rfc2874

     






Network Working Group                                        M. Crawford
Request for Comments: 2874                                      Fermilab
Category: Standards Track                                     C. Huitema
                                                   Microsoft Corporation
                                                               July 2000


   DNS Extensions to Support IPv6 Address Aggregation and Renumbering

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 (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

   This document defines changes to the Domain Name System to support
   renumberable and aggregatable IPv6 addressing.  The changes include a
   new resource record type to store an IPv6 address in a manner which
   expedites network renumbering and updated definitions of existing
   query types that return Internet addresses as part of additional
   section processing.

   For lookups keyed on IPv6 addresses (often called reverse lookups),
   this document defines a new zone structure which allows a zone to be
   used without modification for parallel copies of an address space (as
   for a multihomed provider or site) and across network renumbering
   events.
















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Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction ...............................................  2
   2.  Overview ...................................................  3
       2.1.  Name-to-Address Lookup ...............................  4
       2.2.  Underlying Mechanisms for Reverse Lookups ............  4
           2.2.1.  Delegation on Arbitrary Boundaries .............  4
           2.2.2.  Reusable Zones .................................  5
   3.  Specifications .............................................  5
       3.1.  The A6 Record Type ...................................  5
           3.1.1.  Format .........................................  6
           3.1.2.  Processing .....................................  6
           3.1.3.  Textual Representation .........................  7
           3.1.4.  Name Resolution Procedure ......................  7
       3.2.  Zone Structure for Reverse Lookups ...................  7
   4.  Modifications to Existing Query Types ......................  8
   5.  Usage Illustrations ........................................  8
       5.1.  A6 Record Chains .....................................  9
           5.1.1.  Authoritative Data .............................  9
           5.1.2.  Glue ........................................... 10
           5.1.3.  Variations ..................................... 12
       5.2.  Reverse Mapping Zones ................................ 13
           5.2.1.  The TLA level .................................. 13
           5.2.2.  The ISP level .................................. 13
           5.2.3.  The Site Level ................................. 13
       5.3.  Lookups .............................................. 14
       5.4.  Operational Note ..................................... 15
   6.  Transition from RFC 1886 and Deployment Notes .............. 15
       6.1.  Transition from AAAA and Coexistence with A Records .. 16
       6.2.  Transition from Nibble Labels to Binary Labels ....... 17
   7.  Security Considerations .................................... 17
   8.  IANA Considerations ........................................ 17
   9.  Acknowledgments ............................................ 18
   10.  References ................................................ 18
   11.  Authors' Addresses ........................................ 19
   12.  Full Copyright Statement .................................. 20

1.  Introduction

   Maintenance of address information in the DNS is one of several
   obstacles which have prevented site and provider renumbering from
   being feasible in IP version 4.  Arguments about the importance of
   network renumbering for the preservation of a stable routing system
   and for other purposes may be read in [RENUM1, RENUM2, RENUM3].  To
   support the storage of IPv6 addresses without impeding renumbering we
   define the following extensions.





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   o  A new resource record type, "A6", is defined to map a domain name
      to an IPv6 address, with a provision for indirection for leading
      "prefix" bits.

   o  Existing queries that perform additional section processing to
      locate IPv4 addresses are redefined to do that processing for both
      IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.

   o  A new domain, IP6.ARPA, is defined to support lookups based on
      IPv6 address.

   o  A new prefix-delegation method is defined, relying on new DNS
      features [BITLBL, DNAME].

   The changes are designed to be compatible with existing application
   programming interfaces.  The existing support for IPv4 addresses is
   retained.  Transition issues related to the coexistence of both IPv4
   and IPv6 addresses in DNS are discussed in [TRANS].

   This memo proposes a replacement for the specification in RFC 1886
   [AAAA] and a departure from current implementation practices.  The
   changes are designed to facilitate network renumbering and
   multihoming.  Domains employing the A6 record for IPv6 addresses can
   insert automatically-generated AAAA records in zone files to ease
   transition.  It is expected that after a reasonable period, RFC 1886
   will become Historic.

   The next three major sections of this document are an overview of the
   facilities defined or employed by this specification, the
   specification itself, and examples of use.

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
   document are to be interpreted as described in [KWORD].  The key word
   "SUGGESTED" signifies a strength between MAY and SHOULD: it is
   believed that compliance with the suggestion has tangible benefits in
   most instances.

2.  Overview

   This section provides an overview of the DNS facilities for storage
   of IPv6 addresses and for lookups based on IPv6 address, including
   those defined here and elsewhere.








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2.1.  Name-to-Address Lookup

   IPv6 addresses are stored in one or more A6 resource records.  A
   single A6 record may include a complete IPv6 address, or a contiguous
   portion of an address and information leading to one or more
   prefixes.  Prefix information comprises a prefix length and a DNS
   name which is in turn the owner of one or more A6 records defining
   the prefix or prefixes which are needed to form one or more complete
   IPv6 addresses.  When the prefix length is zero, no DNS name is
   present and all the leading bits of the address are significant.
   There may be multiple levels of indirection and the existence of
   multiple A6 records at any level multiplies the number of IPv6
   addresses which are formed.

   An application looking up an IPv6 address will generally cause the
   DNS resolver to access several A6 records, and multiple IPv6
   addresses may be returned even if the queried name was the owner of
   only one A6 record.  The authenticity of the returned address(es)
   cannot be directly verified by DNS Security [DNSSEC].  The A6 records
   which contributed to the address(es) may of course be verified if
   signed.

   Implementers are reminded of the necessity to limit the amount of
   work a resolver will perform in response to a client request.  This
   principle MUST be extended to also limit the generation of DNS
   requests in response to one name-to-address (or address-to-name)
   lookup request.

2.2.  Underlying Mechanisms for Reverse Lookups

   This section describes the new DNS features which this document
   exploits.  This section is an overview, not a specification of those
   features.  The reader is directed to the referenced documents for
   more details on each.

2.2.1.  Delegation on Arbitrary Boundaries

   This new scheme for reverse lookups relies on a new type of DNS label
   called the "bit-string label" [BITLBL].  This label compactly
   represents an arbitrary string of bits which is treated as a
   hierarchical sequence of one-bit domain labels.  Resource records can
   thereby be stored at arbitrary bit-boundaries.

   Examples in section 5 will employ the following textual
   representation for bit-string labels, which is a subset of the syntax
   defined in [BITLBL].  A base indicator "x" for hexadecimal and a
   sequence of hexadecimal digits is enclosed between "\[" and "]".  The
   bits denoted by the digits represent a sequence of one-bit domain



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   labels ordered from most to least significant.  (This is the opposite
   of the order they would appear if listed one bit at a time, but it
   appears to be a convenient notation.)  The digit string may be
   followed by a slash ("/") and a decimal count.  If omitted, the
   implicit count is equal to four times the number of hexadecimal
   digits.

   Consecutive bit-string labels are equivalent (up to the limit imposed
   by the size of the bit count field) to a single bit-string label
   containing all the bits of the consecutive labels in the proper
   order.  As an example, either of the following domain names could be
   used in a QCLASS=IN, QTYPE=PTR query to find the name of the node
   with IPv6 address 3ffe:7c0:40:9:a00:20ff:fe81:2b32.

    \[x3FFE07C0004000090A0020FFFE812B32/128].IP6.ARPA.

    \[x0A0020FFFE812B32/64].\[x0009/16].\[x3FFE07C00040/48].IP6.ARPA.

2.2.2.  Reusable Zones

   DNS address space delegation is implemented not by zone cuts and NS
   records, but by a new analogue to the CNAME record, called the DNAME
   resource record [DNAME].  The DNAME record provides alternate naming
   to an entire subtree of the domain name space, rather than to a
   single node.  It causes some suffix of a queried name to be
   substituted with a name from the DNAME record's RDATA.

   For example, a resolver or server providing recursion, while looking
   up a QNAME a.b.c.d.e.f may encounter a DNAME record

                        d.e.f.     DNAME     w.xy.

   which will cause it to look for a.b.c.w.xy.

3.  Specifications

3.1.  The A6 Record Type

   The A6 record type is specific to the IN (Internet) class and has
   type number 38 (decimal).











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3.1.1.  Format

   The RDATA portion of the A6 record contains two or three fields.

           +-----------+------------------+-------------------+
           |Prefix len.|  Address suffix  |    Prefix name    |
           | (1 octet) |  (0..16 octets)  |  (0..255 octets)  |
           +-----------+------------------+-------------------+

   o  A prefix length, encoded as an eight-bit unsigned integer with
      value between 0 and 128 inclusive.

   o  An IPv6 address suffix, encoded in network order (high-order octet
      first).  There MUST be exactly enough octets in this field to
      contain a number of bits equal to 128 minus prefix length, with 0
      to 7 leading pad bits to make this field an integral number of
      octets.  Pad bits, if present, MUST be set to zero when loading a
      zone file and ignored (other than for SIG [DNSSEC] verification)
      on reception.

   o  The name of the prefix, encoded as a domain name.  By the rules of
      [DNSIS], this name MUST NOT be compressed.

   The domain name component SHALL NOT be present if the prefix length
   is zero.  The address suffix component SHALL NOT be present if the
   prefix length is 128.

   It is SUGGESTED that an A6 record intended for use as a prefix for
   other A6 records have all the insignificant trailing bits in its
   address suffix field set to zero.

3.1.2.  Processing

   A query with QTYPE=A6 causes type A6 and type NS additional section
   processing for the prefix names, if any, in the RDATA field of the A6
   records in the answer section.  This processing SHOULD be recursively
   applied to the prefix names of A6 records included as additional
   data.  When space in the reply packet is a limit, inclusion of
   additional A6 records takes priority over NS records.

   It is an error for an A6 record with prefix length L1 > 0 to refer to
   a domain name which owns an A6 record with a prefix length L2 > L1.
   If such a situation is encountered by a resolver, the A6 record with
   the offending (larger) prefix length MUST be ignored.  Robustness
   precludes signaling an error if addresses can still be formed from
   valid A6 records, but it is SUGGESTED that zone maintainers from time
   to time check all the A6 records their zones reference.




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3.1.3.  Textual Representation

   The textual representation of the RDATA portion of the A6 resource
   record in a zone file comprises two or three fields separated by
   whitespace.

   o  A prefix length, represented as a decimal number between 0 and 128
      inclusive,

   o  the textual representation of an IPv6 address as defined in
      [AARCH] (although some leading and/or trailing bits may not be
      significant),

   o  a domain name, if the prefix length is not zero.

   The domain name MUST be absent if the prefix length is zero.  The
   IPv6 address MAY be be absent if the prefix length is 128.  A number
   of leading address bits equal to the prefix length SHOULD be zero,
   either implicitly (through the :: notation) or explicitly, as
   specified in section 3.1.1.

3.1.4.  Name Resolution Procedure

   To obtain the IPv6 address or addresses which belong to a given name,
   a DNS client MUST obtain one or more complete chains of A6 records,
   each chain beginning with a record owned by the given name and
   including a record owned by the prefix name in that record, and so on
   recursively, ending with an A6 record with a prefix length of zero.
   One IPv6 address is formed from one such chain by taking the value of
   each bit position from the earliest A6 record in the chain which
   validly covers that position, as indicated by the prefix length.  The
   set of all IPv6 addresses for the given name comprises the addresses
   formed from all complete chains of A6 records beginning at that name,
   discarding records which have invalid prefix lengths as defined in
   section 3.1.2.

   If some A6 queries fail and others succeed, a client might obtain a
   non-empty but incomplete set of IPv6 addresses for a host.  In many
   situations this may be acceptable.  The completeness of a set of A6
   records may always be determined by inspection.

3.2.  Zone Structure for Reverse Lookups

   Very little of the new scheme's data actually appears under IP6.ARPA;
   only the first level of delegation needs to be under that domain.
   More levels of delegation could be placed under IP6.ARPA if some
   top-level delegations were done via NS records instead of DNAME
   records, but this would incur some cost in renumbering ease at the



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   level of TLAs [AGGR].  Therefore, it is declared here that all
   address space delegations SHOULD be done by the DNAME mechanism
   rather than NS.

   In addition, since uniformity in deployment will simplify maintenance
   of address delegations, it is SUGGESTED that address and prefix
   information be stored immediately below a DNS label "IP6".  Stated
   another way, conformance with this suggestion would mean that "IP6"
   is the first label in the RDATA field of DNAME records which support
   IPv6 reverse lookups.

   When any "reserved" or "must be zero" bits are adjacent to a
   delegation boundary, the higher-level entity MUST retain those bits
   in its own control and delegate only the bits over which the lower-
   level entity has authority.

   To find the name of a node given its IPv6 address, a DNS client MUST
   perform a query with QCLASS=IN, QTYPE=PTR on the name formed from the
   128 bit address as one or more bit-string labels [BITLBL], followed
   by the two standard labels "IP6.ARPA".  If recursive service was not
   obtained from a server and the desired PTR record was not returned,
   the resolver MUST handle returned DNAME records as specified in
   [DNAME], and NS records as specified in [DNSCF], and iterate.

4.  Modifications to Existing Query Types

   All existing query types that perform type A additional section
   processing, i.e. the name server (NS), mail exchange (MX), and
   mailbox (MB) query types, and the experimental AFS data base (AFSDB)
   and route through (RT) types, must be redefined to perform type A, A6
   and AAAA additional section processing, with type A having the
   highest priority for inclusion and type AAAA the lowest.  This
   redefinition means that a name server may add any relevant IPv4 and
   IPv6 address information available locally to the additional section
   of a response when processing any one of the above queries.  The
   recursive inclusion of A6 records referenced by A6 records already
   included in the additional section is OPTIONAL.

5.  Usage Illustrations

   This section provides examples of use of the mechanisms defined in
   the previous section.  All addresses and domains mentioned here are
   intended to be fictitious and for illustrative purposes only.
   Example delegations will be on 4-bit boundaries solely for
   readability; this specification is indifferent to bit alignment.

   Use of the IPv6 aggregatable address format [AGGR] is assumed in the
   examples.



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5.1.  A6 Record Chains

   Let's take the example of a site X that is multi-homed to two
   "intermediate" providers A and B.  The provider A is itself multi-
   homed to two "transit" providers, C and D.  The provider B gets its
   transit service from a single provider, E.  For simplicity suppose
   that C, D and E all belong to the same top-level aggregate (TLA) with
   identifier (including format prefix) '2345', and the TLA authority at
   ALPHA-TLA.ORG assigns to C, D and E respectively the next level
   aggregate (NLA) prefixes 2345:00C0::/28, 2345:00D0::/28 and
   2345:000E::/32.

   C assigns the NLA prefix 2345:00C1:CA00::/40 to A, D assigns the
   prefix 2345:00D2:DA00::/40 to A and E assigns 2345:000E:EB00::/40 to
   B.

   A assigns to X the subscriber identification '11' and B assigns the
   subscriber identification '22'.  As a result, the site X inherits
   three address prefixes:

   o  2345:00C1:CA11::/48 from A, for routes through C.
   o  2345:00D2:DA11::/48 from A, for routes through D.
   o  2345:000E:EB22::/48 from B, for routes through E.

   Let us suppose that N is a node in the site X, that it is assigned to
   subnet number 1 in this site, and that it uses the interface
   identifier '1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0'.  In our configuration, this node
   will have three addresses:

   o  2345:00C1:CA11:0001:1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0
   o  2345:00D2:DA11:0001:1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0
   o  2345:000E:EB22:0001:1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0

5.1.1.  Authoritative Data

   We will assume that the site X is represented in the DNS by the
   domain name X.EXAMPLE, while A, B, C, D and E are represented by
   A.NET, B.NET, C.NET, D.NET and E.NET.  In each of these domains, we
   assume a subdomain "IP6" that will hold the corresponding prefixes.
   The node N is identified by the domain name N.X.EXAMPLE.  The
   following records would then appear in X's DNS.

          $ORIGIN X.EXAMPLE.
          N            A6 64 ::1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0 SUBNET-1.IP6
          SUBNET-1.IP6 A6 48 0:0:0:1::  IP6
          IP6          A6 48 0::0       SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET.
          IP6          A6 48 0::0       SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.B.NET.




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   And elsewhere there would appear

        SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET. A6 40 0:0:0011:: A.NET.IP6.C.NET.
        SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET. A6 40 0:0:0011:: A.NET.IP6.D.NET.

        SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.B.NET. A6 40 0:0:0022:: B-NET.IP6.E.NET.

        A.NET.IP6.C.NET. A6 28 0:0001:CA00:: C.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.

        A.NET.IP6.D.NET. A6 28 0:0002:DA00:: D.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.

        B-NET.IP6.E.NET. A6 32 0:0:EB00::    E.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.

        C.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG. A6 0 2345:00C0::
        D.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG. A6 0 2345:00D0::
        E.NET.ALPHA-TLA.ORG. A6 0 2345:000E::

5.1.2.  Glue

   When, as is common, some or all DNS servers for X.EXAMPLE are within
   the X.EXAMPLE zone itself, the top-level zone EXAMPLE must carry
   enough "glue" information to enable DNS clients to reach those
   nameservers.  This is true in IPv6 just as in IPv4.  However, the A6
   record affords the DNS administrator some choices.  The glue could be
   any of

   o  a minimal set of A6 records duplicated from the X.EXAMPLE zone,

   o  a (possibly smaller) set of records which collapse the structure
      of that minimal set,

   o  or a set of A6 records with prefix length zero, giving the entire
      global addresses of the servers.

   The trade-off is ease of maintenance against robustness.  The best
   and worst of both may be had together by implementing either the
   first or second option together with the third.  To illustrate the
   glue options, suppose that X.EXAMPLE is served by two nameservers
   NS1.X.EXAMPLE and NS2.X.EXAMPLE, having interface identifiers
   ::1:11:111:1111 and ::2:22:222:2222 on subnets 1 and 2 respectively.
   Then the top-level zone EXAMPLE would include one (or more) of the
   following sets of A6 records as glue.









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   $ORIGIN EXAMPLE.            ; first option
   X               NS NS1.X
                   NS NS2.X
   NS1.X           A6 64 ::1:11:111:1111 SUBNET-1.IP6.X
   NS2.X           A6 64 ::2:22:222:2222 SUBNET-2.IP6.X
   SUBNET-1.IP6.X  A6 48 0:0:0:1::       IP6.X
   SUBNET-2.IP6.X  A6 48 0:0:0:2::       IP6.X
   IP6.X           A6 48 0::0            SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET.
   IP6.X           A6 48 0::0            SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.B.NET.


   $ORIGIN EXAMPLE.            ; second option
   X               NS NS1.X
                   NS NS2.X
   NS1.X           A6 48 ::1:1:11:111:1111 SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET.
                   A6 48 ::1:1:11:111:1111 SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.B.NET.
   NS2.X           A6 48 ::2:2:22:222:2222 SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.A.NET.
                   A6 48 ::2:2:22:222:2222 SUBSCRIBER-X.IP6.B.NET.


   $ORIGIN EXAMPLE.            ; third option
   X               NS NS1.X
                   NS NS2.X
   NS1.X           A6 0  2345:00C1:CA11:1:1:11:111:1111
                   A6 0  2345:00D2:DA11:1:1:11:111:1111
                   A6 0  2345:000E:EB22:1:1:11:111:1111
   NS2.X           A6 0  2345:00C1:CA11:2:2:22:222:2222
                   A6 0  2345:00D2:DA11:2:2:22:222:2222
                   A6 0  2345:000E:EB22:2:2:22:222:2222

   The first and second glue options are robust against renumbering of
   X.EXAMPLE's prefixes by providers A.NET and B.NET, but will fail if
   those providers' own DNS is unreachable.  The glue records of the
   third option are robust against DNS failures elsewhere than the zones
   EXAMPLE and X.EXAMPLE themselves, but must be updated when X's
   address space is renumbered.

   If the EXAMPLE zone includes redundant glue, for instance the union
   of the A6 records of the first and third options, then under normal
   circumstances duplicate IPv6 addresses will be derived by DNS
   clients.  But if provider DNS fails, addresses will still be obtained
   from the zero-prefix-length records, while if the EXAMPLE zone lags
   behind a renumbering of X.EXAMPLE, half of the addresses obtained by
   DNS clients will still be up-to-date.

   The zero-prefix-length glue records can of course be automatically
   generated and/or checked in practice.




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5.1.3.  Variations

   Several more-or-less arbitrary assumptions are reflected in the above
   structure.  All of the following choices could have been made
   differently, according to someone's notion of convenience or an
   agreement between two parties.

      First, that site X has chosen to put subnet information in a
      separate A6 record rather than incorporate it into each node's A6
      records.

      Second, that site X is referred to as "SUBSCRIBER-X" by both of
      its providers A and B.

      Third, that site X chose to indirect its provider information
      through A6 records at IP6.X.EXAMPLE containing no significant
      bits.  An alternative would have been to replicate each subnet
      record for each provider.

      Fourth, B and E used a slightly different prefix naming convention
      between themselves than did A, C and D.  Each hierarchical pair of
      network entities must arrange this naming between themselves.

      Fifth, that the upward prefix referral chain topped out at ALPHA-
      TLA.ORG.  There could have been another level which assigned the
      TLA values and holds A6 records containing those bits.

   Finally, the above structure reflects an assumption that address
   fields assigned by a given entity are recorded only in A6 records
   held by that entity.  Those bits could be entered into A6 records in
   the lower-level entity's zone instead, thus:

                IP6.X.EXAMPLE. A6 40 0:0:11::   IP6.A.NET.
                IP6.X.EXAMPLE. A6 40 0:0:22::   IP6.B.NET.

                IP6.A.NET.     A6 28 0:1:CA00:: IP6.C.NET.
                and so on.

   Or the higher-level entities could hold both sorts of A6 records
   (with different DNS owner names) and allow the lower-level entities
   to choose either mode of A6 chaining.  But the general principle of
   avoiding data duplication suggests that the proper place to store
   assigned values is with the entity that assigned them.

   It is possible, but not necessarily recommended, for a zone
   maintainer to forego the renumbering support afforded by the chaining
   of A6 records and to record entire IPv6 addresses within one zone
   file.



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5.2.  Reverse Mapping Zones

   Supposing that address space assignments in the TLAs with Format
   Prefix (001) binary and IDs 0345, 0678 and 09AB were maintained in
   zones called ALPHA-TLA.ORG, BRAVO-TLA.ORG and CHARLIE-TLA.XY, then
   the IP6.ARPA zone would include

               $ORIGIN IP6.ARPA.
               \[x234500/24]   DNAME   IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.
               \[x267800/24]   DNAME   IP6.BRAVO-TLA.ORG.
               \[x29AB00/24]   DNAME   IP6.CHARLIE-TLA.XY.

   Eight trailing zero bits have been included in each TLA ID to reflect
   the eight reserved bits in the current aggregatable global unicast
   addresses format [AGGR].

5.2.1.  The TLA level

   ALPHA-TLA's assignments to network providers C, D and E are reflected
   in the reverse data as follows.

              \[xC/4].IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.   DNAME  IP6.C.NET.
              \[xD/4].IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.   DNAME  IP6.D.NET.
              \[x0E/8].IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.  DNAME  IP6.E.NET.

5.2.2.  The ISP level

   The providers A through E carry the following delegation information
   in their zone files.

               \[x1CA/12].IP6.C.NET.  DNAME  IP6.A.NET.
               \[x2DA/12].IP6.D.NET.  DNAME  IP6.A.NET.
               \[xEB/8].IP6.E.NET.    DNAME  IP6.B.NET.
               \[x11/8].IP6.A.NET.    DNAME  IP6.X.EXAMPLE.
               \[x22/8].IP6.B.NET.    DNAME  IP6.X.EXAMPLE.

   Note that some domain names appear in the RDATA of more than one
   DNAME record.  In those cases, one zone is being used to map multiple
   prefixes.

5.2.3.  The Site Level

   Consider the customer X.EXAMPLE using IP6.X.EXAMPLE for address-to-
   name translations.  This domain is now referenced by two different
   DNAME records held by two different providers.






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           $ORIGIN IP6.X.EXAMPLE.
           \[x0001/16]                    DNAME   SUBNET-1
           \[x123456789ABCDEF0].SUBNET-1  PTR     N.X.EXAMPLE.
           and so on.

   SUBNET-1 need not have been named in a DNAME record; the subnet bits
   could have been joined with the interface identifier.  But if subnets
   are treated alike in both the A6 records and in the reverse zone, it
   will always be possible to keep the forward and reverse definition
   data for each prefix in one zone.

5.3.  Lookups

   A DNS resolver looking for a hostname for the address
   2345:00C1:CA11:0001:1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0 would acquire certain of the
   DNAME records shown above and would form new queries.  Assuming that
   it began the process knowing servers for IP6.ARPA, but that no server
   it consulted provided recursion and none had other useful additional
   information cached, the sequence of queried names and responses would
   be (all with QCLASS=IN, QTYPE=PTR):

   To a server for IP6.ARPA:
   QNAME=\[x234500C1CA110001123456789ABCDEF0/128].IP6.ARPA.

        Answer:
        \[x234500/24].IP6.ARPA. DNAME IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.

   To a server for IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG:
   QNAME=\[xC1CA110001123456789ABCDEF0/104].IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG.

        Answer:
        \[xC/4].IP6.ALPHA-TLA.ORG. DNAME IP6.C.NET.

   To a server for IP6.C.NET.:
   QNAME=\[x1CA110001123456789ABCDEF0/100].IP6.C.NET.

        Answer:
        \[x1CA/12].IP6.C.NET. DNAME IP6.A.NET.

   To a server for IP6.A.NET.:
   QNAME=\[x110001123456789ABCDEF0/88].IP6.A.NET.

        Answer:
        \[x11/8].IP6.A.NET. DNAME IP6.X.EXAMPLE.

   To a server for IP6.X.EXAMPLE.:
   QNAME=\[x0001123456789ABCDEF0/80].IP6.X.EXAMPLE.




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        Answer:
        \[x0001/16].IP6.X.EXAMPLE. DNAME SUBNET-1.IP6.X.EXAMPLE.
        \[x123456789ABCDEF0/64].SUBNET-1.X.EXAMPLE. PTR N.X.EXAMPLE.

   All the DNAME (and NS) records acquired along the way can be cached
   to expedite resolution of addresses topologically near to this
   address.  And if another global address of N.X.EXAMPLE were resolved
   within the TTL of the final PTR record, that record would not have to
   be fetched again.

5.4.  Operational Note

   In the illustrations in section 5.1, hierarchically adjacent
   entities, such as a network provider and a customer, must agree on a
   DNS name which will own the definition of the delegated prefix(es).
   One simple convention would be to use a bit-string label representing
   exactly the bits which are assigned to the lower-level entity by the
   higher.  For example, "SUBSCRIBER-X" could be replaced by "\[x11/8]".
   This would place the A6 record(s) defining the delegated prefix at
   exactly the same point in the DNS tree as the DNAME record associated
   with that delegation.  The cost of this simplification is that the
   lower-level zone must update its upward-pointing A6 records when it
   is renumbered.  This cost may be found quite acceptable in practice.

6.  Transition from RFC 1886 and Deployment Notes

   When prefixes have been "delegated upward" with A6 records, the
   number of DNS resource records required to establish a single IPv6
   address increases by some non-trivial factor.  Those records will
   typically, but not necessarily, come from different DNS zones (which
   can independently suffer failures for all the usual reasons).  When
   obtaining multiple IPv6 addresses together, this increase in RR count
   will be proportionally less -- and the total size of a DNS reply
   might even decrease -- if the addresses are topologically clustered.
   But the records could still easily exceed the space available in a
   UDP response which returns a large RRset [DNSCLAR] to an MX, NS, or
   SRV query, for example.  The possibilities for overall degradation of
   performance and reliability of DNS lookups are numerous, and increase
   with the number of prefix delegations involved, especially when those
   delegations point to records in other zones.

   DNS Security [DNSSEC] addresses the trustworthiness of cached data,
   which is a problem intrinsic to DNS, but the cost of applying this to
   an IPv6 address is multiplied by a factor which may be greater than
   the number of prefix delegations involved if different signature
   chains must be verified for different A6 records.  If a trusted
   centralized caching server (as in [TSIG], for example) is used, this
   cost might be amortized to acceptable levels.  One new phenomenon is



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   the possibility that IPv6 addresses may be formed from a A6 records
   from a combination of secure and unsecured zones.

   Until more deployment experience is gained with the A6 record, it is
   recommended that prefix delegations be limited to one or two levels.
   A reasonable phasing-in mechanism would be to start with no prefix
   delegations (all A6 records having prefix length 0) and then to move
   to the use of a single level of delegation within a single zone.  (If
   the TTL of the "prefix" A6 records is kept to an appropriate duration
   the capability for rapid renumbering is not lost.)  More aggressively
   flexible delegation could be introduced for a subset of hosts for
   experimentation.

6.1.  Transition from AAAA and Coexistence with A Records

   Administrators of zones which contain A6 records can easily
   accommodate deployed resolvers which understand AAAA records but not
   A6 records.  Such administrators can do automatic generation of AAAA
   records for all of a zone's names which own A6 records by a process
   which mimics the resolution of a hostname to an IPv6 address (see
   section 3.1.4).  Attention must be paid to the TTL assigned to a
   generated AAAA record, which MUST be no more than the minimum of the
   TTLs of the A6 records that were used to form the IPv6 address in
   that record.  For full robustness, those A6 records which were in
   different zones should be monitored for changes (in TTL or RDATA)
   even when there are no changes to zone for which AAAA records are
   being generated.  If the zone is secure [DNSSEC], the generated AAAA
   records MUST be signed along with the rest of the zone data.

   A zone-specific heuristic MAY be used to avoid generation of AAAA
   records for A6 records which record prefixes, although such
   superfluous records would be relatively few in number and harmless.
   Examples of such heuristics include omitting A6 records with a prefix
   length less than the largest value found in the zone file, or records
   with an address suffix field with a certain number of trailing zero
   bits.

   On the client side, when looking up and IPv6 address, the order of A6
   and AAAA queries MAY be configurable to be one of: A6, then AAAA;
   AAAA, then A6; A6 only; or both in parallel.  The default order (or
   only order, if not configurable) MUST be to try A6 first, then AAAA.
   If and when the AAAA becomes deprecated a new document will change
   the default.

   The guidelines and options for precedence between IPv4 and IPv6
   addresses are specified in [TRANS].  All mentions of AAAA records in
   that document are henceforth to be interpreted as meaning A6 and/or
   AAAA records in the order specified in the previous paragraph.



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6.2.  Transition from Nibble Labels to Binary Labels

   Implementations conforming to RFC 1886 [AAAA] perform reverse lookups
   as follows:

      An IPv6 address is represented as a name in the IP6.INT domain by
      a sequence of nibbles separated by dots with the suffix
      ".IP6.INT". The sequence of nibbles is encoded in reverse order,
      i.e. the low-order nibble is encoded first, followed by the next
      low-order nibble and so on. Each nibble is represented by a
      hexadecimal digit. For example, a name for the address
      2345:00C1:CA11:0001:1234:5678:9ABC:DEF0 of the example in section
      5.3 would be sought at the DNS name "0.f.e.d.c.b.a.9.-
      8.7.6.5.4.3.2.1.1.0.0.0.1.1.a.c.1.c.0.0.5.4.3.2.ip6.int."

   Implementations conforming to this specification will perform a
   lookup of a binary label in IP6.ARPA as specified in Section 3.2.  It
   is RECOMMENDED that for a transition period implementations first
   lookup the binary label in IP6.ARPA and if this fails try to lookup
   the 'nibble' label in IP6.INT.

7.  Security Considerations

   The signing authority [DNSSEC] for the A6 records which determine an
   IPv6 address is distributed among several entities, reflecting the
   delegation path of the address space which that address occupies.
   DNS Security is fully applicable to bit-string labels and DNAME
   records.  And just as in IPv4, verification of name-to-address
   mappings is logically independent of verification of address-to-name
   mappings.

   With or without DNSSEC, the incomplete but non-empty address set
   scenario of section 3.1.4 could be caused by selective interference
   with DNS lookups.  If in some situation this would be more harmful
   than complete DNS failure, it might be mitigated on the client side
   by refusing to act on an incomplete set, or on the server side by
   listing all addresses in A6 records with prefix length 0.

8.  IANA Considerations

   The A6 resource record has been assigned a Type value of 38.










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9.  Acknowledgments

   The authors would like to thank the following persons for valuable
   discussions and reviews:  Mark Andrews, Rob Austein, Jim Bound, Randy
   Bush, Brian Carpenter, David Conrad, Steve Deering, Francis Dupont,
   Robert Elz, Bob Fink, Olafur Gudmundsson, Bob Halley, Bob Hinden,
   Edward Lewis, Bill Manning, Keith Moore, Thomas Narten, Erik
   Nordmark, Mike O'Dell, Michael Patton and Ken Powell.

10.  References

   [AAAA]    Thomson, S. and C. Huitema, "DNS Extensions to support IP
             version 6, RFC 1886, December 1995.

   [AARCH]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
             Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

   [AGGR]    Hinden, R., O'Dell, M. and S. Deering, "An IPv6
             Aggregatable Global Unicast Address Format", RFC 2374, July
             1998.

   [BITLBL]  Crawford, M., "Binary Labels in the Domain Name System",
             RFC 2673, August 1999.

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

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

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

   [DNSSEC]  Eastlake, D. 3rd and C. Kaufman, "Domain Name System
             Security Extensions", RFC 2535, March 1999.

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

   [RENUM1]  Carpenter, B. and Y. Rekhter, "Renumbering Needs Work", RFC
             1900, February 1996.

   [RENUM2]  Ferguson, P. and H. Berkowitz, "Network Renumbering
             Overview:  Why would I want it and what is it anyway?", RFC
             2071, January 1997.

   [RENUM3]  Carpenter, B., Crowcroft, J. and Y. Rekhter, "IPv4 Address
             Behaviour Today", RFC 2101, February 1997.



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   [TRANS]   Gilligan, R. and E. Nordmark, "Transition Mechanisms for
             IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 1933, April 1996.

   [TSIG]    Vixie, P., Gudmundsson, O., Eastlake, D. 3rd and B.
             Wellington, "Secret Key Transaction Authentication for DNS
             (TSIG)", RFC 2845, May 2000.

11.  Authors' Addresses

   Matt Crawford
   Fermilab
   MS 368
   PO Box 500
   Batavia, IL 60510
   USA

   Phone: +1 630 840-3461
   EMail: crawdad@fnal.gov


   Christian Huitema
   Microsoft Corporation
   One Microsoft Way
   Redmond, WA 98052-6399

   EMail: huitema@microsoft.com

























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12.  Full Copyright Statement

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
   English.

   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.

Acknowledgement

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
   Internet Society.



















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