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<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-homenet-front-end-naming-delegation-25" category="std" consensus="true" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
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  <front>
    <title abbrev="public-names">Simple Provisioning of Public Names for Residential Networks</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-homenet-front-end-naming-delegation-25"/>
    <author initials="D." surname="Migault" fullname="Daniel Migault">
      <organization>Ericsson</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>8275 Trans Canada Route</street>
          <city>Saint Laurent, QC</city>
          <code>4S 0B6</code>
          <country>Canada</country>
        </postal>
        <email>daniel.migault@ericsson.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="R." surname="Weber" fullname="Ralf Weber">
      <organization>Nominum</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>2000 Seaport Blvd</street>
          <city>Redwood City</city>
          <code>94063</code>
          <country>US</country>
        </postal>
        <email>ralf.weber@nominum.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Richardson" fullname="Michael Richardson">
      <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>470 Dawson Avenue</street>
          <city>Ottawa, ON</city>
          <code>K1Z 5V7</code>
          <country>Canada</country>
        </postal>
        <email>mcr+ietf@sandelman.ca</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="R." surname="Hunter" fullname="Ray Hunter">
      <organization>Globis Consulting BV</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Weegschaalstraat 3</street>
          <city>Eindhoven</city>
          <code>5632CW</code>
          <country>NL</country>
        </postal>
        <email>v6ops@globis.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2022" month="December" day="09"/>
    <area>Internet</area>
    <workgroup>Homenet</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <t>Home network owners may have devices or services hosted on this home network
that they wish to access from the Internet (i.e., from a network outside of the home network).
Home networks are increasingly numbered using IPv6 addresses, which makes this access much simpler.
To enable this access, the names and IP addresses of these devices and services needs to be made  available in the public DNS.</t>
      <t>The names and IP address of the home network are present in the Public Homenet Zone by the Homenet Naming Authority (HNA), which in turn instructs an
outsourced infrastructure to publish the zone on the behalf of the home owner.
This document describes how an this Home Naming Authority instructs the outsourced infrastructure.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>Home network owners may have devices or services hosted on this home network
that they wish to access from the Internet (i.e., from a network outside of the
home network).
The use of IPv6 addresess in the home makes the actual network access much simpler, while on the other hand, the addresses are much harder to remember, and subject to regular renumbering.
To make this situation simpler for typical home owners to manage, there needs to be an easy way for names and IP addresses of these devices and services to be published in the public DNS.</t>
      <t>The names and IP address of the home network are present in the Public Homenet Zone by the Homenet Naming Authority (HNA), which in turn instructs the DNS Outsourcing Infrastructure (DOI) to publish the zone on the behalf of the HNA.
This document describes how an HNA can instruct a DOI to publish a Public Homenet Zone on its behalf.</t>
      <t>The document introduces the Synchronization Channel and the Control Channel between the HNA and the  Distribution Manager (DM), which is the main interface to the DNS Outsourcing Infrastructure (DOI).</t>
      <t>The Synchronization Channel (see <xref target="sec-synch"/>) is used to synchronize the Public Homenet Zone.</t>
      <t>The Synchronization Channel is a zone transfer, with the HNA configured as a primary, and the Distribution Manager configured as a secondary.
Some operators refer to this kind of configuration as a "hidden primary", but that term is not used in this document as it is not precisely defined anywhere, but has many slightly different meanings to many.</t>
      <t>The Control Channel (see <xref target="sec-ctrl"/>) is used to set up the Synchronization Channel.
This channel is in the form of a dynamic DNS update process, authenticated by TLS.</t>
      <t>For example, to build the Public Homenet Zone, the HNA needs the authoritative servers (and associated IP addresses) of the servers (the visible primaries) of the DOI actually serving the  zone.
Similarly, the DOI needs to know the IP address of the (hidden) primary (HNA) as well as potentially the hash of the Key Signing Key (KSK) in the DS RRset to secure the DNSSEC delegation with the parent zone.</t>
      <t>The remainder of the document is as follows.</t>
      <t><xref target="terminology"/> defines the terminology.
<xref target="selectingnames"/> presents the general problem of publishing names and IP addresses.</t>
      <t><xref target="sec-arch-desc"/> provides an architectural view of the  HNA, DM and DOI as well as their different communication channels (Control Channel, Synchronization Channel, DM Distribution Channel) respectively described in <xref target="sec-ctrl"/>, <xref target="sec-synch"/> and <xref target="sec-dist"/>.</t>
      <t>Then <xref target="sec-ctrl"/> and <xref target="sec-synch"/> deal with the two channels that interface to the home.
<xref target="sec-dist"/> provides a set of requirements and expectations on how the distribution system works.  This section is non-normative and not subject to standardization, but reflects how many scalable DNS distribution systems operate.</t>
      <t><xref target="sec-cpe-sec-policies"/> and <xref target="sec-dnssec-deployment"/> respectively detail HNA security policies as well as DNSSEC compliance within the home network.</t>
      <t><xref target="sec-renumbering"/> discusses how renumbering should be handled.</t>
      <t>Finally, <xref target="sec-privacy"/> and <xref target="sec-security"/> respectively discuss privacy and security considerations when outsourcing the Public Homenet Zone.</t>
      <t>The appendices discuss several management (see <xref target="sec-reverse"/>) provisioning (see <xref target="sec-reverse"/>), configurations (see <xref target="info-model"/>) and deployment (see <xref target="sec-deployment"/> and <xref target="sec-ex-manu"/>) aspects.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="terminology">
      <name>Terminology</name>
      <t>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 BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>
      <dl>
        <dt>Customer Premises Equipment:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>(CPE) is a router providing connectivity to the home network.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Homenet Zone:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>is the DNS zone for use within the boundaries of the home network: 'home.arpa' (see <xref target="RFC8375"/>).
This zone is not considered public and is out of scope for this document.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Registered Homenet Domain:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>is the domain name that is associated with the home network. A given home network may have multiple Registered Homenet Domain.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Public Homenet Zone:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>contains the names in the home network that are expected to be publicly resolvable on the Internet. A home network can have multiple Public Homenet Zones.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Homenet Naming Authority(HNA):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>is a function responsible for managing the Public Homenet Zone.
This includes populating the Public Homenet Zone, signing the zone for DNSSEC, as well as managing the distribution of that Homenet Zone to the DNS Outsourcing Infrastructure (DOI).</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>DNS Outsourcing Infrastructure (DOI):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>is the infrastructure responsible for receiving the Public Homenet Zone and publishing it on the Internet.
It is mainly composed of a Distribution Manager and Public Authoritative Servers.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Public Authoritative Servers:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>are the authoritative name servers for the Public Homenet Zone.
Name resolution requests for the Registered Homenet Domain are sent to these servers.
Some DNS operators would refer to these as public secondaries, and for higher resiliency networks, are often implemented in an anycast fashion.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Homenet Authoritative Servers:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>are authoritative name servers for the Homenet Zone within the Homenet network itself. These are sometimes called the hidden primary servers.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Distribution Manager (DM):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>is the (set of) server(s) to which the HNA synchronizes the Public Homenet Zone, and which then distributes the relevant information to the Public Authoritative Servers.
This server has been historically known as the Distribution Master.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Public Homenet Reverse Zone:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The reverse zone file associated with the Public Homenet Zone.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Reverse Public Authoritative Servers:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>equivalent to Public Authoritative Servers specifically for reverse resolution.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Reverse Distribution Manager:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>equivalent to Distribution Manager specifically for reverse resolution.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Homenet DNS(SEC) Resolver:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>a resolver that performs a DNS(SEC) resolution on the home network for the Public Homenet Zone.
The resolution is performed requesting the Homenet Authoritative Servers.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>DNS(SEC) Resolver:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>a resolver that performs a DNS resolution on the Internet for the Public Homenet Zone.
The resolution is performed requesting the Public Authoritative Servers.</t>
        </dd>
      </dl>
    </section>
    <section anchor="selectingnames">
      <name>Selecting Names and Addresses to Publish</name>
      <t>While this document does not create any normative mechanism to select the names to publish, this document anticipates that the home network administrator (a human being), will be presented with a list of current names and addresses either directly on the HNA or via another device such as a smartphone.</t>
      <t>The administrator would mark which devices and services (by name), are to be published.
The HNA would then collect the IP address(es) associated with that device or service, and put the name into the Public Homenet Zone.
The address of the device or service can be collected from a number of places: mDNS <xref target="RFC6762"/>, DHCP <xref target="RFC8415"/>, UPnP, PCP <xref target="RFC6887"/>, or manual configuration.</t>
      <t>A device or service may have Global Unicast Addresses (GUA) (IPv6 <xref target="RFC3787"/> or IPv4), Unique Local IPv6 Addresses (ULA) <xref target="RFC4193"/>, IPv6-Link-Local addresses<xref target="RFC4291"/><xref target="RFC7404"/>, IPv4-Link-Local Addresses <xref target="RFC3927"/> (LLA), and finally, private IPv4 addresses <xref target="RFC1918"/>.</t>
      <t>Of these the link-local are almost never useful for the Public Zone, and should be omitted.</t>
      <t>The IPv6 ULA and the private IPv4 addresses may be useful to publish, if the home network environment features a VPN that would allow the home owner to reach the network.
The IPv6 ULA addresses are safer to publish with a significantly lower probability of collision than RFC1918 addresses.
RFC1918 addresses in public zones are generally filtered out by many DNS servers as they are considered rebind attacks <xref target="REBIND"/>.</t>
      <t>In general, one expects the GUA to be the default address to be published.
A direct advantage of enabling local communication is to enable communications even in case of Internet disruption.
Since communications are established with names which remain a global identifier, the communication can be protected by TLS the same way it is protected on the global Internet - using certificates.  </t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-deployment">
      <name>Envisioned deployment scenarios</name>
      <t>A number of deployment scenarios have been envisioned, this section aims at
providing a brief description.
The use cases are not limitations and this section is not normative.</t>
      <section anchor="cpe-vendor">
        <name>CPE Vendor</name>
        <t>A specific vendor with specific relations with a registrar or a registry
may sell a CPE that is provisioned with a domain name.
Such a domain name is probably not human friendly, and may consist of some kind of serial number associated with the device being sold.</t>
        <t>One possible scenario is that the vendor provisions the HNA with a private key, with an associated certificate used for the mutual TLS authentication.
Note that these keys are not expected to be used for DNSSEC signing.</t>
        <t>Instead these keys are solely used by the HNA for the authentication to the DM.
Normally the keys should be necessary and sufficient to proceed to the authentication.</t>
        <t>When the home network owner plugs in the CPE at home, the relation between HNA and DM is expected to work out-of-the-box.</t>
        <section anchor="agnostic-cpe">
          <name>Agnostic CPE</name>
          <t>A CPE that is not preconfigured may also use the protocol
defined in this document but some configuration steps will be needed.</t>
          <ol spacing="normal" type="1"><li>The owner of the home network buys a domain name from a registrar, and
as such creates an account on that registrar</li>
            <li>the registrar may also be providing the outsourcing infrastructure
or the home network may need to create a specific account on the
outsourcing infrastructure.</li>
          </ol>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>If the DOI is the DNS Registrar, it has by design a proof of ownership of the domain name by the  homenet owner.
In this case, it is expected the DOI provides the necessary parameters to the home  network owner to configure the HNA.
One potential mechanism to provide the parameters would be to provide the user with a JSON object which they can copy paste into the CPE - such as described in <xref target="info-model"/>.
But, what matters to infrastructure is that the HNA is able to authenticate itself to the DOI.</li>
            <li>If the DOI is not the DNS Registrar, then the proof of ownership needs to be established using a protocols.  ACME <xref target="RFC8555"/> for example that will end in the generation of a certificate.
ACME is used here to the purpose of automating the generation of the certificate, the CA may be a specific CA or the DOI.
With that being done, the DOI has a roof of ownership and can proceed as above.</li>
          </ul>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-arch-desc">
      <name>Architecture Description</name>
      <t>This section provides an overview of the architecture for outsourcing the authoritative naming service from the HNA to the DOI.
As a consequence, this prevents HNA to handle the DNS traffic from the Internet associated with the resolution of the Homenet Zone.
More specifically, DNS resolution for the Public Homenet Zone (here myhome.example) from Internet DNSSEC resolvers is handled by the DOI as opposed to the HNA.
The DOI benefits from a cloud infrastructure while the HNA is dimensioned for home network and as such likely enable to support any load.
In the case the HNA is a CPE, outsourcing to the DOI protects the home network against DDoS for example.
Of course the DOI needs to be informed dynamically about the content of myhome.example. The description of such a synchronization mechanism is the purpose of this document.</t>
      <t>Note that <xref target="info-model"/> shows necessary parameters to configure the HNA.</t>
      <section anchor="sec-arch-overview">
        <name>Architecture Overview</name>
        <figure anchor="fig-naming-arch">
          <name>Homenet Naming Architecture</name>
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            <artwork type="ascii-art" align="center"><![CDATA[
.----------------------------.         .-----------------------------.
|        Home Network        |         |          Internet           |
| .-----------------------.  | Control |  .------------------------. |
| |          HNA          |  | Channel |  |          DOI           | |
| |   (hidden primary)    |<------------->|   (hidden secondary)   | |
| |                       |  | DNSUPD  |  |  Distribution Manager  | |
| | .-------------------. |  |         |  |                        | |
| | |  Public Homenet   | |  |         |  |  .-------------------. | |
| | |       Zone        |<------------------>| Public Homenet Zo | | |
| | | myhome.example    | |  |Synchron-|  |  | myhome.example    | | |
| | '-------------------' |  | ization |  |  '-------------------' | |
| '-----------------------'  |Channel  |  '------------|-----------' |
|             ^              |  AXFR   |               |             |
|             |              |         |               v             |
| .-----------------------.  |         |   .---------------------.   |
| | Homenet Authoritative |  |         |   | Public Authoriative |   |
| |        Server         |  |         |   | (secondary) Servers |   |
| | + myhome.example      |  |         |   | + myhome.example    |   |
| | + home.arpa           |  |         |   | + x.y.z.ip6.arpa    |   |
| | + x.y.z.ip6.arpa      |  |         |   |                     |   |
| '-----------------------'  |         |   |                     |   |
|        |       ^           |         |   '---------------------'   |
|        |       |           |         |     ^            |          |
|        |       |           |         |     |            |          |
|        v       |           |         |     |            v          |
|  .----------------------.  |         | .------------------------.  |
|  |   Homenet Resolver   |  |         | |   Internet Resolvers   |  |
|  '----------------------'  |         | '------------------------'  |
|                            |         |                             |
'----------------------------'         |                             |
                                       '-----------------------------'
]]></artwork>
          </artset>
        </figure>
        <t><xref target="fig-naming-arch"/> illustrates the architecture where the HNA outsources the publication of the Public Homenet Zone to the DOI.
The DOI will serve every DNS request of the Public Homenet Zone coming from outside the home network.
When the request is coming within the home network, the resolution is expected to be handled by the Homenet Resolver as detailed in further details below.</t>
        <t>In this example, The Public Homenet Zone is identified by the Registered Homenet Domain name -- myhome.example.
This diagram also shows a reverse IPv6 map being hosted.</t>
        <t>The ".local" as well as ".home.arpa" are explicitly not considered as Public Homenet zones and represented as a Homenet Zone in <xref target="fig-naming-arch"/>.
They are resolved locally, but not published as they are local content.</t>
        <t>The HNA SHOULD build the Public Homenet Zone in a single zone populated with all resource records that are expected to be published on the Internet.
The use of zone cuts/delegations is NOT RECOMMENDED.</t>
        <t>The HNA signs the Public Homenet Zone with DNSSEC.</t>
        <t>The HNA handles all operations and keying material required for DNSSEC, so there is no provision made in this architecture for transferring private DNSSEC related keying material between the HNA and the DM.</t>
        <t>Once the Public Homenet Zone has been built, the HNA communicates and synchronizes it with the DOI using a primary/secondary setting as depicted in <xref target="fig-naming-arch"/>.
The HNA acts as a stealth server (see <xref target="RFC8499"/>) while the DM behaves as a hidden secondary.
It is responsible for distributing the Public Homenet Zone to the multiple Public Authoritative Servers instances that DOI is responsible for.
The DM has three communication channels:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>DM Control Channel (<xref target="sec-ctrl"/>) to configure the HNA and the DOI. This includes necessary parameters to configure the primary/secondary relation as well as some information provided by the DOI that needs to be included by the HNA in the Public Homenet Zone.</li>
          <li>DM Synchronization Channel (<xref target="sec-synch"/>) to synchronize the Public Homenet Zone on the HNA and on the DM with the appropriately configured primary/secondary.
This is a zone transfer over TLS.</li>
          <li>one or more Distribution Channels (<xref target="sec-dist"/>) that distribute the Public Homenet Zone from the DM to the Public Authoritative Servers serving the Public Homenet Zone on the Internet.</li>
        </ul>
        <t>There might be multiple DM's, and multiple servers per DM.
This document assumes a single DM server for simplicity, but there is no reason why each channel needs to be implemented on the same server or use the same code base.</t>
        <t>It is important to note that while the HNA is configured as an authoritative server, it is not expected to answer DNS requests from the <em>public</em> Internet for the Public Homenet Zone.
More specifically, the addresses associated with the HNA SHOULD NOT be mentioned in the NS records of the Public Homenet zone, unless additional security provisions necessary to protect the HNA from external attack have been taken.</t>
        <t>The DOI is also responsible for ensuring the DS record has been updated in the parent zone.</t>
        <t>Resolution is performed by DNS(SEC) resolvers.
When the resolution is performed outside the home network, the DNS(SEC) Resolver resolves the DS record on the Global DNS and the name associated with the Public Homenet Zone (myhome.example) on the Public Authoritative Servers.</t>
        <t>On the other hand, to provide resilience to the Public Homenet Zone in case of WAN connectivity disruption, the Homenet DNS(SEC) Resolver SHOULD be able to perform the resolution on the Homenet Authoritative Servers.
Note that the use of the Homenet resolver enhances privacy since the user on the home network would no longer be leaking interactions with internal services to an external DNS provider and to an on-path observer.
These servers are not expected to be mentioned in the Public Homenet Zone, nor to be accessible from the Internet.
As such their information as well as the corresponding signed DS record MAY be provided by the HNA to the Homenet DNS(SEC) Resolvers, e.g., using HNCP <xref target="RFC7788"/> or a by configuring a trust anchor <xref target="I-D.ietf-dnsop-dnssec-validator-requirements"/>.
Such configuration is outside the scope of this document.
Since the scope of the Homenet Authoritative Servers is limited to the home network, these servers are expected to serve the Homenet Zone as represented in <xref target="fig-naming-arch"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-comms">
        <name>Distribution Manager (DM) Communication Channels</name>
        <t>This section details the DM channels, that is the Control Channel, the Synchronization Channel and the Distribution Channel.</t>
        <t>The Control Channel and the Synchronization Channel are the interfaces used between the HNA and the DOI.
The entity within the DOI responsible to handle these communications is the DM.
Communications between the HNA and the DM MUST be protected and mutually authenticated.
<xref target="sec-ctrl-security"/> discusses in more depth the different security protocols that could be used to secure.</t>
        <t>The information exchanged between the HNA and the DM uses DNS messages protected by DNS over TLS (DoT) <xref target="RFC7858"/>.
This is configured identically to that described in <xref target="RFC9103"/>, Section 9.3.3.</t>
        <t>It is worth noting that both DM and HNA need to agree on a common configuration to set up the synchronization channel as well as to build and server a coherent Public Homenet Zone.
Typically,  the visible NS records of the Public Homenet Zone (built by the HNA) SHOULD remain pointing at the DOI's Public Authoritative Servers' IP address.
Revealing the address of the HNA in the DNS is not desirable.
In addition, and depending on the configuration of the DOI, the DM also needs to update the parent zone's NS, DS and associated A or AAAA glue records.
Refer to <xref target="sec-chain-of-trust"/> for more details.</t>
        <t>This specification assumes:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>the DM serves both the Control Channel and Synchronization Channel on a single IP address, single port and using a single transport protocol.</li>
          <li>By default, the HNA uses a single IP address for both the Control and Synchronization channel.
However,  the HNA MAY use distinct IP addresses for the Control Channel and the Synchronization Channel - see <xref target="sec-synch"/> and <xref target="sec-sync-info"/> for more details.</li>
        </ul>
        <t>The Distribution Channel is internal to the DOI and as such is not normatively defined by this specification.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-ctrl">
      <name>Control Channel</name>
      <t>The DM Control Channel is used by the HNA and the DOI to exchange information related to the configuration of the delegation which includes information to build the Public Homenet Zone (<xref target="sec-pbl-homenet-zone"/>), information to build the DNSSEC chain of trust (<xref target="sec-chain-of-trust"/>) and information to set the Synchronization Channel (<xref target="sec-sync-info"/>).</t>
      <t>Some information is carried from the DOI to the HNA, described in the next section.
The HNA updates the DOI with the the IP address on which the zone is to be transferred using the synchronization channel.
The HNA is always initiating the exchange in both directions.</t>
      <t>As such the HNA has a prior knowledge of the DM identity (via X509 certificate), the IP address and port number to use and protocol to establish a secure session.
The DM acquires knowledge of the identity of the HNA (X509 certificate) as well as the Registered Homenet Domain.
For more detail to see how this can be achieved, please see <xref target="hna-provisioning"/>.</t>
      <section anchor="sec-pbl-homenet-zone">
        <name>Information to Build the Public Homenet Zone</name>
        <t>The HNA builds the Public Homenet Zone based on a template that is returned by the DM to the HNA.  <xref target="sec-ctrl-messages"/> explains how this leverages the AXFR mechanism.</t>
        <t>In order to build its zone completely, the HNA needs the names (and possibly IP addresses) of the Public Authoritative Name Servers.
These are used to populate the NS records for the zone.
All the content of the zone MUST be created by the HNA, because the zone is DNSSEC signed.</t>
        <t>In addition, the HNA needs to know what to put into the MNAME of the SOA, and only the DOI knows what to put there.
The DM MUST also provide useful operational parameters such as other fields of SOA (SERIAL, RNAME, REFRESH, RETRY, EXPIRE and MINIMUM), however, the HNA is free to override these values based upon local configuration.
For instance, an HNA might want to change these values if it thinks that a renumbering event is approaching.</t>
        <t>As the information is necessary for the HNA to proceed and the information is associated with the DM, this information exchange is mandatory.</t>
        <t>The HNA then perhaps and DNS Update operation to the DOI, updating the DOI with an NS, DS, A and AAAA records. These indicates where its Synchronization Channel is.
The DOI does not publish this NS record, but uses it to perform zone transfers.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-chain-of-trust">
        <name>Information to build the DNSSEC chain of trust</name>
        <t>The HNA SHOULD provide the hash of the KSK via the DS RRset, so that the DOI can provide this value to the parent zone.
A common deployment use case is that the DOI is the registrar of the Registered Homenet Domain and as such, its relationship with the registry of the parent zone enables it to update the parent zone.
When such relation exists, the HNA should be able to request the DOI to update the DS RRset in the parent zone.
A direct update is especially necessary to initialize the chain of trust.</t>
        <t>Though the HNA may also later directly update the values of the DS via the Control Channel, it is RECOMMENDED to use other mechanisms such as CDS and CDNSKEY <xref target="RFC7344"/> for transparent updates during key roll overs.</t>
        <t>As some deployments may not provide a DOI that will be able to update the DS in the parent zone, this information exchange is OPTIONAL.</t>
        <t>By accepting the DS RR, the DM commits to advertise the DS to the parent zone.
On the other hand if the DM does not have the capacity to advertise the DS to the parent  zone, it indicates this by refusing the update to the DS RR.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-sync-info">
        <name>Information to set up the Synchronization Channel</name>
        <t>The HNA works as a hidden primary authoritative DNS server, while the DM works like a secondary.
As a result, the HNA must provide the IP address the DM should use to reach the HNA.</t>
        <t>If the HNA detects that it has been renumbered, then it MUST use the Control Channel to update the DOI with the new IPv6 address it has been assigned.</t>
        <t>The Synchronization Channel will be set between the new IPv6 (and IPv4) address and the IP address of the DM.
By default, the IP address used by the HNA in the Control Channel is considered by the DM and the explicit specification  of the IP by the HNA is only OPTIONAL.
The transport channel (including port number) is the same as the one used between the HNA and the DM for the Control Channel.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="deleting-the-delegation">
        <name>Deleting the delegation</name>
        <t>The purpose of the previous sections were to exchange information in order to set a delegation.
The HNA MUST also be able to delete a delegation with a specific DM.</t>
        <t><xref target="sec-zone-delete"/> explains how a DNS Update operation on the Control Channel is used.</t>
        <t>Upon an instruction of deleting the delegation, the DM MUST stop serving the Public Homenet Zone.</t>
        <t>The decision to delete an inactive HNA by the DM is part of the commercial agreement between DOI and HNA.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-ctrl-messages">
        <name>Messages Exchange Description</name>
        <t>Multiple ways were considered on how the control information could be exchanged between  the HNA and the DM.</t>
        <t>This specification defines a mechanism that re-use the DNS zone transfer format.
Note that while information is provided using DNS exchanges, the exchanged information is not expected to be set in any zone file, instead this information is used as commands between the HNA and the DM.
This was found to be simpler on the home router side, as the HNA already has to have code to deal with all the DNS encodings/decodings.
Inventing a new way to encode the DNS information in, for instance, JSON, seemed to add complexity for no return on investment.</t>
        <t>The Control Channel is not expected to be a long-term session.
After a predefined timer - similar to those used for TCP - the Control Channel is expected to be terminated - by closing the transport channel.
The Control Channel MAY be re-opened at any time later.</t>
        <t>The use of a TLS session tickets <xref section="4.6.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8446"/> is RECOMMENDED.</t>
        <t>The authentication of the channel SHOULD be based on certificates for both the DM and each HNA.
The DM may also create the initial configuration for the delegation zone in the parent zone during the provisioning process.</t>
        <section anchor="zonetemplate">
          <name>Retrieving information for the Public Homenet Zone</name>
          <t>The information provided by the DM to the HNA is retrieved by the HNA with an AXFR exchange <xref target="RFC1034"/>.
AXFR enables the response to contain any type of RRsets.</t>
          <t>To retrieve the necessary information to build the Public Homenet Zone, the HNA MUST send a DNS request of type AXFR associated with the Registered Homenet Domain.</t>
          <t>The zone that is returned by the DM is used by the HNA as a template to build its own zone.</t>
          <t>The zone template MUST contain a RRset of type SOA, one or multiple RRset of type NS and zero or more RRset of type A or AAAA (if the NS are in-bailiwick <xref target="RFC8499"/>).
The zone template will include Time To Live (TTL) values for each RR, and the HNA SHOULD take these as suggested maximum values, but MAY use lower values for operational reasons, such impending renumbering events.</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>The SOA RR indicates to the HNA the value of the MNAME of the Public Homenet Zone.</li>
            <li>The NAME of the SOA RR MUST be the Registered Homenet Domain.</li>
            <li>The MNAME value of the SOA RDATA is the value provided by the DOI to the HNA.</li>
            <li>Other RDATA values (RNAME, REFRESH, RETRY, EXPIRE and MINIMUM) are provided by the DOI as suggestions.</li>
          </ul>
          <t>The NS RRsets carry the Public Authoritative Servers of the DOI.
Their associated NAME MUST be the Registered Homenet Domain.</t>
          <t>The TTL and RDATA are those expected to be published on the Public Homenet Zone.
Note that the TTL SHOULD be set following the resolver's guide line <xref target="I-D.ietf-dnsop-ns-revalidation"/> <xref target="I-D.ietf-dnsop-dnssec-validator-requirements"/> with a TTL not exceeding those of the NS.
The RRsets of Type A and AAAA MUST have their NAME matching the NSDNAME of one of the NS RRsets.</t>
          <t>Upon receiving the response, the HNA MUST validate format and properties of the SOA, NS and A or AAAA RRsets.
If an error occurs, the HNA MUST stop proceeding and MUST log an error.
Otherwise, the HNA builds the Public Homenet Zone by setting the MNAME value of the SOA as indicated by the  SOA provided by the AXFR response.
The HNA SHOULD set the value of NAME, REFRESH, RETRY, EXPIRE and MINIMUM of the SOA to those provided by the AXFR response.
The HNA MUST insert the NS and corresponding A or AAAA RRset in its Public Homenet Zone.
The HNA MUST ignore other RRsets.
If an error message is returned by the DM, the HNA MUST proceed as a regular DNS resolution.
Error messages SHOULD be logged for further analysis.
If the resolution does not succeed, the outsourcing operation is aborted and the HNA MUST close the Control Channel.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec-ds">
          <name>Providing information for the DNSSEC chain of trust</name>
          <t>To provide the DS RRset to initialize the DNSSEC chain of trust the HNA MAY send a DNS update <xref target="RFC3007"/> message.</t>
          <t>The DNS update message is composed of a Header section, a Zone section, a Pre-requisite section, and Update section and an additional section.
The Zone section MUST set the ZNAME to the parent zone of the Registered Homenet Domain - that is where the DS records should be inserted. As described <xref target="RFC2136"/>, ZTYPE is set to SOA and ZCLASS is set to the zone's class.
The Pre-requisite section MUST be empty.
The Update section is a DS RRset with its NAME set to the Registered Homenet Domain and the associated RDATA corresponds to the value of the DS.
The Additional Data section MUST be empty.</t>
          <t>Though the pre-requisite section MAY be ignored by the DM, this value is fixed to remain coherent with a standard DNS update.</t>
          <t>Upon receiving the DNS update request, the DM reads the DS RRset in the Update section.
The DM checks ZNAME corresponds to the parent zone.
The DM SHOULD ignore the Pre-requisite and Additional Data sections, if present.
The DM MAY update the TTL value before updating the DS RRset in the parent zone.
Upon a successful update, the DM should return a NOERROR response as a commitment to update the parent zone with the provided DS.
An error indicates the MD does not update the DS, and the HNA needs to act accordingly or other method should be used by the HNA.</t>
          <t>The regular DNS error message SHOULD be returned to the HNA when an error occurs.
In particular a FORMERR is returned when a format error is found, this includes when unexpected RRSets are added or when RRsets are missing.
A SERVFAIL error is returned when a internal error is encountered.
A NOTZONE error is returned when update and Zone sections are not coherent, a NOTAUTH error is returned when the DM is not authoritative for the Zone section.
A REFUSED error is returned when the DM refuses to proceed to the configuration and the requested action.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec-ip-hna">
          <name>Providing information for the Synchronization Channel</name>
          <t>The default IP address used by the HNA for the Synchronization Channel is the IP address of the Control Channel.
To provide a different IP address, the HNA MAY send a DNS UPDATE message.</t>
          <t>Similarly to the <xref target="sec-ds"/>, the HNA MAY specify the IP address using a DNS update message.
The Zone section sets its ZNAME to the parent zone of the Registered Homenet Domain, ZTYPE is set to SOA and ZCLASS is set to the zone's type.
Pre-requisite is empty.
The Update section is a RRset of type NS.
The Additional Data section contains the RRsets of type A or AAAA that designates the IP addresses associated with the primary (or the HNA).</t>
          <t>The reason to provide these IP addresses is to keep them unpublished and prevent them to be resolved.</t>
          <t>Upon receiving the DNS update request, the DM reads the IP addresses and checks the ZNAME corresponds to the parent zone.
The DM SHOULD ignore a non-empty Pre-requisite section.
The DM configures the secondary with the IP addresses and returns a NOERROR response to indicate it is committed to serve as a secondary.</t>
          <t>Similarly to <xref target="sec-ds"/>, DNS errors are used and an error indicates the DM is not configured as a secondary.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec-zone-delete">
          <name>HNA instructing deleting the delegation</name>
          <t>To instruct to delete the delegation the HNA sends a DNS UPDATE Delete message.</t>
          <t>The Zone section sets its ZNAME to the Registered Homenet Domain, the ZTYPE to SOA and the ZCLASS to zone's type.
The Pre-requisite section is empty.
The Update section is a RRset of type NS with the NAME set to the Registered Domain Name.
As indicated by <xref target="RFC2136"/> Section 2.5.2 the delete instruction is set by setting the TTL to 0, the Class to ANY, the RDLENGTH to 0 and the RDATA MUST be empty.
The Additional Data section is empty.</t>
          <t>Upon receiving the DNS update request, the DM checks the request and removes the delegation.
The DM returns a NOERROR response to indicate the delegation has been deleted.
Similarly to <xref target="sec-ds"/>, DNS errors are used and an error indicates the delegation has not been deleted.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-ctrl-security">
        <name>Securing the Control Channel</name>
        <t>TLS <xref target="RFC8446"/>) MUST be used to secure the transactions between the DM and the HNA and
the DM and HNA MUST be mutually authenticated.
The DNS exchanges are performed using DNS over TLS <xref target="RFC7858"/>.</t>
        <t>The HNA may be provisioned by the manufacturer, or during some user-initiated onboarding process, for example, with a browser, signing up to a service provider, with a resulting OAUTH2 token to be provided to the HNA.
Such a process may result in a passing of a settings from a Registrar into the HNA through an http API interface. (This is not in scope)</t>
        <t>When the HNA connects to the DM's control channel, TLS will be used, and the connection will be mutually authenticated.
The DM will authenticate the HNA's certificate based upon having participating in some provisioning process that is not standardized by this document.
The results of the provisioning process is a series of settings described in <xref target="hna-provisioning"/>.</t>
        <t>The HNA will validate the DM's control channel certificate by doing an <xref target="I-D.ietf-uta-rfc6125bis"/> DNS-ID check on the name.</t>
        <t>In the future, other specifications may consider protecting DNS messages with other transport layers, among others, DNS over DTLS <xref target="RFC8094"/>, or DNS over HTTPs (DoH) <xref target="RFC8484"/> or DNS over QUIC <xref target="RFC9250"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-synch">
      <name>Synchronization Channel</name>
      <t>The DM Synchronization Channel is used for communication between the HNA and the DM for synchronizing the Public Homenet Zone.
Note that the Control Channel and the Synchronization Channel are by construction different channels even though there they may use the same IP address.
Suppose the HNA and the DM are using a single IP address and let designate by XX.
YYYY and ZZZZ the various ports involved in the communications.</t>
      <t>The Control Channel is between the HNA working as a client using port number YYYY (a high range port) toward a service provided by the DM at port 853, when using DoT.</t>
      <t>On the other hand, the Synchronization Channel is set between the DM working as a client using port ZZZZ (another high range port) toward a service provided  by the HNA at port 853.</t>
      <t>As a result, even though the same pair of IP addresses may be involved the Control Channel and the Synchronization Channel are always distinct channels.</t>
      <t>Uploading and dynamically updating the zone file on the DM can be seen as zone provisioning between the HNA (Hidden Primary) and the DM (Secondary Server).
This is handled using the normal zone transfer mechanism involving AXFR/IXFR.</t>
      <t>Part of this zone update process involves the owner of the zone (the hidden primary, the HNA) sending a DNS Notify to the secondaries.
In this situation the only destination that is known by the HNA is the DM's Control Channel, and so DNS notifies are sent over the Control Channel, secured by TLS.</t>
      <t>Please note that, DNS Notifies are not critical to normal operation, as the DM will be checking the zone regularly based upon SOA record comments.  DNS Notifies do speed things up as they cause the DM to use the Synchronization channel to immediately do an SOA Query to detect any updates.  If there are any changes then the DM immediately transfers the zone updates.</t>
      <t>This specification standardizes the use of a primary / secondary mechanism <xref target="RFC1996"/> rather than an extended series of DNS update messages.
The primary / secondary mechanism was selected as it scales better and avoids DoS attacks.
As this AXFR runs over a TCP channel secured by TLS, then DNS Update is just more complicated.</t>
      <t>Note that this document provides no standard way to distribute a DNS primary between multiple devices.
As a result, if multiple devices are candidate for hosting the Hidden Primary, some specific mechanisms should be designed so the home network only selects a single HNA for the Hidden Primary.
Selection mechanisms based on HNCP <xref target="RFC7788"/> are good candidates for future work.</t>
      <section anchor="sec-synch-security">
        <name>Securing the Synchronization Channel</name>
        <t>The Synchronization Channel uses mutually authenticated TLS, as described by <xref target="RFC9103"/>.</t>
        <t>There is a TLS client certificate used by the DM to authenticate itself.
The DM uses the same certificate which was configured into the HNA for authenticating the Control Channel, but as a client certificate rather than a server certificate.</t>
        <t><xref target="RFC9103"/> makes no requirements or recommendations on any extended key usage flags for zone transfers, and this document adopts the view that none should be required, but that if there are any set, they should be tolerated and ignored.
A revision to this specification could change this, and if there is a revision to <xref target="RFC9103"/> to clarify this, then this document should be marked as updated as well.</t>
        <t>For the TLS server certificate, the HNA uses the same certificate which it uses to authenticate itself to the DM for the Control Channel.</t>
        <t>The HNA MAY use this certificate as the authorization for the zone transfer, or the HNA MAY have been configured with an Access Control List that will determine if the zone transfer can proceed.
This is a local configuration option, as it is premature to determine which will be operationally simpler.</t>
        <t>When the HNA expects to do zone transfer authorization by certificate only, the HNA MAY still apply an ACL on inbound connection requests to avoid load.
In this case, the HNA SHOULD regularly check (via a DNS resolution) that the address(es) of the DM in the filter is still valid.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-dist">
      <name>DM Distribution Channel</name>
      <t>The DM Distribution Channel is used for communication between the DM and the Public Authoritative Servers.
The architecture and communication used for the DM Distribution Channels are outside the scope of this document, and there are many existing solutions available, e.g., rsync, DNS AXFR, REST, DB copy.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-cpe-sec-policies">
      <name>HNA Security Policies</name>
      <t>The HNA as hidden primary processes only a limited message exchanges on it's Internet facing interface.
This should be enforced using security policies - to allow only a subset of DNS requests to be received by HNA.</t>
      <t>The Hidden Primary Server on the HNA differs the regular authoritative server for the home network due to:</t>
      <dl>
        <dt>Interface Binding:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>the Hidden Primary Server will almost certainly listen on the WAN Interface, whereas a regular Homenet Authoritative Servers would listen on the internal home network interface.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Limited exchanges:</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>the purpose of the Hidden Primary Server is to synchronize with the DM, not to serve any zones to end users, or the public Internet.
This results in a limited number of possible exchanges (AXFR/IXFR) with a small number of IP addresses and an implementation SHOULD enable filtering policies: it should only respond to queries that are required to do zone transfers.
That list includes SOA queries and AXFR/IXFR queries.</t>
        </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>The HNA SHOULD drop any packets arriving on the WAN interface that are not issued from the DM.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-reverse">
      <name>Public Homenet Reverse Zone</name>
      <t>Public Homenet Reverse Zone works similarly to the Public Homenet Zone.
The main difference is that ISP that provides the IPv6 connectivity is likely also the owner of the corresponding IPv6 reverse zone and administrating the Reverse Public Authoritative Servers.
The configuration and the setting of the Synchronization Channel and Control Channel can largely be automated using DHCPv6 messages that are part of the IPv6 Prefix Delegation process.</t>
      <t>The Public Homenet Zone is associated with a Registered Homenet Domain and the ownership of that domain requires a specific registration from the end user as well as the HNA being provisioned with some authentication credentials.
Such steps are mandatory unless the DOI has some other means to authenticate the HNA.
Such situation may occur, for example, when the ISP provides the Homenet Domain as well as the DOI.</t>
      <t>In this case, the HNA may be authenticated by the physical link layer, in which case the authentication of the HNA may be performed without additional provisioning of the HNA.
While this may not be so common for the Public Homenet Zone, this situation is expected to be quite common for the Reverse Homenet Zone as the ISP owns the IP address or IP prefix.</t>
      <t>More specifically, a common case is that the upstream ISP provides the IPv6 prefix to the Homenet with a IA_PD <xref target="RFC8415"/> option and manages the DOI of the associated reverse zone.</t>
      <t>This leaves place for setting up automatically the relation between HNA and the DOI as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/>.</t>
      <t>In the case of the reverse zone, the DOI authenticates the source of the updates by IPv6 Access Control Lists.
In the case of the reverse zone, the ISP knows exactly what addresses have been delegated.
The HNA SHOULD therefore always originate Synchronization Channel updates from an IP address within the zone that is being updated.</t>
      <t>For example, if the ISP has assigned 2001:db8:f00d::/64 to the WAN interface (by DHCPv6, or PPP/RA), then the HNA should originate Synchronization Channel updates from, for example, 2001:db8:f00d::2.</t>
      <t>An ISP that has delegated 2001:db8:aeae::/56 to the HNA via DHCPv6-PD, then HNA should originate Synchronization Channel updates an IP within that subnet, such as 2001:db8:aeae:1::2.</t>
      <t>With this relation automatically configured, the synchronization between the Home network and the DOI happens similarly as for the Public Homenet Zone described earlier in this document.</t>
      <t>Note that for home networks connected to by multiple ISPs, each ISP provides only the DOI of the reverse zones associated with the delegated prefix.
It is also likely that the DNS exchanges will need to be performed on dedicated interfaces as to be accepted by the ISP.
More specifically, the reverse zone associated with prefix 1 will not be possible to be performs by the HNA using an IP address that belongs to prefix 2.
Such constraints does not raise major concerns either for hot standby or load sharing configuration.</t>
      <t>With IPv6, the reverse domain space for IP addresses associated with a subnet such as ::/64 is so large that reverse zone may be confronted with scalability issues.
How the reverse zone is generated is out of scope of this document.
<xref target="RFC8501"/> provides guidance on how to address scalability issues.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-dnssec-deployment">
      <name>DNSSEC compliant Homenet Architecture</name>
      <t><xref target="RFC7368"/> in Section 3.7.3 recommends DNSSEC to be deployed on both the authoritative server and the resolver.</t>
      <t>The resolver side is out of scope of this document, and only the authoritative part of the server is considered.
Other documents such as <xref target="RFC5011"/> deal with continuous update of trust anchors required for operation of a DNSSEC resolver.</t>
      <t>The HNA MUST DNSSEC sign the Public Homenet Zone and the Public Reverse Zone.</t>
      <t>Secure delegation is achieved only if the DS RRset is properly set in the parent zone.
Secure delegation can be performed by the HNA or the DOIs and the choice highly depends on which entity is authorized to perform such updates.
Typically, the DS RRset is updated manually through a registrar interface, and can be maintained with mechanisms such as CDS <xref target="RFC7344"/>.</t>
      <t>When the operator of the DOI is also the Registrar for the domain, then it is a trivial matter for the DOI to initialize the relevant DS records in the parent zone.
In other cases, some other initialization will be required, and that will be specific to the infrastructure involved.
It is beyond the scope of this document.</t>
      <t>There may be some situations where the HNA is unable to arrange for secure delegation of the zones, but the HNA MUST still sign the zones.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-renumbering">
      <name>Renumbering</name>
      <t>During a renumbering of the home network, the HNA IP address may be changed and the Public Homenet Zone will be updated by the HNA with new AAAA records.</t>
      <t>The HNA will then advertise to the DM via a NOTIFY on the Control Channel.
The DM will need to note the new originating IP for the connection, and it will need to update it's internal database of Synchronization Channels.
A new zone transfer will occur with the new records for the resources that the HNA wishes to publish.</t>
      <t>The remaining of the section provides recommendations regarding the provisioning of the Public Homenet Zone - especially the IP addresses.</t>
      <t>Renumbering has been extensively described in <xref target="RFC4192"/> and analyzed in <xref target="RFC7010"/> and the reader is expected to be familiar with them before reading this section.
In the make-before-break renumbering scenario, the new prefix is advertised, the network is configured to prepare the transition to the new prefix.
During a period of time, the two prefixes old and new coexist, before the old prefix is completely
removed.
New resources records containing the new prefix SHOULD be published, while the old resource records with the old prefixes SHOULD be withdrawn.
If the HNA anticipates that period of overlap is long (perhaps due to knowledge of router and DHCPv6 lifetimes), it MAY publish the old prefixes with a significantly lower time to live.</t>
      <t>In break-before-make renumbering scenarios, including flash renumbering scenarios <xref target="RFC8978"/>, the old prefix becomes unuseable before the new prefix is known or advertised.
As explained in <xref target="RFC8978"/>, some flash renumberings occur due to power cycling of the HNA, where ISPs do not properly remember what prefixes have been assigned to which user.</t>
      <t>An HNA that boots up SHOULD immediately use the Control Channel to update the location for the
Synchronization Channel.
This is a reasonable thing to do on every boot, as the HNA has no idea how long it has been offline, or if the (DNSSEC) zone has perhaps expired during the time the HNA was powered off.</t>
      <t>The HNA will have a list of names that should be published, but it might not yet have IP addresses for those devices.
This could be because at the time of power on, the other devices are not yet online.
If the HNA is sure that the prefix has not changed, then it should use the previously known addresses, with a very low TTL.</t>
      <t>Although the new and old IP addresses may be stored in the Public Homenet Zone, it is RECOMMENDED that only the newly reachable IP addresses be published.</t>
      <t>Regarding the Public Homenet Reverse Zone, the new Public Homenet Reverse Zone has to be populated as soon as possible, and the old Public Homenet Reverse Zone will be deleted by the owner of the zone (and the owner of the old prefix which is usually the ISP) once the prefix is no longer assigned to the HNA.
The ISP SHOULD ensure that the DNS cache has expired before re-assigning the prefix to a new home network.
This may be enforced by controlling the TTL values.</t>
      <t>To avoid reachability disruption, IP connectivity information provided by the DNS SHOULD be coherent with the IP in use.
In our case, this means the old IP address SHOULD NOT be provided via the DNS when it is not reachable anymore.</t>
      <t>In the make-before-break scenario, it is possible to make the transition seamless.
Let T be the TTL associated with a RRset of the Public Homenet Zone.
Let Time_NEW be the time the new IP address replaces the old IP address in the Homenet Zone, and Time_OLD_UNREACHABLE the time the old IP will not be reachable anymore.</t>
      <t>In the case of the make-before-break, seamless reachability is provided as long as Time_OLD_UNREACHABLE - T_NEW &gt; (2 * T).
If this is not satisfied, then devices associated with the old IP address in the home network may become unreachable for 2 * T - (Time_OLD_UNREACHABLE - Time_NEW).</t>
      <t>In the case of a break-before-make, Time_OLD_UNREACHABLE = Time_NEW, and the device may become unreachable up to 2 * T.
Of course if Time_NEW &gt;= Time_OLD_UNREACHABLE, then then outage is not seamless.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-privacy">
      <name>Privacy Considerations</name>
      <t>Outsourcing the DNS Authoritative service from the HNA to a third party raises a few privacy related concerns.</t>
      <t>The Public Homenet Zone lists the names of services hosted in the home network.
Combined with blocking of AXFR queries, the use of NSEC3 <xref target="RFC5155"/> (vs NSEC <xref target="RFC4034"/>) prevents an  attacker from being able to walk the zone, to discover all the names.
However, recent work <xref target="GPUNSEC3"/> or <xref target="ZONEENUM"/> have shown that the protection provided by NSEC3 against dictionary attacks should be considered cautiously and <xref target="RFC9276"/> provides guidelines to configure NSEC3 properly.
In addition, the attacker may be able to walk the reverse DNS zone, or use other reconnaissance techniques to learn this information as described in <xref target="RFC7707"/>.</t>
      <t>The zone may be also exposed during the synchronization between the primary and the secondary.
The casual risk of this occuring is low, and the use of <xref target="RFC9103"/> significantly reduces this.
Even if <xref target="RFC9103"/> is used by the DNS Outsourcing Infrastructure, it may still leak the existence of the zone through Notifies.
The protocol described in this document does not increase that risk, as all Notifies use the encrypted Control Channel.</t>
      <t>In general a home network owner is expected to publish only names for which there is some need to be able to reference externally.
Publication of the name does not imply that the service is necessarily reachable from any or all parts of the Internet.
<xref target="RFC7084"/> mandates that the outgoing-only policy <xref target="RFC6092"/> be available, and in many cases it is configured by default.
A well designed User Interface would combine a policy for making a service public by a name with a policy on who may access it.</t>
      <t>In many cases, and for privacy reasons, the home network owner wished publish names only for services that they will be able to access.
The access control may consist of an IP source address range, or access may be restricted via some VPN functionality.
The main advantages of publishing the name are that service may be access by the same name both within the home and outside the home and that the DNS resolution can be handled similarly within the home and outside the home.
This considerably eases the ability to use VPNs where the VPN can be chosen according to the IP address of the service.
Typically, a user may configure its device to reach its homenet devices via a VPN while the remaining of the traffic is accessed directly.</t>
      <t>Enterprise networks have generally adopted another strategy designated as split-horizon-DNS.
While such strategy might appear as providing more privacy at first sight, its implementation remains challenging and the privacy advantages needs to be considered carefully.
In split-horizon-DNS, names are designated with internal names that can only be resolved within the corporate network.
When such strategy is applied to homenet, VPNs needs to be both configured with a naming resolution policies and routing policies.
Such approach might be reasonable with a single VPN, but maintaining a coherent DNS space and IP space among various VPNs comes with serious complexities.
Firstly, if multiple homenets are using the same domain name -- like home.arpa -- it becomes difficult to determine on which network the resolution should be performed.
As a result, homenets should at least be differentiated by a domain name.
Secondly, the use of split-horizon-DNS requires each VPN being associated with a resolver and specific resolutions being performed by the dedicated resolver.
Such policies can easily raises some conflicts (with significant privacy issues) while remaining hard to be implemented.</t>
      <t>In addition to the Public Homenet Zone, pervasive DNS monitoring can also monitor the traffic associated with the Public Homenet Zone.
This traffic may provide an indication of the services an end user accesses, plus how and when they use these services.
Although, caching may obfuscate this information inside the home network, it is likely that outside your  home network this information will not be cached.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-security">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>This document exposes a mechanism that prevents the HNA from being exposed to queries from the Internet.
The HNA never answers DNS requests from the Internet.
These requests are instead served by the DOI.</t>
      <t>While this limits the level of exposure of the HNA, the HNA still has some exposure to attacks from the Internet.
This section analyses the attack surface associated with these communications, the data published by the DOI, as well as operational considerations.</t>
      <section anchor="hna-dm-channels">
        <name>HNA DM channels</name>
        <t>The channels between HNA and DM are mutually authenticated and encrypted with TLS <xref target="RFC8446"/> and its associated security considerations apply.</t>
        <t>To ensure the multiple TLS session are continuously authenticating the same entity, TLS may take advantage of second factor authentication as described in <xref target="RFC8672"/> for the TLS server certificate for the Control Channel.
The HNA should also cache the TLS server certificate used by the DM, in order to authenticate the DM during the setup of the Synchronization Channel.
(Alternatively, the HNA is configured with an ACL from which Synchronization Channel connections will originate)</t>
        <t>The Control Channel and the Synchronization Channel respectively follow <xref target="RFC7858"/> and <xref target="RFC9103"/> guidelines.</t>
        <t>The DNS protocol is subject to reflection attacks, however, these attacks are largely applicable when DNS is carried over UDP.
The interfaces between the HNA and DM are using TLS over TCP, which prevents such reflection attacks.
Note that Public Authoritative servers hosted by the DOI are subject to such attacks, but that is out of scope of our document.</t>
        <t>Note that in the case of the Reverse Homenet Zone, the data is less subject to attacks than in the Public Homenet Zone.
In addition, the DM and Reverse Distribution Manager (RDM) may be provided by the ISP - as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/>, in which case DM and RDM might be less exposed to attacks - as communications within a network.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-name-less-secure">
        <name>Names are less secure than IP addresses</name>
        <t>This document describes how an end user can make their services and devices from their home network reachable on the Internet by using names rather than IP addresses.
This exposes the home network to attackers, since names are expected to include less entropy than IP addresses.
IPv4 Addresses are 4 bytes long leading to 2**32 possibilities.
With IPv6 addresses, the Interface Identifier is 64 bits long leading to up to 2^64 possibilities  for a given subnetwork.
This is not to mention that the subnet prefix is also of 64 bits long, thus providing up to 2^64 possibilities.
On the other hand, names used either for the home network domain or for the devices present less entropy (livebox, router, printer, nicolas, jennifer, ...) and thus potentially exposes the devices to dictionary attacks.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec-name-less-volatile">
        <name>Names are less volatile than IP addresses</name>
        <t>IP addresses may be used to locate a device, a host or a service.
However, home networks are not expected to be assigned a time invariant prefix by ISPs. In addition IPv6 enables temporary addresses that makes them even more volatile <xref target="RFC8981"/>.
As a result, observing IP addresses only provides some ephemeral information about who is accessing the service.
On the other hand, names are not expected to be as volatile as IP addresses.
As a result, logging names over time may be more valuable than logging IP addresses, especially to profile an end user's characteristics.</t>
        <t>PTR provides a way to bind an IP address to a name.
In that sense, responding to PTR DNS queries may affect the end user's privacy.
For that reason PTR DNS queries and MAY instead be configured to return with NXDOMAIN.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="deployment-considerations">
        <name>Deployment Considerations</name>
        <t>The HNA is expected to sign the DNSSEC zone and as such hold the private KSK/ZSK.</t>
        <t>There is no strong justification in this case to use a separate KSK and ZSK.
If an attacker can get access to one of them, it likely that they will access both of them.
If the HNA is run in a home router with a secure element (SE) or TPM, storing the private keys in the secure element would be a useful precaution.
The DNSSEC keys are needed on an hourly to weekly basis, but not more often.</t>
        <t>While there is some risk that the DNSSEC keys might be disclosed by malicious parties, the bigger risk is that they will simply be lost if the home router is factory reset, or just thrown out/replaced with a newer model.</t>
        <t>Generating new DNSSEC keys is relatively easy, they can be deployed using the Control Channel to the DM.
The key that is used to authenticate that connection is the critical key that needs protection, and should ideally be backed up to offline storage. (Such as a USB key)</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="operational-considerations">
        <name>Operational Considerations</name>
        <t>HomeNet technologies makes it easier to expose devices and services to the
Internet.  This imposes broader operational considerations for the operator and
the Internet:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>The home network operator must carefully assess whether a device or service
previously fielded only on a home network is robust enough to be exposed to the
Internet</li>
          <li>The home network operator will need to increase the diligence to regularly
managing these exposed devices due to their increased risk posture of being
exposed to the Internet</li>
          <li>Depending on the operational practices of the home network operators, there
is an increased risk to the Internet through the possible
introduction of additional internet-exposed system that are poorly managed and
likely to be compromised.
Carriers may need to deploy additional mitigations to ensure that attacks do not originate from their networks.
The use of RFC8520 (MUD) filters is one such method.</li>
        </ul>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document has no actions for IANA.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="acknowledgment">
      <name>Acknowledgment</name>
      <t>The authors wish to thank Philippe Lemordant for his contributions on
the early versions of the draft; Ole Troan for pointing out issues with
the IPv6 routed home concept and placing the scope of this document in a
wider picture; Mark Townsley for encouragement and injecting a healthy
debate on the merits of the idea; Ulrik de Bie for providing alternative
solutions; Paul Mockapetris, Christian Jacquenet, Francis Dupont and
Ludovic Eschard for their remarks on HNA and low power devices; Olafur
Gudmundsson for clarifying DNSSEC capabilities of small devices; Simon
Kelley for its feedback as dnsmasq implementer; Andrew Sullivan, Mark
Andrew, Ted Lemon, Mikael Abrahamson, and Ray Bellis
for their feedback on handling different views as well as clarifying the
impact of outsourcing the zone signing operation outside the HNA; Mark
Andrew and Peter Koch for clarifying the renumbering.</t>
      <t>At last the authors would like to thank Kiran Makhijani for her in-depth review that contributed in shaping the final version.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="contributors">
      <name>Contributors</name>
      <t>The co-authors would like to thank Chris Griffiths and Wouter Cloetens that provided a significant contribution in the early versions of the document.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references>
      <name>References</name>
      <references>
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC2119" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119">
          <front>
            <title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="1997"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification.  These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents.  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2119"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2119"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8174" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174">
          <front>
            <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
            <author fullname="B. Leiba" initials="B." surname="Leiba">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol  specifications.  This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the  defined special meanings.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8174"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8174"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8375" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8375">
          <front>
            <title>Special-Use Domain 'home.arpa.'</title>
            <author fullname="P. Pfister" initials="P." surname="Pfister">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Lemon" initials="T." surname="Lemon">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies the behavior that is expected from the Domain Name System with regard to DNS queries for names ending with '.home.arpa.' and designates this domain as a special-use domain name. 'home.arpa.' is designated for non-unique use in residential home networks.  The Home Networking Control Protocol (HNCP) is updated to use the 'home.arpa.' domain instead of '.home'.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8375"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8375"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC1918" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1918">
          <front>
            <title>Address Allocation for Private Internets</title>
            <author fullname="Y. Rekhter" initials="Y." surname="Rekhter">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Moskowitz" initials="B." surname="Moskowitz">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Karrenberg" initials="D." surname="Karrenberg">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="G. J. de Groot" initials="G. J." surname="de Groot">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="E. Lear" initials="E." surname="Lear">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="February" year="1996"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes address allocation for private internets.  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="5"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1918"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1918"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8499" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8499">
          <front>
            <title>DNS Terminology</title>
            <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Sullivan" initials="A." surname="Sullivan">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="K. Fujiwara" initials="K." surname="Fujiwara">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="January" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Domain Name System (DNS) is defined in literally dozens of different RFCs.  The terminology used by implementers and developers of DNS protocols, and by operators of DNS systems, has sometimes changed in the decades since the DNS was first defined.  This document gives current definitions for many of the terms used in the DNS in a single document.</t>
              <t>This document obsoletes RFC 7719 and updates RFC 2308.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="219"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8499"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8499"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7858" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7858">
          <front>
            <title>Specification for DNS over Transport Layer Security (TLS)</title>
            <author fullname="Z. Hu" initials="Z." surname="Hu">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="L. Zhu" initials="L." surname="Zhu">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Heidemann" initials="J." surname="Heidemann">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Mankin" initials="A." surname="Mankin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Wessels" initials="D." surname="Wessels">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) to provide privacy for DNS.  Encryption provided by TLS eliminates opportunities for eavesdropping and on-path tampering with DNS queries in the network, such as discussed in RFC 7626.  In addition, this document specifies two usage profiles for DNS over TLS and provides advice on performance considerations to minimize overhead from using TCP and TLS with DNS.</t>
              <t>This document focuses on securing stub-to-recursive traffic, as per the charter of the DPRIVE Working Group.  It does not prevent future applications of the protocol to recursive-to-authoritative traffic.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7858"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7858"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9103" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9103">
          <front>
            <title>DNS Zone Transfer over TLS</title>
            <author fullname="W. Toorop" initials="W." surname="Toorop">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Dickinson" initials="S." surname="Dickinson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Sahib" initials="S." surname="Sahib">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Aras" initials="P." surname="Aras">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Mankin" initials="A." surname="Mankin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="August" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>DNS zone transfers are transmitted in cleartext, which gives attackers the opportunity to collect the content of a zone by eavesdropping on network connections. The DNS Transaction Signature (TSIG) mechanism is specified to restrict direct zone transfer to authorized clients only, but it does not add confidentiality. This document specifies the use of TLS, rather than cleartext, to prevent zone content collection via passive monitoring of zone transfers: XFR over TLS (XoT). Additionally, this specification updates RFC 1995 and RFC 5936 with respect to efficient use of TCP connections and RFC 7766 with respect to the recommended number of connections between a client and server for each transport.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9103"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9103"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7344" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7344">
          <front>
            <title>Automating DNSSEC Delegation Trust Maintenance</title>
            <author fullname="W. Kumari" initials="W." surname="Kumari">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="O. Gudmundsson" initials="O." surname="Gudmundsson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="G. Barwood" initials="G." surname="Barwood">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a method to allow DNS Operators to more easily update DNSSEC Key Signing Keys using the DNS as a communication channel.  The technique described is aimed at delegations in which it is currently hard to move information from the Child to Parent.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7344"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7344"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8446" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446">
          <front>
            <title>The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3</title>
            <author fullname="E. Rescorla" initials="E." surname="Rescorla">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="August" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies version 1.3 of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol.  TLS allows client/server applications to communicate over the Internet in a way that is designed to prevent eavesdropping, tampering, and message forgery.</t>
              <t>This document updates RFCs 5705 and 6066, and obsoletes RFCs 5077, 5246, and 6961.  This document also specifies new requirements for TLS 1.2 implementations.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8446"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8446"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC1034" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1034">
          <front>
            <title>Domain names - concepts and facilities</title>
            <author fullname="P. Mockapetris" initials="P." surname="Mockapetris">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="1987"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This RFC is the revised basic definition of The Domain Name System.  It obsoletes RFC-882.  This memo describes the domain style names and their used for host address look up and electronic mail forwarding.  It discusses the clients and servers in the domain name system and the protocol used between them.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="STD" value="13"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1034"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1034"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3007" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3007">
          <front>
            <title>Secure Domain Name System (DNS) Dynamic Update</title>
            <author fullname="B. Wellington" initials="B." surname="Wellington">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="2000"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document proposes a method for performing secure Domain Name System (DNS) dynamic updates.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3007"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3007"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-uta-rfc6125bis" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-uta-rfc6125bis-08.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Service Identity in TLS</title>
            <author fullname="Peter Saint-Andre" initials="P." surname="Saint-Andre">
              <organization>independent</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Rich Salz" initials="R." surname="Salz">
              <organization>Akamai Technologies</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="12" month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   Many application technologies enable secure communication between two
   entities by means of Transport Layer Security (TLS) with Internet
   Public Key Infrastructure Using X.509 (PKIX) certificates.  This
   document specifies procedures for representing and verifying the
   identity of application services in such interactions.

   This document obsoletes RFC 6125.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-uta-rfc6125bis-08"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC1996" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1996">
          <front>
            <title>A Mechanism for Prompt Notification of Zone Changes (DNS NOTIFY)</title>
            <author fullname="P. Vixie" initials="P." surname="Vixie">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="August" year="1996"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo describes the NOTIFY opcode for DNS, by which a master server advises a set of slave servers that the master's data has been changed and that a query should be initiated to discover the new data. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1996"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1996"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5155" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5155">
          <front>
            <title>DNS Security (DNSSEC) Hashed Authenticated Denial of Existence</title>
            <author fullname="B. Laurie" initials="B." surname="Laurie">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="G. Sisson" initials="G." surname="Sisson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Arends" initials="R." surname="Arends">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Blacka" initials="D." surname="Blacka">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2008"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Domain Name System Security (DNSSEC) Extensions introduced the NSEC resource record (RR) for authenticated denial of existence. This document introduces an alternative resource record, NSEC3, which similarly provides authenticated denial of existence.  However, it also provides measures against zone enumeration and permits gradual expansion of delegation-centric zones.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5155"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5155"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4034" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4034">
          <front>
            <title>Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions</title>
            <author fullname="R. Arends" initials="R." surname="Arends">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Austein" initials="R." surname="Austein">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Larson" initials="M." surname="Larson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Massey" initials="D." surname="Massey">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Rose" initials="S." surname="Rose">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document is part of a family of documents that describe the DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC).  The DNS Security Extensions are a collection of resource records and protocol modifications that provide source authentication for the DNS.  This document defines the public key (DNSKEY), delegation signer (DS), resource record digital signature (RRSIG), and authenticated denial of existence (NSEC) resource records.  The purpose and format of each resource record is described in detail, and an example of each resource record is given. </t>
              <t> This document obsoletes RFC 2535 and incorporates changes from all updates to RFC 2535.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4034"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4034"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references>
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="GPUNSEC3" target="https://doi.org/10.1109/NCA.2014.27">
          <front>
            <title>GPU-Based NSEC3 Hash Breaking</title>
            <author initials="M." surname="Wander">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="L." surname="Schwittmann">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="C." surname="Boelmann">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="T." surname="Weis">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="ZONEENUM">
          <front>
            <title>An efficient DNSSEC zone enumeration algorithm</title>
            <author initials="Z." surname="Wang">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="L." surname="Xiao">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="R." surname="Wang">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="REBIND" target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_rebinding">
          <front>
            <title>DNS rebinding</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6762" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6762">
          <front>
            <title>Multicast DNS</title>
            <author fullname="S. Cheshire" initials="S." surname="Cheshire">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Krochmal" initials="M." surname="Krochmal">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="February" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>As networked devices become smaller, more portable, and more ubiquitous, the ability to operate with less configured infrastructure is increasingly important.  In particular, the ability to look up DNS resource record data types (including, but not limited to, host names) in the absence of a conventional managed DNS server is useful.</t>
              <t>Multicast DNS (mDNS) provides the ability to perform DNS-like operations on the local link in the absence of any conventional Unicast DNS server.  In addition, Multicast DNS designates a portion of the DNS namespace to be free for local use, without the need to pay any annual fee, and without the need to set up delegations or otherwise configure a conventional DNS server to answer for those names.</t>
              <t>The primary benefits of Multicast DNS names are that (i) they require little or no administration or configuration to set them up, (ii) they work when no infrastructure is present, and (iii) they work during infrastructure failures.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6762"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6762"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8415" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8415">
          <front>
            <title>Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)</title>
            <author fullname="T. Mrugalski" initials="T." surname="Mrugalski">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Siodelski" initials="M." surname="Siodelski">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Volz" initials="B." surname="Volz">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Yourtchenko" initials="A." surname="Yourtchenko">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Jiang" initials="S." surname="Jiang">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Lemon" initials="T." surname="Lemon">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Winters" initials="T." surname="Winters">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6): an extensible mechanism for configuring nodes with network configuration parameters, IP addresses, and prefixes. Parameters can be provided statelessly, or in combination with stateful assignment of one or more IPv6 addresses and/or IPv6 prefixes.  DHCPv6 can operate either in place of or in addition to stateless address autoconfiguration (SLAAC).</t>
              <t>This document updates the text from RFC 3315 (the original DHCPv6 specification) and incorporates prefix delegation (RFC 3633), stateless DHCPv6 (RFC 3736), an option to specify an upper bound for how long a client should wait before refreshing information (RFC 4242), a mechanism for throttling DHCPv6 clients when DHCPv6 service is not available (RFC 7083), and relay agent handling of unknown messages (RFC 7283).  In addition, this document clarifies the interactions between models of operation (RFC 7550).  As such, this document obsoletes RFC 3315, RFC 3633, RFC 3736, RFC 4242, RFC 7083, RFC 7283, and RFC 7550.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8415"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8415"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6887" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6887">
          <front>
            <title>Port Control Protocol (PCP)</title>
            <author fullname="D. Wing" initials="D." role="editor" surname="Wing">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Cheshire" initials="S." surname="Cheshire">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Boucadair" initials="M." surname="Boucadair">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Penno" initials="R." surname="Penno">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Selkirk" initials="P." surname="Selkirk">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="April" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Port Control Protocol allows an IPv6 or IPv4 host to control how incoming IPv6 or IPv4 packets are translated and forwarded by a Network Address Translator (NAT) or simple firewall, and also allows a host to optimize its outgoing NAT keepalive messages.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6887"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6887"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3787" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3787">
          <front>
            <title>Recommendations for Interoperable IP Networks using Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS)</title>
            <author fullname="J. Parker" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Parker">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2004"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document discusses a number of differences between the Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol used to route IP traffic as described in RFC 1195 and the protocol as it is deployed today.  These differences are discussed as a service to those implementing, testing, and deploying the IS-IS Protocol to route IP traffic.  A companion document describes the differences between the protocol described in ISO 10589 and current practice.  This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3787"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3787"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4193" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4193">
          <front>
            <title>Unique Local IPv6 Unicast Addresses</title>
            <author fullname="R. Hinden" initials="R." surname="Hinden">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Haberman" initials="B." surname="Haberman">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines an IPv6 unicast address format that is globally unique and is intended for local communications, usually inside of a site. These addresses are not expected to be routable on the global Internet.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4193"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4193"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4291" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4291">
          <front>
            <title>IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture</title>
            <author fullname="R. Hinden" initials="R." surname="Hinden">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Deering" initials="S." surname="Deering">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="February" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This specification defines the addressing architecture of the IP Version 6 (IPv6) protocol.  The document includes the IPv6 addressing model, text representations of IPv6 addresses, definition of IPv6 unicast addresses, anycast addresses, and multicast addresses, and an IPv6 node's required addresses.</t>
              <t>This document obsoletes RFC 3513, "IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture".   [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4291"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4291"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7404" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7404">
          <front>
            <title>Using Only Link-Local Addressing inside an IPv6 Network</title>
            <author fullname="M. Behringer" initials="M." surname="Behringer">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="E. Vyncke" initials="E." surname="Vyncke">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In an IPv6 network, it is possible to use only link-local addresses on infrastructure links between routers.  This document discusses the advantages and disadvantages of this approach to facilitate the decision process for a given network.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7404"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7404"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3927" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3927">
          <front>
            <title>Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses</title>
            <author fullname="S. Cheshire" initials="S." surname="Cheshire">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Aboba" initials="B." surname="Aboba">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="E. Guttman" initials="E." surname="Guttman">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>To participate in wide-area IP networking, a host needs to be configured with IP addresses for its interfaces, either manually by the user or automatically from a source on the network such as a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server.  Unfortunately, such address configuration information may not always be available. It is therefore beneficial for a host to be able to depend on a useful subset of IP networking functions even when no address configuration is available.  This document describes how a host may automatically configure an interface with an IPv4 address within the 169.254/16 prefix that is valid for communication with other devices connected to the same physical (or logical) link.</t>
              <t>IPv4 Link-Local addresses are not suitable for communication with devices not directly connected to the same physical (or logical) link, and are only used where stable, routable addresses are not available (such as on ad hoc or isolated networks).  This document does not recommend that IPv4 Link-Local addresses and routable addresses be configured simultaneously on the same interface.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3927"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3927"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8555" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8555">
          <front>
            <title>Automatic Certificate Management Environment (ACME)</title>
            <author fullname="R. Barnes" initials="R." surname="Barnes">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Hoffman-Andrews" initials="J." surname="Hoffman-Andrews">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. McCarney" initials="D." surname="McCarney">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Kasten" initials="J." surname="Kasten">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Public Key Infrastructure using X.509 (PKIX) certificates are used for a number of purposes, the most significant of which is the authentication of domain names.  Thus, certification authorities (CAs) in the Web PKI are trusted to verify that an applicant for a certificate legitimately represents the domain name(s) in the certificate.  As of this writing, this verification is done through a collection of ad hoc mechanisms.  This document describes a protocol that a CA and an applicant can use to automate the process of verification and certificate issuance.  The protocol also provides facilities for other certificate management functions, such as certificate revocation.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8555"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8555"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7788" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7788">
          <front>
            <title>Home Networking Control Protocol</title>
            <author fullname="M. Stenberg" initials="M." surname="Stenberg">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Barth" initials="S." surname="Barth">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Pfister" initials="P." surname="Pfister">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="April" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the Home Networking Control Protocol (HNCP), an extensible configuration protocol, and a set of requirements for home network devices.  HNCP is described as a profile of and extension to the Distributed Node Consensus Protocol (DNCP).  HNCP enables discovery of network borders, automated configuration of addresses, name resolution, service discovery, and the use of any routing protocol that supports routing based on both the source and destination address.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7788"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7788"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-dnsop-dnssec-validator-requirements" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-dnsop-dnssec-validator-requirements-01.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Recommendations for DNSSEC Resolvers Operators</title>
            <author fullname="Daniel Migault" initials="D." surname="Migault">
              <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Dan York" initials="D." surname="York">
              <organization>ISOC</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="13" month="May" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC) define a process for validating
   received data and assert them authentic and complete as opposed to
   forged.

