Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                           S. Rose
Request for Comments: 6672                                          NIST
Obsoletes: 2672                                            W. Wijngaards
Updates: 3363                                                 NLnet Labs
Category: Standards Track                                      June 2012
ISSN: 2070-1721


                     DNAME Redirection in the DNS

Abstract

  The DNAME record provides redirection for a subtree of the domain
  name tree in the DNS.  That is, all names that end with a particular
  suffix are redirected to another part of the DNS.  This document
  obsoletes the original specification in RFC 2672 as well as updates
  the document on representing IPv6 addresses in DNS (RFC 3363).

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6672.




















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Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2012 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

  This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
  10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
  material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
  modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
  Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
  the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
  outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may
  not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
  it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
  than English.

























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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    1.1.  Requirements Language  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
  2.  The DNAME Resource Record  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
    2.1.  Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
    2.2.  The DNAME Substitution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
    2.3.  DNAME Owner Name Matching the QNAME  . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    2.4.  Names next to and below a DNAME Record . . . . . . . . . .  7
    2.5.  Compression of the DNAME Record  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
  3.  Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    3.1.  CNAME Synthesis  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    3.2.  Server Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
    3.3.  Wildcards  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    3.4.  Acceptance and Intermediate Storage  . . . . . . . . . . . 11
      3.4.1.  Resolver Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
  4.  DNAME Discussions in Other Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
  5.  Other Issues with DNAME  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    5.1.  Canonical Hostnames Cannot Be below DNAME Owners . . . . . 13
    5.2.  Dynamic Update and DNAME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    5.3.  DNSSEC and DNAME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
      5.3.1.  Signed DNAME, Unsigned Synthesized CNAME . . . . . . . 14
      5.3.2.  DNAME Bit in NSEC Type Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
      5.3.3.  DNAME Chains as Strong as the Weakest Link . . . . . . 14
      5.3.4.  Validators Must Understand DNAME . . . . . . . . . . . 14
        5.3.4.1.  Invalid Name Error Response Caused by DNAME in
                  Bitmap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
        5.3.4.2.  Valid Name Error Response Involving DNAME in
                  Bitmap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
        5.3.4.3.  Response with Synthesized CNAME  . . . . . . . . . 16
  6.  Examples of DNAME Use in a Zone  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
    6.1.  Organizational Renaming  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
    6.2.  Classless Delegation of Shorter Prefixes . . . . . . . . . 17
    6.3.  Network Renumbering Support  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
  7.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
  8.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
  9.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
  10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
  Appendix A.  Changes from RFC 2672 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
    A.1.  Changes to Server Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
    A.2.  Changes to Client Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21








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1.  Introduction

  DNAME is a DNS resource record type originally defined in RFC 2672
  [RFC2672].  DNAME provides redirection from a part of the DNS name
  tree to another part of the DNS name tree.

  The DNAME RR and the CNAME RR [RFC1034] cause a lookup to
  (potentially) return data corresponding to a domain name different
  from the queried domain name.  The difference between the two
  resource records is that the CNAME RR directs the lookup of data at
  its owner to another single name, whereas a DNAME RR directs lookups
  for data at descendants of its owner's name to corresponding names
  under a different (single) node of the tree.

  For example, take looking through a zone (see RFC 1034 [RFC1034],
  Section 4.3.2, step 3) for the domain name "foo.example.com", and a
  DNAME resource record is found at "example.com" indicating that all
  queries under "example.com" be directed to "example.net".  The lookup
  process will return to step 1 with the new query name of
  "foo.example.net".  Had the query name been "www.foo.example.com",
  the new query name would be "www.foo.example.net".

  This document is a revision of the original specification of DNAME in
  RFC 2672 [RFC2672].  DNAME was conceived to help with the problem of
  maintaining address-to-name mappings in a context of network
  renumbering.  With a careful setup, a renumbering event in the
  network causes no change to the authoritative server that has the
  address-to-name mappings.  Examples in practice are classless reverse
  address space delegations.

  Another usage of DNAME lies in aliasing of name spaces.  For example,
  a zone administrator may want subtrees of the DNS to contain the same
  information.  Examples include punycode [RFC3492] alternates for
  domain spaces.

  This revision of the DNAME specification does not change the wire
  format or the handling of DNAME resource records.  Discussion is
  added on problems that may be encountered when using DNAME.

1.1.  Requirements Language

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED" "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC
  2119 [RFC2119].






