One document matched: draft-ietf-enum-3761bis-05.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-enum-3761bis-04.txt
ENUM Scott Bradner
Internet-Draft Harvard University
Obsoletes: 3761 Lawrence Conroy
Intended status: Standards Track Roke Manor Research
Kazunori Fujiwara
Japan Registry Service Co., Ltd.
22 Nov 2009
The E.164 to Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI) Dynamic Delegation
Discovery System (DDDS) Application (ENUM)
<draft-ietf-enum-3761bis-05.txt>
Abstract
This document discusses the use of the Domain Name System (DNS) for
the storage of E.164 numbers, and for resolving them into URIs that
can be used for (for example) telephony call setup. This document
also describes how the DNS can be used to identify the services
associated with an E.164 number. This document obsoletes RFC 3761.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 22, 2010.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2009 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
publication of this document. Please review these documents
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.2. Use of These Mechanisms for Private Dialing Plans . . . . .
2. The ENUM Application Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.1. Application Unique String . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2. First Well Known Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.3. Expected Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4. Valid Databases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4.1. Optional Name Server Additional Section Processing . . . .
2.4.2. Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4.3. Services Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4.3.1. ENUM Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4.3.2. Compound NAPTRs and Implicit ORDER/PREFERENCE Values . .
2.5. The ENUM Algorithm Always Returns a Single Rule . . . . . .
2.6. Case Sensitivity in ENUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3. ENUM Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.1. Unsupported NAPTRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2. ENUM NAPTR Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.1. Use of Order and Preference fields . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.2. NAPTRs with Identical ORDER/PRIORITY Values . . . . . . .
3.2.3. Processing Order Value Across Domains . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3. Non-Terminal NAPTR Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3.1. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Necessity . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3.2. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Considerations . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3.2.1. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - General . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3.2.2. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Loop Detection and Response . . . .
3.3.2.3. Field content in Non-Terminal NAPTRs . . . . . . . . . .
3.3.2.3.1. Flags Field Content with Non-Terminal NAPTRs . . . . .
3.3.2.3.2. Services Field Content with Non-Terminal NAPTRs . . .
3.3.2.3.3. Regular Expression and Replacement Field Content
with Non-Terminal NAPTRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.4. Backwards Compatibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.4.1. Services Field Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.5. Collected Implications for ENUM Clients . . . . . . . . . . .
3.5.1. Non_terminal NAPTR Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4. ENUM Service Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5. Collected Implications for ENUM Provisioning . . . . . . . . .
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6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.1. DNS Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.2. Caching Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.3. Call Routing Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.4. URI Resolution Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9. Changes from RFC 3761 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9.1. Draft Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Editor's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. Introduction
This document discusses the use of the Domain Name System (DNS) for
the storage of E.164 [E.164] numbers, and for resolving them into
URIs that can be used for (for example) telephony call setup. This
document also describes how the DNS can be used to identify the
services associated with an E.164 number. This document includes a
Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS) Application specification,
as detailed in the document series described in [RFC3401]. This
document obsoletes [RFC3761].
Using the process defined in this document, International Public
Telecommunication Numbers in the international format defined in ITU
Recommendation E.164 [E.164] (called here "E.164 numbers") can be
transformed into DNS names. Using existing DNS services (such as
delegation through NS records and queries for NAPTR resource
records), one can look up the services associated with that E.164
number. This takes advantage of standard DNS architectural features
of decentralized control and management of the different levels in
the lookup process.
The domain "e164.arpa" has been assigned to provide the
infrastructure in the DNS for storage of E.164 numbers. In order to
facilitate distributed operations, this domain is divided into
subdomains. Holders of E.164 numbers which want the numbers to be
listed in the DNS should contact the appropriate zone administrator
as listed in the policy attached to the zone. One should start
looking for this information by examining the SOA resource record
associated with the zone, just like in normal DNS operations.
Of course, as with other domains, policies for such listings will be
controlled on a subdomain basis and may differ in different parts of
the world.
1.1. Terminology
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The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119
[RFC2119].
All other capitalized terms are taken from the vocabulary found in
the DDDS algorithm specification found in [RFC3402].
1.2. Use of These Mechanisms for Private Dialing Plans
This document describes the operation of these mechanisms in the
context of numbers allocated according to the ITU-T recommendation
E.164. The same mechanisms might be used for private dialing plans.
If these mechanisms are re-used, the suffix used for the private
dialing plan MUST NOT be e164.arpa, to avoid conflict with this
specification. Parties to the private dialing plan will need to know
the suffix used by their private dialing plan for correct operation
of these mechanisms. Further, the application unique string used
SHOULD be the full number as specified, but without the leading '+',
and such private use MUST NOT be called "ENUM" because the leading
"E" in this acronym explicitly stands for "E.164".
2. The ENUM Application Specifications
This template defines the ENUM DDDS Application according to the
rules and requirements found in [RFC3402]. The DDDS database used by
this Application is found in [RFC3403], which is the document that
defines the NAPTR DNS Resource Record type.
ENUM is only applicable for E.164 numbers. ENUM compliant
applications MUST only query the DNS for what it believes is an E.164
number. Since there are numerous dialing plans which can change over
time, it is probably impossible for a client application to have
perfect knowledge about every valid and dialable E.164 number.
Therefore a client application, doing everything within its power,
can end up with what it thinks is a syntactically correct E.164
number which in reality is not actually valid or dialable. This
implies that applications MAY send DNS queries when, for example, a
user mistypes a number in a user interface. Because of this, there
is the risk that collisions between E.164 numbers and non-E.164
numbers can occur. To mitigate this risk, the "E2U" token MUST NOT
be provisioned in domains associated with non-E.164 numbers.
2.1. Application Unique String
The Application Unique String (AUS) is a fully qualified E.164 number
minus any non-digit characters except for the '+' character which
appears at the beginning of the number. The '+' is kept to provide a
well understood anchor for the AUS in order to distinguish it from
other telephone numbers that are not part of the E.164 namespace.
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For example, the E.164 number could start out as "+44-116-496-0348".
To ensure that no syntactic sugar is allowed into the AUS, all non-
digits except for '+' are removed, yielding "+441164960348".
2.2. First Well Known Rule
The First Well Known Rule converts an Application Unique String (AUS)
into an initial key into the Application's Rules Database. For ENUM,
the rules database is the DNS, so this key is a fully qualified
domain name (FQDN).
In order to convert the AUS to a unique key in this database the
string is converted into a domain name according to this algorithm:
1. Remove all characters with the exception of the digits. For
example, given the E.164 number "+44-20-7946-0148", this step
would simply remove the leading '+', producing "442079460148".
2. Reverse the order of the digits. Example: "841064970244"
3. Put dots ('.') between each digit. Example:
"4.4.2.0.7.9.4.6.0.1.4.8"
4. Append the string ".e164.arpa." to the end and interpret as a
domain name. Example: 8.4.1.0.6.4.9.7.0.2.4.4.e164.arpa.
The E.164 namespace and this Application's database are organized in
such a way that it is possible to go directly from the name to the
smallest granularity of the namespace directly from the name itself,
so no further processing is required to generate the initial key.
This domain name is used to request NAPTR records. Each of these
records may contain the end result or, if its flags field is empty,
produces a new key in the form of a domain name that is used to
request further NAPTR records from the DNS.
2.3. Expected Output
The output of the last DDDS loop is a Uniform Resource Identifier in
its absolute form according to the <absoluteURI> production in the
Collected ABNF found in [RFC3986].
2.4. Valid Databases
At present only one DDDS Database is specified for this Application.
"Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS) Part Three: The DNS
Database" [RFC3403] specifies a DDDS Database that uses the NAPTR DNS
resource record to contain the rewrite rules. The Keys for this
database are encoded as domain names.
The charset used for the substitution expression is UTF-8. The
allowed input characters are all those characters that are allowed
anywhere in an E.164 number. The characters allowed to be in a Key
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are those that are currently defined for DNS domain names.
2.4.1. Optional Name Server Additional Section Processing
Some nameserver implementations attempt to be intelligent about items
that are inserted into the additional information section of a given
DNS response. For example, BIND will attempt to determine if it is
authoritative for a domain whenever it encodes one into a packet. If
it is, then it will insert any A records it finds for that domain
into the additional information section of the answer until the
packet reaches the maximum length allowed. It is therefore
potentially useful for a client to check for this additional
information.
It is also easy to contemplate an ENUM enhanced nameserver that
understands the actual contents of the NAPTR records it is serving
and inserts more appropriate information into the additional
information section of the response. Thus, DNS servers MAY interpret
Flag values and use that information to include appropriate resource
records in the Additional Information section of the DNS packet.
Clients are encouraged to check for additional information but are
not required to do so. See Section 4.2 of [RFC3403] ("Additional
Information Processing") for more information on NAPTR records and
the Additional Information section of a DNS response packet.
2.4.2. Flags
This Database contains a field that contains flags that signal when
the DDDS algorithm has finished. At this time only one flag, "U", is
defined. This means that this Rule is the last one and that the
output of the Rule is a URI [RFC3986]. See Section 4.3 of [RFC3404].
If a client encounters a record with an unknown flag, it MUST ignore
it and move to the next Rule. This test takes precedence over any
ordering since flags can control the interpretation placed on fields.
A novel flag might change the interpretation of the regexp and/or
replacement fields such that it is impossible to determine if a
record matched a given target.
If this flag is not present then this rule is non-terminal. If a
Rule is non-terminal then the result produced by its rewrite rule
MUST be a FQDN. Clients MUST use this result as the new Key in the
DDDS loop (i.e., the client will query for NAPTR records at this
FQDN).
2.4.3. Services Parameters
Service Parameters for this Application take the following form and
are found in the Service field of the NAPTR record that holds a
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terminal rule. Where the NAPTR holds a non-terminal Rule, the
Services field SHOULD be empty, and clients SHOULD ignore its
content.
service-field = "E2U" 1*(servicespec)
servicespec = "+" enumservice
enumservice = type 0*(subtypespec)
subtypespec = ":" subtype
type = 1*32(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
subtype = 1*32(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
In other words, a non-optional "E2U" (used to denote ENUM only
Rewrite Rules in order to mitigate record collisions) followed by one
or more Enumservices which indicate the class of functionality a
given end point offers. Each Enumservice is indicated by an initial
'+' character.
2.4.3.1. ENUM Services
Enumservices may be specified and registered via the process defined
in "IANA Registration of Enumservices: Guide, Template and IANA
Considerations" [SV_GUIDE]. This registration process is not open to
any Enumservice that has '-' as the second character in its type
string.
In particular, this registration process is not open to Enumservice
types starting with the facet "X-". This "X-" facet is reserved for
experimental or trial use, and any such Enumservices cannot be
registered using the normal process.
Finally, any Enumservice type that starts with the facet "P-" is
intended for use exclusively on private networks. As such, NAPTRs
containing Enumservice types starting "P-" should not be seen on the
global Internet. Even if an ENUM client recognizes and can engage in
the Enumservice, it may be incapable of resolving the URI generated
by the containing NAPTR. These Enumservices WILL NOT be registered.
Such Enumservices MUST NOT be provisioned in any system that provides
answers to DNS queries for NAPTR resource record sets from entities
outside the private network context in which these Enumservices are
intended for use. Unless an ENUM client is sure that it is connected
to the private network for which these NAPTRs are provisioned and
intended, it MUST discard any NAPTR with an Enumservice type that
starts with the "P-" facet.
2.4.3.2. Compound NAPTRs and Implicit ORDER/PREFERENCE Values
It is possible to have more than one Enumservice associated with a
single NAPTR. These Enumservices share the same Regexp field and so
generate the same URI. Such a "compound" NAPTR could well be used to
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indicate a mobile phone that supports both "voice:tel" and "sms:tel"
Enumservices. The Services field in that case would be
"E2U+voice:tel+sms:tel".
A compound NAPTR can be treated as a set of NAPTRs that each hold a
single Enumservice. These reconstructed NAPTRs share the same ORDER
and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field values but should be treated as if each
had a logically different priority. ENUM clients SHOULD process the
Enumservices within a compound NAPTR in a left-to-right sequence.
ENUM provisioning systems SHOULD assume that such a processing order
will be used and provision the Enumservices within a compound NAPTR
accordingly.
2.5. The ENUM Algorithm Always Returns a Single Rule
The ENUM algorithm always returns a single rule. Specific
applications may have application-specific knowledge or facilities
that allow them to present multiple results or speed selection, but
these should never change the operation of the algorithm.
2.6. Case Sensitivity in ENUM
The only place where NAPTR field content is case sensitive is in any
static text in the Repl sub-field of the Regexp field (see Section
3.2 of [RFC3402] for Regexp field definitions). Everywhere else,
case-insensitive processing SHOULD be used.
3. ENUM Clients
3.1. Unsupported NAPTRs
An ENUM client MAY discard a NAPTR received in response to an ENUM
query because:
o the NAPTR is syntactically or semantically incorrect,
o the NAPTR has a different (non-empty) DDDS Application identifier
from the 'E2U' used in ENUM,
o the NAPTR's Extended Regular Expression (ERE) does not match the
Application Unique String for this ENUM query,
o the ENUM client does not recognize any Enumservice in that NAPTR,
o this NAPTR (only) contains an Enumservice that is unsupported.
These conditions SHOULD NOT cause the whole ENUM query to terminate,
and processing SHOULD continue with the next NAPTR in the returned
Resource Record Set (RRSet).
When an ENUM client encounters a compound NAPTR (i.e., one containing
more than one Enumservice -- see Section 2.4.3.2) and cannot process
or cannot recognize one of the Enumservices within it, that ENUM
client SHOULD ignore this Enumservice and continue with the next
Enumservice within this NAPTR's Services field, discarding the NAPTR
only if it cannot handle any of the Enumservices contained. These
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conditions SHOULD NOT be considered errors.
ENUM uses regular-expression processing when generating URIs from the
Regexp field of "terminal" NAPTRs. Just as with all uses of regular
expressions, there is a potential for buffer overrun when generating
this output. There may be repeated back-reference patterns in a
NAPTR's Repl sub-field, and the output these generate may consume a
considerable amount of buffer space.
Even if an ENUM client would normally encounter only NAPTRs with
short URIs, it may also receive NAPTRs with repeated back-reference
patterns in their Repl sub-fields that could generate strings longer
than the client's buffer. Such NAPTRs may have been misconfigured
accidentally or by design. The client MUST NOT fail in this case. It
SHOULD NOT discard the entire ENUM query, but instead just discard
the NAPTR that would otherwise have caused this overrun.
If a problem is detected when processing an ENUM query across
multiple domains (by following non-terminal NAPTR references), then
the ENUM query SHOULD NOT be abandoned, but instead processing SHOULD
continue at the next NAPTR after the non-terminal NAPTR that referred
to the domain in which the problem would have occurred. See Section
3.3.2.2 for more details.
3.2. ENUM NAPTR Processing
ENUM is a DDDS Application, and the way in which NAPTRs in an RRSet
are processed reflects this. The details are described in Section
3.3 of [RFC3402]. The client is expected to sort the records it
receives into a sequence and then process those records in that
sequence. The sequence reflects the ORDER field value ("lowest value
is first") and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field value (again, lowest value
first) in each of the NAPTRs. The ORDER field value is the major, or
most significant, sort term and the PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field value
is the minor, or least significant, sort term. The combination of
ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field values indicates the sequence
chosen by the publisher of this data, and NAPTRs will be considered
in this sequence. Subsequent NAPTRs with worse ORDER values MUST only
be dealt with once the current ones with a better ORDER value have
been processed.
Once sorted into a sequence reflecting ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY
values, other fields are also considered during evaluation of
retrieved NAPTRs. ENUM clients will take into account the Flags field
value, the Services field value, and the Regexp ERE sub-field, along
with the ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field values. Local policies
or local knowledge may play a factor in the decision process, once a
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NAPTR has reached that point in the sequence at which it is
considered.
3.2.1. Use of Order and Preference fields
NAPTRs in ENUM zones that hold incorrect ORDER values can cause major
problems. [RFC3403] highlights that having both ORDER and
PREFERENCE/PRIORITY fields is a historical artifact of the NAPTR
resource record type. It is reasonable to have a common default
value for the ORDER field, relying on the PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field
to indicate the preferred sort.
The ORDER field value is the major sort term, and the
PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field value is the minor sort term. Thus, one
should expect to have a set of NAPTRs in a zone with identical ORDER
field values and different PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field values; not the
other way around.
To avoid common interoperability issues, it is recommended that ENUM
NAPTRs SHOULD hold a default value in their ORDER field.
3.2.2. NAPTRs with Identical ORDER/PRIORITY Values
From experience, it has been learned that there are zones that hold
discrete NAPTRs with identical ORDER and identical PREFERENCE/
PRIORITY field values. This will lead to indeterminate client
behavior and so SHOULD NOT normally occur.
Such a condition indicates that these NAPTRs are truly identical in
priority and that there is no preference between the services these
NAPTRs offer. Implementers SHOULD NOT assume that the DNS will
deliver NAPTRs within an RRSet in a particular sequence.
3.2.3. Processing Order Value Across Domains
Using a different ORDER field value in different domains is
unimportant for most queries. However, DDDS includes a mechanism for
continuing a search for NAPTRs in another domain by including a
reference to that other domain in a "non-terminal" NAPTR. The
treatment of non-terminal NAPTRs is covered in the next section. If
they are supported, then the way that ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY
field values are processed is affected.
ENUM implementations MUST consider the ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY
values only within the context of the domain currently being
processed in an ENUM query. These values MUST be disregarded when
processing other RRSets in the query.
3.3. Non-Terminal NAPTR Processing
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3.3.1. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Necessity
Consider an ENUM RRSet that contains a non-terminal NAPTR record.
This non-terminal NAPTR holds, as its target, another domain that has
a set of NAPTRs. In effect, this is similar to the non-terminal
NAPTR being replaced by the NAPTRs contained in the domain to which
it points.
It is possible to have a non-terminal NAPTR in a domain that is,
itself, pointed to by another non-terminal NAPTR. Thus, a set of
domains forms a "chain", and the list of NAPTRs to be considered is
the set of all NAPTRs contained in all of the domains in that chain.
Given that, in principle, a non-terminal NAPTR can be replaced by the
NAPTRs in the domain to which it points, support of non-terminal
NAPTRs is not needed and non-terminal NAPTRs may not be useful.
Furthermore, some existing ENUM clients do not support non-terminal
NAPTRs and ignore them if received.
As current support is limited, non-terminal NAPTRs SHOULD NOT be used
in ENUM unless it is clear that all of the ENUM clients this
environment supports can process these.
3.3.2. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Considerations
The following specific issues need to be considered if non-terminal
NAPTRs are to be supported in a particular environment. These issues
are gleaned from experience and indicate the kinds of conditions that
should be considered before support for non-terminal NAPTRs is
contemplated.
3.3.2.1. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - General
A non-terminal NAPTR in one RRSet refers to the NAPTRs contained in
another domain. The NAPTRs in the domain referred to by the non-
terminal NAPTR may have a different ORDER value from that in the
referring non-terminal NAPTR. See Section 3.2.3 for details.
3.3.2.2. Non-Terminal NAPTRs - Loop Detection and Response
Where a chain of non-terminal NAPTRs refers back to a domain already
traversed in the current query, a "non-terminal" or referential loop
is implied. An implementation MAY treat a chain of more than 5
domains traversed during a single ENUM query as an indication that a
self-referential loop has been entered.
There are many techniques that can be used to detect such a loop, but
the simple approach of counting the number of domains queried in the
current ENUM query suffices.
Where a loop has been detected, processing SHOULD continue at the
next NAPTR in the referring domain (i.e., after the non-terminal
NAPTR that included the reference that triggered the loop detection).
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3.3.2.3. Field content in Non-Terminal NAPTRs
The set of specifications defining DDDS and its applications are
complex and multi-layered. This reflects the flexibility that the
system provides but does mean that some of the specifications need
clarification as to their interpretation, particularly where non-
terminal rules are concerned.
3.3.2.3.1. Flags Field Content with Non-Terminal NAPTRs
The Flags field will be empty in non-terminal NAPTRs encountered in
ENUM processing. ENUM does not have any other way to indicate a non-
terminal NAPTR.
3.3.2.3.2. Services Field Content with Non-Terminal NAPTRs
In a non-terminal NAPTR encountered in an ENUM query, the Services
field SHOULD be empty, and clients SHOULD ignore any content it
contains.
Non-terminal NAPTRs with an empty Services field are not specific to
any DDDS Application. Thus, other means must be used to ensure a
non-terminal NAPTR that is intended only for a particular DDDS
Application cannot be encountered during a lookup for another DDDS
Application (for example, by ensuring that the same domain is not
used to host NAPTRs for more than one such DDDS Application).
3.3.2.3.3. Regular Expression and Replacement Field Content with Non-
Terminal NAPTRs
[RFC3403] is specific; Regexp and Replacement fields are mutually
exclusive. This means that if the Regexp element is not empty, then
the Replacement element must be empty, and vice versa. However,
[RFC3403] does not specify which is used with terminal and non-
terminal rules.
A Replacement element cannot be used in ENUM for terminal rules, as
only non-terminal rules ("non-terminal NAPTRs") have a domain as
their output in ENUM: terminal ENUM rules generate a URI instead. The
alternative Regexp element may be used either to generate a FQDN as
the next key to be used in the non-terminal case or to generate the
output of the DDDS Application.
However, generating an ENUM FQDN from the Regexp field is difficult
at best and impossible for the general case of a variable- length
telephone number, or one that has more than 9 digits. Thus, the
Regexp field is inappropriate for non-terminal rules encountered
during ENUM processing.
To clarify, the target domain of a non-terminal ENUM NAPTR MUST be
placed in the (non-empty) Replacement field. This field MUST be
interpreted as holding the FQDN that forms the next key output from
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this non-terminal rule. Conversely, the Regexp field MUST be empty in
a non-terminal NAPTR encountered in ENUM processing, and ENUM clients
MUST ignore its content.
3.4. Backwards Compatibility
3.4.1. Services Field Syntax
[RFC2915] and [RFC2916] have been obsoleted by [RFC3401] - [RFC3404]
and by this document. However, [RFC3824] suggests that ENUM clients
should be prepared to accept NAPTRs with the obsolete syntax. Thus,
an ENUM client implementation may have to deal with both forms. This
need not be difficult. For example, an implementation could process
the Services field into a set of tokens and expect exactly one of
these tokens to be "E2U". In this way, the ENUM client might be
designed to handle both the old and the current forms without added
complexity.
To facilitate this method, IANA should reject any request to register
an Enumservice with the label "E2U", and this request is included in
the IANA considerations of [SV_GUIDE].
ENUM clients MUST support ENUM NAPTRs according to the service field
syntax specified in Section 2.4.3. ENUM clients SHOULD also support
ENUM NAPTRs according to the obsolete syntax of [RFC2916]; there are
still zones that hold "old" syntax NAPTRs.
ENUM zones MUST NOT be provisioned with NAPTRs according to the
obsolete form defined in [RFC2916], and MUST be provisioned with
NAPTRs in which the Services field is according to the specification
of Section 2.4.3 of this document.
3.5. Collected Implications for ENUM Clients
ENUM clients SHOULD NOT discard NAPTRs in which they detect
characters outside the US-ASCII printable range (0x20 to 0x7E
hexadecimal).
ENUM clients MAY discard NAPTRs that have octets in the Flags,
Services, or Regexp fields that have byte values outside the US-ASCII
equivalent range (i.e., byte values above 0x7F). Clients MUST be
ready to encounter NAPTRs with such values without failure.
ENUM clients SHOULD NOT assume that the delimiter is the last
character of the Regexp field.
Unless they are sure that in their environment this is the case,
in general an ENUM client may still encounter NAPTRs that have
been provisioned with a following 'i' (case-insensitive) flag,
even though that flag has no effect at all in an ENUM scenario.
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ENUM clients SHOULD discard NAPTRs that have more or less than 3
unescaped instances of the delimiter character within the Regexp
field.
In the spirit of being liberal with what it will accept, if the
ENUM client is sure how the Regexp field should be interpreted,
then it may choose to process the NAPTR even in the face of an
incorrect number of unescaped delimiter characters. If it is not
clear how the Regexp field should be interpreted, then the client
must discard the NAPTR.
Where the ENUM client presents a list of possible URLs to the end
user for his or her choice, it MAY present all NAPTRs -- not just the
ones with the highest currently unprocessed ORDER field value. The
client SHOULD observe the ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY values
specified by the Registrant.
ENUM clients SHOULD accept all NAPTRs with identical ORDER and
identical PREFERENCE/PRIORITY field values, and process them in the
sequence in which they appear in the DNS response. (There is no
benefit in further randomizing the order in which these are
processed, as intervening DNS Servers might have done this already).
ENUM clients receiving compound NAPTRs (i.e., ones with more than one
Enumservice) SHOULD process these Enumservices using a left-to-right
sort ordering, so that the first Enumservice to be processed will be
the leftmost one, and the last will be the rightmost one.
ENUM clients SHOULD consider the ORDER field value only when sorting
NAPTRs within a single RRSet. The ORDER field value SHOULD NOT be
taken into account when processing NAPTRs across a sequence of DNS
queries created by traversal of non-terminal NAPTR references.
ENUM clients MUST be ready to process NAPTRs that use a different
character from '!' as their Regexp Delimiter without failure.
ENUM clients MUST be ready to process NAPTRs that have non-trivial
patterns in their ERE sub-field values without failure.
ENUM clients MUST be ready to process NAPTRs with a DDDS Application
identifier other than 'E2U' without failure.
ENUM clients MUST be ready to process NAPTRs with many copies of
back-reference patterns within the Repl sub-field without failure
(see also Section 3.1).
If a NAPTR is discarded, this SHOULD NOT cause the whole ENUM query
to terminate and processing SHOULD continue with the next NAPTR in
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the returned Resource Record Set (RRSet).
When an ENUM client encounters a compound NAPTR (i.e., one containing
more than one Enumservice) and cannot process or cannot recognize one
of the Enumservices within it, that ENUM client SHOULD ignore this
Enumservice and continue with the next Enumservice within this
NAPTR's Services field, discarding the NAPTR only if it cannot handle
any of the Enumservices contained. These conditions SHOULD NOT be
considered errors.
ENUM clients MUST support ENUM NAPTRs according to syntax defined in
Section 2.4.3. ENUM clients SHOULD also support ENUM NAPTRs according
to the obsolete syntax of [RFC2916]; there are still zones that hold
"old" syntax NAPTRs.
Unless an ENUM client is sure that it is connected to the private
network for which these NAPTRs are provisioned and intended, it MUST
discard any NAPTR with an Enumservice type that starts with the "P-"
facet.
3.5.1. Non-terminal NAPTR Processing
ENUM clients MUST be ready to process NAPTRs with an empty Flags
field ("non-terminal" NAPTRs) without failure. More generally, non-
terminal NAPTR processing SHOULD be implemented, but ENUM clients MAY
discard non-terminal NAPTRs they encounter.
ENUM clients SHOULD ignore any content of the Services field when
encountering a non-terminal NAPTR with an empty Flags field.
ENUM clients receiving a non-terminal NAPTR with an empty Flags field
MUST treat the Replacement field as holding the FQDN to be used in
the next round of the ENUM query. An ENUM client MUST discard such a
non-terminal NAPTR if the Replacement field is empty or does not
contain a valid FQDN. By definition, it follows that the Regexp
field will be empty in such a non-terminal NAPTR. If present in a
non-terminal NAPTR, a non-empty Regexp field MUST be ignored by ENUM
clients.
If a problem is detected when processing an ENUM query across
multiple domains (by following non-terminal NAPTR references), then
the ENUM query SHOULD NOT be abandoned, but instead processing SHOULD
continue at the next NAPTR after the non-terminal NAPTR that referred
to the domain in which the problem would have occurred.
If all NAPTRs in a domain traversed as a result of a reference in a
non-terminal NAPTR have been discarded, then the ENUM client SHOULD
continue its processing with the next NAPTR in the "referring" RRSet
(i.e., the one including the non-terminal NAPTR that caused the
traversal).
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ENUM clients MAY consider a chain of more than 5 "non-terminal"
NAPTRs traversed in a single ENUM query as an indication that a
referential loop has been entered.
Where a domain is about to be entered as the result of a reference in
a non-terminal NAPTR, and the ENUM client has detected a potential
referential loop, then the client SHOULD discard the non-terminal
NAPTR from its processing and continue with the next NAPTR in its
list. It SHOULD NOT make the DNS query indicated by that non-
terminal NAPTR.
4. ENUM Service Example
$ORIGIN 3.8.0.0.6.9.2.3.6.1.4.4.e164.arpa.
NAPTR 100 50 "u" "E2U+sip" "!^.*$!sip:info@example.com!" .
NAPTR 100 51 "u" "E2U+h323" "!^.*$!h323:info@example.com!" .
NAPTR 100 52 "u" "E2U+email:mailto"
"!^.*$!mailto:info@example.com!" .
This describes that the domain 3.8.0.0.6.9.2.3.6.1.4.4.e164.arpa. is
preferably contacted by SIP, secondly via H.323 for voice, and
thirdly by SMTP for messaging. Note that the Enumservice tokens
"sip", "h323", and "email" are Enumservice Types registered with
IANA, and they have no implicit connection with the protocols or URI
schemes with the same names.
In all cases, the next step in the resolution process is to use the
resolution mechanism for each of the protocols, (specified by the URI
schemes sip, h323 and mailto) to know what node to contact.
5. Collected Implications for ENUM Provisioning
ENUM NAPTRs SHOULD NOT include characters outside the printable US-
ASCII equivalent range (U+0020 to U+007E) unless it is clear that all
ENUM clients they are designed to support will be able to process
such characters correctly. If ENUM zone provisioning systems require
non-ASCII characters, these systems SHOULD encode the non-ASCII data
to emit only US-ASCII characters by applying the appropriate
mechanism ([RFC3492], [RFC3987]). Non-printable characters SHOULD
NOT be used, as ENUM clients may need to present NAPTR content in a
human-readable form.
The case-sensitivity flag ('i') is inappropriate for ENUM, and SHOULD
NOT be provisioned into the Regexp field of E2U NAPTRs.
ENUM zone provisioning systems SHOULD use '!' (U+0021) as their
Regexp delimiter character.
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If the Regexp delimiter is a character in the static text of the Repl
sub-field, it MUST be "escaped" using the escaped-delimiter
production of the BNF specification shown in Section 3.2 of [RFC3402]
(i.e., "\!", U+005C U+0021). Note that when a NAPTR resource record
is entered in DNS master file syntax, the backslash itself must be
escaped using a second backslash.
If present in the ERE sub-field of an ENUM NAPTR, the literal
character '+' MUST be escaped as "\+" (i.e. U+005C U+002B). Note
that, as always, when a NAPTR resource record is entered in DNS
master file syntax, the backslash itself must be escaped using a
second backslash.
The Registrant and the ENUM zone provisioning system he or she uses
SHOULD NOT rely on ENUM clients solely taking account of the value of
the ORDER and the PREFERENCE/PRIORITY fields in ENUM NAPTRs. Thus, a
Registrant SHOULD place into his or her zone only contacts that he or
she is willing to support; even those with the worst ORDER and
PREFERENCE/PRIORITY values MAY be selected by an end user.
Many apparent mistakes in ORDER and PREFERENCE/PRIORITY values have
been detected in provisioned ENUM zones. To avoid these common
interoperability issues, provisioning systems SHOULD NOT use
different ORDER field values for NAPTRs in a Resource Record Set
(RRSet). To generalize, all ENUM NAPTRs SHOULD hold a default value
in their ORDER field. A value of "100" is recommended, as it seems
to be used in most provisioned domains.
Multiple NAPTRs with identical ORDER and identical PREFERENCE/
PRIORITY field values SHOULD NOT be provisioned into an RRSet unless
the intent is that these NAPTRs are truly identical and there is no
preference between them. Implementers SHOULD NOT assume that the DNS
will deliver NAPTRs within an RRSet in a particular sequence.
An ENUM zone provisioning system SHOULD assume that, if it generates
compound NAPTRs, the Enumservices will normally be processed in left-
to-right order within such NAPTRs.
ENUM zone provisioning systems SHOULD assume that, once a non-
terminal NAPTR has been selected for processing, the ORDER field
value in a domain referred to by that non-terminal NAPTR will be
considered only within the context of that referenced domain (i.e.,
the ORDER value will be used only to sort within the current RRSet
and will not be used in the processing of NAPTRs in any other RRSet).
Whilst this client behavior is non-compliant, ENUM provisioning
systems and their users should be aware that some ENUM clients have
been detected with poor (or no) support for non-trivial ERE sub-field
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expressions.
ENUM provisioning systems SHOULD be cautious in the use of multiple
back-reference patterns in the Repl sub-field of NAPTRs they
provision. Some clients have limited buffer space for character
expansion when generating URIs (see also Section 3.1). These
provisioning systems SHOULD check the back-reference replacement
patterns they use, ensuring that regular expression processing will
not produce excessive-length URIs.
As current support is limited, non-terminal NAPTRs SHOULD NOT be
provisioned in ENUM zones unless it is clear that all ENUM clients
that this environment supports can process these.
When populating a set of domains with NAPTRs, ENUM zone provisioning
systems SHOULD NOT configure non-terminal NAPTRs so that more than 5
such NAPTRs will be processed in an ENUM query.
In a non-terminal NAPTR encountered in an ENUM query (i.e., one with
an empty Flags field), the Services field SHOULD be empty.
A non-terminal NAPTR MUST include its target domain in the (non-
empty) Replacement field. This field MUST be interpreted as holding
the FQDN that forms the next key output from this non-terminal rule.
The Regexp field MUST be empty in a non-terminal NAPTR intended to be
encountered during an ENUM query.
ENUM zones MUST NOT be provisioned with NAPTRs according to the
obsolete form, and MUST be provisioned with NAPTRs in which the
Services field is according to Section 2.4.3 of this document.
Enumservices in which the Enumservice type starts with the facet "P-"
MUST NOT be provisioned in any system that provides answers to DNS
queries for NAPTR resource record sets from entities outside the
private network context in which these Enumservices are intended for
use.
6. IANA Considerations
RFC 2916 and then RFC 3761 (which this document replaces) requested
IANA to delegate the E164.ARPA domain following instructions to be
provided by the IAB. The domain was delegated according to those
instructions. Names within this zone are to be delegated to parties
according to the ITU-T Recommendation E.164. The names allocated
should be hierarchic in accordance with ITU-T Recommendation E.164,
and the codes should be assigned in accordance with that
Recommendation.
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The IAB is to coordinate with ITU-T TSB if the technical contact for
the domain e164.arpa is to change, as ITU-T TSB has an operational
working relationship with this technical contact which needs to be
reestablished.
Delegations in the zone e164.arpa (not delegations in delegated
domains of e164.arpa) should be done after Expert Review, and the
IESG will appoint a designated expert.
See [SV_GUIDE] for Enumservice-related IANA Considerations.
7. Security Considerations
7.1. DNS Security
As ENUM uses DNS, which in its current form is an insecure protocol,
there is no mechanism for ensuring that the data one gets back is
authentic. As ENUM is deployed on the global Internet, it is
expected to be a popular target for various kind of attacks, and
attacking the underlying DNS infrastructure is one way of attacking
the ENUM service itself.
There are multiple types of attacks that can happen against DNS that
ENUM implementations should consider. See Threat Analysis of the
Domain Name System [RFC3833] for a review of the various threats to
the DNS.
Because of these threats, a deployed ENUM service SHOULD include
mechanisms to mitigate these threats. Most of the threats can be
solved by verifying the authenticity of the data via mechanisms such
as DNS Security (DNSSEC) [RFC4033]. Others, such as Denial Of
Service attacks, cannot be solved by data authentication. It is
important to remember that these threats include not only the NAPTR
lookups themselves, but also the various records needed for the
services to be useful (for example NS, MX, SRV and A records).
Even if DNSSEC is deployed, a service that uses ENUM for address
translation should not blindly trust that the peer is the intended
party as DNSSEC deployment cannot protect against every kind of
attack on DNS. A service should always authenticate the peers as
part of the setup process for the service itself and never blindly
trust any kind of addressing mechanism.
Finally, as an ENUM service will be implementing some type of
security mechanism, software which implements ENUM MUST be prepared
to receive DNSSEC and other standardized DNS security responses,
including large responses, EDNS0 signaling, unknown RRs, and so on.
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7.2. Caching Security
The caching in DNS can make the propagation time for a change take
the same amount of time as the time to live for the NAPTR records in
the zone that is changed. The use of this in an environment where
IP-addresses are dynamically assigned (for example, when using DHCP
[RFC2131]) must therefore be done very carefully.
7.3. Call Routing Security
There are a number of countries (and other numbering environments) in
which there are multiple providers of call routing and number/name-
translation services. In these areas, any system that permits users,
or putative agents for users, to change routing or supplier
information may provide incentives for changes that are actually
unauthorized (and, in some cases, for denial of legitimate change
requests). Such environments should be designed with adequate
mechanisms for identification and authentication of those requesting
changes and for authorization of those changes.
7.4. URI Resolution Security
A large amount of Security Issues have to do with the resolution
process itself, and use of the URIs produced by the DDDS mechanism.
Those have to be specified in the registration of the Enumservice
used, as specified in "IANA Registration of Enumservices: Guide,
Template and IANA Considerations" [SV_GUIDE].
8. Acknowledgements
This document is an update of RFC 3761, which was edited by Patrik
Faltstrom and Michael Mealling. Please see the Acknowledgements
section in that RFC for additional acknowledgements.
9. Changes from RFC 3761
Two sections have been added explaining the implied protocol
requirements for use of NAPTRs according to this specification. These
have been collected from experience of ENUM deployment.
Clarifications include the required use of Replacement field in non-
terminal NAPTRs (Section 3.3.2.3.3) and that string matching is case
insensitive (Section 2.6).
Substantive changes include removing the discussion of registration
mechanisms, (now specified in "IANA Registration of Enumservices:
Guide, Template and IANA Considerations" [SV_GUIDE]), adding "-" as a
valid character in the type and subtype fields in the Services
Parameters (Section 2.4.3) and adding the "P-" private service type
(Section 2.4.3.1).
9.1. Draft Change Log
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change log - RFC Editor - please remove this section for publication.
version 01 -> 02
clean up English - many places
removed Registration mechanism for Enumservices section
removed IANA considerations - point to draft-ietf-enum-
enumservices-
guide,
replace DNS Security Threats in section 6.1 with pointer to RFC
3833
fold in text from the ENUM Experiences ID - many places
version 02 -> 03
fixed minor typos
revised section 2.4.4.1, added P-
expanded IANA Considerations - Section 6
version 03 -> 04
Many changes to bring into sync with RFC 5483
version 04 -> 05
change "ameliorate" to "mitigate" in 7.1
fix reference to IANA Registration of Enumservices
clarify ENUM definition of DDDS First Well Known Rule
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[E.164] ITU-T, "The International Public Telecommunication Number
Plan", Recommendation E.164, February 2005.
[RFC2131] Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC
2131, March 1997.
[RFC3402] Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)
Part Two: The Algorithm", RFC 3402, October 2002.
[RFC3403] Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)
Part Three: The Domain Name System (DNS) Database", RFC 3403,
October 2002.
[RFC3404] Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)
Part Four: The Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI)", RFC 3404,
October 2002.
[RFC3492] Costello, A., "Punycode: A Bootstring encoding of Unicode
for Internationalized Domain Names in Applications (IDNA)", RFC
3492, March 2003.
[RFC3761] Faltstrom, P. and M. Mealling, "The E.164 to Uniform
Resource Identifiers (URI) Dynamic Delegation Discovery System
(DDDS) Application (ENUM)", RFC 3761, April 2004.
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
Bradner, Conroy & Fujiwara [Page 21]
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Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986,
January 2005.
[RFC3987] Duerst, M. and M. Suignard, "Internationalized Resource
Identifiers (IRIs)", RFC 3987, January 2005.
10.2. Informative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2915] Mealling, M. and R. Daniel, "The Naming Authority Pointer
(NAPTR) DNS Resource Record", RFC 2915, September 2000.
[RFC2916] Faltstrom, P., "E.164 number and DNS", RFC 2916,
September 2000.
[RFC3401] Mealling, M., "Dynamic Delegation Discovery System (DDDS)
Part One: The Comprehensive DDDS", RFC 3401, October 2002.
[RFC3824] Peterson, J., Liu, H., Yu, J., and B. Campbell, "Using
E.164 numbers with the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC
3824, June 2004.
[RFC3833] Atkins, D. and R. Austein, "Threat Analysis of the Domain
Name System (DNS)", RFC 3833, August 2004.
[RFC4033] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements", RFC 4033,
March 2005.
[SV_GUIDE] Hoeneisen, B., Mayrhofer, A., and J. Livingood, "IANA
Registration of Enumservices: Guide, Template and IANA
Considerations", (work in progress), September 2009.
Author's Addresses
Scott Bradner
Harvard University
29 Oxford St.
Cambridge MA 02138
USA
Phone: +1-617-495-3864
EMail: sob@harvard.edu
Lawrence Conroy
Roke Manor Research
Roke Manor
Old Salisbury Lane
Romsey
United Kingdom
Phone: +44-1794-833666
EMail: lconroy@insensate.co.uk
URI: http://www.sienum.co.uk
Bradner, Conroy & Fujiwara [Page 22]
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Kazunori Fujiwara
Japan Registry Service Co., Ltd.
Chiyoda First Bldg. East 13F
3-8-1 Nishi-Kanda Chiyoda-ku
Tokyo 101-0165
JAPAN
EMail: fujiwara@jprs.co.jp
URI: http://jprs.jp/en/
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