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Network Working Group                                   D. Eastlake, 3rdRequest for Comments: 2065                                     CyberCashUpdates:1034,1035                                           C. KaufmanCategory: Standards Track                                           Iris                                                            January 1997Domain Name System Security ExtensionsStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   The Domain Name System (DNS) has become a critical operational part   of the Internet infrastructure yet it has no strong security   mechanisms to assure data integrity or authentication.  Extensions to   the DNS are described that provide these services to security aware   resolvers or applications through the use of cryptographic digital   signatures.  These digital signatures are included in secured zones   as resource records.  Security can still be provided even through   non-security aware DNS servers in many cases.   The extensions also provide for the storage of authenticated public   keys in the DNS.  This storage of keys can support general public key   distribution service as well as DNS security.  The stored keys enable   security aware resolvers to learn the authenticating key of zones in   addition to those for which they are initially configured.  Keys   associated with DNS names can be retrieved to support other   protocols.  Provision is made for a variety of key types and   algorithms.   In addition, the security extensions provide for the optional   authentication of DNS protocol transactions.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997Acknowledgments   The significant contributions of the following persons (in alphabetic   order) to this document are gratefully acknowledged:           Harald T. Alvestrand           Madelyn Badger           Scott Bradner           Matt Crawford           James M. Galvin           Olafur Gudmundsson           Edie Gunter           Sandy Murphy           Masataka Ohta           Michael A. Patton           Jeffrey I. SchillerTable of Contents1. Overview of Contents....................................32.  Overview of the DNS Extensions.........................42.1 Services Not Provided..................................42.2 Key Distribution.......................................52.3 Data Origin Authentication and Integrity...............52.3.1 The SIG Resource Record..............................62.3.2 Authenticating Name and Type Non-existence...........72.3.3 Special Considerations With Time-to-Live.............72.3.4 Special Considerations at Delegation Points..........72.3.5 Special Considerations with CNAME RRs................82.3.6 Signers Other Than The Zone..........................82.4 DNS Transaction and Request Authentication.............83. The KEY Resource Record.................................93.1 KEY RDATA format......................................103.2 Object Types, DNS Names, and Keys.....................103.3 The KEY RR Flag Field.................................113.4 The Protocol Octet....................................133.5 The KEY Algorithm Number and the MD5/RSA Algorithm....133.6 Interaction of Flags, Algorithm, and Protocol Bytes...143.7 KEY RRs in the Construction of Responses..............153.8 File Representation of KEY RRs........................164. The SIG Resource Record................................164.1 SIG RDATA Format......................................174.1.1 Signature Data......................................194.1.2 MD5/RSA Algorithm Signature Calculation.............204.1.3 Zone Transfer (AXFR) SIG............................214.1.4 Transaction and Request SIGs........................224.2 SIG RRs in the Construction of Responses..............234.3 Processing Responses and SIG RRs......................24Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19974.4 Signature Expiration, TTLs, and Validity..............244.5 File Representation of SIG RRs........................255. Non-existent Names and Types...........................265.1 The NXT Resource Record...............................265.2 NXT RDATA Format......................................275.3 Example...............................................285.4 Interaction of NXT RRs and Wildcard RRs...............285.5 Blocking NXT Pseudo-Zone Transfers....................295.6 Special Considerations at Delegation Points...........296. The AD and CD Bits and How to Resolve Securely.........306.1 The AD and CD Header Bits.............................306.2 Boot File Format......................................326.3 Chaining Through Zones................................326.4 Secure Time...........................................337. Operational Considerations.............................337.1 Key Size Considerations...............................347.2 Key Storage...........................................347.3 Key Generation........................................357.4 Key Lifetimes.........................................357.5 Signature Lifetime....................................367.6 Root..................................................368. Conformance............................................368.1 Server Conformance....................................368.2 Resolver Conformance..................................379. Security Considerations................................37   References................................................38   Authors' Addresses........................................39   Appendix: Base 64 Encoding................................401. Overview of Contents   This document describes extensions of the Domain Name System (DNS)   protocol to support DNS security and public key distribution.  It   assumes that the reader is familiar with the Domain Name System,   particularly as described in RFCs 1033, 1034, and 1035.Section 2 provides an overview of the extensions and the key   distribution, data origin authentication, and transaction and request   security they provide.Section 3 discusses the KEY resource record, its structure, use in   DNS responses, and file representation.  These resource records   represent the public keys of entities named in the DNS and are used   for key distribution.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997Section 4 discusses the SIG digital signature resource record, its   structure, use in DNS responses, and file representation.  These   resource records are used to authenticate other resource records in   the DNS and optionally to authenticate DNS transactions and requests.Section 5 discusses the NXT resource record and its use in DNS   responses.  The NXT RR permits authenticated denial in the DNS of the   existence of a name or of a particular type for an existing name.Section 6 discusses how a resolver can be configured with a starting   key or keys and proceed to securely resolve DNS requests.   Interactions between resolvers and servers are discussed for all   combinations of security aware and security non-aware.  Two   additional query header bits are defined for signaling between   resolvers and servers.Section 7 reviews a variety of operational considerations including   key generation, lifetime, and storage.Section 8 defines levels of conformance for resolvers and servers.Section 9 provides a few paragraphs on overall security   considerations.   An Appendix is provided that gives details of base 64 encoding which   is used in the file representation of some RR's defined in this   document.2.  Overview of the DNS Extensions   The Domain Name System (DNS) protocol security extensions provide   three distinct services: key distribution as described inSection 2.2   below, data origin authentication as described inSection 2.3 below,   and transaction and request authentication, described inSection 2.4   below.   Special considerations related to "time to live", CNAMEs, and   delegation points are also discussed inSection 2.3.2.1 Services Not Provided   It is part of the design philosophy of the DNS that the data in it is   public and that the DNS gives the same answers to all inquirers.   Following this philosophy, no attempt has been made to include any   sort of access control lists or other means to differentiate   inquirers.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   In addition, no effort has been made to provide for any   confidentiality for queries or responses.  (This service may be   available via IPSEC [RFC 1825].)2.2 Key Distribution   Resource records (RRs) are defined to associate keys with DNS names.   This permits the DNS to be used as a public key distribution   mechanism in support of the DNS data origin authentication and other   security services.   The syntax of a KEY resource record (RR) is described inSection 3.   It includes an algorithm identifier, the actual public key   parameters, and a variety of flags including those indicating the   type of entity the key is associated with and/or asserting that there   is no key associated with that entity.   Under conditions described inSection 3.7, security aware DNS servers   will automatically attempt to return KEY resources as additional   information, along with those resource records actually requested, to   minimize the number of queries needed.2.3 Data Origin Authentication and Integrity   Authentication is provided by associating with resource records in   the DNS cryptographically generated digital signatures.  Commonly,   there will be a single private key that signs for an entire zone. If   a security aware resolver reliably learns the public key of the zone,   it can verify, for signed data read from that zone, that it was   properly authorized and is reasonably current.  The expected   implementation is for the zone private key to be kept off-line and   used to re-sign all of the records in the zone periodically.   This data origin authentication key belongs to the zone and not to   the servers that store copies of the data.  That means compromise of   a server or even all servers for a zone will not necessarily affect   the degree of assurance that a resolver has that it can determine   whether data is genuine.   A resolver can learn the public key of a zone either by reading it   from DNS or by having it staticly configured.  To reliably learn the   public key by reading it from DNS, the key itself must be signed.   Thus, to provide a reasonable degree of security, the resolver must   be configured with at least the public key of one zone that it can   use to authenticate signatures.  From there, it can securely read the   public keys of other zones, if the intervening zones in the DNS tree   are secure and their signed keys accessible.  (It is in principle   more secure to have the resolver manually configured with the publicEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   keys of multiple zones, since then the compromise of a single zone   would not permit the faking of information from other zones.  It is   also more administratively cumbersome, however, particularly when   public keys change.)   Adding data origin authentication and integrity requires no change to   the "on-the-wire" DNS protocol beyond the addition of the signature   resource type and, as a practical matter, the key resource type   needed for key distribution. This service can be supported by   existing resolver and server implementations so long as they can   support the additional resource types (seeSection 8). The one   exception is that CNAME referrals from a secure zone can not be   authenticated if they are from non-security aware servers (seeSection 2.3.5).   If signatures are always separately retrieved and verified when   retrieving the information they authenticate, there will be more   trips to the server and performance will suffer.  To avoid this,   security aware servers mitigate that degradation by always attempting   to send the signature(s) needed.2.3.1 The SIG Resource Record   The syntax of a SIG resource record (signature) is described inSection 4.  It includes the type of the RR(s) being signed, the name   of the signer, the time at which the signature was created, the time   it expires (when it is no longer to be believed), its original time   to live (which may be longer than its current time to live but cannot   be shorter), the cryptographic algorithm in use, and the actual   signature.   Every name in a secured zone will have associated with it at least   one SIG resource record for each resource type under that name except   for glue RRs and delgation point NS RRs.  A security aware server   supporting the performance enhanced version of the DNS protocol   security extensions will attempt to return, with RRs retrieved, the   corresponding SIGs.  If a server does not support the protocol, the   resolver must retrieve all the SIG records for a name and select the   one or ones that sign the resource record(s) that resolver is   interested in.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19972.3.2 Authenticating Name and Type Non-existence   The above security mechanism provides only a way to sign existing RRs   in a zone.  "Data origin" authentication is not obviously provided   for the non-existence of a domain name in a zone or the non-existence   of a type for an existing name.  This gap is filled by the NXT RR   which authenticatably asserts a range of non-existent names in a zone   and the non-existence of types for the name just before that range.Section 5 below covers the NXT RR.2.3.3 Special Considerations With Time-to-Live   A digital signature will fail to verify if any change has occurred to   the data between the time it was originally signed and the time the   signature is verified.  This conflicts with our desire to have the   time-to-live field tick down when resource records are cached.   This could be avoided by leaving the time-to-live out of the digital   signature, but that would allow unscrupulous servers to set   arbitrarily long time to live values undetected.  Instead, we include   the "original" time-to-live in the signature and communicate that   data in addition to the current time-to-live. Unscrupulous servers   under this scheme can manipulate the time to live but a security   aware resolver will bound the TTL value it uses at the original   signed value.  Separately, signatures include a time signed and an   expiration time.  A resolver that knows the absolute time can   determine securely whether a signature has expired.  It is not   possible to rely solely on the signature expiration as a substitute   for the TTL, however, since the TTL is primarily a database   consistency mechanism and, in any case, non-security aware servers   that depend on TTL must still be supported.2.3.4 Special Considerations at Delegation Points   DNS security would like to view each zone as a unit of data   completely under the control of the zone owner and signed by the   zone's key.  But the operational DNS views the leaf nodes in a zone,   which are also the apex nodes of a subzone (i.e., delegation points),   as "really" belonging to the subzone.  These nodes occur in two   master files and may have RRs signed by both the upper and lower   zone's keys.  A retrieval could get a mixture of these RRs and SIGs,   especially since one server could be serving both the zone above and   below a delegation point.   In general, there must be a zone KEY RR for the subzone in the   superzone and the copy signed in the superzone is controlling.  For   all but one other RR type that should appearing in both the superzoneEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   and subzone, the data from the subzone is more authoritative.  To   avoid conflicts, only the KEY RR in the superzone should be signed   and the NS and any A (glue) RRs should only be signed in the subzone.   The SOA and any other RRs that have the zone name as owner should   appear only in the subzone and thus are signed there. The NXT RR type   is an exceptional case that will always appear differently and   authoritatively in both the superzone and subzone, if both are   secure, as described inSection 5.2.3.5 Special Considerations with CNAME RRs   There is a significant problem when security related RRs with the   same owner name as a CNAME RR are retrieved from a non-security-aware   server.  In particular, an initial retrieval for the CNAME or any   other type will not retrieve any associated signature, key, or NXT   RR. For types other than CNAME, it will retrieve that type at the   target name of the CNAME (or chain of CNAMEs) and will return the   CNAME as additional information.  In particular, a specific retrieval   for type SIG will not get the SIG, if any, at the original CNAME   domain name but rather a SIG at the target name.   In general, security aware servers MUST be used to securely CNAME in   DNS.  Security aware servers must (1) allow KEY, SIG, and NXT RRs   along with CNAME RRs, (2) suppress CNAME processing on retrieval of   these types as well as on retrieval of the type CNAME, and (3)   automatically return SIG RRs authenticating the CNAME or CNAMEs   encountered in resolving a query.  This is a change from the previous   DNS standard which prohibited any other RR type at a node where a   CNAME RR was present.2.3.6 Signers Other Than The Zone   There are two cases where a SIG resource record is signed by other   than the zone private key.  One is for support of dynamic update   where an entity is permitted to authenticate/update its own records.   The public key of the entity must be present in the DNS and be   appropriately signed but the other RR(s) may be signed with the   entity's key.  The other is for support of transaction and request   authentication as described inSection 2.4 immediately below.2.4 DNS Transaction and Request Authentication   The data origin authentication service described above protects   retrieved resource records but provides no protection for DNS   requests or for message headers.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   If header bits are falsely set by a server, there is little that can   be done.  However, it is possible to add transaction authentication.   Such authentication means that a resolver can be sure it is at least   getting messages from the server it thinks it queried, that the   response is from the query it sent, and that these messages have not   been diddled in transit.  This is accomplished by optionally adding a   special SIG resource record at the end of the reply which digitally   signs the concatenation of the server's response and the resolver's   query.   Requests can also be authenticated by including a special SIG RR at   the end of the request.  Authenticating requests serves no function   in the current DNS and requests with a non-empty additional   information section are ignored by almost all current DNS servers.   However, this syntax for signing requests is defined in connection   with authenticating future secure dynamic update requests or the   like.   The private keys used in transaction and request security belongs to   the host composing the request or reply message, not to the zone   involved.  The corresponding public key is normally stored in and   retrieved from the DNS.   Because requests and replies are highly variable, message   authentication SIGs can not be pre-calculated.  Thus it will be   necessary to keep the private key on-line, for example in software or   in a directly connected piece of hardware.3. The KEY Resource Record   The KEY resource record (RR) is used to document a key that is   associated with a Domain Name System (DNS) name.  It will be a public   key as only public keys are stored in the DNS.  This can be the   public key of a zone, a host or other end entity, or a user.  A KEY   RR is, like any other RR, authenticated by a SIG RR. Security aware   DNS implementations MUST be designed to handle at least two   simultaneously valid keys of the same type associated with a name.   The type number for the KEY RR is 25.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19973.1 KEY RDATA format   The RDATA for a KEY RR consists of flags, a protocol octet, the   algorithm number, and the public key itself.  The format is as   follows:                        1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             flags             |    protocol   |   algorithm   |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               /   /                          public key                           /   /                                                               /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-|   The meaning of the KEY RR owner name, flags, and protocol octet are   described in Sections3.2,3.3 and3.4 below respectively.  The flags   and algorithm must be examined before any data following the   algorithm octet as they control the format and even whether there is   any following data.  The algorithm and public key fields are   described inSection 3.5.  The format of the public key is algorithm   dependent.3.2 Object Types, DNS Names, and Keys   The public key in a KEY RR belongs to the object named in the owner   name.   This DNS name may refer to up to three different categories of   things.  For example, dee.cybercash.com could be (1) a zone, (2) a   host or other end entity , and (3) the mapping into a DNS name of the   user or account dee@cybercash.com.  Thus, there are flags, as   described below, in the KEY RR to indicate with which of these roles   the owner name and public key are associated.  Note that an   appropriate zone KEY RR MUST occur at the apex node of a secure zone   and at every leaf node which is a delegation point (and thus the same   owner name as the apex of a subzone) within a secure zone.   Although the same name can be used for up to all three of these   categories, such overloading of a name is discouraged.  It is also   possible to use the same key for different things with the same name   or even different names, but this is strongly discouraged.  In   particular, the use of a zone key as a non-zone key will usually   require that the corresponding private key be kept on line and   thereby become more vulnerable.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   In addition to the name type bits, there are additional flag bits   including the "type" field, "experimental" bit, "signatory" field,   etc., as described below.3.3 The KEY RR Flag Field   In the "flags" field:        Bit 0 and 1 are the key "type" field.  Bit 0 a one indicates   that use of the key is prohibited for authentication.  Bit 1 a one   indicates that use of the key is prohibited for confidentiality. If   this field is zero, then use of the key for authentication and/or   confidentiality is permitted. Note that DNS security makes use of   keys for authentication only. Confidentiality use flagging is   provided for use of keys in other protocols.  Implementations not   intended to support key distribution for confidentiality MAY require   that the confidentiality use prohibited bit be on for keys they   serve.  If both bits of this field are one, the "no key" value, there   is no key information and the RR stops after the algorithm octet.  By   the use of this "no key" value, a signed KEY RR can authenticatably   assert that, for example, a zone is not secured.        Bit 2 is the "experimental" bit.  It is ignored if the type   field indicates "no key" and the following description assumes that   type field to be non-zero.  Keys may be associated with zones,   entities, or users for experimental, trial, or optional use, in which   case this bit will be one.  If this bit is a zero, it means that the   use or availability of security based on the key is "mandatory".   Thus, if this bit is off for a zone key, the zone should be assumed   secured by SIG RRs and any responses indicating the zone is not   secured should be considered bogus.  If this bit is a one for a host   or end entity, it might sometimes operate in a secure mode and at   other times operate without security.  The experimental bit, like all   other aspects of the KEY RR, is only effective if the KEY RR is   appropriately signed by a SIG RR.  The experimental bit must be zero   for safe secure operation and should only be a one for a minimal   transition period.        Bits 3-4 are reserved and must be zero.        Bit 5 on indicates that this is a key associated with a "user"   or "account" at an end entity, usually a host.  The coding of the   owner name is that used for the responsible individual mailbox in the   SOA and RP RRs: The owner name is the user name as the name of a node   under the entity name.  For example, "j.random_user" on   host.subdomain.domain could have a public key associated through a   KEY RR with name j\.random_user.host.subdomain.domain and the user   bit a one.  It could be used in an security protocol whereEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   authentication of a user was desired.  This key might be useful in IP   or other security for a user level service such a telnet, ftp,   rlogin, etc.        Bit 6 on indicates that this is a key associated with the non-   zone "entity" whose name is the RR owner name.  This will commonly be   a host but could, in some parts of the DNS tree, be some other type   of entity such as a telephone number [RFC 1530].  This is the public   key used in connection with the optional DNS transaction   authentication service if the owner name is a DNS server host.  It   could also be used in an IP-security protocol where authentication of   at the host, rather than user, level was desired, such as routing,   NTP, etc.        Bit 7 is the "zone" bit and indicates that this is a zone key   for the zone whose name is the KEY RR owner name.  This is the public   key used for DNS data origin authentication.        Bit 8 is reserved to be the IPSEC [RFC 1825] bit and indicates   that this key is valid for use in conjunction with that security   standard.  This key could be used in connection with secured   communication on behalf of an end entity or user whose name is the   owner name of the KEY RR if the entity or user bits are on.  The   presence of a KEY resource with the IPSEC and entity bits on and   experimental and no-key bits off is an assertion that the host speaks   IPSEC.        Bit 9 is reserved to be the "email" bit and indicate that this   key is valid for use in conjunction with MIME security multiparts.   This key could be used in connection with secured communication on   behalf of an end entity or user whose name is the owner name of the   KEY RR if the entity or user bits are on.        Bits 10-11 are reserved and must be zero.        Bits 12-15 are the "signatory" field.  If non-zero, they   indicate that the key can validly sign RRs or updates of the same   name.  If the owner name is a wildcard, then RRs or updates with any   name which is in the wildcard's scope can be signed.  Fifteen   different non-zero values are possible for this field and any   differences in their meaning are reserved for definition in   connection with DNS dynamic update or other new DNS commands.  Zone   keys always have authority to sign any RRs in the zone regardless of   the value of this field.  The signatory field, like all other aspects   of the KEY RR, is only effective if the KEY RR is appropriately   signed by a SIG RR.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19973.4 The Protocol Octet   It is anticipated that some keys stored in DNS will be used in   conjunction with Internet protocols other than DNS (keys with zone   bit or signatory field non-zero) and IPSEC/email (keys with IPSEC   and/or email bit set).  The protocol octet is provided to indicate   that a key is valid for such use and, for end entity keys or the host   part of user keys, that the secure version of that protocol is   implemented on that entity or host.   Values between 1 and 191 decimal inclusive are available for   assignment by IANA for such protocols.  The 63 values between 192 and   254 inclusive will not be assigned to a specific protocol and are   available for experimental use under bilateral agreement. Value 0   indicates, for a particular key, that it is not valid for any   particular additional protocol beyond those indicated in the flag   field. And value 255 indicates that the key is valid for all assigned   protocols (those in the 1 to 191 range).   It is intended that new uses of DNS stored keys would initially be   implemented, and operational experience gained, using the   experimental range of the protocol octet.  If demand for widespread   deployment for the indefinite future warrants, a value in the   assigned range would then be designated for the protocol.  Finally,   (1) should the protocol become so widespread in conjunction with   other protocols and with which it shares key values that duplicate   RRs are a serious burden and (2) should the protocol provide   substantial facilities not available in any protocol for which a   flags field bit has been allocated, then one of the remaining flag   field bits may be allocated to the protocol. When such a bit has been   allocated, a key can be simultaneously indicated as valid for that   protocol and the entity or host can be simultaneously flagged as   implementing the secure version of that protocol, along with other   protocols for which flag field bits have been assigned.3.5 The KEY Algorithm Number and the MD5/RSA Algorithm   This octet is the key algorithm parallel to the same field for the   SIG resource.  The MD5/RSA algorithm described in this document is   number 1. Numbers 2 through 252 are available for assignment should   sufficient reason arise.  However, the designation of a new algorithm   could have a major impact on interoperability and requires an IETF   standards action.  Number 254 is reserved for private use and will   never be assigned a specific algorithm.  For number 254, the public   key area shown in the packet diagram above will actually begin with a   length byte followed by an Object Identifier (OID) of that length.   The OID indicates the private algorithm in use and the remainder of   the area is whatever is required by that algorithm. Number 253 isEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   reserved as the "expiration date algorithm" for use where the   expiration date or other labeling fields of SIGs are desired without   any actual security. It is anticipated that this algorithm will only   be used in connection with some modes of DNS dynamic update.  For   number 253, the public key area is null. Values 0 and 255 are   reserved.   If the type field does not have the "no key" value and the algorithm   field is 1, indicating the MD5/RSA algorithm, the public key field is   structured as follows:                        1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   | pub exp length|        public key exponent                    /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               /   +-                           modulus                            /   |                                                               /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-/   To promote interoperability, the exponent and modulus are each   limited to 2552 bits in length.  The public key exponent is a   variable length unsigned integer.  Its length in octets is   represented as one octet if it is in the range of 1 to 255 and by a   zero octet followed by a two octet unsigned length if it is longer   than 255 bytes.  The public key modulus field is a multiprecision   unsigned integer.  The length of the modulus can be determined from   the RDLENGTH and the preceding RDATA fields including the exponent.   Leading zero bytes are prohibited in the exponent and modulus.3.6 Interaction of Flags, Algorithm, and Protocol Bytes   Various combinations of the no-key type value, algorithm byte,   protocol byte, and any protocol indicating flags (such as the   reserved IPSEC flag) are possible.  (Note that the zone flag bit   being on or the signatory field being non-zero is effectively a DNS   protocol flag on.)  The meaning of these combinations is indicated   below:Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997      NK = no key type value      AL = algorithm byte      PR = protocols indicated by protocol byte or protocol flags      x represents any valid non-zero value(s).       AL  PR   NK  Meaning        0   0   0   Illegal, claims key but has bad algorithm field.        0   0   1   Specifies total lack of security for owner.        0   x   0   Illegal, claims key but has bad algorithm field.        0   x   1   Specified protocols insecure, others may be secure.        x   0   0   Useless.  Gives key but no protocols to use it.        x   0   1   Useless.  Denies key but for no protocols.        x   x   0   Specifies key for protocols and asserts that                      those protocols are implemented with security.        x   x   1   Algorithm not understood for protocol.      (remember, in reference to the above table, that a protocol       byte of 255 means all protocols with protocol byte values       assigned)3.7 KEY RRs in the Construction of Responses   An explicit request for KEY RRs does not cause any special additional   information processing except, of course, for the corresponding SIG   RR from a security aware server.   Security aware DNS servers MUST include KEY RRs as additional   information in responses where appropriate including the following:   (1) On the retrieval of NS RRs, the zone key KEY RR(s) for the zone   served by these name servers MUST be included as additional   information if space is avilable.  There will always be at least one   such KEY RR in a secure zone, even if it has the no-key type value to   indicate that the subzone is insecure.  If not all additional   information will fit, the KEY RR(s) have higher priority than type A   or AAAA glue RRs.  If such a KEY RR does not fit on a retrieval, the   retrieval must be considered truncated.   (2) On retrieval of type A or AAAA RRs, the end entity KEY RR(s) MUST   be included if space is available.  On inclusion of A or AAAA RRs as   additional information, their KEY RRs will also be included but with   lower priority than the relevant A or AAAA RRs.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19973.8 File Representation of KEY RRs   KEY RRs may appear as lines in a zone data master file.   The flag field, protocol, and algorithm number octets are then   represented as unsigned integers.  Note that if the type field has   the "no key" value or the algorithm specified is 253, nothing appears   after the algorithm octet.   The remaining public key portion is represented in base 64 (see   Appendix) and may be divided up into any number of white space   separated substrings, down to single base 64 digits, which are   concatenated to obtain the full signature.  These substrings can span   lines using the standard parenthesis.   Note that the public key may have internal sub-fields but these do   not appear in the master file representation.  For example, with   algorithm 1 there is a public exponent size, then a public exponent,   and then a modulus.  With algorithm 254, there will be an OID size,   an OID, and algorithm dependent information. But in both cases only a   single logical base 64 string will appear in the master file.4. The SIG Resource Record   The SIG or "signature" resource record (RR) is the fundamental way   that data is authenticated in the secure Domain Name System (DNS). As   such it is the heart of the security provided.   The SIG RR unforgably authenticates other RRs of a particular type,   class, and name and binds them to a time interval and the signer's   domain name.  This is done using cryptographic techniques and the   signer's private key.  The signer is frequently the owner of the zone   from which the RR originated.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19974.1 SIG RDATA Format   The RDATA portion of a SIG RR is as shown below.  The integrity of   the RDATA information is protected by the signature field.                        1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |        type covered           |  algorithm    |     labels    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                         original TTL                          |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      signature expiration                     |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                         time signed                           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |         key footprint         |                               /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+         signer's name         /   /                                                               /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               /   +-                          signature                           /   /                                                               /   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The value of the SIG RR type is 24.   The "type covered" is the type of the other RRs covered by this SIG.   The algorithm number is an octet specifying the digital signature   algorithm used parallel to the algorithm octet for the KEY RR.  The   MD5/RSA algorithm described in this document is number 1.  Numbers 2   through 252 are available for assignment should sufficient reason   arise to allocate them.  However, the designation of a new algorithm   could have a major impact on the interoperability of the global DNS   system and requires an IETF standards action.  Number 254 is reserved   for private use and will not be assigned a specific algorithm.  For   number 254, the "signature" area shown above will actually begin with   a length byte followed by an Object Identifier (OID) of that length.   The OID indicates the private algorithm in use and the remainder of   the area is whatever is required by that algorithm.  Number 253,   known as the "expiration date algorithm", is used when the expiration   date or other non-signature fields of the SIG are desired without any   actual security.  It is anticipated that this algorithm will only be   used in connection with some modes of DNS dynamic update.  For number   253, the signature field will be null.  Values 0 and 255 are   reserved.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   The "labels" octet is an unsigned count of how many labels there are   in the original SIG RR owner name not counting the null label for   root and not counting any initial "*" for a wildcard.  If a secured   retrieval is the result of wild card substitution, it is necessary   for the resolver to use the original form of the name in verifying   the digital signature.  This field helps optimize the determination   of the original form thus reducing the effort in authenticating   signed data.   If, on retrieval, the RR appears to have a longer name than indicated   by "labels", the resolver can tell it is the result of wildcard   substitution.  If the RR owner name appears to be shorter than the   labels count, the SIG RR must be considered corrupt and ignored.  The   maximum number of labels allowed in the current DNS is 127 but the   entire octet is reserved and would be required should DNS names ever   be expanded to 255 labels.  The following table gives some examples.   The value of "labels" is at the top, the retrieved owner name on the   left, and the table entry is the name to use in signature   verification except that "bad" means the RR is corrupt.        labels= |  0  |   1  |    2   |      3   |      4   |        --------+-----+------+--------+----------+----------+               .|   . | bad  |  bad   |    bad   |    bad   |              d.|  *. |   d. |  bad   |    bad   |    bad   |            c.d.|  *. | *.d. |   c.d. |    bad   |    bad   |          b.c.d.|  *. | *.d. | *.c.d. |   b.c.d. |    bad   |        a.b.c.d.|  *. | *.d. | *.c.d. | *.b.c.d. | a.b.c.d. |   The "original TTL" field is included in the RDATA portion to avoid   (1) authentication problems that caching servers would otherwise   cause by decrementing the real TTL field and (2) security problems   that unscrupulous servers could otherwise cause by manipulating the   real TTL field.  This original TTL is protected by the signature   while the current TTL field is not.   NOTE:  The "original TTL" must be restored into the covered RRs when   the signature is verified.  This implies that all RRs for a   particular type, name, and class must have the same TTL to start   with.   The SIG is valid until the "signature expiration" time which is an   unsigned number of seconds since the start of 1 January 1970, GMT,   ignoring leap seconds.  (See alsoSection 4.4.)  SIG RRs should not   have a date signed significantly in the future.  To prevent   misordering of network requests to update a zone dynamically,   monotonically increasing "time signed" dates may be necessary.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   The "time signed" field is an unsigned number of seconds since the   start of 1 January 1970, GMT, ignoring leap seconds.   A SIG RR with an expiration date before the time signed must be   considered corrupt and ignored.   The "key footprint" is a 16 bit quantity that is used to help   efficiently select between multiple keys which may be applicable and   as a quick check that a public key about to be used for the   computationally expensive effort to check the signature is possibly   valid.  Its exact meaning is algorithm dependent.  For the MD5/RSA   algorithm, it is the next to the bottom two octets of the public key   modulus needed to decode the signature field.  That is to say, the   most significant 16 of the lest significant 24 bits of the modulus in   network order.   The "signer's name" field is the domain name of the signer generating   the SIG RR.  This is the owner of the public KEY RR that can be used   to verify the signature.  It is frequently the zone which contained   the RR(s) being authenticated.  The signer's name may be compressed   with standard DNS name compression when being transmitted over the   network.   The structure of the "signature" field is described below.4.1.1 Signature Data   Except for algorithm number 253 where it is null, the actual   signature portion of the SIG RR binds the other RDATA fields to all   of the "type covered" RRs with that owner name and class.  These   covered RRs are thereby authenticated.  To accomplish this, a data   sequence is constructed as follows:           data = RDATA | RR(s)...   where "|" is concatenation, RDATA is all the RDATA fields in the SIG   RR itself before and not including the signature, and RR(s) are all   the RR(s) of the type covered with the same owner name and class as   the SIG RR in canonical form and order.  How this data sequence is   processed into the signature is algorithm dependent.   For purposes of DNS security, the canonical form for an RR is the RR   with domain names (1) fully expanded (no name compression via   pointers), (2) all domain name letters set to lower case, and (3) the   original TTL substituted for the current TTL.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   For purposes of DNS security, the canonical order for RRs is to sort   them in ascending order by name, considering labels as a left   justified unsigned octet sequence in network (transmission) order   where a missing octet sorts before a zero octet.  (See also ordering   discussion inSection 5.1.)  Within any particular name they are   similarly sorted by type and then RDATA as a left justified unsigned   octet sequence. EXCEPT that the type SIG RR(s) covering any   particular type appear immediately after the other RRs of that type.   (This special consideration for SIG RR(s) in ordering really only   applies to calculating the AXFR SIG RR as explained insection 4.1.3   below.)  Thus if at name a.b there are two A RRs and one KEY RR,   their order with SIGs for concatenating the "data" to be signed would   be as follows:           a.b.  A ....           a.b.  A ....           a.b.  SIG A ...           a.b.  KEY ...           a.b.  SIG KEY ...   SIGs covering type ANY should not be included in a zone.4.1.2 MD5/RSA Algorithm Signature Calculation   For the MD5/RSA algorithm, the signature is as follows      hash = MD5 ( data )      signature = ( 01 | FF* | 00 | prefix | hash ) ** e (mod n)   where MD5 is the message digest algorithm documented inRFC 1321, "|"   is concatenation, "e" is the private key exponent of the signer, and   "n" is the modulus of the signer's public key.  01, FF, and 00 are   fixed octets of the corresponding hexadecimal value. "prefix" is the   ASN.1 BER MD5 algorithm designator prefix specified in PKCS1, that   is,           hex 3020300c06082a864886f70d020505000410 [NETSEC].   This prefix is included to make it easier to use RSAREF or similar   packages.  The FF octet is repeated the maximum number of times such   that the value of the quantity being exponentiated is one octet   shorter than the value of n.   (The above specifications are identical to the corresponding part of   Public Key Cryptographic Standard #1 [PKCS1].)Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   The size of n, including most and least significant bits (which will   be 1) SHALL be not less than 512 bits and not more than 2552 bits.  n   and e SHOULD be chosen such that the public exponent is small.   Leading zeros bytes are not permitted in the MD5/RSA algorithm   signature.   A public exponent of 3 minimizes the effort needed to decode a   signature.  Use of 3 as the public exponent may be weak for   confidentiality uses since, if the same data can be collected   encrypted under three different keys with an exponent of 3 then,   using the Chinese Remainder Theorem, the original plain text can be   easily recovered.  This weakness is not significant for DNS because   we seek only authentication, not confidentiality.4.1.3 Zone Transfer (AXFR) SIG   The above SIG mechanisms assure the authentication of all zone signed   RRs of a particular name, class and type.  However, to efficiently   assure the completeness and security of zone transfers, a SIG RR   owned by the zone name must be created with a type covered of AXFR   that covers all zone signed RRs in the zone and their zone SIGs but   not the SIG AXFR itself.  The RRs are ordered and concatenated for   hashing as described inSection 4.1.1.  (See also ordering discussion   inSection 5.1.)   The AXFR SIG must be calculated last of all zone key signed SIGs in   the zone.  In effect, when signing the zone, you order, as described   above, all RRs to be signed by the zone, and all associated glue RRs   and delegation point NS RRs.  You can then make one pass inserting   all the zone SIGs.  As you proceed you hash RRs to be signed into   both an RRset hash and the zone hash.  When the name or type changes   you calculate and insert the RRset zone SIG, clear the RRset hash,   and hash that SIG into the zone hash (note that glue RRs and   delegation point NSs are not zone signed but zone apex NSs are).   When you have finished processing all the starting RRs as described   above, you can then use the cumulative zone hash RR to calculate and   insert an AXFR SIG covering the zone.  Of course any computational   technique producing the same results as above is permitted.   The AXFR SIG really belongs to the zone as a whole, not to the zone   name.  Although it should be correct for the zone name, the labels   field of an AXFR SIG is otherwise meaningless. The AXFR SIG is only   retrieved as part of a zone transfer.  After validation of the AXFR   SIG, the zone MAY be considered valid without verification of the   internal zone signed SIGs in the zone; however, any RRs authenticated   by SIGs signed by entity keys or the like MUST still be validated.   The AXFR SIG SHOULD be transmitted first in a zone transfer so theEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   receiver can tell immediately that they may be able to avoid   verifying other zone signed SIGs.   RRs which are authenticated by a dynamic update key and not by the   zone key (seeSection 3.2) are not included in the AXFR SIG. They may   originate in the network and might not, in general, be migrated to   the recommended off line zone signing procedure (seeSection 7.2).   Thus, such RRs are not directly signed by the zone, are not included   in the AXFR SIG, and are protected against omission from zone   transfers only to the extent that the server and communication can be   trusted.4.1.4 Transaction and Request SIGs   A response message from a security aware server may optionally   contain a special SIG as the last item in the additional information   section to authenticate the transaction.   This SIG has a "type covered" field of zero, which is not a valid RR   type.  It is calculated by using a "data" (seeSection 4.1.2) of the   entire preceding DNS reply message, including DNS header but not the   IP header, concatenated with the entire DNS query message that   produced this response, including the query's DNS header but not its   IP header.  That is        data = full response (less final transaction SIG) | full query   Verification of the transaction SIG (which is signed by the server   host key, not the zone key) by the requesting resolver shows that the   query and response were not tampered with in transit, that the   response corresponds to the intended query, and that the response   comes from the queried server.   A DNS request may be optionally signed by including one or more SIGs   at the end of the query. Such SIGs are identified by having a "type   covered" field of zero. They sign the preceding DNS request message   including DNS header but not including the IP header or at the   begining or any preceding request SIGs at the end. Such request SIGs   are included in the "data" used to form any optional response   transaction SIG.   WARNING: Request SIGs are unnecessary for currently defined queries   and will cause almost all existing DNS servers to completely ignore a   query.  However, such SIGs may be needed to authenticate future DNS   secure dynamic update or other requests.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19974.2 SIG RRs in the Construction of Responses   Security aware DNS servers MUST, for every authoritative RR the query   will return, attempt to send the available SIG RRs which authenticate   the requested RR.  The following rules apply to the inclusion of SIG   RRs in responses:   1. when an RR set is placed in a response, its SIG RR has a higher      priority for inclusion than other additional RRs that may need to      be included.  If space does not permit its inclusion, the response      MUST be considered truncated except as provided in 2 below.   2. when a SIG RR is present in the zone for an additional information      section RR, the response MUST NOT be considered truncated merely      because space does not permit the inclusion of its SIG RR.   3. SIGs to authenticate non-authoritative data (glue records and NS      RRs for subzones) are unnecessary and MUST NOT be sent.  (Note      that KEYs for subzones are controlling in a superzone so the      superzone's signature on the KEY MUST be included (unless the KEY      was additional information and the SIG did not fit).)   4. If a SIG covers any RR that would be in the answer section of the      response, its automatic inclusion MUST be the answer section.  If      it covers an RR that would appear in the authority section, its      automatic inclusion MUST be in the authority section.  If it      covers an RR that would appear in the additional information      section it MUST appear in the additional information section.      This is a change in the existing standard which contemplates only      NS and SOA RRs in the authority section.   5. Optionally, DNS transactions may be authenticated by a SIG RR at      the end of the response in the additional information section      (Section 4.1.4).  Such SIG RRs are signed by the DNS server      originating the response.  Although the signer field MUST be the      name of the originating server host, the owner name, class, TTL,      and original TTL, are meaningless.  The class and TTL fields      SHOULD be zero.  To conserve space, the owner name SHOULD be root      (a single zero octet).  If transaction authentication is desired,      that SIG RR must be considered higher priority for inclusion than      any other RR in the response.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19974.3 Processing Responses and SIG RRs   The following rules apply to the processing of SIG RRs included in a   response:   1. a security aware resolver that receives a response from what it      believes to be a security aware server via a secure communication      with the AD bit (seeSection 6.1) set, MAY choose to accept the      RRs as received without verifying the zone SIG RRs.   2. in other cases, a security aware resolver SHOULD verify the SIG      RRs for the RRs of interest.  This may involve initiating      additional queries for SIG or KEY RRs, especially in the case of      getting a response from an insecure server.  (As explained in 4.2      above, it will not be possible to secure CNAMEs being served up by      non-secure resolvers.)      NOTE: Implementers might expect the above SHOULD to be a MUST.      However, local policy or the calling application may not require      the security services.   3. If SIG RRs are received in response to a user query explicitly      specifying the SIG type, no special processing is required.   If the message does not pass reasonable checks or the SIG does not   check against the signed RRs, the SIG RR is invalid and should be   ignored.  If all of the SIG RR(s) purporting to authenticate a set of   RRs are invalid, then the set of RR(s) is not authenticated.   If the SIG RR is the last RR in a response in the additional   information section and has a type covered of zero, it is a   transaction signature of the response and the query that produced the   response.  It MAY be optionally checked and the message rejected if   the checks fail.  But even if the checks succeed, such a transaction   authentication SIG does NOT authenticate any RRs in the message.   Only a proper SIG RR signed by the zone or a key tracing its   authority to the zone or to static resolver configuration can   authenticate RRs.  If a resolver does not implement transaction   and/or request SIGs, it MUST ignore them without error.   If all reasonable checks indicate that the SIG RR is valid then RRs   verified by it should be considered authenticated.4.4 Signature Expiration, TTLs, and Validity   Security aware servers must not consider SIG RRs to authenticate   anything after their expiration time and not consider any RR to be   authenticated after its signatures have expired.  Within thatEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   constraint, servers should continue to follow DNS TTL aging.  Thus   authoritative servers should continue to follow the zone refresh and   expire parameters and a non-authoritative server should count down   the TTL and discard RRs when the TTL is zero.  In addition, when RRs   are transmitted in a query response, the TTL should be trimmed so   that current time plus the TTL does not extend beyond the signature   expiration time.  Thus, in general, the TTL on an transmitted RR   would be         min(sigExpTim,max(zoneMinTTL,min(originalTTL,currentTTL)))4.5 File Representation of SIG RRs   A SIG RR can be represented as a single logical line in a zone data   file [RFC1033] but there are some special considerations as described   below.  (It does not make sense to include a transaction or request   authenticating SIG RR in a file as they are a transient   authentication that covers data including an ephemeral transaction   number and so must be calculated in real time.)   There is no particular problem with the signer, covered type, and   times.  