> I think the history of discussion of this document shows that most > people here agree with the following three statements: > > 1 DNS PTR records are entirely optional, and MUST NOT be assumed to > exist. Software MUST NOT fail or incur delay as a result of the non- > existance of PTR records.
I disagree with the second sentence. With a one word change, I might agree with the first sentence, e.g. " DNS records are entirely optional, and MUST NOT be assumed to exist. " In other words, applications MUST support address literals. > 2 Unauthenticated DNS MUST NOT be relied on for security or trust > decisions. Even when DNSSEC is used to verify the authenticity of > DNS records, matching reverse and forward records do not imply either > improved security or trustworthiness over sites that either do not > have reverse DNS or that do not have matching foward/reverse DNS. I disagree with this statement. It is false today and will be false when DNSSEC is used. > 3 DNS records MUST NOT be used in logs instead of IP addresses. i disagree with this statement. If one were to change the "MUST NOT" to a SHOULD NOT, then this might be a reasonable suggestion. > Logging only the PTR resource records instead of the IP address is > vulnerable, since attackers may have used long names that will either > become truncated by many logging systems, or require upto 255 bytes > to store. Logging both IP address and DNS PTR records may be helpful > but one must also consider that the 255 byte per record space > requirement does not become a DOS attack on the logging system. the example is a sad statement on the support of fully qualified domain names in syslog and its cousins, regardless of DNS RR used. A/AAAA/A6 lables are just as prone to length considerations as PTR lables. Nothing inherently worse w/ PTR lables. --bill > _______________________________________________ > DNSOP mailing list > DNSOP@ietf.org > https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop