On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 04:38:12PM -0600, /dev/rob0 wrote: > On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 02:36:46PM -0700, LuKreme wrote: > > On 24 Feb 2014, at 06:09 , Viktor Dukhovni > > <postfix-us...@dukhovni.org> wrote: > > > On Mon, Feb 24, 2014 at 12:26:42PM +0100, Dirk St?cker wrote: > > > > > > Nonsense. Patrick Koetter's .de domain is DNSSEC signed. His > > > mailserver has TLSA records. Enabling DNSSEC does not prevent > > > you from communicating with the rest of the world. Furthermore, > > > you can enable DNSSEC validation in your resolver before your > > > own domain is signed. The two are independent. > > > > Wait, what? You can? > > My zone "nodns4.us" is signed. You can set up your resolver to verify > these signatures. Later on you might want to sign "kreme.com", and > indeed, this has nothing to do with your local resolver. > > > Hmmm... Hover.com is still not supporting DNSSEC, but I can still > > validate my domains? > > > > That's not exactly what you said, is it? > > Does your domain registrar control (or even ask to control) what you > list in your /etc/resolv.conf file? Mine doesn't. And my resolv.conf > points to "nameserver 127.0.0.1", my own local resolver, which does > perform DNSSEC validation. > > > > It only takes a few minutes to configure a validating recursive > > > resolver. Install unbound and make sure it performs automatic > > > tracking of the root zone DNSKEY. > > > > unbound is better than bind for this sort of thing? (I noticed > > "Better" is subjective. I doubt it. It is trivial to enable DNSSEC > validation in BIND. In fact it almost works out of the box. There's > only one thing to set, in the named.conf(5) options stanza, to wit: > options { > [ ... ] > dnssec-validation auto; > }; > (Offer void where taxed or prohibited, or if your BIND version is > unsupported/EOL. Right now that means BIND 9.7 and earlier -- now > including the recently retired 9.6-ESV branch.) > > > freeBSD 10 has switched from bind to unbound, I expect they have > > good reason). > > And the FreeBSD BIND package has defined empty zones for years, > despite the BIND empty zones feature which has existed all along. > Perhaps their reasons are rooted in misunderstandings of BIND?
FreeBSD changed to unbound as a local resolver not as a replacement for the DNS server BIND. It is explicitly stated in their release notes that the change to unbound as a local resolver, not as a replacement for providing the DNS service. > > I can't say anything good or bad about unbound, never having used > anything other than BIND. I've had no reason to change. > > > >> My Registrar said today: > > >> "Sorry, currently it is not possible to use DNSSec for domains > > >> registered here." > > > > > > Vote with your feet. I'm transferring my domains to a registrar > > > with better DNSSEC support (and incidentally lower price). > > > > Yes, well, in general registrars kind of suck, and hover doesn't > > suck. But yes, they need to get DNSSEC sorted. > > I'd call lack of DNSSEC support a serious drawback. I'm on Godaddy > for now, but I'm probably going to jump ship to GKG.net. They make > the claim to be DNSSEC-friendly. It sounds like you can run your > master nameserver and sign your zone, and they will provide slave > (secondary) name service for free (included with the domain > registration cost.) > -- > http://rob0.nodns4.us/ > Offlist GMX mail is seen only if "/dev/rob0" is in the Subject: