draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names-00.txt Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) C. Grothoff Internet-Draft M. Wachs TU Munich H. Wolf, editor GNU consensus J. Appelbaum Tor Project Inc. Nov 13, 2013 Intended status: (IESG Approval) Expires: May 17th, 2014 Special-Use Domain Names of Peer-to-Peer Name Systems Abstract Today, the Domain Name System (DNS) is a key service for the Internet. DNS is primarily used to map human-memorable names to IP addresses, which are used for routing but generally not meaningful for humans. However, the hierarchical nature of DNS makes it unsuitable for various Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Name Systems. As compatibility with applications using DNS names is desired, these overlay networks often define alternative pseudo Top-Level Domains (pTLDs) to integrate names from the P2P domain into the DNS hierarchy. This memo describes common Special-Use Domain Names [RFC6761] pseudo Top-Level DNS Names designed to help harden name resolution security (e.g., [RFC6840][RFC6975]), provide censorship resistance, and protect the users' privacy on the Internet. In this IESG Approval document we are asking for domain name reservations for five Special-Use Domain Names [RFC6761] TLDs: ".gnu", ".zkey", ".onion", ".exit", and ".i2p". Status of this Memo This is an IESG Approval document specification [RFC5226] defining special handling of the said five Special-Use Domain Names for Peer-to-Peer Name Systems, in conformance with the registration procedure defined in RFC 6761, section 4. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." 1. Introduction [RFC6761] defines a mechanism for reserving DNS names for special use. This document is an IESG Approval document requesting the reservation of five pTLDs for special use: ".gnu", ".zkey", ".onion", ".exit", and ".i2p". They relate to peer-to-peer systems that, given their decentralized design, do not require a central authority to register names. The GNU Name System (GNS) (".gnu", ".zkey"), the Tor network (".onion", ".exit"), and the Invisible Internet Project (".i2p") use these pseudo-Top-Level Domains (pTLDs) to realize fully-decentralized and censorship-resistant secure alternatives for DNS or, in the case of the ".exit" pTLD, to control overlay routing and to securely specify path selection choices [TOR-PATH]. To facilitate integration with legacy applications, the overlay's namespaces can be accessed from applications to resolve these special TLDs, for example via specialized SOCKS proxies [RFC1928], specialized DNS servers, or transparent name resolution and ephemeral address mapping. This document describes the proposed special treatment for each of these five pTLDs below following the questions from [RFC6761], section 5. 2. Terminology and Conventions Used in This Document The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" [RFC2119]. The word "peer" is used in the meaning of a individual system on the network. Thus, "local peer" means the localhost. The acronym "pTLD" is used as a shortcut to mean a pseudo Top-Level Domain, i.e., a name or label for a network not present in operational DNS, and not registered with IANA for use within the scope of operational DNS. Specifically, it refers to one of the Special-Use Domain Names already in use on the Internet and described in this document. In this document, ".tld" (with quotes) means: any domain or hostname within the scope of a given pTLD, while .tld (without quotes), or dot-tld, both refer to an adjective form. For example, a collection of ".gnu" peers, but an .onion URL. The pTLD itself is mentioned with dot, and within double quotes, and usually followed by the word pTLD. The Tor-related names such as 'circuit', 'exit', 'node', 'relay', 'stream', and related Tor terms are described in [Dingledine2004] and the Tor protocol specification [TOR-PROTOCOL]. 3. Description of Special-Use Domains in P2P Networks 3.1. The ".gnu" Relative pTLD The ".gnu" pTLD is used to specify that a domain name should be resolved using GNS instead of DNS. The GNS resolution process is documented in [Schanzenbach2012]. As GNS users need to install a GNS resolver on their individual system and as GNS resolution does not depend on DNS, there are no considerations for DNS with respect to the internals of the GNS resolution process itself. Note that ".gnu" names SHOULD follow the naming conventions of DNS. ".gnu" names are personal, relative, and transitive: each user of the GNS controls their own zone that is authoritative for all ".gnu" domains; zones can be delegated between authorities, so that any user can share names, and chain labels to resolve names out of the requesting user's zone of control, including across several zones. For example, if Alice wants to access the Web service of Bob's friend Dave, she might be able to lookup: "www.dave.bob.gnu", whereas Bob will simply ask for "www.dave.gnu" to obtain the same result. 3.2. The ".zkey" Compressed Public Key pTLD The ".zkey" pTLD is used to signify that resolution of the given name MUST be performed using a record signed by an authority that is in possession of a particular public key. Names in ".zkey" MUST end with a domain which is the compressed point representation from [EdDSA] on [Curve25519] of the public key of the authority, encoded using base32hex [RFC4648]. A GNS resolver uses the key to locate a record signed by the respective authority. The ".zkey" pTLD provides a (reverse) mapping from globally unique hashes to public key, therefore names in ".zkey" are non-memorable, and are expected to be hidden from the user [Schanzenbach2012]. 3.3. Geographically Anonymous pTLDs The Tor anonymization network makes use of several special pTLD domains, three of which have seen widespread usage to date [TOR-ADDRESS]. 3.3.1. The ".onion" Hidden Service pTLD The widely deployed ".onion" pTLD designates an anonymous Tor Hidden Service reachable via the Tor network [Dingledine2004]. These .onion URLs are self-authenticating addresses for use with any TCP service. Such addresses are typically resolved, reached and authenticated through transparent proxying or through a local SOCKS proxy running on TCP port 9050, TCP port 9150 or another user selected TCP port. The purpose of the Tor Hidden Services system is to provide geographic anonymity for the .onion host and for all clients visiting the hidden service as well as other purposes such as NAT traversal, strong authentication, anonymity and censorship resistance. Addresses in ".onion" are opaque, non-mnemonic, alpha-semi-numeric hashes corresponding to an 80-bit truncated SHA1 hash over a given Tor hidden service's public key. This hash can be made up of any letter of the alphabet and decimal digits beginning with 2 and ending with 7, thus representing a number in base32 [RFC4648]. Tor generates this "Onion key" automatically when the hidden service is configured. Tor clients use it following the Tor Rendezvous specifications [TOR-RENDEZVOUS]. 3.3.2. The ".exit" Client Source Routing pTLD The dot-exit suffix is used as an in-band source routing control channel, usually for selection of a specific Tor relay during path creation as the last node in the Tor circuit. It may be used to access a DNS host via specific Torservers, in the form "hostname.nickname-or-fingerprint.exit", where the "hostname" is a valid hostname, and the "nickname-or-fingerprint" is either the nickname of a Tor relay in the Tor network consensus, or the hex-encoded SHA1 digest of the given node's public key (fingerprint). For example, "gnu.org.noisetor.exit" will route the client to "gnu.org" via the Tor node nicknamed "noisetor". Using the fingerprint instead of the nickname ensures that the path selection uses a specific Tor exit node, and is harder to remember: e.g., "gnu.org.f97f3b153fed6604230cd497a3d1e9815b007637.exit". When Tor sees an address in this format, it uses the specified "nickname-or-fingerprint" as the exit node. If no "hostname" component is given, Tor defaults to the published IPv4 address of the Tor exit node [TOR-EXTSOCKS]. 3.3.3. The ".noconnect" Client Interruption pTLD The dot-noconnect suffix is used in Tor for testing purposes: when Tor sees an address in this format, it immediately closes the connection without attaching it to any circuits. It is useful for controllers that want to test whether a given application is indeed using the same instance of Tor that they're controlling. This is a deprecated pTLD and thus we do not include the ".noconnect" pTLD in the list of Special-Use Domain Names that should be reserved. 3.4. The ".i2p" Addressbook pTLD The ".i2p" pTLD provides accessibility to anonymous services ("eepsites") within the I2P network. I2P is a scalable, self-organizing, resilient packet switched anonymous network layer, upon which any number of different anonymity or security-conscious applications can operate. The local I2P proxy resolves such names either by looking up a local table called the addressbook, or by decoding Base32-encoded [RFC4648] public keys and establishing a tunnel to the respective authority, similar to contacting .onion hidden services. I2P uses 52 characters (256 bits) of the SHA-256 hash of the public key to identify eepsites [I2P-NAMING]. These identifiers can be used to address a peer as, e.g.: "ukeu3k5oycgaauneqgtnvselmt4yemvoilkln7jpvamvfx7dnkdq.b32.i2p". Apart from the ".b32.i2p" domain that is reserved for SHA-256 hashes, other hostnames within the ".i2p." pTLD are non-hierarchical and can be assigned locally: example.i2p and other.example.i2p do not necessarily belong to the same authority. As the system is decentralized, example.i2p may also resolve differently for different peers, depending on the state of their respective addressbooks. 4. Security Considerations Specific software performs the resolution of the five requested Special-Use Domain Names presented in this document; this resolution process happens outside of the scope of DNS. Leakage of requests to such domains to the global operational DNS can cause interception of traffic that might be misused to monitor, censor, or abuse the user's trust, and lead to privacy issues with potentially dramatic consequences for the user. Operation of said TLDs into the global DNS scope could as well produce conflicts due to later real use and the possible acquisition of intellectual property rights in such names. The reservation of several Top-Level Domain names for these purposes will minimize such confusion and conflict, and safety risks for users. 5. IANA Considerations The P2P Name Systems domains listed below, and any domains falling within those domains are Special-Use Domain Names [RFC6761]: gnu. zkey. onion. exit. i2p. 5.1. Domain Name Reservation Considerations The five domains listed above, and any names falling within those domains (e.g., "example.gnu.", "j6im4v42ur6dpic3.onion.", etc.) are special [RFC6761] in the following ways: 1. Users MAY use these names as they would other DNS names, entering them anywhere that they would otherwise enter a conventional DNS name, or a dotted decimal IPv4 address, or a literal IPv6 address. Since there is no central authority responsible for assigning dot-gnu and dot-i2p names, and that specific domain is local to the local peer, users SHOULD be aware of that specificity. Since there is no central authority responsible for assigning dot-b32-dot-i2p, dot-onion, and dot-zkey names, and those names match cryptographic keys, users SHOULD be aware that they don't belong to regular DNS, but are still global in their scope. In any case, resolution of the five proposed pTLDs is similar to the normal DNS resolution, and thus SHOULD not affect normal usage of most Internet applications. 2. Application Software MAY pass requests to any of the five proposed pTLDs for normal DNS resolution if A/AAAA records are desired. If available, the local DNS resolver MUST intercept such requests within the respective operating system hooks and behave like DNS. However, P2P-aware application MAY choose to talk directly to the respective P2P resolver, and in the case of GNS use this to access additional GNS-specific record types. As mentioned in sections 4.1.4 and 4.1.5 below, regular DNS resolution is expected to respond with NXDOMAIN for the five proposed pTLDs. Therefore, if it can differentiate between DNS and P2P name resolution, application software MAY expect such a response, and MAY choose to treat other responses from the DNS as errors. 3. Name Resolution APIs and Libraries MAY choose to support additional GNS record types over time and MAY choose to directly resolve those domains via a GNS-specific resolution protocol or API. However, for legacy applications and legacy name resolution APIs, no changes are required. The ".onion" and ".i2p" pTLDs are typically accessed via HTTP or SOCKS proxies and do not define additional record types. 4. If any request to one of the five considered pTLDs is sent to the global operational DNS, the only valid answer from DNS is NXDOMAIN. Therefore, a caching DNS server MUST respond with NXDOMAIN. The caching DNS server MAY choose to cache that response. 