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rfc:rfc4704

Network Working Group B. Volz Request for Comments: 4704 Cisco Systems, Inc. Category: Standards Track October 2006

 The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6) Client
             Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) Option

Status of This Memo

 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
 improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
 and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).

Abstract

 This document specifies a new Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for
 IPv6 (DHCPv6) option that can be used to exchange information about a
 DHCPv6 client's Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) and about
 responsibility for updating DNS resource records (RRs) related to the
 client's address assignments.

Volz Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................3
 2. Terminology .....................................................3
 3. Models of Operation .............................................3
 4. The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option ...................................4
    4.1. The Flags Field ............................................5
    4.2. The Domain Name Field ......................................6
 5. DHCPv6 Client Behavior ..........................................7
    5.1. Client Desires to Update AAAA RRs ..........................7
    5.2. Client Desires Server to Do DNS Updates ....................7
    5.3. Client Desires No Server DNS Updates .......................7
    5.4. Domain Name and DNS Update Issues ..........................8
 6. DHCPv6 Server Behavior ..........................................9
    6.1. When to Perform DNS Updates ................................9
 7. DNS RR TTLs ....................................................10
 8. DNS Update Conflicts ...........................................11
 9. IANA Considerations ............................................11
 10. Security Considerations .......................................12
 11. Acknowledgements ..............................................12
 12. References ....................................................13
    12.1. Normative References .....................................13
    12.2. Informative References ...................................13

Volz Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

1. Introduction

 DNS ([2], [3]) maintains (among other things) the information about
 mapping between hosts' Fully Qualified Domain Names (FQDNs) [10] and
 IPv6 addresses assigned to the hosts.  The information is maintained
 in two types of Resource Records (RRs): AAAA and PTR [12].  The DNS
 update specification [4] describes a mechanism that enables DNS
 information to be updated over a network.
 The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6) [5]
 provides a mechanism by which a host (a DHCPv6 client) can acquire
 certain configuration information, along with its stateful IPv6
 address(es).  This document specifies a new DHCPv6 option, the Client
 FQDN option, which can be used by DHCPv6 clients and servers to
 exchange information about the client's fully qualified domain name
 and about who has the responsibility for updating the DNS with the
 associated AAAA and PTR RRs.

2. Terminology

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in [1].
 Familiarity with the DNS Update protocol [4] and with DHCPv6 and its
 terminology, as defined in [5], is assumed.

3. Models of Operation

 When a DHCPv6 client acquires an address, a site's administrator may
 desire that the AAAA RR for the client's FQDN and the PTR RR for the
 acquired address be updated.  Therefore, two separate DNS update
 transactions may occur.  Acquiring an address via DHCPv6 involves two
 entities: a DHCPv6 client and a DHCPv6 server.  In principle, each of
 these entities could perform none, one, or both of the DNS update
 transactions.  However, in practice, not all permutations make sense.
 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN option is primarily intended to operate in the
 following two cases:
 1.  DHCPv6 client updates the AAAA RR; DHCPv6 server updates the PTR
     RR.
 2.  DHCPv6 server updates both the AAAA and the PTR RRs.
 The only difference between these two cases is whether the FQDN-to-
 IPv6-address mapping is updated by a DHCPv6 client or by a DHCPv6
 server.  The IPv6-address-to-FQDN mapping is updated by a DHCPv6
 server in both cases.

Volz Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 The reason these two are important, while others are unlikely, has to
 do with authority over the respective DNS domain names.  A DHCPv6
 client may be given authority over mapping its own AAAA RRs, or that
 authority may be restricted to a server to prevent the client from
 listing arbitrary addresses or associating its addresses with
 arbitrary domain names.  In all cases, the only reasonable place for
 the authority over the PTR RRs associated with the address is in the
 DHCPv6 server that allocates the address.
 Note: A third case is supported in which the client requests that the
 server perform no updates.  However, this case is presumed to be rare
 because of the authority issues.
 In any case, whether a site permits all, some, or no DHCPv6 servers
 and clients to perform DNS updates into the zones that it controls is
 entirely a matter of local administrative policy.  This document does
 not require any specific administrative policy and does not propose
 one.  The range of possible policies is very broad, from sites where
 only the DHCPv6 servers have been given credentials that the DNS
 servers will accept, to sites where each individual DHCPv6 client has
 been configured with credentials that allow the client to modify its
 own domain name.  Compliant implementations MAY support some or all
 of these possibilities.  Furthermore, this specification applies only
 to DHCPv6 client and server processes: it does not apply to other
 processes that initiate DNS updates.
 This document describes a new DHCPv6 option that a client can use to
 convey all or part of its domain name to a DHCPv6 server.  Site-
 specific policy determines whether or not DHCPv6 servers use the
 names that clients offer, and what DHCPv6 servers do in cases where
 clients do not supply domain names.

4. The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option

 To update the IPv6-address-to-FQDN mapping, a DHCPv6 server needs to
 know the FQDN of the client for the addresses for the client's IA_NA
 bindings.  To allow the client to convey its FQDN to the server, this
 document defines a new DHCPv6 option called "Client FQDN".  The
 Client FQDN option also contains Flags that DHCPv6 clients and
 servers use to negotiate who does which updates.
 The code for this option is 39.  Its minimum length is 1 octet.

Volz Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 The format of the DHCPv6 Client FQDN option is shown below:
      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
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |          OPTION_FQDN          |         option-len            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |   flags       |                                               |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                               |
     .                                                               .
     .                          domain-name                          .
     .                                                               .
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
       option-code      OPTION_CLIENT_FQDN (39)
       option-len       1 + length of domain name
       flags            flag bits used between client and server to
                        negotiate who performs which updates
       domain-name      the partial or fully qualified domain name
                        (with length option-len - 1)
 The Client FQDN option MUST only appear in a message's options field
 and applies to all addresses for all IA_NA bindings in the
 transaction.

4.1. The Flags Field

 The format of the Flags field is:
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |  MBZ    |N|O|S|
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 The "S" bit indicates whether the server SHOULD or SHOULD NOT perform
 the AAAA RR (FQDN-to-address) DNS updates.  A client sets the bit to
 0 to indicate that the server SHOULD NOT perform the updates and 1 to
 indicate that the server SHOULD perform the updates.  The state of
 the bit in the reply from the server indicates the action to be taken
 by the server; if it is 1, the server has taken responsibility for
 AAAA RR updates for the FQDN.

Volz Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 The "O" bit indicates whether the server has overridden the client's
 preference for the "S" bit.  A client MUST set this bit to 0.  A
 server MUST set this bit to 1 if the "S" bit in its reply to the
 client does not match the "S" bit received from the client.
 The "N" bit indicates whether the server SHOULD NOT perform any DNS
 updates.  A client sets this bit to 0 to request that the server
 SHOULD perform updates (the PTR RR and possibly the AAAA RR based on
 the "S" bit) or to 1 to request that the server SHOULD NOT perform
 any DNS updates.  A server sets the "N" bit to indicate whether the
 server SHALL (0) or SHALL NOT (1) perform DNS updates.  If the "N"
 bit is 1, the "S" bit MUST be 0.
 The remaining bits in the Flags field are reserved for future
 assignment.  DHCPv6 clients and servers that send the Client FQDN
 option MUST clear the MBZ bits, and they MUST ignore these bits.

4.2. The Domain Name Field

 The Domain Name part of the option carries all or part of the FQDN of
 a DHCPv6 client.  The data in the Domain Name field MUST be encoded
 as described in Section 8 of [5].  In order to determine whether the
 FQDN has changed between message exchanges, the client and server
 MUST NOT alter the Domain Name field contents unless the FQDN has
 actually changed.
 A client MAY be configured with a fully qualified domain name or with
 a partial name that is not fully qualified.  If a client knows only
 part of its name, it MAY send a name that is not fully qualified,
 indicating that it knows part of the name but does not necessarily
 know the zone in which the name is to be embedded.
 To send a fully qualified domain name, the Domain Name field is set
 to the DNS-encoded domain name including the terminating zero-length
 label.  To send a partial name, the Domain Name field is set to the
 DNS-encoded domain name without the terminating zero-length label.
 A client MAY also leave the Domain Name field empty if it desires the
 server to provide a name.
 Servers SHOULD send the complete fully qualified domain name in
 Client FQDN options.

Volz Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

5. DHCPv6 Client Behavior

 The following describes the behavior of a DHCPv6 client that
 implements the Client FQDN option.
 A client MUST only include the Client FQDN option in SOLICIT,
 REQUEST, RENEW, or REBIND messages.
 A client that sends the Client FQDN option MUST also include the
 option in the Option Request option if it expects the server to
 include the Client FQDN option in any responses.

5.1. Client Desires to Update AAAA RRs

 If a client that owns/maintains its own FQDN wants to be responsible
 for updating the FQDN-to-IPv6-address mapping for the FQDN and
 address(es) used by the client, the client MUST include the Client
 FQDN option in the SOLICIT with Rapid Commit, REQUEST, RENEW, and
 REBIND message originated by the client.  A client MAY choose to
 include the Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT messages.  The "S",
 "O", and "N" bits in the Flags field in the option MUST be 0.
 Once the client's DHCPv6 configuration is completed (the client
 receives a REPLY message and successfully completes a final check on
 the parameters passed in the message), the client MAY originate an
 update for the AAAA RRs (associated with the client's FQDN) unless
 the server has set the "S" bit to 1.  If the "S" is 1, the DHCPv6
 client SHOULD NOT initiate an update for the name in the server's
 returned Client FQDN option Domain Name field.  However, a DHCPv6
 client that is explicitly configured with a FQDN MAY ignore the state
 of the "S" bit if the server's returned name matches the client's
 configured name.

5.2. Client Desires Server to Do DNS Updates

 A client can choose to delegate the responsibility for updating the
 FQDN-to-IPv6-address mapping for the FQDN and address(es) used by the
 client to the server.  In order to inform the server of this choice,
 the client SHOULD include the Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT with
 Rapid Commit, REQUEST, RENEW, and REBIND messages and MAY include the
 Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT.  The "S" bit in the Flags field in
 the option MUST be 1, and the "O" and "N" bits MUST be 0.

5.3. Client Desires No Server DNS Updates

 A client can choose to request that the server perform no DNS updates
 on its behalf.  In order to inform the server of this choice, the
 client SHOULD include the Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT with

Volz Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 Rapid Commit, REQUEST, RENEW, and REBIND messages and MAY include the
 Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT.  The "N" bit in the Flags field in
 the option MUST be 1, and the "S" and "O" bits MUST be 0.
 Once the client's DHCPv6 configuration is completed (the client
 receives a REPLY message and successfully completes a final check on
 the parameters passed in the message), the client MAY originate its
 DNS updates provided the server's "N" bit is 1.  If the server's "N"
 bit is 0, the server MAY perform the PTR RR updates; it MAY also
 perform the AAAA RR updates if the "S" bit is 1.

5.4. Domain Name and DNS Update Issues

 As there is a possibility that the DHCPv6 server is configured to
 complete or replace a domain name that the client sends, the client
 MAY find it useful to send the Client FQDN option in its SOLICIT
 messages.  If the DHCPv6 server returns different Domain Name data in
 its ADVERTISE message, the client could use that data in performing
 its own eventual AAAA RR update, or in forming the Client FQDN option
 that it sends in its subsequent messages.  There is no requirement
 that the client send identical Client FQDN option data in its
 SOLICIT, REQUEST, RENEW, or REBIND messages.  In particular, if a
 client has sent the Client FQDN option to its server, and the
 configuration of the client changes so that its notion of its domain
 name changes, it MAY send the new name data in a Client FQDN option
 when it communicates with the server again.  This MAY cause the
 DHCPv6 server to update the name associated with the PTR records and,
 if the server updated the AAAA record representing the client, to
 delete that record and attempt an update for the client's current
 domain name.
 A client that delegates the responsibility for updating the FQDN-to-
 IPv6-address mapping to a server will not receive any indication
 (either positive or negative) from the server as to whether the
 server was able to perform the update.  The client MAY use a DNS
 query to check whether the mapping is up to date.  However, depending
 on the load on the DHCPv6 and DNS servers and the DNS propagation
 delays, the client can only infer success.  If the information is not
 found to be up to date in DNS, the authoritative servers might not
 have completed the updates or zone transfers, or caching resolvers
 may yet have updated their caches.
 If a client releases an address prior to the expiration of the valid
 lifetime and the client is responsible for updating its AAAA RR, the
 client SHOULD delete the AAAA RR associated with the address before
 sending a RELEASE message.  Similarly, if a client is responsible for
 updating its AAAA RRs, but is unable to renew the lifetimes for an
 address, the client SHOULD attempt to delete the AAAA RR before the

Volz Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 lifetime on the address is no longer valid.  A DHCPv6 client that has
 not been able to delete an AAAA RR that it added SHOULD attempt to
 notify its administrator, perhaps by emitting a log message.
 A client SHOULD NOT perform DNS updates to AAAA RRs for its non-
 Global Unicast addresses [7] or temporary addresses [6].

6. DHCPv6 Server Behavior

 The following describes the behavior of a DHCPv6 server that
 implements the Client FQDN option when the client's message includes
 the Client FQDN option.
 Servers MUST only include a Client FQDN option in ADVERTISE and REPLY
 messages if the client included a Client FQDN option and the Client
 FQDN option is requested by the Option Request option in the client's
 message to which the server is responding.
 The server examines its configuration and the Flag bits in the
 client's Client FQDN option to determine how to respond:
 o  The server sets to 0 the "S", "O", and "N" bits in its copy of the
    option it will return to the client.
 o  If the client's "N" bit is 1 and the server's configuration allows
    it to honor the client's request for no server-initiated DNS
    updates, the server sets the "N" bit to 1.
 o  Otherwise, if the client's "S" bit is 1 and the server's
    configuration allows it to honor the client's request for the
    server to initiate AAAA RR DNS updates, the server sets the "S" to
    1.  If the server's "S" bit does not match the client's "S" bit,
    the server sets the "O" bit to 1.
 The server MAY be configured to use the name supplied in the client's
 Client FQDN option, or it MAY be configured to modify the supplied
 name or to substitute a different name.  The server SHOULD send its
 notion of the complete FQDN for the client in the Domain Name field.
 The server MAY simply copy the Domain Name field from the Client FQDN
 option that the client sent to the server.

6.1. When to Perform DNS Updates

 The server SHOULD NOT perform any DNS updates if the "N" bit is 1 in
 the Flags field of the Client FQDN option in the REPLY messages (to
 be) sent to the client.  However, the server SHOULD delete any RRs
 that it previously added via DNS updates for the client.

Volz Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 The server MAY perform the PTR RR DNS update (unless the "N" bit is
 1).
 The server MAY perform the AAAA RR DNS update if the "S" bit is 1 in
 the Flags field of the Client FQDN option in the REPLY message (to
 be) sent to the client.
 The server MAY perform these updates even if the client's message did
 not carry the Client FQDN option.  The server MUST NOT initiate DNS
 updates when responding with an ADVERTISE message to the client.
 The server MAY complete its DNS updates (PTR RR or PTR and AAAA RR)
 before or after sending the REPLY message to the client.
 If the server's AAAA RR DNS update does not complete until after the
 server has replied to the DHCPv6 client, the server's interaction
 with the DNS server MAY cause the DHCPv6 server to change the domain
 name that it associates with the client.  This can occur, for
 example, if the server detects and resolves a domain-name conflict
 [8].  In such cases, the domain name that the server returns to the
 DHCPv6 client would change between two DHCPv6 exchanges.
 If the server previously performed DNS updates for the client and the
 client's information has not changed, the server MAY skip performing
 additional DNS updates.
 When a server receives a RELEASE or DECLINE for an address, detects
 that the valid lifetime on an address that the server bound to a
 client has expired, or terminates a binding on an address prior to
 the binding's expiration time (for instance, by sending a REPLY with
 a zero valid lifetime for an address), the server SHOULD delete any
 PTR RR that it associated with the address via DNS update.  In
 addition, if the server took responsibility for AAAA RRs, the server
 SHOULD also delete the AAAA RR.

7. DNS RR TTLs

 RRs associated with DHCP clients may be more volatile than statically
 configured RRs.  DHCP clients and servers that perform dynamic
 updates should attempt to specify resource record TTLs that reflect
 this volatility, in order to minimize the possibility that answers to
 DNS queries will return records that refer to DHCP IP address
 assignments that have expired or been released.
 The coupling among primary, secondary, and caching DNS servers is
 'loose'; that is a fundamental part of the design of the DNS.  This
 looseness makes it impossible to prevent all possible situations in
 which a resolver may return a record reflecting a DHCP-assigned IP

Volz Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 address that has expired or been released.  In deployment, this
 rarely, if ever, represents a significant problem.  Most DHCP-managed
 clients are infrequently looked up by name in the DNS, and the
 deployment of IXFR [13] and NOTIFY [14] can reduce the latency
 between updates and their visibility at secondary servers.
 We suggest these basic guidelines for implementers.  In general, the
 TTLs for RRs added as a result of DHCP IP address assignment activity
 SHOULD be less than the initial lifetime.  The RR TTL on a DNS record
 added SHOULD NOT exceed 1/3 of the lifetime, but SHOULD NOT be less
 than 10 minutes.  We recognize that individual administrators will
 have varying requirements: DHCP servers and clients SHOULD allow
 administrators to configure TTLs and upper and lower bounds on the
 TTL values, either as an absolute time interval or as a percentage of
 the lease lifetime.
 While clients and servers MAY update the TTL of the records as the
 lifetime is about to expire, there is no requirement that they do so
 as this puts additional load on the DNS system with likely little
 benefit.

8. DNS Update Conflicts

 This document does not resolve how a DHCPv6 client or server prevent
 name conflicts.  This document addresses only how a DHCPv6 client and
 server negotiate the fully qualified domain name and who will perform
 the DNS updates.
 Implementers of this work will need to consider how name conflicts
 will be prevented.  If a DNS updater needs a security token in order
 to successfully perform DNS updates on a specific name, name
 conflicts can only occur if multiple updaters are given a security
 token for that name.  Or, if the fully qualified domains are based on
 the specific address bound to a client, conflicts will not occur.
 Or, a name conflict resolution technique as described in "Resolving
 Name Conflicts" [8]) SHOULD be used.

9. IANA Considerations

 The IANA has assigned DHCPv6 option code 39 for the Client FQDN
 option.

Volz Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

10. Security Considerations

 Unauthenticated updates to the DNS can lead to tremendous confusion,
 through malicious attack or through inadvertent misconfiguration.
 Administrators need to be wary of permitting unsecured DNS updates to
 zones that are exposed to the global Internet.  Both DHCPv6 clients
 and servers SHOULD use some form of update request origin
 authentication procedure (e.g., Secure DNS Dynamic Update [11]) when
 performing DNS updates.
 Whether a DHCPv6 client is responsible for updating an FQDN-to-IPv6-
 address mapping or whether this is the responsibility of the DHCPv6
 server is a site-local matter.  The choice between the two
 alternatives is likely based on the security model that is used with
 the DNS update protocol (e.g., only a client may have sufficient
 credentials to perform updates to the FQDN-to-IPv6-address mapping
 for its FQDN).
 Whether a DHCPv6 server is always responsible for updating the FQDN-
 to-IPv6-address mapping (in addition to updating the IPv6-to-FQDN
 mapping), regardless of the wishes of an individual DHCPv6 client, is
 also a site-local matter.  The choice between the two alternatives is
 likely based on the security model that is being used with DNS
 updates.  In cases where a DHCPv6 server is performing DNS updates on
 behalf of a client, the DHCPv6 server SHOULD be sure of the DNS name
 to use for the client, and of the identity of the client.
 Depending on the presence of or type of authentication used with the
 Authentication option, a DHCPv6 server may not have much confidence
 in the identities of its clients.  There are many ways for a DHCPv6
 server to develop a DNS name to use for a client, but only in certain
 circumstances will the DHCPv6 server know for certain the identity of
 the client.
 It is critical to implement proper conflict resolution, and the
 security considerations of conflict resolution apply [8].

11. Acknowledgements

 Many thanks to Mark Stapp and Yakov Rekhter, as this document is
 based on the DHCPv4 Client FQDN option [9], and to Ralph Droms, Ted
 Lemon, Josh Littlefield, Kim Kinnear, Pekka Savola, and Mark Stapp
 for their review and comments.

Volz Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

12. References

12.1. Normative References

 [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
      Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [2]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
      STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.
 [3]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
      specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.
 [4]  Vixie, P., Thomson, S., Rekhter, Y., and J. Bound, "Dynamic
      Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)", RFC 2136,
      April 1997.
 [5]  Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C., and M.
      Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)",
      RFC 3315, July 2003.
 [6]  Narten, T. and R. Draves, "Privacy Extensions for Stateless
      Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6", RFC 3041, January 2001.
 [7]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
      Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
 [8]  Stapp, M. and B. Volz, "Resolution of Fully Qualified Domain
      Name (FQDN) Conflicts among Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
      (DHCP) Clients", RFC 4703, October 2006.

12.2. Informative References

 [9]   Stapp, M., Volz, B., and Y. Rekhter, "The Dynamic Host
       Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Client Fully Qualified Domain
       Name (FQDN) Option", RFC 4702, October 2006.
 [10]  Marine, A., Reynolds, J., and G. Malkin, "FYI on Questions and
       Answers - Answers to Commonly asked "New Internet User"
       Questions", FYI 4, RFC 1594, March 1994.
 [11]  Wellington, B., "Secure Domain Name System (DNS) Dynamic
       Update", RFC 3007, November 2000.
 [12]  Thomson, S., Huitema, C., Ksinant, V., and M. Souissi, "DNS
       Extensions to Support IP Version 6", RFC 3596, October 2003.

Volz Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

 [13]  Ohta, M., "Incremental Zone Transfer in DNS", RFC 1995,
       August 1996.
 [14]  Vixie, P., "A Mechanism for Prompt Notification of Zone Changes
       (DNS NOTIFY)", RFC 1996, August 1996.

Author's Address

 Bernard Volz
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 1414 Massachusetts Ave.
 Boxborough, MA  01719
 USA
 Phone: +1 978 936 0382
 EMail: volz@cisco.com

Volz Standards Track [Page 14] RFC 4704 The DHCPv6 Client FQDN Option October 2006

Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
 This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
 contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
 retain all their rights.
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 ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
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 INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
 WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

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Acknowledgement

 Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
 Administrative Support Activity (IASA).

Volz Standards Track [Page 15]

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