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2.  The DNAME Resource Record

2.1.  Format

  The DNAME RR has mnemonic DNAME and type code 39 (decimal).  It is
  CLASS-insensitive.

  Its RDATA is comprised of a single field, <target>, which contains a
  fully qualified domain name that MUST be sent in uncompressed form
  [RFC1035] [RFC3597].  The <target> field MUST be present.  The
  presentation format of <target> is that of a domain name [RFC1035].
  The presentation format of the RR is as follows:

          <owner> <ttl> <class> DNAME <target>

  The effect of the DNAME RR is the substitution of the record's
  <target> for its owner name, as a suffix of a domain name.  This
  substitution is to be applied for all names below the owner name of
  the DNAME RR.  This substitution has to be applied for every DNAME RR
  found in the resolution process, which allows fairly lengthy valid
  chains of DNAME RRs.

  Details of the substitution process, methods to avoid conflicting
  resource records, and rules for specific corner cases are given in
  the following subsections.

2.2.  The DNAME Substitution

  When following step 3 of the algorithm in RFC 1034 [RFC1034], Section
  4.3.2, "start matching down, label by label, in the zone" and a node
  is found to own a DNAME resource record, a DNAME substitution occurs.
  The name being sought may be the original query name or a name that
  is the result of a CNAME resource record being followed or a
  previously encountered DNAME.  As in the case when finding a CNAME
  resource record or NS resource record set, the processing of a DNAME
  will happen prior to finding the desired domain name.

  A DNAME substitution is performed by replacing the suffix labels of
  the name being sought matching the owner name of the DNAME resource
  record with the string of labels in the RDATA field.  The matching
  labels end with the root label in all cases.  Only whole labels are
  replaced.  See the table of examples for common cases and corner
  cases.

  In the table below, the QNAME refers to the query name.  The owner is
  the DNAME owner domain name, and the target refers to the target of
  the DNAME record.  The result is the resulting name after performing
  the DNAME substitution on the query name. "no match" means that the



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  query did not match the DNAME, and thus no substitution is performed
  and a possible error message is returned (if no other result is
  possible).  Thus, every line contains one example substitution.  In
  the examples below, 'cyc' and 'shortloop' contain loops.

   QNAME            owner  DNAME   target         result
   ---------------- -------------- -------------- -----------------
   com.             example.com.   example.net.   <no match>
   example.com.     example.com.   example.net.   [0]
   a.example.com.   example.com.   example.net.   a.example.net.
   a.b.example.com. example.com.   example.net.   a.b.example.net.
   ab.example.com.  b.example.com. example.net.   <no match>
   foo.example.com. example.com.   example.net.   foo.example.net.
   a.x.example.com. x.example.com. example.net.   a.example.net.
   a.example.com.   example.com.   y.example.net. a.y.example.net.
   cyc.example.com. example.com.   example.com.   cyc.example.com.
   cyc.example.com. example.com.   c.example.com. cyc.c.example.com.
   shortloop.x.x.   x.             .              shortloop.x.
   shortloop.x.     x.             .              shortloop.

  [0] The result depends on the QTYPE.  If the QTYPE = DNAME, then
      the result is "example.com.", else "<no match>".

                  Table 1. DNAME Substitution Examples

  It is possible for DNAMEs to form loops, just as CNAMEs can form
  loops.  DNAMEs and CNAMEs can chain together to form loops.  A single
  corner case DNAME can form a loop.  Resolvers and servers should be
  cautious in devoting resources to a query, but be aware that fairly
  long chains of DNAMEs may be valid.  Zone content administrators
  should take care to ensure that there are no loops that could occur
  when using DNAME or DNAME/CNAME redirection.

  The domain name can get too long during substitution.  For example,
  suppose the target name of the DNAME RR is 250 octets in length
  (multiple labels), if an incoming QNAME that has a first label over 5
  octets in length, the result would be a name over 255 octets.  If
  this occurs, the server returns an RCODE of YXDOMAIN [RFC2136].  The
  DNAME record and its signature (if the zone is signed) are included
  in the answer as proof for the YXDOMAIN (value 6) RCODE.

2.3.  DNAME Owner Name Matching the QNAME

  Unlike a CNAME RR, a DNAME RR redirects DNS names subordinate to its
  owner name; the owner name of a DNAME is not redirected itself.  The
  domain name that owns a DNAME record is allowed to have other
  resource record types at that domain name, except DNAMEs, CNAMEs, or
  other types that have restrictions on what they can coexist with.