The time fields appears in the form YYYYMMDDHHMMSS where YYYY   is the year, the first MM is the month number (01-12), DD is the day   of the month (01-31), HH is the hour in 24 hours notation (00-23),   the second MM is the minute (00-59), and SS is the second (00-59).   The original TTL and algorithm fields appear as unsigned integers.   If the original TTL, which applies to the type signed, is the same as   the TTL of the SIG RR itself, it may be omitted.  The date field   which follows it is larger than the maximum possible TTL so there is   no ambiguity.   The "labels" field does not appear in the file representation as it   can be calculated from the owner name.   The key footprint appears as an unsigned decimal number.   However, the signature itself can be very long.  It is the last data   field and is represented in base 64 (see Appendix) and may be divided   up into any number of white space separated substrings, down to   single base 64 digits, which are concatenated to obtain the full   signature.  These substrings can be split between lines using the   standard parenthesis.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19975. Non-existent Names and Types   The SIG RR mechanism described inSection 4 above provides strong   authentication of RRs that exist in a zone.  But is it not clear   above how to authenticatably deny the existence of a name in a zone   or a type for an existent name.   The nonexistence of a name in a zone is indicated by the NXT ("next")   RR for a name interval containing the nonexistent name. A NXT RR and   its SIG are returned in the authority section, along with the error,   if the server is security aware.  The same is true for a non-existent   type under an existing name.  This is a change in the existing   standard which contemplates only NS and SOA RRs in the authority   section. NXT RRs will also be returned if an explicit query is made   for the NXT type.   The existence of a complete set of NXT records in a zone means that   any query for any name and any type to a security aware server   serving the zone will always result in an reply containing at least   one signed RR.   NXT RRs do not appear in zone master files since they can be derived   from the rest of the zone.5.1 The NXT Resource Record   The NXT resource record is used to securely indicate that RRs with an   owner name in a certain name interval do not exist in a zone and to   indicate what zone signed RR types are present for an existing name.   The owner name of the NXT RR is an existing name in the zone.  It's   RDATA is a "next" name and a type bit map. The presence of the NXT RR   means that generally no name between its owner name and the name in   its RDATA area exists and that no other zone signed types exist under   its owner name.  This implies a canonical ordering of all domain   names in a zone.   The ordering is to sort labels as unsigned left justified octet   strings where the absence of a octet sorts before a zero value octet   and upper case letters are treated as lower case letters.  Names are   then sorted by sorting on the highest level label and then, within   those names with the same highest level label by the next lower   label, etc. down to leaf node labels.  Since we are talking about a   zone, the zone name itself always exists and all other names are the   zone name with some prefix of lower level labels.  Thus the zone name   itself always sorts first.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   There is a potential problem with the last NXT in a zone as it wants   to have an owner name which is the last existing name in canonical   order, which is easy, but it is not obvious what name to put in its   RDATA to indicate the entire remainder of the name space.  This is   handled by treating the name space as circular and putting the zone   name in the RDATA of the last NXT in a zone.   There are special considerations due to interaction with wildcards as   explained below.   The NXT RRs for a zone SHOULD be automatically calculated and added   to the zone by the same recommended off-line process that signs the   zone (seeSection 7.2).  The NXT RR's TTL SHOULD not exceed the zone   minimum TTL.5.2 NXT RDATA Format   The RDATA for an NXT RR consists simply of a domain name followed by   a bit map.   The type number for the NXT RR is 30.                           1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |         next domain name                                      /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                    type bit map                               /      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The NXT RR type bit map is one bit per RR type present for the owner   name similar to the WKS socket bit map.  The first bit represents RR   type zero (an illegal type which should not be present.) A one bit   indicates that at least one RR of that type is present for the owner   name.  A zero indicates that no such RR is present.  All bits not   specified because they are beyond the end of the bit map are assumed   to be zero.  Note that bit 30, for NXT, will always be on so the   minimum bit map length is actually four octets.  The NXT bit map   should be printed as a list of RR type mnemonics or decimal numbers   similar to the WKS RR.   The domain name may be compressed with standard DNS name compression   when being transmitted over the network.  The size of the bit map can   be inferred from the RDLENGTH and the length of the next domain name.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19975.3 Example   Assume zone foo.tld has entries for               big.foo.tld,               medium.foo.tld.               small.foo.tld.               tiny.foo.tld.   Then a query to a security aware server for huge.foo.tld would   produce an error reply with the authority section data including   something like the following:   big.foo.tld. NXT medium.foo.tld. A MX SIG NXT   big.foo.tld. SIG NXT 1 3 ( ;type-cov=NXT, alg=1, labels=3                    19960102030405 ;signature expiration                    19951211100908 ;time signed                    21435          ;key footprint                    foo.tld.       ;signer    MxFcby9k/yvedMfQgKzhH5er0Mu/vILz45IkskceFGgiWCn/GxHhai6VAuHAoNUz4YoU    1tVfSCSqQYn6//11U6Nld80jEeC8aTrO+KKmCaY= ;signature (640 bits)                          )   Note that this response implies that big.foo.tld is an existing name   in the zone and thus has other RR types associated with it than NXT.   However, only the NXT (and its SIG) RR appear in the response to this   query for huge.foo.tld, which is a non-existent name.5.4 Interaction of NXT RRs and Wildcard RRs   Since, in some sense, a wildcard RR causes all possible names in an   interval to exist, there should not be an NXT RR that would cover any   part of this interval.  Thus if *.X.ZONE exists you would expect an   NXT RR that ends at X.ZONE and one that starts with the last name   covered by *.X.ZONE.  However, this "last name covered" is something   very ugly and long like \255\255\255....X.zone.  So the NXT for the   interval following is simply given the owner name *.X.ZONE and an   RDATA of the next name after the wildcard.  This "*" type owner name   is not expanded when the NXT is returned as authority information in   connection with a query for a non-existent name.   If there could be any wildcard RRs in a zone and thus wildcard NXTs,   care must be taken in interpreting the results of explicit NXT   retrievals as the owner name may be a wildcard expansion.   The existence of one or more wildcard RRs covering a name interval   makes it possible for a malicious server to hide any more   specifically named RRs in the internal.  The server can just falselyEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   return the wildcard match NXT instead of the more specifically named   RRs.  If there is a zone wide wildcard, there will be an NXT RR whose   owner name is the wild card and whose RDATA is the zone name. In this   case a server could conceal the existence of any more specific RRs in   the zone.  It would be possible to design a more strict NXT feature   which would eliminate this possibility.  But it would be more complex   and might be so constraining as to make any dynamic update feature   very difficult.5.5 Blocking NXT Pseudo-Zone Transfers   In a secure zone, a resolver can query for the initial NXT associated   with the zone name.  Using the next domain name RDATA field from that   RR, it can query for the next NXT RR.  By repeating this, it can walk   through all the NXTs in the zone.  If there are no wildcards, it can   use this technique to find all names in a zone. If it does type ANY   queries, it can incrementally get all information in the zone and   thus defeat attempts to administratively block zone transfers.   If there are any wildcards, this NXT walking technique will not find   any more specific RR names in the part of the name space the wildcard   covers.  By doing explicit retrievals for wildcard names, a resolver   could determine what intervals are covered by wildcards but still   could not, with these techniques, find any names inside such   intervals except by trying every name.   If it is desired to block NXT walking, the recommended method is to   add a zone wide wildcard of the KEY type with the no-key type value   and with no type (zone, entity, or user) bit on.  This will cause   there to be one zone covering NXT RR and leak no information about   what real names exist in the zone.  This protection from pseudo-zone   transfers is bought at the expense of eliminating the data origin   authentication of the non-existence of names that NXT RRs can   provide.  If an entire zone is covered by a wildcard, a malicious   server can return an RR produced by matching the resulting wildcard   NXT and can thus hide all the real data and delegations in the zone   that have more specific names.5.6 Special Considerations at Delegation Points   A name (other than root) which is the head of a zone also appears as   the leaf in a superzone.  If both are secure, there will always be   two different NXT RRs with the same name.  They can be distinguished   by their signers and next domain name fields.  Security aware servers   should return the correct NXT automatically when required to   authenticate the non-existence of a name and both NXTs, if available,   on explicit query for type NXT.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   Insecure servers will never automatically return an NXT and some   implementations may only return the NXT from the subzone on explicit   queries.6. The AD and CD Bits and How to Resolve Securely   Retrieving or resolving authentic data from the Domain Name System   (DNS) involves starting with one or more trusted public keys for one   or more zones. With trusted keys, a resolver willing to perform   cryptography can progress securely through the secure DNS zone   structure to the zone of interest as described inSection 6.3. Such   trusted public keys would normally be configured in a manner similar   to that described inSection 6.2.  However, as a practical matter, a   security aware resolver would still gain some confidence in the   results it returns even if it was not configured with any keys but   trusted what it got from a local well known server as a starting   point.   Data stored at a security aware server needs to be internally   categorized as Authenticated, Pending, or Insecure. There is also a   fourth transient state of Bad which indicates that all SIG checks   have explicitly failed on the data. Such Bad data is not retained at   a security aware server. Authenticated means that the data has a   valid SIG under a KEY traceable via a chain of zero or more SIG and   KEY RRs to a KEY configured at the resolver via its boot file.   Pending data has no authenticated SIGs and at least one additional   SIG the resolver is still trying to authenticate.  Insecure data is   data which it is known can never be either Authenticated or found Bad   because it is in or has been reached via a non-secured zone. Behavior   in terms of control of and flagging based on such data labels is   described inSection 6.1.   The proper validation of signatures requires a reasonably secure   shared opinion of the absolute time between resolvers and servers as   described inSection 6.4.6.1 The AD and CD Header Bits   Two previously unused bits are allocated out of the DNS   query/response format header. The AD (authentic data) bit indicates   in a response that the data included has been verified by the server   providing it.  The CD (checking disabled) bit indicates in a query   that non-verified data is acceptable to the resolver sending the   query.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   These bits are allocated from the must-be-zero Z field as follows:                                          1  1  1  1  1  1            0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  0  1  2  3  4  5          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |                      ID                       |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |QR|   Opcode  |AA|TC|RD|RA| Z|AD|CD|   RCODE   |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |                    QDCOUNT                    |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |                    ANCOUNT                    |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |                    NSCOUNT                    |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+          |                    ARCOUNT                    |          +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   These bits are zero in old servers and resolvers.  Thus the responses   of old servers are not flagged as authenticated to security aware   resolvers and queries from non-security aware resolvers do not assert   the checking disabled bit and thus will be answered by security aware   servers only with authenticated data. Aware resolvers MUST not trust   the AD bit unless they trust the server they are talking to and   either have a secure path to it or use DNS transaction security.   Any security aware resolver willing to do cryptography SHOULD assert   the CD bit on all queries to reduce DNS latency time by allowing   security aware servers to answer before they have resolved the   validity of data.   Security aware servers NEVER return Bad data.  For non-security aware   resolvers or security aware resolvers requesting service by having   the CD bit clear, security aware servers MUST return only   Authenticated or Insecure data with the AD bit set in the response.   Security aware resolvers will know that if data is Insecure versus   Authentic by the absence of SIG RRs.  Security aware servers MAY   return Pending data to security aware resolvers requesting the   service by clearing the AD bit in the response.  The AD bit MUST NOT   be set on a response unless all of the RRs in the response are either   Authenticated or Insecure.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19976.2 Boot File Format   Two boot file directives are added as described in this section.   The format for a boot file directive to configure a starting zone key   is as follows:        pubkey name flags protocol algorithm key-data   for a public key.  "name" is the owner name (if the line is   translated into a KEY RR).  Flags indicates the type of key and is   the same as the flag octet in the KEY RR.  Protocol and algorithm   also have the same meaning as they do in the KEY RR.  The material   after the algorithm is algorithm dependent and, for private   algorithms (algorithm 254), starts with the algorithm's identifying   OID and its length.  If the "no key" type value is set in flags or   the algorithm is specified as 253, then the key-data after algorithm   is null.  When present the key-data is treated as an octet stream and   encoded in base 64 (see Appendix).   A file of keys for cross certification or other purposes can be   configured though the keyfile directive as follows:        keyfile filename   The file looks like a master file except that it can only contain KEY   and SIG RRs with the SIGs signed under a key configured with the   pubkey directive.   While it might seem logical for everyone to start with the key for   the root zone, this has problems.  The logistics of updating every   DNS resolver in the world when the root key changes would be   excessive.  It may be some time before there even is a root key.   Furthermore, many organizations will explicitly wish their "interior"   DNS implementations to completely trust only their own zone.  Such   interior resolvers can then go through the organization's zone   servers to access data outsize the organization's domain and should   only be configured with the key forthe organization's DNS apex.6.3 Chaining Through Zones   Starting with one or more trusted keys for a zone, it should be   possible to retrieve signed keys for its subzones which have a key   and, if the zone is not root, for its superzone. Every authoritative   secure zone server MUST also include the KEY RR for a super-zone   signed by the secure zone via a keyfile directive. This makes it   possible to climb the tree of zones if one starts below root.  A   secure sub-zone is indicated by a KEY RR with non-null keyEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   information appearing with the NS RRs for the sub-zone.  These make   it possible to descend within the tree of zones.   A resolver should keep track of the number of successive secure zones   traversed from a starting point to any secure zone it can reach.  In   general, the lower such a distance number is, the greater the   confidence in the data.  Data configured via a boot file directive   should be given a distance number of zero.  If a query encounters   different data for the same query with different distance values,   that with a larger value should be ignored.   A security conscious resolver should completely refuse to step from a   secure zone into a non-secure zone unless the non-secure zone is   certified to be non-secure, or only experimentally secure, by the   presence of an authenticated KEY RR for the non-secure zone with the   no-key type value or the presence of a KEY RR with the experimental   bit set.  Otherwise the resolver is getting bogus or spoofed data.   If legitimate non-secure zones are encountered in traversing the DNS   tree, then no zone can be trusted as secure that can be reached only   via information from such non-secure zones. Since the non-secure zone   data could have been spoofed, the "secure" zone reach via it could be   counterfeit.  The "distance" to data in such zones or zones reached   via such zones could be set to 512 or more as this exceeds the   largest possible distance through secure zones in the DNS.   Nevertheless, continuing to apply secure checks within "secure" zones   reached via non-secure zones is a good practice and will, as a   practical matter, provide some small increase in security.6.4 Secure Time   Coordinated interpretation of the time fields in SIG RRs requires   that reasonably consistent time be available to the hosts   implementing the DNS security extensions.   A variety of time synchronization protocols exist including the   Network Time Protocol (NTP,RFC1305).  If such protocols are used,   they MUST be used securely so that time can not be spoofed.   Otherwise, for example, a host could get its clock turned back and   might then believe old SIG and KEY RRs which were valid but no longer   are.7. Operational Considerations   This section discusses a variety of considerations in secure   operation of the Domain Name System (DNS) using these protocol   extensions.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19977.1 Key Size Considerations   There are a number of factors that effect public key size choice for   use in the DNS security extension.  Unfortunately, these factors   usually do not all point in the same direction.  Choice of zone key   size should generally be made by the zone administrator depending on   their local conditions.   For most schemes, larger keys are more secure but slower.  Given a   small public exponent, verification (the most common operation) for   the MD5/RSA algorithm will vary roughly with the square of the   modulus length, signing will vary with the cube of the modulus   length, and key generation (the least common operation) will vary   with the fourth power of the modulus length.  The current best   algorithms for factoring a modulus and breaking RSA security vary   roughly with the 1.6 power of the modulus itself.  Thus going from a   640 bit modulus to a 1280 bit modulus only increases the verification   time by a factor of 4 but increases the work factor of breaking the   key by over 2^900.  An upper bound of 2552 bits has been established   for the MD5/RSA DNS security algorithm for interoperability purposes.   However, larger keys increase the size of the KEY and SIG RRs.  This   increases the chance of DNS UDP packet overflow and the possible   necessity for using higher overhead TCP in responses.   The recommended minimum RSA algorithm modulus size, 640 bits, is   believed by the authors to be secure at this time but high level   zones in the DNS tree may wish to set a higher minimum, perhaps 1000   bits, for security reasons.  (Since the United States National   Security Agency generally permits export of encryption systems using   an RSA modulus of up to 512 bits, use of that small a modulus, i.e.   n, must be considered weak.)   For a key used only to secure data and not to secure other keys, 640   bits should be adequate at this time.7.2 Key Storage   It is recommended that zone private keys and the zone file master   copy be kept and used in off-line non-network connected physically   secure machines only.  Periodically an application can be run to add   authentication to a zone by adding SIG and NXT RRs and adding no-key   type KEY RRs for subzones where a real KEY RR is not provided. Then   the augmented file can be transferred, perhaps by sneaker-net, to the   networked zone primary server machine.   The idea is to have a one way information flow to the network to   avoid the possibility of tampering from the network.  Keeping theEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   zone master file on-line on the network and simply cycling it through   an off-line signer does not do this.  The on-line version could still   be tampered with if the host it resides on is compromised.  For   maximum security, the master copy of the zone file should be off net   and should not be updated based on an unsecured network mediated   communication.   Note, however, that secure resolvers must be configured with some   trusted on-line public key information (or a secure path to such a   resolver) or they will be unable to authenticate.   Non-zone private keys, such as host or user keys, generally have to   be kept on line to be used for real-time purposes such as DNS   transaction security, IPSEC session set-up, or secure mail.7.3 Key Generation   Careful key generation is a sometimes overlooked but absolutely   essential element in any cryptographically secure system.  The   strongest algorithms used with the longest keys are still of no use   if an adversary can guess enough to lower the size of the likely key   space so that it can be exhaustively searched.  Suggestions will be   found inRFC 1750.   It is strongly recommended that key generation also occur off-line,   perhaps on the machine used to sign zones (seeSection 7.2).7.4 Key Lifetimes   No key should be used forever.  The longer a key is in use, the   greater the probability that it will have been compromised through   carelessness, accident, espionage, or cryptanalysis.  Furthermore, if   key rollover is a rare event, there is an increased risk that, when   the time does come up change the key, no one at the site will   remember how to do it or other problems will have developed in the   procedures.   While key lifetime is a matter of local policy, these considerations   suggest that no zone key should have a lifetime significantly over   four years.  A reasonable maximum lifetime for zone keys that are   kept off-line and carefully guarded is 13 months with the intent that   they be replaced every year.  A reasonable maximum lifetime for end   entity and useer keys that are used for IP-security or the like and   are kept on line is 36 days with the intent that they be replaced   monthly or more often.  In some cases, an entity key lifetime of   somewhat over a day may be reasonable.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19977.5 Signature Lifetime   Signature expiration times must be set far enough in the future that   it is quite certain that new signatures can be generated before the   old ones expire.  However, setting expiration too far into the future   could, if bad data or signatures were ever generated, mean a long   time to flush such badness.   It is recommended that signature lifetime be a small multiple of the   TTL but not less than a reasonable re-signing interval.7.6 Root   It should be noted that in DNS the root is a zone unto itself.  Thus   the root zone key should only be seen signing itself or signing RRs   with names one level below root, such as .aq, .edu, or .arpa.   Implementations MAY reject as bogus any purported root signature of   records with a name more than one level below root.  The root zone   contains the root KEY RR signed by a SIG RR under the root key   itself.8. Conformance   Levels of server and resolver conformance are defined.8.1 Server Conformance   Two levels of server conformance are defined as follows:      Minimal server compliance is the ability to store and retrieve      (including zone transfer) SIG, KEY, and NXT RRs.  Any secondary,      caching, or other server for a secure zone MUST be at least      minimally compliant and even then some things, such as secure      CNAMEs, will not work without full compliance.   Full server compliance adds the following to basic compliance:      (1) ability to read SIG, KEY, and NXT RRs in zone files and (2)      ability, given a zone file and private key, to add appropriate SIG      and NXT RRs, possibly via a separate application, (3) proper      automatic inclusion of SIG, KEY, and NXT RRs in responses, (4)      suppression of CNAME following on retrieval of the security type      RRs, (5) recognize the CD query header bit and set the AD query      header bit, as appropriate, and (6) proper handling of the two NXT      RRs at delegation points.  Primary servers for secure zones MUST      be fully compliant and for completely successful secure operation,      all secondary, caching, and other servers handling the zone SHOULD      be fully compliant as well.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 19978.2 Resolver Conformance   Two levels of resolver compliance are defined:      A basic compliance resolver can handle SIG, KEY, and NXT RRs when      they are explicitly requested.      A fully compliant resolver (1) understands KEY, SIG, and NXT RRs,      (2) maintains appropriate information in its local caches and      database to indicate which RRs have been authenticated and to what      extent they have been authenticated, (3) performs additional      queries as necessary to attempt to obtain KEY, SIG, or NXT RRs      from non-security aware servers, (4) normally sets the CD query      header bit on its queries.9. Security Considerations   This document describes technical details of extensions to the Domain   Name System (DNS) protocol to provide data integrity and origin   authentication, public key distribution, and optional transaction and   request security.   It should be noted that, at most, these extensions guarantee the   validity of resource records, including KEY resource records,   retrieved from the DNS.  They do not magically solve other security   problems.  For example, using secure DNS you can have high confidence   in the IP address you retrieve for a host name; however, this does   not stop someone for substituting an unauthorized host at that   address or capturing packets sent to that address and falsely   responding with packets apparently from that address.  Any reasonably   complete security system will require the protection of many   additional facets of the Internet.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997References   [NETSEC] -  Network Security: PRIVATE Communications in a PUBLIC               World, Charlie Kaufman, Radia Perlman, & Mike Speciner,               Prentice Hall Series in Computer Networking and               Distributed Communications 1995.   [PKCS1] -   PKCS #1: RSA Encryption Standard, RSA Data Security,               Inc., 3 June 1991, Version 1.4.   [RFC1032] - Stahl, M., "Domain Administrators Guide",RFC 1032,               November 1987.   [RFC1033] - Lottor, M., "Domain Administrators Operations Guide",               RRFC 1033, November 1987.   [RFC1034] - Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and               Facilities", STD 13,RFC 1034, November 1987.   [RFC1035] - Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and               Specifications", STD 13,RFC 1035, November 1987.   [RFC1305] - Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (v3)",RFC 1305, March               1992.   [RFC1321] - Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm",RFC 1321,               April 1992.   [RFC1530] - Malamud, C., and M. Rose, "Principles of Operation for               the TPC.INT Subdomain: General Principles and Policy",RFC 1530, October 1993.   [RFC1750] - Eastlake, D., Crocker, S., and J, Schiller, "Randomness               Requirements for Security",RFC 1750, December 1994.   [RFC1825] - Atkinson, R., "Security Architecture for the Internet               Protocol",RFC 1825, August 1995.   [RSA FAQ] - RSADSI Frequently Asked Questions periodic posting.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997Authors' Addresses   Donald E. Eastlake 3rd   CyberCash, Inc.   318 Acton Street   Carlisle, MA 01741 USA   Telephone:   +1 508-287-4877                +1 508-371-7148(fax)                +1 703-620-4200(main office, Reston, Virginia, USA)   EMail:       dee@cybercash.com   Charles W. Kaufman   Iris Associates   1 Technology Park Drive   Westford, MA 01886 USA   Telephone:   +1 508-392-5276   EMail:       charlie_kaufman@iris.comEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997Appendix: Base 64 Encoding   The following encoding technique is taken fromRFC 1521 by N.   Borenstein and N. Freed.  It is reproduced here in an edited form for   convenience.   A 65-character subset of US-ASCII is used, enabling 6 bits to be   represented per printable character. (The extra 65th character, "=",   is used to signify a special processing function.)   The encoding process represents 24-bit groups of input bits as output   strings of 4 encoded characters. Proceeding from left to right, a   24-bit input group is formed by concatenating 3 8-bit input groups.   These 24 bits are then treated as 4 concatenated 6-bit groups, each   of which is translated into a single digit in the base 64 alphabet.   Each 6-bit group is used as an index into an array of 64 printable   characters. The character referenced by the index is placed in the   output string.                       Table 1: The Base 64 Alphabet      Value Encoding  Value Encoding  Value Encoding  Value Encoding          0 A            17 R            34 i            51 z          1 B            18 S            35 j            52 0          2 C            19 T            36 k            53 1          3 D            20 U            37 l            54 2          4 E            21 V            38 m            55 3          5 F            22 W            39 n            56 4          6 G            23 X            40 o            57 5          7 H            24 Y            41 p            58 6          8 I            25 Z            42 q            59 7          9 J            26 a            43 r            60 8         10 K            27 b            44 s            61 9         11 L            28 c            45 t            62 +         12 M            29 d            46 u            63 /         13 N            30 e            47 v         14 O            31 f            48 w         (pad) =         15 P            32 g            49 x         16 Q            33 h            50 y   Special processing is performed if fewer than 24 bits are available   at the end of the data being encoded.  A full encoding quantum is   always completed at the end of a quantity.  When fewer than 24 input   bits are available in an input group, zero bits are added (on the   right) to form an integral number of 6-bit groups.  Padding at the   end of the data is performed using the '=' character.  Since all base   64 input is an integral number of octets, only the following casesEastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 2065                DNS Security Extensions             January 1997   can arise: (1) the final quantum of encoding input is an integral   multiple of 24 bits; here, the final unit of encoded output will be   an integral multiple of 4 characters with no "=" padding, (2) the   final quantum of encoding input is exactly 8 bits; here, the final   unit of encoded output will be two characters followed by two "="   padding characters, or (3) the final quantum of encoding input is   exactly 16 bits; here, the final unit of encoded output will be three   characters followed by one "=" padding character.Eastlake & Kaufman          Standards Track                    [Page 41]

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