581 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
581 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
DNSEXT WG Edward Lewis
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INTERNET DRAFT NAI Labs
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Category:I-D Feburary 1, 2000
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DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status
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<draft-ietf-dnsext-zone-status-00.txt>
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Status of this Memo
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This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all
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provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
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Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task
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Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
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groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
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Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
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and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
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time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
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material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
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The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
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http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt
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The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
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http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
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Comments should be sent to the authors or the DNSIND WG mailing list
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namedroppers@internic.net.
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This draft expires on August 1, 2000.
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Copyright Notice
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Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999, 2000). All rights reserved.
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Abstract
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The definition of a secured zone is presented, updating RFC 2535. The
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new definition has consequences which alter the interpretation of the
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NXT record, obsolete NULL keys, and the designation of "experimentally
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secure."
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1 Introduction
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Whether a DNS zone is "secured" or not is a question asked in at least
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four contexts. A zone administrator asks the question when
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configuring a zone to use DNSSEC. A dynamic update server asks the
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question when an update request arrives, which may require DNSSEC
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processing. A delegating zone asks the question of a child zone when
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the parent enters data indicating the status the child. A resolver
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asks the question upon receipt of data belonging to the zone.
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A zone administrator needs to be able to determine what steps are
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needed to make the zone as secure as it can be. Realizing that due to
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 1]
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the distributed nature of DNS and its administration, any single zone
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is at the mercy of other zones when it comes to the appearance of
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security. This document will define what makes a zone qualify as
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secure (absent interaction with other zones).
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A name server performing dynamic updates needs to know whether a zone
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being updated is to have signatures added to the updated data, NXT
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records applied, and other required processing. In this case, it is
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conceivable that the name server is configured with the knowledge, but
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being able to determine the status of a zone by examining the data is
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a desirable alternative to configuration parameters.
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A delegating zone is required to indicate whether a child zone is
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secured. The reason for this requirement lies in the way in which a
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resolver makes its own determination about a zone (next paragraph). To
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shorten a long story, a parent needs to know whether a child should be
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considered secured. This is a two part question, what does a parent
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consider a secure child to be, and how does a parent know if the child
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conforms?
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A resolver needs to know if a zone is secured when the resolver is
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processing data from the zone. Ultimately, a resolver needs to know
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whether or not to expect a usable signature covering the data. How
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this determination is done is out of the scope of this document,
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except that, in some cases, the resolver will need to contact the
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parent of the zone to see if the parent states that the child is
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secured.
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This document updates several sections of RFC 2535. The definition of
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a secured zone is an update to section 3.4 of the RFC. The document
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updates section 2.3.4, by specifying a replacement for the NULL zone
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keys. The document also updates section 3.4 to eliminate the
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definition of experimental keys and illustrate a way to still achieve
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the functionality they were designed to provide.
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2 Status of a Zone
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In this section, rules governing a zone's DNSSEC status are presented.
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There are three levels of security defined; full, private, and
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unsecured. A zone is fully secure when it complies with the strictest
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set of DNSSEC processing rules. A zone is privately secured when it
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is configured in such a way that only resolvers that are appropriately
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configured see the zone as secured. All other zones are unsecured.
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Note: there currently is no other document completely defining DNSSEC
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processing rules. For the purposes of this document, the strictest
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rules are assumed to state that the verification chain of zone keys
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parallels the delegation tree up to the root zone. This is not
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intended to disallow alternate verification paths, just to establish a
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baseline definition.
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To avoid repetition in the rules below, the following term is defined.
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2.a. Zone signing KEY RR - A KEY RR whose flag field has the value 01
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 2]
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for name type (indicating a zone key) and either value 00 or value 01
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for key type (indicating a key permitted to authenticate data). (See
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RFC 2535, section 3.1.2). The KEY RR also has a protocol octet value
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of DNSSEC (3) or All (255).
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2.1 Fully Secured
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A fully secured zone, in a nutshell, is a zone that uses only
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mandatory to implement algorithms (RFC 2535, section 3.2) and relies
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on a key certification chain that parallels the delegation tree. Fully
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secured zones are defined by the following rules.
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2.1.a. The zone's apex MUST have a KEY RR set. There MUST be at least
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one zone signing KEY RR (2.a) of a mandatory to implement algorithm in
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the set.
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2.1.b. The zone's apex KEY RR set MUST be signed by a private key
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belonging to the parent zone. The private key's public companion MUST
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be a zone signing KEY RR (2.a) of a mandatory to implement algorithm
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and owned by the parent's apex.
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If a zone cannot get a conforming signature from the parent zone, the
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child zone cannot be considered fully secured.
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2.1.c. NXT records MUST be deployed throughout the zone. (Updates RFC
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2535, section 2.3.2.) Note: there is some operational discomfort with
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the current NXT record. This requirement is open to modification when
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two things happen. First, an alternate mechanism to the NXT is
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defined and second, a means by which a zone can indicate that it is
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using an alternate method.
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2.1.d. Each RR set that qualifies for zone membership MUST be signed
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by a key that is in the apex's KEY RR set and is a zone signing KEY RR
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(2.a) of a mandatory to implement algorithm. (Updates 2535, section
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2.3.1.)
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2.2 Privately Secured
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A privately secured zone is a zone that complies with rules like those
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for fully secured, with the following exceptions. The signing keys
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may be of an algorithm that is not mandatory to implement and/or the
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verification of the zone keys in use may rely on a verification chain
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that is not parallel to the delegation tree.
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2.2.a. The zone's apex MUST have a KEY RR set. There MUST be at least
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one zone signing KEY RR (2.a) in the set.
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2.2.b. The zone's apex KEY RR set MUST be signed by a private key and
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one of the following two sentences MUST hold true. The private key's
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public companion MUST be preconfigured in all the resolvers of
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interest. The private key's public component MUST be a zone signing
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KEY RR (2.a) authorized to provide validation of the zone's apex KEY
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RR set, as recognized by resolvers of interest.
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 3]
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DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status February 1, 2000
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The previous sentence is trying to convey the notion of using a
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trusted third party to provide validation of keys. If the domain name
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owning the validating key is not the parent zone, the domain name must
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represent someone the resolver trusts to provide validation.
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2.2.c. NXT records MUST be deployed throughout the zone. (Updates RFC
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2535, section 2.3.2.) Note: see the discussion following 2.1.c.
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2.2.d. Each RR set that qualifies for zone membership MUST be signed
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by a key that is in the apex's KEY RR set and is a zone signing KEY RR
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(2.a). (Updates 2535, section 2.3.1.)
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2.3 Unsecured
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All other zones qualify as unsecured. This includes zones that are
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designed to be experimentally secure, as defined in a later section on
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that topic.
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2.4 Wrap up
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The designation of fully secured, privately secured, and unsecured are
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merely labels to apply to zones, based on their contents. Resolvers,
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when determining whether a signature is expected or not, will only see
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a zone as secured or unsecured.
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Resolvers that follow the most restrictive DNSSEC verification rules
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will only see fully secured zones as secured, and all others as
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unsecured, including zones which are privately secured. Resolvers
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which are not as restrictive, such as those that implement algorithms
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in addition to the mandatory to implement algorithms, will see some
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privately secured zones as secured.
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The intent of the labels "fully" and "privately" is to identify the
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specific attributes of a zone. The words are chosen to assist in the
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writing of a document recommending the actions a zone administrator
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take in making use of the DNS security extensions. The words are
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explicitly not intended to convey a state of compliance with DNS
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security standards.
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3 Parental Notification
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For a resolver to come to a definitive answer concerning a zone's
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security status, there is a requirement that the parent of a zone
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signify whether the child zone is signed or not. The justification of
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this requirement requires a discussion of the resolver's activity,
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which is described in RFC 2535.
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In RFC 2535, a parent is required to hold a NULL key for an unsigned
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child (a bone of contention here is how this works in light of
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multiple algorithms). The parent has the option to hold the keys of
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the child if the child is signed. The parent may also hold nothing
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cryptographic if the child is signed. This, of course, assumes the
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parent is a signed zone.
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 4]
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There is a strong case for discouraging a parent from holding keys of
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a signed child. These include concrete concerns about performance and
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more abstract concerns about the liability of the parent.
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DNS [RFC 1034 and 1035] requires a parent to hold NS records for a
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child zone, this signifies the delegation. RFC 2535 requires a
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secured parent to also have signed NXT records for the child, and
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possibly a signed KEY RR set (required for NULL key situations).
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By redefining the security status of a zone to be per zone and not per
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algorithm, there is an opportunity to completely remove the need for a
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KEY RR set in the parent. Because the question of whether the zone is
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secure or not is a yes-or-no question, the notification needs just one
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bit to be expressed.
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Keep in mind that the following sections speak to the contents of a
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zone, not a name server. In the case of a name server speaking
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authoritatively for both the parent and child, or if a server caches
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the information for the other half of the delegation, then a server
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will have more types of data at a delegation point than a parent is
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supposed to hold. (E.g., if a parent zone's name server caches the
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SOA for the child, the SOA is not in the parent zone, but is in the
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server's cache.)
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3.1 Child Is Secured Bit
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This section is written assuming the current definition of NXT holds.
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There is some controversy surrounding the NXT record which may result
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in a complete replacement of it for proof of non-existence. The
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current NXT definition provides an extension bit in the types present
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bit map, whose use is remains incompletely defined. The following
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text largely ignores these uncertainties, and should be rewritten to
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accommodate these uncertainties in revisions.
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In the parent's half of the delegation point, there will be an NXT
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record. According to the rules for a delegation point, only the NS,
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NXT, and SIG bits will be turned on in the types present field,
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assuming we drop the KEY set altogether.
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The KEY bit in the parent's NXT types present bit map is hereby
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redefined to have the following meaning.
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If the bit corresponding to the KEY RR set in a parent NXT is set, the
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parent has signed a KEY RR set for the child that includes a zone
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signing KEY RR (2.a). Furthermore, the validity period on the SIG
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(KEY) RR covers the current time and the public component of the key
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used to generate the SIG (KEY) RR is validly available from the
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parent.
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E.g., Assume the zone "test." signs a key for "zone1.test.," with the
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signature valid from May 1st to June 1st and a public key from "test."
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available from April 1st until July 1st. The NXT record for
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"zone1.test." will have the KEY RR bit set from May 1st to June 1st.
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 5]
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This constraint may be enforced in the SIG (NXT) RR validity period,
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timely editing of the master file, or whatever other mechanism "test."
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chooses to implement.
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Conversely, if the bit is 0, then the child is not secured. Note that
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for a fully secured zone (section 2.1), the bit is on (1). For all
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unsecured zones (section 2.3) the bit is off (0). For privately
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secured zones (section 2.2), the setting of the bit is determined by
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whether the parent signs the child's keys or not. Hence, for
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privately secured zones, the parent may have no responsibility. A
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child wishing to have the parent set the bit must contact the parent.
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3.2 Rules Governing the Bit
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In this section, the words of the previous are turned into definitive
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MUST and SHOULDs. Note that this section does not refer to the bit in
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the NXT. This is in anticipation of a change in the way NXT indicates
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types present (e.g., if bit 0 of the field is defined) or a successor
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to the NXT is defined.
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3.2.a. At a delegation point, a parent zone MUST have a mechanism in
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place to indicate which RR sets are present. The mechanism MUST
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indicate that the NS, SIG, and the type(s) corresponding to the
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mechanism itself are present (of course, with these types actually
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being present). With the exception of the KEY RR type, all other
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types MUST be indicated as not present, and, in accordance with
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delegation rules, actually be absent from the zone. If, in the
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future, other data is permitted to be present at a delegation point,
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this requirement MUST be amended.
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Assuming the NXT record, the above requirement reads as follows. At a
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delegation point, a parent zone must have a secured NXT record. This
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NXT record must indicate that the NS, SIG, and NXT types are present.
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With the exception of KEY, all other types must be indicated as not
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present. The lower casing of the word "must" is intentional,
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conveying that this is an explanation of the rule above.
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3.2.b. The KEY set MUST be indicated as present during the time when
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the parent has issued a signature for the child's KEY set. Conversely,
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during periods of time in which the parent knows it has not generated
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a signature for the KEY RR set, the KEY set MUST be indicated to be
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absent.
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If the parent has issued signatures with discontinuous validity spans,
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then the presence of the KEY set will flip from present to not present
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and back as time progresses.
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If the parent is aware that the child's keys are becoming valid or
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will be becoming invalid at a certain point in time, it is recommended
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that this be reflected in the NXT's signature validity period.
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3.2.c. When signing a child's KEY RR set, a parent SHOULD carefully
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consider the algorithm of the key used to generate the signature. The
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parent SHOULD make clear to child zones what steps are to be taken to
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 6]
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DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status February 1, 2000
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get the parent to indicate that the child is signed. This document
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will go no further in specifying operational considerations.
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(Let's say the parent signs the child's key set with an algorithm the
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child can't process. The child could elect not to advertise this
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signature as it cannot verify that the signature covers the real key
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set. If this happens, is the parent justified in claiming that the
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child is secured?)
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3.2.d. The parent MUST allow the child, through some trusted, probably
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non-DNS mechanism, to request that the indication of the KEY set in
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the NXT be turned off. This allows a child to revert to an unsigned
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state.
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3.2.e. The parent SHOULD NOT allow the child to request that the KEY
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set be indicated in the absence of a key signing request.
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3.3 Operational Considerations
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Retrieving the NXT for a delegated name from the parent zone (the
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upper NXT) is not a trivial operation. The complication arises due to
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having an NXT in the delegatee (the lower NXT) that matches the owner
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name of the upper NXT. (The case in which both the parent and child
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zones are secured is the only case mentioned here. If both are not
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secured, then there will be at most one NXT, which is easily
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retrieved.)
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There are two complications to describe. One involves the multiple
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NXT sets matching the same owner. The other is the pragmatic issue of
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knowing where to get the answer.
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With multiple NXT sets at the same owner, caches may become a problem.
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If a (for example) recursive server has cached the lower NXT, any
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query for the upper NXT may be confused for a lower NXT query. This
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is akin to the issue of the ANY query, where a server with some cached
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data will answer with just that and not seek the rest of the data.
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A resolver may know the child's server's addresses and the parent zone
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may not be sharing servers with the child. In this case the resolver
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will need to be able to locate the parent zones (possibly having to go
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to the root servers and descend) in order to obtain the upper NXT
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record.
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A potential solution to this is to define an NXT meta-query which will
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force a recursive server to find all available NXT RR sets for a given
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name. Details of this have not been examined.
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3.4 Interaction with Dynamic Update
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Dynamic update [RFC 2136, draft-ietf-dnsext-simple-secure-update-
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xy.txt] defines a means by which a zone can change without undergoing
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a full reload. This combination of dynamic update and the proposed
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use of the NXT record to signify a child's status raises some
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concerns.
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Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 7]
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DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status February 1, 2000
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First a few elements need to be labeled. There is an off-line signer,
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which is the process that signs zone data files away from the name
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server. There is an on-line signer, part of a name server, that the
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dynamic update mechanism uses to sign the updated data. Finally,
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there is an on-line key validator, perhaps a misnomer, which accepts
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requests for parent signatures over each child zone's keys.
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The proposal depicted in this draft relies upon the on-line key
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validator informing the on-line and off-line signers of the status of
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a child, recall that the status of a child has a temporal element.
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E.g., a signature may be generated for just the month of July, so the
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child is secured for the month of July, but not August.
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The first issues pertain to the way in which a validation is encoded
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in an NXT record by the off-line signer. There is a need for the
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status information to flow from the on-line validator to the off-line
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signer and then be used as input to the signing process. The way that
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this information makes the transition is an issue. The second issue
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is through what mechanism is this information ingested into the NXT
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generating process. Recall that all other information can be derived
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by the zone data, the status of the child isn't stored anywhere else
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in the parent zone.
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The next issue is the means in which a validation action is reported
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to the active zone. On the surface, dynamically updating the NXT
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would seem to make sense, but updating the NXT in this manner can lead
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to a race condition in the server, this is unstable. The issue here
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is deriving a mechanism by which a name server knows to signify that
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the child status has changed. Note that this applies to newly
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validated keys as well as the granting of a child's request to cancel
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a validation.
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The final issue is the operation of the off-line signer. When an NXT
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is being regenerated, the old NXT is needed to see what the previous
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setting of the child's status had been. The old NXT signature is also
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needed to know that, had the child been known to be secured, for what
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interval was is it thought to be secured so that the new NXT signature
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is appropriately set. Of course, if the reason for updating the NXT
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is a change as described in the previous paragraph, the old NXT is of
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lesser value.
