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+Network Working Group S. Weiler
+Request for Comments: 4470 SPARTA, Inc.
+Updates: 4035, 4034 J. Ihren
+Category: Standards Track Autonomica AB
+ April 2006
+
+
+ Minimally Covering NSEC Records and DNSSEC On-line Signing
+
+
+Status of This Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
+
+Abstract
+
+ This document describes how to construct DNSSEC NSEC resource records
+ that cover a smaller range of names than called for by RFC 4034. By
+ generating and signing these records on demand, authoritative name
+ servers can effectively stop the disclosure of zone contents
+ otherwise made possible by walking the chain of NSEC records in a
+ signed zone.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+ 1. Introduction ....................................................1
+ 2. Applicability of This Technique .................................2
+ 3. Minimally Covering NSEC Records .................................2
+ 4. Better Epsilon Functions ........................................4
+ 5. Security Considerations .........................................5
+ 6. Acknowledgements ................................................6
+ 7. Normative References ............................................6
+
+1. Introduction
+
+ With DNSSEC [1], an NSEC record lists the next instantiated name in
+ its zone, proving that no names exist in the "span" between the
+ NSEC's owner name and the name in the "next name" field. In this
+ document, an NSEC record is said to "cover" the names between its
+ owner name and next name.
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 1]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+ Through repeated queries that return NSEC records, it is possible to
+ retrieve all of the names in the zone, a process commonly called
+ "walking" the zone. Some zone owners have policies forbidding zone
+ transfers by arbitrary clients; this side effect of the NSEC
+ architecture subverts those policies.
+
+ This document presents a way to prevent zone walking by constructing
+ NSEC records that cover fewer names. These records can make zone
+ walking take approximately as many queries as simply asking for all
+ possible names in a zone, making zone walking impractical. Some of
+ these records must be created and signed on demand, which requires
+ on-line private keys. Anyone contemplating use of this technique is
+ strongly encouraged to review the discussion of the risks of on-line
+ signing in Section 5.
+
+1.2. Keywords
+
+ The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
+ document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [4].
+
+2. Applicability of This Technique
+
+ The technique presented here may be useful to a zone owner that wants
+ to use DNSSEC, is concerned about exposure of its zone contents via
+ zone walking, and is willing to bear the costs of on-line signing.
+
+ As discussed in Section 5, on-line signing has several security
+ risks, including an increased likelihood of private keys being
+ disclosed and an increased risk of denial of service attack. Anyone
+ contemplating use of this technique is strongly encouraged to review
+ the discussion of the risks of on-line signing in Section 5.
+
+ Furthermore, at the time this document was published, the DNSEXT
+ working group was actively working on a mechanism to prevent zone
+ walking that does not require on-line signing (tentatively called
+ NSEC3). The new mechanism is likely to expose slightly more
+ information about the zone than this technique (e.g., the number of
+ instantiated names), but it may be preferable to this technique.
+
+3. Minimally Covering NSEC Records
+
+ This mechanism involves changes to NSEC records for instantiated
+ names, which can still be generated and signed in advance, as well as
+ the on-demand generation and signing of new NSEC records whenever a
+ name must be proven not to exist.
+
+
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 2]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+ In the "next name" field of instantiated names' NSEC records, rather
+ than list the next instantiated name in the zone, list any name that
+ falls lexically after the NSEC's owner name and before the next
+ instantiated name in the zone, according to the ordering function in
+ RFC 4034 [2] Section 6.1. This relaxes the requirement in Section
+ 4.1.1 of RFC 4034 that the "next name" field contains the next owner
+ name in the zone. This change is expected to be fully compatible
+ with all existing DNSSEC validators. These NSEC records are returned
+ whenever proving something specifically about the owner name (e.g.,
+ that no resource records of a given type appear at that name).
+
+ Whenever an NSEC record is needed to prove the non-existence of a
+ name, a new NSEC record is dynamically produced and signed. The new
+ NSEC record has an owner name lexically before the QNAME but
+ lexically following any existing name and a "next name" lexically
+ following the QNAME but before any existing name.
+
+ The generated NSEC record's type bitmap MUST have the RRSIG and NSEC
+ bits set and SHOULD NOT have any other bits set. This relaxes the
+ requirement in Section 2.3 of RFC4035 that NSEC RRs not appear at
+ names that did not exist before the zone was signed.
+
+ The functions to generate the lexically following and proceeding
+ names need not be perfect or consistent, but the generated NSEC
+ records must not cover any existing names. Furthermore, this
+ technique works best when the generated NSEC records cover as few
+ names as possible. In this document, the functions that generate the
+ nearby names are called "epsilon" functions, a reference to the
+ mathematical convention of using the greek letter epsilon to
+ represent small deviations.
+
+ An NSEC record denying the existence of a wildcard may be generated
+ in the same way. Since the NSEC record covering a non-existent
+ wildcard is likely to be used in response to many queries,
+ authoritative name servers using the techniques described here may
+ want to pregenerate or cache that record and its corresponding RRSIG.
+
+ For example, a query for an A record at the non-instantiated name
+ example.com might produce the following two NSEC records, the first
+ denying the existence of the name example.com and the second denying
+ the existence of a wildcard:
+
+ exampld.com 3600 IN NSEC example-.com ( RRSIG NSEC )
+
+ \).com 3600 IN NSEC +.com ( RRSIG NSEC )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 3]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+ Before answering a query with these records, an authoritative server
+ must test for the existence of names between these endpoints. If the
+ generated NSEC would cover existing names (e.g., exampldd.com or
+ *bizarre.example.com), a better epsilon function may be used or the
+ covered name closest to the QNAME could be used as the NSEC owner
+ name or next name, as appropriate. If an existing name is used as
+ the NSEC owner name, that name's real NSEC record MUST be returned.
+ Using the same example, assuming an exampldd.com delegation exists,
+ this record might be returned from the parent:
+
+ exampldd.com 3600 IN NSEC example-.com ( NS DS RRSIG NSEC )
+
+ Like every authoritative record in the zone, each generated NSEC
+ record MUST have corresponding RRSIGs generated using each algorithm
+ (but not necessarily each DNSKEY) in the zone's DNSKEY RRset, as
+ described in RFC 4035 [3] Section 2.2. To minimize the number of
+ signatures that must be generated, a zone may wish to limit the
+ number of algorithms in its DNSKEY RRset.
+
+4. Better Epsilon Functions
+
+ Section 6.1 of RFC 4034 defines a strict ordering of DNS names.
+ Working backward from that definition, it should be possible to
+ define epsilon functions that generate the immediately following and
+ preceding names, respectively. This document does not define such
+ functions. Instead, this section presents functions that come
+ reasonably close to the perfect ones. As described above, an
+ authoritative server should still ensure than no generated NSEC
+ covers any existing name.
+
+ To increment a name, add a leading label with a single null (zero-
+ value) octet.
+
+ To decrement a name, decrement the last character of the leftmost
+ label, then fill that label to a length of 63 octets with octets of
+ value 255. To decrement a null (zero-value) octet, remove the octet
+ -- if an empty label is left, remove the label. Defining this
+ function numerically: fill the leftmost label to its maximum length
+ with zeros (numeric, not ASCII zeros) and subtract one.
+
+ In response to a query for the non-existent name foo.example.com,
+ these functions produce NSEC records of the following:
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 4]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+ fon\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255.example.com 3600 IN NSEC \000.foo.example.com ( NSEC RRSIG )
+
+ \)\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255\255
+ \255\255.example.com 3600 IN NSEC \000.*.example.com ( NSEC RRSIG )
+
+ The first of these NSEC RRs proves that no exact match for
+ foo.example.com exists, and the second proves that there is no
+ wildcard in example.com.
+
+ Both of these functions are imperfect: they do not take into account
+ constraints on number of labels in a name nor total length of a name.
+ As noted in the previous section, though, this technique does not
+ depend on the use of perfect epsilon functions: it is sufficient to
+ test whether any instantiated names fall into the span covered by the
+ generated NSEC and, if so, substitute those instantiated owner names
+ for the NSEC owner name or next name, as appropriate.
+
+5. Security Considerations
+
+ This approach requires on-demand generation of RRSIG records. This
+ creates several new vulnerabilities.
+
+ First, on-demand signing requires that a zone's authoritative servers
+ have access to its private keys. Storing private keys on well-known
+ Internet-accessible servers may make them more vulnerable to
+ unintended disclosure.
+
+ Second, since generation of digital signatures tends to be
+ computationally demanding, the requirement for on-demand signing
+ makes authoritative servers vulnerable to a denial of service attack.
+
+ Last, if the epsilon functions are predictable, on-demand signing may
+ enable a chosen-plaintext attack on a zone's private keys. Zones
+ using this approach should attempt to use cryptographic algorithms
+ that are resistant to chosen-plaintext attacks. It is worth noting
+ that although DNSSEC has a "mandatory to implement" algorithm, that
+ is a requirement on resolvers and validators -- there is no
+ requirement that a zone be signed with any given algorithm.
+
+ The success of using minimally covering NSEC records to prevent zone
+ walking depends greatly on the quality of the epsilon functions
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 5]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+ chosen. An increment function that chooses a name obviously derived
+ from the next instantiated name may be easily reverse engineered,
+ destroying the value of this technique. An increment function that
+ always returns a name close to the next instantiated name is likewise
+ a poor choice. Good choices of epsilon functions are the ones that
+ produce the immediately following and preceding names, respectively,
+ though zone administrators may wish to use less perfect functions
+ that return more human-friendly names than the functions described in
+ Section 4 above.
+
+ Another obvious but misguided concern is the danger from synthesized
+ NSEC records being replayed. It is possible for an attacker to
+ replay an old but still validly signed NSEC record after a new name
+ has been added in the span covered by that NSEC, incorrectly proving
+ that there is no record at that name. This danger exists with DNSSEC
+ as defined in [3]. The techniques described here actually decrease
+ the danger, since the span covered by any NSEC record is smaller than
+ before. Choosing better epsilon functions will further reduce this
+ danger.
+
+6. Acknowledgements
+
+ Many individuals contributed to this design. They include, in
+ addition to the authors of this document, Olaf Kolkman, Ed Lewis,
+ Peter Koch, Matt Larson, David Blacka, Suzanne Woolf, Jaap Akkerhuis,
+ Jakob Schlyter, Bill Manning, and Joao Damas.
+
+ In addition, the editors would like to thank Ed Lewis, Scott Rose,
+ and David Blacka for their careful review of the document.
+
+7. Normative References
+
+ [1] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S. Rose,
+ "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements", RFC 4033, March
+ 2005.
+
+ [2] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S. Rose,
+ "Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions", RFC 4034,
+ March 2005.
+
+ [3] Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S. Rose,
+ "Protocol Modifications for the DNS Security Extensions", RFC
+ 4035, March 2005.
+
+ [4] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
+
+
+
+
+
+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 6]
+
+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Samuel Weiler
+ SPARTA, Inc.
+ 7075 Samuel Morse Drive
+ Columbia, Maryland 21046
+ US
+
+ EMail: weiler@tislabs.com
+
+
+ Johan Ihren
+ Autonomica AB
+ Bellmansgatan 30
+ Stockholm SE-118 47
+ Sweden
+
+ EMail: johani@autonomica.se
+
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+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 7]
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+RFC 4470 NSEC Epsilon April 2006
+
+
+Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
+
+ This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
+ contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
+ retain all their rights.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
+ OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
+ ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
+ INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
+ INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
+ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Intellectual Property
+
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+
+Acknowledgement
+
+ Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
+ Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
+
+
+
+
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+Weiler & Ihren Standards Track [Page 8]
+