In message , Ted Lemon writes
:
> On Sep 7, 2009, at 6:52 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
> > /56 should be typical for homes
> > /48 should be typical for businesses
>
> I don't think this is germane to the discussion. My point in
> mentioning /64 was simply that if you go narrower than that
On Sep 7, 2009, at 6:52 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
/56 should be typical for homes
/48 should be typical for businesses
I don't think this is germane to the discussion. My point in
mentioning /64 was simply that if you go narrower than that, important
things break, so it's a
In message <63fd8b00-b74f-465e-95c8-129a69f52...@nominum.com>, Ted Lemon writes
:
> On Sep 3, 2009, at 6:37 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
> > First what DoS that doesn't exist today? Updates already get sent
> > to the ISP's {IN-ADDR,IP6}.ARPA servers.
>
> If you do prefix delegation, you're delegatin
On Sep 3, 2009, at 3:37 PM, Lee Howard wrote:
I agree that I don't like this answer, and I think I said that in
the draft,
for exactly those reasons. If this draft is worth pursuing but you
think
section 3 is unclear, could you help me improve it?
The problem with section 3 is that aside f
On Sep 3, 2009, at 6:37 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
First what DoS that doesn't exist today? Updates already get sent
to the ISP's {IN-ADDR,IP6}.ARPA servers.
If you do prefix delegation, you're delegating typically 64 bits of
address space. If you allow your customer to do arbitrary DNS
upd
In message , Ted Lemon writes
:
> On Sep 3, 2009, at 11:58 AM, Lee Howard wrote:
> > Education needed: how do you tell a residential user what server
> > will accept their dynamic PTR updates?
>
> I think this is an unnecessarily difficult answer. Maintaining the
> zones at the ISP is a reci
> -Original Message-
> From: dnsop-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:dnsop-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of
Ted Lemon
> Sent: Thursday, September 03, 2009 1:05 PM
> To: Lee Howard
> Cc: 'dnsop'
> Subject: [DNSOP] A practical solution for ISP-level support of the reverse
On Sep 3, 2009, at 11:58 AM, Lee Howard wrote:
Education needed: how do you tell a residential user what server
will accept their dynamic PTR updates?
I think this is an unnecessarily difficult answer. Maintaining the
zones at the ISP is a recipe for DoS attacks, bad configuration, angry