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FCC CSRIC III Working Group 5 DNSSEC Implementation Practices. Steve Crocker CEO, Shinkuro, Inc. steve@shinkuro.com. Protection against cache poisoning Security increasingly resonates with customers DNSSEC can be a market differentiator for early adopters
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FCC CSRIC III Working Group 5 DNSSEC Implementation Practices Steve Crocker CEO, Shinkuro, Inc. steve@shinkuro.com Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Protection against cache poisoning • Security increasingly resonates with customers • DNSSEC can be a market differentiator for early adopters • DNSSEC may help ISPs avoid some costs if a cache poisoning attack occurs • ISP DNSSEC awareness in DNS recursive nameservers is necessary for end- user validation (e.g., DANE) The Opportunity Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Recommend the best practices for deploying and managing the Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC) by Internet service providers (ISPs). • Recommend proper metrics and measurements that allow for evaluation of the effectiveness of DNSSEC deployment by ISPs. WG5 Objective Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Measurements of recursive resolvers were carried out through two methods: • Broad survey of the IPv4 address space to find putative resolvers, followed by detailed probing of each putative resolver. • Similar detailed probing from SamKnows clients inside of networks. • The detailed probing comprised 13 tests for both basic functionality and specific edge cases. • We restated basic functionality as: • Validator This means the resolver checks signatures when requested to do so. • DNSSEC Aware Resolver This means the resolver retrieves and passes back to the client the full set of keys, signatures, etc. that enable the client to validate. • Other This means the resolver does not provide enough functionality to enable the client to do his own validation. Measurements Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
In preliminary measurement we discovered unanticipated limitations. We evolved the test set to check for: • Support for large responses via large packets and/or TCP • Support for DNAME • Support for NSEC3 • Support for unknown (new) record types • We annotated the description of a resolver to reflect these limitations, as in this case: • Partial Validator [DNAME] Measurements – Edge Cases Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
>1/6 Validators • 2/3 Full Validators • 1/3 Partial • 1/2 DNSSEC Aware • 2/3 Full • 1/3 Partial • >1/4 Broken • ~ 5% Other Measurements – SamKnows Results Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
IPv4 space 4,294,967,295 Addresses probed 3,421,239,040 Dropped responses 10,197,657 Probably overran our nameserver bandwidth Full responses 26,603,239 • “Good” responses 11,697,272 • Well-formed responses 5,908,002 Most of these were evaluated as Not a Resolver or alternately, we had timeout issues. This part of the testing needs to be redone. Measurements – Shinkuro Survey Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Shinkuro test site sent a basic DNS query to each IPv4 address. • The query was tailored to the address being sent. • The address was encoded in the query. • This query was resolvable only via a special Shinkuro nameserver. • Thus, we could see the query we sent, and we could see the resolver trying to fetch the answer from our nameserver. • This gave us insight into which resolvers were forwarding to other resolvers versus sending queries to our nameservers. • We discovered many SOHO stub resolvers accepting queries from off net. • We discovered some “closed” resolvers accessible via open SOHO stub resolvers. Measurements – Shinkuro Setup Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Many resolvers are DNSSEC Aware. This is good news. • Of these, a significant portion have specific limitations. Improvement is needed. Some resolvers check signatures, i.e. are Validators. • Some of these also have specific limitations. Findings Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
ISPs implement their DNS recursive nameservers so that they are at a minimum DNSSEC-aware, as soon as possible. • Key industry segments, such as banking, credit cards, healthcare and others, sign their respective domain names with DNSSEC. • Software developers, such as those creating operating-system, web-browser, and other Internet-focused applications, study how and when to incorporate DNSSEC validation functions into their software. • The survey and description process should continue with refinement and with continued measurement over time. • Controversy over DNSSEC and DDoS attacks persists. This should be documented and these attacks countered thoroughly. Recommendations Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Laurie Flaherty at DOT suggested that an acronym list, and the spelling out of acronyms on first citation, would help potential lay readers understand the report better. • We added an acronym list and made sure that acronyms’ elements were spelled out on first reference. Comments for Working Group 5 Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
ISP support for DNSSEC is necessary even in a future in which end points perform all validation. They must be able to, at a minimum, recognize DNSSEC-related traffic and allow it to pass for the smooth functioning of an end-to-end, DNSSEC-secured system. Conclusion Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices
Thank You Steve Crocker steve@shinkuro.com (301) 961-3131, ext. 111 Working Group 5: DNSSEC Implementation Practices