Hi Spencer,
On 14/07/2016, 12:57 PM, "Spencer Dawkins at IETF"
wrote:
>
>Terry, I like where you're headed, but just to ask the obvious question,
>are you thinking the draft would, or would not, also contain something
>like "at the time this document was approved, a domain used for this test
>was
This is Not My Yes, but ...
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 12:28 AM, Terry Manderson wrote:
> Hi Wes,
>
> Thanks for responding.
>
> I'll trim to only the the remaining items needing a response, and express
> my appreciation at the clarified items.
>
> On 9/07/2016, 9:53 AM, "iesg on behalf of Wes Hard
>> why all that complexity? if some remote device (iot thingy) wants 'dns over
>>> http' why would it not (as a first order answer) just ask
>>> /cgi-bin/dnslookup for 'srv:foo.com' ? (returned answer in txt, json,
>>> etc...)
>> Security in IoT is close to an oxymoron, but my device would like to
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 3:42 PM, John R Levine wrote:
> why all that complexity? if some remote device (iot thingy) wants 'dns over
>> http' why would it not (as a first order answer) just ask
>> /cgi-bin/dnslookup for 'srv:foo.com' ? (returned answer in txt, json,
>> etc...)
>>
>> why bother wit
why all that complexity? if some remote device (iot thingy) wants 'dns over
http' why would it not (as a first order answer) just ask
/cgi-bin/dnslookup for 'srv:foo.com' ? (returned answer in txt, json,
etc...)
why bother with a bunch of javascript tomfoolery?
Security in IoT is close to an ox
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 10:59 AM, Tony Finch wrote:
> Shane Kerr wrote:
> >
> > OTOH, I am (obviously) not a web developer, so perhaps I overestimate
> > the difficulty in working with DNS binary-format. Maybe it's a
> > relatively compact set of JavaScript functions that can be used?
>
> It wou
Shane Kerr wrote:
>
> OTOH, I am (obviously) not a web developer, so perhaps I overestimate
> the difficulty in working with DNS binary-format. Maybe it's a
> relatively compact set of JavaScript functions that can be used?
It wouldn't be completely horrible to parse DNS packets using JavaScript