In message <200903091515.n29ffetp055...@stora.ogud.com>, Olafur Gudmundsson wri tes: > --===============0733757033== > Content-Type: multipart/alternative; > boundary="=====================_777355448==.ALT" > > --=====================_777355448==.ALT > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed > > At 13:46 06/08/2008, Paul Hoffman wrote: > >Greetings again. The end of section 2 of this document says: > > Another advantage of configuring a trust anchor using a DS record is > > that the entire hash of the public key in the DS RDATA need not > > necessarily be specified. A validating resolver MAY support > > configuration using a truncated DS hash value as a human-factors > > convenience: shorter strings are easier to type and less prone to > > error when entered manually. Even with a truncated hash configured, > > a validating resolver can still verify that the corresponding DNSKEY > > is present in the trust anchor zone's apex DNSKEY RRSet. RFC 2104 > > [RFC2104] offers guidance on acceptable truncation lengths. > > > >This is not correct. You cannot say "here is the SHA-256 hash of a > >value" and then give less than 256 bits of the hash. If you wanted > >to do this, you need to define the truncated hash and use that new > >hash algorithm. So far, none of these truncated hashes have been > >defined for DNSSEC, although ones could be defined. > > > >Further, it is somewhat optimistic (and possibly sadistic) to think > >that a user can type Base64 by hand for more than maybe ten > >characters. This document should assume that the user is using > >copy-and-paste, and therefore using the full 256 bits of the hash is > >just as easy as using a truncated hash. If not, new, inherently >weaker, truncated hash algorithms need to be defined. > > > >--Paul Hoffman, Director > >--VPN Consortium > >_ > > You are not the first person to bring this issue up, and upon reflection > we have dropped truncation discussion. > > Olafur
On a related issue DS -> DNSKEY translations cannot be performed until the DNSKEY is published in the zone. The use of DS prevents pre-publishing of keys. I can see no real reason to recommend that DS records be published in preference to DNSKEY records. DNSKEY -> DS is a conversion that can be at anytime. This make DNSKEY a better manditory record to publish. Mark -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: mark_andr...@isc.org _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop