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Document Action: 'IPv6 Host Configuration of DNS Server Information Approaches' to Informational RFC
The IESG has approved the following document:
- 'IPv6 Host Configuration of DNS Server Information Approaches '
<draft-ietf-dnsop-ipv6-dns-configuration-06.txt> as an Informational RFC
This document is the product of the Domain Name System Operations Working
Group.
The IESG contact persons are David Kessens and Bert Wijnen.
A URL of this Internet-Draft is:
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-dnsop-ipv6-dns-configuration-06.t
xt
Technical Summary
This document describes three approaches for IPv6 recursive DNS
server address configuration. It details the operational attributes
of three solutions: RA option, DHCPv6 option, and Well-known anycast
addresses for recursive DNS servers.
Working Group Summary
This document is a product of the dnsop working group.
Protocol Quality
This document was reviewed by David Kessens for the IESG.
IESG Note
This document describes three different approaches for the
configuration of DNS name resolution server information in IPv6
hosts.
There is not an IETF consensus on which approach is preferred.
The analysis in this document was developed by the proponents for
each approach and does not represent an IETF consensus.
The 'RA option' and 'Well-known anycast' approaches described in
this document are not standardized. Consequently the analysis for
these approaches might not be completely applicable to any specific
proposal that might be proposed in the future.
Note to RFC Editor
In 'Abstract':
DELETE:
Therefore, this document will give the audience a guideline for IPv6 host
DNS configuration.
---
In section '3.1 RA Option':
DELETE:
However, it is worth noting that some link layers, such as Wireless
LANs (e.g., IEEE 802.11 a/b/g), do not support reliable multicast,
which means that they cannot guarantee the timely delivery of RA
messages [25]-[28]. This is discussed in Appendix A.
---
In section '3.1.1 Advantages':
DELETE:
This works well on links that support
broadcast reliably (e.g., Ethernet LANs) but not necessarily on
other links (e.g., Wireless LANs): Refer to Appendix A.
---
Same section, directly after the sentences that should be deleted:
OLD:
Also, this works
NEW:
This works
---
In section '3.1.3 Observations':
OLD:
needed, but exclude public WLAN hot spots.
NEW:
needed.
---
DELETE:
Note
The observation section is based on what the proponents of each
approach think makes a good overall solution.
---
In section '3.2.1 Advantages':
DELETE:
This capability is important in some network deployments such as service
provider networks or WiFi hot spots.
---
In section '3.2.3 Observations':
OLD:
on a cell phone network
NEW:
in a mobile phone network
---
In section '3.3.1 Advantages':
OLD:
Another advantage is that the approach needs to configure DNS servers as a
router, but nothing else.
NEW:
Another advantage is that this approach only needs configuration of the DNS
server as a router (or configuration of a proxy router).
---
At the end of section '3.3.2 Disadvantages':
ADD:
In addition, routers at the boundary of the "site" might need the
configuration of route filters to prevent providing DNS services to parties
outside the "site" and the possibility of denial of service attacks on the
internal DNS infrastructure.
---
In section '6.3 Well-known Anycast Addresses':
OLD:
Well-known anycast addresses does not require configuration security since
there is no protocol [9].
The DNS server with the preconfigured addresses are still reasonably
reliable, if local environment is reasonably secure, that is, there is no
active attackers receiving queries to the anycast addresses of the servers
and reply to them.
NEW:
The Well-known anycast addresses approach is not a protocol thus there is no
need to secure the protocol itself.
However, denial of service attacks on the DNS resolver system might be
easier to achieve as the anycast addresses used are by definition well
known.
---
DELETE:
'Appendix A. Link-layer Multicast Acknowledgements for RA Option'.
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