> 4 янв. 2021 г., в 19:20, Stephen Farrell <stephen.farr...@cs.tcd.ie> 
> написал(а):
> 
> 
> Hiya,
> 
> On 04/01/2021 16:05, Paul Wouters wrote:
>> While asking is fair, you would also have to define what you
>> do based on the outcome of that ask. You left that out,
> 
> I don't think I did omit that. My stated reason to ask was
> to help me figure out what I think about the draft named in
> the subject line. And yes, I do think that if a codepoint
> is being requested for a new version of an existing one
> then asking about how the existing one was used is a good
> thing to do. The case with gost and rsa+sha1/sha256 isn't
> the same because gost is a series of national standards.
> 
> > As to answer your question, I believe GOST did not see
> > more than about 5 domains use it in what was clearly a
> > "Testing" deployment.
> 
> Thanks. In that case, it sounds like it'd have been better
> to use a private or experimental code point for that kind
> of thing. OTOH, my understanding (based only on hallway
> chats over the years) was that the codepoint was allocated
> for political reasons. Either way, does that mean that a
> lot of effort to implement and test was wasted since that
> codepoint was allocated? If so, avoiding that in future
> would be good, if there's a way to do that.
The situation with GOST in DNSSEC is explainable and was explained 
in the list during the discussion of another draft (and to you personally, 
AFAIR,
maybe you’ve forgotten that).

To the time when RFC5933 was published and corresponding codepoint was allocated
it has been known already that new version of underlying standards for hash and 
signature were on the way,
so there were no reason to implement it immediately using standards which will 
be obsoleted soon.

That explains why there  were only several test implementations performed, 
which were intended to check 
smooth interoperability, if different algorithms were used in DNSSEC validation 
chain, with even several
algorithms switches along the chain.  The interoperability was proven and 
results were presented on
one of the RIPE meetings.

Then the DNSSEC deployment in Russia went into «waiting state», waiting for:
 - new standards to be published in Russia
 - reference implementations of it were created  by different software teams 
with interoperability checks
 - making IETF community aware of them by publishing set of Informational RFC
 - «running code» was created for new standards in open-source software 
(implementing it in OpenSSL for instance)
 - assigning codepoints in DNSSEC registry

Now we are at the last step in this list, and after its completion we consider 
that it will become possible to deploy GOST in DNSSEC.

That explains why there is no wide deployment of GOST in DNSSEC until now. We 
prefer slow-pace but reliable way forward.

Btw, the same way was passed for TLS now, after codepoints for GOST in TLS has 
been assigned already, we have
several different implementations of TLS with GOST by different software 
developer teams and we have a stand for TLS interoperability check which is run 
by the team independent from any of software vendors and performing the check 
that all
implementations are mutually compatible and aligned with the corresponding 
RFCs. 
This stand  is used for the interoperability check of IPSEC implementations 
also and will incorporate DNSSEC in its scope in proper time.

dol@
 
> 
> Cheers,
> S.
> 
> PS: note that I'm neither supporting, nor objecting to,
> Paul's draft in the above.
> 
> 
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