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Network Working Group                                          D. Atkins
draft-ietf-dnsext-dns-threats-07.txt                    IHTFP Consulting
                                                              R. Austein
                                                                     ISC
                                                              April 2004
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Threat Analysis of the Domain Name System
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Status of this document
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This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all
provisions of Section 10 of RFC 2026.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that other
groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
<http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt>

The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
<http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html>

Distribution of this document is unlimited.  Please send comments to
the Namedroppers mailing list <namedroppers@ops.ietf.org>.

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Abstract

Although the DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC) have been under
development for most of the last decade, the IETF has never written
down the specific set of threats against which DNSSEC is designed to
protect.  Among other drawbacks, this cart-before-the-horse situation
has made it difficult to determine whether DNSSEC meets its design
goals, since its design goals are not well specified.  This note
attempts to document some of the known threats to the DNS, and, in
doing so, attempts to measure to what extent (if any) DNSSEC is a
useful tool in defending against these threats.

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1. Introduction

The earliest organized work on DNSSEC within the IETF was an open
design team meeting organized by members of the DNS working group in
November 1993 at the 28th IETF meeting in Houston.  The broad outlines
of DNSSEC as we know it today are already clear in Jim Galvin's
summary of the results of that meeting [Galvin93]:
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- While some participants in the meeting were interested in protecting
against disclosure of DNS data to unauthorized parties, the design
team made an explicit decision that "DNS data is `public'", and ruled
all threats of data disclosure explicitly out of scope for DNSSEC.

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- While some participants in the meeting were interested in
authentication of DNS clients and servers as a basis for access
control, this work was also ruled out of scope for DNSSEC per se.

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- Backwards compatibility and co-existence with "insecure DNS" was
listed as an explicit requirement.

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- The resulting list of desired security services was
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1) data integrity, and
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2) data origin authentication.
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- The design team noted that a digital signature mechanism would
support the desired services.
.in 3

While a number of detail decisions were yet to be made (and in some
cases remade after implementation experience) over the subsequent
decade, the basic model and design goals have remained fixed.

Nowhere, however, does any of the DNSSEC work attempt to specify in
any detail the sorts of attacks against which DNSSEC is intended to
protect, or the reasons behind the list of desired security services
that came out of the Houston meeting.  For that, we have to go back to
a paper originally written by Steve Bellovin in 1990 but not published
until 1995, for reasons that Bellovin explained in the paper's
epilogue [Bellovin95].

While it may seem a bit strange to publish the threat analysis a
decade after starting work on the protocol designed to defend against
it, that is nevertheless what this note attempts to do.  Better late
than never.

This note assumes that the reader is familiar with both the DNS and
with DNSSEC, and does not attempt to provide a tutorial on either.
The DNS documents most relevant to the subject of this note are:
[RFC1034], [RFC1035], section 6.1 of [RFC1123], [RFC2181], [RFC2308],
[RFC2671], [RFC2845], [RFC2930], [RFC3007], and [RFC2535].

For purposes of discussion, this note uses the term "DNSSEC" to refer
to the core hierarchical public key and signature mechanism specified
in the DNSSEC documents, and refers to TKEY and TSIG as separate
mechanisms, even though channel security mechanisms such as TKEY and
TSIG are also part of the larger problem of "securing DNS" and thus
are often considered part of the overall set of "DNS security
extensions".  This is an arbitrary distinction that in part reflects
the way in which the protocol has evolved (introduction of a
putatively simpler channel security model for certain operations such
as zone transfers and dynamic update requests), and perhaps should be
changed in a future revision of this note.

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2.  Known Threats

There are several distinct classes of threats to the DNS, most of
which are DNS-related instances of more general problems, but a few of
which are specific to peculiarities of the DNS protocol.

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2.1.  Packet Interception

Some of the simplest threats against DNS are various forms of packet
interception: monkey-in-the-middle attacks, eavesdropping on requests
combined with spoofed responses that beat the real response back to
the resolver, and so forth.  In any of these scenarios, the attacker
can simply tell either party (usually the resolver) whatever it wants
that party to believe.  While packet interception attacks are far from
unique to DNS, DNS's usual behavior of sending an entire query or
response in a single unsigned, unencrypted UDP packet makes these
attacks particularly easy for any bad guy with the ability to
intercept packets on a shared or transit network.

To further complicate things, the DNS query the attacker intercepts
may just be a means to an end for the attacker: the attacker might
even choose to return the correct result in the answer section of a
reply message while using other parts of the message to set the stage
for something more complicated, for example, a name-based attack
(see below).

While it certainly would be possible to sign DNS messages using a
channel security mechanism such as TSIG or IPsec, or even to
encrypt them using IPsec, this would not be a very good solution.
First, this approach would impose a fairly high processing cost per
DNS message, as well as a very high cost associated with establishing
and maintaining bilateral trust relationships between all the parties
that might be involved in resolving any particular query.  For heavily
used name servers (such as the servers for the root zone), this cost
would almost certainly be prohibitively high.  Even more important,
however, is that the underlying trust model in such a design would be
wrong, since at best it would only provide a hop-by-hop integrity
check on DNS messages and would not provide any sort of end-to-end
integrity check between the producer of DNS data (the zone
administrator) and the consumer of DNS data (the application that
triggered the query).

By contrast, DNSSEC (when used properly) does provide an end-to-end
data integrity check, and is thus a much better solution for this
class of problems during basic DNS lookup operations.

TSIG does have its place in corners of the DNS protocol where there's
a specific trust relationship between a particular client and a
particular server, such as zone transfer, dynamic update, or a
resolver (stub or otherwise) that is not going to check all the DNSSEC
signatures itself.

Note that DNSSEC does not provide any protection against modification
of the DNS message header, so any properly paranoid resolver must:
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- Perform all of the DNSSEC signature checking on its own,

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- Use TSIG (or some equivalent mechanism) to ensure the integrity of
its communication with whatever name servers it chooses to trust, or

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- Resign itself to the possibility of being attacked via packet
interception (and via other techniques discussed below).
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2.2.  ID Guessing and Query Prediction

Since DNS is for the most part used over UDP/IP, it is relatively easy
for an attacker to generate packets which will match the transport
protocol parameters.  The ID field in the DNS header is only a 16-bit
field and the server UDP port associated with DNS is a well-known
value, so there are only 2**32 possible combinations of ID and client
UDP port for a given client and server.  This is not a particularly
large range, and is not sufficient to protect against a brute force search;
furthermore, in practice both the client UDP port and the ID can often
be predicted from previous traffic, and it is not uncommon for the
client port to be a known fixed value as well (due to firewalls or
other restrictions), thus frequently reducing the search space to a
range smaller than 2**16.

By itself, ID guessing is not enough to allow an attacker to inject
bogus data, but combined with knowledge (or guesses) about QNAMEs and
QTYPEs for which a resolver might be querying, this leaves the
resolver only weakly defended against injection of bogus responses.

Since this attack relies on predicting a resolver's behavior, it's
most likely to be successful when the victim is in a known state,
whether because the victim rebooted recently, or because the victim's
behavior has been influenced by some other action by the attacker, or
because the victim is responding (in a predictable way) to some third
party action known to the attacker.

This attack is both more and less difficult for the attacker than the
simple interception attack described above: more difficult, because
the attack only works when the attacker guesses correctly; less
difficult, because the attacker doesn't need to be on a transit or
shared network.

In most other respects, this attack is similar to a packet
interception attack.  A resolver that checks DNSSEC signatures will be
able to detect the forged response; resolvers that do not themselves
perform DNSSEC signature checking should use TSIG or some equivalent
mechanism to ensure the integrity of their communication with a
recursing name server that does perform DNSSEC signature checking.

