From anandb at ripe.net Tue Feb 5 15:10:43 2008 From: anandb at ripe.net (Anand Buddhdev) Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2008 15:10:43 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] IANA introduces AAAA record for K-root Message-ID: <200802051510.44137.anandb@ripe.net> Dear Colleagues, Yesterday, 4 February 2008, at around 17:00 (UTC), IANA introduced AAAA records for six of the root servers in the root server system. One of these servers is k.root-servers.net (2001:7fd::1), which is managed by the RIPE NCC. This change allows the root zone to be queried over IPv6. The K-root IPv6 prefix is currently anycast from the two global nodes, located in Amsterdam and Miami. The introduction of the AAAA records went smoothly, and we are monitoring the query rate and pattern. We are also collecting more detailed information for future analysis. A graph showing the IPv6 query rate for the last 24 hours can be viewed at: http://ripe.net/news/k-root-aaaa-announcement.html More information about AAAA records in the root zone is available at: http://www.iana.org/reports/root-aaaa-announcement.html Regards, -- Anand Buddhdev DNS Services Manager, RIPE NCC From lutz at iks-jena.de Tue Feb 5 15:26:14 2008 From: lutz at iks-jena.de (Lutz Donnerhacke) Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2008 14:26:14 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [dns-wg] IANA introduces AAAA record for K-root References: <200802051510.44137.anandb@ripe.net> Message-ID: * Anand Buddhdev wrote: > Yesterday, 4 February 2008, at around 17:00 (UTC), IANA introduced AAAA > records for six of the root servers in the root server system. One of > these servers is k.root-servers.net (2001:7fd::1), which is managed by > the RIPE NCC. This change allows the root zone to be queried over IPv6. The H-Root provides seperate IPv6 statistics showing a v4/v6 ratio of about 2000:1. Does RIPE plan to give a similar report? From wnagele at ripe.net Wed Feb 13 15:24:45 2008 From: wnagele at ripe.net (Wolfgang Nagele) Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 15:24:45 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] IANA introduces AAAA record for K-root In-Reply-To: References: <200802051510.44137.anandb@ripe.net> Message-ID: <47B2FDAD.5080507@ripe.net> Hi, > The H-Root provides seperate IPv6 statistics showing a v4/v6 ratio of about > 2000:1. Does RIPE plan to give a similar report? currently there is no public report for that yet. I can tell that we have a ratio of about 125:1. Regards, Wolfgang -- Wolfgang Nagele DNS System Engineer RIPE NCC Singel 258 1016 AB Amsterdam Tel: +31 20 535 4444 Fax: +31 20 535 4445 -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: wnagele.vcf Type: text/x-vcard Size: 275 bytes Desc: not available URL: From lutz at iks-jena.de Wed Feb 13 16:00:11 2008 From: lutz at iks-jena.de (Lutz Donnerhacke) Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 15:00:11 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [dns-wg] IANA introduces AAAA record for K-root References: <47B2FDAD.5080507@ripe.net> Message-ID: * Wolfgang Nagele wrote: >> The H-Root provides seperate IPv6 statistics showing a v4/v6 ratio of about >> 2000:1. Does RIPE plan to give a similar report? > currently there is no public report for that yet. I can tell that we > have a ratio of about 125:1. I'm sorry. In my original posting the ratio was wrong. On H we have 200:1. From training at ripe.net Thu Feb 21 11:01:20 2008 From: training at ripe.net (RIPE NCC Training Services) Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 11:01:20 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] ANNOUNCEMENT: RIPE NCC Training Courses. Message-ID: <20080221100120.E66642F583@herring.ripe.net> [Apologies for duplicate e-mails] Dear Colleagues, The RIPE NCC invites you to register for one of our upcoming training courses: - The LIR Training Course This course teaches LIRs how to request Internet number resources and interact with the RIPE NCC. A course outline is available at: http://www.ripe.net/training/lir/outline.html - The Routing Registry Training Course This course teaches LIRs how to use the RIPE Database for routing. A course outline is available at: http://www.ripe.net/training/rr/outline.html - The DNS for LIRs Training Course This course teaches LIRs about the RIPE NCC's DNS-related services. A course outline is available at: http://www.ripe.net/training/dns/outline.html To see the location of upcoming courses and to register, please use the LIR Portal or complete the registration form on our website at: http://www.ripe.net/cgi-bin/trainingform.pl.cgi If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us at . Kind regards, Rumy Kanis Training Services Manager RIPE NCC From pawal at blipp.com Tue Feb 26 11:06:31 2008 From: pawal at blipp.com (Patrik Wallstrom) Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2008 11:06:31 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] .SE releases report on consumer broadband routers Message-ID: <20080226100631.GB3828@vic20.blipp.com> "Three of the ten routers that .SE has tested, have passed the test specification without any remarks. The other seven have had severe problems when using what might be considered plain Domain Name System (DNS). The majority of the routers does not manage to pass on DNSSEC to the client, which gives you problems when there are applications on the client that want to handle their own DNSSEC validation." http://iis.se/about/press?id=135 The Excel document describing the result of the tests in more detail is available on request. -- Patrik Wallstr?m Project Manager, R&D .SE (Stiftelsen f?r Internetinfrastruktur) E-mail: pawal at iis.se Web: http://www.iis.se/ -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: Digital signature URL: From bortzmeyer at nic.fr Tue Feb 26 11:18:54 2008 From: bortzmeyer at nic.fr (Stephane Bortzmeyer) Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2008 11:18:54 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] Re: .SE releases report on consumer broadband routers In-Reply-To: <20080226100631.GB3828@vic20.blipp.com> References: <20080226100631.GB3828@vic20.blipp.com> Message-ID: <20080226101854.GA15743@nic.fr> On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 11:06:31AM +0100, Patrik Wallstrom wrote a message of 58 lines which said: > "Three of the ten routers that .SE has tested, have passed the test > specification without any remarks. The other seven have had severe > problems when using what might be considered plain Domain Name > System (DNS). If they mess with DNS data, they are not routers (a layer 3 device, neutral with respect to the content), they are middleboxes (a layer 1 to 9 device, able to break anything). From paf at cisco.com Tue Feb 26 11:47:11 2008 From: paf at cisco.com (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Patrik_F=E4ltstr=F6m?=) Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2008 11:47:11 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] Re: [dnssec-deployment] .SE releases report on consumer broadband routers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <0B3AB04C-67CF-44D0-92E6-98FD237F1FC3@cisco.com> Patrik, let me be one of the first that thank you and your team for the hard work in doing this testing. Specifically as I early in this process "complained" that it was hard for us as Cisco to get to know which one (if any) of our products where involved. Thanks! Patrik On 26 feb 2008, at 11.06, Patrik Wallstrom wrote: > "Three of the ten routers that .SE has tested, have passed the test > specification without any remarks. The other seven have had severe > problems when using what might be considered plain Domain Name System > (DNS). The majority of the routers does not manage to pass on DNSSEC > to the client, which gives you problems when there are applications on > the client that want to handle their own DNSSEC validation." > > http://iis.se/about/press?id=135 > > The Excel document describing the result of the tests in more detail > is available on request. > > -- > Patrik Wallstr?m > Project Manager, R&D > .SE (Stiftelsen f?r Internetinfrastruktur) > E-mail: pawal at iis.se > Web: http://www.iis.se/ From paf at cisco.com Tue Feb 26 11:48:53 2008 From: paf at cisco.com (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Patrik_F=E4ltstr=F6m?=) Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2008 11:48:53 +0100 Subject: [dns-wg] Re: .SE releases report on consumer broadband routers In-Reply-To: <20080226101854.GA15743@nic.fr> References: <20080226100631.GB3828@vic20.blipp.com> <20080226101854.GA15743@nic.fr> Message-ID: On 26 feb 2008, at 11.18, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote: > If they mess with DNS data, they are not routers (a layer 3 device, > neutral with respect to the content), they are middleboxes (a layer 1 > to 9 device, able to break anything). Well, it is more complicated than that. Many people do think that NAT boxes are layer 3 devices, and if you have a double-nat mechanism then "messing around with DNS packets" is a needed feature. Sure, then one start walking from layer 3 towards layer 9.... But... Anyway, this is not when we should fight about wording. We all know what we talk about, and I think we should thank Patrik and others what they have done. Patrik From paul at xelerance.com Tue Feb 26 12:19:52 2008 From: paul at xelerance.com (Paul Wouters) Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2008 06:19:52 -0500 (EST) Subject: [dns-wg] Re: .SE releases report on consumer broadband routers In-Reply-To: <20080226101854.GA15743@nic.fr> References: <20080226100631.GB3828@vic20.blipp.com> <20080226101854.GA15743@nic.fr> Message-ID: On Tue, 26 Feb 2008, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote: > If they mess with DNS data, they are not routers (a layer 3 device, > neutral with respect to the content), they are middleboxes (a layer 1 > to 9 device, able to break anything). Please drop your OSI poster and put your hands behind your head! Paul