   This document clarifies the scope and responsibilities of DNSSEC
   Resolver Operators (DRO) as well as operational recommendations that
   DNSSEC validators operators SHOULD put in place in order to implement
   sufficient trust that makes DNSSEC validation output accurate.  The
   recommendations described in this document include, provisioning
   mechanisms as well as monitoring and management mechanisms.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-dnsop-dnssec-validator-requirements-01"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-dnsop-ns-revalidation" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-dnsop-ns-revalidation-03.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Delegation Revalidation by DNS Resolvers</title>
            <author fullname="Shumon Huque" initials="S." surname="Huque">
              <organization>Salesforce</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Paul A. Vixie" initials="P. A." surname="Vixie">
              <organization>Farsight Security</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Ralph Dolmans" initials="R." surname="Dolmans">
              <organization>NLnet Labs</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="6" month="September" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document recommends improved DNS [RFC1034] [RFC1035] resolver
   behavior with respect to the processing of Name Server (NS) resource
   record sets (RRset) during iterative resolution.  When following a
   referral response from an authoritative server to a child zone, DNS
   resolvers should explicitly query the authoritative NS RRset at the
   apex of the child zone and cache this in preference to the NS RRset
   on the parent side of the zone cut.  Resolvers should also
   periodically revalidate the child delegation by re-quering the parent
   zone at the expiration of the TTL of the parent side NS RRset.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-dnsop-ns-revalidation-03"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2136" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2136">
          <front>
            <title>Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)</title>
            <author fullname="P. Vixie" initials="P." role="editor" surname="Vixie">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Thomson" initials="S." surname="Thomson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Y. Rekhter" initials="Y." surname="Rekhter">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Bound" initials="J." surname="Bound">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="April" year="1997"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Using this specification of the UPDATE opcode, it is possible to add or delete RRs or RRsets from a specified zone.  Prerequisites are specified separately from update operations, and can specify a dependency upon either the previous existence or nonexistence of an RRset, or the existence of a single RR.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2136"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2136"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8094" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8094">
          <front>
            <title>DNS over Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)</title>
            <author fullname="T. Reddy" initials="T." surname="Reddy">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Wing" initials="D." surname="Wing">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Patil" initials="P." surname="Patil">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="February" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>DNS queries and responses are visible to network elements on the path between the DNS client and its server.  These queries and responses can contain privacy-sensitive information, which is valuable to protect.</t>
              <t>This document proposes the use of Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) for DNS, to protect against passive listeners and certain active attacks.  As latency is critical for DNS, this proposal also discusses mechanisms to reduce DTLS round trips and reduce the DTLS handshake size.  The proposed mechanism runs over port 853.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8094"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8094"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8484" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8484">
          <front>
            <title>DNS Queries over HTTPS (DoH)</title>
            <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. McManus" initials="P." surname="McManus">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a protocol for sending DNS queries and getting DNS responses over HTTPS.  Each DNS query-response pair is mapped into an HTTP exchange.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8484"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8484"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9250" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9250">
          <front>
            <title>DNS over Dedicated QUIC Connections</title>
            <author fullname="C. Huitema" initials="C." surname="Huitema">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Dickinson" initials="S." surname="Dickinson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Mankin" initials="A." surname="Mankin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the use of QUIC to provide transport confidentiality for DNS. The encryption provided by QUIC has similar properties to those provided by TLS, while QUIC transport eliminates the head-of-line blocking issues inherent with TCP and provides more efficient packet-loss recovery than UDP. DNS over QUIC (DoQ) has privacy properties similar to DNS over TLS (DoT) specified in RFC 7858, and latency characteristics similar to classic DNS over UDP. This specification describes the use of DoQ as a general-purpose transport for DNS and includes the use of DoQ for stub to recursive, recursive to authoritative, and zone transfer scenarios.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9250"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9250"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options-24.txt">
          <front>
            <title>DHCPv6 Options for Home Network Naming Authority</title>
            <author fullname="Daniel Migault" initials="D." surname="Migault">
              <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Ralf Weber" initials="R." surname="Weber">
              <organization>Akamai</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Tomek Mrugalski" initials="T." surname="Mrugalski">
              <organization>Internet Systems Consortium, Inc.</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="31" month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document defines DHCPv6 options so a Homenet Naming Authority
   (HNA) can automatically proceed to the appropriate configuration and
   outsource the authoritative naming service for the home network.  In
   most cases, the outsourcing mechanism is transparent for the end
   user.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options-24"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8501" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8501">
          <front>
            <title>Reverse DNS in IPv6 for Internet Service Providers</title>
            <author fullname="L. Howard" initials="L." surname="Howard">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In IPv4, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) commonly provide IN-ADDR.ARPA information for their customers by prepopulating the zone with one PTR record for every available address.  This practice does not scale in IPv6.  This document analyzes different approaches and considerations for ISPs in managing the IP6.ARPA zone.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8501"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8501"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7368" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7368">
          <front>
            <title>IPv6 Home Networking Architecture Principles</title>
            <author fullname="T. Chown" initials="T." role="editor" surname="Chown">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Arkko" initials="J." surname="Arkko">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="A. Brandt" initials="A." surname="Brandt">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="O. Troan" initials="O." surname="Troan">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Weil" initials="J." surname="Weil">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This text describes evolving networking technology within residential home networks with increasing numbers of devices and a trend towards increased internal routing.  The goal of this document is to define a general architecture for IPv6-based home networking, describing the associated principles, considerations, and requirements.  The text briefly highlights specific implications of the introduction of IPv6 for home networking, discusses the elements of the architecture, and suggests how standard IPv6 mechanisms and addressing can be employed in home networking.  The architecture describes the need for specific protocol extensions for certain additional functionality.  It is assumed that the IPv6 home network is not actively managed and runs as an IPv6-only or dual-stack network.  There are no recommendations in this text for the IPv4 part of the network.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7368"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7368"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5011" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5011">
          <front>
            <title>Automated Updates of DNS Security (DNSSEC) Trust Anchors</title>
            <author fullname="M. StJohns" initials="M." surname="StJohns">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2007"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a means for automated, authenticated, and authorized updating of DNSSEC "trust anchors".  The method provides protection against N-1 key compromises of N keys in the trust point key set.  Based on the trust established by the presence of a current anchor, other anchors may be added at the same place in the hierarchy, and, ultimately, supplant the existing anchor(s).</t>
              <t>This mechanism will require changes to resolver management behavior (but not resolver resolution behavior), and the addition of a single flag bit to the DNSKEY record.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="STD" value="74"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5011"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5011"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4192" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4192">
          <front>
            <title>Procedures for Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day</title>
            <author fullname="F. Baker" initials="F." surname="Baker">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="E. Lear" initials="E." surname="Lear">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Droms" initials="R." surname="Droms">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a procedure that can be used to renumber a network from one prefix to another.  It uses IPv6's intrinsic ability to assign multiple addresses to a network interface to provide continuity of network service through a "make-before-break" transition, as well as addresses naming and configuration management issues.  It also uses other IPv6 features to minimize the effort and time required to complete the transition from the old prefix to the new prefix.  This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4192"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4192"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7010" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7010">
          <front>
            <title>IPv6 Site Renumbering Gap Analysis</title>
            <author fullname="B. Liu" initials="B." surname="Liu">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Jiang" initials="S." surname="Jiang">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Carpenter" initials="B." surname="Carpenter">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Venaas" initials="S." surname="Venaas">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="W. George" initials="W." surname="George">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document briefly introduces the existing mechanisms that could be utilized for IPv6 site renumbering and tries to cover most of the explicit issues and requirements associated with IPv6 renumbering.  The content is mainly a gap analysis that provides a basis for future works to identify and develop solutions or to stimulate such development as appropriate.  The gap analysis is organized by the main steps of a renumbering process.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7010"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7010"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8978" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8978">
          <front>
            <title>Reaction of IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) to Flash-Renumbering Events</title>
            <author fullname="F. Gont" initials="F." surname="Gont">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="J. Žorž" initials="J." surname="Žorž">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Patterson" initials="R." surname="Patterson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In scenarios where network configuration information related to IPv6 prefixes becomes invalid without any explicit and reliable signaling of that condition (such as when a Customer Edge router crashes and reboots without knowledge of the previously employed prefixes), hosts on the local network may continue using stale prefixes for an unacceptably long time (on the order of several days), thus resulting in connectivity problems. This document describes this issue and discusses operational workarounds that may help to improve network robustness. Additionally, it highlights areas where further work may be needed.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8978"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8978"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9276" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9276">
          <front>
            <title>Guidance for NSEC3 Parameter Settings</title>
            <author fullname="W. Hardaker" initials="W." surname="Hardaker">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="V. Dukhovni" initials="V." surname="Dukhovni">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="August" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>NSEC3 is a DNSSEC mechanism providing proof of nonexistence by asserting that there are no names that exist between two domain names within a zone.  Unlike its counterpart NSEC, NSEC3 avoids directly disclosing the bounding domain name pairs.  This document provides guidance on setting NSEC3 parameters based on recent operational deployment experience.  This document updates RFC 5155 with guidance about selecting NSEC3 iteration and salt parameters.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="236"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9276"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9276"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7707" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7707">
          <front>
            <title>Network Reconnaissance in IPv6 Networks</title>
            <author fullname="F. Gont" initials="F." surname="Gont">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Chown" initials="T." surname="Chown">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>IPv6 offers a much larger address space than that of its IPv4 counterpart.  An IPv6 subnet of size /64 can (in theory) accommodate approximately 1.844 * 10^19 hosts, thus resulting in a much lower host density (#hosts/#addresses) than is typical in IPv4 networks, where a site typically has 65,000 or fewer unique addresses.  As a result, it is widely assumed that it would take a tremendous effort to perform address-scanning attacks against IPv6 networks; therefore, IPv6 address-scanning attacks have been considered unfeasible.  This document formally obsoletes RFC 5157, which first discussed this assumption, by providing further analysis on how traditional address-scanning techniques apply to IPv6 networks and exploring some additional techniques that can be employed for IPv6 network reconnaissance.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7707"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7707"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7084" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7084">
          <front>
            <title>Basic Requirements for IPv6 Customer Edge Routers</title>
            <author fullname="H. Singh" initials="H." surname="Singh">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="W. Beebee" initials="W." surname="Beebee">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="C. Donley" initials="C." surname="Donley">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="B. Stark" initials="B." surname="Stark">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="November" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies requirements for an IPv6 Customer Edge (CE) router.  Specifically, the current version of this document focuses on the basic provisioning of an IPv6 CE router and the provisioning of IPv6 hosts attached to it.  The document also covers IP transition technologies.  Two transition technologies in RFC 5969's IPv6 Rapid Deployment on IPv4 Infrastructures (6rd) and RFC 6333's Dual-Stack Lite (DS-Lite) are covered in the document.  The document obsoletes RFC 6204.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7084"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7084"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6092" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6092">
          <front>
            <title>Recommended Simple Security Capabilities in Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) for Providing Residential IPv6 Internet Service</title>
            <author fullname="J. Woodyatt" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Woodyatt">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="January" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document identifies a set of recommendations for the makers of devices and describes how to provide for "simple security" capabilities at the perimeter of local-area IPv6 networks in Internet-enabled homes and small offices.  This document is not  an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for  informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6092"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6092"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8672" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8672">
          <front>
            <title>TLS Server Identity Pinning with Tickets</title>
            <author fullname="Y. Sheffer" initials="Y." surname="Sheffer">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Migault" initials="D." surname="Migault">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Misissued public-key certificates can prevent TLS clients from appropriately authenticating the TLS server. Several alternatives have been proposed to detect this situation and prevent a client from establishing a TLS session with a TLS end point authenticated with an illegitimate public-key certificate. These mechanisms are either not widely deployed or limited to public web browsing.</t>
              <t>This document proposes experimental extensions to TLS with opaque pinning tickets as a way to pin the server's identity. During an initial TLS session, the server provides an original encrypted pinning ticket. In subsequent TLS session establishment, upon receipt of the pinning ticket, the server proves its ability to decrypt the pinning ticket and thus the ownership of the pinning protection key. The client can now safely conclude that the TLS session is established with the same TLS server as the original TLS session. One of the important properties of this proposal is that no manual management actions are required.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8672"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8672"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8981" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8981">
          <front>
            <title>Temporary Address Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6</title>
            <author fullname="F. Gont" initials="F." surname="Gont">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Krishnan" initials="S." surname="Krishnan">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Narten" initials="T." surname="Narten">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Draves" initials="R." surname="Draves">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="February" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes an extension to IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration that causes hosts to generate temporary addresses with randomized interface identifiers for each prefix advertised with autoconfiguration enabled. Changing addresses over time limits the window of time during which eavesdroppers and other information collectors may trivially perform address-based network-activity correlation when the same address is employed for multiple transactions by the same host. Additionally, it reduces the window of exposure of a host as being accessible via an address that becomes revealed as a result of active communication. This document obsoletes RFC 4941.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8981"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8981"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6749" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6749">
          <front>
            <title>The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework</title>
            <author fullname="D. Hardt" initials="D." role="editor" surname="Hardt">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2012"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The OAuth 2.0 authorization framework enables a third-party application to obtain limited access to an HTTP service, either on behalf of a resource owner by orchestrating an approval interaction between the resource owner and the HTTP service, or by allowing the third-party application to obtain access on its own behalf.  This specification replaces and obsoletes the OAuth 1.0 protocol described in RFC 5849.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6749"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6749"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8610" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8610">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL): A Notational Convention to Express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) and JSON Data Structures</title>
            <author fullname="H. Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="C. Vigano" initials="C." surname="Vigano">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="June" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document proposes a notational convention to express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) data structures (RFC 7049).  Its main goal is to provide an easy and unambiguous way to express structures for protocol messages and data formats that use CBOR or JSON.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8610"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8610"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.richardson-homerouter-provisioning" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-richardson-homerouter-provisioning-02.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Provisioning Initial Device Identifiers into Home Routers</title>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="14" month="November" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document describes a method to provisioning an 802.1AR-style
   certificate into a router intended for use in the home.

   The proceedure results in a certificate which can be validated with a
   public trust anchor ("WebPKI"), using a name rather than an IP
   address.  This method is focused on home routers, but can in some
   cases be used by other classes of IoT devices.

   (RFCEDITOR please remove: this document can be found at
   https://github.com/mcr/homerouter-provisioning)

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-richardson-homerouter-provisioning-02"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
    <section anchor="hna-channel-configurations">
      <name>HNA Channel Configurations</name>
      <section anchor="hna-provisioning">
        <name>Homenet Public Zone</name>
        <t>This document does not deal with how the HNA is provisioned with a trusted relationship to the Distribution Manager for the forward zone.</t>
        <t>This section details what needs to be provisioned into the HNA and serves as a requirements statement for mechanisms.</t>
        <t>The HNA needs to be provisioned with:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>the Registered Domain (e.g., myhome.example )</li>
          <li>the contact info for the Distribution Manager (DM), including the DNS name (FQDN), possibly including the IP literal, and a certificate (or anchor) to be used to authenticate the service</li>
          <li>the DM transport protocol and port (the default is DNS over TLS, on port 853)</li>
          <li>the HNA credentials used by the DM for its authentication.</li>
        </ul>
        <t>The HNA will need to select an IP address for communication for the Synchronization Channel.
This is typically the WAN address of the CPE, but could be an IPv6 LAN address in the case of a home with multiple ISPs (and multiple border routers).
This is detailed in <xref target="sec-ip-hna"/> when the NS and A or AAAA RRsets are communicated.</t>
        <t>The above parameters MUST be be provisioned for ISP-specific reverse zones.
One example of how to do this can be found in  <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/>.
ISP-specific forward zones MAY also be provisioned using <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/>, but zones which are not related to a specific ISP zone (such as with a DNS provider) must be provisioned through other means.</t>
        <t>Similarly, if the HNA is provided by a registrar, the HNA may be handed pre-configured to end user.</t>
        <t>In the absence of specific pre-established relation, these pieces of information may be entered manually by the end user.
In order to ease the configuration from the end user the following scheme may be implemented.</t>
        <t>The HNA may present the end user a web interface where it provides the end user the ability to indicate the Registered Homenet Domain or the registrar for example a preselected list.
Once the registrar has been selected, the HNA redirects the end user to that registrar in order to receive a access token.
The access token will enable the HNA to retrieve the DM parameters associated with the Registered Domain.
These parameters will include the credentials used by the HNA to establish the Control and Synchronization Channels.</t>
        <t>Such architecture limits the necessary steps to configure the HNA from the end user.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="info-model">
      <name>Information Model for Outsourced information</name>
      <t>This section specifies an optional format for the set of parameters required by the HNA to configure the naming architecture of this document.</t>
      <t>In cases where a home router has not been provisioned by the manufacturer (when forward zones are provided by the manufacturer), or by the ISP (when the ISP provides this service), then a home user/owner will need to configure these settings via an administrative interface.</t>
      <t>By defining a standard format (in JSON) for this configuration information, the user/owner may be able to just copy and paste a configuration blob from the service provider into the administrative interface of the HNA.</t>
      <t>This format may also provide the basis for a future OAUTH2 <xref target="RFC6749"/> flow that could do the setup automatically.</t>
      <t>The HNA needs to be configured with the following parameters as described by this CDDL <xref target="RFC8610"/>.  These are the parameters are necessary to establish a secure channel  between the HNA and the DM as well as to specify the DNS zone that is in the scope of the communication.</t>
      <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
hna-configuration = {
  "registered_domain" : tstr,
  "dm"                : tstr,
  ? "dm_transport" : "DoT"
  ? "dm_port"        : uint,
  ? "dm_acl"         : hna-acl / [ +hna-acl ]
  ? "hna_auth_method": hna-auth-method
  ? "hna_certificate": tstr
}

hna-acl          = tstr
hna-auth-method  /= "certificate"
]]></sourcecode>
      <t>For example:</t>
      <!-- NOT actually json, as it is two examples merged -->

<artwork><![CDATA[
{
  "registered_domain" : "n8d234f.r.example.net",
  "dm"                : "2001:db8:1234:111:222::2",
  "dm_transport"      : "DoT",
  "dm_port"           : 4433,
  "dm_acl"            : "2001:db8:1f15:62e:21c::/64"
                   or [ "2001:db8:1f15:62e:21c::/64", ... ]
  "hna_auth_method"   : "certificate",
  "hna_certificate"   : "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMIIDTjCCFGy....",
}
]]></artwork>
      <dl>
        <dt>Registered Homenet Domain (registered_domain)</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The Domain Name of the zone. Multiple Registered Homenet Domains may be provided.
This will generate the
creation of multiple Public Homenet Zones.
This parameter is mandatory.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Distribution Manager notification address (dm)</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The associated FQDNs or IP addresses of the DM to which DNS notifies should be sent.
This parameter is mandatory.
IP addresses are optional and the FQDN is sufficient and preferred.
If there are concerns about the security of the name to IP translation, then DNSSEC should be employed.</t>
        </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>As the session between the HNA and the DM is authenticated with TLS, the use of names is easier.</t>
      <t>As certificates are more commonly emitted for FQDN than for IP addresses, it is preferred to use names and authenticate the name of the DM during the TLS session establishment.</t>
      <dl>
        <dt>Supported Transport (dm_transport):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The transport that carries the DNS exchanges between the HNA and the DM.
Typical value is "DoT" but it may be extended in the future with "DoH", "DoQ" for example.
This parameter is optional and by default the HNA uses DoT.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Distribution Manager Port (dm_port):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>Indicates the port used by the DM.
This parameter is optional and the default value is provided by the Supported Transport.
In the future, additional transport may not have default port, in which case either a default port needs to be defined or this parameter become mandatory.</t>
        </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>Note that HNA does not defines ports for the Synchronization Channel.
In any case, this is not expected to part of the configuration, but instead negotiated through the Configuration Channel.
Currently the Configuration Channel does not provide this, and limits its agility to a dedicated IP address.
If such agility is needed in the future, additional exchanges will need to be defined.</t>
      <dl>
        <dt>Authentication Method ("hna_auth_method"):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>How the HNA authenticates itself to the DM within the TLS connection(s).
The authentication method can typically be "certificate", "psk" or "none".
This Parameter is optional and by default the Authentication Method is "certificate".</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Authentication data ("hna_certificate", "hna_key"):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The certificate chain used to authenticate the HNA.
This parameter is optional and when not specified, a self-signed certificate is used.</t>
        </dd>
        <dt>Distribution Manager AXFR permission netmask (dm_acl):</dt>
        <dd>
          <t>The subnet from which the CPE should accept SOA queries and AXFR requests.
A subnet is used in the case where the DOI consists of a number of different systems.
An array of addresses is permitted.
This parameter is optional and if unspecified, the CPE uses the IP addresses provided by the dm parameter either directly when dm indicates an IP address or the IP addresses returned by the DNS(SEC) resolution when dm indicates a FQDN.</t>
        </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>For forward zones, the relationship between the HNA and the forward zone provider may be the result of a number of transactions:</t>
      <ol spacing="normal" type="1"><li>The forward zone outsourcing may be provided by the maker of the Homenet router.
In this case, the identity and authorization could be built in the device at manufacturer provisioning time.  The device would need to be provisioned with a device-unique credential, and it is likely that the Registered Homenet Domain would be derived from a public attribute of the device, such as a serial number (see <xref target="sec-ex-manu"/> or <xref target="I-D.richardson-homerouter-provisioning"/> for more details ).</li>
        <li>The forward zone outsourcing may be provided by the Internet Service Provider.
In this case, the use of <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/> to provide the credentials is appropriate.</li>
        <li>The forward zone may be outsourced to a third party, such as a domain registrar.
In this case, the use of the JSON-serialized YANG data model described in this section is appropriate, as it can easily be copy and pasted by the user, or downloaded as part of a web transaction.</li>
      </ol>
      <t>For reverse zones, the relationship is always with the upstream ISP (although there may be more than one), and so <xref target="I-D.ietf-homenet-naming-architecture-dhc-options"/> is always the appropriate interface.</t>
      <t>The following is an abbridged example of a set of data that represents the needed configuration parameters for outsourcing.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec-ex-manu">
      <name>Example: A manufacturer provisioned HNA product flow</name>
      <t>This scenario is one where a homenet router device manufacturer decides to offer DNS hosting as a value add.</t>
      <t><xref target="I-D.richardson-homerouter-provisioning"/> describes a process for a home router
credential provisioning system.
The outline of it is that near the end of the manufacturing process, as part of the firmware loading, the manufacturer provisions a private key and certificate into the device.</t>
      <t>In addition to having a assymmetric credential known to the manufacturer, the device also has
been provisioned with an agreed upon name.  In the example in the above document, the name "n8d234f.r.example.net" has already been allocated and confirmed with the manufacturer.</t>
      <t>The HNA can use the above domain for itself.
It is not very pretty or personal, but if the owner wishes a better name, they can arrange for it.</t>
      <t>The configuration would look like:</t>
      <artwork><![CDATA[
{
  "dm" : "2001:db8:1234:111:222::2",
  "dm_acl"    : "2001:db8:1234:111:222::/64",
  "dm_ctrl"   : "manufacturer.example.net",
  "dm_port"   : "4433",
  "ns_list"   : [ "ns1.publicdns.example", "ns2.publicdns.example"],
  "zone"      : "n8d234f.r.example.net",
  "auth_method" : "certificate",
  "hna_certificate":"-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMIIDTjCCFGy....",
}
]]></artwork>
      <t>The dm_ctrl and dm_port values would be built into the firmware.</t>
    </section>
  </back>
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