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The issue raised in the last paragraph leads to a questioning of the
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sanity of using signature validity periods to signify the temporal
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status of data in a server. What does a server return if the NXT
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needed is not currently covered by a valid signature?
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4 NULL keys
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Through the use of the types present to indicate the existence of a
|
||
signature validating the KEY set of a child, the need for NULL keys
|
||
effectively disappears. NULL keys are left as a defined entity, but
|
||
are rendered meaningless in DNSSEC.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 8]
|
||
DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status February 1, 2000
|
||
|
||
5 Experimental Status
|
||
|
||
Without NULL keys, an experimentally secured zone cannot be defined as
|
||
it is in RFC 2535. The purpose of an experimentally secured zone was
|
||
to facilitate the migration from an unsecured zone to a secured zone.
|
||
|
||
The objective of facilitating the migration can be achieved without a
|
||
special designation of an experimentally secure status. Experimentally
|
||
secured is a special case of privately secured. A zone administrator
|
||
can achieve this by publishing a zone with signatures and configuring
|
||
a set of test resolvers with the corresponding public keys. Even if
|
||
the public key is published in a KEY RR, as long as there is no parent
|
||
signature, the resolvers will need some preconfiguration to know to
|
||
process the signatures. This allows a zone to be secured with in the
|
||
sphere of the experiment, yet still be registered as unsecured in the
|
||
general Internet.
|
||
|
||
6 IANA/ICANN Considerations
|
||
|
||
This document does not request any action from an assigned number
|
||
authority nor recommends any actions.
|
||
|
||
7 Security Considerations
|
||
|
||
Without a means to enforce compliance with specified protocols or
|
||
recommended actions, declaring a DNS zone to be "completely" secured
|
||
is impossible. Even if, assuming an omnipotent view of DNS, one can
|
||
declare a zone to be properly configured for security, and all of the
|
||
zones up to the root too, a misbehaving resolver could be duped into
|
||
believing bad data. If a zone and resolver comply, a non-compliant or
|
||
subverted parent could interrupt operations. The best that can be
|
||
hoped for is that all parties are prepared to be judged secure and
|
||
that security incidents can be traced to the cause in short order.
|
||
|
||
8 Acknowledgements
|
||
|
||
The need to refine the definition of a secured zone has become
|
||
apparent through the efforts of the participants at two DNSSEC
|
||
workshops, sponsored by the NIC-SE (.se registrar) and CAIRN (a
|
||
DARPA-funded research network). Further discussions leading to the
|
||
document include Olafur Gudmundsson, Russ Mundy, Robert Watson, and
|
||
Brian Wellington.
|
||
|
||
9 References
|
||
|
||
[RFC1034] P. Mockapetris, "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities,"
|
||
RFC 1034, November 1987.
|
||
|
||
[RFC1035] P. Mockapetris, "Domain Names - Implementation and
|
||
Specification," RFC 1034, November 1987.
|
||
|
||
[RFC2119] S. Bradner, "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
|
||
Requirement Levels," RFC 2119, March 1997
|
||
|
||
|
||
Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 9]
|
||
DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone Status February 1, 2000
|
||
|
||
[RFC2136] P. Vixie (Ed.), S. Thomson, Y. Rekhter, J. Bound "Dynamic
|
||
Updates in the Domain Name System," RFC 2136, April 1997.
|
||
|
||
[RFC2535] D. Eastlake, "Domain Name System Security Extensions," RFC
|
||
2535, March 1999.
|
||
|
||
[draft-ietf-dnsext-simple-secure-update-xy.txt] B. Wellington, "Simple
|
||
Secure Domain Name System (DNS) Dynamic Update", version 00, February
|
||
2000.
|
||
|
||
10 Author Information
|
||
|
||
Edward Lewis NAI Labs 3060 Washington Road Glenwood, MD 21738 +1 443
|
||
259 2352 <lewis@tislabs.com>
|
||
|
||
11 Full Copyright Statement
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999, 2000). All Rights Reserved.
|
||
|
||
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
|
||
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
|
||
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and
|
||
distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind,
|
||
provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
|
||
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
|
||
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
|
||
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
|
||
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing
|
||
Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined
|
||
in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to
|
||
translate it into languages other than English.
|
||
|
||
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
|
||
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
|
||
|
||
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
|
||
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
|
||
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Expires August 1, 2000 [Page 10]
|