Richard Gibson wrote: > On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 11:46 AM, Tony Finch <d...@dotat.at> wrote: > > > OK. But does an EDNS flag help? What if you are using old tools? > > > If you are using old tools, then you don't get new conveniences (the same > is true of using OPT class to specify a maximum payload size exceeding 512 > bytes, using the DO bit to request DNSSEC records, and using the COOKIE > option for authentication). But a flag would still be there, conveying > information even if any given client or tool isn't looking for it.
It looks like dig does display unknown EDNS flags -- as a masked hex value: https://source.isc.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=bind9.git;a=blob;f=lib/dns/message.c;h=45bd0ba9ea31be49ffa5bca2aebb77ebc2f3b95c;hb=4801fbccaa431ca6a72753150cbb58e5d4627cc4#l3408 You think this would actually provide any sort of useful information? No operator would understand what "MBZ: 0xNNNN" means without re-training, and if you're re-training operators you may as well point them to this document. -- Robert Edmonds _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop