One document matched: draft-ietf-v6ops-v6-aaaa-whitelisting-implications-06.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-v6ops-v6-aaaa-whitelisting-implications-05.txt
IPv6 Operations J. Livingood
Internet-Draft Comcast
Intended status: Informational June 8, 2011
Expires: December 10, 2011
IPv6 AAAA DNS Whitelisting Implications
draft-ietf-v6ops-v6-aaaa-whitelisting-implications-06
Abstract
This document describes the practice and implications of whitelisting
DNS recursive resolvers in order to limit AAAA resource record
responses (which contain IPv6 addresses) sent by authoritative DNS
servers. This is an IPv6 transition mechanism used by domains as a
method for incrementally transitioning inbound traffic to a domain
from IPv4 to IPv6 transport. The audience for this document is the
Internet community generally, particularly IPv6 implementers.
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
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."
This Internet-Draft will expire on December 10, 2011.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
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the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. How DNS Whitelisting Works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.1. Description of the Operation of DNS Whitelisting . . . . . 6
2.2. Comparison with Blacklisting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3. Similarities to Other DNS Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.1. Similarities to Split DNS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2. Similarities to DNS Load Balancing . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4. What Problems Are Implementers Trying To Solve? . . . . . . . 10
4.1. Volume-Based Concerns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2. IPv6-Related Impairment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.3. Free Versus Subscription Services . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5. General Implementation Variations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.1. Implement DNS Whitelisting Universally . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.2. Implement DNS Whitelisting On An Ad Hoc Basis . . . . . . 14
5.3. Do Not Implement DNS Whitelisting . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.3.1. Solve Current End User IPv6 Impairments . . . . . . . 14
5.3.2. Gain Experience Using IPv6 Transition Names . . . . . 15
5.3.3. Implement DNS Blacklisting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
6. Concerns Regarding DNS Whitelisting . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
7. Implications of DNS Whitelisting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.1. Architectural Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.2. Public IPv6 Address Reachability Implications . . . . . . 18
7.3. Operational Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
7.3.1. De-Whitelisting May Occur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
7.3.2. Authoritative DNS Server Operational Implications . . 19
7.3.3. DNS Recursive Resolver Server Operational
Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
7.3.4. Monitoring Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7.3.5. Implications of Operational Momentum . . . . . . . . . 22
7.3.6. Troubleshooting Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.3.7. Additional Implications If Deployed On An Ad Hoc
Basis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7.4. Homogeneity May Be Encouraged . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.5. Technology Policy Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.6. IPv6 Adoption Implications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.7. Implications with Poor IPv4 and Good IPv6 Transport . . . 25
7.8. Implications for Users of Third-Party DNS Recursive
Resolvers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
8. Is DNS Whitelisting a Recommended Practice? . . . . . . . . . 26
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
9.1. DNSSEC Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
9.2. Authoritative DNS Response Consistency Considerations . . 27
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10. Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
11. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
12. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
13. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
14. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
14.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
14.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Appendix A. Document Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Appendix B. Open Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
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1. Introduction
This document describes the practice and implications of whitelisting
DNS recursive resolvers in order to limit AAAA resource record (RR)
responses (which contain IPv6 addresses) sent by authoritative DNS
servers. This is referred to hereafter as DNS Whitelisting. This is
an IPv6 transition mechanism used by domains as a method for
incrementally transitioning inbound traffic to a domain from IPv4 to
IPv6 transport. When implemented, a domain's authoritative DNS will
return a AAAA resource record to DNS recursive resolvers [RFC1035] on
the whitelist, while returning no AAAA resource records to DNS
recursive resolvers which are not on the whitelist. The practice
appears to have first been used by major web content sites (sometimes
described hereafter as "high-traffic domains"), which have specific
concerns relating to maintaining a high-quality user experience for
all of their users during their transition to IPv6.
Critics of the practice of DNS Whitelisting have articulated several
concerns. Among these are that:
o DNS Whitelisting is a very different behavior from the current
practice concerning the publishing of IPv4 address resource
records,
o that it may create a two-tiered Internet,
o that policies and decision-making for whitelisting and de-
whitelisting are opaque or likely to cause conflict,
o that DNS Whitelisting reduces interest in the deployment of IPv6,
o that new operational and management burdens are created,
o that the practice does not scale,
o that it violates a basic premise of cross-Internet
interoperability by requiring prior arrangements,
o and that the costs and negative implications of DNS Whitelisting
outweigh the perceived benefits.
This document explores the reasons and motivations for DNS
Whitelisting Section 4. It also explores the concerns regarding this
practice, and whether and when the practice is recommended Section 8.
Readers will hopefully better understand what DNS Whitelisting is,
why some domains are implementing it, and what the implications are.
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2. How DNS Whitelisting Works
Generally, using a whitelist means no traffic (or traffic of a
certain type) is permitted to the destination host unless the
originating host's IP address is contained in the whitelist. In
contrast, using a blacklist means that all traffic is permitted to
the destination host unless the originating host's IP address is
contained in the blacklist.
DNS Whitelisting is implemented in authoritative DNS servers, not in
DNS recursive resolvers. These authoritative DNS servers implement
IP address-based restrictions on AAAA query responses. So far, DNS
Whitelisting has been primarily implemented by web site operators
deploying IPv6-enabled services, though this practice could affect
all protocols and services within a domain. For a given operator of
a website, such as www.example.com, the domain operator essentially
applies an access control list (ACL) on the authoritative DNS servers
for the domain example.com. The ACL is populated with the IPv4
and/or IPv6 addresses or prefix ranges of DNS recursive resolvers on
the Internet, which have been authorized to receive (or access) AAAA
resource record responses. These DNS recursive resolvers are
operated by third parties, such as Internet Service Providers (ISPs),
universities, governments, businesses, and individual end users. If
a DNS recursive resolver IS NOT matched in the ACL, then AAAA
resource records WILL NOT be sent in response to a query for a
hostname in the example.com domain. However, if a DNS recursive
resolver IS matched in the ACL, then AAAA resource records WILL be
sent in response to a query for a given hostname in the example.com
domain. While these are not network-layer access controls (as many
ACLs are) they are nonetheless access controls that are a factor for
end users and other organizations such as network operators,
especially as networks and hosts transition from one network address
family to another (IPv4 to IPv6). Thus, if a DNS recursive resolver
is on the ACL (whitelist) then they have access to AAAA resource
records for the domain.
In practice, DNS Whitelisting generally means that a very small
fraction of the DNS recursive resolvers on the Internet (those in the
whitelist or ACL) will receive AAAA responses. The large majority of
DNS recursive resolvers on the Internet will therefore receive only A
resource records containing IPv4 addresses. Thus, quite simply, the
authoritative server hands out different answers depending upon who
is asking; with IPv4 and IPv6 resource records for all those the
authorized whitelist, and only IPv4 resource records for everyone
else. See Section 2.1 and Figure 1 for more details.
DNS Whitelisting also works independently of whether an authoritative
DNS server, DNS recursive resolver, or end user host uses IPv4
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transport, IPv6, or both. So, for example, whitelisting may prevent
sending AAAA responses even in those cases where the DNS recursive
resolver has queried the authoritative server over IPv6 transport, or
where the end user host's original query to the DNS recursive
resolver was over IPv6 transport. One important reason for this is
that even though the DNS recursive resolver may have no IPv6-related
impairments, this is not a reliable predictor of whether the same is
true of the end user host. This also means that a DNS whitelist can
contain both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
Finally, DNS Whitelisting could possibly be deployed in two ways:
universally on a global basis (though that would be considered
harmful and is just covered to explain why this is the case), or,
more realistically, on an ad hoc basis. Deployment on a universal
deployment basis means that DNS Whitelisting is implemented on all
authoritative DNS servers, across the entire Internet. In contrast,
deployment on an ad hoc basis means that only some authoritative DNS
servers, and perhaps even only a few, implement DNS Whitelisting.
These two potential deployment models are described in Section 5.
Specific implementations will vary from domain to domain, based on a
range of factors such as the technical capabilities of a given
domain. As such, any examples listed herein should be considered
general examples and are not intended to be exhaustive.
2.1. Description of the Operation of DNS Whitelisting
The system logic of DNS Whitelisting is as follows:
1. The authoritative DNS server for example.com receives DNS queries
for the A (IPv4) and/or AAAA (IPv6) address resource records for
the Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) www.example.com, for which
AAAA (IPv6) resource records exist.
2. The authoritative DNS server checks the IP address (IPv4, IPv6,
or both) of the DNS recursive resolver sending the AAAA (IPv6)
query against the access control list (ACL) that is the DNS
Whitelist.
3. If the DNS recursive resolver's IP address IS matched in the ACL,
then the response to that specific DNS recursive resolver can
contain AAAA (IPv6) address resource records.
4. If the DNS recursive resolver's IP address IS NOT matched in the
ACL, then the response to that specific DNS recursive resolver
cannot contain AAAA (IPv6) address resource records. In this
case, the server will likely return a response with the response
code (RCODE) being set to 0 (No Error) with an empty answer
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section for the AAAA record query.
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Caching Server 1 - IS NOT ON the DNS Whitelist |
| Caching Server 2 - IS ON the DNS Whitelist |
| Note: Transport between each host can be IPv4 or IPv6. |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+----------+ +---------------+ +---------------+
| Stub | | DNS Caching | | DNS |
| Resolver | | Server 1 | | Server |
+----------+ +---------------+ +---------------+
| DNS Query: | |
| example.com A, AAAA | |
|---------------------->| |
| | |
| | DNS Query: |
| | example.com A, AAAA |
| |------------------------>|
| | |
| | | NOT on Whitelist
| | DNS Response: |
| | example.com A |
| |<------------------------|
| | |
| DNS Response: | |
| example.com A | |
|<----------------------| |
+----------+ +---------------+ +---------------+
| Stub | | DNS Caching | | DNS |
| Resolver | | Server 2 | | Server |
+----------+ +---------------+ +---------------+
| DNS Query: | |
| example.com A, AAAA | |
|---------------------->| |
| | |
| | DNS Query: |
| | example.com A, AAAA |
| |------------------------>|
| | |
| | | IS on Whitelist
| | DNS Response: |
| | example.com A, AAAA |
| |<------------------------|
| | |
| DNS Response: | |
| example.com A, AAAA | |
|<----------------------| |
Figure 1: DNS Whitelisting Diagram
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2.2. Comparison with Blacklisting
With DNS Whitelisting, DNS recursive resolvers can receive AAAA
resource records only if they are on the whitelist. In contrast,
blacklisting would be the opposite whereby all DNS recursive
resolvers can receive AAAA resource records unless they are on the
blacklist. So a whitelist contains a list of hosts allowed
something, whereby a blacklist contains a list of hosts disallowed
something. While the distinction between the concepts of
whitelisting and blacklisting is important, this is noted
specifically since some implementers of DNS Whitelisting may choose
to transition to DNS Blacklisting before returning to a state without
address-family-related ACLs in their authoritative DNS servers. It
is unclear when and if it would be appropriate to change from
whitelisting to blacklisting. Nor is it clear how implementers will
judge the network conditions to have changed sufficiently to justify
disabling such controls.
3. Similarities to Other DNS Operations
Some aspects of DNS Whitelisting may be considered similar to other
common DNS operational techniques which are explored below.
3.1. Similarities to Split DNS
DNS Whitelisting has some similarities to so-called split DNS,
briefly described in Section 3.8 of [RFC2775]. When split DNS is
used, the authoritative DNS server returns different responses
depending upon what host has sent the query. While [RFC2775] notes
the typical use of split DNS is to provide one answer to hosts on an
Intranet and a different answer to hosts on the Internet, the essence
is that different answers are provided to hosts on different
networks. This is basically the way that DNS Whitelisting works,
whereby hosts on different networks which use different DNS recursive
resolvers, receive different answers if one DNS recursive resolver is
on the whitelist and the other is not.
In [RFC2956], Internet transparency and Internet fragmentation
concerns regarding split DNS are detailed in Section 2.1. [RFC2956]
further notes in Section 2.7, concerns regarding split DNS and that
it "makes the use of Fully Qualified Domain Names (FQDNs) as endpoint
identifiers more complex." Section 3.5 of [RFC2956] further
recommends that maintaining a stable approach to DNS operations is
key during transitions such as the one to IPv6 that is underway now,
stating that "Operational stability of DNS is paramount, especially
during a transition of the network layer, and both IPv6 and some
network address translation techniques place a heavier burden on
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DNS."
3.2. Similarities to DNS Load Balancing
DNS Whitelisting also has some similarities to DNS load balancing.
There are of course many ways that DNS load balancing can be
performed. In one example, multiple IP address resource records (A
and/or AAAA) can be added to the DNS for a given FQDN. This approach
is referred to as DNS round robin [RFC1794]. DNS round robin may
also be employed where SRV resource records are used [RFC2782].
In another example, one or more of the IP address resource records in
the DNS will direct traffic to a load balancer. That load balancer,
in turn, may be application-aware, and pass the traffic on to one or
more hosts connected to the load balancer which have different IP
addresses. In cases where private IPv4 addresses are used [RFC1918],
as well as when public IP addresses are used, those end hosts may not
necessarily be directly reachable without passing through the load
balancer first.
Additionally, a geographically-aware authoritative DNS server may be
used, as is common with Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) or Global
Load Balancing (GLB, also referred to as Global Server Load
Balancing, or GSLB), whereby the IP address resource records returned
to a resolver in response to a query will vary based on the estimated
geographic location of the resolver [Wild-Resolvers]. CDNs perform
this function in order to attempt to direct hosts to connect to the
nearest content cache. As a result, one can see some similarities
with DNS Whitelisting insofar as different IP address resource
records are selectively returned to resolvers based on the IP address
of each resolver (or other imputed factors related to that IP
address). However, what is different is that in this case the
resolvers are not deliberately blocked from receiving DNS responses
containing an entire class of addresses; this load balancing function
strives to perform a content location-improvement function and not an
access control function.
4. What Problems Are Implementers Trying To Solve?
Implementers are attempting to protect users of their domain from
having a negative experience (poor performance) when they receive DNS
response containing AAAA resource records or when attempting to use
IPv6 transport. There are two concerns which relate to this
practice; one of which relates to IPv6-related impairment and the
other which relates to the maturity or stability of IPv6 transport
for high-traffic domains. Both can negatively affect the experience
of end users.
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Not all domains may face these challenges, though some clearly do,
since the user base of each domain, traffic sources, traffic volumes,
and other factors obviously varies between domains. For example,
while some domains have implemented DNS Whitelisting, others have run
IPv6 experiments whereby they added AAAA resource records and
observed and measured errors, and then decided not to implement DNS
Whitelisting [Heise]. A more widespread such experiment was World
IPv6 Day [W6D], sponsored by the Internet Society, on June 8, 2011.
This was a unique opportunity for hundreds of domains to add AAAA
resource records to the DNS without using DNS Whitelisting, all at
the same time. Domains can run their own independent experiments in
the future, adding AAAA resource records for a period of time, and
then analyzing any impacts or effects on traffic and the experience
of end users.
4.1. Volume-Based Concerns
Some implementers are trying to gradually add IPv6 traffic to their
domain since they may find that network operations, tools, processes
and procedures are less mature for IPv6 as compared to IPv4.
Compared to domains with small to moderate traffic volumes, whether
by the count of end users or count of bytes transferred, high-traffic
domains receive such a level of usage that it is prudent to undertake
any network changes gradually or in a manner which minimizes any risk
of disruption.
For example, one can imagine for one of the top ten sites globally
that the idea of suddenly turning on a significant amount of IPv6
traffic is quite daunting. DNS Whitelisting may therefore offer such
high-traffic domains one potential method for incrementally enabling
IPv6. Thus, some implementers with high-traffic domains plan to use
DNS Whitelisting as a necessary, though temporary, risk reduction
tactic intended to ease their transition to IPv6 and minimize any
perceived risk in such a transition.
4.2. IPv6-Related Impairment
Some implementers have observed that when they added AAAA resource
records to their authoritative DNS servers in order to support IPv6
access to their content that a small fraction of end users had slow
or otherwise impaired access to a given web site with both AAAA and A
resource records. The fraction of users with such impaired access
has been estimated to be as high as 0.078% of total Internet users
[IETF-77-DNSOP] [NW-Article-DNSOP] [IPv6-Growth] [IPv6-Brokenness],
though more recent measurements indicate this is declining
[Impairment-Tracker]. In these situations, DNS recursive resolvers
are added to the DNS Whitelist only when the measured level of
impairment of the hosts using that resolver declines to some level
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acceptable by the domain.
It is not clear if the level of IPv4-related impairment is more or
less that IPv6-related impairment. As one document reviewer has
pointed out, it may simply be that websites are only measuring IPv6
impairments and not IPv4 impairments, whether because IPv6 is new or
whether those websites are simply unable to or are otherwise not in a
position to be able to measure IPv4 impairment (since this could
result in no Internet access whatsoever).
As a result of this impairment affecting end users of a given domain,
a few high-traffic domains have either implemented DNS Whitelisting
or are considering doing so [NW-Article-DNS-WL] [WL-Ops]. While it
is outside the scope of this document to explore the various reasons
why a particular user's system (host) may have impaired IPv6 access,
for the users who experience this impairment it has a very real
performance impact. It would affect access to all or most dual stack
services to which the user attempts to connect. This negative end
user experience can range from somewhat slower than usual access (as
compared to native IPv4-based access), to extremely slow access, to
no access to the domain whatsoever. In essence, whether the end user
even has an IPv6 address or not, merely by receiving a AAAA record
response the user either cannot access a FQDN or it is so slow that
the user gives up and assumes the destination is unreachable.
In addition, at least one high-traffic domain has noted that they
have received requests to not send DNS responses with AAAA resource
records to particular DNS recursive resolvers. In this case, a DNS
recursive resolver operator expressed a short-term concern that their
IPv6 network infrastructure was not yet ready to handle the large
traffic volume that may be associated with the hosts in their network
connecting to the websites of these domains. These end user networks
may also have other tools at their disposal in order to address this
concern, including applying rules to network equipment such as
routers and firewalls (this will necessarily vary by the type of
network, as well as the technologies used and the design of a given
network), as well as configuration of their DNS recursive resolvers
(though modifying or suppressing AAAA resource records in a DNSSEC-
signed domain on a Security-Aware Resolver will be problematic
Section 9.1).
It is worth noting that the IP address of a DNS recursive resolver is
not a precise indicator of the IPv6 preparedness, or lack of IPv6-
related impairment, of end user hosts which query (use) a particular
DNS recursive resolver. While the DNS recursive resolver may be an
imperfect proxy for judging IPv6 preparedness, it is at least one of
the best available methods at the current time.
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4.3. Free Versus Subscription Services
It is also worth noting the differences between domains containing
primarily subscription-based services compared to those containing
primarily free services. In the case of free services, such as
search engines, end users have no direct billing relationship with
the domain and can switch sites simply by changing the address they
enter into their browser (ignoring other value added services which
may tie a user's preference to a given domain or otherwise create
switching costs). As a result, such domains may be more sensitive to
IPv6 transition issues since their users can quickly switch to
another domain that is not using IPv6.
5. General Implementation Variations
In considering how DNS Whitelisting may emerge more widely, there are
two deployment scenarios explored below, one of which, the ad-hoc
case Section 5.2, is realistic and is happening now. The other,
universal deployment Section 5.1, is only described for the sake of
completeness, to highlight its difficulties, and to explain why it
would be considered harmful. Other possible alternative or
supplementary approaches are also outlined.
In evaluating implementing DNS Whitelisting universally and on an ad
hoc basis, it is possible that reputable third parties could create
and maintain DNS whitelists, in much the same way that blacklists are
distributed and used for reducing email spam. In the email context,
a mail operator subscribes to one or more of these lists and as such
the operational processes for additions and deletions to the list are
managed by a third party. A similar model could emerge for DNS
Whitelisting.
In either of those scenarios a DNS recursive resolver operator will
have to determine whether or not DNS Whitelisting has been
implemented for a domain, since the absence of AAAA resource records
may simply be indicative that the domain has not yet added IPv6
addressing for the domain, rather than that they have done so but are
using DNS Whitelisting. This will be challenging at scale.
5.1. Implement DNS Whitelisting Universally
One approach is to implement DNS Whitelisting universally, which
could also involve using some sort of centralized registry of DNS
Whitelisting policies, contracts, processes, or other information.
For this deployment scenario to occur, DNS Whitelisting functionality
would need to be built into all authoritative DNS server software,
and all operators of authoritative DNS servers would have to upgrade
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their software in order to enable this functionality. New IETF
Request for Comment (RFC) documents may need to be completed to
describe how to properly configure, deploy, and maintain DNS
Whitelisting across the entire Internet. As a result, it is highly
unlikely that DNS Whitelisting will become universally deployed.
Such an approach is considered harmful and problematic, and almost
certain not to happen.
5.2. Implement DNS Whitelisting On An Ad Hoc Basis
DNS Whitelisting is now being adopted on an ad hoc, or domain-by-
domain basis. Therefore, only those domains interested in DNS
Whitelisting would need to adopt the practice. Also in this
scenario, ad hoc use by a particular domain is likely to be a
temporary measure that has been adopted to ease the transition of the
domain to IPv6. A domain, particularly a high-traffic domain, may
choose to do so in order to ease their transition to IPv6 through a
selective deployment so as to minimize any risks or disruptions in
such a transition.
One benefit of DNS Whitelisting being deployed on an ad hoc basis is
that only the domains that are interested in doing so would have to
upgrade their authoritative DNS servers (or take other steps) in
order to implement DNS Whitelisting. Some domains that plan to or
already have implemented this and are manually updating their
whitelist, while others such as CDNs have discussed the possibility
of an automated method for doing so.
5.3. Do Not Implement DNS Whitelisting
As an alternative to adopting DNS Whitelisting, domains can choose
not to implement DNS Whitelisting, continuing the current predominant
authoritative DNS operational model on the Internet. It is then up
to end users with IPv6-related impairments to discover and fix those
impairments, though clearly other parties including end user host
operating system developers can play a critical role. However, the
concerns and risks related to traffic volume Section 4.1 should still
be considered since those are not directly related to such
impairments.
5.3.1. Solve Current End User IPv6 Impairments
A further extension of not implementing DNS Whitelisting, is to also
endeavor fix the underlying technical problems experienced by end
users during the transition to IPv6. A first step is to identify
which users have such impairments and then to communicate this
information to affected users. Such end user communication is likely
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to be most helpful if the end user is not only alerted to a potential
problem but is given careful and detailed advice on how to resolve
this on their own, or where they can seek help in doing so.
Section 10 may also be relevant in this case.
One challenge with this option is the potential difficulty of
motivating members of the Internet community to work collectively
towards this goal, sharing the labor, time, and costs related to such
an effort. However, World IPv6 Day [W6D] shows that such community
efforts are possible and despite any potential challenges, the
Internet community continues to work to solve end user IPv6
impairments.
However, as noted above, the concerns and risks related to traffic
volume Section 4.1 should still be considered since those are not
directly related to such impairments.
5.3.2. Gain Experience Using IPv6 Transition Names
Another alternative is for domains to gain experience using an FQDN
which has become common for domains beginning the transition to IPv6;
ipv6.example.com and www.ipv6.example.com. This can be a way for a
domain to gain IPv6 experience and increase IPv6 use on a relatively
controlled basis, and to inform any plans for DNS Whitelisting with
experience.
While this is a good first step to functionally test and prepare a
domain for IPv6, the utility of the tactic is limited since users
must know the transition name, the traffic volume will be low, and
the traffic is unlikely to be representative of the general
population of end users, among other reasons. Thus, as noted above,
the concerns and risks related to traffic volume Section 4.1 should
still be considered.
5.3.3. Implement DNS Blacklisting
Some domains may wish to be more permissive than if they adopted DNS
Whitelisting, but still have some level of control over returning
AAAA record responses. In this case an alternative may be to employ
DNS Blacklisting, which would enable all DNS recursive resolvers to
receive AAAA record responses except for the relatively small number
that are listed in the blacklist. This could, for example, enable an
implementer to only prevent such responses where there has been a
relatively high level of IPv6-related impairments, until such time as
these impairments can be fixed or otherwise meaningfully reduced to
an acceptable level.
This approach is likely to be significantly less labor intensive for
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an authoritative DNS server operator, as they would presumably focus
on a smaller number of DNS recursive resolvers than if they
implemented whitelisting. Thus, these authoritative DNS server
operators would only need to communicate with a few DNS recursive
resolver operators rather than potentially all such operators. This
should result in lower labor, systems, and process requirements.
This is not to say that there will be no time required to work with
those parties affected by a blacklist, simply that there are likely
to be fewer such interactions and that each such interaction could be
shorter in duration.
The email industry has a long experience with blacklists and, very
generally speaking, blacklists tend to be effective and well received
when it is easy to discover if a server is on a blacklist, if there
is a transparent and easily understood process for requesting removal
from a blacklist, and if the decision-making criteria for placing a
server on a blacklist is transparently disclosed and perceived as
fair.
As noted in Section 7.3.7, it is also possible that a domain may
choose to first implement DNS Whitelisting and then migrate to DNS
Blacklisting.
6. Concerns Regarding DNS Whitelisting
There is concern that the practice of DNS Whitelisting for IPv6
address resource records represents a departure from the generally
accepted practices regarding IPv4 address resource records in the DNS
on the Internet [WL-Concerns]. Generally, once an authoritative
server operator adds an A record (IPv4) to the DNS, then any DNS
recursive resolver on the Internet can receive that A record in
response to a query. This enables new server hosts that are
connected to the Internet, and for which a FQDN such as
www.example.com has been added to the DNS with an IPv4 address
record, to be almost immediately reachable by any host on the
Internet. Each end in this end-to-end model is responsible for
connecting to the Internet and once they have done so they can
connect to each other without additional impediments, middle
networks, intervening networks, or servers either knowing about all
end points or whether one is allowed to discover and contact the
other. The end result is that new server hosts become more and more
widely accessible as new networks and new hosts connect to the
Internet over time, capitalizing on and increasing so-called "network
effects" (also called network externalities).
In contrast, DNS Whitelisting may fundamentally change this model.
In the altered DNS Whitelisting end-to-end model, one end (where the
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end user is located) cannot readily discover the other end (where the
content is located), without parts of the middle (authoritative DNS
servers) making a new type of access control decision in the DNS. So
in the current IPv4-based Internet when a new server host is added to
the Internet it is generally widely available to all end user hosts
via a FQDN. When DNS Whitelisting of IPv6 resource records is used,
these new server hosts are not accessible via a FQDN by any end user
hosts until such time as the operator of the authoritative DNS
servers adds DNS recursive resolvers around the Internet to the DNS
Whitelist.
7. Implications of DNS Whitelisting
The key DNS Whitelisting implications are detailed below.
7.1. Architectural Implications
DNS Whitelisting modifies the end-to-end model and the general notion
of spontaneous interoperability of the architecture that prevails on
the Internet today. This is because this approach moves additional
access control information and policies into the middle of the DNS
resolution path of the IPv6-addressed Internet, which generally did
not exist before on the IPv4-addressed Internet, and it requires some
type of prior registration with authoritative servers. This poses
some risks noted in [RFC3724]. In explaining the history of the end-
to-end principle, [RFC1958] states that one of the goals is to
minimize the state, policies, and other functions needed in the
middle of the network in order to enable end-to-end communications on
the Internet. In this case, the middle network should be understood
to mean anything other than the end hosts involved in communicating
with one another. Some state, policies, and other functions have
always been necessary to enable such end-to-end communication, but
the goal of the approach has been to minimize this to the greatest
extent possible.
It is also possible that DNS Whitelisting could place at risk some of
the observed benefits of the end-to-end principle, as listed in
Section 4.1 of [RFC3724], such as protection of innovation.
[RFC3234] details issues and concerns regarding so-called
middleboxes, so there may also be parallel concerns with the DNS
Whitelisting approach, especially concerning modified DNS servers
noted in Section 2.16 of [RFC3234], as well as more general concerns
noted in Section 1.2 of [RFC3234] about the introduction of new
failure modes. In particular, there may be concerns that
configuration is no longer limited to two ends of a session, and that
diagnosis of failures and misconfigurations becomes more complex.
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Two additional sources worth considering as far as implications for
the end-to-end model are concerned are [Tussle] and [Rethinking]. In
[Tussle], the authors note concerns regarding the introduction of new
control points, as well as "kludges" to the DNS, as risks to the goal
of network transparency in the end-to-end model. Given the emerging
use of DNS Whitelisting [Tussle] is an interesting and relevant
document. In addition, [Rethinking] reviews similar issues that are
of interest to readers of this document.
Also, it is somewhat possible that DNS Whitelisting could affect some
of the architectural assumptions which underlie parts of Section 2 of
[RFC4213] which outlines the dual stack approach to the IPv6
transition. DNS Whitelisting could modify the behavior of the DNS,
as described in Section 2.2 of [RFC4213] and could require different
sets of DNS servers to be used for hosts that are (using terms from
that document) IPv6/IPv4 nodes, IPv4-only nodes, and IPv6-only nodes.
As such, broad use of DNS Whitelisting may necessitate the review
and/or revision (though revision is unlikely to be necessary) of
standards documents which describe dual-stack and IPv6 operating
modes, dual-stack architecture generally, and IPv6 transition
methods, including but not limited to [RFC4213].
7.2. Public IPv6 Address Reachability Implications
It is a critical to understand that the concept of reachability
described here depends upon a knowledge of an address in the DNS.
Thus, in order to establish reachability to an end point, a host is
dependent upon looking up an IP address in the DNS when a FQDN is
used. When DNS Whitelisting is used, it is quite likely that an
IPv6-enabled end user host could connect to an example server host
using the IPv6 address, even though the FQDN associated with that
server host is restricted via a DNS whitelist. Since most Internet
applications and hosts such as web servers depend upon the DNS, and
as end users connect to FQDNs such as www.example.com and do not
remember or wish to type in an IP address, the notion of reachability
described here should be understood to include knowledge of how to
associate a name with a network address.
The predominant experience of end user hosts and servers on the IPv4-
addressed Internet today is that when a new server with a public IPv4
address is added to the DNS, that a FQDN is immediately useful for
reaching it. This is a generalization and in Section 3 there are
examples of common cases where this may not necessarily be the case.
For the purposes of this argument, that concept of accessibility is
described as "pervasive reachability". It has so far been assumed
that the same expectations of pervasive reachability would exist in
the IPv6-addressed Internet. However, if DNS Whitelisting is
deployed, this will not be the case since only end user hosts using
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DNS recursive resolvers that are included in the ACL of a given
domain using DNS Whitelisting would be able to reach new servers in
that given domain via IPv6 addresses. The expectation of any end
user host being able to connect to any server (essentially both
hosts, just at either end of the network), defined here as "pervasive
reachability", will change to "restricted reachability" with IPv6.
Establishing DNS Whitelisting as an accepted practice in the early
phases of mass IPv6 deployment could establish it as an integral part
of how IPv6 DNS resource records are deployed globally. This risks
DNS Whitelisting living on for many years as a key foundational
element of domain name management on the Internet.
7.3. Operational Implications
This section explores some of the operational implications which may
occur as a result of, are related to, or become necessary when
engaging in the practice of DNS Whitelisting.
7.3.1. De-Whitelisting May Occur
It is possible for a DNS recursive resolver added to a whitelist to
then be removed from the whitelist, also known as de-whitelisting.
Since de-whitelisting can occur, through a decision by the
authoritative server operator, the domain owner, or even due to a
technical error, an operator of a DNS recursive resolver will have
new operational and monitoring requirements and/or needs as noted in
Section 7.3.3, Section 7.3.4, Section 7.3.6, and Section 7.5. One
particular risk is that, especially when a high-traffic domain de-
whitelists a large network, this may cause a sudden and dramatic
change to networks since a large volume of traffic will then switch
from IPv6 to IPv4. This can have dramatic effects on those being de-
whitelisted as well as on other interconnected networks. In some
cases, IPv4 network links may rapidly become congested and users of
affected networks will experience network access impairments well
beyond the domain which performed the de-whitelisting. Thus, once
"operational stability" has been achieved between a whitelisting and
whitelisted party, then de-whitelisting should generally not occur
except in cases of operational emergencies, and there should be
opportunities for joint troubleshooting or at least for advance
warning to affected parties.
7.3.2. Authoritative DNS Server Operational Implications
DNS Whitelisting serves as a critical infrastructure service; to be
useful it needs careful and extensive administration, monitoring and
operation. Each new and essential mechanism creates substantial
follow-on support costs.
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Operators of authoritative servers (which are frequently
authoritative for multiple domain names) will need to maintain an ACL
on a server-wide basis affecting all domains, or on a domain-by-
domain basis. As a result, operational practices and software
capabilities may need to be developed in order to support such
functionality. In addition, processes may need to be put in place to
protect against inadvertently adding or removing IP addresses, as
well as systems and/or processes to respond to such incidents if and
when they occur. For example, a system may be needed to record DNS
Whitelisting requests, report on their status along a workflow, add
IP addresses when whitelisting has been approved, remove IP addresses
when they have been de-whitelisted, log the personnel involved and
timing of changes, schedule changes to occur in the future, and to
roll back any inadvertent changes.
Operators may also need implement new forms of monitoring in order to
apply change control, as noted briefly in Section 7.3.4.
It is important for operators of authoritative servers to recognize
that the operational burden is likely to increase dramatically over
time, as more and more networks transition to IPv6. As a result, the
volume of new DNS Whitelisting requests will increase over time,
potentially at an extraordinary growth rate, which will place an
increasing burden on personnel, systems, and/or processes. Operators
should also consider that any supporting systems, including the
authoritative servers themselves, may experience reduced performance
when a DNS whitelist becomes quite large.
7.3.3. DNS Recursive Resolver Server Operational Implications
For operators of DNS recursive resolvers, coping with DNS
Whitelisting becomes expensive in time and personnel as the practice
scales up. These operators include ISPs, enterprises, universities,
governments; a wide range of organization types with a range of DNS-
related expertise. They will need to implement new forms of
monitoring, as noted briefly in Section 7.3.4. But more critically,
such operators will need to add people, processes, and systems in
order to manage large numbers of DNS Whitelisting applications.
Since there is no common method for determining whether or not a
domain is engaged in DNS Whitelisting, operators will have to apply
to be whitelisted for a domain based upon one or more end user
requests, which means systems, processes, and personnel for handling
and responding to those requests will also be necessary.
When operators apply for DNS Whitelisting for all domains, that may
mean doing so for all registered domains. Thus, some system would
have to be developed to discover whether each domain has been
whitelisted or not, which is touched on in Section 5 and may vary
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depending upon whether DNS Whitelisting is universally deployed or is
deployed on an ad hoc basis.
These operators (of DNS recursive resolvers) will need to develop
processes and systems to track the status of all DNS Whitelisting
applications, respond to requests for additional information related
to these applications, determine when and if applications have been
denied, manage appeals, and track any de-whitelisting actions.
Given the large number of domains in existence, the ease with which a
new domain can be added, and the continued strong growth in the
numbers of new domains, readers should not underestimate the
potential significance in personnel and expense that this could
represent for such operators. In addition, it is likely that systems
and personnel may also be needed to handle new end user requests for
domains for which to apply for DNS Whitelisting, and/or inquiries
into the status of a whitelisting application, reports of de-
whitelisting incidents, general inquiries related to DNS
Whitelisting, and requests for DNS Whitelisting-related
troubleshooting by these end users.
7.3.4. Monitoring Implications
Once a DNS recursive resolver has been whitelisted for a particular
domain, then the operator of that DNS recursive resolver may need to
implement monitoring in order to detect the possible loss of DNS
Whitelisting in the future. This DNS recursive resolver operator
could configure a monitor to check for a AAAA response in the
whitelisted domain, as a check to validate continued status on the
DNS whitelist. The monitor could then trigger an alert if at some
point the AAAA responses were no longer received, so that operations
personnel could begin troubleshooting, as outlined in Section 7.3.6.
Also, authoritative DNS server operators are likely to need to
implement new forms of monitoring. In this case, they may desire to
monitor for significant changes in the size of the whitelist within a
certain period of time, which might be indicative of a technical
error such as the entire ACL being removed. Authoritative DNS server
operators may also wish to monitor their workflow process for
reviewing and acting upon DNS Whitelisting applications and appeals,
potentially measuring and reporting on service level commitments
regarding the time an application or appeal can remain at each step
of the process, regardless of whether or not such information is
shared with parties other than that authoritative DNS server
operator.
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7.3.5. Implications of Operational Momentum
It seems plausible that once DNS Whitelisting is implemented it will
be very difficult to deprecate such technical and operational
practices. This assumption is based on an understanding of human
nature, not to mention physics. For example, as Sir Isaac Newton
noted, "Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in
that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it"
[Motion]. Thus, once DNS Whitelisting is implemented it is quite
likely that it would take considerable effort to deprecate the
practice and remove it everywhere on the Internet; it may otherwise
simply remain in place in perpetuity. To illustrate this point, one
could consider for example that there are many email servers
continuing to attempt to query anti-spam DNS blocklists which have
long ago ceased to exist.
7.3.6. Troubleshooting Implications
The implications of DNS whitelisted present many challenges, as
detailed throughout Section 7. These challenges may negatively
affect the end users' ability to troubleshoot, as well as that of DNS
recursive resolver operators, ISPs, content providers, domain owners
(where they may be different from the operator of the authoritative
DNS server for their domain), and other third parties. This may make
the process of determining why a server is not reachable via a FQDN
significantly more complex and time-consuming.
7.3.7. Additional Implications If Deployed On An Ad Hoc Basis
As more domains choose to implement DNS Whitelisting, and more
networks become IPv6-capable and request to be whitelisted, scaling
up operational processes, monitoring, and ACL updates will become
more difficult. The increased rate of change and increased size of
whitelists will increase the likelihood of configuration and other
operational errors.
It is unclear when and if it would be appropriate to change from
whitelisting to blacklisting. It also seems unlikely for such a
change from whitelisting to blacklisting to be coordinated across the
Internet, so such a change to blacklisting will likely occur on an
ad-hoc basis as well (if at all).
Finally, some implementers consider DNS Whitelisting to be a
temporary measure. As such, it is not clear how these implementers
will judge the network conditions to have changed sufficiently to
justify disabling DNS Whitelisting (or blacklisting, or other AAAA
resource record access controls) and/or what the process and timing
will be in order to discontinue this practice.
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7.4. Homogeneity May Be Encouraged
A broad trend on the Internet is a move toward more heterogeneity.
One manifestation of this is in an increasing number, variety, and
customization of end user hosts, including home networks, operating
systems, client software, home network devices, and personal
computing devices. This trend appears to have had a positive effect
on the development and growth of the Internet and has enabled end
users to connect any technically compliant device or use any
technically compatible software to connect to the Internet. Not only
does this trend towards greater heterogeneity reduce the control
which is exerted in the middle of the network, described positively
in [Tussle], [Rethinking], and [RFC3724], but it also appears to help
to enable greater and more rapid innovation at the edge of the
network.
Some forms of so-called "network neutrality" principles around the
world include the notion that any IP-capable device should be able to
connect to a network, encouraging heterogeneity. These principles
are often explicitly encouraged by application providers, though some
of these same providers may be using DNS Whitelisting. This is
ironic, as one implication of the adoption of DNS Whitelisting is
that it could encourage a move back towards homogeneity resulting
from greater control over devices in order to attempt to enforce
technical requirements intended to reduce IPv6-related impairments.
This return to an environment of more homogenous and/or controlled
end user hosts could have unintended side effects on and counter-
productive implications for future innovation at the edge of the
network.
7.5. Technology Policy Implications
A key technology policy implication concerns the policies and
processes related to reviewing and making decisions on DNS
Whitelisting applications for a domain, as well as making any
possible de-whitelisting decisons. Important questions may include
whether these policies have been fully and transparently disclosed,
are non-discriminatory, and are not anti-competitive. Key questions
here may include whether appeals are allowed, what the process is,
what the expected turn around time is, and whether the appeal will be
handled by an independent third party.
It is also conceivable that whitelisting and de-whitelisting
decisions could be quite sensitive to concerned parties beyond the
operator of the domain operator and the operator of the DNS recursive
resolver, including end users, application developers, content
providers, advertisers, public policy groups, governments, and other
entities. These concerned parties may seek to become involved in or
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express opinions concerning whitelisting and/or de-whitelisting
decisions.
A final concern is that decisions relating to whitelisting and de-
whitelisting may occur as an expression of other commercial,
governmental, and/or cultural conflicts, given the new control point
which has been established with DNS Whitelisting. For example, in
one imagined scenario, a domain could withhold adding a network to
their DNS Whitelisting unless that network agreed to some sort of
financial payment, legal agreement, agreement to sever a relationship
with a competitor of the domain, etc. In another example, a music-
oriented domain may be engaged in some sort of dispute with an
academic network concerning copyright infringement concerns within
that network, and may choose to de-whitelist that network as a
negotiating technique in some sort of commercial discussion. In a
final example, a major email domain may choose to de-whitelist a
network due to that network sending some large volume of spam. Thus,
it seems possible that whitelisting and de-whitelisting could become
a vehicle for adjudicating other disputes, and that this may well
have consequences for end users which are affected by such decisions
and are unable to express a strong voice in such decisions.
7.6. IPv6 Adoption Implications
As noted in Section 6, the implications of DNS Whitelisting may drive
end users and/or networks to delay, postpone, or cancel adoption of
IPv6, or to actively seek alternatives to it. Such alternatives may
include the use of multi-layer or large scale network address
translation (NAT) techniques, which these parties may decide to
pursue on a long-term basis to avoid the perceived costs and
aggravations related to DNS Whitelisting. This could of course come
at the very time that the Internet community is trying to get these
very same parties interested in IPv6 and motivated to begin the
transition to IPv6. As a result, parties that are likely to be
concerned over the negative implications of DNS Whitelisting could
logically be concerned of the negative effects that this practice
could have on the adoption of IPv6 if it became widespread.
At the same time, as noted in Section 4, some high-traffic domains
may find the prospect of transitioning to IPv6 daunting without
having some short-term ability to incrementally control the amount
and source of IPv6 traffic to their domains. Lacking such controls,
some domains may choose to substantially delay their transition to
IPv6.
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7.7. Implications with Poor IPv4 and Good IPv6 Transport
It is possible that there could be situations where the differing
quality of the IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity of an end user could cause
complications in accessing content which is in a whitelisted domain,
when the end user's DNS recursive resolver is not on that whitelist.
While today most end users' IPv4 connectivity is typically superior
to IPv6 connectivity (if such connectivity exists at all), there
could be implications when the reverse is true and and end user has
markedly superior IPv6 connectivity as compared to IPv4. This is
admittedly theoretical but could become a factor as the transition to
IPv6 continues and IPv4 address availability within networks becomes
strained.
For example, in one possible scenario, a user is issued IPv6
addresses by their ISP and has a home network and devices or
operating systems which fully support IPv6. As a result this
theoretical user has very good IPv6 connectivity. However, this end
user's ISP may have exhausted their available pool of unique IPv4
address, and so that ISP uses NAT in order to reuse IPv4 addresses.
So for IPv4 content, the end user must send their IPv4 traffic
through some additional network element (e.g. NAT, proxy, tunnel
server). Use of this additional network element may cause the end
user to experience sub-optimal IPv4 connectivity when certain
protocols or applications are used. This user then has good IPv6
connectivity but impaired IPv4 connectivity. Furthermore, this end
user's DNS recursive resolver is not whitelisted by the authoritative
server for a domain that the user is trying to access, meaning the
end user only gets A record responses for their impaired IPv4
transport rather than also AAAA record responses for their stable and
well-performing IPv6 transport. Thus, the user's poor IPv4
connectivity situation is potentially exacerbated by not having
access to a given domain's IPv6 content since they must use the
address family with relatively poor performance.
7.8. Implications for Users of Third-Party DNS Recursive Resolvers
In most cases it is assumed that end users will make use of DNS
recursive resolvers which are operated by their access network
provider, whether that is an ISP, campus network, enterprise network,
or some other type of network. However there are also cases where an
end user has changed their DNS server IP addresses in their device's
operating system to those of a third party which operates DNS
recursive resolvers independently of end user access networks.
In these cases, an authoritative DNS server may receive a query from
a DNS recursive resolver in one network, though the end user sending
the original query is in an entirely different network. It may
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therefore be more challenging for a DNS Whitelist implementer to
determine the level of IPv6-related impairment when such third-party
DNS recursive resolvers are used, given the wide variety of end user
access networks which may be used and that this mix may change in
unpredictable ways over time.
There may also be cases where end users' assigned DNS recursive
resolvers have not been whitelisted for a particular domain, but
where the end user tries to switch to a third-party DNS recursive
resolver that has been whitelisted. While in most cases the end user
will be able to switch to use that third-party's DNS servers, some
specialized access networks, such as in hotels and conference
centers, may prevent using third-party DNS servers. In these cases,
end users may be frustrated at their inability to access certain
content over IPv6, resulting in complaints to both a particular
domain as well as the access network operator.
8. Is DNS Whitelisting a Recommended Practice?
Opinions in the Internet community concerning whether or not DNS
Whitelisting is a recommended practice are understandably quite
varied. However, there is clear consensus that DNS Whitelisting can
be a useful tactic a domain may choose to use as they transition to
IPv6. In particular, some high-traffic domains view DNS Whitelisting
as one of the few practical and low-risk approaches enabling them to
transition to IPv6, without which their transition may not take place
for some time. However, there is also consensus is that this
practice is workable only in the short-term and that it will not
scale over the long-term. Thus, some domains may find DNS
Whitelisting a beneficial temporary tactic in their transition to
IPv6. Such temporary use during the transition to IPv6 is broadly
accepted within the community, so long as it does not become a long-
term practice.
9. Security Considerations
If DNS Whitelisting is adopted, then organizations which apply DNS
Whitelisting policies in their authoritative servers should have
procedures and systems which do not allow unauthorized parties to
either remove whitelisted DNS recursive resolvers from the whitelist
or add non-whitelisted DNS recursive resolvers to the whitelist, just
as all configuration settings for name servers should be protected by
appropriate procedures and systems. Should such unauthorized
additions or removals from the whitelist can be quite damaging, and
result in content providers and/or ISPs to incur substantial support
costs resulting from end user and/or customer contacts. As such,
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great care must be taken to control access to the whitelist for an
authoritative server.
In addition, two other key security-related issues should be taken
into consideration:
9.1. DNSSEC Considerations
DNS security extensions defined in [RFC4033], [RFC4034], and
[RFC4035] use cryptographic digital signatures to provide origin
authentication and integrity assurance for DNS data. This is done by
creating signatures for DNS data on a Security-Aware Authoritative
Name Server that can be used by Security-Aware Resolvers to verify
the answers. Since DNS Whitelisting is implemented on an
authoritative DNS server, which provides different answers depending
upon which DNS resolver has sent a query, the DNSSEC chain of trust
is not altered. Even though the authoritative DNS server will not
always return a AAAA resource record when one exists, respective A
resource records and AAAA resource records can and should both be
signed. Therefore there are no DNSSEC implications per se. However,
any implementer of DNS Whitelisting should be careful if they
implement both DNSSEC signing of their domain and also DNS
Whitelisting of that same domain. Specifically, those domains should
ensure that resource records are being appropriately and reliably
signed, which may present modest incremental operational and/or
technical challenges.
However, as noted in fourth paragraph of Section 4.2, end user
networks may also choose to implement tools at their disposal in
order to address IPv6-related impairments. One of those tools could
involve unspecified changes to the configuration of their DNS
recursive resolvers. If those are Security-Aware Resolvers,
modifying or suppressing AAAA resource records for a DNSSEC-signed
domain will be problematic and could break the chain of trust
established with DNSSEC.
9.2. Authoritative DNS Response Consistency Considerations
In addition to the considerations raised in Section 9.1, it is
conceivable that security concerns may arise when end users or other
parties notice that the responses sent from an authoritative DNS
server appear to vary from one network or one DNS recursive resolver
to another. This may give rise to concerns that, since the
authoritative responses vary that there is some sort of security
issue and/or some or none of the responses can be trusted. While
this may seem a somewhat obscure concern, domains nonetheless may
wish to consider this when contemplating whether or not to pursue DNS
Whitelisting.
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10. Privacy Considerations
As noted in Section 5.3.1, there may be methods to detect IPv6-
related impairments for a particular end user. For example, this may
be possible when an end user visits the website of a particular
domain. In that example, there are likely no privacy considerations
in automatically communicating to that end user that the domain has
detected a particular impairment. However, if that domain decided to
share information concerning that particular end user with their
network operator or another party, then the visited domain may wish
to in some manner advise the end user of this or otherwise seek to
obtain the user's consent to such information sharing. This may be
achieved in a wide variety of ways, from presenting a message asking
the user for consent (which will of course help them solve a
technical problem of which they are likely unaware) to adding this to
a domain's website terms of use / service. Such information sharing
and communication of such sharing to end users may well vary by
geographic area and/or legal jurisdiction. Thus, a domain should
consider any potential privacy issues these sorts of scenarios.
To the extent that domains or network operators decide to publish
impairment statistics, they should not identify individual hosts,
host identifiers, or users.
11. IANA Considerations
There are no IANA considerations in this document.
12. Contributors
The following people made significant textual contributions to this
document and/or played an important role in the development and
evolution of this document:
- John Brzozowski
- Chris Griffiths
- Tom Klieber
- Yiu Lee
- Rich Woundy
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13. Acknowledgements
The author and contributors also wish to acknowledge the assistance
of the following individuals or groups. Some of these people
provided helpful and important guidance in the development of this
document and/or in the development of the concepts covered in this
document. Other people assisted by performing a detailed review of
this document, and then providing feedback and constructive criticism
for revisions to this document, or engaged in a healthy debate over
the subject of the document. All of this was helpful and therefore
the following individuals merit acknowledgement:
- Bernard Aboba
- Jari Arkko
- Frank Bulk
- Brian Carpenter
- Lorenzo Colitti
- Alissa Cooper
- Dave Crocker
- Ralph Droms
- Wesley Eddy
- J.D. Falk
- Adrian Farrel
- Stephen Farrell
- Tony Finch
- Karsten Fleischhauer
- Wesley George
- Philip Homburg
- Jerry Huang
- Ray Hunter
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- Joel Jaeggli
- Erik Kline
- Suresh Krishnan
- Victor Kuarsingh
- John Leslie
- John Mann
- Danny McPherson
- Milo Medin
- Martin Millnert
- Russ Mundy
- Thomas Narten
- Pekka Savola
- Robert Sparks
- Barbara Stark
- Joe Touch
- Hannes Tschofenig
- Tina Tsou
- Members of the Broadband Internet Technical Advisory Group (BITAG)
14. References
14.1. Normative References
[RFC1035] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.
[RFC1794] Brisco, T., "DNS Support for Load Balancing", RFC 1794,
April 1995.
[RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and
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E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",
BCP 5, RFC 1918, February 1996.
[RFC1958] Carpenter, B., "Architectural Principles of the Internet",
RFC 1958, June 1996.
[RFC2775] Carpenter, B., "Internet Transparency", RFC 2775,
February 2000.
[RFC2782] Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
February 2000.
[RFC2956] Kaat, M., "Overview of 1999 IAB Network Layer Workshop",
RFC 2956, October 2000.
[RFC3234] Carpenter, B. and S. Brim, "Middleboxes: Taxonomy and
Issues", RFC 3234, February 2002.
[RFC3724] Kempf, J., Austein, R., and IAB, "The Rise of the Middle
and the Future of End-to-End: Reflections on the Evolution
of the Internet Architecture", RFC 3724, March 2004.
[RFC4033] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",
RFC 4033, March 2005.
[RFC4034] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
Rose, "Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions",
RFC 4034, March 2005.
[RFC4035] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
Rose, "Protocol Modifications for the DNS Security
Extensions", RFC 4035, March 2005.
[RFC4213] Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition Mechanisms
for IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 4213, October 2005.
14.2. Informative References
[Heise] Heise.de, "The Big IPv6 Experiment", Heise.de
Website http://www.h-online.com, January 2011, <http://
www.h-online.com/features/
The-big-IPv6-experiment-1165042.html>.
[IETF-77-DNSOP]
Gashinsky, I., "IPv6 & recursive resolvers: How do we make
the transition less painful?", IETF 77 DNS Operations
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Working Group, March 2010,
<http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/77/slides/dnsop-7.pdf>.
[IPv6-Brokenness]
Anderson, T., "Measuring and Combating IPv6 Brokenness",
Reseaux IP Europeens (RIPE) 61st Meeting, November 2010,
<http://ripe61.ripe.net/presentations/162-ripe61.pdf>.
[IPv6-Growth]
Colitti, L., Gunderson, S., Kline, E., and T. Refice,
"Evaluating IPv6 adoption in the Internet", Passive and
Active Management (PAM) Conference 2010, April 2010,
<http://www.google.com/research/pubs/archive/36240.pdf>.
[Impairment-Tracker]
Anderson, T., "IPv6 dual-stack client loss in Norway",
Website , May 2011, <http://www.fud.no/ipv6/>.
[Motion] Newton, I., "Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy
(Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica)",
Principia Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy
(Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica), July 1687,
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton's_laws_of_motion>.
[NW-Article-DNS-WL]
Marsan, C., "Google, Microsoft, Netflix in talks to create
shared list of IPv6 users", Network World , March 2010, <h
ttp://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/
032610-dns-ipv6-whitelist.html>.
[NW-Article-DNSOP]
Marsan, C., "Yahoo proposes 'really ugly hack' to DNS",
Network World , March 2010, <http://www.networkworld.com/
news/2010/032610-yahoo-dns.html>.
[Rethinking]
Blumenthal, M. and D. Clark, "Rethinking the design of the
Internet: The end to end arguments vs. the brave new
world", ACM Transactions on Internet Technology Volume 1,
Number 1, Pages 70-109, August 2001, <http://
dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/1519/
TPRC_Clark_Blumenthal.pdf>.
[Tussle] Braden, R., Clark, D., Sollins, K., and J. Wroclawski,
"Tussle in Cyberspace: Defining Tomorrow's Internet",
Proceedings of ACM Sigcomm 2002, August 2002, <http://
groups.csail.mit.edu/ana/Publications/PubPDFs/
Tussle2002.pdf>.
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[W6D] The Internet Society, "World IPv6 Day - June 8, 2011",
Internet Society Website http://www.isoc.org,
January 2011, <http://isoc.org/wp/worldipv6day/>.
[WL-Concerns]
Brzozowski, J., Griffiths, C., Klieber, T., Lee, Y.,
Livingood, J., and R. Woundy, "IPv6 DNS Whitelisting -
Could It Hinder IPv6 Adoption?", ISOC Internet Society
IPv6 Deployment Workshop, April 2010, <http://
www.comcast6.net/
IPv6_DNS_Whitelisting_Concerns_20100416.pdf>.
[WL-Ops] Kline, E., "IPv6 Whitelist Operations", Google Google IPv6
Implementors Conference, June 2010, <http://
sites.google.com/site/ipv6implementors/2010/agenda/
IPv6_Whitelist_Operations.pdf>.
[Wild-Resolvers]
Ager, B., Smaragdakis, G., Muhlbauer, W., and S. Uhlig,
"Comparing DNS Resolvers in the Wild", ACM Sigcomm
Internet Measurement Conference 2010, November 2010,
<http://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2010/papers/p15.pdf>.
Appendix A. Document Change Log
[RFC Editor: This section is to be removed before publication]
-06: Removed the Open Issue #8 concerning the document name, at the
direction of Joel Jaeggli. Removed Open Issue #2 from J.D. Falk and
removed Open Issue #3 from Ray Hunter, as confirmed on the v6ops WG
mailing list. Revised the Abstract and Intro as recommended by Tony
Finch. Per Dave Crocker, updated the diagram following remedial
ASCII art assistance, added a reference regarding IPv4-brokenness
statistics. Removed Open Issue #1, after validating proper reference
placement and removing NAT444 reference. Updates per Ralph Droms'
review for the IESG. Closed Open Issue #4, Per Joe Touch, moved
section 8 to just after section 3 - and also moved up section 6 and
merged it. Closed Open Issue #5, per Dave Crocker and John Leslie,
simplifying the document more, consolidating sections, etc. Closed
Open Issue #6. Closed Open Issue #7, per Jari Arkko, ensuring all
motivations are accounted for, etc. Closed Open Issue #9, per
Stephen Farrell, re. World IPv6 Day (retained reference but re-
worded those sections). Removed the happy-eyeballs reference since
this was an informative reference and the draft could be delayed due
to that dependency. ALL OPEN ITEMS ARE NOW CLOSED.
-05: Additional changes requested by Stephen Farrell intended to
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close his Discuss on the I-D. These changes were in Sections 6.2 and
8.3. Also shortened non-RFC references at Stephen's request.
-04: Made changed based on feedback received during IESG review.
This does NOT include updated from the more general IETF last call -
that will be in a -05 version of the document. Per Ralph Droms,
change the title of 6.2 from "Likely Deployment Scenarios" to
"General Implementation Variations", as well as changes to improve
the understanding of sentences in Sections 2, 3, 4, and 8.2. Per
Adrian Farrel, made a minor change to Section 3. Per Robert Sparks,
to make clear in Section 2 that whitelisting is done on authoritative
servers and not DNS recursive resolvers, and to improve Section 8.3
and add a reference to I-D.ietf-v6ops-happy-eyeballs. Per Wesley
Eddy, updated Section 7.3.2 to address operational concerns and re-
titled Section 8 from "Solutions" to "General Implementation
Variations". Per Stephen Farrell, added text to Section 8.1 and
Section 6.2, with a reference to 8.1 in the Introduction, to say that
universal deployment is considered harmful. Added text to Section 2
per the v6ops list discussion to indicate that whitelisting is
independent of the IP address family of the end user host or
resolver. There was also discussion with the IESG to change the name
of the draft to IPv6 DNS Resolver Whitelisting or IPv6 AAAA DNS
Resolver Whitelisting (as suggested originally by John Mann) but
there was not a strong consensus to do so. Added a new section 7.7,
at the suggestion of Philip Homburg. Per Joe Touch, added a new
Section 8.4 on blacklisting as an alternative, mentioned blacklisting
in Section 2, added a new Section 7.8 on the use of 3rd party
resolvers, and updated section 6.2 to change Internet Draft documents
to RFCs. Minor changes from Barbara Stark. Changes to the Privacy
Considerations section based on feedback from Alissa Cooper. Changed
"highly-trafficked" domains to "high-traffic" domains. Per Bernard
Aboba, added text noting that a whitelist may be manually or
automatically updated, contrasting whitelisting with blacklisting,
reorganized Section 3, added a note on multiple clearinghouses being
possible. Per Pekka Savola, added a note regarding multiple
clearinghouses to the Ad Hoc section, corrected grammar in Section
7.5, reworded Section 7.3.7, corrected the year in a RIPE reference
citation. Also incorporated general feedback from the Broadband
Internet Technical Advisory Group. Per Jari Arkko, simplified the
introduction to the Implications section, played down possible
impacts on RFC 4213, added caveats to Section 8.3.2 on the utility of
transition names, re-wrote Section 9. Updated the Abstract and
Introduction, per errors noted by Tony Finch. Updated the Security
Considerations based on feedback from Russ Mundy. Per Ray Hunter,
added some text to the De-Whitelisting implications section regarding
effects on networks of switching from IPv6 to IPv4. Updated 7.3.1
per additional feedback from Karsten Fleischhauer. Per Dave Crocker,
added a complete description of the practice to the Abstract, added a
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note to the Introduction that the operational impacts are
particularly acute at scale, added text to Intro to make clear this
practice affects all protocols and not just HTTP, added a new query/
response diagram, added text to the Abstract and Introduction noting
that this is an IPv6 transition mechanism, and too many other changes
to list.
-03: Several changes suggested by Joel Jaeggli at the end of WGLC.
This involved swapping the order of Section 6.1 and 6.2, among other
changes to make the document more readable, understandable, and
tonally balanced. As suggested by Karsten Fleischhauer, added a
reference to RFC 4213 in Section 7.1, as well as other suggestions to
that section. As suggested by Tina Tsou, made some changes to the
DNSSEC section regarding signing. As suggested by Suresh Krishnan,
made several changes to improve various sections of the document,
such as adding an alternative concerning the use of ipv6.domain,
improving the system logic section, and shortening the reference
titles. As suggested by Thomas Narten, added some text regarding the
imperfection of making judgements as to end user host impairments
based upon the DNS recursive resolver's IP and/or network. Finally,
made sure that variations in the use of 'records' and 'resource
records' was updated to 'resource records' for uniformity and to
avoid confusion.
-02: Called for and closed out feedback on dnsop and v6ops mailing
lists. Closed out open feedback items from IETF 79. Cleared I-D
nits issues, added a section on whether or not this is recommended,
made language less company-specific based on feedback from Martin
Millnert, Wes George, and Victor Kuarsingh. Also mentioned World
IPv6 Day per Wes George's suggestion. Added references to the ISOC
World IPv6 Day and the Heise.de test at the suggestion of Jerry
Huang, as well as an additional implication in 7.3.7. Made any
speculation on IPv4 impairment noted explicitly as such, per feedback
from Martin Millnert. Added a reference to DNS SRV in the load
balancing section. Added various other references. Numerous changes
suggested by John Brzozowski in several sections, to clean up the
document. Moved up the section on why whitelisting is performed to
make the document flow more logically. Added a note in the ad hoc
deployment scenario explaining that a deployment may be temporary,
and including more of the perceived benefits of this tactic. Added a
Privacy Considerations section to address end-user detection and
communication.
-01: Incorporated feedback received from Brian Carpenter (from 10/19/
2010), Frank Bulk (from 11/8/2010), and Erik Kline (from 10/1/2010).
Also added an informative reference at the suggestion of Wes George
(from from 10/22/2010). Closed out numerous editorial notes, and
made a variety of other changes.
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-00: First version published as a v6ops WG draft. The preceding
individual draft was
draft-livingood-dns-whitelisting-implications-01. IMPORTANT TO NOTE
that no changes have been made yet based on WG and list feedback.
These are in queue for a -01 update.
Appendix B. Open Issues
[RFC Editor: This section is to be removed before publication]
Author's Address
Jason Livingood
Comcast Cable Communications
One Comcast Center
1701 John F. Kennedy Boulevard
Philadelphia, PA 19103
US
Email: jason_livingood@cable.comcast.com
URI: http://www.comcast.com
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