5. Authoritative DNS Servers are not expected to treat these TLDs specially. In practice, they SHOULD answer with NXDOMAIN, as none of the considered pTLDs are normally available via global DNS resolution, and not doing so MAY put users' privacy at risk, e.g., as suggested in the next point. 6. DNS Server Operators SHOULD treat requests to the five considered pTLDs as typos, for correct installations MUST not allow P2P requests to escape to DNS. DNS operators SHOULD NOT choose to redirect such bogus requests to a site, not even to explain to the user that their P2P resolver is missing or mis-configured as this MAY violate privacy expectations of the user. 7. DNS Registries/Registrars In order to avoid conflicts with the P2P namespaces, IANA should reserve all five considered pTLDs and forbid registrars from registering domains names within their respective scopes. 6. Acknowledgements The authors thank the I2P developers for their constructive feedback, and Leif Ryge for his proof-reading and valuable feedback. 7. References 7.1. Normative References [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC5226] Narten, T., Alvestrand, H., "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008. [RFC6761] Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "Special-Use Domain Names", RFC 6761, February 2013. 7.2. Informative References Tor specifications are mentioned below with the TOR- prefix, and available from the Tor Project documentation page: https://www.torproject.org/docs/documentation.html#DesignDoc [Curve25519] Bernstein, D.J., "Curve25519: new Diffie-Hellman speed record", February 2006, URL: http://cr.yp.to/ecdh/curve25519-20060209.pdf [Dingledine2004] Dingledine, R., Mathewson, N., and Syverson, P., "Tor: the second-generation onion router", in SSYM'04 Proceedings of the 13th conference on USENIX Security Symposium - Volume 13, page 21, 2004. [EdDSA] Bernstein, D.J., Duif, N., Lange, T., Schwabe, P., and Yang B-Y., "High-speed, high-security signatures", September 2011. URL: http://ed25519.cr.yp.to/ed25519-20110926.pdf [I2P-NAMING] jrandom, "Naming in I2P and Addressbook", URL: http://www.i2p2.de/naming.html [RFC1928] Leech, M., Ganis, M., Lee, Y., Kuris, R., Koblas, D., and L. Jones, "SOCKS Protocol Version 5", RFC 1928, March 1996. [RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 4648, October 2006. [RFC6840] Weiler, S., Ed., and D. Blacka, Ed., "Clarifications and Implementation Notes for DNS Security (DNSSEC)", RFC 6840, February 2013. [RFC6975] Crocker, S. and S. Rose, "Signaling Cryptographic Algorithm Understanding in DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC)", RFC 6975, July 2013. [Schanzenbach2012] Schanzenbach, M., "Design and Implementation of a Censorship Resistant and Fully Decentralized Name System", September 2012. See also URL: https://gnunet.org/gns [TOR-ADDRESS] Mathewson, N., Dingledine, R., "Special Hostnames in Tor", September 2011. [TO BE REMOVED: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob/HEAD:/address-spec.txt ] [TOR-EXTSOCKS] Mathewson, N., Dingledine, R., "Tor's extensions to the SOCKS protocol", September 2011. [TO BE REMOVED: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob/HEAD:/socks-extensions.txt ] [TOR-PATH] Mathewson, N., Dingledine, R., "Tor Path Specification", April 2013. [TO BE REMOVED: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob/HEAD:/path-spec.txt ] [TOR-PROTOCOL] Dingledine, R., Mathewson, N., "Tor Protocol Specification", November 2013. [TO BE REMOVED: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob/HEAD:/tor-spec.txt ] [TOR-RENDEZVOUS] Mathewson, N., Dingledine, R., "Tor Rendezvous Specification", September 2013. [TO BE REMOVED: https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob/HEAD:/rend-spec.txt ] 8. Authors' Addresses Christian Grothoff Free Secure Network Systems Group Lehrstuhl fuer Netzarchitekturen und Netzdienste Boltzmannstrasse 3 Technische Universitaet Muenchen D-85748 Garching bei Muenchen, Bayern Email: christian@grothoff.org Matthias Wachs Free Secure Network Systems Group Lehrstuhl fuer Netzarchitekturen und Netzdienste Boltzmannstrasse 3 Technische Universitaet Muenchen D-85748 Garching bei Muenchen, Bayern Email: wachs@net.in.tum.de Hellekin O. Wolf Email: hellekin@gnu.org Jacob Appelbaum Email: jacob@appelbaum.net This document expires on May 17th, 2014. Comments are solicited and should be addressed to the authors.