Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Info page]

INFORMATIONAL
Independent Submission                                      L. Song, Ed.Request for Comments: 8483                                        D. LiuCategory: Informational                       Beijing Internet InstituteISSN: 2070-1721                                                 P. Vixie                                                                    TISF                                                                 A. Kato                                                               Keio/WIDE                                                                 S. Kerr                                                            October 2018Yeti DNS TestbedAbstract   Yeti DNS is an experimental, non-production root server testbed that   provides an environment where technical and operational experiments   can safely be performed without risk to production root server   infrastructure.  This document aims solely to document the technical   and operational experience of deploying a system that is similar to   but different from the Root Server system (on which the Internet's   Domain Name System is designed and built).Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other   RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at   its discretion and makes no statement about its value for   implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by   the RFC Editor are not candidates for any level of Internet Standard;   seeSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttps://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8483.Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2018 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Requirements Notation and Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . .53.  Areas of Study  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5     3.1.  Implementation of a Testbed like the Root Server System .   53.2.  Yeti-Root Zone Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.3.  Yeti-Root Server Names and Addressing . . . . . . . . . .53.4.  IPv6-Only Yeti-Root Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.5.  DNSSEC in the Yeti-Root Zone  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.  Yeti DNS Testbed Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.  Root Zone Retrieval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84.2.  Transformation of Root Zone to Yeti-Root Zone . . . . . .94.2.1.  ZSK and KSK Key Sets Shared between DMs . . . . . . .104.2.2.  Unique ZSK per DM; No Shared KSK  . . . . . . . . . .104.2.3.  Preserving Root Zone NSEC Chain and ZSK RRSIGs  . . .114.3.  Yeti-Root Zone Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.4.  Synchronization of Service Metadata . . . . . . . . . . .124.5.  Yeti-Root Server Naming Scheme  . . . . . . . . . . . . .134.6.  Yeti-Root Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.7.  Experimental Traffic  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .164.8.  Traffic Capture and Analysis  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165.  Operational Experience with the Yeti DNS Testbed  . . . . . .175.1.  Viability of IPv6-Only Operation  . . . . . . . . . . . .175.1.1.  IPv6 Fragmentation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.1.2.  Serving IPv4-Only End-Users . . . . . . . . . . . . .195.2.  Zone Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .195.2.1.  Zone Transfers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .195.2.2.  Delays in Yeti-Root Zone Distribution . . . . . . . .205.2.3.  Mixed RRSIGs from Different DM ZSKs . . . . . . . . .215.3.  DNSSEC KSK Rollover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .225.3.1.  Failure-Case KSK Rollover . . . . . . . . . . . . . .225.3.2.  KSK Rollover vs. BIND9 Views  . . . . . . . . . . . .225.3.3.  Large Responses during KSK Rollover . . . . . . . . .235.4.  Capture of Large DNS Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . .245.5.  Automated Maintenance of the Hints File . . . . . . . . .24Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20185.6.  Root Label Compression in Knot DNS Server . . . . . . . .256.  Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .289.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .299.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .299.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29Appendix A.  Yeti-Root Hints File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33Appendix B.  Yeti-Root Server Priming Response  . . . . . . . . .34Appendix C.  Active IPv6 Prefixes in Yeti DNS Testbed . . . . . .36Appendix D.  Tools Developed for Yeti DNS Testbed . . . . . . . .36Appendix E.  Controversy  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37   Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .391.  Introduction   The Domain Name System (DNS), as originally specified in [RFC1034]   and [RFC1035], has proved to be an enduring and important platform   upon which almost every end-user of the Internet relies.  Despite its   longevity, extensions to the protocol, new implementations, and   refinements to DNS operations continue to emerge both inside and   outside the IETF.   The Root Server system in particular has seen technical innovation   and development, for example, in the form of wide-scale anycast   deployment, the mitigation of unwanted traffic on a global scale, the   widespread deployment of Response Rate Limiting [RRL], the   introduction of IPv6 transport, the deployment of DNSSEC, changes in   DNSSEC key sizes, and preparations to roll the root zone's Key   Signing Key (KSK) and corresponding trust anchor.  These projects   created tremendous qualitative operational change and required   impressive caution and study prior to implementation.  They took   place in parallel with the quantitative expansion or delegations for   new TLDs (see <https://newgtlds.icann.org/>).   Aspects of the operational structure of the Root Server system have   been described in such documents as [TNO2009], [ISC-TN-2003-1],   [RSSAC001], and [RFC7720].  Such references, considered together,   provide sufficient insight into the operations of the system as a   whole that it is straightforward to imagine structural changes to the   Root Server system's infrastructure and to wonder what the   operational implications of such changes might be.   The Yeti DNS Project was conceived in May 2015 with the aim of   providing a non-production testbed that would be open for use by   anyone from the technical community to propose or run experiments   designed to answer these kinds of questions.  Coordination for theSong, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   project was provided by BII, TISF, and the WIDE Project.  Thus, Yeti   DNS is an independently coordinated project and is not affiliated   with the IETF, ICANN, IANA, or any Root Server Operator.  The   objectives of the Yeti Project were set by the participants in the   project based on experiments that they considered would provide   valuable information.   Many volunteers collaborated to build a distributed testbed that at   the time of writing includes 25 Yeti root servers with 16 operators   and handles experimental traffic from individual volunteers,   universities, DNS vendors, and distributed measurement networks.   By design, the Yeti testbed system serves the root zone published by   the IANA with only those structural modifications necessary to ensure   that it is able to function usefully in the Yeti testbed system   instead of the production Root Server system.  In particular, no   delegation for any top-level zone is changed, added, or removed from   the IANA-published root zone to construct the root zone served by the   Yeti testbed system, and changes in the root zone are reflected in   the testbed in near real-time.  In this document, for clarity, we   refer to the zone derived from the IANA-published root zone as the   Yeti-Root zone.   The Yeti DNS testbed serves a similar function to the Root Server   system in the sense that they both serve similar zones: the Yeti-Root   zone and the IANA-published root zone.  However, the Yeti DNS testbed   only serves clients that are explicitly configured to participate in   the experiment, whereas the Root Server system serves the whole   Internet.  Since the dependent end-users and systems of the Yeti DNS   testbed are known and their operations well-coordinated with those of   the Yeti project, it has been possible to deploy structural changes   in the Yeti DNS testbed with effective measurement and analysis,   something that is difficult or simply impractical in the production   Root Server system.   This document describes the motivation for the Yeti project,   describes the Yeti testbed infrastructure, and provides the technical   and operational experiences of some users of the Yeti testbed.  This   document neither addresses the relevant policies under which the Root   Server system is operated nor makes any proposal for changing any   aspect of its implementation or operation.Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20182.  Requirements Notation and Conventions   Through the document, any mention of "Root" with an uppercase "R" and   without other prefix, refers to the "IANA Root" systems used in the   production Internet.  Proper mentions of the Yeti infrastructure will   be prefixed with "Yeti", like "Yeti-Root zone", "Yeti DNS", and so   on.3.  Areas of Study   This section provides some examples of the topics that the developers   of the Yeti DNS testbed considered important to address.  As noted inSection 1, the Yeti DNS is an independently coordinated project and   is not affiliated with the IETF, ICANN, IANA, or any Root Server   Operator.  Thus, the topics and areas for study were selected by (and   for) the proponents of the Yeti project to address their own concerns   and in the hope that the information and tools provided would be of   wider interest.   Each example included below is illustrated with indicative questions.3.1.  Implementation of a Testbed like the Root Server System   o  How can a testbed be constructed and deployed on the Internet,      allowing useful public participation without any risk of      disruption of the Root Server system?   o  How can representative traffic be introduced into such a testbed      such that insights into the impact of specific differences between      the testbed and the Root Server system can be observed?3.2.  Yeti-Root Zone Distribution   o  What are the scaling properties of Yeti-Root zone distribution as      the number of Yeti-Root servers, Yeti-Root server instances, or      intermediate distribution points increases?3.3.  Yeti-Root Server Names and Addressing   o  What naming schemes other than those closely analogous to the use      of ROOT-SERVERS.NET in the production root zone are practical, and      what are their respective advantages and disadvantages?   o  What are the risks and benefits of signing the zone that contains      the names of the Yeti-Root servers?Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   o  What automatic mechanisms might be useful to improve the rate at      which clients of Yeti-Root servers are able to react to a Yeti-      Root server renumbering event?3.4.  IPv6-Only Yeti-Root Servers   o  Are there negative operational effects in the use of IPv6-only      Yeti-Root servers, compared to the use of servers that are dual-      stack?   o  What effect does the IPv6 fragmentation model have on the      operation of Yeti-Root servers, compared with that of IPv4?3.5.  DNSSEC in the Yeti-Root Zone   o  Is it practical to sign the Yeti-Root zone using multiple,      independently operated DNSSEC signers and multiple corresponding      Zone Signing Keys (ZSKs)?   o  To what extent is [RFC5011] ("Automated Updates of DNS Security      (DNSSEC) Trust Anchors") supported by resolvers?   o  Does the KSK Rollover plan designed and in the process of being      implemented by ICANN work as expected on the Yeti testbed?   o  What is the operational impact of using much larger RSA key sizes      in the ZSKs used in a root?   o  What are the operational consequences of choosing DNSSEC      algorithms other than RSA to sign a root?Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20184.  Yeti DNS Testbed Infrastructure   The purpose of the testbed is to allow DNS queries from stub   resolvers, mediated by recursive resolvers, to be delivered to Yeti-   Root servers, and for corresponding responses generated on the Yeti-   Root servers to be returned, as illustrated in Figure 1.       ,----------.        ,-----------.        ,------------.       |   stub   +------> | recursive +------> | Yeti-Root  |       | resolver | <------+ resolver  | <------+ nameserver |       `----------'        `-----------'        `------------'          ^                   ^                    ^          |  appropriate      |  Yeti-Root hints;  |  Yeti-Root zone          `- resolver         `- Yeti-Root trust   `- with DNSKEY RRset             configured          anchor               signed by                                                      Yeti-Root KSK                  Figure 1: High-Level Testbed Components   To use the Yeti DNS testbed, a recursive resolver must be configured   to use the Yeti-Root servers.  That configuration consists of a list   of names and addresses for the Yeti-Root servers (often referred to   as a "hints file") that replaces the corresponding hints used for the   production Root Server system (Appendix A).  If resolvers are   configured to validate DNSSEC, then they also need to be configured   with a DNSSEC trust anchor that corresponds to a KSK used in the Yeti   DNS Project, in place of the normal trust anchor set used for the   Root Zone.   Since the Yeti root(s) are signed with Yeti keys, rather than those   used by the IANA Root, corresponding changes are needed in the   resolver trust anchors.  Corresponding changes are required in the   Yeti-Root hints fileAppendix A.  Those changes would be properly   rejected as bogus by any validator using the production Root Server   system's root zone trust anchor set.   Stub resolvers become part of the Yeti DNS testbed by their use of   recursive resolvers that are configured as described above.   The data flow from IANA to stub resolvers through the Yeti testbed is   illustrated in Figure 2 and is described in more detail in the   sections that follow.Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018                              ,----------------.                         ,-- / IANA Root Zone / ---.                         |  `----------------'     |                         |            |            |                         |            |            |       Root Zone ,--------------.    ,---V---.    ,---V---.    ,---V---. | Yeti Traffic |    | BII   |    | WIDE  |    | TISF  | | Collection   |    |  DM   |    |  DM   |    |  DM   | `----+----+----'    `---+---'    `---+---'    `---+---'      |    |       ,-----'    ,-------'            `----.      |    |       |          |                         |  Yeti-Root      ^    ^       |          |                         |     Zone      |    |   ,---V---.  ,---V---.                 ,---V---.      |    `---+ Yeti  |  | Yeti  |  . . . . . . .  | Yeti  |      |        | Root  |  | Root  |                 | Root  |      |        `---+---'  `---+---'                 `---+---'      |            |          |                         |    DNS      |            |          |                         |  Response      |         ,--V----------V-------------------------V--.      `---------+              Yeti Resolvers              |                `--------------------+---------------------'                                     |                       DNS                                     |                     Response                ,--------------------V---------------------.                |            Yeti Stub Resolvers           |                `------------------------------------------' The three coordinators of the Yeti DNS testbed:    BII : Beijing Internet Institute    WIDE: Widely Integrated Distributed Environment Project    TISF: A collaborative engineering and security project by Paul Vixie                        Figure 2: Testbed Data Flow   Note that the roots are not bound to Distribution Masters (DMs).  DMs   update their zone on a schedule described inSection 4.1.  Each DM   that updates the latest zone can notify all roots, so the zone   transfer can happen between any DM and any root.4.1.  Root Zone Retrieval   The Yeti-Root zone is distributed within the Yeti DNS testbed through   a set of internal master servers that are referred to as Distribution   Masters (DMs).  These server elements distribute the Yeti-Root zone   to all Yeti-Root servers.  The means by which the Yeti DMs construct   the Yeti-Root zone for distribution is described below.Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   Since Yeti DNS DMs do not receive DNS NOTIFY [RFC1996] messages from   the Root Server system, a polling approach is used to determine when   new revisions of the root zone are available from the production Root   Server system.  Each Yeti DM requests the Root Zone SOA record from a   Root server that permits unauthenticated zone transfers of the root   zone, and performs a zone transfer from that server if the retrieved   value of SOA.SERIAL is greater than that of the last retrieved zone.   At the time of writing, unauthenticated zone transfers of the Root   Zone are available directly from B-Root, C-Root, F-Root, G-Root,   K-Root, and L-Root; two servers XFR.CJR.DNS.ICANN.ORG and   XFR.LAX.DNS.ICANN.ORG; and via FTP from sites maintained by the Root   Zone Maintainer and the IANA Functions Operator.  The Yeti DNS   testbed retrieves the Root Zone using zone transfers from F-Root.   The schedule on which F-Root is polled by each Yeti DM is as follows:                  +-------------+-----------------------+                  | DM Operator | Time                  |                  +-------------+-----------------------+                  | BII         | UTC hour + 00 minutes |                  | WIDE        | UTC hour + 20 minutes |                  | TISF        | UTC hour + 40 minutes |                  +-------------+-----------------------+   The Yeti DNS testbed uses multiple DMs, each of which acts   autonomously and equivalently to its siblings.  Any single DM can act   to distribute new revisions of the Yeti-Root zone and is also   responsible for signing the RRsets that are changed as part of the   transformation of the Root Zone into the Yeti-Root zone described inSection 4.2.  This multiple DM model intends to provide a basic   structure to implement the idea of shared zone control as proposed in   [ITI2014].4.2.  Transformation of Root Zone to Yeti-Root Zone   Two distinct approaches have been deployed in the Yeti DNS testbed,   separately, to transform the Root Zone into the Yeti-Root zone.  At a   high level, the approaches are equivalent in the sense that they   replace a minimal set of information in the root zone with   corresponding data for the Yeti DNS testbed; the mechanisms by which   the transforms are executed are different, however.  The approaches   are discussed in Sections4.2.1 and4.2.2.   A third approach has also been proposed, but not yet implemented.   The motivations and changes implied by that approach are described inSection 4.2.3.Song, et al.                  Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20184.2.1.  ZSK and KSK Key Sets Shared between DMs   The approach described here was the first to be implemented.  It   features entirely autonomous operation of each DM, but also requires   secret key material (the private key in each of the Yeti-Root KSK and   ZSK key pairs) to be distributed and maintained on each DM in a   coordinated way.   The Root Zone is transformed as follows to produce the Yeti-Root   zone.  This transformation is carried out autonomously on each Yeti   DNS Project DM.  Each DM carries an authentic copy of the current set   of Yeti KSK and ZSK key pairs, synchronized between all DMs (seeSection 4.4).   1.  SOA.MNAME is set to www.yeti-dns.org.   2.  SOA.RNAME is set to <dm-operator>.yeti-dns.org, where       <dm-operator> is currently one of "wide", "bii", or "tisf".   3.  All DNSKEY, RRSIG, and NSEC records are removed.   4.  The apex Name Server (NS) RRset is removed, with the       corresponding root server glue (A and AAAA) RRsets.   5.  A Yeti DNSKEY RRset is added to the apex, comprising the public       parts of all Yeti KSK and ZSKs.   6.  A Yeti NS RRset is added to the apex that includes all Yeti-Root       servers.   7.  Glue records (AAAA only, since Yeti-Root servers are v6-only) for       all Yeti-Root servers are added.   8.  The Yeti-Root zone is signed: the NSEC chain is regenerated; the       Yeti KSK is used to sign the DNSKEY RRset; and the shared ZSK is       used to sign every other RRset.   Note that the SOA.SERIAL value published in the Yeti-Root zone is   identical to that found in the root zone.4.2.2.  Unique ZSK per DM; No Shared KSK   The approach described here was the second to be implemented and   maintained as stable state.  Each DM is provisioned with its own,   dedicated ZSK key pairs that are not shared with other DMs.  A Yeti-   Root DNSKEY RRset is constructed and signed upstream of all DMs as   the union of the set of active Yeti-Root KSKs and the set of active   ZSKs for every individual DM.  Each DM now only requires the secretSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   part of its own dedicated ZSK key pairs to be available locally, and   no other secret key material is shared.  The high-level approach is   illustrated in Figure 3.                            ,----------.         ,-----------.                   .--------> BII ZSK  +---------> Yeti-Root |                   | signs  `----------'  signs  `-----------'                   |     ,-----------. |        ,----------.         ,-----------.     | Yeti KSK  +-+--------> TISF ZSK +---------> Yeti-Root |     `-----------' | signs  `----------'  signs  `-----------'                   |                   |        ,----------.         ,-----------.                   `--------> WIDE ZSK +---------> Yeti-Root |                     signs  `----------'  signs  `-----------'                        Figure 3: Unique ZSK per DM   The process of retrieving the Root Zone from the Root Server system   and replacing and signing the apex DNSKEY RRset no longer takes place   on the DMs; instead, it takes place on a central Hidden Master.  The   production of signed DNSKEY RRsets is analogous to the use of Signed   Key Responses (SKRs) produced during ICANN KSK key ceremonies   [ICANN2010].   Each DM now retrieves source data (with a premodified and Yeti-signed   DNSKEY RRset, but otherwise unchanged) from the Yeti DNS Hidden   Master instead of from the Root Server system.   Each DM carries out a similar transformation to that described inSection 4.2.1, except that DMs no longer need to modify or sign the   DNSKEY RRset, and the DM's unique local ZSK is used to sign every   other RRset.4.2.3.  Preserving Root Zone NSEC Chain and ZSK RRSIGs   A change to the transformation described inSection 4.2.2 has been   proposed as a Yeti experiment called PINZ [PINZ], which would   preserve the NSEC chain from the Root Zone and all RRSIG RRs   generated using the Root Zone's ZSKs.  The DNSKEY RRset would   continue to be modified to replace the Root Zone KSKs, but Root Zone   ZSKs would be kept intact, and the Yeti KSK would be used to generate   replacement signatures over the apex DNSKEY and NS RRsets.  Source   data would continue to flow from the Root Server system through the   Hidden Master to the set of DMs, but no DNSSEC operations would be   required on the DMs, and the source NSEC and most RRSIGs would remain   intact.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   This approach has been suggested in order to keep minimal changes   from the IANA Root zone and provide cryptographically verifiable   confidence that no owner name in the root zone had been changed in   the process of producing the Yeti-Root zone from the Root Zone,   thereby addressing one of the concerns described inAppendix E in a   way that can be verified automatically.4.3.  Yeti-Root Zone Distribution   Each Yeti DM is configured with a full list of Yeti-Root server   addresses to send NOTIFY [RFC1996] messages to.  This also forms the   basis for an address-based access-control list for zone transfers.   Authentication by address could be replaced with more rigorous   mechanisms (e.g., using Transaction Signatures (TSIGs) [RFC2845]).   This has not been done at the time of writing since the use of   address-based controls avoids the need for the distribution of shared   secrets amongst the Yeti-Root server operators.   Individual Yeti-Root servers are configured with a full set of Yeti   DM addresses to which SOA and AXFR queries may be sent in the   conventional manner.4.4.  Synchronization of Service Metadata   Changes in the Yeti DNS testbed infrastructure such as the addition   or removal of Yeti-Root servers, renumbering Yeti-Root servers, or   DNSSEC key rollovers require coordinated changes to take place on all   DMs.  The Yeti DNS testbed is subject to more frequent changes than   are observed in the Root Server system and includes substantially   more Yeti-Root servers than there are IANA Root Servers, and hence a   manual change process in the Yeti testbed would be more likely to   suffer from human error.  An automated and cooperative process was   consequently implemented.   The theory of this operation is that each DM operator runs a Git   repository locally, containing all service metadata involved in the   operation of each DM.  When a change is desired and approved among   all Yeti coordinators, one DM operator (usually BII) updates the   local Git repository.  A serial number in the future (in two days) is   chosen for when the changes become active.  The DM operator then   pushes the changes to the Git repositories of the other two DM   operators who have a chance to check and edit the changes.  When the   serial number of the root zone passes the number chosen, the changes   are pulled automatically to individual DMs and promoted to   production.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   The three Git repositories are synchronized by configuring them as   remote servers.  For example, at BII we push to all three DMs'   repositories as follows:             $ git remote -v             origin yeticonf@yeti-conf.dns-lab.net:dm (fetch)             origin yeticonf@yeti-conf.dns-lab.net:dm (push)             origin yeticonf@yeti-dns.tisf.net:dm (push)             origin yeticonf@yeti-repository.wide.ad.jp:dm (push)   For more detailed information on DM synchronization, please see this   document in Yeti's GitHub repository: <https://github.com/BII-Lab/Yeti-Project/blob/master/doc/Yeti-DM-Sync.md>.4.5.  Yeti-Root Server Naming Scheme   The current naming scheme for Root Servers was normalized to use   single-character host names ("A" through "M") under the domain ROOT-   SERVERS.NET, as described in [RSSAC023].  The principal benefit of   this naming scheme was that DNS label compression could be used to   produce a priming response that would fit within 512 bytes at the   time it was introduced, where 512 bytes is the maximum DNS message   size using UDP transport without EDNS(0) [RFC6891].   Yeti-Root servers do not use this optimization, but rather use free-   form nameserver names chosen by their respective operators -- in   other words, no attempt is made to minimize the size of the priming   response through the use of label compression.  This approach aims to   challenge the need to minimize the priming response in a modern DNS   ecosystem where EDNS(0) is prevalent.   Priming responses from Yeti-Root servers (unlike those from Root   Servers) do not always include server addresses in the additional   section.  In particular, Yeti-Root servers running BIND9 return an   empty additional section if the configuration parameter "minimum-   responses" is set, forcing resolvers to complete the priming process   with a set of conventional recursive lookups in order to resolve   addresses for each Yeti-Root server.  The Yeti-Root servers running   NSD were observed to return a fully populated additional section   (depending, of course, on the EDNS buffer size in use).   Various approaches to normalize the composition of the priming   response were considered, including:   o  Require use of DNS implementations that exhibit a desired behavior      in the priming response.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   o  Modify nameserver software or configuration as used by Yeti-Root      servers.   o  Isolate the names of Yeti-Root servers in one or more zones that      could be slaved on each Yeti-Root server, renaming servers as      necessary, giving each a source of authoritative data with which      the authority section of a priming response could be fully      populated.  This is the approach used in the Root Server system      with the ROOT-SERVERS.NET zone.   The potential mitigation of renaming all Yeti-Root servers using a   scheme that would allow their names to exist directly in the root   zone was not considered because that approach implies the invention   of new top-level labels not present in the Root Zone.   Given the relative infrequency of priming queries by individual   resolvers and the additional complexity or other compromises implied   by each of those mitigations, the decision was made to make no effort   to ensure that the composition of priming responses was identical   across servers.  Even the empty additional sections generated by   Yeti-Root servers running BIND9 seem to be sufficient for all   resolver software tested; resolvers simply perform a new recursive   lookup for each authoritative server name they need to resolve.4.6.  Yeti-Root Servers   Various volunteers have donated authoritative servers to act as Yeti-   Root servers.  At the time of writing, there are 25 Yeti-Root servers   distributed globally, one of which is named using a label as   specified in IDNA2008 [RFC5890] (it is shown in the following list in   punycode).Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   +-------------------------------------+---------------+-------------+   | Name                                | Operator      | Location    |   +-------------------------------------+---------------+-------------+   | bii.dns-lab.net                     | BII           | CHINA       |   | yeti-ns.tsif.net                    | TSIF          | USA         |   | yeti-ns.wide.ad.jp                  | WIDE Project  | Japan       |   | yeti-ns.as59715.net                 | as59715       | Italy       |   | dahu1.yeti.eu.org                   | Dahu Group    | France      |   | ns-yeti.bondis.org                  | Bond Internet | Spain       |   |                                     | Systems       |             |   | yeti-ns.ix.ru                       | Russia        | MSK-IX      |   | yeti.bofh.priv.at                   | CERT Austria  | Austria     |   | yeti.ipv6.ernet.in                  | ERNET India   | India       |   | yeti-dns01.dnsworkshop.org          | dnsworkshop   | Germany     |   |                                     | /informnis    |             |   | dahu2.yeti.eu.org                   | Dahu Group    | France      |   | yeti.aquaray.com                    | Aqua Ray SAS  | France      |   | yeti-ns.switch.ch                   | SWITCH        | Switzerland |   | yeti-ns.lab.nic.cl                  | NIC Chile     | Chile       |   | yeti-ns1.dns-lab.net                | BII           | China       |   | yeti-ns2.dns-lab.net                | BII           | China       |   | yeti-ns3.dns-lab.net                | BII           | China       |   | ca...a23dc.yeti-dns.net             | Yeti-ZA       | South       |   |                                     |               | Africa      |   | 3f...374cd.yeti-dns.net             | Yeti-AU       | Australia   |   | yeti1.ipv6.ernet.in                 | ERNET India   | India       |   | xn--r2bi1c.xn--h2bv6c0a.xn--h2brj9c | ERNET India   | India       |   | yeti-dns02.dnsworkshop.org          | dnsworkshop   | USA         |   |                                     | /informnis    |             |   | yeti.mind-dns.nl                    | Monshouwer    | Netherlands |   |                                     | Internet      |             |   |                                     | Diensten      |             |   | yeti-ns.datev.net                   | DATEV         | Germany     |   | yeti.jhcloos.net.                   | jhcloos       | USA         |   +-------------------------------------+---------------+-------------+   The current list of Yeti-Root servers is made available to a   participating resolver first using a substitute hints fileAppendix A   and subsequently by the usual resolver priming process [RFC8109].   All Yeti-Root servers are IPv6-only, because of the IPv6-only   Internet of the foreseeable future, and hence the Yeti-Root hints   file contains no IPv4 addresses and the Yeti-Root zone contains no   IPv4 glue records.  Note that the rationale of an IPv6-only testbed   is to test whether an IPv6-only root can survive any problem or   impact when IPv4 is turned off, much like the context of the IETF   SUNSET4 WG [SUNSET4].Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   At the time of writing, all root servers within the Root Server   system serve the ROOT-SERVERS.NET zone in addition to the root zone,   and all but one also serve the ARPA zone.  Yeti-Root servers serve   the Yeti-Root zone only.   Significant software diversity exists across the set of Yeti-Root   servers, as reported by their volunteer operators at the time of   writing:   o  Platform: 18 of 25 Yeti-Root servers are implemented on a Virtual      Private Server (VPS) rather than bare metal.   o  Operating System: 15 Yeti-Root servers run on Linux (Ubuntu,      Debian, CentOS, Red Hat, and ArchLinux); 4 run on FreeBSD; 1 on      NetBSD; and 1 on Windows Server 2016.   o  DNS software: 16 of 25 Yeti-Root servers use BIND9 (versions      varying between 9.9.7 and 9.10.3); 4 use NSD (4.10 and 4.15); 2      use Knot (2.0.1 and 2.1.0); 1 uses Bundy (1.2.0); 1 uses PowerDNS      (4.1.3); and 1 uses MS DNS (10.0.14300.1000).4.7.  Experimental Traffic   For the Yeti DNS testbed to be useful as a platform for   experimentation, it needs to carry statistically representative   traffic.  Several approaches have been taken to load the system with   traffic, including both real-world traffic triggered by end-users and   synthetic traffic.   Resolvers that have been explicitly configured to participate in the   testbed, as described inSection 4, are a source of real-world, end-   user traffic.  Due to an efficient cache mechanism, the mean query   rate is less than 100 qps in the Yeti testbed, but a variety of   sources were observed as active during 2017, as summarized inAppendix C.   Synthetic traffic has been introduced to the system from time to time   in order to increase traffic loads.  Approaches include the use of   distributed measurement platforms such as RIPE ATLAS to send DNS   queries to Yeti-Root servers and the capture of traffic (sent from   non-Yeti resolvers to the Root Server system) that was subsequently   modified and replayed towards Yeti-Root servers.4.8.  Traffic Capture and Analysis   Traffic capture of queries and responses is available in the testbed   in both Yeti resolvers and Yeti-Root servers in anticipation of   experiments that require packet-level visibility into DNS traffic.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   Traffic capture is performed on Yeti-Root servers using either   o  dnscap <https://www.dns-oarc.net/tools/dnscap> or   o  pcapdump, part of the pcaputils Debian package      <https://packages.debian.org/sid/pcaputils>, with a patch to      facilitate triggered file upload (see <https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=545985>).   PCAP-format files containing packet captures are uploaded using rsync   to central storage.5.  Operational Experience with the Yeti DNS Testbed   The following sections provide commentary on the operation and impact   analyses of the Yeti DNS testbed described inSection 4.  More   detailed descriptions of observed phenomena are available in the Yeti   DNS mailing list archives <http://lists.yeti-dns.org/pipermail/discuss/> and on the Yeti DNS blog <https://yeti-dns.org/blog.html>.5.1.  Viability of IPv6-Only Operation   All Yeti-Root servers were deployed with IPv6 connectivity, and no   IPv4 addresses for any Yeti-Root server were made available (e.g., in   the Yeti hints file or in the DNS itself).  This implementation   decision constrained the Yeti-Root system to be v6 only.   DNS implementations are generally adept at using both IPv4 and IPv6   when both are available.  Servers that cannot be reliably reached   over one protocol might be better queried over the other, to the   benefit of end-users in the common case where DNS resolution is on   the critical path for end-users' perception of performance.  However,   this optimization also means that systemic problems with one protocol   can be masked by the other.  By forcing all traffic to be carried   over IPv6, the Yeti DNS testbed aimed to expose any such problems and   make them easier to identify and understand.  Several examples of   IPv6-specific phenomena observed during the operation of the testbed   are described in the sections that follow.   Although the Yeti-Root servers themselves were only reachable using   IPv6, real-world end-users often have no IPv6 connectivity.  The   testbed was also able to explore the degree to which IPv6-only Yeti-   Root servers were able to serve single-stack, IPv4-only end-user   populations through the use of dual-stack Yeti resolvers.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20185.1.1.  IPv6 Fragmentation   In the Root Server system, structural changes with the potential to   increase response sizes (and hence fragmentation, fallback to TCP   transport, or both) have been exercised with great care, since the   impact on clients has been difficult to predict or measure.  The Yeti   DNS testbed is experimental and has the luxury of a known client   base, making it far easier to make such changes and measure their   impact.   Many of the experimental design choices described in this document   were expected to trigger larger responses.  For example, the choice   of naming scheme for Yeti-Root servers described inSection 4.5   defeats label compression.  It makes a large priming response (up to   1754 octets with 25 NS records and their corresponding glue records);   the Yeti-Root zone transformation approach described inSection 4.2.2   greatly enlarges the apex DNSKEY RRset especially during the KSK   rollover (up to 1975 octets with 3 ZSKs and 2 KSKs).  Therefore, an   increased incidence of fragmentation was expected.   The Yeti DNS testbed provides service on IPv6 only.  However,   middleboxes (such as firewalls and some routers) are not friendly on   IPv6 fragments.  There are reports of a notable packet drop rate due   to the mistreatment of middleboxes on IPv6 fragments [FRAGDROP]   [RFC7872].  One APNIC study [IPv6-frag-DNS] reported that 37% of   endpoints using IPv6-capable DNS resolvers cannot receive a   fragmented IPv6 response over UDP.   To study the impact, RIPE Atlas probes were used.  For each Yeti-Root   server, an Atlas measurement was set up using 100 IPv6-enabled probes   from five regions, sending a DNS query for "./IN/DNSKEY" using UDP   transport with DO=1.  This measurement, when carried out concurrently   with a Yeti KSK rollover, further exacerbating the potential for   fragmentation, identified a 7% failure rate compared with a non-   fragmented control.  A failure rate of 2% was observed with response   sizes of 1414 octets, which was surprising given the expected   prevalence of 1500-octet (Ethernet-framed) MTUs.   The consequences of fragmentation were not limited to failures in   delivering DNS responses over UDP transport.  There were two cases   where a Yeti-Root server failed when using TCP to transfer the Yeti-   Root zone from a DM.  DM log files revealed "socket is not connected"   errors corresponding to zone transfer requests.  Further   experimentation revealed that combinations of NetBSD 6.1, NetBSD   7.0RC1, FreeBSD 10.0, Debian 3.2, and VMWare ESXI 5.5 resulted in a   high TCP Maximum Segment Size (MSS) value of 1440 octets being   negotiated between client and server despite the presence of the   IPV6_USE_MIN_MTU socket option, as described in [USE_MIN_MTU].  TheSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   mismatch appears to cause outbound segments of a size greater than   1280 octets to be dropped before sending.  Setting the local TCP MSS   to 1220 octets (chosen as 1280 - 60, the size of the IPv6 TCP header   with no other extension headers) was observed to be a pragmatic   mitigation.5.1.2.  Serving IPv4-Only End-Users   Yeti resolvers have been successfully used by real-world end-users   for general name resolution within a number of participant   organizations, including resolution of names to IPv4 addresses and   resolution by IPv4-only end-user devices.   Some participants, recognizing the operational importance of   reliability in resolver infrastructure and concerned about the   stability of their IPv6 connectivity, chose to deploy Yeti resolvers   in parallel to conventional resolvers, making both available to end-   users.  While the viability of this approach provides a useful data   point, end-users using Yeti resolvers exclusively provided a better   opportunity to identify and understand any failures in the Yeti DNS   testbed infrastructure.   Resolvers deployed in IPv4-only environments were able to join the   Yeti DNS testbed by way of upstream, dual-stack Yeti resolvers.  In   one case (CERNET2), this was done by assigning IPv4 addresses to   Yeti-Root servers and mapping them in dual-stack IVI translation   devices [RFC6219].5.2.  Zone Distribution   The Yeti DNS testbed makes use of multiple DMs to distribute the   Yeti-Root zone, an approach that would allow the number of Yeti-Root   servers to scale to a higher number than could be supported by a   single distribution source and that provided redundancy.  The use of   multiple DMs introduced some operational challenges, however, which   are described in the following sections.5.2.1.  Zone Transfers   Yeti-Root servers were configured to serve the Yeti-Root zone as   slaves.  Each slave had all DMs configured as masters, providing   redundancy in zone synchronization.   Each DM in the Yeti testbed served a Yeti-Root zone that was   functionally equivalent but not congruent to that served by every   other DM (seeSection 4.3).  The differences included variations in   the SOA.MNAME field and, more critically, in the RRSIGs for   everything other than the apex DNSKEY RRset, since signatures for allSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   other RRsets are generated using a private key that is only available   to the DM serving its particular variant of the zone (see Sections   4.2.1 and 4.2.2).   Incremental Zone Transfer (IXFR), as described in [RFC1995], is a   viable mechanism to use for zone synchronization between any Yeti-   Root server and a consistent, single DM.  However, if that Yeti-Root   server ever selected a different DM, IXFR would no longer be a safe   mechanism; structural changes between the incongruent zones on   different DMs would not be included in any transferred delta, and the   result would be a zone that was not internally self-consistent.  For   this reason, the first transfer after a change of DM would require   AXFR not IXFR.   None of the DNS software in use on Yeti-Root servers supports this   mixture of IXFR/AXFR according to the master server in use.  This is   unsurprising, given that the environment described above in the Yeti-   Root system is idiosyncratic; conventional zone transfer graphs   involve zones that are congruent between all nodes.  For this reason,   all Yeti-Root servers are configured to use AXFR at all times, and   never IXFR, to ensure that zones being served are internally self-   consistent.5.2.2.  Delays in Yeti-Root Zone Distribution   Each Yeti DM polled the Root Server system for a new revision of the   root zone on an interleaved schedule, as described inSection 4.1.   Consequently, different DMs were expected to retrieve each revision   of the root zone, and make a corresponding revision of the Yeti-Root   zone available, at different times.  The availability of a new   revision of the Yeti-Root zone on the first DM would typically   precede that of the last by 40 minutes.   