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  When there is a match of the QTYPE to a type (or types) also owned by
  the owner name, the response is sourced from the owner name.  For
  example, a QTYPE of ANY would return the (available) types at the
  owner name, not the target name.

  DNAME RRs MUST NOT appear at the same owner name as an NS RR unless
  the owner name is the zone apex; if it is not the zone apex, then the
  NS RR signifies a delegation point, and the DNAME RR must in that
  case appear below the zone cut at the zone apex of the child zone.

  If a DNAME record is present at the zone apex, there is still a need
  to have the customary SOA and NS resource records there as well.
  Such a DNAME cannot be used to mirror a zone completely, as it does
  not mirror the zone apex.

  These rules also allow DNAME records to be queried through caches
  that are RFC 1034 [RFC1034] compliant and are DNAME unaware.

2.4.  Names next to and below a DNAME Record

  Resource records MUST NOT exist at any subdomain of the owner of a
  DNAME RR.  To get the contents for names subordinate to that owner
  name, the DNAME redirection must be invoked and the resulting target
  queried.  A server MAY refuse to load a zone that has data at a
  subdomain of a domain name owning a DNAME RR.  If the server does
  load the zone, those names below the DNAME RR will be occluded as
  described in RFC 2136 [RFC2136], Section 7.18.  Also, a server ought
  to refuse to load a zone subordinate to the owner of a DNAME record
  in the ancestor zone.  See Section 5.2 for further discussion related
  to dynamic update.

  DNAME is a singleton type, meaning only one DNAME is allowed per
  name.  The owner name of a DNAME can only have one DNAME RR, and no
  CNAME RRs can exist at that name.  These rules make sure that for a
  single domain name, only one redirection exists; thus, there's no
  confusion about which one to follow.  A server ought to refuse to
  load a zone that violates these rules.

2.5.  Compression of the DNAME Record

  The DNAME owner name can be compressed like any other owner name.
  The DNAME RDATA target name MUST NOT be sent out in compressed form
  and MUST be downcased for DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC)
  validation.







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  Although the previous DNAME specification [RFC2672] (that is
  obsoleted by this specification) talked about signaling to allow
  compression of the target name, such signaling has never been
  specified, nor is it specified in this document.

  RFC 2672 (obsoleted by this document) states that the Extended DNS
  (EDNS) version has a means for understanding DNAME and DNAME target
  name compression.  This document revises RFC 2672, in that there is
  no EDNS version signaling for DNAME.

3.  Processing

3.1.  CNAME Synthesis

  When preparing a response, a server performing a DNAME substitution
  will, in all cases, include the relevant DNAME RR in the answer
  section.  Relevant cases includes the following:

  1.  The DNAME is being employed as a substitution instruction.

  2.  The DNAME itself matches the QTYPE, and the owner name matches
      QNAME.

  When the owner name matches the QNAME and the QTYPE matches another
  type owned there, the DNAME is not included in the answer.

  A CNAME RR with Time to Live (TTL) equal to the corresponding DNAME
  RR is synthesized and included in the answer section when the DNAME
  is employed as a substitution instruction.  The owner name of the
  CNAME is the QNAME of the query.  The DNSSEC specification ([RFC4033]
  [RFC4034] [RFC4035]) says that the synthesized CNAME does not have to
  be signed.  The signed DNAME has an RRSIG, and a validating resolver
  can check the CNAME against the DNAME record and validate the
  signature over the DNAME RR.

  Servers MUST be able to answer a query for a synthesized CNAME.  Like
  other query types, this invokes the DNAME, and then the server
  synthesizes the CNAME and places it into the answer section.  If the
  server in question is a cache, the synthesized CNAME's TTL SHOULD be
  equal to the decremented TTL of the cached DNAME.

  Resolvers MUST be able to handle a synthesized CNAME TTL of zero or a
  value equal to the TTL of the corresponding DNAME record (as some
  older, authoritative server implementations set the TTL of
  synthesized CNAMEs to zero).  A TTL of zero means that the CNAME can
  be discarded immediately after processing the answer.





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3.2.  Server Algorithm

  Below is the revised version of the server algorithm, which appears
  in RFC 2672, Section 4.1.

  1.  Set or clear the value of recursion available in the response
      depending on whether the name server is willing to provide
      recursive service.  If recursive service is available and
      requested via the RD bit in the query, go to step 5; otherwise,
      step 2.

  2.  Search the available zones for the zone which is the nearest
      ancestor to QNAME.  If such a zone is found, go to step 3;
      otherwise, step 4.

  3.  Start matching down, label by label, in the zone.  The matching
      process can terminate several ways:

      A.  If the whole of QNAME is matched, we have found the node.

          If the data at the node is a CNAME, and QTYPE does not match
          CNAME, copy the CNAME RR into the answer section of the
          response, change QNAME to the canonical name in the CNAME RR,
          and go back to step 1.

          Otherwise, copy all RRs which match QTYPE into the answer
          section and go to step 6.

      B.  If a match would take us out of the authoritative data, we
          have a referral.  This happens when we encounter a node with
          NS RRs marking cuts along the bottom of a zone.

          Copy the NS RRs for the sub-zone into the authority section
          of the reply.  Put whatever addresses are available into the
          additional section, using glue RRs if the addresses are not
          available from authoritative data or the cache.  Go to step
          4.

      C.  If at some label, a match is impossible (i.e., the
          corresponding label does not exist), look to see whether the
          last label matched has a DNAME record.

          If a DNAME record exists at that point, copy that record into
          the answer section.  If substitution of its <target> for its
          <owner> in QNAME would overflow the legal size for a <domain-
          name>, set RCODE to YXDOMAIN [RFC2136] and exit; otherwise,
          perform the substitution and continue.  The server MUST




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          synthesize a CNAME record as described above and include it
          in the answer section.  Go back to step 1.

          If there was no DNAME record, look to see if the "*" label
          exists.

          If the "*" label does not exist, check whether the name we
          are looking for is the original QNAME in the query or a name
          we have followed due to a CNAME or DNAME.  If the name is
          original, set an authoritative name error in the response and
          exit.  Otherwise, just exit.

          If the "*" label does exist, match RRs at that node against
          QTYPE.  If any match, copy them into the answer section, but
          set the owner of the RR to be QNAME, and not the node with
          the "*" label.  If the data at the node with the "*" label is
          a CNAME, and QTYPE doesn't match CNAME, copy the CNAME RR
          into the answer section of the response changing the owner
          name to the QNAME, change QNAME to the canonical name in the
          CNAME RR, and go back to step 1.  Otherwise, go to step 6.

  4.  Start matching down in the cache.  If QNAME is found in the
      cache, copy all RRs attached to it that match QTYPE into the
      answer section.  If QNAME is not found in the cache but a DNAME
      record is present at an ancestor of QNAME, copy that DNAME record
      into the answer section.  If there was no delegation from
      authoritative data, look for the best one from the cache, and put
      it in the authority section.  Go to step 6.

  5.  Use the local resolver or a copy of its algorithm to answer the
      query.  Store the results, including any intermediate CNAMEs and
      DNAMEs, in the answer section of the response.

  6.  Using local data only, attempt to add other RRs that may be
      useful to the additional section of the query.  Exit.

  Note that there will be at most one ancestor with a DNAME as
  described in step 4 unless some zone's data is in violation of the
  no-descendants limitation in Section 3.  An implementation might take
  advantage of this limitation by stopping the search of step 3c or
  step 4 when a DNAME record is encountered.

3.3.  Wildcards

  The use of DNAME in conjunction with wildcards is discouraged
  [RFC4592].  Thus, records of the form "*.example.com DNAME
  example.net" SHOULD NOT be used.




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  The interaction between the expansion of the wildcard and the
  redirection of the DNAME is non-deterministic.  Due to the fact that
  the processing is non-deterministic, DNSSEC validating resolvers may
  not be able to validate a wildcarded DNAME.

  A server MAY give a warning that the behavior is unspecified if such
  a wildcarded DNAME is loaded.  The server MAY refuse it, refuse to
  load the zone, or refuse dynamic updates.

3.4.  Acceptance and Intermediate Storage

  Recursive caching name servers can encounter data at names below the
  owner name of a DNAME RR, due to a change at the authoritative server
  where data from before and after the change resides in the cache.
  This conflict situation is a transitional phase that ends when the
  old data times out.  The caching name server can opt to store both
  old and new data and treat each as if the other did not exist, or
  drop the old data, or drop the longer domain name.  In any approach,
  consistency returns after the older data TTL times out.

  Recursive caching name servers MUST perform CNAME synthesis on behalf
  of clients.

  If a recursive caching name server encounters a DNSSEC validated
  DNAME RR that contradicts information already in the cache (excluding
  CNAME records), it SHOULD cache the DNAME RR, but it MAY cache the
  CNAME record received along with it, subject to the rules for CNAME.
  If the DNAME RR cannot be validated via DNSSEC (i.e., not BOGUS, but
  not able to validate), the recursive caching server SHOULD NOT cache
  the DNAME RR but MAY cache the CNAME record received along with it,
  subject to the rules for CNAME.

3.4.1.  Resolver Algorithm

  Below is the revised version of the resolver algorithm, which appears
  in RFC 2672, Section 4.2.

  1.  See if the answer is in local information or can be synthesized
      from a cached DNAME; if so, return it to the client.

  2.  Find the best servers to ask.

  3.  Send queries until one returns a response.








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  4.  Analyze the response, either:

      A.  If the response answers the question or contains a name
          error, cache the data as well as return it back to the
          client.

      B.  If the response contains a better delegation to other
          servers, cache the delegation information, and go to step 2.

      C.  If the response shows a CNAME and that is not the answer
          itself, cache the CNAME, change the SNAME to the canonical
          name in the CNAME RR, and go to step 1.

      D.  If the response shows a DNAME and that is not the answer
          itself, cache the DNAME (upon successful DNSSEC validation if
          the client is a validating resolver).  If substitution of the
          DNAME's target name for its owner name in the SNAME would
          overflow the legal size for a domain name, return an
          implementation-dependent error to the application; otherwise,
          perform the substitution and go to step 1.

      E.  If the response shows a server failure or other bizarre
          contents, delete the server from the SLIST and go back to
          step 3.

4.  DNAME Discussions in Other Documents

  In Section 10.3 of [RFC2181], the discussion on MX and NS records
  touches on redirection by CNAMEs, but this also holds for DNAMEs.

  Section 10.3 ("MX and NS records") of [RFC2181] states:

          The domain name used as the value of a NS resource record,
          or part of the value of a MX resource record must not be
          an alias.  Not only is the specification clear on this
          point, but using an alias in either of these positions
          neither works as well as might be hoped, nor well fulfills
          the ambition that may have led to this approach.  This
          domain name must have as its value one or more address
          records.  Currently those will be A records, however in
          the future other record types giving addressing
          information may be acceptable.  It can also have other
          RRs, but never a CNAME RR.

  The DNAME RR is discussed in RFC 3363, Section 4, on A6 and DNAME.
  The opening premise of this section is demonstrably wrong, and so the
  conclusion based on that premise is wrong.  In particular, [RFC3363]
  deprecates the use of DNAME in the IPv6 reverse tree.  Based on the



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  experience gained in the meantime, [RFC3363] is revised, dropping all
  constraints on having DNAME RRs in these zones [RFC6434].  This would
  greatly improve the manageability of the IPv6 reverse tree.  These
  changes are made explicit below.

  In [RFC3363], the following paragraph is updated by this document,
  and the use of DNAME RRs in the reverse tree is no longer deprecated.

    The issues for DNAME in the reverse mapping tree appears to be
    closely tied to the need to use fragmented A6 in the main tree: if
    one is necessary, so is the other, and if one isn't necessary, the
    other isn't either.  Therefore, in moving RFC 2874 to experimental,
    the intent of this document is that use of DNAME RRs in the reverse
    tree be deprecated.

5.  Other Issues with DNAME

  There are several issues to be aware of about the use of DNAME.

5.1.  Canonical Hostnames Cannot Be below DNAME Owners

  The names listed as target names of MX, NS, PTR, and SRV [RFC2782]
  records must be canonical hostnames.  This means no CNAME or DNAME
  redirection may be present during DNS lookup of the address records
  for the host.  This is discussed in RFC 2181 [RFC2181], Section 10.3,
  and RFC 1912 [RFC1912], Section 2.4.  For SRV, see RFC 2782
  [RFC2782], page 4.

  The upshot of this is that although the lookup of a PTR record can
  involve DNAMEs, the name listed in the PTR record cannot fall under a
  DNAME.  The same holds for NS, SRV, and MX records.  For example,
  when punycode [RFC3492] alternates for a zone use DNAME, then the NS,
  MX, SRV, and PTR records that point to that zone must use names that
  are not aliases in their RDATA.  Then, what must be done is to have
  the domain names with DNAME substitution already applied to it as the
  MX, NS, PTR, and SRV data.  These are valid canonical hostnames.

5.2.  Dynamic Update and DNAME

  DNAME records can be added, changed, and removed in a zone using
  dynamic update transactions.  Adding a DNAME RR to a zone occludes
  any domain names that may exist under the added DNAME.

  If a dynamic update message attempts to add a DNAME with a given
  owner name, but a CNAME is associated with that name, then the server
  MUST ignore the DNAME.  If a DNAME is already associated with that
  name, then it is replaced with the new DNAME.  Otherwise, add the
  DNAME.  If a CNAME is added with a given owner name, but a DNAME is



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  associated with that name, then the CNAME MUST be ignored.  Similar
  behavior occurs for dynamic updates to an owner name of a CNAME RR
  [RFC2136].

5.3.  DNSSEC and DNAME

  The following subsections specify the behavior of implementations
  that understand both DNSSEC and DNAME (synthesis).

5.3.1.  Signed DNAME, Unsigned Synthesized CNAME

  In any response, a signed DNAME RR indicates a non-terminal
  redirection of the query.  There might or might not be a server-
  synthesized CNAME in the answer section; if there is, the CNAME will
  never be signed.  For a DNSSEC validator, verification of the DNAME
  RR and then that the CNAME was properly synthesized is sufficient
  proof.

5.3.2.  DNAME Bit in NSEC Type Map

  In any negative response, the NSEC or NSEC3 [RFC5155] record type
  bitmap SHOULD be checked to see that there was no DNAME that could
  have been applied.  If the DNAME bit in the type bitmap is set and
  the query name is a subdomain of the closest encloser that is
  asserted, then DNAME substitution should have been done, but the
  substitution has not been done as specified.

5.3.3.  DNAME Chains as Strong as the Weakest Link

  A response can contain a chain of DNAME and CNAME redirections.  That
  chain can end in a positive answer or a negative reply (no name error
  or no data error).  Each step in that chain results in resource
  records being added to the answer or authority section of the
  response.  Only if all steps are secure can the AD (Authentic Data)
  bit be set for the response.  If one of the steps is bogus, the
  result is bogus.

5.3.4.  Validators Must Understand DNAME

  Below are examples of why DNSSEC validators MUST understand DNAME.
  In the examples, SOA records, wildcard denial NSECs, and other
  material not under discussion have been omitted or shortened.









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5.3.4.1.  Invalid Name Error Response Caused by DNAME in Bitmap

  ;; Header: QR AA RCODE=3(NXDOMAIN)
  ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
  ; EDNS: version: 0, flags: do; udp: 4096

  ;; Question
  foo.bar.example.com. IN A
  ;; Authority
  bar.example.com. NSEC dub.example.com. A DNAME
  bar.example.com. RRSIG NSEC [valid signature]

  If this is the received response, then only by understanding that the
  DNAME bit in the NSEC bitmap means that foo.bar.example.com needed to
  have been redirected by the DNAME, the validator can see that it is a
  BOGUS reply from an attacker that collated existing records from the
  DNS to create a confusing reply.

  If the DNAME bit had not been set in the NSEC record above, then the
  answer would have validated as a correct name error response.

5.3.4.2.  Valid Name Error Response Involving DNAME in Bitmap

  ;; Header: QR AA RCODE=3(NXDOMAIN)
  ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
  ; EDNS: version: 0, flags: do; udp: 4096

  ;; Question
  cee.example.com. IN A
  ;; Authority
  bar.example.com. NSEC dub.example.com. A DNAME
  bar.example.com. RRSIG NSEC [valid signature]

  This response has the same NSEC records as the example above, but
  with this query name (cee.example.com), the answer is validated,
  because 'cee' does not get redirected by the DNAME at 'bar'.















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5.3.4.3.  Response with Synthesized CNAME

  ;; Header: QR AA RCODE=0(NOERROR)
  ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
  ; EDNS: version: 0, flags: do; udp: 4096

  ;; Question
  foo.bar.example.com. IN A
  ;; Answer
  bar.example.com. DNAME bar.example.net.
  bar.example.com. RRSIG DNAME [valid signature]
  foo.bar.example.com. CNAME foo.bar.example.net.

  The response shown above has the synthesized CNAME included.
  However, the CNAME has no signature, since the server does not sign
  online.  So this response cannot be trusted.  It could be altered by
  an attacker to be foo.bar.example.com CNAME bla.bla.example.  The
  DNAME record does have its signature included, since it does not
  change.  The validator must verify the DNAME signature and then
  recursively resolve further in order to query for the
  foo.bar.example.net A record.

6.  Examples of DNAME Use in a Zone

  Below are some examples of the use of DNAME in a zone.  These
  examples are by no means exhaustive.

6.1.  Organizational Renaming

  If an organization with domain name FROBOZZ.EXAMPLE.NET became part
  of an organization with domain name ACME.EXAMPLE.COM, it might ease
  transition by placing information such as this in its old zone.

      frobozz.example.net.  DNAME    frobozz-division.acme.example.com.
                            MX       10       mailhub.acme.example.com.

  The response to an extended recursive query for
  www.frobozz.example.net would contain, in the answer section, the
  DNAME record shown above and the relevant RRs for www.frobozz-
  division.acme.example.com.

  If an organization wants to have aliases for names, for a different
  spelling or language, the same example applies.  Note that the MX RR
  at the zone apex is not redirected and has to be repeated in the
  target zone.  Also note that the services at mailhub or www.frobozz-
  division.acme.example.com. have to recognize and handle the aliases.





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6.2.  Classless Delegation of Shorter Prefixes

  The classless scheme for in-addr.arpa delegation [RFC2317] can be
  extended to prefixes shorter than 24 bits by use of the DNAME record.
  For example, the prefix 192.0.8.0/22 can be delegated by the
  following records.

      $ORIGIN 0.192.in-addr.arpa.
      8/22    NS       ns.slash-22-holder.example.com.
      8       DNAME    8.8/22
      9       DNAME    9.8/22
      10      DNAME    10.8/22
      11      DNAME    11.8/22

  A typical entry in the resulting reverse zone for some host with
  address 192.0.9.33 might be as follows:

       $ORIGIN 8/22.0.192.in-addr.arpa.
       33.9    PTR     somehost.slash-22-holder.example.com.

  The advisory remarks in [RFC2317] concerning the choice of the "/"
  character apply here as well.

6.3.  Network Renumbering Support

  If IPv4 network renumbering were common, maintenance of address space
  delegation could be simplified by using DNAME records instead of NS
  records to delegate.

      $ORIGIN new-style.in-addr.arpa.
      189.190           DNAME    in-addr.example.net.

      $ORIGIN in-addr.example.net.
      188               DNAME    in-addr.customer.example.com.

      $ORIGIN in-addr.customer.example.
      1                 PTR      www.customer.example.com
      2                 PTR      mailhub.customer.example.com.
      ; etc ...

  This would allow the address space 190.189.0.0/16 assigned to the ISP
  "example.net" to be changed without having to alter the zone data
  describing the use of that space by the ISP and its customers.








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  Renumbering IPv4 networks is currently so arduous a task that
  updating the DNS is only a small part of the labor, so this scheme
  may have a low value.  But it is hoped that in IPv6 the renumbering
  task will be quite different, and the DNAME mechanism may play a
  useful part.

7.  IANA Considerations

  The DNAME resource record type code 39 (decimal) originally was
  registered by [RFC2672] in the DNS Resource Record (RR) Types
  registry table at http://www.iana.org/assignments/dns-parameters.
  IANA has updated the DNS resource record registry to point to this
  document for RR type 39.

8.  Security Considerations

  DNAME redirects queries elsewhere, which may impact security based on
  policy and the security status of the zone with the DNAME and the
  redirection zone's security status.  For validating resolvers, the
  lowest security status of the links in the chain of CNAME and DNAME
  redirections is applied to the result.

  If a validating resolver accepts wildcarded DNAMEs, this creates
  security issues.  Since the processing of a wildcarded DNAME is non-
  deterministic and the CNAME that was substituted by the server has no
  signature, the resolver may choose a different result than what the
  server meant, and consequently end up at the wrong destination.  Use
  of wildcarded DNAMEs is discouraged in any case [RFC4592].

  A validating resolver MUST understand DNAME, according to [RFC4034].
  The examples in Section 5.3.4 illustrate this need.

9.  Acknowledgments

  The authors of this document would like to acknowledge Matt Larson
  for beginning this effort to address the issues related to the DNAME
  RR type.  The authors would also like to acknowledge Paul Vixie, Ed
  Lewis, Mark Andrews, Mike StJohns, Niall O'Reilly, Sam Weiler, Alfred
  Hoenes, and Kevin Darcy for their reviews and comments on this
  document.











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10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [RFC1034]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
             STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987.

  [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
             specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC2136]  Vixie, P., Thomson, S., Rekhter, Y., and J. Bound,
             "Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)",
             RFC 2136, April 1997.

  [RFC2181]  Elz, R. and R. Bush, "Clarifications to the DNS
             Specification", RFC 2181, July 1997.

  [RFC2317]  Eidnes, H., de Groot, G., and P. Vixie, "Classless IN-
             ADDR.ARPA delegation", BCP 20, RFC 2317, March 1998.

  [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
             specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
             February 2000.

  [RFC3597]  Gustafsson, A., "Handling of Unknown DNS Resource Record
             (RR) Types", RFC 3597, September 2003.

  [RFC4033]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
             Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",
             RFC 4033, March 2005.

  [RFC4034]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
             Rose, "Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions",
             RFC 4034, March 2005.

  [RFC4035]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.
             Rose, "Protocol Modifications for the DNS Security
             Extensions", RFC 4035, March 2005.

  [RFC4592]  Lewis, E., "The Role of Wildcards in the Domain Name
             System", RFC 4592, July 2006.

  [RFC5155]  Laurie, B., Sisson, G., Arends, R., and D. Blacka, "DNS
             Security (DNSSEC) Hashed Authenticated Denial of
             Existence", RFC 5155, March 2008.



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10.2.  Informative References

  [RFC1912]  Barr, D., "Common DNS Operational and Configuration
             Errors", RFC 1912, February 1996.

  [RFC2672]  Crawford, M., "Non-Terminal DNS Name Redirection",
             RFC 2672, August 1999.

  [RFC3363]  Bush, R., Durand, A., Fink, B., Gudmundsson, O., and T.
             Hain, "Representing Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)
             Addresses in the Domain Name System (DNS)", RFC 3363,
             August 2002.

  [RFC3492]  Costello, A., "Punycode: A Bootstring encoding of Unicode
             for Internationalized Domain Names in Applications
             (IDNA)", RFC 3492, March 2003.

  [RFC6434]  Jankiewicz, E., Loughney, J., and T. Narten, "IPv6 Node
             Requirements", RFC 6434, December 2011.
































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Appendix A.  Changes from RFC 2672

A.1.  Changes to Server Behavior

  Major changes to server behavior from the original DNAME
  specification are summarized below:

  o  The rules for DNAME substitution have been clarified in
     Section 2.2.

  o  The EDNS option to signal DNAME understanding and compression has
     never been specified, and this document clarifies that there is no
     signaling method (Section 2.5).

  o  The TTL for synthesized CNAME RRs is now set to the TTL of the
     DNAME, not zero (Section 3.1).

  o  Recursive caching servers MUST perform CNAME synthesis on behalf
     of clients (Section 3.4).

  o  The revised server algorithm is detailed in Section 3.2.

  o  Rules for dynamic update messages adding a DNAME or CNAME RR to a
     zone where a CNAME or DNAME already exists are detailed in
     Section 5.2.

A.2.  Changes to Client Behavior

  Major changes to client behavior from the original DNAME
  specification are summarized below:

  o  Clients MUST be able to accept synthesized CNAME RR's with a TTL
     of either zero or the TTL of the DNAME RR that accompanies the
     CNAME RR.

  o  DNSSEC-aware clients SHOULD cache DNAME RRs and MAY cache
     synthesized CNAME RRs they receive in the same response.  DNSSEC-
     aware clients SHOULD also check the NSEC/NSEC3 type bitmap to
     verify that DNAME redirection is to be done.  DNSSEC validators
     MUST understand DNAME (Section 5.3).

  o  The revised client algorithm is detailed in Section 3.4.1.









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Authors' Addresses

  Scott Rose
  NIST
  100 Bureau Dr.
  Gaithersburg, MD  20899
  USA

  Phone: +1-301-975-8439
  Fax:   +1-301-975-6238
  EMail: [email protected]


  Wouter Wijngaards
  NLnet Labs
  Science Park 140
  Amsterdam  1098 XH
  The Netherlands

  Phone: +31-20-888-4551
  EMail: [email protected]






























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