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2.3.  Name Chaining

Perhaps the most interesting class of DNS-specific threats are the
name chaining attacks.  These are a subset of a larger class of
name-based attacks, sometimes called "cache poisoning" attacks.  Most
name-based attacks can be at least partially mitigated by the
long-standing defense of checking RRs in response messages for
relevance to the original query, but such defenses do not catch name
chaining attacks.  There are several variations on the basic attack,
but what they all have in common is that they all involve DNS RRs
whose RDATA portion (right hand side) includes a DNS name (or, in a
few cases, something that is not a DNS name but which directly maps to
a DNS name).  Any such RR is, at least in principle, a hook that lets
an attacker feed bad data into a victim's cache, thus potentially
subverting subsequent decisions based on DNS names.

The worst examples in this class of RRs are CNAME, NS, and DNAME RRs,
because they can redirect a victim's query to a location of the
attacker's choosing.  RRs like MX and SRV are somewhat less dangerous,
but in principle they can also be used to trigger further lookups at a
location of the attacker's choosing.  Address RR types such as A or
AAAA don't have DNS names in their RDATA, but since the IN-ADDR.ARPA
and IP6.ARPA trees are indexed using a DNS encoding of IPv4 and IPv6
addresses, these record types can also be used in a name chaining
attack.

The general form of a name chaining attack is something like this:
.in 5

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- Victim issues a query, perhaps at the instigation of the attacker or
some third party; in some cases the query itself may be unrelated to the
name under attack (that is, the attacker is just using this query as a
means to inject false information about some other name).

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- Attacker injects response, whether via packet interception, query
guessing, or by being a legitimate name server that's involved at some
point in the process of answering the query that the victim issued.

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- Attacker's response includes one or more RRs with DNS names in their
RDATA; depending on which particular form this attack takes, the
object may be to inject false data associated with those names into
the victim's cache via the Additional section of this response, or may
be to redirect the next stage of the query to a server of the
attacker's choosing (in order to inject more complex lies into the
victim's cache than will fit easily into a single response, or in
order to place the lies in the Authority or Answer section of a
response where they will have a better chance of sneaking past a
resolver's defenses).
.in 3

Any attacker who can insert resource records into a victim's cache can
almost certainly do some kind of damage, so there are cache poisoning
attacks which are not name chaining attacks in the sense discussed
here.  However, in the case of name chaining attacks, the cause and
effect relationship between the initial attack and the eventual result
may be significantly more complex than in the other forms of cache
poisoning, so name chaining attacks merit special attention.

The common thread in all of the name chaining attacks is that response
messages allow the attacker to introduce arbitrary DNS names of the
attacker's choosing and provide further information that the attacker
claims is associated with those names; unless the victim has better
knowledge of the data associated with those names, the victim is going
to have a hard time defending against this class of attacks.

This class of attack is particularly insidious given that it's quite
easy for an attacker to provoke a victim into querying for a
particular name of the attacker's choosing, for example, by embedding
a link to a 1x1-pixel "web bug" graphic in a piece of Text/HTML mail
to the victim.  If the victim's mail reading program attempts to
follow such a link, the result will be a DNS query for a name chosen
by the attacker.

DNSSEC should provide a good defense against most (all?) variations on
this class of attack.  By checking signatures, a resolver can
determine whether the data associated with a name really was inserted
by the delegated authority for that portion of the DNS name space
(more precisely, a resolver can determine whether the entity that
injected the data had access to an allegedly secret key whose
corresponding public key appears at an expected location in the DNS
name space with an expected chain of parental signatures that start
with a public key of which the resolver has prior knowledge).  

DNSSEC signatures do not cover glue records, so there's still a
possibility of a name chaining attack involving glue, but with DNSSEC
it is possible to detect the attack by temporarily accepting the glue
in order to fetch the signed authoritative version of the same data,
then checking the signatures on the authoritative version.

