- which would be a disadvantage in most
+ cases. When the different name is under a sub-domain, if the
+ services are deployed within a restricted network (e.g., inside an
+ enterprise), it's possible to prefer them transparently, at least to
+ a degree, by modifying the DNS search path; however, this is a
+ suboptimal solution. Using the same service name is the "long-term"
+ solution, but may degrade performance for those clients whose IPv6
+ performance is lower than IPv4, or does not work as well (see
+ Section 4.3 for more).
+
+ In most cases, it makes sense to pilot or test a service using
+ separate service names, and move to the use of the same name when
+ confident enough that the service level will not degrade for the
+ users unaware of IPv6.
+
+4.3. Adding the Records Only When Fully IPv6-enabled
+
+ The recommendation is that AAAA records for a service should not be
+ added to the DNS until all of following are true:
+
+ 1. The address is assigned to the interface on the node.
+
+ 2. The address is configured on the interface.
+
+ 3. The interface is on a link that is connected to the IPv6
+ infrastructure.
+
+ In addition, if the AAAA record is added for the node, instead of
+ service as recommended, all the services of the node should be IPv6-
+ enabled prior to adding the resource record.
+
+ For example, if an IPv6 node is isolated from an IPv6 perspective
+ (e.g., it is not connected to IPv6 Internet) constraint #3 would mean
+ that it should not have an address in the DNS.
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 8]
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+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
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+
+ Consider the case of two dual-stack nodes, which both are IPv6-
+ enabled, but the server does not have (global) IPv6 connectivity. As
+ the client looks up the server's name, only A records are returned
+ (if the recommendations above are followed), and no IPv6
+ communication, which would have been unsuccessful, is even attempted.
+
+ The issues are not always so black-and-white. Usually, it's
+ important that the service offered using both protocols is of roughly
+ equal quality, using the appropriate metrics for the service (e.g.,
+ latency, throughput, low packet loss, general reliability, etc.).
+ This is typically very important especially for interactive or real-
+ time services. In many cases, the quality of IPv6 connectivity may
+ not yet be equal to that of IPv4, at least globally; this has to be
+ taken into consideration when enabling services.
+
+4.4. The Use of TTL for IPv4 and IPv6 RRs
+
+ The behavior of DNS caching when different TTL values are used for
+ different RRsets of the same name calls for explicit discussion. For
+ example, let's consider two unrelated zone fragments:
+
+ example.com. 300 IN MX foo.example.com.
+ foo.example.com. 300 IN A 192.0.2.1
+ foo.example.com. 100 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
+
+ ...
+
+ child.example.com. 300 IN NS ns.child.example.com.
+ ns.child.example.com. 300 IN A 192.0.2.1
+ ns.child.example.com. 100 IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
+
+ In the former case, we have "courtesy" additional data; in the
+ latter, we have "critical" additional data. See more extensive
+ background discussion of additional data handling in Appendix B.
+
+4.4.1. TTL with Courtesy Additional Data
+
+ When a caching resolver asks for the MX record of example.com, it
+ gets back "foo.example.com". It may also get back either one or both
+ of the A and AAAA records in the additional section. The resolver
+ must explicitly query for both A and AAAA records [RFC2821].
+
+ After 100 seconds, the AAAA record is removed from the cache(s)
+ because its TTL expired. It could be argued to be useful for the
+ caching resolvers to discard the A record when the shorter TTL (in
+ this case, for the AAAA record) expires; this would avoid the
+ situation where there would be a window of 200 seconds when
+ incomplete information is returned from the cache. Further argument
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 9]
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+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ for discarding is that in the normal operation, the TTL values are so
+ high that very likely the incurred additional queries would not be
+ noticeable, compared to the obtained performance optimization. The
+ behavior in this scenario is unspecified.
+
+4.4.2. TTL with Critical Additional Data
+
+ The difference to courtesy additional data is that the A/AAAA records
+ served by the parent zone cannot be queried explicitly. Therefore,
+ after 100 seconds the AAAA record is removed from the cache(s), but
+ the A record remains. Queries for the remaining 200 seconds
+ (provided that there are no further queries from the parent that
+ could refresh the caches) only return the A record, leading to a
+ potential operational situation with unreachable servers.
+
+ Similar cache flushing strategies apply in this scenario; the
+ behavior is likewise unspecified.
+
+4.5. IPv6 Transport Guidelines for DNS Servers
+
+ As described in Section 1.3 and [RFC3901], there should continue to
+ be at least one authoritative IPv4 DNS server for every zone, even if
+ the zone has only IPv6 records. (Note that obviously, having more
+ servers with robust connectivity would be preferable, but this is the
+ minimum recommendation; also see [RFC2182].)
+
+5. Recommendations for DNS Resolver IPv6 Support
+
+ When IPv6 is enabled on a node, there are several things to consider
+ to ensure that the process is as smooth as possible.
+
+5.1. DNS Lookups May Query IPv6 Records Prematurely
+
+ The system library that implements the getaddrinfo() function for
+ looking up names is a critical piece when considering the robustness
+ of enabling IPv6; it may come in basically three flavors:
+
+ 1. The system library does not know whether IPv6 has been enabled in
+ the kernel of the operating system: it may start looking up AAAA
+ records with getaddrinfo() and AF_UNSPEC hint when the system is
+ upgraded to a system library version that supports IPv6.
+
+ 2. The system library might start to perform IPv6 queries with
+ getaddrinfo() only when IPv6 has been enabled in the kernel.
+ However, this does not guarantee that there exists any useful
+ IPv6 connectivity (e.g., the node could be isolated from the
+ other IPv6 networks, only having link-local addresses).
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 10]
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+
+ 3. The system library might implement a toggle that would apply some
+ heuristics to the "IPv6-readiness" of the node before starting to
+ perform queries; for example, it could check whether only link-
+ local IPv6 address(es) exists, or if at least one global IPv6
+ address exists.
+
+ First, let us consider generic implications of unnecessary queries
+ for AAAA records: when looking up all the records in the DNS, AAAA
+ records are typically tried first, and then A records. These are
+ done in serial, and the A query is not performed until a response is
+ received to the AAAA query. Considering the misbehavior of DNS
+ servers and load-balancers, as described in Section 3.1, the lookup
+ delay for AAAA may incur additional unnecessary latency, and
+ introduce a component of unreliability.
+
+ One option here could be to do the queries partially in parallel; for
+ example, if the final response to the AAAA query is not received in
+ 0.5 seconds, start performing the A query while waiting for the
+ result. (Immediate parallelism might not be optimal, at least
+ without information-sharing between the lookup threads, as that would
+ probably lead to duplicate non-cached delegation chain lookups.)
+
+ An additional concern is the address selection, which may, in some
+ circumstances, prefer AAAA records over A records even when the node
+ does not have any IPv6 connectivity [WIP-RDP2004]. In some cases,
+ the implementation may attempt to connect or send a datagram on a
+ physical link [WIP-R2006], incurring very long protocol time-outs,
+ instead of quickly falling back to IPv4.
+
+ Now, we can consider the issues specific to each of the three
+ possibilities:
+
+ In the first case, the node performs a number of completely useless
+ DNS lookups as it will not be able to use the returned AAAA records
+ anyway. (The only exception is where the application desires to know
+ what's in the DNS, but not use the result for communication.) One
+ should be able to disable these unnecessary queries, for both latency
+ and reliability reasons. However, as IPv6 has not been enabled, the
+ connections to IPv6 addresses fail immediately, and if the
+ application is programmed properly, the application can fall
+ gracefully back to IPv4 [RFC4038].
+
+ The second case is similar to the first, except it happens to a
+ smaller set of nodes when IPv6 has been enabled but connectivity has
+ not been provided yet. Similar considerations apply, with the
+ exception that IPv6 records, when returned, will be actually tried
+ first, which may typically lead to long time-outs.
+
+
+
+
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+
+ The third case is a bit more complex: optimizing away the DNS lookups
+ with only link-locals is probably safe (but may be desirable with
+ different lookup services that getaddrinfo() may support), as the
+ link-locals are typically automatically generated when IPv6 is
+ enabled, and do not indicate any form of IPv6 connectivity. That is,
+ performing DNS lookups only when a non-link-local address has been
+ configured on any interface could be beneficial -- this would be an
+ indication that the address has been configured either from a router
+ advertisement, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)
+ [RFC3315], or manually. Each would indicate at least some form of
+ IPv6 connectivity, even though there would not be guarantees of it.
+
+ These issues should be analyzed at more depth, and the fixes found
+ consensus on, perhaps in a separate document.
+
+5.2. Obtaining a List of DNS Recursive Resolvers
+
+ In scenarios where DHCPv6 is available, a host can discover a list of
+ DNS recursive resolvers through the DHCPv6 "DNS Recursive Name
+ Server" option [RFC3646]. This option can be passed to a host
+ through a subset of DHCPv6 [RFC3736].
+
+ The IETF is considering the development of alternative mechanisms for
+ obtaining the list of DNS recursive name servers when DHCPv6 is
+ unavailable or inappropriate. No decision about taking on this
+ development work has been reached as of this writing [RFC4339].
+
+ In scenarios where DHCPv6 is unavailable or inappropriate, mechanisms
+ under consideration for development include the use of [WIP-O2004]
+ and the use of Router Advertisements to convey the information
+ [WIP-J2006].
+
+ Note that even though IPv6 DNS resolver discovery is a recommended
+ procedure, it is not required for dual-stack nodes in dual-stack
+ networks as IPv6 DNS records can be queried over IPv4 as well as
+ IPv6. Obviously, nodes that are meant to function without manual
+ configuration in IPv6-only networks must implement the DNS resolver
+ discovery function.
+
+5.3. IPv6 Transport Guidelines for Resolvers
+
+ As described in Section 1.3 and [RFC3901], the recursive resolvers
+ should be IPv4-only or dual-stack to be able to reach any IPv4-only
+ DNS server. Note that this requirement is also fulfilled by an IPv6-
+ only stub resolver pointing to a dual-stack recursive DNS resolver.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 12]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+6. Considerations about Forward DNS Updating
+
+ While the topic of how to enable updating the forward DNS, i.e., the
+ mapping from names to the correct new addresses, is not specific to
+ IPv6, it should be considered especially due to the advent of
+ Stateless Address Autoconfiguration [RFC2462].
+
+ Typically, forward DNS updates are more manageable than doing them in
+ the reverse DNS, because the updater can often be assumed to "own" a
+ certain DNS name -- and we can create a form of security relationship
+ with the DNS name and the node that is allowed to update it to point
+ to a new address.
+
+ A more complex form of DNS updates -- adding a whole new name into a
+ DNS zone, instead of updating an existing name -- is considered out
+ of scope for this memo as it could require zone-wide authentication.
+ Adding a new name in the forward zone is a problem that is still
+ being explored with IPv4, and IPv6 does not seem to add much new in
+ that area.
+
+6.1. Manual or Custom DNS Updates
+
+ The DNS mappings can also be maintained by hand, in a semi-automatic
+ fashion or by running non-standardized protocols. These are not
+ considered at more length in this memo.
+
+6.2. Dynamic DNS
+
+ Dynamic DNS updates (DDNS) [RFC2136] [RFC3007] is a standardized
+ mechanism for dynamically updating the DNS. It works equally well
+ with Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC), DHCPv6, or manual
+ address configuration. It is important to consider how each of these
+ behave if IP address-based authentication, instead of stronger
+ mechanisms [RFC3007], was used in the updates.
+
+ 1. Manual addresses are static and can be configured.
+
+ 2. DHCPv6 addresses could be reasonably static or dynamic, depending
+ on the deployment, and could or could not be configured on the
+ DNS server for the long term.
+
+ 3. SLAAC addresses are typically stable for a long time, but could
+ require work to be configured and maintained.
+
+ As relying on IP addresses for Dynamic DNS is rather insecure at
+ best, stronger authentication should always be used; however, this
+ requires that the authorization keying will be explicitly configured
+ using unspecified operational methods.
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 13]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ Note that with DHCP it is also possible that the DHCP server updates
+ the DNS, not the host. The host might only indicate in the DHCP
+ exchange which hostname it would prefer, and the DHCP server would
+ make the appropriate updates. Nonetheless, while this makes setting
+ up a secure channel between the updater and the DNS server easier, it
+ does not help much with "content" security, i.e., whether the
+ hostname was acceptable -- if the DNS server does not include
+ policies, they must be included in the DHCP server (e.g., a regular
+ host should not be able to state that its name is "www.example.com").
+ DHCP-initiated DDNS updates have been extensively described in
+ [WIP-SV2005], [WIP-S2005a], and [WIP-S2005b].
+
+ The nodes must somehow be configured with the information about the
+ servers where they will attempt to update their addresses, sufficient
+ security material for authenticating themselves to the server, and
+ the hostname they will be updating. Unless otherwise configured, the
+ first could be obtained by looking up the authoritative name servers
+ for the hostname; the second must be configured explicitly unless one
+ chooses to trust the IP address-based authentication (not a good
+ idea); and lastly, the nodename is typically pre-configured somehow
+ on the node, e.g., at install time.
+
+ Care should be observed when updating the addresses not to use longer
+ TTLs for addresses than are preferred lifetimes for the addresses, so
+ that if the node is renumbered in a managed fashion, the amount of
+ stale DNS information is kept to the minimum. That is, if the
+ preferred lifetime of an address expires, the TTL of the record needs
+ to be modified unless it was already done before the expiration. For
+ better flexibility, the DNS TTL should be much shorter (e.g., a half
+ or a third) than the lifetime of an address; that way, the node can
+ start lowering the DNS TTL if it seems like the address has not been
+ renewed/refreshed in a while. Some discussion on how an
+ administrator could manage the DNS TTL is included in [RFC4192]; this
+ could be applied to (smart) hosts as well.
+
+7. Considerations about Reverse DNS Updating
+
+ Updating the reverse DNS zone may be difficult because of the split
+ authority over an address. However, first we have to consider the
+ applicability of reverse DNS in the first place.
+
+7.1. Applicability of Reverse DNS
+
+ Today, some applications use reverse DNS either to look up some hints
+ about the topological information associated with an address (e.g.,
+ resolving web server access logs) or (as a weak form of a security
+ check) to get a feel whether the user's network administrator has
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 14]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ "authorized" the use of the address (on the premise that adding a
+ reverse record for an address would signal some form of
+ authorization).
+
+ One additional, maybe slightly more useful usage is ensuring that the
+ reverse and forward DNS contents match (by looking up the pointer to
+ the name by the IP address from the reverse tree, and ensuring that a
+ record under the name in the forward tree points to the IP address)
+ and correspond to a configured name or domain. As a security check,
+ it is typically accompanied by other mechanisms, such as a user/
+ password login; the main purpose of the reverse+forward DNS check is
+ to weed out the majority of unauthorized users, and if someone
+ managed to bypass the checks, he would still need to authenticate
+ "properly".
+
+ It may also be desirable to store IPsec keying material corresponding
+ to an IP address in the reverse DNS, as justified and described in
+ [RFC4025].
+
+ It is not clear whether it makes sense to require or recommend that
+ reverse DNS records be updated. In many cases, it would just make
+ more sense to use proper mechanisms for security (or topological
+ information lookup) in the first place. At minimum, the applications
+ that use it as a generic authorization (in the sense that a record
+ exists at all) should be modified as soon as possible to avoid such
+ lookups completely.
+
+ The applicability is discussed at more length in [WIP-S2005c].
+
+7.2. Manual or Custom DNS Updates
+
+ Reverse DNS can of course be updated using manual or custom methods.
+ These are not further described here, except for one special case.
+
+ One way to deploy reverse DNS would be to use wildcard records, for
+ example, by configuring one name for a subnet (/64) or a site (/48).
+ As a concrete example, a site (or the site's ISP) could configure the
+ reverses of the prefix 2001:db8:f00::/48 to point to one name using a
+ wildcard record like "*.0.0.f.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. IN PTR
+ site.example.com.". Naturally, such a name could not be verified
+ from the forward DNS, but would at least provide some form of
+ "topological information" or "weak authorization" if that is really
+ considered to be useful. Note that this is not actually updating the
+ DNS as such, as the whole point is to avoid DNS updates completely by
+ manually configuring a generic name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 15]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+7.3. DDNS with Stateless Address Autoconfiguration
+
+ Dynamic reverse DNS with SLAAC is simpler than forward DNS updates in
+ some regard, while being more difficult in another, as described
+ below.
+
+ The address space administrator decides whether or not the hosts are
+ trusted to update their reverse DNS records. If they are trusted and
+ deployed at the same site (e.g., not across the Internet), a simple
+ address-based authorization is typically sufficient (i.e., check that
+ the DNS update is done from the same IP address as the record being
+ updated); stronger security can also be used [RFC3007]. If they
+ aren't allowed to update the reverses, no update can occur. However,
+ such address-based update authorization operationally requires that
+ ingress filtering [RFC3704] has been set up at the border of the site
+ where the updates occur, and as close to the updater as possible.
+
+ Address-based authorization is simpler with reverse DNS (as there is
+ a connection between the record and the address) than with forward
+ DNS. However, when a stronger form of security is used, forward DNS
+ updates are simpler to manage because the host can be assumed to have
+ an association with the domain. Note that the user may roam to
+ different networks and does not necessarily have any association with
+ the owner of that address space. So, assuming a stronger form of
+ authorization for reverse DNS updates than an address association is
+ generally infeasible.
+
+ Moreover, the reverse zones must be cleaned up by an unspecified
+ janitorial process: the node does not typically know a priori that it
+ will be disconnected, and it cannot send a DNS update using the
+ correct source address to remove a record.
+
+ A problem with defining the clean-up process is that it is difficult
+ to ensure that a specific IP address and the corresponding record are
+ no longer being used. Considering the huge address space, and the
+ unlikelihood of collision within 64 bits of the interface
+ identifiers, a process that would remove the record after no traffic
+ has been seen from a node in a long period of time (e.g., a month or
+ year) might be one possible approach.
+
+ To insert or update the record, the node must discover the DNS server
+ to send the update to somehow, similar to as discussed in
+ Section 6.2. One way to automate this is looking up the DNS server
+ authoritative (e.g., through SOA record) for the IP address being
+ updated, but the security material (unless the IP address-based
+ authorization is trusted) must also be established by some other
+ means.
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 16]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ One should note that Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs)
+ [RFC3972] may require a slightly different kind of treatment. CGAs
+ are addresses where the interface identifier is calculated from a
+ public key, a modifier (used as a nonce), the subnet prefix, and
+ other data. Depending on the usage profile, CGAs might or might not
+ be changed periodically due to, e.g., privacy reasons. As the CGA
+ address is not predictable, a reverse record can only reasonably be
+ inserted in the DNS by the node that generates the address.
+
+7.4. DDNS with DHCP
+
+ With DHCPv4, the reverse DNS name is typically already inserted to
+ the DNS that reflects the name (e.g., "dhcp-67.example.com"). One
+ can assume similar practice may become commonplace with DHCPv6 as
+ well; all such mappings would be pre-configured and would require no
+ updating.
+
+ If a more explicit control is required, similar considerations as
+ with SLAAC apply, except for the fact that typically one must update
+ a reverse DNS record instead of inserting one (if an address
+ assignment policy that reassigns disused addresses is adopted) and
+ updating a record seems like a slightly more difficult thing to
+ secure. However, it is yet uncertain how DHCPv6 is going to be used
+ for address assignment.
+
+ Note that when using DHCP, either the host or the DHCP server could
+ perform the DNS updates; see the implications in Section 6.2.
+
+ If disused addresses were to be reassigned, host-based DDNS reverse
+ updates would need policy considerations for DNS record modification,
+ as noted above. On the other hand, if disused address were not to be
+ assigned, host-based DNS reverse updates would have similar
+ considerations as SLAAC in Section 7.3. Server-based updates have
+ similar properties except that the janitorial process could be
+ integrated with DHCP address assignment.
+
+7.5. DDNS with Dynamic Prefix Delegation
+
+ In cases where a prefix, instead of an address, is being used and
+ updated, one should consider what is the location of the server where
+ DDNS updates are made. That is, where the DNS server is located:
+
+ 1. At the same organization as the prefix delegator.
+
+ 2. At the site where the prefixes are delegated to. In this case,
+ the authority of the DNS reverse zone corresponding to the
+ delegated prefix is also delegated to the site.
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 17]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ 3. Elsewhere; this implies a relationship between the site and where
+ the DNS server is located, and such a relationship should be
+ rather straightforward to secure as well. Like in the previous
+ case, the authority of the DNS reverse zone is also delegated.
+
+ In the first case, managing the reverse DNS (delegation) is simpler
+ as the DNS server and the prefix delegator are in the same
+ administrative domain (as there is no need to delegate anything at
+ all); alternatively, the prefix delegator might forgo DDNS reverse
+ capability altogether, and use, e.g., wildcard records (as described
+ in Section 7.2). In the other cases, it can be slightly more
+ difficult, particularly as the site will have to configure the DNS
+ server to be authoritative for the delegated reverse zone, implying
+ automatic configuration of the DNS server -- as the prefix may be
+ dynamic.
+
+ Managing the DDNS reverse updates is typically simple in the second
+ case, as the updated server is located at the local site, and
+ arguably IP address-based authentication could be sufficient (or if
+ not, setting up security relationships would be simpler). As there
+ is an explicit (security) relationship between the parties in the
+ third case, setting up the security relationships to allow reverse
+ DDNS updates should be rather straightforward as well (but IP
+ address-based authentication might not be acceptable). In the first
+ case, however, setting up and managing such relationships might be a
+ lot more difficult.
+
+8. Miscellaneous DNS Considerations
+
+ This section describes miscellaneous considerations about DNS that
+ seem related to IPv6, for which no better place has been found in
+ this document.
+
+8.1. NAT-PT with DNS-ALG
+
+ The DNS-ALG component of NAT-PT [RFC2766] mangles A records to look
+ like AAAA records to the IPv6-only nodes. Numerous problems have
+ been identified with [WIP-AD2005]. This is a strong reason not to
+ use NAT-PT in the first place.
+
+8.2. Renumbering Procedures and Applications' Use of DNS
+
+ One of the most difficult problems of systematic IP address
+ renumbering procedures [RFC4192] is that an application that looks up
+ a DNS name disregards information such as TTL, and uses the result
+ obtained from DNS as long as it happens to be stored in the memory of
+ the application. For applications that run for a long time, this
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 18]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ could be days, weeks, or even months. Some applications may be
+ clever enough to organize the data structures and functions in such a
+ manner that lookups get refreshed now and then.
+
+ While the issue appears to have a clear solution, "fix the
+ applications", practically, this is not reasonable immediate advice.
+ The TTL information is not typically available in the APIs and
+ libraries (so, the advice becomes "fix the applications, APIs, and
+ libraries"), and a lot more analysis is needed on how to practically
+ go about to achieve the ultimate goal of avoiding using the names
+ longer than expected.
+
+9. Acknowledgements
+
+ Some recommendations (Section 4.3, Section 5.1) about IPv6 service
+ provisioning were moved here from [RFC4213] by Erik Nordmark and Bob
+ Gilligan. Havard Eidnes and Michael Patton provided useful feedback
+ and improvements. Scott Rose, Rob Austein, Masataka Ohta, and Mark
+ Andrews helped in clarifying the issues regarding additional data and
+ the use of TTL. Jefsey Morfin, Ralph Droms, Peter Koch, Jinmei
+ Tatuya, Iljitsch van Beijnum, Edward Lewis, and Rob Austein provided
+ useful feedback during the WG last call. Thomas Narten provided
+ extensive feedback during the IESG evaluation.
+
+10. Security Considerations
+
+ This document reviews the operational procedures for IPv6 DNS
+ operations and does not have security considerations in itself.
+
+ However, it is worth noting that in particular with Dynamic DNS
+ updates, security models based on the source address validation are
+ very weak and cannot be recommended -- they could only be considered
+ in the environments where ingress filtering [RFC3704] has been
+ deployed. On the other hand, it should be noted that setting up an
+ authorization mechanism (e.g., a shared secret, or public-private
+ keys) between a node and the DNS server has to be done manually, and
+ may require quite a bit of time and expertise.
+
+ To re-emphasize what was already stated, the reverse+forward DNS
+ check provides very weak security at best, and the only
+ (questionable) security-related use for them may be in conjunction
+ with other mechanisms when authenticating a user.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 19]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+11. References
+
+11.1. Normative References
+
+ [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and
+ facilities", STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.
+
+ [RFC2136] Vixie, P., Thomson, S., Rekhter, Y., and J. Bound,
+ "Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS
+ UPDATE)", RFC 2136, April 1997.
+
+ [RFC2181] Elz, R. and R. Bush, "Clarifications to the DNS
+ Specification", RFC 2181, July 1997.
+
+ [RFC2182] Elz, R., Bush, R., Bradner, S., and M. Patton,
+ "Selection and Operation of Secondary DNS Servers",
+ BCP 16, RFC 2182, July 1997.
+
+ [RFC2462] Thomson, S. and T. Narten, "IPv6 Stateless Address
+ Autoconfiguration", RFC 2462, December 1998.
+
+ [RFC2671] Vixie, P., "Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0)",
+ RFC 2671, August 1999.
+
+ [RFC2821] Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 2821,
+ April 2001.
+
+ [RFC3007] Wellington, B., "Secure Domain Name System (DNS)
+ Dynamic Update", RFC 3007, November 2000.
+
+ [RFC3041] Narten, T. and R. Draves, "Privacy Extensions for
+ Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6", RFC 3041,
+ January 2001.
+
+ [RFC3056] Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains
+ via IPv4 Clouds", RFC 3056, February 2001.
+
+ [RFC3152] Bush, R., "Delegation of IP6.ARPA", BCP 49, RFC 3152,
+ August 2001.
+
+ [RFC3315] Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C.,
+ and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for
+ IPv6 (DHCPv6)", RFC 3315, July 2003.
+
+ [RFC3363] Bush, R., Durand, A., Fink, B., Gudmundsson, O., and T.
+ Hain, "Representing Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)
+ Addresses in the Domain Name System (DNS)", RFC 3363,
+ August 2002.
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 20]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ [RFC3364] Austein, R., "Tradeoffs in Domain Name System (DNS)
+ Support for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)",
+ RFC 3364, August 2002.
+
+ [RFC3596] Thomson, S., Huitema, C., Ksinant, V., and M. Souissi,
+ "DNS Extensions to Support IP Version 6", RFC 3596,
+ October 2003.
+
+ [RFC3646] Droms, R., "DNS Configuration options for Dynamic Host
+ Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)", RFC 3646,
+ December 2003.
+
+ [RFC3736] Droms, R., "Stateless Dynamic Host Configuration
+ Protocol (DHCP) Service for IPv6", RFC 3736,
+ April 2004.
+
+ [RFC3879] Huitema, C. and B. Carpenter, "Deprecating Site Local
+ Addresses", RFC 3879, September 2004.
+
+ [RFC3901] Durand, A. and J. Ihren, "DNS IPv6 Transport
+ Operational Guidelines", BCP 91, RFC 3901,
+ September 2004.
+
+ [RFC4038] Shin, M-K., Hong, Y-G., Hagino, J., Savola, P., and E.
+ Castro, "Application Aspects of IPv6 Transition",
+ RFC 4038, March 2005.
+
+ [RFC4074] Morishita, Y. and T. Jinmei, "Common Misbehavior
+ Against DNS Queries for IPv6 Addresses", RFC 4074,
+ May 2005.
+
+ [RFC4192] Baker, F., Lear, E., and R. Droms, "Procedures for
+ Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day",
+ RFC 4192, September 2005.
+
+ [RFC4193] Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast
+ Addresses", RFC 4193, October 2005.
+
+ [RFC4291] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
+ Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
+
+ [RFC4339] Jeong, J., Ed., "IPv6 Host Configuration of DNS Server
+ Information Approaches", RFC 4339, February 2006.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 21]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+11.2. Informative References
+
+ [RFC2766] Tsirtsis, G. and P. Srisuresh, "Network Address
+ Translation - Protocol Translation (NAT-PT)", RFC 2766,
+ February 2000.
+
+ [RFC2782] Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR
+ for specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)",
+ RFC 2782, February 2000.
+
+ [RFC2826] Internet Architecture Board, "IAB Technical Comment on
+ the Unique DNS Root", RFC 2826, May 2000.
+
+ [RFC3704] Baker, F. and P. Savola, "Ingress Filtering for
+ Multihomed Networks", BCP 84, RFC 3704, March 2004.
+
+ [RFC3972] Aura, T., "Cryptographically Generated Addresses
+ (CGA)", RFC 3972, March 2005.
+
+ [RFC4025] Richardson, M., "A Method for Storing IPsec Keying
+ Material in DNS", RFC 4025, March 2005.
+
+ [RFC4213] Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition
+ Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 4213,
+ October 2005.
+
+ [RFC4215] Wiljakka, J., "Analysis on IPv6 Transition in Third
+ Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Networks",
+ RFC 4215, October 2005.
+
+ [RFC4380] Huitema, C., "Teredo: Tunneling IPv6 over UDP through
+ Network Address Translations (NATs)", RFC 4380,
+ February 2006.
+
+ [TC-TEST] Jinmei, T., "Thread "RFC2181 section 9.1: TC bit
+ handling and additional data" on DNSEXT mailing list,
+ Message-
+ Id:y7vek9j9hyo.wl%jinmei@isl.rdc.toshiba.co.jp", August
+ 1, 2005, <http://ops.ietf.org/lists/namedroppers/
+ namedroppers.2005/msg01102.html>.
+
+ [WIP-AD2005] Aoun, C. and E. Davies, "Reasons to Move NAT-PT to
+ Experimental", Work in Progress, October 2005.
+
+ [WIP-DC2005] Durand, A. and T. Chown, "To publish, or not to
+ publish, that is the question", Work in Progress,
+ October 2005.
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 22]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ [WIP-H2005] Huston, G., "6to4 Reverse DNS Delegation
+ Specification", Work in Progress, November 2005.
+
+ [WIP-J2006] Jeong, J., "IPv6 Router Advertisement Option for DNS
+ Configuration", Work in Progress, January 2006.
+
+ [WIP-LB2005] Larson, M. and P. Barber, "Observed DNS Resolution
+ Misbehavior", Work in Progress, February 2006.
+
+ [WIP-O2004] Ohta, M., "Preconfigured DNS Server Addresses", Work in
+ Progress, February 2004.
+
+ [WIP-R2006] Roy, S., "IPv6 Neighbor Discovery On-Link Assumption
+ Considered Harmful", Work in Progress, January 2006.
+
+ [WIP-RDP2004] Roy, S., Durand, A., and J. Paugh, "Issues with Dual
+ Stack IPv6 on by Default", Work in Progress, July 2004.
+
+ [WIP-S2005a] Stapp, M., "The DHCP Client FQDN Option", Work in
+ Progress, March 2006.
+
+ [WIP-S2005b] Stapp, M., "A DNS RR for Encoding DHCP Information
+ (DHCID RR)", Work in Progress, March 2006.
+
+ [WIP-S2005c] Senie, D., "Encouraging the use of DNS IN-ADDR
+ Mapping", Work in Progress, August 2005.
+
+ [WIP-SV2005] Stapp, M. and B. Volz, "Resolution of FQDN Conflicts
+ among DHCP Clients", Work in Progress, March 2006.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 23]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+Appendix A. Unique Local Addressing Considerations for DNS
+
+ Unique local addresses [RFC4193] have replaced the now-deprecated
+ site-local addresses [RFC3879]. From the perspective of the DNS, the
+ locally generated unique local addresses (LUL) and site-local
+ addresses have similar properties.
+
+ The interactions with DNS come in two flavors: forward and reverse
+ DNS.
+
+ To actually use local addresses within a site, this implies the
+ deployment of a "split-faced" or a fragmented DNS name space, for the
+ zones internal to the site, and the outsiders' view to it. The
+ procedures to achieve this are not elaborated here. The implication
+ is that local addresses must not be published in the public DNS.
+
+ To facilitate reverse DNS (if desired) with local addresses, the stub
+ resolvers must look for DNS information from the local DNS servers,
+ not, e.g., starting from the root servers, so that the local
+ information may be provided locally. Note that the experience of
+ private addresses in IPv4 has shown that the root servers get loaded
+ for requests for private address lookups in any case. This
+ requirement is discussed in [RFC4193].
+
+Appendix B. Behavior of Additional Data in IPv4/IPv6 Environments
+
+ DNS responses do not always fit in a single UDP packet. We'll
+ examine the cases that happen when this is due to too much data in
+ the Additional section.
+
+B.1. Description of Additional Data Scenarios
+
+ There are two kinds of additional data:
+
+ 1. "critical" additional data; this must be included in all
+ scenarios, with all the RRsets, and
+
+ 2. "courtesy" additional data; this could be sent in full, with only
+ a few RRsets, or with no RRsets, and can be fetched separately as
+ well, but at the cost of additional queries.
+
+ The responding server can algorithmically determine which type the
+ additional data is by checking whether it's at or below a zone cut.
+
+ Only those additional data records (even if sometimes carelessly
+ termed "glue") are considered "critical" or real "glue" if and only
+ if they meet the above-mentioned condition, as specified in Section
+ 4.2.1 of [RFC1034].
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 24]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+ Remember that resource record sets (RRsets) are never "broken up", so
+ if a name has 4 A records and 5 AAAA records, you can either return
+ all 9, all 4 A records, all 5 AAAA records, or nothing. In
+ particular, notice that for the "critical" additional data getting
+ all the RRsets can be critical.
+
+ In particular, [RFC2181] specifies (in Section 9) that:
+
+ a. if all the "critical" RRsets do not fit, the sender should set
+ the TC bit, and the recipient should discard the whole response
+ and retry using mechanism allowing larger responses such as TCP.
+
+ b. "courtesy" additional data should not cause the setting of the TC
+ bit, but instead all the non-fitting additional data RRsets
+ should be removed.
+
+ An example of the "courtesy" additional data is A/AAAA records in
+ conjunction with MX records as shown in Section 4.4; an example of
+ the "critical" additional data is shown below (where getting both the
+ A and AAAA RRsets is critical with respect to the NS RR):
+
+ child.example.com. IN NS ns.child.example.com.
+ ns.child.example.com. IN A 192.0.2.1
+ ns.child.example.com. IN AAAA 2001:db8::1
+
+ When there is too much "courtesy" additional data, at least the non-
+ fitting RRsets should be removed [RFC2181]; however, as the
+ additional data is not critical, even all of it could be safely
+ removed.
+
+ When there is too much "critical" additional data, TC bit will have
+ to be set, and the recipient should ignore the response and retry
+ using TCP; if some data were to be left in the UDP response, the
+ issue is which data could be retained.
+
+ However, the practice may differ from the specification. Testing and
+ code analysis of three recent implementations [TC-TEST] confirm this.
+ None of the tested implementations have a strict separation of
+ critical and courtesy additional data, while some forms of additional
+ data may be treated preferably. All the implementations remove some
+ (critical or courtesy) additional data RRsets without setting the TC
+ bit if the response would not otherwise fit.
+
+ Failing to discard the response with the TC bit or omitting critical
+ information but not setting the TC bit lead to an unrecoverable
+ problem. Omitting only some of the RRsets if all would not fit (but
+ not setting the TC bit) leads to a performance problem. These are
+ discussed in the next two subsections.
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 25]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+B.2. Which Additional Data to Keep, If Any?
+
+ NOTE: omitting some critical additional data instead of setting the
+ TC bit violates a 'should' in Section 9 of RFC2181. However, as many
+ implementations still do that [TC-TEST], operators need to understand
+ its implications, and we describe that behavior as well.
+
+ If the implementation decides to keep as much data (whether
+ "critical" or "courtesy") as possible in the UDP responses, it might
+ be tempting to use the transport of the DNS query as a hint in either
+ of these cases: return the AAAA records if the query was done over
+ IPv6, or return the A records if the query was done over IPv4.
+ However, this breaks the model of independence of DNS transport and
+ resource records, as noted in Section 1.2.
+
+ With courtesy additional data, as long as enough RRsets will be
+ removed so that TC will not be set, it is allowed to send as many
+ complete RRsets as the implementations prefers. However, the
+ implementations are also free to omit all such RRsets, even if
+ complete. Omitting all the RRsets (when removing only some would
+ suffice) may create a performance penalty, whereby the client may
+ need to issue one or more additional queries to obtain necessary
+ and/or consistent information.
+
+ With critical additional data, the alternatives are either returning
+ nothing (and absolutely requiring a retry with TCP) or returning
+ something (working also in the case if the recipient does not discard
+ the response and retry using TCP) in addition to setting the TC bit.
+ If the process for selecting "something" from the critical data would
+ otherwise be practically "flipping the coin" between A and AAAA
+ records, it could be argued that if one looked at the transport of
+ the query, it would have a larger possibility of being right than
+ just 50/50. In other words, if the returned critical additional data
+ would have to be selected somehow, using something more sophisticated
+ than a random process would seem justifiable.
+
+ That is, leaving in some intelligently selected critical additional
+ data is a trade-off between creating an optimization for those
+ resolvers that ignore the "should discard" recommendation and causing
+ a protocol problem by propagating inconsistent information about
+ "critical" records in the caches.
+
+ Similarly, leaving in the complete courtesy additional data RRsets
+ instead of removing all the RRsets is a performance trade-off as
+ described in the next section.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 26]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+B.3. Discussion of the Potential Problems
+
+ As noted above, the temptation for omitting only some of the
+ additional data could be problematic. This is discussed more below.
+
+ For courtesy additional data, this causes a potential performance
+ problem as this requires that the clients issue re-queries for the
+ potentially omitted RRsets. For critical additional data, this
+ causes a potential unrecoverable problem if the response is not
+ discarded and the query not re-tried with TCP, as the nameservers
+ might be reachable only through the omitted RRsets.
+
+ If an implementation would look at the transport used for the query,
+ it is worth remembering that often the host using the records is
+ different from the node requesting them from the authoritative DNS
+ server (or even a caching resolver). So, whichever version the
+ requestor (e.g., a recursive server in the middle) uses makes no
+ difference to the ultimate user of the records, whose transport
+ capabilities might differ from those of the requestor. This might
+ result in, e.g., inappropriately returning A records to an IPv6-only
+ node, going through a translation, or opening up another IP-level
+ session (e.g., a Packet Data Protocol (PDP) context [RFC4215]).
+ Therefore, at least in many scenarios, it would be very useful if the
+ information returned would be consistent and complete -- or if that
+ is not feasible, leave it to the client to query again.
+
+ The problem of too much additional data seems to be an operational
+ one: the zone administrator entering too many records that will be
+ returned truncated (or missing some RRsets, depending on
+ implementations) to the users. A protocol fix for this is using
+ Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0) [RFC2671] to signal the capacity
+ for larger UDP packet sizes, pushing up the relevant threshold.
+ Further, DNS server implementations should omit courtesy additional
+ data completely rather than including only some RRsets [RFC2181]. An
+ operational fix for this is having the DNS server implementations
+ return a warning when the administrators create zones that would
+ result in too much additional data being returned. Further, DNS
+ server implementations should warn of or disallow such zone
+ configurations that are recursive or otherwise difficult to manage by
+ the protocol.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 27]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Alain Durand
+ Comcast
+ 1500 Market St.
+ Philadelphia, PA 19102
+ USA
+
+ EMail: Alain_Durand@cable.comcast.com
+
+
+ Johan Ihren
+ Autonomica
+ Bellmansgatan 30
+ SE-118 47 Stockholm
+ Sweden
+
+ EMail: johani@autonomica.se
+
+
+ Pekka Savola
+ CSC/FUNET
+ Espoo
+ Finland
+
+ EMail: psavola@funet.fi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 28]
+
+RFC 4472 Considerations with IPv6 DNS April 2006
+
+
+Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
+
+ This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
+ contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
+ retain all their rights.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
+ OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
+ ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
+ INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
+ INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
+ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Intellectual Property
+
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+ http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
+
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+
+Acknowledgement
+
+ Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
+ Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Durand, et al. Informational [Page 29]
+