Given this distribution mechanism, it might be expected that the   maximum latency between the publication of a new revision of the root   zone and the availability of the corresponding Yeti-Root zone on any   Yeti-Root server would be 20 minutes, since in normal operation at   least one DM should serve that Yeti-Zone within 20 minutes of root   zone publication.  In practice, this was not observed.   In one case, a Yeti-Root server running Bundy 1.2.0 on FreeBSD   10.2-RELEASE was found to lag root zone publication by as much as ten   hours.  Upon investigation, this was found to be due to software   defects that were subsequently corrected.   More generally, Yeti-Root servers were observed routinely to lag root   zone publication by more than 20 minutes, and relatively often by   more than 40 minutes.  Whilst in some cases this might be assumed toSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   be a result of connectivity problems, perhaps suppressing the   delivery of NOTIFY messages, it was also observed that Yeti-Root   servers receiving a NOTIFY from one DM would often send SOA queries   and AXFR requests to a different DM.  If that DM were not yet serving   the new revision of the Yeti-Root zone, a delay in updating the Yeti-   Root server would naturally result.5.2.3.  Mixed RRSIGs from Different DM ZSKs   The second approach for doing the transformation of Root Zone to   Yeti-Root zone (Section 4.2.2) introduces a situation where mixed   RRSIGs from different DM ZSKs are cached in one resolver.   It is observed that the Yeti-Root zone served by any particular Yeti-   Root server will include signatures generated using the ZSK from the   DM that served the Yeti-Root zone to that Yeti-Root server.   Signatures cached at resolvers might be retrieved from any Yeti-Root   server, and hence are expected to be a mixture of signatures   generated by different ZSKs.  Since all ZSKs can be trusted through   the signature by the Yeti KSK over the DNSKEY RRset, which includes   all ZSKs, the mixture of signatures was predicted not to be a threat   to reliable validation.   It was first tested in BII's lab environment as a proof of concept.   It was observed in the resolver's DNSSEC log that the process of   verifying an RDATA set shows "success" with a key (keyid) in the   DNSKEY RRset.  It was implemented later in three DMs that were   carefully coordinated and made public to all Yeti resolver operators   and participants in Yeti's mailing list.  At least 45 Yeti resolvers   (deployed by Yeti operators) were being monitored and had set a   reporting trigger if anything was wrong.  In addition, the Yeti   mailing list is open for error reports from other participants.  So   far, the Yeti testbed has been operated in this configuration (with   multiple ZSKs) for 2 years.  This configuration has proven workable   and reliable, even when rollovers of individual ZSKs are on different   schedules.   Another consequence of this approach is that the apex DNSKEY RRset in   the Yeti-Root zone is much larger than the corresponding DNSKEY RRset   in the Root Zone.  This requires more space and produces a larger   response to the query for the DNSKEY RRset especially during the KSK   rollover.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20185.3.  DNSSEC KSK Rollover   At the time of writing, the Root Zone KSK is expected to undergo a   carefully orchestrated rollover as described in [ICANN2016].  ICANN   has commissioned various tests and has published an external test   plan [ICANN2017].   Three related DNSSEC KSK rollover exercises were carried out on the   Yeti DNS testbed, somewhat concurrent with the planning and execution   of the rollover in the root zone.  Brief descriptions of these   exercises are included below.5.3.1.  Failure-Case KSK Rollover   The first KSK rollover that was executed on the Yeti DNS testbed   deliberately ignored the 30-day hold-down timer specified in   [RFC5011] before retiring the outgoing KSK.   It was confirmed that clients of some (but not all) validating Yeti   resolvers experienced resolution failures (received SERVFAIL   responses) following this change.  Those resolvers required   administrator intervention to install a functional trust anchor   before resolution was restored.5.3.2.  KSK Rollover vs. BIND9 Views   The second Yeti KSK rollover was designed with similar phases to the   ICANN's KSK rollover, although with modified timings to reduce the   time required to complete the process.  The "slot" used in this   rollover was ten days long, as follows:              +-----------------+----------------+----------+              |                 | Old Key: 19444 | New Key  |              +-----------------+----------------+----------+              | slot 1          | pub+sign       |          |              | slot 2, 3, 4, 5 | pub+sign       | pub      |              | slot 6, 7       | pub            | pub+sign |              | slot 8          | revoke         | pub+sign |              | slot 9          |                | pub+sign |              +-----------------+----------------+----------+   During this rollover exercise, a problem was observed on one Yeti   resolver that was running BIND 9.10.4-p2 [KROLL-ISSUE].  That   resolver was configured with multiple views serving clients in   different subnets at the time that the KSK rollover began.  DNSSEC   validation failures were observed following the completion of the KSK   rollover, triggered by the addition of a new view that was intended   to serve clients from a new subnet.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   BIND 9.10 requires "managed-keys" configuration to be specified in   every view, a detail that was apparently not obvious to the operator   in this case and that was subsequently highlighted by the Internet   Systems Consortium (ISC) in their general advice relating to KSK   rollover in the root zone to users of BIND 9 [ISC-BIND].  When the   "managed-keys" configuration is present in every view that is   configured to perform validation, trust anchors for all views are   updated during a KSK rollover.5.3.3.  Large Responses during KSK Rollover   Since a KSK rollover necessarily involves the publication of outgoing   and incoming public keys simultaneously, an increase in the size of   DNSKEY responses is expected.  The third KSK rollover carried out on   the Yeti DNS testbed was accompanied by a concerted effort to observe   response sizes and their impact on end-users.   As described inSection 4.2.2, in the Yeti DNS testbed each DM can   maintain control of its own set of ZSKs, which can undergo rollover   independently.  During a KSK rollover where concurrent ZSK rollovers   are executed by each of three DMs, the maximum number of apex DNSKEY   RRs present is eight (incoming and outgoing KSK, plus incoming and   outgoing of each of three ZSKs).  In practice, however, such   concurrency did not occur; only the BII ZSK was rolled during the KSK   rollover, and hence only three DNSKEY RRset configurations were   observed:   o  3 ZSKs and 2 KSKs, DNSKEY response of 1975 octets;   o  3 ZSKs and 1 KSK, DNSKEY response of 1414 octets; and   o  2 ZSKs and 1 KSK, DNSKEY response of 1139 octets.   RIPE Atlas probes were used as described inSection 5.1.1 to send   DNSKEY queries directly to Yeti-Root servers.  The numbers of queries   and failures were recorded and categorized according to the response   sizes at the time the queries were sent.  A summary of the results   ([YetiLR]) is as follows:        +---------------+----------+---------------+--------------+        | Response Size | Failures | Total Queries | Failure Rate |        +---------------+----------+---------------+--------------+        | 1139          | 274      | 64252         | 0.0042       |        | 1414          | 3141     | 126951        | 0.0247       |        | 1975          | 2920     | 42529         | 0.0687       |        +---------------+----------+---------------+--------------+Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   The general approach illustrated briefly here provides a useful   example of how the design of the Yeti DNS testbed, separate from the   Root Server system but constructed as a live testbed on the Internet,   facilitates the use of general-purpose active measurement facilities   (such as RIPE Atlas probes) as well as internal passive measurement   (such as packet capture).5.4.  Capture of Large DNS Response   Packet capture is a common approach in production DNS systems where   operators require fine-grained insight into traffic in order to   understand production traffic.  For authoritative servers, capture of   inbound query traffic is often sufficient, since responses can be   synthesized with knowledge of the zones being served at the time the   query was received.  Queries are generally small enough not to be   fragmented, and even with TCP transport are generally packed within a   single segment.   The Yeti DNS testbed has different requirements; in particular, there   is a desire to compare responses obtained from the Yeti   infrastructure with those received from the Root Server system in   response to a single query stream (e.g., using the "Yeti Many Mirror   Verifier" (YmmV) as described inAppendix D).  Some Yeti-Root servers   were capable of recovering complete DNS messages from within   nameservers, e.g., using dnstap; however, not all servers provided   that functionality, and a consistent approach was desirable.   The requirement to perform passive capture of responses from the wire   together with experiments that were expected (and in some cases   designed) to trigger fragmentation and use of TCP transport led to   the development of a new tool, PcapParser, to perform fragment and   TCP stream reassembly from raw packet capture data.  A brief   description of PcapParser is included inAppendix D.5.5.  Automated Maintenance of the Hints File   Renumbering events in the Root Server system are relatively rare.   Although each such event is accompanied by the publication of an   updated hints file in standard locations, the task of updating local   copies of that file used by DNS resolvers is manual, and the process   has an observably long tail.  For example, in 2015 J-Root was still   receiving traffic at its old address some thirteen years after   renumbering [Wessels2015].   The observed impact of these old, deployed hints files is minimal,   likely due to the very low frequency of such renumbering events.   Even the oldest of hints files would still contain some accurate root   server addresses from which priming responses could be obtained.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   By contrast, due to the experimental nature of the system and the   fact that it is operated mainly by volunteers, Yeti-Root servers are   added, removed, and renumbered with much greater frequency.  A tool   to facilitate automatic maintenance of hints files was therefore   created: [hintUpdate].   The automated procedure followed by the hintUpdate tool is as   follows.   1.  Use the local resolver to obtain a response to the query       "./IN/NS".   2.  Use the local resolver to obtain a set of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses       for each name server.   3.  Validate all signatures obtained from the local resolvers and       confirm that all data is signed.   