requirements.txt revision 356345
1Requirements for Recursive Caching Resolver 
2	(a.k.a. Treeshrew, Unbound-C)
3By W.C.A. Wijngaards, NLnet Labs, October 2006.
4
5Contents
61. Introduction
72. History
83. Goals
94. Non-Goals
10
11
121. Introduction
13---------------
14This is the requirements document for a DNS name server and aims to
15document the goals and non-goals of the project.  The DNS (the Domain
16Name System) is a global, replicated database that uses a hierarchical
17structure for queries.
18
19Data in the DNS is stored in Resource Record sets (RR sets), and has a
20time to live (TTL).  During this time the data can be cached.  It is
21thus useful to cache data to speed up future lookups.  A server that
22looks up data in the DNS for clients and caches previous answers to
23speed up processing is called a caching, recursive nameserver.  
24
25This project aims to develop such a nameserver in modular components, so
26that also DNSSEC (secure DNS) validation and stub-resolvers (that do not
27run as a server, but a linked into an application) are easily possible.
28
29The main components are the Validator that validates the security
30fingerprints on data sets, the Iterator that sends queries to the
31hierarchical DNS servers that own the data and the Cache that stores
32data from previous queries.  The networking and query management code
33then interface with the modules to perform the necessary processing.
34
35In Section 2 the origins of the Unbound project are documented. Section
363 lists the goals, while Section 4 lists the explicit non-goals of the
37project. Section 5 discusses choices made during development.
38
39
402. History
41----------
42The unbound resolver project started by Bill Manning, David Blacka, and
43Matt Larson (from the University of California and from Verisign), that
44created a Java based prototype resolver called Unbound.  The basic
45design decisions of clean modules was executed.
46
47The Java prototype worked very well, with contributions from Geoff
48Sisson and Roy Arends from Nominet.  Around 2006 the idea came to create
49a full-fledged C implementation ready for deployed use.  NLnet Labs
50volunteered to write this implementation.
51
52
533. Goals
54--------
55o A validating recursive DNS resolver.
56o Code diversity in the DNS resolver monoculture.
57o Drop-in replacement for BIND apart from config.
58o DNSSEC support.
59o Fully RFC compliant.
60o High performance
61	* even with validation.
62o Used as
63	* stub resolver.
64	* full caching name server.
65	* resolver library.
66o Elegant design of validator, resolver, cache modules.
67	* provide the ability to pick and choose modules.
68o Robust.
69o In C, open source: The BSD license. 
70o Highly portable, targets include modern Unix systems, such as *BSD,
71solaris, linux, and maybe also the windows platform.
72o Smallest as possible component that does the job.
73o Stub-zones can be configured (local data or AS112 zones).
74
75
764. Non-Goals
77------------
78o An authoritative name server.
79o Too many Features.
80
81
825. Choices
83----------
84o rfc2181 discourages duplicates RRs in RRsets. unbound does not create
85  duplicates, but when presented with duplicates on the wire from the
86  authoritative servers, does not perform duplicate removal.
87  It does do some rrsig duplicate removal, in the msgparser, for dnssec qtype
88  rrsig and any, because of special rrsig processing in the msgparser.
89o The harden-glue feature, when yes all out of zone glue is deleted, when
90  no out of zone glue is used for further resolving, is more complicated 
91  than that, see below.
92  Main points:
93  	* rfc2182 trust handling is used. 
94	* data is let through only in very specific cases
95	* spoofability remains possible.
96  Not all glue is let through (despite the name of the option). Only glue 
97  which is present in a delegation, of type A and AAAA, where the name is
98  present in the NS record in the authority section is let through.
99  The glue that is let through is stored in the cache (marked as 'from the
100  additional section'). And will then be used for sending queries to. It
101  will not be present in the reply to the client (if RD is off).
102  A direct query for that name will attempt to get a msg into the message
103  cache. Since A and AAAA queries are not synthesized by the unbound cache,
104  this query will be (eventually) sent to the authoritative server and its
105  answer will be put in the cache, marked as 'from the answer section' and
106  thus remove the 'from the additional section' data, and this record is 
107  returned to the client.
108  The message has a TTL smaller or equal to the TTL of the answer RR.
109  If the cache memory is low; the answer RR may be dropped, and a glue
110  RR may be inserted, within the message TTL time, and thus return the
111  spoofed glue to a client. When the message expires, it is refetched and
112  the cached RR is updated with the correct content.
113  The server can be spoofed by getting it to visit a especially prepared 
114  domain. This domain then inserts an address for another authoritative 
115  server into the cache, when visiting that other domain, this address may
116  then be used to send queries to. And fake answers may be returned.
117  If the other domain is signed by DNSSEC, the fakes will be detected.
118
119  In summary, the harden glue feature presents a security risk if
120  disabled. Disabling the feature leads to possible better performance
121  as more glue is present for the recursive service to use. The feature
122  is implemented so as to minimise the security risk, while trying to 
123  keep this performance gain.
124o The method by which dnssec-lameness is detected is not secure. DNSSEC lame
125  is when a server has the zone in question, but lacks dnssec data, such as
126  signatures. The method to detect dnssec lameness looks at nonvalidated 
127  data from the parent of a zone. This can be used, by spoofing the parent,
128  to create a false sense of dnssec-lameness in the child, or a false sense
129  or dnssec-non-lameness in the child. The first results in the server marked
130  lame, and not used for 900 seconds, and the second will result in a 
131  validator failure (SERVFAIL again), when the query is validated later on.
132
133  Concluding, a spoof of the parent delegation can be used for many cases
134  of denial of service. I.e. a completely different NS set could be returned,
135  or the information withheld. All of these alterations can be caught by
136  the validator if the parent is signed, and result in 900 seconds bogus. 
137  The dnssec-lameness detection is used to detect operator failures, 
138  before the validator will properly verify the messages.
139
140  Also for zones for which no chain of trust exists, but a DS is given by the
141  parent, dnssec-lameness detection enables. This delivers dnssec to our 
142  clients when possible (for client validators).
143
144  The following issue needs to be resolved:
145	a server that serves both a parent and child zone, where
146	parent is signed, but child is not. The server must not be marked 
147	lame for the parent zone, because the child answer is not signed. 
148  Instead of a false positive, we want false negatives; failure to 
149  detect dnssec-lameness is less of a problem than marking honest 
150  servers lame. dnssec-lameness is a config error and deserves the trouble.
151  So, only messages that identify the zone are used to mark the zone
152  lame. The zone is identified by SOA or NS RRsets in the answer/auth.
153  That includes almost all negative responses and also A, AAAA qtypes.
154  That would be most responses from servers.
155  For referrals, delegations that add a single label can be checked to be
156  from their zone, this covers most delegation-centric zones.
157
158  So possibly, for complicated setups, with multiple (parent-child) zones 
159  on a server, dnssec-lameness detection does not work - no dnssec-lameness 
160  is detected. Instead the zone that is dnssec-lame becomes bogus.
161
162o authority features.
163  This is a recursive server, and authority features are out of scope.
164  However, some authority features are expected in a recursor. Things like
165  localhost, reverse lookup for 127.0.0.1, or blocking AS112 traffic.
166  Also redirection of domain names with fixed data is needed by service
167  providers. Limited support is added specifically to address this.
168
169  Adding full authority support, requires much more code, and more complex
170  maintenance.
171
172  The limited support allows adding some static data (for localhost and so),
173  and to respond with a fixed rcode (NXDOMAIN) for domains (such as AS112).
174
175  You can put authority data on a separate server, and set the server in 
176  unbound.conf as stub for those zones, this allows clients to access data 
177  from the server without making unbound authoritative for the zones.
178
179o the access control denies queries before any other processing.
180  This denies queries that are not authoritative, or version.bind, or any.
181  And thus prevents cache-snooping (denied hosts cannot make non-recursive
182  queries and get answers from the cache).
183
184o If a client makes a query without RD bit, in the case of a returned 
185  message from cache which is:
186	answer section: empty
187	auth section: NS record present, no SOA record, no DS record, 
188		maybe NSEC or NSEC3 records present.
189	additional: A records or other relevant records.
190  A SOA record would indicate that this was a NODATA answer.
191  A DS records would indicate a referral.
192  Absence of NS record would indicate a NODATA answer as well.
193
194  Then the receiver does not know whether this was a referral
195  with attempt at no-DS proof) or a nodata answer with attempt
196  at no-data proof. It could be determined by attempting to prove
197  either condition; and looking if only one is valid, but both 
198  proofs could be valid, or neither could be valid, which creates
199  doubt. This case is validated by unbound as a 'referral' which
200  ascertains that RRSIGs are OK (and not omitted), but does not
201  check NSEC/NSEC3. 
202
203o Case preservation
204  Unbound preserves the casing received from authority servers as best 
205  as possible. It compresses without case, so case can get lost there.
206  The casing from the query name is used in preference to the casing
207  of the authority server. This is the same as BIND. RFC4343 allows either 
208  behaviour.
209 
210o Denial of service protection
211  If many queries are made, and they are made to names for which the
212  authority servers do not respond, then the requestlist for unbound
213  fills up fast.  This results in denial of service for new queries.
214  To combat this the first 50% of the requestlist can run to completion.
215  The last 50% of the requestlist get (200 msec) at least and are replaced
216  by newer queries when older (LIFO).
217  When a new query comes in, and a place in the first 50% is available, this
218  is preferred.  Otherwise, it can replace older queries out of the last 50%.
219  Thus, even long queries get a 50% chance to be resolved.  And many 'short'
220  one or two round-trip resolves can be done in the last 50% of the list.
221  The timeout can be configured.
222
223o EDNS fallback. Is done according to the EDNS RFC (and update draft-00).
224  Unbound assumes EDNS 0 support for the first query.  Then it can detect
225  support (if the servers replies) or non-support (on a NOTIMPL or FORMERR).
226  Some middleboxes drop EDNS 0 queries, mainly when forwarding, not when
227  routing packets.  To detect this, when timeouts keep happening, as the
228  timeout approached 5-10 seconds, and EDNS status has not been detected yet,
229  a single probe query is sent.  This probe has a sub-second timeout, and
230  if the server responds (quickly) without EDNS, this is cached for 15 min.
231  This works very well when detecting an address that you use much - like
232  a forwarder address - which is where the middleboxes need to be detected.
233  Otherwise, it results in a 5 second wait time before EDNS timeout is 
234  detected, which is slow but it works at least. 
235  It minimizes the chances of a dropped query making a (DNSSEC) EDNS server
236  falsely EDNS-nonsupporting, and thus DNSSEC-bogus, works well with 
237  middleboxes, and can detect the occasional authority that drops EDNS.
238  For some boxes it is necessary to probe for every failing query, a
239  reassurance that the DNS server does EDNS does not mean that path can
240  take large DNS answers.
241
242o 0x20 backoff.
243  The draft describes to back off to the next server, and go through all
244  servers several times.  Unbound goes on get the full list of nameserver
245  addresses, and then makes 3 * number of addresses queries.
246  They are sent to a random server, but no one address more than 4 times.
247  It succeeds if one has 0x20 intact, or else all are equal.
248  Otherwise, servfail is returned to the client.
249
250o NXDOMAIN and SOA serial numbers.
251  Unbound keeps TTL values for message formats, and thus rcodes, such
252  as NXDOMAIN.  Also it keeps the latest rrsets in the rrset cache.
253  So it will faithfully negative cache for the exact TTL as originally
254  specified for an NXDOMAIN message, but send a newer SOA record if
255  this has been found in the mean time.  In point, this could lead to a
256  negative cached NXDOMAIN reply with a SOA RR where the serial number
257  indicates a zone version where this domain is not any longer NXDOMAIN.
258  These situations become consistent once the original TTL expires.
259  If the domain is DNSSEC signed, by the way, then NSEC records are
260  updated more carefully.  If one of the NSEC records in an NXDOMAIN is
261  updated from another query, the NXDOMAIN is dropped from the cache,
262  and queried for again, so that its proof can be checked again.
263
264o SOA records in negative cached answers for DS queries.
265  The current unbound code uses a negative cache for queries for type DS.
266  This speeds up building chains of trust, and uses NSEC and NSEC3
267  (optout) information to speed up lookups.  When used internally,
268  the bare NSEC(3) information is sufficient, probably picked up from
269  a referral.  When answering to clients, a SOA record is needed for
270  the correct message format, a SOA record is picked from the cache
271  (and may not actually match the serial number of the SOA for which the
272  NSEC and NSEC3 records were obtained) if available otherwise network
273  queries are performed to get the data.
274
275o Parent and child with different nameserver information.
276  A misconfiguration that sometimes happens is where the parent and child
277  have different NS, glue information.  The child is authoritative, and
278  unbound will not trust information from the parent nameservers as the
279  final answer.  To help lookups, unbound will however use the parent-side
280  version of the glue as a last resort lookup.  This resolves lookups for
281  those misconfigured domains where the servers reported by the parent
282  are the only ones working, and servers reported by the child do not.
283
284o Failure of validation and probing.
285  Retries on a validation failure are now 5x to a different nameserver IP
286  (if possible), and then it gives up, for one name, type, class entry in
287  the message cache.  If a DNSKEY or DS fails in the chain of trust in the
288  key cache additionally, after the probing, a bad key entry is created that
289  makes the entire zone bogus for 900 seconds.  This is a fixed value at
290  this time and is conservative in sending probes.  It makes the compound
291  effect of many resolvers less and easier to handle, but penalizes
292  individual resolvers by having less probes and a longer time before fixes
293  are picked up.
294
295