Recommended Draft Policy ARIN-2014-6: Remove Operational Reverse DNS Text
ARIN
info at arin.net
Tue Mar 24 15:33:53 EDT 2015
Recommended Draft Policy ARIN-2014-6
Remove Operational Reverse DNS Text
On 19 March 2015 the ARIN Advisory Council (AC) recommended
ARIN-2014-6 for adoption, making it a Recommended Draft Policy.
ARIN-2014-6 is below and can be found at:
https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2014_6.html
You are encouraged to discuss Draft Policy 2014-6 on the PPML prior to
the upcoming ARIN Public Policy Consultation at ARIN 35 in San Francisco
in April 2015. Both the discussion on the list and at the meeting will
be used by the ARIN Advisory Council to determine the community
consensus for adopting this as policy.
The ARIN Policy Development Process can be found at:
https://www.arin.net/policy/pdp.html
Draft Policies and Proposals under discussion can be found at:
https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/index.html
Regards,
Communications and Member Services
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
## * ##
Recommended Draft Policy ARIN-2014-6
Remove Operational Reverse DNS Text (was: Remove 7.1)
Date: 21 January 2014
AC's assessment of conformance with the Principles of Internet Number
Resource Policy:
2014-6 enables fair and impartial number resource administration by
removing technical statements that are not related to number policy from
the NRPM. It is technically sound to remove operational practice from
the NRPM; indeed this act serves as a forcing function for a best
practices document that is both more detailed and more approachable than
the policy statement that was removed. Discussion of the previous
revision of 2014-6 centered around "why are you fixing this for IPv4 and
not IPv6", and the most recent changes reflect that community feedback.
There has not been notable opposition to the notion of removing
operational language from the NRPM.
Problem Statement:
7.1 attempts to assert rules on rDNS management at ARIN. It fails to do
so because it only addresses in-addr.arpa (missing equally important
rules in ip6.arpa). It's also not based on any RFC; it's an arbitrary
decision made by ARIN technical staff. We should remove this text from
policy, as it represents operational practice rather than ARIN number
policy.
In feedback received at public policy meetings and on the PPML mailing
list, the Community expressed a desire for IPv4 and IPv6 policy on
reverse DNS to be congruent (that is to say, it makes no sense to remove
7.1 without addressing 6.5.6 which is similarly operationally
prescriptive) and bring this proposal forward again.
Policy statement:
Remove 7.1
Remove 6.5.6
Comments:
a.Timetable for implementation: Immediate
b.Anything else:
7.1. Maintaining IN-ADDRs
All ISPs receiving one or more distinct /16 CIDR blocks of IP addresses
from ARIN will be responsible for maintaining all IN-ADDR.ARPA domain
records for their respective customers. For blocks smaller than /16, and
for the segment of larger blocks smaller than /16, ARIN can maintain
IN-ADDRs.
6.5.6. Reverse lookup
When an RIR delegates IPv6 address space to an organization, it also
delegates the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that
corresponds to the allocated IPv6 address space. Each organization
should properly manage its reverse lookup zone. When making an address
assignment, the organization must delegate to an assignee organization,
upon request, the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that
corresponds to the assigned address.
#####
ARIN STAFF & LEGAL ASSESSMENT
Draft Policy ARIN-2014-6
Remove Operational Reverse DNS Text
Date of Assessment: March 17, 2015
1. Summary (Staff Understanding)
This proposal would remove 6.5.6 and 7.1, thus removing reverse DNS
language from the NRPM.
2. Comments
A. ARIN Staff Comments
This change to NRPM will not change the DNS service that ARIN performs.
This proposal can be implemented as written.
ARIN registration services staff occasionally receives a telephone or
email inquiry asking how reverse DNS services can be set up for a
company. In the cases the company is a downstream customer of an ISP who
has received a direct allocation from ARIN, staff explains this service
can be set up for them by their service provider. On rare occasion, the
company presses for a reference that states this is done by their ISP,
and not ARIN. In those cases staff will refer them to the language
currently in the NRPM.
In the case the language is removed from NRPM, ARIN staff will create a
resource for the ARIN public website that describes how ARIN's Reverse
DNS services are provided; including who is able to establish Reverse
DNS service for different types of registration records.
B. ARIN General Counsel – Legal Assessment
The policy does not create legal concerns.
3. Resource Impact
This policy would have minimal impact from an implementation standpoint.
It is estimated implementation would occur within 3 months after
ratification by the ARIN Board of Trustees. The following tasks will be
completed for implementation:
Versioned change to NRPM
Updated guidelines on ARIN website describing reverse DNS services (to
act as general information resource and serve as new reference point for
situation described in staff comments).
Staff training
4. Proposal / Draft Policy Text Assessed
Draft Policy ARIN-2014-6
Remove Operational Reverse DNS Text (was: Remove 7.1)
Date: 21 January 2015
Problem Statement:
7.1 attempts to assert rules on rDNS management at ARIN. It fails to do
so because it only addresses in-addr.arpa (missing equally important
rules in ip6.arpa). It's also not based on any RFC; it's an arbitrary
decision made by ARIN technical staff. We should remove this text from
policy, as it represents operational practice rather than ARIN number
policy.
In feedback received at public policy meetings and on the PPML mailing
list, the Community expressed a desire for IPv4 and IPv6 policy on
reverse DNS to be congruent (that is to say, it makes no sense to remove
7.1 without addressing 6.5.6 which is similarly operationally
prescriptive) and bring this proposal forward again.
Policy statement:
Remove 7.1
Remove 6.5.6
Comments:
a.Timetable for implementation: Immediate
b.Anything else:
7.1. Maintaining IN-ADDRs
All ISPs receiving one or more distinct /16 CIDR blocks of IP addresses
from ARIN will be responsible for maintaining all IN-ADDR.ARPA domain
records for their respective customers. For blocks smaller than /16, and
for the segment of larger blocks smaller than /16, ARIN can maintain
IN-ADDRs.
6.5.6. Reverse lookup
When an RIR delegates IPv6 address space to an organization, it also
delegates the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that
corresponds to the allocated IPv6 address space. Each organization
should properly manage its reverse lookup zone. When making an address
assignment, the organization must delegate to an assignee organization,
upon request, the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that
corresponds to the assigned address.
More information about the Info
mailing list