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Thursday, November 19, 2009

DomainKeys support in progress...
(posted at 07:36PM GMT)

I have been very very busy working on rolling out a usable DKIM implementation for both authenticated SMTP users (allowing them to sign mails from their domain using DKIM without making any changes to their own systems) and allowing for our border mailservers to validate the signatures of incoming mail for other DKIM users.

Currently signing all outbound spilsby.net mail just to see if anything important breaks... if all goes well, expect another announcement shortly!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

DNSSEC gotcha...
(posted at 09:07AM GMT)

It seems that all DNSSEC-signed records that are returned in a single batch (i.e. MX records) must have the same TTL as each other otherwise the TTL on the RRSIG won't match and therefore the data is marked as 'bogus' by any DNSSEC-compliant resolver.

A quick check of all zones served by us reveals that spilsby.net and spilsby.net.uk were the only zones affected; so no customers were affected but we did manage to break our own incoming mail for anyone who has deployed DNSSEC on their own resolvers and ISC's lookaside service.

It was probably all spam anyway :-P

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Time to officially launch DNSSEC support!
(posted at 11:09PM GMT)

Since 10pm this evening, both spilsby.net resolvers are now validating all customer DNS against ISC's DLV lookaside service using DNSSEC; this provides full protection against DNS hijacking or spoofing attacks for those zones which have been registered with the service.

Naturally, we are also signing copies of all zones published on ns1/ns2/ns3.spilsby.net and have registered our own zones (spilsby.net/spilsby.net.uk) with ISC's DLV lookaside service.

We will be publishing DS resource records with all gTLD and ccTLD operators as and when they officially announce support for DNSSEC.

Nominet (.uk) plan to launch in early 2010 with Verisign (.com) planning to launch in 2012; as always, we are ahead of the pack :-)

UKFast
(posted at 12:44PM GMT)

Please put your hands up if you have heard of UKFast or do business with UKFast.

Yep, this is yet another SEO experiment!

Sunday, November 1, 2009

So many standards, so little time...
(posted at 09:52PM GMT)

One of my side projects at the moment is building an OpenWRT-based replacement firmware for the Netgear DG834G v2/v4/v5 routers which is what Spilsby Internet Solutions currently ships to end users.

The primary motivation behind this is to provide a software-based upgrade path to our users in order for them to easily adopt IPv6 which we currently support on our ADSL/WBC platform; it wouldn't surprise me if Netgear, the proponents of 'open source routers' but distributors of 'closed source binary blobs', decide not to release their own IPv6-enabled firmware for these routers and will require users to purchase new hardware.

Some additional features are also on the roadmap which will benefit us; primarily the logging and reporting of ADSL line stats (attenuation, noise, etc, etc) which should make diagnosing and reporting faults to BT Wholesale so much easier.

The other reason why I'm working on this is because there is still some confusion about how IPv6 addresses/prefixes/nameservers are going to be propogated to the end-users' CPE via PPP - the general consensus to obtain an IPv6 address on the WAN interface is for the remote server to advertise a prefix via IPv6 Router Advertisement but this allows for IPv6 address spoofing as this address can be chosen by the client.

Prefixes/nameservers can only be passed via DHCPv6 as there are no LCP messages in the current PPP RFCs that cater for IPv6 prefixes/nameservers; the end result being that this needs to be implemented on both client and server ends - with no reference implementation for either currently endorsed or sponsored by the IETF.

The problem with DHCPv6 is that it works based on the link-local address which is assigned to the end-user and provides prefix delegation, nameservers and all other information based solely on the value of that link-local address; according to the author of MPD, it is the preferred way of assigning global IPv6 addresses and other information.

Unfortunately, this Daily WTF article highlights what is wrong with this approach - if the end-user can spoof their MAC address, they will obtain a different link-local address from the IPv6CP negotiation, which in turn, will result in them obtaining a different global IPv6 address from DHCPv6 - what happens if the user spoofs the MAC address of an existing user who is currently not connected ?

The only way this is going to work is if the link-local address is assigned by the server rather than being chosen by the client - the server can override a client preference but it is 'discouraged' by the RFCs.

This always makes me question myself; RFC documents are written by groups of very intelligent people who know their subject intimately - therefore, when I find myself disagreeing with an RFC, I almost always accuse myself of not knowing enough about the subject and sit down and read the RFC again.

Unfortunately, I have done this several times with this RFC over the last six weeks or so and I keep coming to the conclusion that the authors did not consider the possibility of 'spoofing' as per the Daily WTF article above - an attack which seems highly probable given that if it works with IPv4, it will work with IPv6 as well.

It is my honest opinion that the OSS world is in for a world of hurt when it realizes that its' IPv6 'support' is next to useless in so many ways; with commercial software being just as bad.

 
slashdot

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the register

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