DNSEXT Working Group                                Olafur Gudmundsson
  INTERNET-DRAFT                                                May 2003
  <draft-ietf-dnsext-delegation-signer-14.txt>

  Updates: RFC 1035, RFC 2535, RFC 3008, RFC 3090.


                   Delegation Signer Resource Record


Status of this Memo

   This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
   all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that
   other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
   Drafts.

   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
   and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
   material or to cite them other than as ``work in progress.''

   The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
   http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt

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   Comments should be sent to the authors or the DNSEXT WG mailing list
   namedroppers@ops.ietf.org

   This draft expires on December 6, 2003.

   Copyright Notice

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003).  All rights reserved.



Abstract

   The delegation signer (DS) resource record is inserted at a zone cut
   (i.e., a delegation point) to indicate that the delegated zone is
   digitally signed and that the delegated zone recognizes the indicated
   key as a valid zone key for the delegated zone. The DS RR is a
   modification to the DNS Security Extensions definition, motivated by



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   operational considerations. The intent is to use this resource record
   as an explicit statement about the delegation, rather than relying on
   inference.

   This document defines the DS RR, gives examples of how it is used and
   the implications of this record on resolvers. This change is not
   backwards compatible with RFC 2535.
   This document updates RFC1035, RFC2535, RFC3008 and RFC3090.


1 Introduction

   Familiarity with the DNS system [RFC1035], DNS security extensions
   [RFC2535] and DNSSEC terminology [RFC3090] is important.

   Experience shows that when the same data can reside in two
   administratively different DNS zones, the data frequently gets out of
   sync. The presence of an NS RRset in a zone anywhere other than at
   the apex indicates a zone cut or delegation.  The RDATA of the NS
   RRset specifies the authoritative servers for the delegated or
   "child" zone. Based on actual measurements, 10-30% of all delegations
   on the Internet have differing NS RRsets at parent and child. There
   are a number of reasons for this, including a lack of communication
   between parent and child and bogus name servers being listed to meet
   registry requirements.

   DNSSEC [RFC2535,RFC3008,RFC3090] specifies that a child zone needs to
   have its KEY RRset signed by its parent to create a verifiable chain
   of KEYs. There has been some debate on where the signed KEY RRset
   should reside, whether at the child [RFC2535] or at the parent. If
   the KEY RRset resides at the child, maintaining the signed KEY RRset
   in the child requires frequent two-way communication between the two
   parties. First the child transmits the KEY RRset to the parent and
   then the parent sends the signature(s) to the child. Storing the KEY
   RRset at the parent was thought to simplify the communication.

   DNSSEC [RFC2535] requires that the parent store a NULL KEY record for
   an unsecure child zone to indicate that the child is unsecure. A NULL
   KEY record is a waste: an entire signed RRset is used to communicate
   effectively one bit of information--that the child is unsecure.
   Chasing down NULL KEY RRsets complicates the resolution process in
   many cases, because servers for both parent and child need to be
   queried for the KEY RRset if the child server does not return it.
   Storing the KEY RRset only in the parent zone simplifies this and
   would allow the elimination of the NULL KEY RRsets entirely. For
   large delegation zones the cost of NULL keys is a significant barrier
   to deployment.





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   Another complication of the DNSSEC key model is that the KEY record
   can be used to store public keys for other protocols in addition to
   DNSSEC keys.  There are number of potential problems with this,
   including:
   1. The KEY RRset can become quite large if many applications and
      protocols store their keys at the zone apex. Possible protocols
      are IPSEC, HTTP, SMTP, SSH and others that use public key
      cryptography.
   2. The KEY RRset may require frequent updates.
   3. The probability of compromised or lost keys, which trigger
      emergency key rollover procedures, increases.
   4. The parent may refuse sign KEY RRsets with non-DNSSEC zone keys.
   5. The parent may not meet the child's expectations in turnaround
      time for resigning the KEY RRset.

   Given these reasons, SIG@parent isn't any better than SIG/KEY@Child.


1.2 Reserved Words

   The key words "MAY","MAY NOT", "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
   "RECOMMENDED", "SHOULD", and "SHOULD NOT" in this document are to be
   interpreted as described in RFC2119.

2 Specification of the Delegation key Signer

   This section defines the Delegation Signer (DS) RR type (type code
   TBD) and the changes to DNS to accommodate it.

2.1 Delegation Signer Record Model

   This document presents a replacement for the DNSSEC KEY record chain
   of trust [RFC2535] that uses a new RR that resides only at the
   parent.  This record identifies the key(s) that the child uses to
   self-sign its own KEY RRset.

   The chain of trust is now established by verifying the parent KEY
   RRset, the DS RRset from the parent and the KEY RRset at the child.
   This is cryptographically equivalent to using just KEY records.

   Communication between the parent and child is greatly reduced, since
   the child only needs to notify the parent about changes in keys that
   sign its apex KEY RRset.  The parent is ignorant of all other keys in
   the child's apex KEY RRset. Furthermore, the child maintains full
   control over the apex KEY RRset and its content.  The child can
   maintain any policies regarding its KEY usage for DNSSEC with minimal
   impact on the parent. Thus if the child wants to have frequent key
   rollover for its DNS zone keys, the parent does not need to be aware
   of it. The child can use one key to sign only its apex KEY RRset and



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   a different key to sign the other RRsets in the zone.

   This model fits well with a slow roll out of DNSSEC and the islands
   of security model. In this model, someone who trusts "good.example."
   can preconfigure a key from "good.example." as a trusted key, and
   from then on trusts any data signed by that key or that has a chain
   of trust to that key.  If "example." starts advertising DS records,
   "good.example." does not have to change operations by suspending
   self-signing. DS records can also be used to identify trusted keys
   instead of KEY records.  Another significant advantage is that the
   amount of information stored in large delegation zones is reduced:
   rather than the NULL KEY record at every unsecure delegation required
   by RFC 2535, only secure delegations require additional information
   in the form of a signed DS RRset.

   The main disadvantage of this approach is that verifying a zone's KEY
   RRset requires two signature verification operations instead of the
   one required by RFC 2535.  There is no impact on the number of
   signatures verified for other types of RRsets.

   Even though DS identifies two roles for KEY's, Key Signing Key (KSK)
   and Zone Signing Key (ZSK), there is no requirement that zone use two
   different keys for these roles. It is expected that many small zones
   will only use one key, while larger organizations will be more likely
   to use multiple keys.

2.2 Protocol Change

   All DNS servers and resolvers that support DS MUST support the OK bit
   [RFC3225] and a larger message size [RFC3226].  In order for a
   delegation to be considered secure the delegation MUST contain a DS
   RRset.  If a query contains the OK bit, a server returning a referral
   for the delegation MUST include the following RRsets in the authority
   section in this order:
   If DS RRset is present:
        parents copy of childs NS RRset
        DS and SIG(DS)
   If no DS RRset is present:
        parents copy of childs NS RRset
        parents zone NXT and SIG(NXT)

   This increases the size of referral messages and possilbly causing
   some or all glue to be omitted. If the DS or NXT RRsets with
   signatures do not fit in the DNS message, the TC bit MUST be set.
   Additional section processing is not changed.

   A DS RRset accompanying a NS RRset indicates that the child zone is
   secure. If a NS RRset exists without a DS RRset, the child zone is
   unsecure (from the parents point of view).  DS RRsets MUST NOT appear



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   at non-delegation points or at a zone's apex.

   Section 2.2.1 defines special considerations related to authoritative
   servers responding to DS queries and replaces RFC2535 sections 2.3.4
   and 3.4. Section 2.2.2 replaces RFC3008 section 2.7, and section
   2.2.3 updates RFC3090.


2.2.1 RFC2535 2.3.4 and 3.4: Special Considerations at Delegation Points

   DNS security views each zone as a unit of data completely under the
   control of the zone owner with each entry (RRset) signed by a special
   private key held by the zone manager.  But the DNS protocol views the
   leaf nodes in a zone that are also the apex nodes of a child zone
   (i.e., delegation points) as "really" belonging to the child zone.
   The corresponding domain names appear in two master files and might
   have RRsets signed by both the parent and child zones' keys. A
   retrieval could get a mixture of these RRsets and SIGs, especially
   since one server could be serving both the zone above and below a
   delegation point [RFC 2181].

   Each DS RRset stored in the parent zone MUST be signed by at least
   one of the parent zone's private key. The parent zone MUST NOT
   contain a KEY RRset at any delegation point. Delegations in the
   parent MAY contain only the following RR types: NS, DS, NXT and SIG.
   The NS RRset MUST NOT be signed.  The NXT RRset is the exceptional
   case: it will always appear differently and authoritatively in both
   the parent and child zones if both are secure.

   A secure zone MUST contain a self-signed KEY RRset at its apex.  Upon
   verifying the DS RRset from the parent, a resolver MAY trust any KEY
   identified in the DS RRset as a valid signer of the child's apex KEY
   RRset. Resolvers configured to trust one of the keys signing the KEY
   RRset MAY now treat any data signed by the zone keys in the KEY RRset
   as secure.  In all other cases resolvers MUST consider the zone
   unsecure. A DS RRset MUST NOT appear at a zone's apex.

   An authoritative server queried for type DS MUST return the DS RRset
   in the answer section.


2.2.1.1  Special processing for DS queries

   When a server is authoritative for the parent zone at a delegation
   point and receives a query for the DS record at that name, it will
   return the DS from the parent zone.  This is true whether or not it
   is also authoritative for the child zone.





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   When the server is authoritative for the child zone at a delegation
   point but not the parent zone, there is no natural response, since
   the child zone is not authoritative for the DS record at the zone's
   apex.  As these queries are only expected to originate from recursive
   servers which are not DS-aware, the authoritative server MUST answer
   with:
        RCODE:             NOERROR
        AA bit:            set
        Answer Section:    Empty
        Authority Section: SOA [+ SIG(SOA) + NXT + SIG(NXT)]

   That is, it answers as if it is authoritative and the DS record does
   not exist.  DS-aware recursive servers will query the parent zone at
   delegation points, so will not be affected by this.

   A server authoritative for only the child zone at a delegation point
   that is also a caching server MAY (if the RD bit is set in the query)
   perform recursion to find the DS record at the delegation point, and
   may return the DS record from its cache.  In this case, the AA bit
   MUST not be set in the response.


2.2.1.2 Special processing when child and an ancestor share server"

   Special rules are needed to permit DS RR aware servers to gracefully
   interact with older caches which otherwise might falsely label a
   server as lame because of the new placement of the DS RR set.

   Such a situation might arise when a server is authoritative for both
   a zone and it's grandparent, but not the parent.  This sounds like an
   obscure example, but it is very real.  The root zone is currently
   served on 13 machines, and "root-servers.net." is served on 4 of the
   same 13, but "net." is served elsewhere.

   When a server receives a query for (<QNAME>, DS, IN), the response
   MUST be determined from reading these rules in order:


   1) If the server is authoritative for the zone that holds the DS RR
   set (i.e., the zone that delegates <QNAME> away, aka the "parent"
   zone), the response contains the DS RR set as an authoritative
   answer.

   2) If the server is offering recursive service and the RD bit is set
   in the query, the server performs the query itself (according to the
   rules for resolvers described below) and returns it's findings.

   3) If the server is authoritative for the zone that holds the
   <QNAME>'s SOA RR set, the response is an authoritative negative



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   answer as described in 2.2.1.1.

   4) If the server is authoritative for a zone or zones above the
   QNAME, a referral to the most enclosing zone's servers is made.

   5) If the server is not authoritative for any part of the QNAME, a
   response indicating a lame server for QNAME is given.

   Using these rules will require some special processing on the part of
   a DS RR aware resolver.  To illustrate this, an example is used.

   Assuming a server is authoritative for roots.example.net. and for the
   root zone but not the intervening two zones (or the intervening two
   label deep zone).  Assume that QNAME=roots.example.net., QTYPE=DS,
   and QCLASS=IN.

   The resolver will issue this request (assuming no cached data)
   expecting a referral to a net. server.  Instead, rule number 3 above
   applies and a negative answer is returned by the server.  The
   reaction by the resolver is not to accept this answer as final as it
   can determine from the SOA RR in the negative answer the context
   within which the server has answered.

   A solution to this is to instruct the resolver to hunt for the
   authoritative zone of the data in a brute force manner.

   This can be accomplished by taking the owner name of the returned SOA
   RR and strip off enough left-hand labels until a successful NS
   response is obtained.  A successful response here means that the
   answer has NS records in it.  (Entertaining the possibility that a
   cut point may be two labels down in a zone.)

   Returning to the example, the response will include a negative answer
   with either the SOA RR for "roots.example.net." or "example.net."
   depending on whether roots.example.net is a delegated domain.  In
   either case, removing the least significant label of the SOA owner
   name will lead to the location of the desired data.


2.2.1.3 Modification on KEY RR in the construction of Responses

   This section updates RFC2535 section 3.5 by replacing it with the
   following:

   An query for KEY RR MUST NOT trigger any additional section
   processing.  Security aware resolver will include corresponding SIG
   records in the answer section.





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   KEY records SHOULD NOT be added to additional records section in
   response to any query.

   RFC2535 included rules to in add KEY records to additional section
   when SOA or NS records where included in an answer. The is was done
   to reduce round trips (in the case of SOA) and to force out NULL
   KEY's (in the NS case), as this document obsoletes NULL keys there is
   no need for the second case, the first case causes redundant
   transfers of KEY RRset as SOA is included in the authority section of
   negative answers.

   RFC2535 section 3.5 also included rule for adding KEY RRset to query
   for A and AAAA, as Restrict KEY[RFC3445] eliminated use of KEY RR by
   all applications therfore the rule is not needed anymore.


2.2.2 Signer's Name (replaces RFC3008 section 2.7)

   The signer's name field of a SIG RR MUST contain the name of the zone
   to which the data and signature belong.  The combination of signer's
   name, key tag, and algorithm MUST identify a zone key if the SIG is
   to be considered material.  This document defines a standard policy
   for DNSSEC validation; local policy may override the standard policy.

   There are no restrictions on the signer field of a SIG(0) record.
   The combination of signer's name, key tag, and algorithm MUST
   identify a key if this SIG(0) is to be processed.


2.2.3 Changes to RFC3090

   A number of sections of RFC3090 need to be updated to reflect the DS
   record.


2.2.3.1 RFC3090: Updates to section 1: Introduction

   Most of the text is still relevant but the words ``NULL key'' are to
   be replaced with ``missing DS RRset''. In section 1.3 the last three
   paragraphs discuss the confusion in sections of RFC 2535 that are
   replaced in section 2.2.1 above. Therefore, these paragraphs are now
   obsolete.


2.2.3.2 RFC3090 section 2.1: Globally Secured

   Rule 2.1.b is replaced by the following rule:





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   2.1.b. The KEY RRset at a zone's apex MUST be self-signed by a
   private key whose public counterpart MUST appear in a zone signing
   KEY RR (2.a) owned by the zone's apex and specifying a mandatory-to-
   implement algorithm.  This KEY RR MUST be identified by a DS RR in a
   signed DS RRset in the parent zone.

   If a zone cannot get its parent to advertise a DS record for it, the
   child zone cannot be considered globally secured.  The only exception
   to this is the root zone, for which there is no parent zone.


2.2.3.3 RFC3090 section 3: Experimental Status.

   The only difference between experimental status and globally secured
   is the missing DS RRset in the parent zone. All locally secured zones
   are experimental.


2.2.4 NULL KEY elimination

   RFC3445 section 3 elminates the top two bits in the flags field of
   KEY RR. These two bits where used to indicate NULL KEY or NO KEY.
   RFC3090 defines that zone that defines that zone is either secure or
   not, eliminates the possible need to put NULL keys in the zone apex
   to indicate that the zone is not secured for a algorithm.  Along with
   this document these other two elminate all uses for the NULL KEY,
   Thus this document obsoletes NULL KEY.

2.3 Comments on Protocol Changes

   Over the years there have been various discussions surrounding the
   DNS delegation model, declaring it to be broken because there is no
   good way to assert if a delegation exists. In the RFC2535 version of
   DNSSEC, the presence of the NS bit in the NXT bit map proves there is
   a delegation at this name.  Something more explicit is needed and the
   DS record addresses this need for secure delegations.

   The DS record is a major change to DNS: it is the first resource
   record that can appear only on the upper side of a delegation. Adding
   it will cause interoperabilty problems and requires a flag day for
   DNSSEC. Many old servers and resolvers MUST be upgraded to take
   advantage of DS.  Some old servers will be able to be authoritative
   for zones with DS records but will not add the NXT or DS records to
   the authority section.  The same is true for caching servers; in
   fact, some may even refuse to pass on the DS or NXT records.







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2.4 Wire Format of the DS record

   The DS (type=TDB) record contains these fields: key tag, algorithm,
   digest type, and the digest of a public key KEY record that is
   allowed and/or used to sign the child's apex KEY RRset. Other keys
   MAY sign the child's apex KEY RRset.

                           1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3
       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |           key tag             |  algorithm    |  Digest type  |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                digest  (length depends on type)               |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                (SHA-1 digest is 20 bytes)                     |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                                                               |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-|
      |                                                               |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-|
      |                                                               |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

   The key tag is calculated as specified in RFC2535. Algorithm MUST be
   an algorithm number assigned in the range 1..251 and the algorithm
   MUST be allowed to sign DNS data.  The digest type is an identifier
   for the digest algorithm used. The digest is calculated over the
   canonical name of the delegated domain name followed by the whole
   RDATA of the KEY record (all four fields).

      digest = hash( canonical FQDN on KEY RR | KEY_RR_rdata)

      KEY_RR_rdata = Flags | Protocol | Algorithm | Public Key

   Digest type value 0 is reserved, value 1 is SHA-1, and reserving
   other types requires IETF standards action. For interoperabilty
   reasons, as few digest algorithms as possible should be reserved. The
   only reason to reserve additional digest types is to increase
   security.

   DS records MUST point to zone KEY records that are allowed to
   authenticate DNS data.  The indicated KEY record's protocol field
   MUST be set to 3; flag field bit 7 MUST be set to 1.  The value of
   other flag bits is not significant for the purposes of this document.

   The size of the DS RDATA for type 1 (SHA-1) is 24 bytes, regardless
   of key size, new digest types probably will have larger digests.





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2.4.1 Justifications for Fields

   The algorithm and key tag fields are present to allow resolvers to
   quickly identify the candidate KEY records to examine.  SHA-1 is a
   strong cryptographic checksum: it is computationally infeasible for
   an attacker to generate a KEY record that has the same SHA-1 digest.
   Combining the name of the key and the key rdata as input to the
   digest provides stronger assurance of the binding.  Having the key
   tag in the DS record adds greater assurance than the SHA-1 digest
   alone, as there are now two different mapping functions that a KEY RR
   must match.

   This format allows concise representation of the keys that the child
   will use, thus keeping down the size of the answer for the
   delegation, reducing the probability of DNS message overflow. The
   SHA-1 hash is strong enough to uniquely identify the key and is
   similar to the PGP key footprint. The digest type field is present
   for possible future expansion.

   The DS record is well suited to listing trusted keys for islands of
   security in configuration files.

2.5 Presentation Format of the DS Record

   The presentation format of the DS record consists of three numbers
   (key tag, algorithm and digest type) followed by the digest itself
   presented in hex:
      example.   DS  12345 3 1 123456789abcdef67890123456789abcdef67890

2.6 Transition Issues for Installed Base

   No backwards compatibility with RFC2535 is provided.

   RFC2535-compliant resolvers will assume that all DS-secured
   delegations are locally secure. This is bad, but the DNSEXT Working
   Group has determined that rather than dealing with both
   RFC2535-secured zones and DS-secured zones, a rapid adoption of DS is
   preferable.  Thus the only option for early adopters is to upgrade to
   DS as soon as possible.

2.6.1 Backwards compatibility with RFC2535 and RFC1035

   This section documents how a resolver determines the type of
   delegation.
   RFC1035 delegation (in parent) has:

   RFC1035           NS

   RFC2535 adds the following two cases:



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   Secure RFC2535:   NS + NXT + SIG(NXT)
                     NXT bit map contains: NS SIG NXT
   Unsecure RFC2535: NS + KEY + SIG(KEY) + NXT + SIG(NXT)
                     NXT bit map contains: NS SIG KEY NXT
                     KEY must be a NULL key.

   DNSSEC with DS has the following two states:

   Secure DS:        NS + DS + SIG(DS)
                     NXT bit map contains: NS SIG NXT DS
   Unsecure DS:      NS + NXT + SIG(NXT)
                     NXT bit map contains: NS SIG NXT

   It is difficult for a resolver to determine if a delegation is secure
   RFC 2535 or unsecure DS. This could be overcome by adding a flag to
   the NXT bit map, but only upgraded resolvers would understand this
   flag, anyway. Having both parent and child signatures for a KEY RRset
   might allow old resolvers to accept a zone as secure, but the cost of
   doing this for a long time is much higher than just prohibiting RFC
   2535-style signatures at child zone apexes and forcing rapid
   deployment of DS-enabled servers and resolvers.

   RFC 2535 and DS can in theory be deployed in parallel, but this would
   require resolvers to deal with RFC 2535 configurations forever.  This
   document obsoletes the NULL KEY in parent zones, which is a difficult
   enough change that a flag day is required.

2.7 KEY and corresponding DS record example

   This is an example of a KEY record and the corresponding DS record.

   dskey.example. KEY  256 3 1 (
                  AQPwHb4UL1U9RHaU8qP+Ts5bVOU1s7fYbj2b3CCbzNdj
                  4+/ECd18yKiyUQqKqQFWW5T3iVc8SJOKnueJHt/Jb/wt
                  ) ; key id = 28668
             DS   28668 1  1  49FD46E6C4B45C55D4AC69CBD3CD34AC1AFE51DE
















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3 Resolver

3.1 DS Example

   To create a chain of trust, a resolver goes from trusted KEY to DS to
   KEY.

   Assume the key for domain "example." is trusted.  Zone "example."
   contains at least the following records:
   example.          SOA     <soa stuff>
   example.          NS       ns.example.
   example.          KEY     <stuff>
   example.          NXT      NS SOA KEY SIG NXT secure.example.
   example.          SIG(SOA)
   example.          SIG(NS)
   example.          SIG(NXT)
   example.          SIG(KEY)
   secure.example.   NS      ns1.secure.example.
   secure.example.   DS      tag=12345 alg=3 digest_type=1 <foofoo>
   secure.example.   NXT     NS SIG NXT DS unsecure.example.
   secure.example.   SIG(NXT)
   secure.example.   SIG(DS)
   unsecure.example  NS      ns1.unsecure.example.
   unsecure.example. NXT     NS SIG NXT example.
   unsecure.example. SIG(NXT)

   In zone "secure.example." following records exist:
   secure.example.   SOA      <soa stuff>
   secure.example.   NS       ns1.secure.example.
   secure.example.   KEY      <tag=12345 alg=3>
   secure.example.   KEY      <tag=54321 alg=5>
   secure.example.   NXT      <nxt stuff>
   secure.example.   SIG(KEY) <key-tag=12345 alg=3>
   secure.example.   SIG(SOA) <key-tag=54321 alg=5>
   secure.example.   SIG(NS)  <key-tag=54321 alg=5>
   secure.example.   SIG(NXT) <key-tag=54321 alg=5>

   In this example the private key for "example." signs the DS record
   for "secure.example.", making that a secure delegation. The DS record
   states which key is expected to sign the KEY RRset at
   "secure.example.".  Here "secure.example." signs its KEY RRset with
   the KEY identified in the DS RRset, thus the KEY RRset is validated
   and trusted.

   This example has only one DS record for the child, but parents MUST
   allow multiple DS records to facilitate key rollover and multiple KEY
   algorithms.





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   The resolver determines the security status of "unsecure.example." by
   examining the parent zone's NXT record for this name.  The absence of
   the DS bit indicates an unsecure delegation. Note the NXT record
   SHOULD only be examined after verifying the corresponding signature.

3.1 Resolver Cost Estimates for DS Records

   From a RFC2535 resolver point of view, for each delegation followed
   to chase down an answer, one KEY RRset has to be verified.
   Additional RRsets might also need to be verified based on local
   policy (e.g., the contents of the NS RRset). Once the resolver gets
   to the appropriate delegation, validating the answer might require
   verifying one or more signatures.  A simple A record lookup requires
   at least N delegations to be verified and one RRset. For a DS-enabled
   resolver, the cost is 2N+1.  For an MX record, where the target of
   the MX record is in the same zone as the MX record, the costs are N+2
   and 2N+2, for RFC 2535 and DS, respectively. In the case of negatives
   answer the same ratios hold true.

   The resolver may require an extra query to get the DS record and this
   may add to the overall cost of the query, but this is never worse
   than chasing down NULL KEY records from the parent in RFC2535 DNSSEC.

   DS adds processing overhead on resolvers and increases the size of
   delegation answers, but much less than storing signatures in the
   parent zone.

4 Security Considerations:

   This document proposes a change to the validation chain of KEY
   records in DNSSEC. The change is not believed to reduce security in
   the overall system. In RFC2535 DNSSEC, the child zone has to
   communicate keys to its parent and prudent parents will require some
   authentication with that transaction. The modified protocol will
   require the same authentication, but allows the child to exert more
   local control over its own KEY RRset.

   There is a remote possibility that an attacker could generate a valid
   KEY that matches all the DS fields, of a specific DS set, and thus
   forge data from the child. This possibility is considered
   impractical, as on average more than
       2 ^ (160 - <Number of keys in DS set>)
   keys would have to be generated before a match would be found.

   An attacker that wants to match any DS record will have to generate
   on average at least 2^80 keys.

   The DS record represents a change to the DNSSEC protocol and there is
   an installed base of implementations, as well as textbooks on how to



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   set up secure delegations. Implementations that do not understand the
   DS record will not be able to follow the KEY to DS to KEY chain and
   will consider all zones secured that way as unsecure.

5 IANA Considerations:

   IANA needs to allocate an RR type code for DS from the standard RR
   type space (type 43 requested).

   IANA needs to open a new registry for the DS RR type for digest
   algorithms. Defined types are:
       0 is Reserved,
       1 is SHA-1.
   Adding new reservations requires IETF standards action.

6 Acknowledgments

   Over the last few years a number of people have contributed ideas
   that are captured in this document. The core idea of using one key to
   sign only the KEY RRset comes from discussions with Bill Manning and
   Perry Metzger on how to put in a single root key in all resolvers.
   Alexis Yushin, Brian Wellington, Sam Weiler, Paul Vixie, Jakob
   Schlyter, Scott Rose, Edward Lewis, Lars-Johan Liman, Matt Larson,
   Mark Kosters, Dan Massey, Olaf Kolman, Phillip Hallam-Baker, Miek
   Gieben, Havard Eidnes, Donald Eastlake 3rd., Randy Bush, David
   Blacka, Steve Bellovin, Rob Austein, Derek Atkins, Roy Arends, Mark
   Andrews, Harald Alvestrand, and others have provided useful comments.

Normative References:

[RFC1035]  P. Mockapetris, ``Domain Names - Implementation and
           Specification'', STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.

[RFC2535]  D. Eastlake, ``Domain Name System Security Extensions'', RFC
           2535, March 1999.

[RFC3008]  B. Wellington, ``Domain Name System Security (DNSSEC) Signing
           Authority'', RFC 3008, November 2000.

[RFC3090]  E. Lewis `` DNS Security Extension Clarification on Zone
           Status'', RFC 3090, March 2001.

[RFC3225]  D. Conrad, ``Indicating Resolver Support of DNSSEC'', RFC
           3225, December 2001.

[RFC3445]  D. Massey, S. Rose ``Limiting the scope of the KEY Resource
           Record (RR)``, RFC 3445, December 2002.





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Informational References

[RFC2181]  R. Elz, R. Bush, ``Clarifications to the DNS Specification'',
           RFC 2181, July 1997.

[RFC3226]  O. Gudmundsson, ``DNSSEC and IPv6 A6 aware server/resolver
           message size requirements'', RFC 3226, December 2001.

Author Address

      Olafur Gudmundsson
      3821 Village Park Drive
      Chevy Chase, MD,  20815
      USA
      <ogud@ogud.com>

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