GENWiki

Premier IT Outsourcing and Support Services within the UK

User Tools

Site Tools


rfc:rfc8976



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) D. Wessels Request for Comments: 8976 P. Barber Category: Standards Track Verisign ISSN: 2070-1721 M. Weinberg

                                                                Amazon
                                                             W. Kumari
                                                                Google
                                                           W. Hardaker
                                                               USC/ISI
                                                         February 2021
                    Message Digest for DNS Zones

Abstract

 This document describes a protocol and new DNS Resource Record that
 provides a cryptographic message digest over DNS zone data at rest.
 The ZONEMD Resource Record conveys the digest data in the zone
 itself.  When used in combination with DNSSEC, ZONEMD allows
 recipients to verify the zone contents for data integrity and origin
 authenticity.  This provides assurance that received zone data
 matches published data, regardless of how the zone data has been
 transmitted and received.  When used without DNSSEC, ZONEMD functions
 as a checksum, guarding only against unintentional changes.
 ZONEMD does not replace DNSSEC: DNSSEC protects individual RRsets
 (DNS data with fine granularity), whereas ZONEMD protects a zone's
 data as a whole, whether consumed by authoritative name servers,
 recursive name servers, or any other applications.
 As specified herein, ZONEMD is impractical for large, dynamic zones
 due to the time and resources required for digest calculation.
 However, the ZONEMD record is extensible so that new digest schemes
 may be added in the future to support large, dynamic zones.

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/rfc8976.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2021 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.  Motivation
   1.2.  Alternative Approaches
   1.3.  Design Overview
   1.4.  Use Cases
     1.4.1.  Root Zone
     1.4.2.  Providers, Secondaries, and Anycast
     1.4.3.  Response Policy Zones
     1.4.4.  Centralized Zone Data Service
     1.4.5.  General Purpose Comparison Check
   1.5.  Terminology
 2.  The ZONEMD Resource Record
   2.1.  Non-apex ZONEMD Records
   2.2.  ZONEMD RDATA Wire Format
     2.2.1.  The Serial Field
     2.2.2.  The Scheme Field
     2.2.3.  The Hash Algorithm Field
     2.2.4.  The Digest Field
   2.3.  ZONEMD Presentation Format
   2.4.  ZONEMD Example
   2.5.  Including ZONEMD RRs in a Zone
 3.  Calculating the Digest
   3.1.  Add ZONEMD Placeholder
   3.2.  Optionally, Sign the Zone
   3.3.  Scheme-Specific Processing
     3.3.1.  The SIMPLE Scheme
       3.3.1.1.  SIMPLE Scheme Inclusion/Exclusion Rules
       3.3.1.2.  SIMPLE Scheme Digest Calculation
   3.4.  Update ZONEMD RR
 4.  Verifying Zone Digest
 5.  IANA Considerations
   5.1.  ZONEMD RRtype
   5.2.  ZONEMD Scheme
   5.3.  ZONEMD Hash Algorithms
 6.  Security Considerations
   6.1.  Using Zone Digest without DNSSEC
   6.2.  Attacks against the Zone Digest
   6.3.  Use of Multiple ZONEMD Hash Algorithms
   6.4.  DNSSEC Timing Considerations
   6.5.  Attacks Utilizing ZONEMD Queries
   6.6.  Resilience and Fragility
 7.  Performance Considerations
   7.1.  SIMPLE SHA384
 8.  Privacy Considerations
 9.  References
   9.1.  Normative References
   9.2.  Informative References
 Appendix A.  Example Zones with Digests
   A.1.  Simple EXAMPLE Zone
   A.2.  Complex EXAMPLE Zone
   A.3.  EXAMPLE Zone with Multiple Digests
   A.4.  The URI.ARPA Zone
   A.5.  The ROOT-SERVERS.NET Zone
 Appendix B.  Implementation Status
   B.1.  Authors' Implementation
   B.2.  Shane Kerr's Implementation
   B.3.  NIC Chile Lab's Implementation
 Acknowledgments
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 In the DNS, a zone is the collection of authoritative resource
 records (RRs) sharing a common origin ([RFC8499]).  Zones are often
 stored as files in the so-called "master file format" ([RFC1034]).
 Zones are generally distributed among name servers using the zone
 transfer (AXFR) ([RFC5936]) and incremental zone transfer (IXFR)
 ([RFC1995]) protocols.  They can also be distributed outside of the
 DNS with any file transfer protocol such as FTP, HTTP, and rsync, or
 even as email attachments.  Currently, there is no standard way to
 compute a hash or message digest for a stand-alone zone.
 This document specifies an RR type that provides a cryptographic
 message digest of the data in a zone.  It allows a receiver of the
 zone to verify the zone's integrity and authenticity when used in
 combination with DNSSEC.  The digest RR is a part of the zone itself,
 allowing verification of the zone, no matter how it is transmitted.
 The digest uses the wire format of zone data in a canonical ordering.
 Thus, it is independent of presentation format such as whitespace,
 capitalization, and comments.
 This specification is OPTIONAL to implement by both publishers and
 consumers of zone data.

1.1. Motivation

 The primary motivation for this protocol enhancement is the desire to
 verify the data integrity and origin authenticity of a stand-alone
 zone, regardless of how it is transmitted.  A consumer of zone data
 should be able to verify that it is as published by the zone
 operator.
 Note, however, that integrity and authenticity can only be assured
 when the zone is signed.  DNSSEC provides three strong security
 guarantees relevant to this protocol:
 1.  whether or not to expect DNSSEC records in the zone,
 2.  whether or not to expect a ZONEMD record in a signed zone, and
 3.  whether or not the ZONEMD record has been altered since it was
     signed.
 A secondary motivation is to provide the equivalent of a checksum,
 allowing a zone recipient to check for unintended changes and
 operational errors such as accidental truncation.

1.2. Alternative Approaches

 One approach to preventing data tampering and corruption is to secure
 the distribution channel.  The DNS has a number of features that are
 already used for channel security.  Perhaps the most widely used is
 DNS transaction signatures (TSIGs) ([RFC8945]).  A TSIG uses shared
 secret keys and a message digest to protect individual query and
 response messages.  It is generally used to authenticate and validate
 UPDATE ([RFC2136]), AXFR ([RFC5936]), and IXFR ([RFC1995]) messages.
 DNS Request and Transaction Signatures (SIG(0)) ([RFC2931]) is
 another protocol extension that authenticates individual DNS
 transactions.  Whereas SIG records normally cover specific RR types,
 SIG(0) is used to sign an entire DNS message.  Unlike TSIG, SIG(0)
 uses public key cryptography rather than shared secrets.
 The Transport Layer Security protocol suite also provides channel
 security.  The DPRIVE Working Group is in the process of specifying
 DNS Zone Transfer-over-TLS ([DPRIVE-XFR-OVER-TLS]).  One can also
 easily imagine the distribution of zones over HTTPS-enabled web
 servers as well as DNS-over-HTTPS ([RFC8484]).
 Unfortunately, the protections provided by these channel security
 techniques are (in practice) ephemeral and are not retained after the
 data transfer is complete.  They ensure that the client receives the
 data from the expected server and that the data sent by the server is
 not modified during transmission.  However, they do not guarantee
 that the server transmits the data as originally published and do not
 provide any methods to verify data that is read after transmission is
 complete.  For example, a name server loading saved zone data upon
 restart cannot guarantee that the on-disk data has not been modified.
 Such modification could be the result of an accidental corruption of
 the file or perhaps an incomplete saving of the file
 ([DISK-FULL-FAILURE]).  For these reasons, it is preferable to
 protect the integrity of the data itself.
 Why not simply rely on DNSSEC, which provides certain data security
 guarantees?  For zones that are signed, a recipient could validate
 all of the signed RRsets.  Additionally, denial-of-existence records
 prove that RRsets have not been added or removed.  However,
 delegations (non-apex NS records) are not signed by DNSSEC and
 neither are any glue records.  ZONEMD protects the integrity of
 delegation, glue, and other records that are not otherwise covered by
 DNSSEC.  Furthermore, zones that employ NSEC3 with Opt-Out
 ([RFC5155]) are susceptible to the removal or addition of names
 between the signed nodes.  Whereas DNSSEC primarily protects
 consumers of DNS response messages, this protocol protects consumers
 of zones.
 There are existing tools and protocols that provide data security,
 such as OpenPGP ([RFC4880]) and S/MIME ([RFC8551]).  In fact, the
 internic.net site publishes Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) signatures
 alongside the root zone and other files available there.  However,
 this is a detached signature with no strong association to the
 corresponding zone file other than its timestamp.  Attached
 signatures are of course possible, but these necessarily change the
 format of the file being distributed; a zone signed with OpenPGP or
 S/MIME no longer looks like a DNS zone and could not directly be
 loaded into a name server.  Once loaded, the signature data is lost,
 so it cannot be further propagated.
 It seems the desire for data security in DNS zones was envisioned as
 far back as 1997.  [RFC2065] is an obsoleted specification of the
 first generation DNSSEC Security Extensions.  It describes a zone
 transfer signature, identified as the AXFR SIG, which is similar to
 the technique proposed by this document.  That is, it proposes
 ordering all (signed) RRsets in a zone, hashing their contents, and
 then signing the zone hash.  The AXFR SIG is described only for use
 during zone transfers.  It did not postulate the need to validate
 zone data distributed outside of the DNS.  Furthermore, its
 successor, [RFC2535], omits the AXFR SIG while at the same time
 introducing an IXFR SIG.  (Note: RFC 2535 was obsoleted by [RFC4033],
 [RFC4034], and [RFC4035].)

1.3. Design Overview

 This document specifies a new Resource Record type to convey a
 message digest of the content of a zone.  The digest is calculated at
 the time of zone publication.  If the zone is signed with DNSSEC, any
 modifications of the digest can be detected.  The procedures for
 digest calculation and DNSSEC signing are similar.  Both require data
 to be processed in a well-defined order and format.  It may be
 possible to perform DNSSEC signing and digest calculation in
 parallel.
 The zone digest is designed to be used on zones that have infrequent
 updates.  As specified herein, the digest is recalculated over the
 entire zone content each time the zone is updated.  This
 specification does not provide an efficient mechanism for updating
 the digest on incremental updates of zone data.  It is, however,
 extensible so that future schemes may be defined to support efficient
 incremental digest updates.
 It is expected that verification of a zone digest will be implemented
 in name server software.  That is, a name server can verify the zone
 data it was given and refuse to serve a zone that fails verification.
 For signed zones, the name server needs a trust anchor to perform
 DNSSEC validation.  For signed non-root zones, the name server may
 need to send queries to validate a chain of trust.  Digest
 verification could also be performed externally.

1.4. Use Cases

1.4.1. Root Zone

 The root zone ([InterNIC]) is one of the most widely distributed DNS
 zones on the Internet, served by more than 1000 separate instances
 ([ROOT-SERVERS]) at the time of this writing.  Additionally, many
 organizations configure their own name servers to serve the root zone
 locally.  Reasons for doing so include privacy and reduced access
 time.  [RFC8806] describes one way to do this.  As the root zone
 spreads beyond its traditional deployment boundaries, the
 verification of the completeness of the zone contents becomes more
 important.

1.4.2. Providers, Secondaries, and Anycast

 Since its very early days, the developers of the DNS recognized the
 importance of secondary name servers and service diversity.  However,
 modern DNS service has complex provisioning that includes multiple
 third-party providers ([RFC8901]) and hundreds of anycast instances
 ([RFC3258]).  Instead of a simple primary-to-secondary zone
 distribution system, today it is possible to have multiple levels,
 multiple parties, and multiple protocols involved in the distribution
 of zone data.  This complexity introduces new places for problems to
 arise.  The zone digest protects the integrity of data that flows
 through such systems.

1.4.3. Response Policy Zones

 A Response Policy Zone (RPZ) is "a mechanism to introduce a
 customized policy in Domain Name System servers, so that recursive
 resolvers return possibly modified results" ([RPZ]).  The policy
 information is carried inside specially constructed DNS zones.  A
 number of companies provide RPZ feeds, which are consumed by name
 server and firewall products.  While RPZs can be signed with DNSSEC,
 the data is not queried directly and would not be subject to DNSSEC
 validation.

1.4.4. Centralized Zone Data Service

 ICANN operates the Centralized Zone Data Service ([CZDS]), which is a
 repository of top-level domain zone files.  Users that have been
 granted access are then able to download zone data.  Adding a zone
 digest to these would provide CZDS users with assurances that the
 data has not been modified between origination and retrieval.  Note
 that ZONEMD could be added to zone data supplied to CZDS without
 requiring it to be present in the zone data served by production name
 servers, since the digest is inherently attached to the specific copy
 of the zone.

1.4.5. General Purpose Comparison Check

 Since the zone digest calculation does not depend on presentation
 format, it could be used to compare multiple copies of a zone
 received from different sources, or copies generated by different
 processes.  In this case, it serves as a checksum and can be useful
 even for unsigned zones.

1.5. Terminology

 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.
 The terms Private Use, Reserved, Unassigned, and Specification
 Required are to be interpreted as defined in [RFC8126].

2. The ZONEMD Resource Record

 This section describes the ZONEMD Resource Record, including its
 fields, wire format, and presentation format.  The Type value for the
 ZONEMD RR is 63.  The ZONEMD RR is class independent.  The RDATA of
 the resource record consists of four fields: Serial, Scheme, Hash
 Algorithm, and Digest.

2.1. Non-apex ZONEMD Records

 This document specifies ZONEMD RRs located at the zone apex.  Non-
 apex ZONEMD RRs are not forbidden, but have no meaning in this
 specification.  Non-apex ZONEMD RRs MUST NOT be used for
 verification.
 During digest calculation, non-apex ZONEMD RRs are treated as
 ordinary RRs.  They are digested as is, and the RR is not replaced by
 a placeholder RR.
 Unless explicitly stated otherwise, "ZONEMD" always refers to apex
 records throughout this document.

2.2. ZONEMD RDATA Wire Format

 The ZONEMD RDATA wire format is encoded as follows:
                      1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                             Serial                            |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |    Scheme     |Hash Algorithm |                               |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               |
 |                             Digest                            |
 /                                                               /
 /                                                               /
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

2.2.1. The Serial Field

 The Serial field is a 32-bit unsigned integer in network byte order.
 It is the serial number from the zone's SOA record ([RFC1035],
 Section 3.3.13) for which the zone digest was generated.
 It is included here to clearly bind the ZONEMD RR to a particular
 version of the zone's content.  Without the serial number, a stand-
 alone ZONEMD digest has no obvious association to any particular
 instance of a zone.

2.2.2. The Scheme Field

 The Scheme field is an 8-bit unsigned integer that identifies the
 methods by which data is collated and presented as input to the
 hashing function.
 Herein, SIMPLE, with Scheme value 1, is the only standardized Scheme
 defined for ZONEMD records and it MUST be supported by
 implementations.  The "ZONEMD Schemes" registry is further described
 in Section 5.
 Scheme values 240-254 are allocated for Private Use.

2.2.3. The Hash Algorithm Field

 The Hash Algorithm field is an 8-bit unsigned integer that identifies
 the cryptographic hash algorithm used to construct the digest.
 Herein, SHA384 ([RFC6234]), with Hash Algorithm value 1, is the only
 standardized Hash Algorithm defined for ZONEMD records that MUST be
 supported by implementations.  When SHA384 is used, the size of the
 Digest field is 48 octets.  The result of the SHA384 digest algorithm
 MUST NOT be truncated, and the entire 48-octet digest is published in
 the ZONEMD record.
 SHA512 ([RFC6234]), with Hash Algorithm value 2, is also defined for
 ZONEMD records and SHOULD be supported by implementations.  When
 SHA512 is used, the size of the Digest field is 64 octets.  The
 result of the SHA512 digest algorithm MUST NOT be truncated, and the
 entire 64-octet digest is published in the ZONEMD record.
 Hash Algorithm values 240-254 are allocated for Private Use.
 The "ZONEMD Hash Algorithms" registry is further described in
 Section 5.

2.2.4. The Digest Field

 The Digest field is a variable-length sequence of octets containing
 the output of the hash algorithm.  The length of the Digest field is
 determined by deducting the fixed size of the Serial, Scheme, and
 Hash Algorithm fields from the RDATA size in the ZONEMD RR header.
 The Digest field MUST NOT be shorter than 12 octets.  Digests for the
 SHA384 and SHA512 hash algorithms specified herein are never
 truncated.  Digests for future hash algorithms MAY be truncated but
 MUST NOT be truncated to a length that results in less than 96 bits
 (12 octets) of equivalent strength.
 Section 3 describes how to calculate the digest for a zone.
 Section 4 describes how to use the digest to verify the contents of a
 zone.

2.3. ZONEMD Presentation Format

 The presentation format of the RDATA portion is as follows:
  • The Serial field is represented as an unsigned decimal integer.
  • The Scheme field is represented as an unsigned decimal integer.
  • The Hash Algorithm field is represented as an unsigned decimal

integer.

  • The Digest is represented as a sequence of case-insensitive

hexadecimal digits. Whitespace is allowed within the hexadecimal

    text.

2.4. ZONEMD Example

 The following example shows a ZONEMD RR in presentation format:
 example.com. 86400 IN ZONEMD 2018031500 1 1 (
     FEBE3D4CE2EC2FFA4BA99D46CD69D6D29711E55217057BEE
     7EB1A7B641A47BA7FED2DD5B97AE499FAFA4F22C6BD647DE )

2.5. Including ZONEMD RRs in a Zone

 The zone operator chooses an appropriate hash algorithm and scheme
 and includes the calculated zone digest in the apex ZONEMD RRset.
 The zone operator MAY choose any of the defined hash algorithms and
 schemes, including the Private Use code points.
 The ZONEMD RRset MAY contain multiple records to support algorithm
 agility ([BCP201]).  When multiple ZONEMD RRs are present, each MUST
 specify a unique Scheme and Hash Algorithm tuple.  It is RECOMMENDED
 that a zone include only one ZONEMD RR, unless the zone operator is
 in the process of transitioning to a new scheme or hash algorithm.

3. Calculating the Digest

 The algorithm described in this section is designed for the common
 case of offline DNSSEC signing.  Slight deviations may be permitted
 or necessary in other situations, such as with unsigned zones or
 online DNSSEC signing.  Implementations that deviate from the
 described algorithm are advised to ensure that it produces ZONEMD
 RRs, signatures, and denial-of-existence records that are identical
 to the ones generated by this procedure.

3.1. Add ZONEMD Placeholder

 In preparation for calculating the zone digest(s), any existing
 ZONEMD records (and covering RRSIGs) at the zone apex are first
 deleted.
 Prior to calculation of the digest, and prior to signing with DNSSEC,
 one or more placeholder ZONEMD records are added to the zone apex.
 This ensures that denial-of-existence (NSEC, NSEC3) records are
 created correctly if the zone is signed with DNSSEC.  If placeholders
 were not added prior to signing, the later addition of ZONEMD records
 would also require updating the Type Bit Maps field of any apex NSEC/
 NSEC3 RRs, which then invalidates the calculated digest value.
 When multiple ZONEMD RRs are published in the zone, e.g., during an
 algorithm rollover, each MUST specify a unique Scheme and Hash
 Algorithm tuple.
 It is RECOMMENDED that the TTL of the ZONEMD record match the TTL of
 the Start of Authority (SOA).  However, the TTL of the ZONEMD record
 may be safely ignored during verification in all cases.
 In the placeholder record, the Serial field is set to the current SOA
 Serial.  The Scheme field is set to the value for the chosen
 collation scheme.  The Hash Algorithm field is set to the value for
 the chosen hash algorithm.  Since apex ZONEMD records are excluded
 from digest calculation, the value of the Digest field does not
 matter at this point in the process.

3.2. Optionally, Sign the Zone

 Following the addition of placeholder records, the zone may be signed
 with DNSSEC.  When the digest calculation is complete, and the ZONEMD
 record is updated, the signature(s) for the ZONEMD RRset MUST be
 recalculated and updated as well.  Therefore, the signer is not
 required to calculate a signature over the placeholder record at this
 step in the process, but it is harmless to do so.

3.3. Scheme-Specific Processing

 Herein, only the SIMPLE collation scheme is defined.  Additional
 schemes may be defined in future updates to this document.

3.3.1. The SIMPLE Scheme

 For the SIMPLE scheme, the digest is calculated over the zone as a
 whole.  This means that a change to a single RR in the zone requires
 iterating over all RRs in the zone to recalculate the digest.  SIMPLE
 is a good choice for zones that are small and/or stable, but it is
 probably not good for zones that are large and/or dynamic.
 Calculation of a zone digest requires RRs to be processed in a
 consistent format and ordering.  This specification uses DNSSEC's
 canonical on-the-wire RR format (without name compression) and
 ordering as specified in Sections 6.1, 6.2, and 6.3 of [RFC4034] with
 the additional provision that RRsets having the same owner name MUST
 be numerically ordered, in ascending order, by their numeric RR TYPE.

3.3.1.1. SIMPLE Scheme Inclusion/Exclusion Rules

 When iterating over records in the zone, the following inclusion/
 exclusion rules apply:
  • All records in the zone, including glue records, MUST be included

unless excluded by a subsequent rule.

  • Occluded data ([RFC5936], Section 3.5) MUST be included.
  • If there are duplicate RRs with equal owner, class, type, and

RDATA, only one instance is included ([RFC4034], Section 6.3) and

    the duplicates MUST be omitted.
  • The placeholder apex ZONEMD RR(s) MUST NOT be included.
  • If the zone is signed, DNSSEC RRs MUST be included, except:
  • The RRSIG covering the apex ZONEMD RRset MUST NOT be included

because the RRSIG will be updated after all digests have been

    calculated.

3.3.1.2. SIMPLE Scheme Digest Calculation

 A zone digest using the SIMPLE scheme is calculated by concatenating
 all RRs in the zone, in the format and order described in
 Section 3.3.1 subject to the inclusion/exclusion rules described in
 Section 3.3.1.1, and then applying the chosen hash algorithm:
 digest = hash( RR(1) | RR(2) | RR(3) | ... )
 where "|" denotes concatenation.

3.4. Update ZONEMD RR

 The calculated zone digest is inserted into the placeholder ZONEMD
 RR.  Repeat for each digest if multiple digests are to be published.
 If the zone is signed with DNSSEC, the RRSIG record(s) covering the
 ZONEMD RRset MUST then be added or updated.  Because the ZONEMD
 placeholder was added prior to signing, the zone will already have
 the appropriate denial-of-existence (NSEC, NSEC3) records.
 Some DNSSEC implementations (especially "online signing") might
 update the SOA serial number whenever a new signature is made.  To
 preserve the calculated digest, generation of a ZONEMD signature MUST
 NOT also result in a change to the SOA serial number.  The ZONEMD RR
 and the matching SOA MUST be published at the same time.

4. Verifying Zone Digest

 The recipient of a zone that has a ZONEMD RR verifies the zone by
 calculating the digest as follows:
    |  Note: If multiple ZONEMD RRs are present in the zone, e.g.,
    |  during an algorithm rollover, a match using any one of the
    |  recipient's supported Schemes and Hash Algorithms is sufficient
    |  to verify the zone.  The verifier MAY ignore a ZONEMD RR if its
    |  Scheme and Hash Algorithm violates local policy.
 1.  The verifier MUST first determine whether or not to expect DNSSEC
     records in the zone.  By examining locally configured trust
     anchors and, if necessary, querying for and validating Delegation
     Signer (DS) RRs in the parent zone, the verifier knows whether or
     not the zone to be verified should include DNSSEC keys and
     signatures.  For zones where signatures are not expected, or if
     DNSSEC validation is not performed, digest verification continues
     at step 4 below.
 2.  For zones where signatures are expected, the existence of the
     apex ZONEMD record MUST be validated.  If the DNSSEC data proves
     the ZONEMD RRset does not exist, digest verification cannot
     occur.  If the DNSSEC data proves the ZONEMD does exist, but is
     not found in the zone, digest verification MUST NOT be considered
     successful.
 3.  For zones where signatures are expected, the SOA and ZONEMD
     RRsets MUST have valid signatures, chaining up to a trust anchor.
     If DNSSEC validation of the SOA or ZONEMD RRsets fails, digest
     verification MUST NOT be considered successful.
 4.  When multiple ZONEMD RRs are present, each MUST specify a unique
     Scheme and Hash Algorithm tuple.  If the ZONEMD RRset contains
     more than one RR with the same Scheme and Hash Algorithm, digest
     verification for those ZONEMD RRs MUST NOT be considered
     successful.
 5.  Loop over all apex ZONEMD RRs and perform the following steps:
     a.  The SOA Serial field MUST exactly match the ZONEMD Serial
         field.  If the fields do not match, digest verification MUST
         NOT be considered successful with this ZONEMD RR.
     b.  The Scheme field MUST be checked.  If the verifier does not
         support the given scheme, verification MUST NOT be considered
         successful with this ZONEMD RR.
     c.  The Hash Algorithm field MUST be checked.  If the verifier
         does not support the given hash algorithm, verification MUST
         NOT be considered successful with this ZONEMD RR.
     d.  The Digest field size MUST be checked.  If the size of the
         given Digest field is smaller than 12 octets, or if the size
         is not equal to the size expected for the corresponding Hash
         Algorithm, verification MUST NOT be considered successful
         with this ZONEMD RR.
     e.  The zone digest is computed over the zone data as described
         in Section 3.3 using the Scheme and Hash Algorithm for the
         current ZONEMD RR.
     f.  The computed digest is compared to the received digest.  If
         the two digest values match, verification is considered
         successful.  Otherwise, verification MUST NOT be considered
         successful for this ZONEMD RR.
 Each time zone verification is performed, the verifier SHOULD report
 the status as either successful or unsuccessful.  When unsuccessful,
 the verifier SHOULD report the reason(s) that verification did not
 succeed.

5. IANA Considerations

5.1. ZONEMD RRtype

 This document defines a new DNS RR type, ZONEMD, whose value 63 has
 been allocated by IANA from the "Resource Record (RR) TYPEs"
 subregistry of the "Domain Name System (DNS) Parameters" registry:
 Type:  ZONEMD
 Value:  63
 Meaning:  Message Digest Over Zone Data
 Reference:  [RFC8976]

5.2. ZONEMD Scheme

 IANA has created a new subregistry in the "Domain Name System (DNS)
 Parameters" registry as follows:
 Registry Name:  ZONEMD Schemes
 Registration Procedure:  Specification Required
 Reference:  [RFC8976]
     +=========+=========================+==========+===========+
     | Value   | Description             | Mnemonic | Reference |
     +=========+=========================+==========+===========+
     | 0       | Reserved                |          | [RFC8976] |
     +---------+-------------------------+----------+-----------+
     | 1       | Simple ZONEMD collation | SIMPLE   | [RFC8976] |
     +---------+-------------------------+----------+-----------+
     | 2-239   | Unassigned              |          |           |
     +---------+-------------------------+----------+-----------+
     | 240-254 | Private Use             | N/A      | [RFC8976] |
     +---------+-------------------------+----------+-----------+
     | 255     | Reserved                |          | [RFC8976] |
     +---------+-------------------------+----------+-----------+
                   Table 1: ZONEMD Scheme Registry

5.3. ZONEMD Hash Algorithms

 IANA has created a new subregistry in the "Domain Name System (DNS)
 Parameters" registry as follows:
 Registry Name:  ZONEMD Hash Algorithms
 Registration Procedure:  Specification Required
 Reference:  [RFC8976]
           +=========+=============+==========+===========+
           | Value   | Description | Mnemonic | Reference |
           +=========+=============+==========+===========+
           | 0       | Reserved    |          | [RFC8976] |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
           | 1       | SHA-384     | SHA384   | [RFC8976] |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
           | 2       | SHA-512     | SHA512   | [RFC8976] |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
           | 3-239   | Unassigned  |          |           |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
           | 240-254 | Private Use | N/A      | [RFC8976] |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
           | 255     | Reserved    |          | [RFC8976] |
           +---------+-------------+----------+-----------+
               Table 2: ZONEMD Hash Algorithms Registry

6. Security Considerations

6.1. Using Zone Digest without DNSSEC

 Users of ZONEMD with unsigned zones are advised that it provides no
 real protection against attacks.  While zone digests can be used in
 the absence of DNSSEC, this only provides protection against
 accidental zone corruption such as transmission errors and
 truncation.  When used in this manner, it effectively serves only as
 a checksum.  For zones not signed with DNSSEC, an attacker can make
 any zone modifications appear to be valid by recomputing the Digest
 field of a ZONEMD RR.

6.2. Attacks against the Zone Digest

 An attacker, whose goal is to modify zone content before it is used
 by the victim, may consider a number of different approaches.
 The attacker might perform a downgrade attack to an unsigned zone.
 This is why Section 4 talks about determining whether or not to
 expect DNSSEC signatures for the zone in step 1.
 The attacker might perform a downgrade attack by removing one or more
 ZONEMD records.  Such a removal is detectable only with DNSSEC
 validation and is why Section 4 talks about checking denial-of-
 existence proofs in step 2 and signature validation in step 3.
 The attacker might alter the Scheme, Hash Algorithm, or Digest fields
 of the ZONEMD record.  Such modifications are detectable only with
 DNSSEC validation.
 As stated in [BCP201], cryptographic algorithms age and become weaker
 as cryptanalysis techniques and computing resources improve with
 time.  Implementors and publishers of zone digests should anticipate
 the need for algorithm agility on long timescales.

6.3. Use of Multiple ZONEMD Hash Algorithms

 When a zone publishes multiple ZONEMD RRs, the overall security is
 only as good as the weakest hash algorithm in use.  For this reason,
 Section 2 recommends only publishing multiple ZONEMD RRs when
 transitioning to a new scheme or hash algorithm.  Once the transition
 is complete, the old scheme or hash algorithm should be removed from
 the ZONEMD RRset.

6.4. DNSSEC Timing Considerations

 As with all DNSSEC signatures, the ability to perform signature
 validation of a ZONEMD record is limited in time.  If the DS
 record(s) or trust anchors for the zone to be verified are no longer
 available, the recipient cannot validate the ZONEMD RRset.  This
 could happen even if the ZONEMD signature is still current (not
 expired), since the zone's DS record(s) may have been withdrawn
 following a Key Signing Key (KSK) rollover.
 For zones where it may be important to validate a ZONEMD RRset
 through its entire signature validity period, the zone operator
 should ensure that KSK rollover timing takes this into consideration.

6.5. Attacks Utilizing ZONEMD Queries

 Nothing in this specification prevents clients from making, and
 servers from responding to, ZONEMD queries.  Servers SHOULD NOT
 calculate zone digests dynamically (for each query) as this can be
 used as a CPU resource exhaustion attack.
 ZONEMD responses could be used in a distributed denial-of-service
 amplification attack.  The ZONEMD RR is moderately sized, much like
 the DS RR.  A single ZONEMD RR contributes approximately 65 to 95
 octets to a DNS response for digest types defined herein.  Other RR
 types, such as DNS Public Key (DNSKEY), can result in larger
 amplification effects.

6.6. Resilience and Fragility

 ZONEMD is used to detect incomplete or corrupted zone data prior to
 its use, thereby increasing resilience by not using corrupt data, but
 also introduces some denial-of-service fragility by making good data
 in a zone unavailable if some other data is missing or corrupt.
 Publishers and consumers of zones containing ZONEMD records should be
 aware of these trade-offs.  While the intention is to secure the zone
 data, misconfigurations or implementation bugs are generally
 indistinguishable from intentional tampering and could lead to
 service failures when verification is performed automatically.
 Zone publishers may want to deploy ZONEMD gradually perhaps by
 utilizing one of the Private Use hash algorithm code points listed in
 Section 5.3.  Similarly, recipients may want to initially configure
 verification failures only as a warning, and later as an error after
 gaining experience and confidence with the feature.

7. Performance Considerations

 This section is provided to make zone publishers aware of the
 performance requirements and implications of including ZONEMD RRs in
 a zone.

7.1. SIMPLE SHA384

 As mentioned previously, the SIMPLE scheme may be impractical for use
 in zones that are either large or highly dynamic.  Zone publishers
 should carefully consider the use of ZONEMD in such zones since it
 might cause consumers of zone data (e.g., secondary name servers) to
 expend resources on digest calculation.  For such use cases, it is
 recommended that ZONEMD only be used when digest calculation time is
 significantly less than propagation times and update intervals.
 The authors' implementation (Appendix B.1) includes an option to
 record and report CPU usage of its operation.  The software was used
 to generate digests for more than 800 Top-Level Domain (TLD) zones
 available from [CZDS].  The table below summarizes the results for
 the SIMPLE scheme and SHA384 hash algorithm grouped by zone size.
 The Rate column is the mean amount of time per RR to calculate the
 digest, running on commodity hardware in early 2020.
               +=====================+================+
               |     Zone Size (RRs) | Rate (msec/RR) |
               +=====================+================+
               |             10 - 99 |        0.00683 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               |           100 - 999 |        0.00551 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               |         1000 - 9999 |        0.00505 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               |       10000 - 99999 |        0.00602 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               |     100000 - 999999 |        0.00845 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               |   1000000 - 9999999 |         0.0108 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
               | 10000000 - 99999999 |         0.0148 |
               +---------------------+----------------+
                               Table 3
 For example, based on the above table, it takes approximately 0.13
 seconds to calculate a SIMPLE SHA384 digest for a zone with 22,000
 RRs, and about 2.5 seconds for a zone with 300,000 RRs.
 These benchmarks attempt to emulate a worst-case scenario and take
 into account the time required to canonicalize the zone for
 processing.  Each of the 800+ zones were measured three times and
 then averaged, with a different random sorting of the input data
 prior to each measurement.

8. Privacy Considerations

 This specification has no impact on user privacy.

9. References

9.1. 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>.
 [RFC4034]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
            Rose, "Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions",
            RFC 4034, DOI 10.17487/RFC4034, March 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4034>.
 [RFC6234]  Eastlake 3rd, D. and T. Hansen, "US Secure Hash Algorithms
            (SHA and SHA-based HMAC and HKDF)", RFC 6234,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6234, May 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6234>.
 [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>.

9.2. Informative References

 [BCP201]   Housley, R., "Guidelines for Cryptographic Algorithm
            Agility and Selecting Mandatory-to-Implement Algorithms",
            BCP 201, RFC 7696, November 2015.
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp201>
 [CZDS]     Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
            (ICANN), "Centralized Zone Data Service", October 2018,
            <https://czds.icann.org/>.
 [DISK-FULL-FAILURE]
            DENIC, "Background of the Partial Failure of the Name
            Service for .de Domains", May 2010,
            <https://web.archive.org/web/20100618032705/
            https://www.denic.de/en/denic-in-dialogue/news/2733.html>.
 [DNS-TOOLS]
            "DNS tools for zone signature (file, pkcs11-hsm) and
            validation, and zone digest (ZONEMD)", commit 489de21,
            December 2020, <https://github.com/niclabs/dns-tools>.
 [DPRIVE-XFR-OVER-TLS]
            Toorop, W., Dickinson, S., Sahib, S., Aras, P., and A.
            Mankin, "DNS Zone Transfer-over-TLS", Work in Progress,
            Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-dprive-xfr-over-tls-05, 20
            January 2021, <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-
            dprive-xfr-over-tls-05>.
 [InterNIC] InterNIC, "Index of ftp://rs.internic.net/", May 2018,
            <ftp://ftp.internic.net/domain/>.
 [LDNS-ZONE-DIGEST]
            "Implementation of Message Digests for DNS Zones using the
            ldns library", commit 71c0cd1, January 2021,
            <https://github.com/verisign/ldns-zone-digest>.
 [RFC1995]  Ohta, M., "Incremental Zone Transfer in DNS", RFC 1995,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC1995, August 1996,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1995>.
 [RFC2065]  Eastlake 3rd, D. and C. Kaufman, "Domain Name System
            Security Extensions", RFC 2065, DOI 10.17487/RFC2065,
            January 1997, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2065>.
 [RFC2136]  Vixie, P., Ed., Thomson, S., Rekhter, Y., and J. Bound,
            "Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)",
            RFC 2136, DOI 10.17487/RFC2136, April 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2136>.
 [RFC2535]  Eastlake 3rd, D., "Domain Name System Security
            Extensions", RFC 2535, DOI 10.17487/RFC2535, March 1999,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2535>.
 [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>.
 [RFC3258]  Hardie, T., "Distributing Authoritative Name Servers via
            Shared Unicast Addresses", RFC 3258, DOI 10.17487/RFC3258,
            April 2002, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3258>.
 [RFC4033]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
            Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",
            RFC 4033, DOI 10.17487/RFC4033, March 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4033>.
 [RFC4035]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
            Rose, "Protocol Modifications for the DNS Security
            Extensions", RFC 4035, DOI 10.17487/RFC4035, March 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4035>.
 [RFC4880]  Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., Shaw, D., and R.
            Thayer, "OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 4880,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4880, November 2007,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4880>.
 [RFC5155]  Laurie, B., Sisson, G., Arends, R., and D. Blacka, "DNS
            Security (DNSSEC) Hashed Authenticated Denial of
            Existence", RFC 5155, DOI 10.17487/RFC5155, March 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5155>.
 [RFC5936]  Lewis, E. and A. Hoenes, Ed., "DNS Zone Transfer Protocol
            (AXFR)", RFC 5936, DOI 10.17487/RFC5936, June 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5936>.
 [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>.
 [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>.
 [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>.
 [RFC8551]  Schaad, J., Ramsdell, B., and S. Turner, "Secure/
            Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 4.0
            Message Specification", RFC 8551, DOI 10.17487/RFC8551,
            April 2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8551>.
 [RFC8806]  Kumari, W. and P. Hoffman, "Running a Root Server Local to
            a Resolver", RFC 8806, DOI 10.17487/RFC8806, June 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8806>.
 [RFC8901]  Huque, S., Aras, P., Dickinson, J., Vcelak, J., and D.
            Blacka, "Multi-Signer DNSSEC Models", RFC 8901,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8901, September 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8901>.
 [RFC8945]  Dupont, F., Morris, S., Vixie, P., Eastlake 3rd, D.,
            Gudmundsson, O., and B. Wellington, "Secret Key
            Transaction Authentication for DNS (TSIG)", STD 93,
            RFC 8945, DOI 10.17487/RFC8945, November 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8945>.
 [ROOT-SERVERS]
            Root Server Operators, "root-servers.org", July 2018,
            <https://www.root-servers.org/>.
 [RPZ]      Wikipedia, "Response policy zone", May 2020,
            <https://en.wikipedia.org/w/
            index.php?title=Response_policy_zone&oldid=960043728>.
 [ZONE-DIGEST-HACKATHON]
            "Prototype implementation of ZONEMD for the IETF 102
            hackathon", commit 76ad7a7, August 2019,
            <https://github.com/shane-kerr/ZoneDigestHackathon>.
 [ZONE-DIGEST-TESTS]
            IETF, "RFC 8976 ZONEMD Test Cases", January 2021,
            <https://trac.ietf.org/trac/dnsop/wiki/
            RFC8976ZONEMDTestCases>.

Appendix A. Example Zones with Digests

 This appendix contains example zones with accurate ZONEMD records.
 These can be used to verify an implementation of the zone digest
 protocol.  Additional and more extensive test cases can be found via
 the ZONEMD Tests Wiki ([ZONE-DIGEST-TESTS]) maintained by the IETF
 DNSOP Working Group.

A.1. Simple EXAMPLE Zone

 Here, the EXAMPLE zone contains an SOA record, NS and glue records,
 and a ZONEMD record.
 example.      86400  IN  SOA     ns1 admin 2018031900 (
                                  1800 900 604800 86400 )
               86400  IN  NS      ns1
               86400  IN  NS      ns2
               86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 1 (
                                  c68090d90a7aed71
                                  6bc459f9340e3d7c
                                  1370d4d24b7e2fc3
                                  a1ddc0b9a87153b9
                                  a9713b3c9ae5cc27
                                  777f98b8e730044c )
 ns1           3600   IN  A       203.0.113.63
 ns2           3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::63

A.2. Complex EXAMPLE Zone

 Here, the EXAMPLE zone contains duplicate RRs, an occluded RR,
 uppercase names, a wildcard, a multi-record RRset, a non-apex ZONEMD
 RR, and one out-of-zone RR.
 example.      86400  IN  SOA     ns1 admin 2018031900 (
                                  1800 900 604800 86400 )
               86400  IN  NS      ns1
               86400  IN  NS      ns2
               86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 1 (
                                  a3b69bad980a3504
                                  e1cffcb0fd6397f9
                                  3848071c93151f55
                                  2ae2f6b1711d4bd2
                                  d8b39808226d7b9d
                                  b71e34b72077f8fe )
 ns1           3600   IN  A       203.0.113.63
 NS2           3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::63
 occluded.sub  7200   IN  TXT     "I'm occluded but must be digested"
 sub           7200   IN  NS      ns1
 duplicate     300    IN  TXT     "I must be digested just once"
 duplicate     300    IN  TXT     "I must be digested just once"
 foo.test.     555    IN  TXT     "out-of-zone data must be excluded"
 UPPERCASE     3600   IN  TXT     "canonicalize uppercase owner names"
 *             777    IN  PTR     dont-forget-about-wildcards
 mail          3600   IN  MX      20 MAIL1
 mail          3600   IN  MX      10 Mail2.Example.
 sortme        3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::5:61
 sortme        3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::3:62
 sortme        3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::4:63
 sortme        3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::1:65
 sortme        3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::2:64
 non-apex      900    IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 1 (
                                  616c6c6f77656420
                                  6275742069676e6f
                                  7265642e20616c6c
                                  6f77656420627574
                                  2069676e6f726564
                                  2e20616c6c6f7765 )

A.3. EXAMPLE Zone with Multiple Digests

 Here, the EXAMPLE zone contains multiple ZONEMD records.  It has both
 SHA384 and SHA512 digests using the SIMPLE scheme.  It also includes
 ZONEMD records with Scheme and Hash Algorithm values in the private
 range (240-254).  These additional private-range digests are not
 verifiable.
 example.      86400  IN  SOA     ns1 admin 2018031900 (
                                  1800 900 604800 86400 )
 example.      86400  IN  NS      ns1.example.
 example.      86400  IN  NS      ns2.example.
 example.      86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 1 (
                                  62e6cf51b02e54b9
                                  b5f967d547ce4313
                                  6792901f9f88e637
                                  493daaf401c92c27
                                  9dd10f0edb1c56f8
                                  080211f8480ee306 )
 example.      86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 2 (
                                  08cfa1115c7b948c
                                  4163a901270395ea
                                  226a930cd2cbcf2f
                                  a9a5e6eb85f37c8a
                                  4e114d884e66f176
                                  eab121cb02db7d65
                                  2e0cc4827e7a3204
                                  f166b47e5613fd27 )
 example.      86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 1 240 (
                                  e2d523f654b9422a
                                  96c5a8f44607bbee )
 example.      86400  IN  ZONEMD  2018031900 241 1 (
                                  e1846540e33a9e41
                                  89792d18d5d131f6
                                  05fc283e )
 ns1.example.  3600   IN  A       203.0.113.63
 ns2.example.  86400  IN  TXT     "This example has multiple digests"
 NS2.EXAMPLE.  3600   IN  AAAA    2001:db8::63

A.4. The URI.ARPA Zone

 The following sample zone is the URI.ARPA zone retrieved 2021-01-21.
 Note this sample zone has been re-signed with unpublished keys, so
 that the added ZONEMD RR also has a signature.
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      SOA     sns.dns.icann.org. (
    noc.dns.icann.org. 2018100702 10800 3600 1209600 3600 )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      RRSIG   SOA 8 2 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     GzQw+QzwLDJr13REPGVmpEChjD1D2XlX0ie1DnWHpgaEw1E/dhs3lCN3+B
     mHd4Kx3tffTRgiyq65HxR6feQ5v7VmAifjyXUYB1DZur1eP5q0Ms2ygCB3
     byoeMgCNsFS1oKZ2LdzNBRpy3oace8xQn1SpmHGfyrsgg+WbHKCT1dY= )
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      NS      a.iana-servers.net.
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      NS      b.iana-servers.net.
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      NS      c.iana-servers.net.
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      NS      ns2.lacnic.net.
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      NS      sec3.apnic.net.
 uri.arpa.       86400   IN      RRSIG   NS 8 2 86400 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     M+Iei2lcewWGaMtkPlrhM9FpUAHXFkCHTVpeyrjxjEONeNgKtHZor5e4V4
     qJBOzNqo8go/qJpWlFBm+T5Hn3asaBZVstFIYky38/C8UeRLPKq1hTTHAR
     YUlFrexr5fMtSUAVOgOQPSBfH3xBq/BgSccTdRb9clD+HE7djpqrLS4= )
 uri.arpa.       600     IN      MX      10 pechora.icann.org.
 uri.arpa.       600     IN      RRSIG   MX 8 2 600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     kQAJQivmv6A5hqYBK8h6Z13ESY69gmosXwKI6WE09I8RFetfrxr24ecdnY
     d0lpnDtgNNSoHkYRSOoB+C4+zuJsoyAAzGo9uoWMWj97/2xeGhf3PTC9me
     Q9Ohi6hul9By7OR76XYmGhdWX8PBi60RUmZ1guslFBfQ8izwPqzuphs= )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      DNSKEY  256 3 8 (
     AwEAAbMxuFuLeVDuOwIMzYOTD/bTREjLflo7wOi6ieIJhqltEzgjNzmWJf
     9kGwwDmzxU7kbthMEhBNBZNn84zmcyRSCMzuStWveL7xmqqUlE3swL8kLO
     vdZvc75XnmpHrk3ndTyEb6eZM7slh2C63Oh6K8VR5VkiZAkEGg0uZIT3Nj
     sF )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      DNSKEY  257 3 8 (
     AwEAAdkTaWkZtZuRh7/OobBUFxM+ytTst+bCu0r9w+rEwXD7GbDs0pIMhM
     enrZzoAvmv1fQxw2MGs6Ri6yPKfNULcFOSt9l8i6BVBLI+SKTY6XXeDUQp
     SEmSaxohHeRPMQFzpysfjxINp/L2rGtZ7yPmxY/XRiFPSO0myqwGJa9r06
     Zw9CHM5UDHKWV/E+zxPFq/I7CfPbrrzbUotBX7Z6Vh3Sarllbe8cGUB2UF
     NaTRgwB0TwDBPRD5ER3w2Dzbry9NhbElTr7vVfhaGWeOGuqAUXwlXEg6Cr
     NkmJXJ2F1Rzr9WHUzhp7uWxhAbmJREGfi2dEyPAbUAyCjBqhFaqglknvc= )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      DNSKEY  257 3 8 (
     AwEAAenQaBoFmDmvRT+/H5oNbm0Tr5FmNRNDEun0Jpj/ELkzeUrTWhNpQm
     ZeIMC8I0kZ185tEvOnRvn8OvV39B17QIdrvvKGIh2HlgeDRCLolhaojfn2
     QM0DStjF/WWHpxJOmE6CIuvhqYEU37yoJscGAPpPVPzNvnL1HhYTaao1VR
     YWQ/maMrJ+bfHg+YX1N6M/8MnRjIKBif1FWjbCKvsn6dnuGGL9oCWYUFJ3
     DwofXuhgPyZMkzPc88YkJj5EMvbMH4wtelbCwC+ivx732l0w/rXJn0ciQS
     OgoeVvDio8dIJmWQITWQAuP+q/ZHFEFHPlrP3gvQh5mcVS48eLX71Bq7c= )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      RRSIG   DNSKEY 8 2 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 12670 uri.arpa.
     DBE2gkKAoxJCfz47KKxzoImN/0AKArhIVHE7TyTwy0DdRPo44V5R+vL6th
     UxlQ1CJi2Rw0jwAXymx5Y3Q873pOEllH+4bJoIT4dmoBmPXfYWW7Clvw9U
     PKHRP0igKHmCVwIeBYDTU3gfLcMTbR4nEWPDN0GxlL1Mf7ITaC2Ioabo79
     Ip3M/MR8I3Vx/xZ4ZKKPHtLn3xUuJluPNanqJrED2gTslL2xWZ1tqjsAjJ
     v7JnJo2HJ8XVRB5zBto0IaJ2oBlqcjdcQ/0VlyoM8uOy1pDwHQ2BJl7322
     gNMHBP9HSiUPIOaIDNUCwW8eUcW6DIUk+s9u3GN1uTqwWzsYB/rA== )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      RRSIG   DNSKEY 8 2 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 30577 uri.arpa.
     Kx6HwP4UlkGc1UZ7SERXtQjPajOF4iUvkwDj7MEG1xbQFB1KoJiEb/eiW0
     qmSWdIhMDv8myhgauejRLyJxwxz8HDRV4xOeHWnRGfWBk4XGYwkejVzOHz
     oIArVdUVRbr2JKigcTOoyFN+uu52cNB7hRYu7dH5y1hlc6UbOnzRpMtGxc
     gVyKQ+/ARbIqGG3pegdEOvV49wTPWEiyY65P2urqhvnRg5ok/jzwAdMx4X
     Gshiib7Ojq0sRVl2ZIzj4rFgY/qsSO8SEXEhMo2VuSkoJNiofVzYoqpxEe
     GnANkIT7Tx2xJL1BWyJxyc7E8Wr2QSgCcc+rYL6IkHDtJGHy7TaQ== )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      ZONEMD  2018100702 1 1 (
     0dbc3c4dbfd75777c12ca19c337854b1577799901307c482e9d91d5d15
     cd934d16319d98e30c4201cf25a1d5a0254960 )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      RRSIG   ZONEMD 8 2 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     QDo4XZcL3HMyn8aAHyCUsu/Tqj4Gkth8xY1EqByOb8XOTwVtA4ZNQORE1s
     iqNqjtJUbeJPtJSbLNqCL7rCq0CzNNnBscv6IIf4gnqJZjlGtHO30ohXtK
     vEc4z7SU3IASsi6bB3nLmEAyERdYSeU6UBfx8vatQDIRhkgEnnWUTh4= )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      NSEC    ftp.uri.arpa. (
     NS SOA MX RRSIG NSEC DNSKEY ZONEMD )
 uri.arpa.       3600    IN      RRSIG   NSEC 8 2 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     dU/rXLM/naWd1+1PiWiYVaNJyCkiuyZJSccr91pJI673T8r3685B4ODMYF
     afZRboVgwnl3ZrXddY6xOhZL3n9V9nxXZwjLJ2HJUojFoKcXTlpnUyYUYv
     VQ2kj4GHAo6fcGCEp5QFJ2KbCpeJoS+PhKGRRx28icCiNT4/uXQvO2E= )
 ftp.uri.arpa.   604800  IN      NAPTR   0 0 "" "" (
     "!^ftp://([^:/?#]*).*$!\\1!i" . )
 ftp.uri.arpa.   604800  IN      RRSIG   NAPTR 8 3 604800 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     EygekDgl+Lyyq4NMSEpPyOrOywYf9Y3FAB4v1DT44J3R5QGidaH8l7ZFjH
     oYFI8sY64iYOCV4sBnX/dh6C1L5NgpY+8l5065Xu3vvjyzbtuJ2k6YYwJr
     rCbvl5DDn53zAhhO2hL9uLgyLraZGi9i7TFGd0sm3zNyUF/EVL0CcxU= )
 ftp.uri.arpa.   3600    IN      NSEC    http.uri.arpa. (
     NAPTR RRSIG NSEC )
 ftp.uri.arpa.   3600    IN      RRSIG   NSEC 8 3 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     pbP4KxevPXCu/bDqcvXiuBppXyFEmtHyiy0eAN5gS7mi6mp9Z9bWFjx/Ld
     H9+6oFGYa5vGmJ5itu/4EDMe8iQeZbI8yrpM4TquB7RR/MGfBnTd8S+sjy
     QtlRYG7yqEu77Vd78Fme22BKPJ+MVqjS0JHMUE/YUGomPkAjLJJwwGw= )
 http.uri.arpa.  604800  IN      NAPTR   0 0 "" "" (
     "!^http://([^:/?#]*).*$!\\1!i" . )
 http.uri.arpa.  604800  IN      RRSIG   NAPTR 8 3 604800 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     eTqbWvt1GvTeXozuvm4ebaAfkXFQKrtdu0cEiExto80sHIiCbO0WL8UDa/
     J3cDivtQca7LgUbOb6c17NESsrsVkc6zNPx5RK2tG7ZQYmhYmtqtfg1oU5
     BRdHZ5TyqIXcHlw9Blo2pir1Y9IQgshhD7UOGkbkEmvB1Lrd0aHhAAg= )
 http.uri.arpa.  3600    IN      NSEC    mailto.uri.arpa. (
     NAPTR RRSIG NSEC )
 http.uri.arpa.  3600    IN      RRSIG   NSEC 8 3 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     R9rlNzw1CVz2N08q6DhULzcsuUm0UKcPaGAWEU40tr81jEDHsFHNM+khCd
     OI8nDstzA42aee4rwCEgijxJpRCcY9hrO1Ysrrr2fdqNz60JikMdarvU5O
     0p0VXeaaJDfJQT44+o+YXaBwI7Qod3FTMx7aRib8i7istvPm1Rr7ixA= )
 mailto.uri.arpa.        604800  IN      NAPTR   0 0 "" "" (
     "!^mailto:(.*)@(.*)$!\\2!i" . )
 mailto.uri.arpa.        604800  IN      RRSIG   NAPTR 8 3 604800 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     Ch2zTG2F1plEvQPyIH4Yd80XXLjXOPvMbiqDjpJBcnCJsV8QF7kr0wTLnU
     T3dB+asQudOjPyzaHGwFlMzmrrAsszN4XAMJ6htDtFJdsgTMP/NkHhYRSm
     Vv6rLeAhd+mVfObY12M//b/GGVTjeUI/gJaLW0fLVZxr1Fp5U5CRjyw= )
 mailto.uri.arpa.        3600    IN      NSEC    urn.uri.arpa. (
     NAPTR RRSIG NSEC )
 mailto.uri.arpa.        3600    IN      RRSIG   NSEC 8 3 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     fQUbSIE6E7JDi2rosah4SpCOTrKufeszFyj5YEavbQuYlQ5cNFvtm8KuE2
     xXMRgRI4RGvM2leVqcoDw5hS3m2pOJLxH8l2WE72YjYvWhvnwc5Rofe/8y
     B/vaSK9WCnqN8y2q6Vmy73AGP0fuiwmuBra7LlkOiqmyx3amSFizwms= )
 urn.uri.arpa.   604800  IN      NAPTR   0 0 "" "" (
     "/urn:([^:]+)/\\1/i" . )
 urn.uri.arpa.   604800  IN      RRSIG   NAPTR 8 3 604800 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     CVt2Tgz0e5ZmaSXqRfNys/8OtVCk9nfP0zhezhN8Bo6MDt6yyKZ2kEEWJP
     jkN7PCYHjO8fGjnUn0AHZI2qBNv7PKHcpR42VY03q927q85a65weOO1YE0
     vPYMzACpua9TOtfNnynM2Ws0uN9URxUyvYkXBdqOC81N3sx1dVELcwc= )
 urn.uri.arpa.   3600    IN      NSEC    uri.arpa. NAPTR RRSIG NSEC
 urn.uri.arpa.   3600    IN      RRSIG   NSEC 8 3 3600 (
     20210217232440 20210120232440 37444 uri.arpa.
     JuKkMiC3/j9iM3V8/izcouXWAVGnSZjkOgEgFPhutMqoylQNRcSkbEZQzF
     K8B/PIVdzZF0Y5xkO6zaKQjOzz6OkSaNPIo1a7Vyyl3wDY/uLCRRAHRJfp
     knuY7O+AUNXvVVIEYJqZggd4kl/Rjh1GTzPYZTRrVi5eQidI1LqCOeg= )

A.5. The ROOT-SERVERS.NET Zone

 The following sample zone is the ROOT-SERVERS.NET zone retrieved
 2018-10-21.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  SOA     a.root-servers.net. (
     nstld.verisign-grs.com. 2018091100 14400 7200 1209600 3600000 )
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      a.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      b.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      c.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      d.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      e.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      f.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      g.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      h.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      i.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      j.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      k.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      l.root-servers.net.
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  NS      m.root-servers.net.
 a.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:503:ba3e::2:30
 a.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       198.41.0.4
 b.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  MX      20 mail.isi.edu.
 b.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:200::b
 b.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       199.9.14.201
 c.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:2::c
 c.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.33.4.12
 d.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:2d::d
 d.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       199.7.91.13
 e.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:a8::e
 e.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.203.230.10
 f.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:2f::f
 f.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.5.5.241
 g.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:12::d0d
 g.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.112.36.4
 h.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:1::53
 h.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       198.97.190.53
 i.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  MX      10 mx.i.root-servers.org.
 i.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:7fe::53
 i.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.36.148.17
 j.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:503:c27::2:30
 j.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       192.58.128.30
 k.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:7fd::1
 k.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       193.0.14.129
 l.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:500:9f::42
 l.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       199.7.83.42
 m.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  AAAA    2001:dc3::35
 m.root-servers.net.   3600000 IN  A       202.12.27.33
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  SOA     a.root-servers.net. (
     nstld.verisign-grs.com. 2018091100 14400 7200 1209600 3600000 )
 root-servers.net.     3600000 IN  ZONEMD  2018091100 1 1 (
     f1ca0ccd91bd5573d9f431c00ee0101b2545c97602be0a97
     8a3b11dbfc1c776d5b3e86ae3d973d6b5349ba7f04340f79 )

Appendix B. Implementation Status

 This section records the status of known implementations of the
 protocol defined by this specification at the time of publication,
 and is inspired by the concepts described in RFC 7942.
 Please note that the listing of any individual implementation here
 does not imply endorsement by the IETF.  Furthermore, no effort has
 been spent to verify the information presented here that was supplied
 by IETF contributors.  This is not intended as, and must not be
 construed to be, a catalog of available implementations or their
 features.  Readers are advised to note that other implementations may
 exist.

B.1. Authors' Implementation

 The authors have an open-source implementation in C, using the ldns
 library ([LDNS-ZONE-DIGEST]).  This implementation is able to perform
 the following functions:
  • Read an input zone and output a zone with the ZONEMD placeholder.
  • Compute the zone digest over the signed zone and update the ZONEMD

record.

  • Recompute DNSSEC signatures over the ZONEMD record.
  • Verify the zone digest from an input zone.
 This implementation does not:
  • Perform DNSSEC validation of the ZONEMD record during

verification.

B.2. Shane Kerr's Implementation

 Shane Kerr wrote an implementation of this specification during the
 IETF 102 hackathon ([ZONE-DIGEST-HACKATHON]).  This implementation is
 in Python and is able to perform the following functions:
  • Read an input zone and output a zone with ZONEMD record.
  • Verify the zone digest from an input zone.
  • Output the ZONEMD record in its defined presentation format.
 This implementation does not:
  • Recompute DNSSEC signatures over the ZONEMD record.
  • Perform DNSSEC validation of the ZONEMD record.

B.3. NIC Chile Lab's Implementation

 NIC Chile Labs wrote an implementation of this specification as part
 of "dns-tools" suite ([DNS-TOOLS]), which besides digesting, can also
 sign and verify zones.  This implementation is in Go and is able to
 perform the following functions:
  • Compute zone digest over signed zone and update the ZONEMD record.
  • Verify the zone digest from an input zone.
  • Perform DNSSEC validation of the ZONEMD record during

verification.

  • Recompute DNSSEC signatures over the ZONEMD record.

Acknowledgments

 The authors wish to thank David Blacka, Scott Hollenbeck, and Rick
 Wilhelm for providing feedback on early drafts of this document.
 Additionally, they thank Joe Abley, Mark Andrews, Ralph Dolmans,
 Donald Eastlake 3rd, Richard Gibson, Olafur Gudmundsson, Bob Harold,
 Paul Hoffman, Evan Hunt, Shumon Huque, Tatuya Jinmei, Mike St. Johns,
 Burt Kaliski, Shane Kerr, Matt Larson, Barry Leiba, John Levine, Ed
 Lewis, Matt Pounsett, Mukund Sivaraman, Petr Spacek, Ondrej Sury,
 Willem Toorop, Florian Weimer, Tim Wicinski, Wouter Wijngaards, Paul
 Wouters, and other members of the DNSOP Working Group for their
 input.
 The authors would again like to thank Tim Wicinski, who served as the
 Document Shepherd for this document.

Authors' Addresses

 Duane Wessels
 Verisign
 12061 Bluemont Way
 Reston, VA 20190
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 703 948-3200
 Email: dwessels@verisign.com
 URI:   https://verisign.com
 Piet Barber
 Verisign
 12061 Bluemont Way
 Reston, VA 20190
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 703 948-3200
 Email: pbarber@verisign.com
 URI:   https://verisign.com
 Matt Weinberg
 Amazon
 Email: matweinb@amazon.com
 URI:   https://amazon.com
 Warren Kumari
 Google
 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
 Mountain View, CA 94043
 United States of America
 Email: warren@kumari.net
 Wes Hardaker
 USC/ISI
 P.O. Box 382
 Davis, CA 95617
 United States of America
 Email: ietf@hardakers.net
/home/gen.uk/domains/wiki.gen.uk/public_html/data/pages/rfc/rfc8976.txt · Last modified: 2021/02/10 06:16 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki