Internet-Draft | RSS Requirements | February 2023 |
Blanchet, et al. | Expires 18 August 2023 | [Page] |
The DNS root name service is a critical part of the Internet architecture. The DNS root name service's DNS protocol and deployment requirements are defined in this document. Operational requirements for the root name service are out of scope.¶
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This document co-exists with a corresponding operational requirements document published by the Root Server System Advisory Committee of ICANN in [RSSAC-001] or any subsequent version. Although intricately tied together, both of these documents may be updated at any time to reflect required updates to the protocol, deployment and operational requirements. Further notes about the history of these documents is discussed in Appendix A.¶
The root servers are authoritative servers of the unique [RFC2826] root zone (".") [ROOTZONE]. They currently also serve the root- servers.net zone. Some also serve the zone for the .arpa top-level domain [ARPAZONE] [RFC3172], although at the time of this writing there are plans to move the service for the .arpa top-level domain to different infrastructure [RFC9120].¶
This document describes the external interface of the root name servers from a protocol viewpoint of the service. It specifies basic requirements for the Internet that DNS clients meet when interacting with a root name service over the public Internet.¶
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 [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
This section describes the minimum high-level protocol requirements.¶
The root name service:¶
The root name service:¶
This document does not specify a new protocol. However, the root name service is a key component of the Internet architecture and plays a key role into the overall security of the Internet [RFC2826]. Specific security considerations on the DNS protocols are discussed in their respective specifications. The security considerations on the operational side of the root name servers are discussed in the corresponding document published by RSSAC ([RSSAC-001] or a subsequent version).¶
[RFC2870] originally discussed both the protocol and operational requirements for root name servers for the Internet's domain name system (DNS) protocol [RFC1035]. Since its initial publication, both protocol and operational requirements have evolved. The protocol requirements was later split into [RFC7720] and the operational requirements was moved to [RSSAC-001] and published by ICANN's Root Server System Advisory Committee (RSSAC). These two documents functionally replaced [RFC2870]. Similarly, this document now functionally replaces [RFC7720].¶
As both of these requirement sets are expected to evolve over time, the authors of both document sets hope to always keep them roughly in synchronization. However, the latest version of both of these two documents should be consider the most recent set of requirements regardless of whether they were published together or separately.¶
This document was prepared by the ICANN RSSAC Caucus with participation of many Caucus members.¶
Much of this text is a rearrangement and restatement of [RFC7720], which itself contains text was taken from [RFC2870].¶
The editors of this document would like to sincerely thank the following individuals for valuable contributions to the text of [RFC7720]: Andrew Sullivan, Simon Perreault, Jean-Philippe Dionne, Dave Thaler, Russ Housley, Alissa Cooper, Joe Abley, Joao Damas, Daniel Karrenberg, Jacques Latour, Eliot Lear, Bill Manning, David Conrad, Paul Hoffman, Terry Manderson, Jari Arkko, and Mark Andrews.¶