Joe Abley (jabley) writes: > > (b) Inclusion of IPv6-related RFC6303-style zones on AS112 servers > (2) whether the list of zones specified is complete and accurate
[...] > (b) and (2) above also prompt the question of how we (more generally) > might manage the zones served by AS112 nodes, given that there is > only loose coordination between AS112 node operators and potentially > a significant deployment of (globally) invisible AS112 nodes which > serve captive audiences (enterprises, ISPs own customers, etc). ... all of whom may have a voluntarily incomplete implementation of AS112 zones on, or upstream of, their recursive servers - not the least because they may themselves be using the networks that the reverse zones provide reverse information for. > There is a risk, depending on the update mechanism, that additional > zones delegated to the existing AS112 servers might be lame on a > significant number of servers, and the impact of that lameness ought > to be assessed. With regards to private AS112 announcement leaking from these servers ? Or did you have other things in mind ? Would make sense to dig a bit deeper on the effect. > In addition we now have a registry of locally-served zones, per > RFC6303, and we might consider mechanisms to update AS112 nodes from > that registry (or constrain the procedures for updating that registry > also to consider AS112 support for the zones, as they are added). Got any ideas on that front already ? And, where would the the "official" list of locally-served zones reside ? draft-cheshire-dnsext-special-names-01 suggest that "IANA needs to create a new registry of Special-Use Domain Names." > It feels like there's an opportunity here to align these various > registries and knit in some process relating to the AS112 project. > What exists right now, together with what is proposed to exist, is a > little messy. Sounds like a plan :) _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop