Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                      M. Kucherawy
Request for Comments: 6686                                     Cloudmark
Category: Informational                                        July 2012
ISSN: 2070-1721


           Resolution of the Sender Policy Framework (SPF)
                      and Sender ID Experiments

Abstract

  In 2006, the IETF published a suite of protocol documents comprising
  the Sender Policy Framework (SPF) and Sender ID: two proposed email
  authentication protocols.  Both of these protocols enable one to
  publish, via the Domain Name System, a policy declaring which mail
  servers were authorized to send email on behalf of the domain name
  being queried.  There was concern that the two would conflict in some
  significant operational situations, interfering with message
  delivery.

  The IESG required all of these documents (RFC 4405, RFC 4406, RFC
  4407, and RFC 4408) to be published as Experimental RFCs and
  requested that the community observe deployment and operation of the
  protocols over a period of two years from the date of publication to
  determine a reasonable path forward.

  After six years, sufficient experience and evidence have been
  collected that the experiments thus created can be considered
  concluded.  This document presents those findings.

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.

  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).  Not all documents
  approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
  Standard; see 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/rfc6686.






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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.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Definitions .....................................................3
  3. Evidence of Deployment ..........................................3
     3.1. DNS Resource Record Types ..................................3
     3.2. Implementations ............................................5
     3.3. The SUBMITTER SMTP Extension ...............................6
  4. Evidence of Differences .........................................7
  5. Analysis ........................................................7
  6. Conclusions .....................................................8
  7. Security Considerations .........................................9
  8. References ......................................................9
     8.1. Normative References .......................................9
     8.2. Informative References .....................................9
  Appendix A. Background on the RRTYPE Issue ........................10
  Appendix B. Acknowledgments .......................................11

1.  Introduction

  In April 2006, the IETF published the [SPF] and Sender ID email
  authentication protocols, the latter consisting of three documents
  ([SUBMITTER], [SENDER-ID], and [PRA]).  Both of these protocols
  enable one to publish, via the Domain Name System, a policy declaring
  which mail servers are authorized to send email on behalf of the
  selected domain name.

  Consensus did not clearly support one protocol over the other, and
  there was significant concern that the two would conflict in some
  significant operational situations, interfering with message
  delivery.  The IESG required the publication of all of these
  documents as Experimental, and requested that the community observe




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  deployment and operation of the protocols over a period of two years
  from the date of publication in order to determine a reasonable path
  forward.

  In line with the IESG's request to evaluate after a period of time,
  this document concludes the experiments by presenting evidence
  regarding both deployment and comparative effect of the two
  protocols.  At the end, it presents conclusions based on the data
  collected.

  It is important to note that this document makes no direct technical
  comparison of the two protocols in terms of correctness, weaknesses,
  or use case coverage.  The email community at large has already done
  that through its deployment choices.  Rather, the analysis presented
  here is merely an observation of what has been deployed and supported
  in the time since the protocols were published and lists conclusions
  based on those observations.

  The data collected and presented here are presumed to be a reasonable
  representative view of the global deployment data, which could never
  itself be fully surveyed within a reasonable period of time.

2.  Definitions

  The term "RRTYPE" is used to refer to a Domain Name System ([DNS])
  Resource Record (RR) type.  These are always expressed internally in
  software as numbers, assigned according to the procedures in
  [DNS-IANA] Assigned RRTYPEs also have names.  The two of interest in
  this work are the TXT RRTYPE (16) and the SPF RRTYPE (99).

3.  Evidence of Deployment

  This section presents the collected research done to determine what
  parts of the two protocol suites are in general use as well as
  related issues like [DNS] support.

3.1.  DNS Resource Record Types

  Three large-scale DNS surveys were run that looked for the two
  supported kinds of RRTYPEs that can contain SPF policy statements.
  These surveys selected substantial sets of distinct domain names from
  email headers and logs over long periods, regardless of whether the
  DNS data for those domains included A, MX, or any other RRTYPEs.  The
  nameservers for these domains were queried, asking for both of the
  RRTYPEs that could be used for SPF and/or Sender ID.






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  In the tables below, replies were counted only if they included
  prefixes that indicated the record was intended to be of a form
  defined in either [SPF] or [SENDER-ID], though complete syntax
  validation of the replies was not done.  That is, the records started
  either "v=spf1" or "spf2.0/", or they were not counted as replies.

  The tables are broken down into three parts: (a) the size of the
  sample set, (b) a report about RRTYPE use independent of content, and
  (c) a report about content independent of RRTYPE.

  "SPF+TXT" indicates the count of domains where both types were in
  use.

  DNS Survey #1 (Cisco)

    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | Domains queried  | 1,000,000 |   -   |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | TXT replies      |   397,511 | 39.8% |
    | SPF replies      |     6,627 | <1.0% |
    | SPF+TXT replies  |     6,603 | <1.0% |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | v=spf1 replies   |   395,659 | 39.6% |
    | spf2.0/* replies |     5,291 | <1.0% |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+

  Domains were selected as the top million domains as reported by
  Alexa, which monitors browser activity.

  DNS Survey #2 (The Trusted Domain Project)

    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | Domains queried  |   278,353 |   -   |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | TXT replies      |   156,894 | 56.4% |
    | SPF replies      |     2,876 |  1.0% |
    | SPF+TXT replies  |     2,689 | <1.0% |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | v=spf1 replies   |   149,985 | 53.9% |
    | spf2.0/* replies |     7,285 |  2.7% |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+

  This survey selected its domains from data observed in email headers
  and previous SPF and Sender ID evaluations, collected from 23
  reporting hosts across a handful of unrelated operators over a period
  of 22 months.





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  During this second survey, some domains were observed to provide
  immediate answers for RRTYPE 16 queries, but would time out waiting
  for replies to RRTYPE 99 queries.  For example, it was observed that
  4,360 (over 1.6%) distinct domains in the survey returned a result of
  some kind (a record or an error) for the TXT query in time N, while
  the SPF query ultimately failed after at least time 4N.

  DNS Survey #3 (Hotmail)

    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | Domains queried  |   100,000 |   -   |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+
    | TXT replies      |    46,221 | 46.2% |
    | SPF replies      |       954 | <1.0% |
    | SPF+TXT replies  |     1,383 |  1.4% |
    +------------------+-----------+-------+

  Hotmail's domain set was selected from live email traffic at the time
  the sample was extracted.  Only the RRTYPE portion of the report is
  available.

  A separate survey was done of queries for RRTYPE 16 and RRTYPE 99
  records by observing nameserver traffic records.  Only a few queries
  were ever received for RRTYPE 99 records, and those almost
  exclusively came from one large email service provider that queried
  for both RRTYPEs.  The vast majority of other querying agents only
  ever requested RRTYPE 16.

3.2.  Implementations

  It is likely impossible to determine from a survey which Mail
  Transfer Agents (MTAs) have SPF and/or Sender ID checking enabled at
  message ingress since it does not appear, for example, in the reply
  to the EHLO command from extended [SMTP].  Therefore, we relied on
  evidence found via web searches and observed the following:

  o  A web site [SID-IMPL] dedicated to highlighting Sender ID
     implementations, last updated in late 2007, listed 13 commercial
     implementations, which we assume means they implement the
     Purported Responsible Address (PRA) checks.  At least one of them
     is known no longer to be supported by its vendor.  There were no
     free open-source implementations listed.

  o  The [OPENSPF] web site maintains a list of implementations of SPF.
     At the time of this document's writing, it listed six libraries,
     22 MTAs with built-in SPF implementations, and numerous patches
     for MTAs and mail clients.  The set included a mix of commercial
     and free open-source implementations.



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3.3.  The SUBMITTER SMTP Extension

  The PRA is the output of a heuristic that seeks to scan a message
  header and extract from it the email address most likely to be the
  one responsible for injection of that message into the mail stream.
  The SUBMITTER extension to SMTP is a mechanism to provide an early
  hint (i.e., as part of the MAIL command in an SMTP session) to the
  receiving MTA of what the PRA would be on full receipt of the
  message.

  In a review of numerous MTAs in current or recent use, two
  (Santronics WinServer and McAfee MxLogic) were found to contain
  implementations of the SMTP SUBMITTER extension as part of the MTA
  service, which could act as an enabler to Sender ID.

  An unknown number of SMTP clients implement the SUBMITTER SMTP
  extension.  Although information from MTA logs indicates substantial
  use of the SMTP extension, it is not possible to determine whether
  the usage is from multiple instances of the same SMTP client or
  different SMTP client implementations.

  An active survey of MTAs accessible over the Internet was performed.
  The MTAs selected were found by querying for MX and A resource
  records of a subset of all domains observed by The Trusted Domain
  Project's data collection system in the preceding 20 months.  The
  results were as follows:

  SUBMITTER Survey (The Trusted Domain Project)

    +-------------------+-----------+-------+
    | MTAs selected     |   484,980 |   -   |
    | MTAs responding   |   371,779 | 76.7% |
    | SUBMITTER enabled |    17,425 |  4.7% |
    | MXLogic banner    |    16,914 |  4.6% |
    +-------------------+-----------+-------+

  Note: The bottom two rows indicate the percentage of responding MTAs
  with the stated property, not the percentage of selected MTAs.

  Based on the SMTP banner presented upon connection, the entire set of
  SUBMITTER-enabled MTAs consisted of the two found during the review
  (above) and a third whose identity could not be positively
  determined.

  Of those few responding MTAs advertising the SUBMITTER SMTP
  extension, 97% were different instances of one MTA.  The service
  operating that MTA (MXLogic, a division of McAfee) reported that




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  about 11% of all observed SMTP sessions involved SMTP clients that
  make use of the SUBMITTER extension.  Note that this represents about
  11% of the clients of 4.6% of the responding MTAs in the survey.

4.  Evidence of Differences

  Separate surveys from Hotmail and The Trusted Domain Project compared
  the cases where the PRA (used by Sender ID) and the RFC5321.MailFrom
  address (used by SPF) differed.  The results of these tests showed
  that, at least 50% of the time, the two addresses were the same, but,
  beyond that, the percentage varied substantially from one sampling
  location to the next due to the nature of the mail streams they each
  receive.

  Further, The Trusted Domain Project analyzed approximately 150,000
  messages and found that in more than 95% of those cases, Sender ID
  and SPF reach the same conclusion about a message, meaning either
  both protocols return a "pass" result or both return a "fail" result.
  Note that this does not include an evaluation of whether "fail" meant
  spam or other abusive mail was thus detected or that "pass" mail is
  good mail; it is merely a measure of how often the two protocols
  concurred.  The data set yielding this response could not further
  characterize the cases in which the answers differed.

  A second analysis of the same nature by Hotmail found that the two
  protocols yielded the same result approximately 80% of the time when
  evaluated across billions of messages.

  Anecdotally, the differences in conclusions have not been noted as
  causing significant operational problems by the email-receiving
  community.

5.  Analysis

  Given the six years that have passed since the publication of the
  Experimental RFCs, and the evidence reported in the earlier sections
  of this document, the following analysis appears to be supported:

  1.  There has not been substantial adoption of the RRTYPE 99 (SPF)
      DNS resource record.  In all large-scale surveys performed for
      this work, fewer than 2% of responding domains published RRTYPE
      99 records, and almost no clients requested them.

  2.  Of the DNS resource records retrieved, fewer than 3% included
      specific requests for processing of messages using the PRA
      algorithm, which is an essential part of Sender ID.





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  3.  Although the two protocols often used different email address
      fields as the subject being evaluated, no data collected showed
      any substantial operational benefit, in terms of improved
      accuracy, to using one mechanism over the other.

  4.  A review of known implementations shows significant support for
      both protocols, though there were more implementations in support
      of SPF than of Sender ID.  Further, the SPF implementations
      showed better upkeep and current interest than the Sender ID
      implementations.

  5.  A survey of running MTAs shows fewer than 5% of them advertised
      the SUBMITTER extension, which is a Sender ID enabler.  Only
      three implementations of it were found.

  6.  There remain obstacles to deployment of protocols that use DNS
      RRTYPEs other than the most common ones, including firewalls and
      DNS servers that block or discard requests for unknown RRTYPEs.
      Further, few if any web-based DNS configuration tools offer
      support for RRTYPE 99 records.

6.  Conclusions

  In light of the analysis in the previous section, the following
  conclusions are supported:

  1.  The experiments comprising the series of RFCs defining the
      SUBMITTER SMTP extension (RFC4405), the Sender ID mechanism
      (RFC4406), the Purported Responsible Address algorithm (RFC4407),
      and SPF (RFC4408), should be considered concluded.

  2.  The absence of significant adoption of the RRTYPE 99 DNS Resource
      Record suggests that it has not attracted enough support to be
      useful.

  3.  Unavailability of software implementing the protocols was not a
      gating factor in terms of the selection of which to use.

  4.  The absence of significant adoption of the [SUBMITTER] extension,
      [SENDER-ID], and [PRA], indicates that there is not a strong
      community deploying and using these protocols.

  5.  [SPF] has widespread implementation and deployment, comparable to
      that of many Standards Track protocols.

  Appendix A is offered as a cautionary review of problems that
  affected the process of developing SPF and Sender ID in terms of
  their use of the DNS.



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7.  Security Considerations

  This document contains information for the community, akin to an
  implementation report, and does not introduce any new security
  concerns.

8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

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

  [PRA]         Lyon, J., "Purported Responsible Address in E-Mail
                Messages", RFC 4407, April 2006.

  [SENDER-ID]   Lyon, J. and M. Wong, "Sender ID: Authenticating
                E-Mail", RFC 4406, April 2006.

  [SPF]         Wong, M. and W. Schlitt, "Sender Policy Framework (SPF)
                for Authorizing Use of Domains in E-Mail, Version 1",
                RFC 4408, April 2006.

  [SUBMITTER]   Allman, E. and H. Katz, "SMTP Service Extension for
                Indicating the Responsible Submitter of an E-Mail
                Message", RFC 4405, April 2006.

8.2.  Informative References

  [DNS-EXPAND]  IAB, Faltstrom, P., Austein, R., and P. Koch, "Design
                Choices When Expanding the DNS", RFC 5507, April 2009.

  [DNS-IANA]    Eastlake 3rd, D., "Domain Name System (DNS) IANA
                Considerations", BCP 42, RFC 6195, March 2011.

  [OPENSPF]     "Sender Policy Framework: Project Overview",
                <http://www.openspf.net>.

  [SID-IMPL]    "Sender ID Framework Industry Support and Solutions",
                October 2007, <http://www.microsoft.com/mscorp/safety/
                technologies/senderid/support.mspx>.

  [SMTP]        Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 5321,
                October 2008.







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Appendix A.  Background on the RRTYPE Issue

  SPF was originally created by a community of interested developers
  outside the IETF, with the intent of bringing it to the IETF for
  standardization after it had become relatively mature and ready for
  the IETF Standards process.

  At the time of SPF's initial development, the prospect of getting an
  RRTYPE allocated for SPF was not seriously considered, partly because
  doing so had high barriers to entry.  As a result, at the time it was
  brought to the IETF for development and publication, there was
  already a substantial and growing installed base that had SPF running
  using TXT RRs.  Eventually, the application was made for the new
  RRTYPE as a result of pressure from the DNS experts in the community,
  who insisted upon doing so as the preferred path toward using the DNS
  for storing such things as policy data.

  Later, after RRTYPE 99 was assigned (long after IESG approval of
  [SPF], in fact), a plan was put into place to effect a gradual
  transition to using RRTYPE 99 instead of using RRTYPE 16.  This plan
  failed to take effect for four primary reasons:

  1.  there was hesitation to make the transition because existing
      nameservers (and, in fact, DNS-aware firewalls) would drop or
      reject requests for unknown RRTYPEs (see Section 3 for evidence
      of this), which means successful rollout of a new RRTYPE is
      contingent upon widespread adoption of updated nameservers and
      resolver functions;

  2.  many DNS provisioning tools (e.g., web interfaces to controlling
      DNS zone data) were, and still are, typically lethargic about
      adding support for new RRTYPEs;

  3.  the substantial deployed base was already using RRTYPE 16, and it
      was working just fine, leading to inertia;

  4.  [SPF] itself included a faulty transition plan, likely because of
      the late addition of a requirement to develop one -- it said:

        An SPF-compliant domain name SHOULD have SPF records of both RR
        types.  A compliant domain name MUST have a record of at least
        one type.

      which means both can claim to be fully compliant while failing
      utterly to interoperate.  Publication occurred without proper
      IETF review, so this was not detected prior to publication.





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  It is likely that this will happen again if the bar to creating new
  RRTYPEs even for experimental development purposes is not lowered,
  and handling of unknown RRTYPEs in software becomes generally more
  graceful.  Also, important in this regard is encouragement of support
  for new RRTYPEs in DNS record provisioning tools.

  Fortunately, in the meantime, the requirements for new RRTYPE
  assignments was changed to be less stringent (see [DNS-IANA]).  Also,
  the publication of [DNS-EXPAND] has provided some useful guidance in
  this regard.  However, there is still a common perception that adding
  new types of data to the DNS will face resistance due to the lack of
  appropriate software support.

  There are DNS experts within the community that will undoubtedly
  point to DNS servers and firewalls that mistreat queries for unknown
  RRTYPEs, and to overly simplistic provisioning tools, and claim they
  are broken as a way of answering these concerns.  This is undoubtedly
  correct, but the reality is that they are among us and likely will be
  for some time, and this needs to be considered as new protocols and
  IETF procedures are developed.

Appendix B.  Acknowledgments

  The following provided operational data that contributed to the
  evidence presented above:

  Cisco:  contributed data about observed Sender ID and SPF records in
     the DNS for a large number of domains (DNS survey #1)

  Hotmail:  contributed data about the difference between
     RFC5321.MailFrom and RFC5322.From domains across large mail
     volumes, and a survey of DNS replies observed in response to
     incoming mail traffic (DNS survey #3)

  John Levine:  conducted a survey of DNS server logs to evaluate SPF-
     related query traffic

  McAfee:  provided details about their SUBMITTER implementation and
     usage statistics

  Santronics:  contributed data about the use of the SUBMITTER
     extension in aggregate SMTP client traffic

  The Trusted Domain Project:  contributed data about the difference
     between Sender ID and SPF results, conducted one of the detailed
     TXT/SPF RRTYPE surveys including collecting timing data (DNS
     survey #2), and conducted the MTA SUBMITTER survey




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  The author would also like to thank the following for their
  contributions to the development of the text in this document: Dave
  Crocker, Scott Kitterman, Barry Leiba, John Leslie, John Levine,
  Hector Santos, and Alessandro Vesely.

Author's Address

  Murray S. Kucherawy
  Cloudmark
  128 King St., 2nd Floor
  San Francisco, CA  94107
  USA

  Phone: +1 415 946 3800
  EMail: [email protected]




































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