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2.4.  Betrayal By Trusted Server

Another variation on the packet interception attack is the trusted
server that turns out not to be so trustworthy, whether by accident or
by intent.  Many client machines are only configured with stub
resolvers, and use trusted servers to perform all of their DNS queries
on their behalf.  In many cases the trusted server is furnished by the
user's ISP and advertised to the client via DHCP or PPP options.
Besides accidental betrayal of this trust relationship (via server
bugs, successful server break-ins, etc), the server itself may be
configured to give back answers that are not what the user would
expect (whether in an honest attempt to help the user or to further
some other goal such as furthering a business partnership between the
ISP and some third party).

This problem is particularly acute for frequent travelers who carry
their own equipment and expect it to work in much the same way no
matter which network it's plugged into at any given moment (and no
matter what brand of middle boxes a particular hotel chain might have
installed when adding network drops in every guest room...).

While the obvious solution to this problem would be for the client to
choose a more trustworthy server, in practice this may not be an option
for the client.  In many network environments a client machine has
only a limited set of recursive name servers from which to choose, and
none of them may be particularly trustworthy.  In extreme cases, port
filtering or other forms of packet interception may prevent the client
host from being able to run an iterative resolver even if the owner of
the client machine is willing and able to do so.  Thus, while the
initial source of this problem is not a DNS protocol attack per se,
this sort of betrayal is a threat to DNS clients, and simply switching
to a different recursive name server is not an adequate defense.

Viewed strictly from the DNS protocol standpoint, the only difference
between this sort of betrayal and a packet interception attack is that
in this case the client has voluntarily sent its request to the
attacker.  The defense against this is the same as with a packet
interception attack: the resolver must either check DNSSEC signatures
itself or use TSIG (or equivalent) to authenticate the server that it
has chosen to trust.  Note that use of TSIG does not by itself
guarantee that a name server is at all trustworthy: all TSIG can do is
help a resolver protect its communication with a name server that it
has already decided to trust for other reasons.  Protecting a
resolver's communication with a server that's giving out bogus answers
is not particularly useful.

Also note that if the stub resolver does not trust the name server
that is doing work on its behalf and wants to check the DNSSEC
signatures itself, the resolver really does need to have independent
knowledge of the DNSSEC public key(s) it needs in order to perform the
check (usually the public key for the root zone, but in some cases
knowledge of additional keys may also be appropriate).

It is difficult to escape the conclusion that a properly paranoid
resolver must always perform its own signature checking, and that this
rule even applies to stub resolvers.

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2.5.  Denial of Service

As with any network service (or, indeed, almost any service of any
kind in any domain of discourse), DNS is vulnerable to denial of
service attacks.  DNSSEC does not help this, and may in fact make the
problem worse for resolvers that check signatures, since checking
signatures both increases the processing cost per DNS message and in
some cases can also increase the number of messages needed to answer a
query.  TSIG (and similar mechanisms) have equivalent problems.

DNS servers are also at risk of being used as denial of service
amplifiers, since DNS response packets tend to be significantly longer
than DNS query packets.  Unsurprisingly, DNSSEC doesn't help here
either.

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2.6.  Authenticated Denial of Domain Names

Much discussion has taken place over the question of authenticated
denial of domain names.  The particular question is whether there is a
requirement for authenticating the non-existence of a name.  The issue
is whether the resolver should be able to detect when an attacker
removes RRs from a response.

General paranoia aside, the existence of RR types whose absence causes
an action other than immediate failure (such as missing MX and SRV
RRs, which fail over to A RRs) constitutes a real threat.  Arguably,
in some cases, even the immediate failure of a missing RR might be
considered a problem.  The question remains: how serious is this
threat?  Clearly the threat does exist; general paranoia says that
some day it'll be on the front page of some major newspaper, even if we
cannot conceive of a plausible scenario involving this attack today.
This implies that some mitigation of this risk is required.

Note that it's necessary to prove the non-existence of applicable
wildcard RRs as part of the authenticated denial mechanism, and that,
in a zone that is more than one label deep, such a proof may require
proving the non-existence of multiple discrete sets of wildcard RRs.

DNSSEC does include mechanisms which make it possible to determine
which authoritative names exist in a zone, and which authoritative
resource record types exist at those names.  The DNSSEC protections do
not cover non-authoritative data such as glue records.

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2.7.  Wildcards

Much discussion has taken place over whether and how to provide data
integrity and data origin authentication for "wildcard" DNS names.
Conceptually, RRs with wildcard names are patterns for synthesizing
RRs on the fly according to the matching rules described in section
4.3.2 of RFC 1034.  While the rules that control the behavior of
wildcard names have a few quirks that can make them a trap for the
unwary zone administrator, it's clear that a number of sites make
heavy use of wildcard RRs, particularly wildcard MX RRs.

In order to provide the desired services for wildcard RRs, we need to
do two things:
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- We need a way to attest to the existence of the wildcard RR
itself (that is, we need to show that the synthesis rule exists), and

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- We need a way to attest to the non-existence of any RRs which, if
they existed, would make the wildcard RR irrelevant according to the
synthesis rules that govern the way in which wildcard RRs are used
(that is, we need to show that the synthesis rule is applicable).
.in 3

Note that this makes the wildcard mechanisms dependent upon the
authenticated denial mechanism described in the previous section.

DNSSEC includes mechanisms along the lines described above, which make
it possible for a resolver to verify that a name server applied the
wildcard expansion rules correctly when generating an answer.

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3.  Weaknesses of DNSSEC

DNSSEC has some problems of its own:
.in 5

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- DNSSEC is complex to implement, and includes some nasty edge cases
at the zone cuts that require very careful coding.  Testbed experience
to date suggests that trivial zone configuration errors or expired
keys can cause serious problems for a DNSSEC-aware resolver, and that
the current protocol's error reporting capabilities may leave
something to be desired.

.ti 3
- DNSSEC significantly increases the size of DNS response packets;
among other issues, this makes DNSSEC-aware DNS servers even more
effective as denial of service amplifiers.

.ti 3
- DNSSEC answer validation increases the resolver's work load, since a
DNSSEC-aware resolver will need to perform signature validation and in
some cases will also need to issue further queries.  This increased
workload will also increase the time it takes to get an answer back to
the original DNS client, which is likely to trigger both timeouts and
re-queries in some cases.  (Arguably, many current DNS clients are
already too impatient even before taking the further delays that
DNSSEC will impose into account, but that's a separate topic for
another document....)

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- Like DNS itself, DNSSEC's trust model is almost totally
hierarchical.  While DNSSEC does allow resolvers to have special
additional knowledge of public keys beyond those for the root, in the
general case the root key is the one that matters.  Thus any
compromise in any of the zones between the root and a particular
target name can damage DNSSEC's ability to protect the integrity of
data owned by that target name.  This is not a change, since insecure
DNS has the same model.

.ti 3
- Key rollover at the root is really hard.  Work to date has not even
come close to adequately specifying how the root key rolls over, or
even how it's configured in the first place.

.ti 3
- DNSSEC creates a requirement of loose time synchronization between
the validating resolver and the entity creating the DNSSEC signatures.
Prior to DNSSEC, all time-related actions in DNS could be performed by
a machine that only knew about "elapsed" or "relative" time.  Because
the validity period of a DNSSEC signature is based on "absolute" time,
a validating resolver must have the same concept of absolute time as
the zone signer in order to determine whether the signature is within
its validity period or has expired.  An attacker that can change a
resolver's opinion of the current absolute time can fool the resolver
using expired signatures.  An attacker that can change the zone
signer's opinion of the current absolute time can fool the zone signer
into generating signatures whose validity period does not match what
the signer intended.

.ti 3
- The possible existence of wildcard RRs in a zone complicates the
authenticated denial mechanism considerably.  For most of the decade
that DNSSEC has been under development these issues were poorly
understood.  At various times there have been questions as to whether
the authenticated denial mechanism is completely airtight and whether
it would be worthwhile to optimize the authenticated denial mechanism
for the common case in which wildcards are not present in a zone, but
the main problem is just the inherent complexity of the wildcard
mechanism itself.  This complexity probably makes the code for
generating and checking authenticated denial attestations somewhat
fragile, but since the alternative of giving up wildcards entirely is
not practical due to widespread use, we are going to have to live with
wildcards, and the question just becomes one of whether or not the
proposed optimizations would make DNSSEC's mechanisms more or less
fragile.

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- Even with DNSSEC, the class of attacks discussed in section 2.4 is
not easy to defeat.  In order for DNSSEC to be effective in this case,
it must be possible to configure the resolver to expect certain
categories of DNS records to be signed, which may require manual
configuration of the resolver, especially during the initial DNSSEC
rollout period when the resolver cannot reasonably expect the root and
TLD zones to be signed.

.in 3

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4.  Topics for Future Work

This section lists a few subjects not covered above which probably
need additional study, additional mechanisms, or both.

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4.1.  Interactions With Other Protocols

The above discussion has concentrated exclusively on attacks within
the boundaries of the DNS protocol itself, since those are the
problems against (some of) which DNSSEC was intended to protect.
There are, however, other potential problems at the boundaries where
DNS interacts with other protocols.

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4.2.  Securing DNS Dynamic Update

DNS dynamic update opens a number of potential problems when combined
with DNSSEC.  Dynamic update of a non-secure zone can use TSIG to
authenticate the updating client to the server.  While TSIG does not
scale very well (it requires manual configuration of shared keys
between the DNS name server and each TSIG client), it works well in a
limited or closed environment such as a DHCP server updating a local
DNS name server.

Major issues arise when trying to use dynamic update on a secure zone.
TSIG can similarly be used in a limited fashion to authenticate the
client to the server, but TSIG only protects DNS transactions, not the
actual data, and the TSIG is not inserted into the DNS zone, so
resolvers cannot use the TSIG as a way of verifying the changes to the
zone.  This means that either:
.in 7

.ti 3
a) The updating client must have access to a zone-signing key in order
to sign the update before sending it to the server, or

.ti 3
b) The DNS name server must have access to an online zone-signing key
in order to sign the update.
.in 3

In either case, a zone-signing key must be available to create signed
RRsets to place in the updated zone.  The fact that this key must be
online (or at least available) is a potential security risk.

Dynamic update also requires an update to the SERIAL field of the
zone's SOA RR.  In theory, this could also be handled via either of
the above options, but in practice (a) would almost certainly be
extremely fragile, so (b) is the only workable mechanism.

There are other threats in terms of describing the policy of who can
make what changes to which RRsets in the zone.  The current access
control scheme in Secure Dynamic Update is fairly limited.  There is
no way to give fine-grained access to updating DNS zone information to
multiple entities, each of whom may require different kinds of access.
For example, Alice may need to be able to add new nodes to the zone or
change existing nodes, but not remove them; Bob may need to be able to
remove zones but not add them; Carol may need to be able to add,
remove, or modify nodes, but only A records.

Scaling properties of the key management problem here are a particular
concern that needs more study.

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4.3.  Securing DNS Zone Replication

As discussed in previous sections, DNSSEC per se attempts to provide
data integrity and data origin authentication services on top of the
normal DNS query protocol.  Using the terminology discussed in
[RFC3552], DNSSEC provides "object security" for the normal DNS query
protocol.  For purposes of replicating entire DNS zones, however,
DNSSEC does not provide object security, because zones include
unsigned NS RRs and glue at delegation points.  Use of TSIG to protect
zone transfer (AXFR or IXFR) operations provides "channel security",
but still does not provide object security for complete zones, so the
trust relationships involved in zone transfer are still very much a
hop-by-hop matter of name server operators trusting other name server
operators, rather than an end-to-end matter of name server operators
trusting zone administrators.

Zone object security was not an explicit design goal of DNSSEC, so
failure to provide this service should not be a surprise.
Nevertheless, there are some zone replication scenarios for which this
would be a very useful additional service, so this seems like a useful
area for future work.  In theory it should not be difficult to zone
object security as a backwards compatible enhancement to the existing
DNSSEC model, but the DNSEXT WG has not yet discussed either the
desirability of or the requirements for such an enhancement.

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5.  Conclusion

Based on the above analysis, the DNSSEC extensions do appear to solve
a set of problems that do need to be solved, and are worth deploying.

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Security Considerations

This entire document is about security considerations of the DNS.  The
authors believe that deploying DNSSEC will help to address some, but
not all, of the known threats to the DNS.

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IANA Considerations

None.

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Acknowledgments

This note is based both previous published works by others and on a
number of discussions both public and private over a period of many
years, but particular thanks go to
Jaap Akkerhuis,
Steve Bellovin,
Dan Bernstein,
Randy Bush,
Steve Crocker,
Olafur Gudmundsson,
Russ Housley,
Rip Loomis,
Allison Mankin,
Paul Mockapetris,
Thomas Narten
Mans Nilsson,
Pekka Savola,
Paul Vixie,
Xunhua Wang,
and any other members of the DNS, DNSSEC, DNSIND, and DNSEXT working
groups whose names and contributions the authors have forgotten,
none of whom are responsible for what the authors did with their ideas.

As with any work of this nature, the authors of this note acknowledge
that we are standing on the toes of those who have gone before us.
Readers interested in this subject may also wish to read [Bellovin95],
[Schuba93], and [Vixie95].

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Normative References

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC1034]
Mockapetris, P., 
"Domain names - concepts and facilities", 
RFC 1034, 
November 1987.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC1035]
Mockapetris, P.,
"Domain names - implementation and specification", 
RFC 1035, 
November 1987.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC1123]
Braden, R., Editor,
"Requirements for Internet Hosts - Application and Support",
RFC 1123,
October 1989.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2181]
Elz, R., and R. Bush, 
"Clarifications to the DNS Specification"
RFC 2181,
July 1997.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2308]
Andrews, M.,
"Negative Caching of DNS Queries (DNS NCACHE)"
RFC 2308,
March 1998.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2671]
Vixie, P.,
"Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0)",
RFC 2671,
August 1999.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2845]
Vixie, P., Gudmundsson, O., Eastlake, D., and B. Wellington, 
"Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS (TSIG)"
RFC 2845,
May 2000.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2930]
Eastlake, D.,
"Secret Key Establishment for DNS (TKEY RR)"
RFC 2930,
September 2000.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC3007]
Wellington, B.,
"Secure Domain Name System (DNS) Dynamic Update"
RFC 3007,
November 2000.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC2535]
Eastlake, D.,
"Domain Name System Security Extensions",
RFC 2535,
March 1999.

.in 8
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Informative References

.ti 3
.ne 2
[RFC3552]
Rescorla, E., Korver, B., and the Internet Architecture Board,
"Guidelines for Writing RFC Text on Security Considerations",
RFC 3552,
July 2003.

.ti 3
[Bellovin95] 
Bellovin, S.,
"Using the Domain Name System for System Break-Ins",
Proceedings of the Fifth Usenix Unix Security Symposium,
June 1995.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[Galvin93] Design team meeting summary message posted to
dns-security@tis.com mailing list by Jim Galvin on 19 November 1993.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[Schuba93]
Schuba, C.,
"Addressing Weaknesses in the Domain Name System Protocol",
Master's thesis, 
Purdue University Department of Computer Sciences, 
August 1993.

.ti 3
.ne 2
[Vixie95]
Vixie, P,
"DNS and BIND Security Issues",
Proceedings of the Fifth Usenix Unix Security Symposium,
June 1995.

.in 6
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Authors' addresses:

.nf
.ne 7
Derek Atkins
IHTFP Consulting, Inc.
6 Farragut Ave
Somerville, MA  02144
USA

Email: derek@ihtfp.com

.ne 7
Rob Austein
Internet Systems Consortium
950 Charter Street
Redwood City, CA 94063
USA

Email: sra@isc.org
.fi
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Intellectual Property Statement

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Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
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