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rfc:rfc973

Network Working Group Paul Mockapetris Request for Comments: 973 ISI

                                                          January 1986
               Domain System Changes and Observations

STATUS OF THIS MEMO

 This RFC documents updates to Domain Name System specifications
 RFC-882 [1] and RFC-883 [2], suggests some operational guidelines,
 and discusses some experiences and problem areas in the present
 system.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
 This document includes all changes to the Domain System through
 January, 1986.  Change notices and additional discussion are
 available online in file [USC-ISIB.ARPA]<DOMAIN>DOMAIN.CHANGES.

OVERVIEW

 This memo is divided into four major sections:
    "UPDATES" which discusses changes to the domain specification
    which are in widespread use and should be regarded as being part
    of the specification.
    "OPERATION GUIDELINES" which suggests rules-of-thumb for using the
    domain system and configuring your database which are appropriate
    in most cases, but which may have rare exceptions.
    "EXPERIENCES" which discusses some unusual situations and common
    bugs which are encountered in the present system, and should be
    helpful in problem determination and tuning.
    "PROBLEM AREAS" which discusses some shortcomings in the present
    system which may be addressed in future versions.

UPDATES

 This section discusses changes to the specification which are final,
 and should be incorporated in all domain system software.
 TTL timeouts too small
    The 16 bit TTL field in RRs could not represent a large enough
    time interval.  The 16 bit field, using seconds for units, has a
    maximum period of approximately 18 hours.
    All time values, including all TTLs and the MINIMUM field of the
    SOA RR, are expanded to 32 bits.

Mockapetris [Page 1]

RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

 CLASS changes
    Class 2, originally reserved for CSNET, is obsolete.  Class 3 has
    been assigned for use by CHAOS.
 CNAME usage
    The specification allows CNAME RRs to exist with other RRs at the
    same node.  This creates difficulties since the other RRs stored
    with the CNAME at the alias might not agree with the RRs stored at
    the primary name.
    If a node has a CNAME RR, it should have no other RRs.
  • semantics
    The use of * to represent a single label wildcard, along with the
    possibility of multiple * labels, led to difficult server
    implementations and complicated search algorithms.  There were
    also questions regarding whether a * based specification could
    refer to names that were not contained in the zone which had the *
    specification.
    While we might want the "inheritability" for some cases, it leads
    to implementation difficulties.  The first of these is that
    whenever we can't find a RR in a particular zone, we have to
    search all parent zones to look for a suitable * result.
    (Alternatively we could develop some automatic method for insuring
    consistency or insist on careful duplication of inherited data.)
    We also must deal with conflicts, i.e. what if a subdomain doesn't
    want to inherit defaults.
    Given these difficulties, the solution is to insist that
    delegation of authority cancels the * defaults.  This is quite
    simple to implement; all you need to do is to check for delegation
    before looking for * RRs.
    A second difficulty is the restriction that * match a single
    label.  Thus if a name server is looking for RRs for the name
    A.B.C.D.E.F, it must check for *.B.C.D.E.F, *.*.C.D.E.F,
    *.*.*.D.E.F, etc.  This check must also be careful of zone
    boundaries and multiplies the effort to handle a query.
    The solution adopted is to allow a single * label in the leftmost
    part of a name stored in a zone, and to allow this label to match

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

    any number of unknown labels or a single known label in the query
    name.  However, the * match is only taken for parts of the tree
    which are neither delegated or explicitly represented.
    The algorithm for performing the search in a tree structured
    database has the following steps:
    1) Descend in the tree matching labels from right to left.  If a
    delegation is found return that;  if the specified node is found
    go to step 2, if the tree ends go to step 3.
    2) Look for RRs that answer the query.  If any are found, return
    them as the answer.  If none are found, look for answers in a *
    node which has the same name as the query name except for the
    rightmost label.  (e.g. if you can't find an answer at F.ISI.ARPA,
    look for a RR at *.ISI.ARPA)
    3) The search for a desired name has failed; look for a node whose
    name is * plus however much matched.  Look for answers there.
    (e.g. If you are looking for X.Y.ISI.ARPA and the tree ends at
    ISI.ARPA, look at *.ISI.ARPA.  The same thing holds for
    Y.ISI.ARPA, or any name of the form <anything>.Z.ISI.ARPA, where Z
    is a label that doesn't exist under ISI.ARPA)
    Note that this interpretation means that * matches names that are
    not in the tree, no matter how much of the tree is missing, and
    also matches one level's worth of known tree.
 AA semantics
    When a name server is responding to a query for a particular name
    and finds a CNAME, it may optionally restart the search at the
    canonical name.  If the server uses the restart feature, the
    answer section of the returned query contains one (or more)
    CNAMEs, possibly followed by answers for the primary name.  The
    canonical name will usually be in the same zone as the alias, but
    this need not be the case.  If the server is authoritative for one
    of the names but not both, it is not clear whether the AA bit
    should be set.
    The solution adopted is to make the AA refer to the original query
    name.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

 Master file format
    The present specification uses a somewhat awkward method for
    representing domain names in master files.
    The change adopted is that all domain names in this file will be
    represented as either absolute or relative.  An absolute domain
    name ends with a ".".  A free standing "." is assumed to refer to
    the root.  A relative domain name doesn't end with a dot, and is
    assumed to be relative to the current origin.
 SERIAL number size
    If the master file changes rapidly, an infrequently updated copy
    may miss the wrapping of the sequence number in the SERIAL field
    of the SOA, or misinterpret the number of updates that have taken
    place.
    The SERIAL field is increased to 32 bits.
 MD and MF replaced by MX
    The original specification uses MD and MF RRs for mail agent
    binding.  The problem is that a mailer making a MAILA query, which
    asks for both types, can't use the cache since the cache might
    have the results for a MD or MF query.  That is, the presence of
    one of these types of information in the cache doesn't imply
    anything about the other type.  The result was that either mailers
    would have to always consult authoritative servers or try to use
    partial information; neither of these is really acceptable.
    The change is to replace MD and MF with a new type of RR called MX
    which conveys similar information in a single RR type.  MX has
    been assigned a type code of 15 decimal.  The format of the MX RR
    is a 16 bit preference value followed by a domain name.  A node
    may have multiple MX RRs, and multiple MX RRs with the same
    preference value are allowed at a given node.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

    The preference values denote the relative preference that the mail
    destination places on the mail agents, with lower values being
    "better".  A mailer is expected to at least try the mail agent(s)
    with the lowest preference value.  The significance of particular
    preference values, the units of preference, and the linearity of
    preference values are not defined but left open; preference values
    should only be used to establish relative rankings.
    For example, the current RRs:
                     MAIL-ORG   MD    HOST1    
                                MD    HOST2    
                                MF    HOST3    
    might be replaced by:
                     MAIL-ORG   MX    10 HOST1 
                                MX    10 HOST2 
                                MX    20 HOST3 
    The values 10 and 20 have no significance other than 10<20.  A
    detailed discussion of the use of MX is the subject of [3].
 Zone transfer
    The original specification states that zone transfers take place
    in breadth first order.  The intent was to make the transfer
    easier for the accepting name server to handle.  This now doesn't
    work out to be very helpful, and is a severe pain for implementers
    using various hashing algorithms.  The new rule is that you can
    transmit the records in any order you choose, so long as the SOA
    node of the zone is transmitted first and last, and no other
    duplication occurs.
 IN-ADDR domain renamed
    The name of the IN-ADDR domain is now IN-ADDR.ARPA.  This change
    was made because many felt that the use of a top-level name was
    inappropriate to network-specific information.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

OPERATIONAL GUIDELINES

 This section suggests rules-of-thumb for using the domain system and
 configuring your database which are appropriate in most cases, but
 which may have rare exceptions.
 Zone delegation
    When a domain wishes to become independent from its parent, the
    RRs which mark the delegation in the parent and child zones should
    be carefully synchronized to minimize the possibility that
    resolvers become confused.
    For example, suppose that we wish to create a new zone called
    ISI.EDU under an existing EDU zone, and that the servers for the
    child zone are X.ISI.EDU and Y.GOV.
    We might add the following to the parent zone:
     ISI.EDU.      10000 NS  X.ISI.EDU.              
                   10000 NS  Y.GOV.                  
     X.ISI.EDU.    10000 A   <address of X.ISI.EDU.> 
     Y.GOV.        10000 A   <address of Y.GOV.>     
    and the following to the child zone:
     ISI.EDU.      10000 NS  X.ISI.EDU.              
                   10000 NS  Y.GOV.                  
                   50000 SOA <SOA information>       
     X.ISI.EDU.    10000 A   <address of X.ISI.EDU.> 
     Y.GOV.        10000 A   <address of Y.GOV.>     
    Note the following:
       In both cases, the A RR for Y.GOV is included, even though
       Y.GOV isn't in the EDU or ISI.EDU domains.  This RR isn't
       authoritative, but is included to guarantee that the address of
       Y.GOV is passed with delegations to it.  Strictly speaking this
       RR need not be in either zone, but its presence is recommended.
       The X.ISI.EDU A RR is absolutely essential.  The only time that
       a server should use the glue RRs is when it is returning the NS
       RRs and doesn't otherwise have the address of the server.  For
       example, if the parent server also was authoritative for GOV,
       the glue RR would typically not be consulted.  However, it is
       still a good idea for it to be present, so that the zone is
       self-sufficient.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

       The child zone and the parent zone have identical NS RRs for
       the ISI.EDU domain.  This guarantees that no matter which
       server is asked about the ISI.EDU domain, the same set of name
       servers is returned.
       The child zone and the parent zone have A RRs for the name
       servers in the NS RRs that delegate the ISI.EDU domain.  This
       guarantees that in addition to knowing the name servers for the
       ISI.EDU domain, the addresses of the servers are known as well.
       The TTLs for the NS RRs that delegate the ISI.EDU domain and
       the A RRs that represent the addresses of the name servers are
       all the same.  This guarantees that all of these RRs will
       timeout simultaneously.  In this example, the value 10000 has
       no special significance, but the coincidence of the TTLs is
       significant.
    These guidelines haven't changed any of the flexibility of the
    system; the name of a name server and the domains it serves are
    still independent.
    It might also be the case that the organization called ISI wanted
    to take over management of the IN-ADDR domain for an internal
    network, say 128.99.0.0.  In this case, we would have additions to
    the parent zone, say IN-ADDR.ARPA.
    We might add the following to the parent zone:
     99.128.IN-ADDR.ARPA. 2000 NS  Q.ISI.EDU.               
                          2000 NS  XX.MIT.EDU.              
     Q.ISI.EDU.           2000 A   <address of Q.ISI.EDU.>  
     XX.MIT.EDU.          2000 A   <address of XX.MIT.EDU.> 
    and the following to the child zone:
     99.128.IN-ADDR.ARPA. 2000 NS  Q.ISI.EDU.               
                          2000 NS  XX.MIT.EDU.              
                          5000 SOA <SOA information>        
     Q.ISI.EDU.           2000 A   <address of Q.ISI.EDU.>  
     XX.MIT.EDU.          2000 A   <address of XX.MIT.EDU.> 
 SOA serials
    The serial field of the SOA RR for a domain is supposed to be a
    continuously increasing (mod 2**32) value which denotes the

Mockapetris [Page 7]

RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

    version of the database.  The idea is that you can tell that a
    zone has changed by comparing serial numbers.  When you change a
    zone, you should increment the serial field of the SOA.
 All RRs with the same name, class, and type should have the same TTL.
    The logic here is that all of them will timeout simultaneously if
    cached and hence the cache can be reliably used.
 Case consistency
    The domain system is supposed to preserve case, but be case
    insensitive.  However, it does nobody any good to put both RRs for
    domain name xxx and XXX in the data base - It merely makes caching
    ambiguous and decreases the efficiency of compression.  This
    consistency should also exist in the duplicate RRs that mark
    delegation in the delegator and delegatee.  For example, if you
    ask the NIC to delegate UZOO.EDU to you, your database shouldn't
    say uzoo.edu.
 Inappropriate use of aliases
    Canonical names are preferred to aliases in all RRs.  One reason
    is that the canonical names are closer to the information
    associated with a name.  A second is that canonical names are
    unique, and aliases are not, and hence comparisons will work.
    In particular, the use of aliases in PTR RRs of the IN-ADDR domain
    or in NS RRs that mark delegation is discouraged.

EXPERIENCES

 This section discusses some unusual situations and common bugs which
 are encountered in the present system, and should be helpful in
 problem determination and tuning.  Put differently, you should try to
 make your code defend against these attacks, and you should expect to
 be the object of complaint if you make these attacks.
 UDP addresses
    When you send a query to a host with multiple addresses, you might
    expect the response to be from the address to which you sent the
    query.  This isn't the case with almost all UNIX implementations.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

 UDP checksums
    Many versions of UNIX generate incorrect UDP checksums, and most
    ignore the checksum of incoming UDP datagrams.  The typical
    symptom is that your UNIX domain code works fine with other
    UNIXes, but won't communicate with TOPS-20 or other systems.
    (JEEVES, the TOPS-20 server used for 3 of the 4 root servers,
    ignores datagrams with bad UDP checksums.)
 Making up data
    There are lots of name servers which return RRs for the root
    servers with 99999999 or similar large values in the TTL.  For
    example, some return RRs that suggest that ISIF is a root server.
    (It was months ago, but is no longer.)
    One of the main ideas of the domain system is that everybody can
    get a chunk of the name space to manage as they choose.  However,
    you aren't supposed to lie about other parts of the name space.
    Its OK to remember about other parts of the name space for caching
    or other purposes, but you are supposed to follow the TTL rules.
    Now it may be that you put such records in your server or whatever
    to ensure a server of last resort.  That's fine.  But if you
    export these in answers to queries, you should be shot.  These
    entries get put in caches and never die.
    Suggested domain meta-rule:
       If you must lie, lie only to yourself.

PROBLEM AREAS

 This section discusses some shortcomings in the present system which
 may be addressed in future versions.
 Compression and types
    The present specification attempts to allow name servers and
    resolvers to cache RRs for classes they don't "understand" as well
    as to allow compression of domain names to minimize the size of
    UDP datagrams.  These two goals conflict in the present scheme
    since the only way to expand a compressed name is to know that a
    name is expected in that position.
    One technique for addressing this problem would be to preface
    binary data (i.e. anything but a domain name) with a length octet.

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RFC 973 January 1986 Domain System Changes and Observations

    The high order two bits of the length octet could contain either
    01 or 10, which are illegal for domain names.  To compensate for
    the additional bytes of data, we could omit the RDATA length field
    and terminate each RR with a binary length field of zero.
 Caching non-existent names
    In the present system, a resolver has no standard method for
    caching the result that a name does not exist, which seems to make
    up a larger than expected percentage of queries.  Some resolvers
    create "does not exist" RRs with TTLs to guarantee against
    repetitive queries for a non-existent name.
    A standard technique might be to return the SOA RR for the zone
    (note that only authoritative servers can say name does not exist)
    in the reply, and define the semantics to be that the requester is
    free to assume that the name does not exist for a period equal to
    the MINIMUM field of the SOA.
 Cache conflicts
    When a resolver is processing a reply, it may well decide to cache
    all RRs found in sections of the reply.  The problem is that the
    resolver's cache may already contain a subset of these RRs,
    probably with different TTLs.
    If the RRs are from authoritative data in the answer section, then
    the cache RRs should be replaced.  In other cases, the correct
    strategy isn't completely clear.  Note that if the authoritative
    data's TTL has changed, then the resolver doesn't have enough
    information to make the correct decision in all cases.
    This issue is tricky, and deserves thought.

REFERENCES

 [1]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities",
      RFC-882, USC Information Sciences Institute, November 1983.
 [2]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and
      Specification", RFC-883, USC Information Sciences Institute,
      November 1983.
 [3]  Partridge, C., "Mail Routing and the Domain System", RFC-974,
      CSNET-CIC, BBN Laboratories, January 1986.

Mockapetris [Page 10]

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