Copyright (C) 2004 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") Copyright (C) 2000-2002 Internet Software Consortium. See COPYRIGHT in the source root or http://isc.org/copyright.html for terms. DNSSEC Release Notes This document summarizes the state of the DNSSEC implementation in this release of BIND9. OpenSSL Library Required To support DNSSEC, BIND 9 must be linked with version 0.9.6e or newer of the OpenSSL library. As of BIND 9.2, the library is no longer included in the distribution - it must be provided by the operating system or installed separately. To build BIND 9 with OpenSSL, use "configure --with-openssl". If the OpenSSL library is installed in a nonstandard location, you can specify a path as in "configure --with-openssl=/var". Key Generation and Signing The tools for generating DNSSEC keys and signatures are now in the bin/dnssec directory. Documentation for these programs can be found in doc/arm/Bv9ARM.4.html and the man pages. The random data used in generating DNSSEC keys and signatures comes from either /dev/random (if the OS supports it) or keyboard input. Alternatively, a device or file containing entropy/random data can be specified. Serving Secure Zones When acting as an authoritative name server, BIND9 includes KEY, SIG and NXT records in responses as specified in RFC2535 when the request has the DO flag set in the query. Secure Resolution Basic support for validation of DNSSEC signatures in responses has been implemented but should still be considered experimental. When acting as a caching name server, BIND9 is capable of performing basic DNSSEC validation of positive as well as nonexistence responses. This functionality is enabled by including a "trusted-keys" clause in the configuration file, containing the top-level zone key of the the DNSSEC tree. Validation of wildcard responses is not currently supported. In particular, a "name does not exist" response will validate successfully even if it does not contain the NXT records to prove the nonexistence of a matching wildcard. Proof of insecure status for insecure zones delegated from secure zones works when the zones are completely insecure. Privately secured zones delegated from secure zones will not work in all cases, such as when the privately secured zone is served by the same server as an ancestor (but not parent) zone. Handling of the CD bit in queries is now fully implemented. Validation is not attempted for recursive queries if CD is set. Secure Dynamic Update Dynamic update of secure zones has been implemented, but may not be complete. Affected NXT and SIG records are updated by the server when an update occurs. Advanced access control is possible using the "update-policy" statement in the zone definition. Secure Zone Transfers BIND 9 does not implement the zone transfer security mechanisms of RFC2535 section 5.6, and we have no plans to implement them in the future as we consider them inferior to the use of TSIG or SIG(0) to ensure the integrity of zone transfers. $ISC: dnssec,v 1.19 2004/03/05 05:04:53 marka Exp $