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rfc:rfc8777



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) J. Holland Request for Comments: 8777 Akamai Technologies, Inc. Updates: 7450 April 2020 Category: Standards Track ISSN: 2070-1721

    DNS Reverse IP Automatic Multicast Tunneling (AMT) Discovery

Abstract

 This document updates RFC 7450, "Automatic Multicast Tunneling" (or
 AMT), by modifying the relay discovery process.  A new DNS resource
 record named AMTRELAY is defined for publishing AMT relays for
 source-specific multicast channels.  The reverse IP DNS zone for a
 multicast sender's IP address is configured to use AMTRELAY resource
 records to advertise a set of AMT relays that can receive and forward
 multicast traffic from that sender over an AMT tunnel.  Other
 extensions and clarifications to the relay discovery process are also
 defined.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8777.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2020 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
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
   1.1.  Background
   1.2.  Terminology
     1.2.1.  Relays and Gateways
     1.2.2.  Definitions
     1.2.3.  Requirements Language
 2.  Relay Discovery Overview
   2.1.  Basic Mechanics
   2.2.  Signaling and Discovery
   2.3.  Example Deployments
     2.3.1.  Example Receiving Networks
     2.3.2.  Example Sending Networks
 3.  Relay Discovery Operation
   3.1.  Optimal Relay Selection
     3.1.1.  Overview
     3.1.2.  Preference Ordering
     3.1.3.  Connecting to Multiple Relays
   3.2.  Happy Eyeballs
     3.2.1.  Overview
     3.2.2.  Algorithm Guidelines
     3.2.3.  Connection Definition
   3.3.  Guidelines for Restarting Discovery
     3.3.1.  Overview
     3.3.2.  Updates to Restarting Events
     3.3.3.  Tunnel Stability
     3.3.4.  Traffic Health
     3.3.5.  Relay Loaded or Shutting Down
     3.3.6.  Relay Discovery Messages vs. Restarting Discovery
     3.3.7.  Independent Discovery per Traffic Source
   3.4.  DNS Configuration
   3.5.  Waiting for DNS Resolution
 4.  AMTRELAY Resource Record Definition
   4.1.  AMTRELAY RRType
   4.2.  AMTRELAY RData Format
     4.2.1.  RData Format - Precedence
     4.2.2.  RData Format - Discovery Optional (D-bit)
     4.2.3.  RData Format - Type
     4.2.4.  RData Format - Relay
   4.3.  AMTRELAY Record Presentation Format
     4.3.1.  Representation of AMTRELAY RRs
     4.3.2.  Examples
 5.  IANA Considerations
 6.  Security Considerations
   6.1.  Use of AMT
   6.2.  Record-Spoofing
   6.3.  Congestion
 7.  References
   7.1.  Normative References
   7.2.  Informative References
 Appendix A.  Unknown RRType Construction
 Acknowledgements
 Author's Address

1. Introduction

 This document defines DNS Reverse IP AMT Discovery (DRIAD), a
 mechanism for AMT gateways to discover AMT relays that are capable of
 forwarding multicast traffic from a known source IP address.
 AMT (Automatic Multicast Tunneling) is defined in [RFC7450] and
 provides a method to transport multicast traffic over a unicast
 tunnel in order to traverse network segments that are not multicast
 capable.
 Section 4.1.5 of [RFC7450] explains that the relay selection process
 for AMT is intended to be more flexible than the particular discovery
 method described in that document.  That section further explains
 that the selection process might need to depend on the source of the
 multicast traffic in some deployments, since a relay must be able to
 receive multicast traffic from the desired source in order to forward
 it.
 Section 4.1.5 of [RFC7450] goes on to suggest DNS-based queries as a
 possible solution: DRIAD is DNS based.  This solution also addresses
 the relay discovery issues in the "Disadvantages of this
 configuration" lists in Sections 3.3 and 3.4 of [RFC8313].
 The goal for DRIAD is to enable multicast connectivity between
 separate multicast-enabled networks without preconfiguring any
 peering arrangements between the networks when neither the sending
 nor the receiving network is connected to a multicast-enabled
 backbone.
 This document extends the relay discovery procedure described in
 Section 5.2.3.4 of [RFC7450].

1.1. Background

 The reader is assumed to be familiar with the basic DNS concepts
 described in [RFC1034], [RFC1035], and the subsequent documents that
 update them, particularly [RFC2181].
 The reader is also assumed to be familiar with the concepts and
 terminology regarding source-specific multicast as described in
 [RFC4607] and the use of Internet Group Management Protocol Version 3
 (IGMPv3) [RFC3376] and Multicast Listener Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2)
 [RFC3810] for group management of source-specific multicast channels,
 as described in [RFC4604].
 The reader should also be familiar with AMT, particularly the
 terminology listed in Sections 3.2 and 3.3 of [RFC7450].

1.2. Terminology

1.2.1. Relays and Gateways

 When reading this document, it's especially helpful to recall that
 once an AMT tunnel is established, the relay receives native
 multicast traffic and sends unicast tunnel-encapsulated traffic to
 the gateway.  The gateway receives the tunnel-encapsulated packets,
 decapsulates them, and forwards them as native multicast packets, as
 illustrated in Figure 1.
   Multicast  +-----------+  Unicast  +-------------+  Multicast
  >---------> | AMT relay | >=======> | AMT gateway | >--------->
              +-----------+           +-------------+
                   Figure 1: AMT Tunnel Illustration

1.2.2. Definitions

   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |       Term | Definition                                      |
   +============+=================================================+
   |      (S,G) | A source-specific multicast channel, as         |
   |            | described in [RFC4607].  A pair of IP addresses |
   |            | with a source host IP and destination group IP. |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |       CMTS | Cable Modem Termination System                  |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |  discovery | A broker or load balancer for AMT relay         |
   |     broker | discovery, as mentioned in Section 4.2.1.1 of   |
   |            | [RFC7450].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   | downstream | Further from the source of traffic, as          |
   |            | described in [RFC7450].                         |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |       FQDN | Fully Qualified Domain Name, as described in    |
   |            | [RFC8499].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |    gateway | An AMT gateway, as described in [RFC7450].      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |     L flag | The "Limit" flag described in Section 5.1.4.4   |
   |            | of [RFC7450].                                   |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |        OLT | Optical Line Terminal                           |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |      relay | An AMT relay, as described in [RFC7450].        |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |        RPF | Reverse Path Forwarding, as described in        |
   |            | [RFC5110].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |         RR | A DNS Resource Record, as described in          |
   |            | [RFC1034].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |     RRType | A DNS Resource Record Type, as described in     |
   |            | [RFC1034].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |        SSM | Source-specific multicast, as described in      |
   |            | [RFC4607].                                      |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
   |   upstream | Closer to the source of traffic, as described   |
   |            | in [RFC7450].                                   |
   +------------+-------------------------------------------------+
                         Table 1: Definitions

1.2.3. Requirements Language

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.

2. Relay Discovery Overview

2.1. Basic Mechanics

 The AMTRELAY resource record (RR) defined in this document is used to
 publish the IP address or domain name of a set of AMT relays or
 discovery brokers that can receive, encapsulate, and forward
 multicast traffic from a particular sender.
 The sender is the owner of the RR and configures the zone so that it
 contains a set of RRs that provide the addresses or domain names of
 AMT relays (or discovery brokers that advertise relays) that can
 receive multicast IP traffic from that sender.
 This enables AMT gateways in remote networks to discover an AMT relay
 that is capable of forwarding traffic from the sender.  This, in
 turn, enables those AMT gateways to receive the multicast traffic
 tunneled over a unicast AMT tunnel from those relays and then pass
 the multicast packets into networks or applications that are using
 the gateway to subscribe to traffic from that sender.
 This mechanism only works for source-specific multicast (SSM)
 channels.  The source address of the (S,G) is reversed and used as an
 index into one of the reverse mapping trees (in-addr.arpa for IPv4,
 as described in Section 3.5 of [RFC1035], or ip6.arpa for IPv6, as
 described in Section 2.5 of [RFC3596]).
 This mechanism should be treated as an extension of the AMT relay
 discovery procedure described in Section 5.2.3.4 of [RFC7450].  A
 gateway that supports this method of AMT relay discovery SHOULD use
 this method whenever it's performing the relay discovery procedure,
 the source IP addresses for desired (S,G)s are known to the gateway,
 and conditions match the requirements outlined in Section 3.1.
 Some detailed example use cases are provided in Section 2.3, and
 other applicable example topologies appear in Sections 3.3, 3.4, and
 3.5 of [RFC8313].

2.2. Signaling and Discovery

 This section describes a typical example of the end-to-end process
 for signaling a receiver's join of an SSM channel that relies on an
 AMTRELAY RR.
 The example in Figure 2 contains two multicast-enabled networks that
 are both connected to the internet with non-multicast-capable links
 and which have no direct association with each other.
 A content provider operates a sender, which is a source of multicast
 traffic inside a multicast-capable network.
 An end user who is a customer of the content provider has a
 multicast-capable Internet Service Provider (ISP), which operates a
 receiving network that uses an AMT gateway.  The AMT gateway is DRIAD
 capable.
 The content provider provides the user with a receiving application
 that tries to subscribe to at least one (S,G).  This receiving
 application could, for example, be a file transfer system using File
 Delivery over Unidirectional Transport (FLUTE) [RFC6726], a live
 video stream using RTP [RFC3550], or any other application that might
 subscribe to an SSM channel.
                   +---------------+
                   |    Sender     |
    |    |         |  2001:db8::a  |
    |    |         +---------------+
    |Data|                 |
    |Flow|      Multicast  |
   \|    |/      Network   |
    \    /                 |        5: Propagate RPF for Join(S,G)
     \  /          +---------------+
      \/           |   AMT relay   |
                   | 2001:db8:c::f |
                   +---------------+
                           |        4: Gateway connects to Relay,
                                       sends Join(S,G) over tunnel
                           |
                  Unicast
                   Tunnel  |        3: --> DNS Query: type=AMTRELAY,
                                   /        a.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
       ^                   |      /         0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.
       |                         /          8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa
       |                   |    /      <-- Response:
   Join/Leave       +-------------+         AMTRELAY=2001:db8:c::f
    Signals         | AMT gateway |
       |            +-------------+
       |                   |        2: Propagate RPF for Join(S,G)
       |        Multicast  |
                 Network   |
                           |     1: Join(S=2001:db8::a,G=ff3e::8000:d)
                    +-------------+
                    |   Receiver  |
                    |  (end user) |
                    +-------------+
                       Figure 2: DRIAD Messaging
 In this simple example, the sender IP is 2001:db8::a, which is
 sending traffic to the group address ff3e::8000:d, and the relay IP
 is 2001:db8::c:f.
 The content provider has previously configured the DNS zone that
 contains the reverse IP domain name for the sender's IP address so
 that it provides an AMTRELAY RR with the relay's IP address (see
 Section 4.3 for details about the AMTRELAY RR format and semantics).
 As described in Section 2.5 of [RFC3596], the reverse IP FQDN of the
 sender's address "2001:db8::a" is:
  a.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.
                                                                 arpa.
 The sequence of events depicted in Figure 2 is as follows:
 1.  The end user starts the app, which issues a join to the (S,G):
     (2001:db8::a, ff3e::8000:d).
 2.  The join propagates with RPF through the receiver's multicast-
     enabled network with PIM [RFC7761] or another multicast routing
     mechanism until the AMT gateway receives a signal to join the
     (S,G).
 3.  The AMT gateway performs a reverse DNS lookup for the AMTRELAY
     RRType by sending an AMTRELAY RRType query for the reverse IP
     domain name for the sender's source IP address (the S from the
     (S,G)).
     The DNS resolver for the AMT gateway uses ordinary DNS recursive
     resolution until it has the authoritative result that the content
     provider configured, which informs the AMT gateway that the relay
     address is 2001:db8::c:f.
 4.  The AMT gateway performs AMT handshakes with the AMT relay as
     described in Section 4 of [RFC7450], then forwards a membership
     report to the relay, indicating subscription to the (S,G).
 5.  The relay propagates the join through its network toward the
     sender and then forwards the appropriate AMT-encapsulated traffic
     to the gateway, which decapsulates and forwards it as a native
     multicast through its downstream network to the end user.
 In the case of an IPv4 (S,G), the only difference in the AMT relay
 discovery process is the use of the in-addr.arpa reverse IP domain
 name, as described in Section 3.5 of [RFC1035], instead of the
 in6.arpa domain name.  For example, if the (S,G) is (198.51.100.12,
 232.252.0.2), the reverse IP FQDN for the AMTRELAY query would be
 "12.100.51.198.in-addr.arpa.".
 Note that the address family of the AMT tunnel is independent of the
 address family for the multicast traffic.

2.3. Example Deployments

2.3.1. Example Receiving Networks

2.3.1.1. Internet Service Provider

 One example of a receiving network is an Internet Service Provider
 (ISP) that offers multicast ingest services to its subscribers,
 illustrated in Figure 3.
 In the example network below, subscribers can join (S,G)s with MLDv2
 or IGMPv3 as described in [RFC4604], and the AMT gateway in this ISP
 can receive and forward multicast traffic from one of the example
 sending networks in Section 2.3.2 by discovering the appropriate AMT
 relays with a DNS lookup for the AMTRELAY RR with the reverse IP of
 the source in the (S,G).
                      Internet
                   ^            ^      Multicast-enabled
                   |            |      Receiving Network
            +------|------------|-------------------------+
            |      |            |                         |
            |  +--------+   +--------+    +=========+     |
            |  | Border |---| Border |    |   AMT   |     |
            |  | Router |   | Router |    | gateway |     |
            |  +--------+   +--------+    +=========+     |
            |      |            |              |          |
            |      +-----+------+-----------+--+          |
            |            |                  |             |
            |      +-------------+    +-------------+     |
            |      | Agg Routers | .. | Agg Routers |     |
            |      +-------------+    +-------------+     |
            |            /     \ \     /         \        |
            | +---------------+         +---------------+ |
            | |Access Systems | ....... |Access Systems | |
            | |(CMTS/OLT/etc.)|         |(CMTS/OLT/etc.)| |
            | +---------------+         +---------------+ |
            |        |                        |           |
            +--------|------------------------|-----------+
                     |                        |
               +---+-+-+---+---+        +---+-+-+---+---+
               |   |   |   |   |        |   |   |   |   |
              /-\ /-\ /-\ /-\ /-\      /-\ /-\ /-\ /-\ /-\
              |_| |_| |_| |_| |_|      |_| |_| |_| |_| |_|
                             Subscribers
                    Figure 3: Receiving ISP Example

2.3.1.2. Small Office

 Another example receiving network is a small branch office that
 regularly accesses some multicast content, illustrated in Figure 4.
 This office has desktop devices that need to receive some multicast
 traffic, so an AMT gateway runs on a LAN with these devices to pull
 traffic in through a non-multicast next hop.
 The office also hosts some mobile devices that have AMT gateway
 instances embedded inside apps in order to receive multicast traffic
 over their non-multicast wireless LAN.  (Note that the "Legacy
 Router" is a simplification that's meant to describe a variety of
 possible conditions; for example, it could be a device providing a
 split-tunnel VPN as described in [RFC7359], deliberately excluding
 multicast traffic for a VPN tunnel, rather than a device that is
 incapable of multicast forwarding.)
                   Internet
                (non-multicast)
                       ^
                       |                  Office Network
            +----------|----------------------------------+
            |          |                                  |
            |    +---------------+ (Wifi)   Mobile apps   |
            |    | Modem+ | Wifi | - - - -  w/ embedded   |
            |    | Router |  AP  |          AMT gateways  |
            |    +---------------+                        |
            |          |                                  |
            |          |                                  |
            |     +----------------+                      |
            |     | Legacy Router  |                      |
            |     |   (unicast)    |                      |
            |     +----------------+                      |
            |      /        |      \                      |
            |     /         |       \                     |
            | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+=========+  |
            | | Phones | | ConfRm | | Desks  |   AMT   |  |
            | | subnet | | subnet | | subnet | gateway |  |
            | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+=========+  |
            |                                             |
            +---------------------------------------------+
                Figure 4: Small Office (No Multicast Up)
 By adding an AMT relay to this office network as in Figure 5, it's
 possible to make use of multicast services from the example
 multicast-capable ISP in Section 2.3.1.1.
             Multicast-capable ISP
                       ^
                       |                  Office Network
            +----------|----------------------------------+
            |          |                                  |
            |    +---------------+ (Wifi)   Mobile apps   |
            |    | Modem+ | Wifi | - - - -  w/ embedded   |
            |    | Router |  AP  |          AMT gateways  |
            |    +---------------+                        |
            |          |               +=======+          |
            |          +---Wired LAN---|  AMT  |          |
            |          |               | relay |          |
            |     +----------------+   +=======+          |
            |     | Legacy Router  |                      |
            |     |   (unicast)    |                      |
            |     +----------------+                      |
            |      /        |      \                      |
            |     /         |       \                     |
            | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+=========+  |
            | | Phones | | ConfRm | | Desks  |   AMT   |  |
            | | subnet | | subnet | | subnet | gateway |  |
            | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+=========+  |
            |                                             |
            +---------------------------------------------+
                     Figure 5: Small Office Example
 When multicast-capable networks are chained like this, with a network
 like the one in Figure 5 receiving Internet services from a
 multicast-capable network like the one in Figure 3, it's important
 for AMT gateways to reach the more local AMT relay in order to avoid
 accidentally tunneling multicast traffic from a more distant AMT
 relay with unicast and failing to utilize the multicast transport
 capabilities of the network in Figure 3.

2.3.2. Example Sending Networks

2.3.2.1. Sender-Controlled Relays

 When a sender network is also operating AMT relays to distribute
 multicast traffic, as in Figure 6, each address could appear as an
 AMTRELAY RR for the reverse IP of the sender.  Alternately, one or
 more domain names could appear in AMTRELAY RRs, and the AMT relay
 addresses can be discovered by finding A or AAAA records from those
 domain names.
                                        Sender Network
                  +-----------------------------------+
                  |                                   |
                  | +--------+   +=======+  +=======+ |
                  | | Sender |   |  AMT  |  |  AMT  | |
                  | +--------+   | relay |  | relay | |
                  |     |        +=======+  +=======+ |
                  |     |            |          |     |
                  |     +-----+------+----------+     |
                  |           |                       |
                  +-----------|-----------------------+
                              v
                           Internet
                        (non-multicast)
                     Figure 6: Small Office Example

2.3.2.2. Provider-Controlled Relays

 When an ISP offers a service to transmit outbound multicast traffic
 through a forwarding network, it might also offer AMT relays in order
 to reach receivers without multicast connectivity to the forwarding
 network, as in Figure 7.  In this case, it's recommended that the ISP
 also provide at least one domain name for the AMT relays for use with
 the AMTRELAY RR.
 When the sender wishes to use the relays provided by the ISP for
 forwarding multicast traffic, an AMTRELAY RR should be configured to
 use the domain name provided by the ISP to allow for address
 reassignment of the relays without forcing the sender to reconfigure
 the corresponding AMTRELAY RRs.
                    +--------+
                    | Sender |
                    +---+----+        Multicast-enabled
                        |              Sending Network
            +-----------|-------------------------------+
            |           v                               |
            |    +------------+     +=======+ +=======+ |
            |    | Agg Router |     |  AMT  | |  AMT  | |
            |    +------------+     | relay | | relay | |
            |           |           +=======+ +=======+ |
            |           |               |         |     |
            |     +-----+------+--------+---------+     |
            |     |            |                        |
            | +--------+   +--------+                   |
            | | Border |---| Border |                   |
            | | Router |   | Router |                   |
            | +--------+   +--------+                   |
            +-----|------------|------------------------+
                  |            |
                  v            v
                     Internet
                  (non-multicast)
                     Figure 7: Sending ISP Example

3. Relay Discovery Operation

3.1. Optimal Relay Selection

3.1.1. Overview

 The reverse source IP DNS query of an AMTRELAY RR is a good way for a
 gateway to discover a relay that is known to the sender.
 However, it is *not* necessarily a good way to discover the best
 relay for that gateway to use, because the RR will only provide
 information about relays known to the source.
 If there is an upstream relay in a network that is topologically
 closer to the gateway and is able to receive and forward multicast
 traffic from the sender, that relay is better for the gateway to use
 since more of the network path uses native multicast, allowing more
 chances for packet replication.  But since that relay is not known to
 the sender, it won't be advertised in the sender's reverse IP DNS
 record.  An example network that illustrates this scenario is
 outlined in Figure 5 from Section 2.3.1.2.
 It's only appropriate for an AMT gateway to discover an AMT relay by
 querying an AMTRELAY RR owned by a sender when all of these
 conditions are met:
 1.  The gateway needs to propagate a join of an (S,G) over AMT
     because in the gateway's network, no RPF next hop toward the
     source can propagate a native multicast join of the (S,G);
 2.  The gateway is not already connected to a relay that forwards
     multicast traffic from the source of the (S,G);
 3.  The gateway is not configured to use a particular IP address for
     AMT discovery, or a relay discovered with that IP is not able to
     forward traffic from the source of the (S,G);
 4.  The gateway is not able to find an upstream AMT relay with DNS-
     based Service Discovery (DNS-SD) [RFC6763] using "_amt._udp" as
     the Service section of the queries, or a relay discovered this
     way is not able to forward traffic from the source of the (S,G)
     (as described in Section 3.3.4.1 and 3.3.5); and
 5.  The gateway is not able to find an upstream AMT relay with the
     well-known anycast addresses from Section 7 of [RFC7450].
 When all of the above conditions are met, the gateway has no path
 within its local network that can receive multicast traffic from the
 source IP of the (S,G).
 In this situation, the best way to find a relay that can forward the
 required traffic is to use information that comes from the operator
 of the sender.  When the sender has configured an AMTRELAY RR,
 gateways can use the DRIAD mechanism defined in this document to
 discover the relay information provided by the sender.
 Note that the above conditions are designed to prefer the use of a
 local AMT relay if one can be discovered.  However, note also that
 the network upstream of the locally discovered relay would still need
 to receive traffic from the sender of the (S,G) in order to forward
 it.  Therefore, unless the upstream network contains the sender or
 has a multicast-capable peering with a network that can forward
 traffic from the sender, the upstream network might still use AMT to
 ingest the traffic from a network that can receive traffic from the
 sender.  If this is the case, the upstream AMT gateway could still
 rely on the AMTRELAY RR provided by the sender, even though the
 AMTRELAY RR is not directly used by gateways topologically closer to
 the receivers.  For a concrete example of such a situation, consider
 the network in Figure 5 connected as one of the customers to the
 network in Figure 3.

3.1.2. Preference Ordering

 This section defines a preference ordering for relay addresses during
 the relay discovery process.  Gateways are encouraged to implement a
 Happy Eyeballs [RFC8305] algorithm to try candidate relays
 concurrently (see Section 3.2), but even gateways that do not
 implement a Happy Eyeballs algorithm SHOULD use this ordering, except
 as noted.
 When establishing an AMT tunnel to forward multicast data, it's very
 important for the discovery process to prioritize network topology
 considerations ahead of address selection considerations in order to
 gain the packet replication benefits from using multicast instead of
 unicast tunneling in the multicast-capable portions of the network
 path.
 The intent of the advice and requirements in this section is to
 describe how a gateway should make use of the concurrency provided by
 a Happy Eyeballs algorithm to reduce the join latency while still
 prioritizing network efficiency considerations over address selection
 considerations.
 Section 4 of [RFC8305] requires a Happy Eyeballs algorithm to sort
 the addresses with the Destination Address Selection defined in
 Section 6 of [RFC6724], but for the above reasons, that requirement
 is superseded in the AMT discovery use case by the following
 considerations:
  • Prefer Local Relays
    Figure 5 and Section 2.3.1.2 provide a motivating example to
    prefer DNS-SD [RFC6763] for discovery strictly ahead of using the
    AMTRELAY RR controlled by the sender for AMT discovery.
    For this reason, it's RECOMMENDED that AMT gateways by default
    perform service discovery using DNS Service Discovery (DNS-SD)
    [RFC6763] for _amt._udp.<domain> (with <domain> chosen as
    described in Section 11 of [RFC6763]) and use the AMT relays
    discovered that way in preference to AMT relays discoverable via
    the mechanism defined in this document (DRIAD).
  • Prefer Relays Managed by the Containing Network
    When no local relay is discoverable with DNS-SD, it still may be
    the case that a relay local to the receiver is operated by the
    network providing transit services to the receiver.
    In this case, when the network cannot make the relay discoverable
    via DNS-SD, the network SHOULD use the well-known anycast
    addresses from Section 7 of [RFC7450] to route discovery traffic
    to the relay most appropriate to the receiver's gateway.
    Accordingly, the gateway SHOULD by default discover a relay with
    the well-known AMT anycast addresses as the next-best option after
    DNS-SD when searching for a local relay.
  • Let Sender Manage Relay Provisioning
    A related motivating example is provided by considering a sender
    whose traffic can be forwarded by relays in a sender-controlled
    network like Figure 6 in Section 2.3.2.1 and by relays in a
    provider-controlled network like Figure 7 in Section 2.3.2.2, with
    different cost and scalability profiles for the different options.
    In this example about the sending-side network, the precedence
    field described in Section 4.2.1 is a critical method of control
    so that senders can provide the appropriate guidance to gateways
    during the discovery process in order to manage load and failover
    scenarios in a manner that operates well with the sender's
    provisioning strategy for horizontal scaling of AMT relays.
    Therefore, after DNS-SD, the precedence from the RR MUST be used
    for sorting preference ahead of the Destination Address Selection
    ordering from Section 6 of [RFC6724] so that only relay IPs with
    the same precedence are directly compared according to the
    Destination Address Selection ordering.
 Accordingly, AMT gateways SHOULD by default prefer relays in this
 order:
 1.  DNS-SD
 2.  Anycast addresses from Section 7 of [RFC7450]
 3.  DRIAD
 This default behavior MAY be overridden by administrative
 configuration where other behavior is more appropriate for the
 gateway within its network.
 Among relay addresses that have an equivalent preference as described
 above, a Happy Eyeballs algorithm for AMT SHOULD use the Destination
 Address Selection defined in Section 6 of [RFC6724].
 Among relay addresses that still have an equivalent preference after
 the above orderings, a gateway SHOULD make a non-deterministic choice
 (such as a pseudorandom selection) for relay preference ordering in
 order to support load balancing by DNS configurations that provide
 many relay options.
 The gateway MAY introduce a bias in the non-deterministic choice
 according to information that indicates expected benefits from
 selecting some relays in preference to others.  Details about the
 structure and collection of this information are out of scope for
 this document but could, for example, be obtained by out-of-band
 methods or from a historical record about network topology, timing
 information, or the response to a probing mechanism.  A gateway in
 possession of such information MAY use it to prefer topologically
 closer relays.
 Within the above constraints, gateways MAY make use of other
 considerations from Section 4 of [RFC8305], such as the address
 family interleaving strategies, to produce a final ordering of
 candidate relay addresses.
 Note also that certain relay addresses might be excluded from
 consideration by the hold-down timers described in Section 3.3.4.1 or
 3.3.5.  These relays constitute "unusable destinations" under Rule 1
 of the Destination Address Selection and are also not part of the
 superseding considerations described above.
 The discovery and connection process for the relay addresses in the
 above described ordering MAY operate in parallel, subject to delays
 prescribed by the Happy Eyeballs requirements described in Section 5
 of [RFC8305] for successively launched concurrent connection
 attempts.

3.1.3. Connecting to Multiple Relays

 In some deployments, it may be useful for a gateway to connect to
 multiple upstream relays and subscribe to the same traffic in order
 to support an active/active failover model.  A gateway SHOULD NOT be
 configured to do so without guaranteeing that adequate bandwidth is
 available.
 A gateway configured to do this SHOULD still use the same preference-
 ordering logic from Section 3.1.2 for each connection.  (Note that
 this ordering allows for overriding by explicit administrative
 configuration where required.)

3.2. Happy Eyeballs

3.2.1. Overview

 Often, multiple choices of relay will exist for a gateway using DRIAD
 for relay discovery.  Happy Eyeballs [RFC8305] provides a widely
 deployed and generalizable strategy for probing multiple possible
 connections in parallel.  Therefore, it is RECOMMENDED that DRIAD-
 capable gateways implement a Happy Eyeballs algorithm to support fast
 discovery of the most preferred available relay by probing multiple
 relays concurrently.
 The parallel discovery logic of a Happy Eyeballs algorithm serves to
 reduce join latency for the initial join of an SSM channel.  This
 section and the preference ordering of relays defined in
 Section 3.1.2 together provide guidance on use of a Happy Eyeballs
 algorithm for the case of establishing AMT connections.
 Note that according to the definition in Section 3.2.3 of this
 document, establishing the connection occurs before sending a
 membership report.  As described in Section 5 of [RFC8305], only one
 of the successful connections will be used, and the others are all
 canceled or ignored.  In the context of an AMT connection, this means
 the gateway will send the membership reports that subscribe to
 traffic only for the chosen connection after the Happy Eyeballs
 algorithm resolves.

3.2.2. Algorithm Guidelines

 During the "Initiation of asynchronous DNS queries" phase described
 in Section 3 of [RFC8305], a gateway attempts to resolve the domain
 names listed in Section 3.1.  This consists of resolving the SRV
 queries for DNS-SD domains for the AMT service, as well as the
 AMTRELAY query for the reverse IP domain defined in this document.
 Each of the SRV and AMTRELAY responses might contain:
  • one or more IP addresses (as with type 1 or type 2 AMTRELAY

responses or when the SRV Additional Data section of the SRV

    response contains the address records for the target, as urged by
    [RFC2782]), or
  • only domain names (as with type 3 responses from Section 4.2.3 or

an SRV response without an additional data section).

 When present, IP addresses in the initial response provide resolved
 destination address candidates for the "Sorting of resolved
 destination addresses" phase described in Section 4 of [RFC8305]),
 whereas domain names without IP addresses in the initial response
 result in another set of queries for AAAA and A records, whose
 responses provide the candidate resolved destination addresses.
 Since the SRV or AMTRELAY responses don't have a bound on the count
 of queries that might be generated aside from the bounds imposed by
 the DNS resolver, it's important for the gateway to provide a rate
 limit on the DNS queries.  The DNS query functionality is expected to
 follow ordinary standards and best practices for DNS clients.  A
 gateway MAY use an existing DNS client implementation that does so
 and MAY rely on that client's rate-limiting logic to avoid issuing
 excessive queries.  Otherwise, a gateway MUST provide a rate limit
 for the DNS queries, and its default settings SHOULD NOT permit more
 than 10 queries for any 100-millisecond period (though this MAY be
 overridable by the administrative configuration).
 As the resolved IP addresses arrive, the Happy Eyeballs algorithm
 sorts them according to the requirements and recommendations given in
 Section 3.1.2 and attempts connections with the corresponding relays
 under the algorithm restrictions and guidelines given in [RFC8305]
 for the "Establishment of one connection, which cancels all other
 attempts" phase.  As described in Section 3 of [RFC8305], DNS
 resolution is treated as asynchronous, and connection initiation does
 not wait for lagging DNS responses.

3.2.3. Connection Definition

 Section 5 of [RFC8305] non-normatively describes a successful
 connection attempt as "generally when the TCP handshake completes".
 There is no normative definition of a connection in the AMT
 specification [RFC7450], and there is no TCP connection involved in
 an AMT tunnel.
 However, the concept of an AMT connection in the context of a Happy
 Eyeballs algorithm is a useful one, and so this section provides the
 following normative definition:
  • An AMT connection is established successfully when the gateway

receives from a newly discovered relay a valid Membership Query

    message (Section 5.1.4 of [RFC7450]) that does not have the L flag
    set.
 See Section 3.3.5 of this document for further information about the
 relevance of the L flag to the establishment of a Happy Eyeballs
 connection.  See Section 3.3.4 for an overview of how to respond if
 the connection does not provide multicast connectivity to the source.
 To "cancel" this kind of AMT connection for the Happy Eyeballs
 algorithm, a gateway that has not sent a membership report with a
 subscription would simply stop sending AMT packets for that
 connection.  A gateway only sends a membership report to a connection
 it has chosen as the most preferred available connection.

3.3. Guidelines for Restarting Discovery

3.3.1. Overview

 It's expected that gateways deployed in different environments will
 use a variety of heuristics to decide when it's appropriate to
 restart the relay discovery process in order to meet different
 performance goals (for example, to fulfill different kinds of service
 level agreements).
 In general, restarting the discovery process is always safe for the
 gateway and relay during any of the events listed in this section but
 may cause a disruption in the forwarded traffic if the discovery
 process results in choosing a different relay because this changes
 the RPF forwarding tree for the multicast traffic upstream of the
 gateway.  This is likely to result in some dropped or duplicated
 packets from channels actively being tunneled from the old relay to
 the gateway.
 The degree of impact on the traffic from choosing a different relay
 may depend on network conditions between the gateway and the new
 relay, as well as the network conditions and topology between the
 sender and the new relay, as this may cause the relay to propagate a
 new RPF join toward the sender.
 Balancing the expected impact on the tunneled traffic against likely
 or observed problems with an existing connection to the relay is the
 goal of the heuristics that gateways use to determine when to restart
 the discovery process.
 The non-normative advice in this section should be treated as
 guidelines to operators and implementors working with AMT systems
 that can use DRIAD as part of the relay discovery process.

3.3.2. Updates to Restarting Events

 Section 5.2.3.4.1 of [RFC7450] lists several events that may cause a
 gateway to start or restart the discovery procedure.
 This document provides some updates and recommendations regarding the
 handling of these and similar events.  The first five events are
 copied here and numbered for easier reference, and the remaining four
 events are newly added for consideration in this document:
 1.  When a gateway pseudo-interface is started (enabled).
 2.  When the gateway wishes to report a group subscription when none
     currently exists.
 3.  Before sending the next Request message in a membership update
     cycle.
 4.  After the gateway fails to receive a response to a Request
     message.
 5.  After the gateway receives a Membership Query message with the L
     flag set to 1.
 6.  When the gateway wishes to report an (S,G) subscription with a
     source address that does not currently have other group
     subscriptions.
 7.  When there is a network change detected; for example, when a
     gateway is operating inside an end user device or application and
     the device joins a different network or when the domain portion
     of a DNS-SD domain name changes in response to a DHCP message or
     administrative configuration.
 8.  When substantial loss, persistent congestion, or network overload
     is detected in the stream of AMT packets from a relay.
 9.  When the gateway has reported one or more (S,G) subscriptions but
     no traffic is received from the source for some timeout (see
     Section 3.3.4.1).
 This list is not exhaustive, nor are any of the listed events
 strictly required to always force a restart of the discovery process.
 Note that during event #1, a gateway may use DNS-SD but does not have
 sufficient information to use DRIAD, since no source is known.

3.3.3. Tunnel Stability

 In general, subscribers to active traffic flows that are being
 forwarded by an AMT gateway are less likely to experience a
 degradation in service (for example, from missing or duplicated
 packets) when the gateway continues using the same relay as long as
 the relay is not overloaded and the network conditions remain stable.
 Therefore, gateways SHOULD avoid performing a full restart of the
 discovery process during routine cases of event #3 (sending a new
 Request message), since it occurs frequently in normal operation.
 However, see Sections 3.3.4, 3.3.6, and 3.3.4.3 for more information
 about exceptional cases when it may be appropriate to use event #3.

3.3.4. Traffic Health

3.3.4.1. Absence of Traffic

 If a gateway indicates one or more (S,G) subscriptions in a
 Membership Update message but no traffic for any of the (S,G)s is
 received in a reasonable time, it's appropriate for the gateway to
 restart the discovery process.
 If the gateway restarts the discovery process multiple times
 consecutively for this reason, the timeout period SHOULD be adjusted
 to provide a random exponential back-off.
 The RECOMMENDED timeout is a random value in the range
 [initial_timeout, MIN(initial_timeout * 2^retry_count,
 maximum_timeout)], with a RECOMMENDED initial_timeout of 4 seconds
 and a RECOMMENDED maximum_timeout of 120 seconds (which is the
 recommended minimum NAT mapping timeout described in [RFC4787]).
 Note that the recommended initial_timeout is larger than the initial
 timeout recommended in the similar algorithm from Section 5.2.3.4.3
 of [RFC7450].  This is to provide time for RPF Join propagation in
 the sending network.  Although the timeout values may be
 administratively adjusted to support performance requirements,
 operators are advised to consider the possibility of join propagation
 delays between the sender and the relay when choosing an appropriate
 timeout value.
 Gateways restarting the discovery process because of an absence of
 traffic MUST use a hold-down timer that removes this relay from
 consideration during subsequent rounds of discovery while active.
 The hold-down SHOULD last for no less than 3 minutes and no more than
 10 minutes.

3.3.4.2. Loss and Congestion

 In some gateway deployments, it is also feasible to monitor the
 health of traffic flows through the gateway -- for example, by
 detecting the rate of packet loss by communicating out of band with
 receivers or monitoring the packets of known protocols with sequence
 numbers.  Where feasible, it's encouraged for gateways to use such
 traffic health information to trigger a restart of the discovery
 process during event #3 (before sending a new Request message).
 However, if a transient network event that affects the tunneled
 multicast stream -- as opposed to an event that affects the tunnel
 connection between the relay and gateway -- occurs, poor health
 detection could be triggered for many gateways simultaneously.  In
 this situation, adding a random delay to avoid synchronized
 rediscovery by many gateways is recommended.
 The span of the random portion of the delay should be no less than 10
 seconds by default but may be administratively configured to support
 different performance requirements.

3.3.4.3. Ancient Discovery Information

 In most cases, a gateway actively receiving healthy traffic from a
 relay that has not indicated load with the L flag should prefer to
 remain connected to the same relay, as described in Section 3.3.3.
 However, a relay that appears healthy but has been forwarding traffic
 for days or weeks may have an increased chance of becoming unstable.
 Gateways may benefit from restarting the discovery process during
 event #3 (before sending a Request message) after the expiration of a
 long-term timeout on the order of multiple hours or even days in some
 deployments.
 It may be beneficial for such timers to consider the amount of
 traffic currently being forwarded and to give a higher probability of
 restarting discovery during periods with an unusually low data rate
 to reduce the impact on active traffic while still avoiding relying
 on the results of a very old discovery.
 Other issues may also be worth considering as part of this heuristic;
 for example, if the DNS expiry time of the record that was used to
 discover the current relay has not passed, the long-term timer might
 be restarted without restarting the discovery process.

3.3.5. Relay Loaded or Shutting Down

 The L flag (see Section 5.1.4.4 of [RFC7450]) is the preferred
 mechanism for a relay to signal overloading or a graceful shutdown to
 gateways.
 A gateway that supports handling of the L flag should generally
 restart the discovery process when it processes a Membership Query
 packet with the L flag set.  If an L flag is received while a
 concurrent Happy Eyeballs discovery process is underway for multiple
 candidate relays (Section 3.2), the relay sending the L flag SHOULD
 NOT be considered for the relay selection.
 It is also RECOMMENDED that gateways avoid choosing a relay that has
 recently sent an L flag, with approximately a 10-minute hold-down.
 Gateways SHOULD treat this hold-down timer in the same way as the
 hold-down in Section 3.3.4.1 so that the relay is removed from
 consideration for subsequent short-term rounds of discovery.

3.3.6. Relay Discovery Messages vs. Restarting Discovery

 All AMT relays are required by [RFC7450] to support handling of Relay
 Discovery messages (e.g., in Section 5.3.3.2 of [RFC7450]).
 So a gateway with an existing connection to a relay can send a Relay
 Discovery message to the unicast address of that AMT relay.  Under
 stable conditions with an unloaded relay, it's expected that the
 relay will return its own unicast address in the Relay Advertisement
 in response to such a Relay Discovery message.  Since this will not
 result in the gateway changing to another relay unless the relay
 directs the gateway away, this is a reasonable exception to the
 advice against handling event #3 described in Section 3.3.3.
 This behavior is discouraged for gateways that do support the L flag
 to avoid sending unnecessary packets over the network.
 However, gateways that do not support the L flag may be able to avoid
 a disruption in the forwarded traffic by sending such Relay Discovery
 messages regularly.  When a relay is under load or has started a
 graceful shutdown, it may respond with a different relay address,
 which the gateway can use to connect to a different relay.  This kind
 of coordinated handoff will likely result in a smaller disruption to
 the traffic than if the relay simply stops responding to Request
 messages and stops forwarding traffic.
 This style of Relay Discovery message (one sent to the unicast
 address of a relay that's already forwarding traffic to this gateway)
 SHOULD NOT be considered a full restart of the relay discovery
 process.  It is RECOMMENDED that gateways support the L flag, but for
 gateways that do not support the L flag, sending this message during
 event #3 may help mitigate service degradation when relays become
 unstable.

3.3.7. Independent Discovery per Traffic Source

 Relays discovered via the AMTRELAY RR are source-specific relay
 addresses and may use different pseudo-interfaces from each other and
 from relays discovered via DNS-SD or via a non-source-specific
 address, as described in Section 4.1.2.1 of [RFC7450].
 Restarting the discovery process for one pseudo-interface does not
 require restarting the discovery process for other pseudo-interfaces.
 Gateway heuristics about restarting the discovery process should
 operate independently for different tunnels to relays when responding
 to events that are specific to the different tunnels.

3.4. DNS Configuration

 Often, an AMT gateway will only have access to the source and group
 IP addresses of the desired traffic and will not know any other name
 for the source of the traffic.  Because of this, typically, the best
 way of looking up AMTRELAY RRs will be by using the source IP address
 as an index into one of the reverse mapping trees (in-addr.arpa for
 IPv4, as described in Section 3.5 of [RFC1035], or ip6.arpa for IPv6,
 as described in Section 2.5 of [RFC3596]).
 Therefore, it is RECOMMENDED that AMTRELAY RRs be added to reverse IP
 zones as appropriate.  AMTRELAY records MAY also appear in other
 zones, since this may be necessary to perform delegation from the
 reverse zones (see, for example, Section 5.2 of [RFC2317]), but the
 use case enabled by this document requires a reverse IP mapping for
 the source from an (S,G) in order to be useful to most AMT gateways.
 This document does not define semantics for the use of AMTRELAY
 records obtained in a way other than by a reverse IP lookup.
 When performing the AMTRELAY RR lookup, any CNAMEs or DNAMEs found
 MUST be followed.  This is necessary to support zone delegation.
 Some examples outlining this need are described in [RFC2317].
 See Sections 4 and 4.3 for a detailed explanation of the contents of
 a DNS zone file.

3.5. Waiting for DNS Resolution

 DNS query functionality is expected to follow ordinary standards and
 best practices for DNS clients.  A gateway MAY use an existing DNS
 client implementation that does so and MAY rely on that client's
 retry logic to determine the timeouts between retries.
 Otherwise, a gateway MAY resend a DNS query if it does not receive an
 appropriate DNS response within some timeout period.  If the gateway
 retries multiple times, the timeout period SHOULD be adjusted to
 provide a random exponential back-off.
 As with the waiting process for the Relay Advertisement message from
 Section 5.2.3.4.3 of [RFC7450], the RECOMMENDED timeout is a random
 value in the range [initial_timeout, MIN(initial_timeout *
 2^retry_count, maximum_timeout)], with a RECOMMENDED initial_timeout
 of 1 second and a RECOMMENDED maximum_timeout of 120 seconds.

4. AMTRELAY Resource Record Definition

4.1. AMTRELAY RRType

 The AMTRELAY RRType has the mnemonic AMTRELAY and type code 260
 (decimal).
 The AMTRELAY RR is class independent.

4.2. AMTRELAY RData Format

 The AMTRELAY RData consists of an 8-bit precedence field, a 1-bit
 "Discovery Optional" field, a 7-bit type field, and a variable length
 relay field.
  0                   1                   2                   3
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |   precedence  |D|    type     |                               |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +
 ~                            relay                              ~
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

4.2.1. RData Format - Precedence

 This is an 8-bit precedence for this record.  It is interpreted in
 the same way as the PREFERENCE field described in Section 3.3.9 of
 [RFC1035].
 Relays listed in AMTRELAY records with a lower value for precedence
 are to be attempted first.

4.2.2. RData Format - Discovery Optional (D-bit)

 The D-bit is a "Discovery Optional" flag.
 If the D-bit is set to 0, a gateway using this RR MUST perform AMT
 relay discovery as described in Section 4.2.1.1 of [RFC7450] rather
 than directly sending an AMT Request message to the relay.
 That is, the gateway MUST receive an AMT Relay Advertisement message
 (Section 5.1.2 of [RFC7450]) for an address before sending an AMT
 Request message (Section 5.1.3 of [RFC7450]) to that address.  Before
 receiving the Relay Advertisement message, this record has only
 indicated that the address can be used for AMT relay discovery, not
 for a Request message.  This is necessary for devices that are not
 fully functional AMT relays but rather load balancers or brokers, as
 mentioned in Section 4.2.1.1 of [RFC7450].
 If the D-bit is set to 1, the gateway MAY send an AMT Request message
 directly to the discovered relay address without first sending an AMT
 Discovery message.
 This bit should be set according to advice from the AMT relay
 operator.  The D-bit MUST be set to zero when no information is
 available from the AMT relay operator about its suitability.

4.2.3. RData Format - Type

 The type field indicates the format of the information that is stored
 in the relay field.
 The following values are defined:
  • type = 0: The relay field is empty (0 bytes).
  • type = 1: The relay field contains a 4-octet IPv4 address.
  • type = 2: The relay field contains a 16-octet IPv6 address.
  • type = 3: The relay field contains a wire-encoded domain name.

The wire-encoded format is self-describing, so the length is

    implicit.  The domain name MUST NOT be compressed (see Section 3.3
    of [RFC1035] and Section 4 of [RFC3597]).
 RRs with an undefined value in the Type field SHOULD NOT be
 considered by receiving gateways for AMT relay discovery.

4.2.4. RData Format - Relay

 The relay field is the address or domain name of the AMT relay.  It
 is formatted according to the type field.
 When the type field is 0, the length of the relay field is 0, and it
 indicates that no AMT relay should be used for multicast traffic from
 this source.
 When the type field is 1, the length of the relay field is 4 octets,
 and a 32-bit IPv4 address is present.  This is an IPv4 address as
 described in Section 3.4.1 of [RFC1035].  This is a 32-bit number in
 network byte order.
 When the type field is 2, the length of the relay field is 16 octets,
 and a 128-bit IPv6 address is present.  This is an IPv6 address as
 described in Section 2.2 of [RFC3596].  This is a 128-bit number in
 network byte order.
 When the type field is 3, the relay field is a normal wire-encoded
 domain name, as described in Section 3.3 of [RFC1035].  For the
 reasons given in Section 4 of [RFC3597], compression MUST NOT be
 used.
 For a type 3 record, the D-bit and preference fields carry over to
 all A or AAAA records for the domain name.  There is no difference in
 the result of the discovery process when it's obtained by type 1 or
 type 2 AMTRELAY records with identical D-bit and preference fields
 vs. when the result is obtained by a type 3 AMTRELAY record that
 resolves to the same set of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses via A and AAAA
 lookups.

4.3. AMTRELAY Record Presentation Format

4.3.1. Representation of AMTRELAY RRs

 AMTRELAY RRs may appear in a zone data master file.  The precedence,
 D-bit, relay type, and relay fields are REQUIRED.
 If the relay type field is 0, the relay field MUST be ".".
 The presentation for the record is as follows:
   IN AMTRELAY precedence D-bit type relay

4.3.2. Examples

 In a DNS authoritative nameserver that understands the AMTRELAY type,
 the zone might contain a set of entries like this:
     $ORIGIN 100.51.198.in-addr.arpa.
     12     IN AMTRELAY  10 0 1 203.0.113.15
     12     IN AMTRELAY  10 0 2 2001:db8::15
     12     IN AMTRELAY 128 1 3 amtrelays.example.com.
 This configuration advertises an IPv4 discovery address, an IPv6
 discovery address, and a domain name for AMT relays that can receive
 traffic from the source 198.51.100.12.  The IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
 are configured with a D-bit of 0 (meaning discovery is mandatory, as
 described in Section 4.2.2) and a precedence 10 (meaning they're
 preferred ahead of the last entry, which has precedence 128).
 For zone files in name servers that don't support the AMTRELAY RRType
 natively, it's possible to use the format for unknown RR types, as
 described in [RFC3597].  This approach would replace the AMTRELAY
 entries in the example above with the entries below:
     10   IN TYPE260  \# (
            6  ; length
            0a ; precedence=10
            01 ; D=0, relay type=1, an IPv4 address
            cb00710f ) ; 203.0.113.15
     10   IN TYPE260  \# (
            18 ; length
            0a ; precedence=10
            02 ; D=0, relay type=2, an IPv6 address
            20010db800000000000000000000000f ) ; 2001:db8::15
     10   IN TYPE260  \# (
            24 ; length
            80 ; precedence=128
            83 ; D=1, relay type=3, a wire-encoded domain name
          09616d7472656c617973076578616d706c6503636f6d ) ; domain name
 See Appendix A for more details.

5. IANA Considerations

 This document updates the DNS "Resource Record (RR) TYPEs" registry
 by assigning type 260 to the AMTRELAY record.
 This document creates a new registry named "AMTRELAY Resource Record
 Parameters" with a subregistry for the "Relay Type Field".  The
 initial values in the subregistry are:
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
 | Value | Description                           |
 +=======+=======================================+
 | 0     | No relay is present                   |
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
 | 1     | A 4-byte IPv4 address is present      |
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
 | 2     | A 16-byte IPv6 address is present     |
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
 | 3     | A wire-encoded domain name is present |
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
 | 4-255 | Unassigned                            |
 +-------+---------------------------------------+
    Table 2: Initial Contents of the "Relay Type
                  Field" Registry
 Values 0, 1, 2, and 3 are further explained in Sections 4.2.3 and
 4.2.4.  Relay type numbers 4 through 255 can be assigned with a
 policy of Specification Required (as described in [RFC8126]).

6. Security Considerations

6.1. Use of AMT

 This document defines a mechanism that enables a more widespread and
 automated use of AMT, even without access to a multicast backbone.
 Operators of networks and applications that include a DRIAD-capable
 AMT gateway are advised to carefully consider the security
 considerations in Section 6 of [RFC7450].
 AMT gateway operators also are encouraged to take appropriate steps
 to ensure the integrity of the data received via AMT, for example, by
 the opportunistic use of IPsec [RFC4301] to secure traffic received
 from AMT relays when IPSECKEY records [RFC4025] are available or when
 a trust relationship with the AMT relays can be otherwise established
 and secured.
 Note that AMT does not itself provide any integrity protection for
 Multicast Data packets (Section 5.1.6 of [RFC7450]), so absent
 protections like those mentioned above, even an off-path attacker who
 discovers the gateway IP, the relay IP, and the relay source port for
 an active AMT connection can inject multicast data packets for a
 joined (S,G) into the data stream if he can get data packets
 delivered to the gateway IP that spoof the relay as the source.

6.2. Record-Spoofing

 The AMTRELAY resource record contains information that SHOULD be
 communicated to the DNS client without being modified.  The method
 used to ensure the result was unmodified is up to the client.
 There must be a trust relationship between the end consumer of this
 resource record and the DNS server.  This relationship may be end-to-
 end DNSSEC validation or a secure connection to a trusted DNS server
 that provides end-to-end safety to prevent record-spoofing of the
 response from the trusted server.  The connection to the trusted
 server can use any secure channel, such as with a TSIG [RFC2845] or
 SIG(0) [RFC2931] channel, a secure local channel on the host, DNS
 over TLS [RFC7858], DNS over HTTPS [RFC8484], or some other mechanism
 that provides authentication of the RR.
 If an AMT gateway accepts a maliciously crafted AMTRELAY record, the
 result could be a Denial of Service or receivers processing multicast
 traffic from a source under the attacker's control.

6.3. Congestion

 Multicast traffic, particularly interdomain multicast traffic,
 carries some congestion risks, as described in Section 4 of
 [RFC8085].
 Application implementors and network operators that use AMT gateways
 are advised to take precautions, including monitoring of application
 traffic behavior, traffic authentication at ingest, rate-limiting of
 multicast traffic, and the use of circuit-breaker techniques such as
 those described in Section 3.1.10 of [RFC8085] and similar
 protections at the network level in order to ensure network health in
 the event of misconfiguration, poorly written applications that don't
 follow UDP congestion control principles, or a deliberate attack.
 Section 4.1.4.2 of [RFC7450] and Section 6.1 of [RFC7450] provide
 some further considerations and advice about mitigating congestion
 risk.

7. References

7.1. Normative References

 [RFC1034]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
            STD 13, RFC 1034, DOI 10.17487/RFC1034, November 1987,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1034>.
 [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
            specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035,
            November 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035>.
 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC2181]  Elz, R. and R. Bush, "Clarifications to the DNS
            Specification", RFC 2181, DOI 10.17487/RFC2181, July 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2181>.
 [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
            specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2782, February 2000,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2782>.
 [RFC3376]  Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.
            Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version
            3", RFC 3376, DOI 10.17487/RFC3376, October 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3376>.
 [RFC3596]  Thomson, S., Huitema, C., Ksinant, V., and M. Souissi,
            "DNS Extensions to Support IP Version 6", STD 88,
            RFC 3596, DOI 10.17487/RFC3596, October 2003,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3596>.
 [RFC3597]  Gustafsson, A., "Handling of Unknown DNS Resource Record
            (RR) Types", RFC 3597, DOI 10.17487/RFC3597, September
            2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3597>.
 [RFC3810]  Vida, R., Ed. and L. Costa, Ed., "Multicast Listener
            Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6", RFC 3810,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3810, June 2004,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3810>.
 [RFC4604]  Holbrook, H., Cain, B., and B. Haberman, "Using Internet
            Group Management Protocol Version 3 (IGMPv3) and Multicast
            Listener Discovery Protocol Version 2 (MLDv2) for Source-
            Specific Multicast", RFC 4604, DOI 10.17487/RFC4604,
            August 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4604>.
 [RFC4607]  Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source-Specific Multicast for
            IP", RFC 4607, DOI 10.17487/RFC4607, August 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4607>.
 [RFC6724]  Thaler, D., Ed., Draves, R., Matsumoto, A., and T. Chown,
            "Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6
            (IPv6)", RFC 6724, DOI 10.17487/RFC6724, September 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6724>.
 [RFC6763]  Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "DNS-Based Service
            Discovery", RFC 6763, DOI 10.17487/RFC6763, February 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6763>.
 [RFC7450]  Bumgardner, G., "Automatic Multicast Tunneling", RFC 7450,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7450, February 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7450>.
 [RFC8085]  Eggert, L., Fairhurst, G., and G. Shepherd, "UDP Usage
            Guidelines", BCP 145, RFC 8085, DOI 10.17487/RFC8085,
            March 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8085>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
 [RFC8305]  Schinazi, D. and T. Pauly, "Happy Eyeballs Version 2:
            Better Connectivity Using Concurrency", RFC 8305,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8305, December 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8305>.
 [RFC8499]  Hoffman, P., Sullivan, A., and K. Fujiwara, "DNS
            Terminology", BCP 219, RFC 8499, DOI 10.17487/RFC8499,
            January 2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8499>.

7.2. Informative References

 [RFC2317]  Eidnes, H., de Groot, G., and P. Vixie, "Classless IN-
            ADDR.ARPA delegation", BCP 20, RFC 2317,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2317, March 1998,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2317>.
 [RFC2845]  Vixie, P., Gudmundsson, O., Eastlake 3rd, D., and B.
            Wellington, "Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS
            (TSIG)", RFC 2845, DOI 10.17487/RFC2845, May 2000,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2845>.
 [RFC2931]  Eastlake 3rd, D., "DNS Request and Transaction Signatures
            ( SIG(0)s )", RFC 2931, DOI 10.17487/RFC2931, September
            2000, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2931>.
 [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
            Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
            Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,
            July 2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.
 [RFC4025]  Richardson, M., "A Method for Storing IPsec Keying
            Material in DNS", RFC 4025, DOI 10.17487/RFC4025, March
            2005, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4025>.
 [RFC4301]  Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
            Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, DOI 10.17487/RFC4301,
            December 2005, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4301>.
 [RFC4787]  Audet, F., Ed. and C. Jennings, "Network Address
            Translation (NAT) Behavioral Requirements for Unicast
            UDP", BCP 127, RFC 4787, DOI 10.17487/RFC4787, January
            2007, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4787>.
 [RFC5110]  Savola, P., "Overview of the Internet Multicast Routing
            Architecture", RFC 5110, DOI 10.17487/RFC5110, January
            2008, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5110>.
 [RFC6726]  Paila, T., Walsh, R., Luby, M., Roca, V., and R. Lehtonen,
            "FLUTE - File Delivery over Unidirectional Transport",
            RFC 6726, DOI 10.17487/RFC6726, November 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6726>.
 [RFC7359]  Gont, F., "Layer 3 Virtual Private Network (VPN) Tunnel
            Traffic Leakages in Dual-Stack Hosts/Networks", RFC 7359,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7359, August 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7359>.
 [RFC7761]  Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., Kouvelas, I.,
            Parekh, R., Zhang, Z., and L. Zheng, "Protocol Independent
            Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification
            (Revised)", STD 83, RFC 7761, DOI 10.17487/RFC7761, March
            2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7761>.
 [RFC7858]  Hu, Z., Zhu, L., Heidemann, J., Mankin, A., Wessels, D.,
            and P. Hoffman, "Specification for DNS over Transport
            Layer Security (TLS)", RFC 7858, DOI 10.17487/RFC7858, May
            2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7858>.
 [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
            Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
            RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.
 [RFC8313]  Tarapore, P., Ed., Sayko, R., Shepherd, G., Eckert, T.,
            Ed., and R. Krishnan, "Use of Multicast across Inter-
            domain Peering Points", BCP 213, RFC 8313,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8313, January 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8313>.
 [RFC8484]  Hoffman, P. and P. McManus, "DNS Queries over HTTPS
            (DoH)", RFC 8484, DOI 10.17487/RFC8484, October 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8484>.

Appendix A. Unknown RRType Construction

 In a DNS resolver that understands the AMTRELAY type, the zone file
 might contain this line:
   IN AMTRELAY 128 0 3 amtrelays.example.com.
 In order to translate this example to appear as an unknown RRType as
 defined in [RFC3597], one could run the following program:
 <CODE BEGINS>
   $ cat translate.py
   #!/usr/bin/env python3
   import sys
   name=sys.argv[1]
   wire=''
   for dn in name.split('.'):
     if len(dn) > 0:
       wire += ('%02x' % len(dn))
       wire += (''.join('%02x'%ord(x) for x in dn))
   print(len(wire)//2) + 2
   print(wire)
   $ ./translate.py amtrelays.example.com
   24
   09616d7472656c617973076578616d706c6503636f6d
 <CODE ENDS>
 The length of the RData and the hex string for the domain name
 "amtrelays.example.com" are the outputs of this program.
 The length of the wire-encoded domain name is 22, so 2 was added to
 that value (1 for the precedence field and 1 for the combined D-bit
 and relay type fields) to get the full length 24 of the RData.  For
 the 2 octets ahead of the domain name, we encode the precedence,
 D-bit, and relay type fields, as described in Section 4.
 This results in a zone file entry like this:
   IN TYPE260  \# ( 24 ; length
           80 ; precedence = 128
           03 ; D-bit=0, relay type=3 (wire-encoded domain name)
         09616d7472656c617973076578616d706c6503636f6d ) ; domain name

Acknowledgements

 This specification was inspired by the previous work of Doug Nortz,
 Robert Sayko, David Segelstein, and Percy Tarapore, presented in the
 MBONED Working Group at IETF 93.
 Thanks to Jeff Goldsmith, Toerless Eckert, Mikael Abrahamsson, Lenny
 Giuliano, Mark Andrews, Sandy Zheng, Kyle Rose, Ben Kaduk, Bill
 Atwood, Tim Chown, Christian Worm Mortensen, Warren Kumari, Dan
 Romanescu, Bernard Aboba, Carlos Pignataro, Niclas Comstedt, Mirja
 Kühlewind, Henning Rogge, Eric Vyncke, Barry Lieba, Roman Danyliw,
 Alissa Cooper, Suresh Krishnan, Adam Roach, and Daniel Franke for
 their very helpful reviews and comments.

Author's Address

 Jake Holland
 Akamai Technologies, Inc.
 150 Broadway
 Cambridge, MA 02144
 United States of America
 Email: jakeholland.net@gmail.com
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