4.  Compare the data obtained to that contained within the currently       active hints file; if there are differences, rotate the old one       away and replace it with a new one.   This tool would not function unmodified when used in the Root Server   system, since the names of individual Root Servers (e.g., A.ROOT-   SERVERS.NET) are not DNSSEC signed.  All Yeti-Root server names are   DNSSEC signed, however, and hence this tool functions as expected in   that environment.5.6.  Root Label Compression in Knot DNS Server   [RFC1035] specifies that domain names can be compressed when encoded   in DNS messages, and can be represented as one of   1.  a sequence of labels ending in a zero octet;   2.  a pointer; or   3.  a sequence of labels ending with a pointer.   The purpose of this flexibility is to reduce the size of domain names   encoded in DNS messages.   It was observed that Yeti-Root servers running Knot 2.0 would   compress the zero-length label (the root domain, often represented as   ".") using a pointer to an earlier example.  Although legal, this   encoding increases the encoded size of the root label from one octet   to two; it was also found to break some client software -- inSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   particular, the Go DNS library.  Bug reports were filed against both   Knot and the Go DNS library, and both were resolved in subsequent   releases.6.  Conclusions   Yeti DNS was designed and implemented as a live DNS root system   testbed.  It serves a root zone ("Yeti-Root" in this document)   derived from the root zone published by the IANA with only those   structural modifications necessary to ensure its function in the   testbed system.  The Yeti DNS testbed has proven to be a useful   platform to address many questions that would be challenging to   answer using the production Root Server system, such as those   included inSection 3.   Indicative findings following from the construction and operation of   the Yeti DNS testbed include:   o  Operation in a pure IPv6-only environment; confirmation of a      significant failure rate in the transmission of large responses      (~7%), but no other persistent failures observed.  Two cases in      which Yeti-Root servers failed to retrieve the Yeti-Root zone due      to fragmentation of TCP segments; mitigated by setting a TCP MSS      of 1220 octets (seeSection 5.1.1).   o  Successful operation with three autonomous Yeti-Root zone signers      and 25 Yeti-Root servers, and confirmation that IXFR is not an      appropriate transfer mechanism of zones that are structurally      incongruent across different transfer paths (seeSection 5.2).   o  ZSK size increased to 2048 bits and multiple KSK rollovers      executed to exercise support ofRFC 5011 in validating resolvers;      identification of pitfalls relating to views in BIND9 when      configured with "managed-keys" (seeSection 5.3).   o  Use of natural (non-normalized) names for Yeti-Root servers      exposed some differences between implementations in the inclusion      of additional-section glue in responses to priming queries;      however, despite this inefficiency, Yeti resolvers were observed      to function adequately (seeSection 4.5).   o  It was observed that Knot 2.0 performed label compression on the      root (empty) label.  This resulted in an increased encoding size      for references to the root label, since a pointer is encoded as      two octets whilst the root label itself only requires one (seeSection 5.6).Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 26]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   o  Some tools were developed in response to the operational      experience of running and using the Yeti DNS testbed: DNS fragment      and DNS Additional Truncated Response (ATR) for large DNS      responses, a BIND9 patch for additional-section glue, YmmV, and      IPv6 defrag for capturing and mirroring traffic.  In addition, a      tool to facilitate automatic maintenance of hints files was      created (seeAppendix D).   The Yeti DNS testbed was used only by end-users whose local   infrastructure providers had made the conscious decision to do so, as   is appropriate for an experimental, non-production system.  So far,   no serious user complaints have reached Yeti's mailing list during   Yeti normal operation.  Adding more instances into the Yeti root   system may help to enhance the quality of service, but it is   generally accepted that Yeti DNS performance is good enough to serve   the purpose of DNS Root testbed.   The experience gained during the operation of the Yeti DNS testbed   suggested several topics worthy of further study:   o  Priming truncation and TCP-only Yeti-Root servers: observe and      measure the worst-possible case for priming truncation by      responding with TC=1 to all priming queries received over UDP      transport, forcing clients to retry using TCP.  This should also      give some insight into the usefulness of TCP-only DNS in general.   o  KSK ECDSA Rollover: one possible way to reduce DNSKEY response      sizes is to change to an elliptic curve signing algorithm.  While      in principle this can be done separately for the KSK and the ZSK,      the RIPE NCC has done research recently and discovered that some      resolvers require that both KSK and ZSK use the same algorithm.      This means that an algorithm roll also involves a KSK roll.      Performing an algorithm roll at the root would be an interesting      challenge.   o  Sticky Notify for zone transfer: the non-applicability of IXFR as      a zone transfer mechanism in the Yeti DNS testbed could be      mitigated by the implementation of a sticky preference for master      server for each slave.  This would be so that an initial AXFR      response could be followed up with IXFR requests without      compromising zone integrity in the case (as with Yeti) that      equivalent but incongruent versions of a zone are served by      different masters.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 27]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   o  Key distribution for zone transfer credentials: the use of a      shared secret between slave and master requires key distribution      and management whose scaling properties are not ideally suited to      systems with large numbers of transfer clients.  Other approaches      for key distribution and authentication could be considered.   o  DNS is a tree-based hierarchical database.  Mathematically, it has      a root node and dependency between parent and child nodes.  So,      any failures and instability of parent nodes (Root in Yeti's case)      may impact their child nodes if there is a human mistake, a      malicious attack, or even an earthquake.  It is proposed to define      technology and practices to allow any organization, from the      smallest company to nations, to be self-sufficient in their DNS.   o  InSection 3.12 of [RFC8324], a "Centrally Controlled Root" is      viewed as an issue of DNS.  In future work, it would be      interesting to test some technical tools like blockchain [BC] to      either remove the technical requirement for a central authority      over the root or enhance the security and stability of the      existing Root.7.  Security Considerations   As introduced inSection 4.4, service metadata is synchronized among   3 DMs using Git tool.  Any security issue around Git may affect Yeti   DM operation.  For example, a hacker may compromise one DM's Git   repository and push unwanted changes to the Yeti DM system; this may   introduce a bad root server or bad key for a period of time.   The Yeti resolver needs the bootstrapping files to join the testbed,   like the hints file and trust anchor of Yeti.  All required   information is published on <yeti-dns.org> and <github.com>.  If a   hacker tampers with those websites by creating a fake page, a new   resolver may lose its way and be configured with a bad root.   DNSSEC is an important research goal in the Yeti DNS testbed.  To   reduce the central function of DNSSEC for Root zone, we sign the   Yeti-Root zone using multiple, independently operated DNSSEC signers   and multiple corresponding ZSKs (seeSection 4.2).  To verify ICANN's   KSK rollover, we rolled the Yeti KSK three times according toRFC5011, and we do have some observations (seeSection 5.3).  In   addition, larger RSA key sizes were used in the testbed before   2048-bit keys were used in the ZSK signing process of the IANA Root   zone.8.  IANA Considerations   This document has no IANA actions.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 28]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 20189.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC1034]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",              STD 13,RFC 1034, DOI 10.17487/RFC1034, November 1987,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1034>.   [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and              specification", STD 13,RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035,              November 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035>.   [RFC1995]  Ohta, M., "Incremental Zone Transfer in DNS",RFC 1995,              DOI 10.17487/RFC1995, August 1996,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1995>.   [RFC1996]  Vixie, P., "A Mechanism for Prompt Notification of Zone              Changes (DNS NOTIFY)",RFC 1996, DOI 10.17487/RFC1996,              August 1996, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1996>.   [RFC5011]  StJohns, M., "Automated Updates of DNS Security (DNSSEC)              Trust Anchors", STD 74,RFC 5011, DOI 10.17487/RFC5011,              September 2007, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5011>.   [RFC5890]  Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for              Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework",RFC 5890, DOI 10.17487/RFC5890, August 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5890>.9.2.  Informative References   [ATR]      Song, L., "ATR: Additional Truncation Response for Large              DNS Response", Work in Progress,draft-song-atr-large-resp-02, August 2018.   [BC]       Wikipedia, "Blockchain", September 2018,              <https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blockchain&oldid=861681529>.   [FRAGDROP] Jaeggli, J., Colitti, L., Kumari, W., Vyncke, E., Kaeo,              M., and T. Taylor, "Why Operators Filter Fragments and              What It Implies", Work in Progress,draft-taylor-v6ops-fragdrop-02, December 2013.   [FRAGMENTS]              Sivaraman, M., Kerr, S., and D. Song, "DNS message              fragments", Work in Progress,draft-muks-dns-message-fragments-00, July 2015.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 29]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   [hintUpdate]              "Hintfile Auto Update", commit de428c0, October 2015,              <https://github.com/BII-Lab/Hintfile-Auto-Update>.   [HOW_ATR_WORKS]              Huston, G., "How well does ATR actually work?",              APNIC blog, April 2018,              <https://blog.apnic.net/2018/04/16/how-well-does-atr-actually-work/>.   [ICANN2010]              Schlyter, J., Lamb, R., and R. Balasubramanian, "DNSSEC              Key Management Implementation for the Root Zone (DRAFT)",              May 2010, <http://www.root-dnssec.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/draft-icann-dnssec-keymgmt-01.txt>.   [ICANN2016]              Design Team, "Root Zone KSK Rollover Plan", March 2016,              <https://www.iana.org/reports/2016/root-ksk-rollover-design-20160307.pdf>.   [ICANN2017]              ICANN, "2017 KSK Rollover External Test Plan", July 2016,              <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/ksk-rollover-external-test-plan-22jul16-en.pdf>.   [IPv6-frag-DNS]              Huston, G., "Dealing with IPv6 fragmentation in the DNS",              APNIC blog, August 2017,              <https://blog.apnic.net/2017/08/22/dealing-ipv6-fragmentation-dns>.   [ISC-BIND] Risk, V., "2017 Root Key Rollover - What Does it Mean for              BIND Users?", Internet Systems Consortium, December 2016,              <https://www.isc.org/blogs/2017-root-key-rollover-what-does-it-mean-for-bind-users/>.   [ISC-TN-2003-1]              Abley, J., "Hierarchical Anycast for Global Service              Distribution", March 2003,              <http://ftp.isc.org/isc/pubs/tn/isc-tn-2003-1.txt>.   [ITI2014]  ICANN, "Identifier Technology Innovation Report", May              2014, <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/iti-report-15may14-en.pdf>.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 30]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   [KROLL-ISSUE]              Song, D., "A DNSSEC issue during Yeti KSK rollover", Yeti              DNS blog, October 2016, <http://yeti-dns.org/yeti/blog/2016/10/26/A-DNSSEC-issue-during-Yeti-KSK-rollover.html>.   [PINZ]     Song, D., "Yeti experiment plan for PINZ", Yeti DNS blog,              May 2018, <http://yeti-dns.org/yeti/blog/2018/05/01/Experiment-plan-for-PINZ.html>.   [RFC2826]  Internet Architecture Board, "IAB Technical Comment on the              Unique DNS Root",RFC 2826, DOI 10.17487/RFC2826, May              2000, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2826>.   [RFC2845]  Vixie, P., Gudmundsson, O., Eastlake 3rd, D., and B.              Wellington, "Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS              (TSIG)",RFC 2845, DOI 10.17487/RFC2845, May 2000,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2845>.   [RFC6219]  Li, X., Bao, C., Chen, M., Zhang, H., and J. Wu, "The              China Education and Research Network (CERNET) IVI              Translation Design and Deployment for the IPv4/IPv6              Coexistence and Transition",RFC 6219,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6219, May 2011,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6219>.   [RFC6891]  Damas, J., Graff, M., and P. Vixie, "Extension Mechanisms              for DNS (EDNS(0))", STD 75,RFC 6891,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6891, April 2013,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6891>.   [RFC7720]  Blanchet, M. and L-J. Liman, "DNS Root Name Service              Protocol and Deployment Requirements",BCP 40,RFC 7720,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7720, December 2015,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7720>.   [RFC7872]  Gont, F., Linkova, J., Chown, T., and W. Liu,              "Observations on the Dropping of Packets with IPv6              Extension Headers in the Real World",RFC 7872,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7872, June 2016,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7872>.   [RFC8109]  Koch, P., Larson, M., and P. Hoffman, "Initializing a DNS              Resolver with Priming Queries",BCP 209,RFC 8109,              DOI 10.17487/RFC8109, March 2017,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8109>.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 31]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   [RFC8324]  Klensin, J., "DNS Privacy, Authorization, Special Uses,              Encoding, Characters, Matching, and Root Structure: Time              for Another Look?",RFC 8324, DOI 10.17487/RFC8324,              February 2018, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8324>.   [RRL]      Vixie, P. and V. Schryver, "Response Rate Limiting in the              Domain Name System (DNS RRL)", June 2012,              <http://www.redbarn.org/dns/ratelimits>.   [RSSAC001] Root Server System Advisory Committee (RSSAC), "Service              Expectations of Root Servers", RSSAC001 Version 1,              December 2015,              <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/rssac-001-root-service-expectations-04dec15-en.pdf>.   [RSSAC023] Root Server System Advisory Committee (RSSAC), "History of              the Root Server System", November 2016,              <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/rssac-023-04nov16-en.pdf>.   [SUNSET4]  IETF, "Sunsetting IPv4 (sunset4) Concluded WG",              <https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/sunset4/about/>.   [TNO2009]  Gijsen, B., Jamakovic, A., and F. Roijers, "Root Scaling              Study: Description of the DNS Root Scaling Model",              TNO report, September 2009,              <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/root-scaling-model-description-29sep09-en.pdf>.   [USE_MIN_MTU]              Andrews, M.,"TCP Fails To Respect IPV6_USE_MIN_MTU", Work              in Progress,draft-andrews-tcp-and-ipv6-use-minmtu-04,              October 2015.   [Wessels2015]              Wessels, D., Castonguay, J., and P. Barber, "Thirteen              Years of 'Old J-Root'", DNS-OARC Fall 2015 Workshop,              October 2015, <https://indico.dns-oarc.net/event/24/session/10/contribution/10/material/slides/0.pdf>.   [YetiLR]   "Observation on Large response issue during Yeti KSK              rollover", Yeti DNS blog, August 2017,              <https://yeti-dns.org/yeti/blog/2017/08/02/large-packet-impact-during-yeti-ksk-rollover.html>.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 32]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018Appendix A.  Yeti-Root Hints File   The following hints file (complete and accurate at the time of   writing) causes a DNS resolver to use the Yeti DNS testbed in place   of the production Root Server system and hence participate in   experiments running on the testbed.   Note that some lines have been wrapped in the text that follows in   order to fit within the production constraints of this document.   Wrapped lines are indicated with a blackslash character ("\"),   following common convention.   .                     3600000  IN   NS     bii.dns-lab.net   bii.dns-lab.net       3600000  IN   AAAA   240c:f:1:22::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.tisf.net   yeti-ns.tisf.net      3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:559:8000::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.wide.ad.jp   yeti-ns.wide.ad.jp    3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:200:1d9::35   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.as59715.net   yeti-ns.as59715.net   3600000  IN   AAAA   \                              2a02:cdc5:9715:0:185:5:203:53   .                     3600000  IN   NS     dahu1.yeti.eu.org   dahu1.yeti.eu.org     3600000  IN   AAAA   \                              2001:4b98:dc2:45:216:3eff:fe4b:8c5b   .                     3600000  IN   NS     ns-yeti.bondis.org   ns-yeti.bondis.org    3600000  IN   AAAA   2a02:2810:0:405::250   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.ix.ru   yeti-ns.ix.ru         3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:6d0:6d06::53   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti.bofh.priv.at   yeti.bofh.priv.at     3600000  IN   AAAA   2a01:4f8:161:6106:1::10   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti.ipv6.ernet.in   yeti.ipv6.ernet.in    3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:e30:1c1e:1::333   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-dns01.dnsworkshop.org   yeti-dns01.dnsworkshop.org \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:1608:10:167:32e::53   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.conit.co   yeti-ns.conit.co      3600000  IN   AAAA   \                             2604:6600:2000:11::4854:a010   .                     3600000  IN   NS     dahu2.yeti.eu.org   dahu2.yeti.eu.org     3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:67c:217c:6::2   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti.aquaray.com   yeti.aquaray.com      3600000  IN   AAAA   2a02:ec0:200::1   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.switch.ch   yeti-ns.switch.ch     3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:620:0:ff::29   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns.lab.nic.cl   yeti-ns.lab.nic.cl    3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:1398:1:21::8001   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns1.dns-lab.netSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 33]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   yeti-ns1.dns-lab.net  3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:da8:a3:a027::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns2.dns-lab.net   yeti-ns2.dns-lab.net  3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:da8:268:4200::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-ns3.dns-lab.net   yeti-ns3.dns-lab.net  3600000  IN   AAAA   2400:a980:30ff::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     \                           ca978112ca1bbdcafac231b39a23dc.yeti-dns.net   ca978112ca1bbdcafac231b39a23dc.yeti-dns.net \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2c0f:f530::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     \                           3e23e8160039594a33894f6564e1b1.yeti-dns.net   3e23e8160039594a33894f6564e1b1.yeti-dns.net \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2803:80:1004:63::1   .                     3600000  IN   NS     \                           3f79bb7b435b05321651daefd374cd.yeti-dns.net   3f79bb7b435b05321651daefd374cd.yeti-dns.net \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2401:c900:1401:3b:c::6   .                     3600000  IN   NS     \                           xn--r2bi1c.xn--h2bv6c0a.xn--h2brj9c   xn--r2bi1c.xn--h2bv6c0a.xn--h2brj9c \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:e30:1c1e:10::333   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti1.ipv6.ernet.in   yeti1.ipv6.ernet.in   3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:e30:187d::333   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti-dns02.dnsworkshop.org   yeti-dns02.dnsworkshop.org \                         3600000  IN   AAAA   2001:19f0:0:1133::53   .                     3600000  IN   NS     yeti.mind-dns.nl   yeti.mind-dns.nl      3600000  IN   AAAA   2a02:990:100:b01::53:0Appendix B.  Yeti-Root Server Priming Response   Here is the reply of a Yeti root name server to a priming request.   The authoritative server runs NSD.   ...   ;; Got answer:   ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 62391   ;; flags: qr aa rd; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 26, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 7   ;; WARNING: recursion requested but not available   ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:   ; EDNS: version: 0, flags: do; udp: 1460   ;; QUESTION SECTION:   ;.                      IN NS   ;; ANSWER SECTION:   .            86400 IN NS bii.dns-lab.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti.bofh.priv.at.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 34]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   .            86400 IN NS yeti.ipv6.ernet.in.   .            86400 IN NS yeti.aquaray.com.   .            86400 IN NS yeti.jhcloos.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti.mind-dns.nl.   .            86400 IN NS dahu1.yeti.eu.org.   .            86400 IN NS dahu2.yeti.eu.org.   .            86400 IN NS yeti1.ipv6.ernet.in.   .            86400 IN NS ns-yeti.bondis.org.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.ix.ru.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.lab.nic.cl.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.tisf.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.wide.ad.jp.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.datev.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.switch.ch.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns.as59715.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns1.dns-lab.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns2.dns-lab.net.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-ns3.dns-lab.net.   .            86400 IN NS xn--r2bi1c.xn--h2bv6c0a.xn--h2brj9c.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-dns01.dnsworkshop.org.   .            86400 IN NS yeti-dns02.dnsworkshop.org.   .            86400 IN NS 3f79bb7b435b05321651daefd374cd.yeti-dns.net.   .            86400 IN NS ca978112ca1bbdcafac231b39a23dc.yeti-dns.net.   .            86400 IN RRSIG NS 8 0 86400 (                            20171121050105 20171114050105 26253 .                            FUvezvZgKtlLzQx2WKyg+D6dw/pITcbuZhzStZfg+LNa                            DjLJ9oGIBTU1BuqTujKHdxQn0DcdFh9QE68EPs+93bZr                            VlplkmObj8f0B7zTQgGWBkI/K4Tn6bZ1I7QJ0Zwnk1mS                            BmEPkWmvo0kkaTQbcID+tMTodL6wPAgW1AdwQUInfy21                            p+31GGm3+SU6SJsgeHOzPUQW+dUVWmdj6uvWCnUkzW9p                            +5en4+85jBfEOf+qiyvaQwUUe98xZ1TOiSwYvk5s/qiv                            AMjG6nY+xndwJUwhcJAXBVmGgrtbiR8GiGZfGqt748VX                            4esLNtD8vdypucffem6n0T0eV1c+7j/eIA== )   ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:   bii.dns-lab.net.        86400 IN AAAA 240c:f:1:22::6   yeti.bofh.priv.at.      86400 IN AAAA 2a01:4f8:161:6106:1::10   yeti.ipv6.ernet.in.     86400 IN AAAA 2001:e30:1c1e:1::333   yeti.aquaray.com.       86400 IN AAAA 2a02:ec0:200::1   yeti.jhcloos.net.       86400 IN AAAA 2001:19f0:5401:1c3::53   yeti.mind-dns.nl.       86400 IN AAAA 2a02:990:100:b01::53:0   ;; Query time: 163 msec   ;; SERVER: 2001:4b98:dc2:45:216:3eff:fe4b:8c5b#53   ;; WHEN: Tue Nov 14 16:45:37 +08 2017   ;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 1222Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 35]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018Appendix C.  Active IPv6 Prefixes in Yeti DNS Testbed   The following table shows the prefixes that were active during 2017.   +----------------------+---------------------------------+----------+   | Prefix               | Originator                      | Location |   +----------------------+---------------------------------+----------+   | 240c::/28            | BII                             | CN       |   | 2001:6d0:6d06::/48   | MSK-IX                          | RU       |   | 2001:1488::/32       | CZ.NIC                          | CZ       |   | 2001:620::/32        | SWITCH                          | CH       |   | 2001:470::/32        | Hurricane Electric, Inc.        | US       |   | 2001:0DA8:0202::/48  | BUPT6-CERNET2                   | CN       |   | 2001:19f0:6c00::/38  | Choopa, LLC                     | US       |   | 2001:da8:205::/48    | BJTU6-CERNET2                   | CN       |   | 2001:62a::/31        | Vienna University Computer      | AT       |   |                      | Center                          |          |   | 2001:67c:217c::/48   | AFNIC                           | FR       |   | 2a02:2478::/32       | Profitbricks GmbH               | DE       |   | 2001:1398:1::/48     | NIC Chile                       | CL       |   | 2001:4490:dc4c::/46  | NIB (National Internet          | IN       |   |                      | Backbone)                       |          |   | 2001:4b98::/32       | Gandi                           | FR       |   | 2a02:aa8:0:2000::/52 | T-Systems-Eltec                 | ES       |   | 2a03:b240::/32       | Netskin GmbH                    | CH       |   | 2801:1a0::/42        | Universidad de Ibague           | CO       |   | 2a00:1cc8::/40       | ICT Valle Umbra s.r.l.          | IT       |   | 2a02:cdc0::/29       | ORG-CdSB1-RIPE                  | IT       |   +----------------------+---------------------------------+----------+Appendix D.  Tools Developed for Yeti DNS Testbed   Various tools were developed to support the Yeti DNS testbed, a   selection of which are described briefly below.   YmmV ("Yeti Many Mirror Verifier") is designed to make it easy and   safe for a DNS administrator to capture traffic sent from a resolver   to the Root Server system and to replay it towards Yeti-Root servers.   Responses from both systems are recorded and compared, and   differences are logged.  See <https://github.com/BII-Lab/ymmv>.   PcapParser is a module used by YmmV which reassembles fragmented IPv6   datagrams and TCP segments from a PCAP archive and extracts DNS   messages contained within them.  See <https://github.com/RunxiaWan/PcapParser>.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 36]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018   DNS-layer-fragmentation implements DNS proxies that perform   application-level fragmentation of DNS messages, based on   [FRAGMENTS].  The idea with these proxies is to explore splitting DNS   messages in the protocol itself, so they will not by fragmented by   the IP layer.  See <https://github.com/BII-Lab/DNS-layer-Fragmentation>.   DNS_ATR is an implementation of DNS Additional Truncated Response   (ATR), as described in [ATR] and [HOW_ATR_WORKS].  DNS_ATR acts as a   proxy between resolver and authoritative servers, forwarding queries   and responses as a silent and transparent listener.  Responses that   are larger than a nominated threshold (1280 octets by default)   trigger additional truncated responses to be sent immediately   following the large response.  See <https://github.com/songlinjian/DNS_ATR>.Appendix E.  Controversy   The Yeti DNS Project, its infrastructure and the various experiments   that have been carried out using that infrastructure, have been   described by people involved in the project in many public meetings   at technical venues since its inception.  The mailing lists using   which the operation of the infrastructure has been coordinated are   open to join, and their archives are public.  The project as a whole   has been the subject of robust public discussion.   Some commentators have expressed concern that the Yeti DNS Project   is, in effect, operating an alternate root, challenging the IAB's   comments published in [RFC2826].  Other such alternate roots are   considered to have caused end-user confusion and instability in the   namespace of the DNS by the introduction of new top-level labels or   the different use of top-level labels present in the Root Server   system.  The coordinators of the Yeti DNS Project do not consider the   Yeti DNS Project to be an alternate root in this sense, since by   design the namespace enabled by the Yeti-Root zone is identical to   that of the Root Zone.   Some commentators have expressed concern that the Yeti DNS Project   seeks to influence or subvert administrative policy relating to the   Root Server system, in particular in the use of DNSSEC trust anchors   not published by the IANA and the use of Yeti-Root servers in regions   where governments or other organizations have expressed interest in   operating a Root Server.  The coordinators of the Yeti-Root project   observe that their mandate is entirely technical and has no ambition   to influence policy directly; they do hope, however, that technical   findings from the Yeti DNS Project might act as a useful resource for   the wider technical community.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 37]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018Acknowledgments   Firstly, the authors would like to acknowledge the contributions from   the people who were involved in the implementation and operation of   the Yeti DNS by donating their time and resources.  They are:      Tomohiro Ishihara, Antonio Prado, Stephane Bortzmeyer, Mickael      Jouanne, Pierre Beyssac, Joao Damas, Pavel Khramtsov, Dmitry      Burkov, Dima Burkov, Kovalenko Dmitry, Otmar Lendl, Praveen Misra,      Carsten Strotmann, Edwin Gomez, Daniel Stirnimann, Andreas      Schulze, Remi Gacogne, Guillaume de Lafond, Yves Bovard, Hugo      Salgado, Kees Monshouwer, Li Zhen, Daobiao Gong, Andreas Schulze,      James Cloos, and Runxia Wan.   Thanks to all people who gave important advice and comments to Yeti,   either in face-to-face meetings or virtually via phone or mailing   list.  Some of the individuals are as follows:      Wu Hequan, Zhou Hongren, Cheng Yunqing, Xia Chongfeng, Tang      Xiongyan, Li Yuxiao, Feng Ming, Zhang Tongxu, Duan Xiaodong, Wang      Yang, Wang JiYe, Wang Lei, Zhao Zhifeng, Chen Wei, Wang Wei, Wang      Jilong, Du Yuejing, Tan XiaoSheng, Chen Shangyi, Huang Chenqing,      Ma Yan, Li Xing, Cui Yong, Bi Jun, Duan Haixing, Marc Blanchet,      Andrew Sullivan, Suzanne Wolf, Terry Manderson, Geoff Huston, Jaap      Akkerhuis, Kaveh Ranjbar, Jun Murai, Paul Wilson, and Kilnam      Chonm.   The authors also acknowledge the assistance of the Independent   Submissions Editorial Board, and of the following reviewers whose   opinions helped improve the clarity of this document:      Joe Abley, Paul Mockapetris, and Subramanian Moonesamy.Song, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 38]

RFC 8483                    Yeti DNS Testbed                October 2018Authors' Addresses   Linjian Song (editor)   Beijing Internet Institute   2nd Floor, Building 5, No.58 Jing Hai Wu Lu, BDA   Beijing  100176   China   Email: songlinjian@gmail.com   URI:http://www.biigroup.com/   Dong Liu   Beijing Internet Institute   2nd Floor, Building 5, No.58 Jing Hai Wu Lu, BDA   Beijing  100176   China   Email: dliu@biigroup.com   URI:http://www.biigroup.com/   Paul Vixie   TISF   11400 La Honda Road   Woodside, California  94062   United States of America   Email: vixie@tisf.net   URI:http://www.redbarn.org/   Akira Kato   Keio University/WIDE Project   Graduate School of Media Design, 4-1-1 Hiyoshi, Kohoku   Yokohama  223-8526   Japan   Email: kato@wide.ad.jp   URI:http://www.kmd.keio.ac.jp/   Shane Kerr   Antoon Coolenlaan 41   Uithoorn  1422 GN   The Netherlands   Email: shane@time-travellers.orgSong, et al.                  Informational                    [Page 39]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp