DRAFT RIPE 53 DNS WG minutes
Dear WG, please find below the draft minutes of last week's two DNS WG sessions. Thanks to Susannah for being the Jabber Proxy and to Adrian for the fast delivery of the minutes. All errors are still mine. There were no new action items generated for the DNS WG last week, but a couple of old ones made progress or were closed, in some cases pending mailing list approval. Please expect some 'last calls' soon. Please review the minutes, especially if you are quoted by name. The deadline for this first round is October, 30th. Thanks! -Peter ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- D R A F T [1] RIPE DNS WG minutes for RIPE 53, Amsterdam ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- WG: DNS Meeting: RIPE 53, Istanbul Date-1: Wednesday, 4 October 2006 Time-1: 16:00 - 17:00 (UTC +0200) Chair-1: Peter Koch Minutes-1: Adrian Bedford Jabber: xmpp:dns@conference.ripe.net J-Scribe-1: Susannah Gray J-Script-1: TBD Audio-1: TBD WG URL: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/dns/ Material-1: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/wednesday.html Agenda: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/agendas/dns.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- A. Administrative Matters - Working Group Chairs <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/dns_agenda1.pdf> Appointment of scribe -- Adrian Bedford (RIPE NCC) Jabber monitor -- Susannah Gray (RIPE NCC) Agenda bashing -- no changes ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- B. Status Reports - Working Group Chairs IETF, DNSEXT, DNSOP and others (Olaf Kolkman, NLNet Labs) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/dns_wg_update.pdf> Questions: Ole Jacobsen asked about the team set up to discuss operational aspects of DNS security. Although the aim of the team was to lead the rapid deployment of the technology, little has been heard since it inception almost two years ago. Olaf replied that the DNSSEC deployment initiative led by Steve Crocker is essentially a web-based forum. There is a move to involve more people. It certainly remains a good place to go to find information or help with the deployment of DNSSEC in any organisation. In terms of results, Olaf feels there is much going on behind the scenes. He clarified that there is no formal liaison between the forum and the IETF. ICANN/IANA Update (John Crain, ICANN) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/icann_dns_wg.pdf> Questions: Rob Blokzijl asked why there was a move to retire old ccTLDs. He could see no technical reason to do this. John agreed that there was no compelling reason. He added that the question remained about whether this should be done. Rob pointed out that current guidelines preclude reuse of ISO3166 country codes for a period of five years. New guidelines will change this to 50 years. Carsten Schiefner commented that .cs was reused recently. Previously it was the code for Czechoslovakia; it was then used for Serbia and Montenegro. CENTR (Marcos Sanz, DENIC) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/centr.pdf> Questions: Peter Koch asked if interested operators might be able to present at the normally closed CENTR meetings. Marco said that active participation in the meetings was encouraged, provided there was not a confidential matter under discussion. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- C. Action Items Review (Working Group Chairs) The action list for the working group was reviewed. <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/dns/dns-actions.html> 48.1 Peter Koch has written this up in an Internet draft. <http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-koch-dns-unsolicited-queries-00.txt> [[Ongoing]] 48.2 Mans Nilsson -- TSIG/SIG(0) for ns.ripe.net [[Ongoing]] 48.4 David Malone -- AAAA misbehavior. <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/aaa.pdf> Dave Wilson gave a short presentation on the issue on behalf of Dave Malone. The document has been written and circulated to the list. There is a question about whether this document would just repeat work done elsewhere in the Internet Protocol Journal. After a show of hands, it was decided to mark the item done and regard the IPJ article as the authoritative source. [[Done, pending mailing list approval]] 49.1 Peter Koch -- DNS Hostcount successor requirements Peter is to discuss this with RIPE NCC staff. [[Ongoing]] 49.2 Jim Reid -- Server Migration Document A document will go to the review panel after this meeting and be circulated through the working group mailing list. Hopefully, this can be marked as completed in time for RIPE 54. [[Ongoing]] 51.1 RIPE NCC -- K-Root anycast measurement The publication of the report from the RIPE NCC is nearing publication. After this happens, the working group will then need to decide whether to ask the RIPE NCC to look into other types of measurement. [[Ongoing, draft RIPE document to be last called]] 51.3 Lars-Johan Liman -- NCC Secondary Service Policy Lars commented that the RIPE NCC has announced it will limit involvement in provision of slave servers for TLDs. Lars suggested this be closed for now and marked as overtaken by events. The working group agreed. [[Done, pending mailing list approval]] 51.4 Peter Koch -- ripe-203 Update [[Ongoing]] Brett Carr gave an update on the various outstanding actions on the RIPE NCC <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/ncc_dnswg_update.pdf> 52.1 Report into the causes for extra DNSSEC network traffic. [[Ongoing]] 52.2 Report numbers of signed zones and delegations in reverse tree Jim suggested this be considered closed, but ask the RIPE NCC to give regular updates once or twice a year. As a result, this will remain a standing item on the working group agenda. [[Done]] Questions: Max Tulyev asked why there are so few DNSSEC delegations. Brett replied that the answer for this would lie with the community. He agreed with comments from Max that people need to understand the benefits and that implementation is easy. 52.3 Lame delegation proposal WG Last call to be issued, chairs to discuss and declare consensus [[Ongoing]] 52.4 Automate and streamline ENUM delegation process. [[Done]] 52.5 Carsten Schiefner -- Proposal for regular lameness checks in e164.arpa Carsten has reported on this in the ENUM working group. They will come up with a task force to take this work forward and report at RIPE 54. Carsten suggests that the DNS working group mark this action as closed. [[Done]] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date-2: Thursday, 5 October 2006 Time-2: 11:00 - 12:30 (UTC +0200) Chair-2: Jim Reid Minutes-2: Adrian Bedford J-Scribe-2: Susannah Gray WG URL: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/dns/ Material-2: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/thursday.html J-Script-2: TBD Audio-2: TBD ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- D. Plenary Follow Up (Working Group Chairs) There was a discussion around the issues raised by Duane Wessels on problems with DNS and Steve Gibbard on DNS Infrastructure Distribution. Jim Reid commented that much of what Duane had said was reasonably valid and much was already good practice, such separating out authoritative and caching-only nameservers and issues surrounding lameness. Jim however did take exception to was the talk of using TCP-based DNS queries. He pointed out that most DNS clients will make a single DNS lookup before taking any action. Using TCP for this seemed somewhat inefficient, considering the small amounts of data that are being transferred. It would also add to latency. A high latency, low bandwidth network or one with a busy nameserver might find handling short-lived TCP connections painful. Olaf Kolkman mentioned that he had heard that under a DoS attack, an operator had first sent back a result with a TC-bit leading to a re-test on TCP, after this the UDP source was white listed. Duane confirmed that there is a company producing software that can create a white list in this way. Replying to Jim's concerns about using TCP on busy servers, he stated that there are applications that can handle large volumes of queries each second. He also agreed that maintaining state for TCP would be painful. Lars Liman asked Duane to clarify if he thought TCP should be a preferred transport. Duane said that he did suggest this. Lars voiced the general mood that high TCP loads would be painful for a server. Duane commented that it would still be preferable to a DDos attack. Lars clarified that he was not against using TCP, but felt unable to advocate using it as his preferred mode of transport. The first defence against a DDos attack would be to rate limit the traffic in his upstream router. Ed Lewis favoured the expansion of DNS beyond its use in root servers; it is a quick reacting database. Recommending using TCP as a default way of contacting DNS goes against its very nature. He also recognises that the way UDP uses DNS manifests considerable problems, which is perhaps why Duane sees TCP as the best way to go. Ed felt the group should first look at the UDP problem in terms of operational practices, buffers and the brakes put on its use. The working group might like to look into suggestions for time-outs and back-offs, maintaining statistics about efficient routing and so on. Jim concurred that this was a good point. There was a short discussion about whether the DNS Working Group is the right arena for such investigation. Jim suggested that it might be worth the working group gathering information about the work done by various parties and put them into a single document identifying key elements of operational best current practice. Lars asked if anyone had previously measured the difference between DNS over UDP and DNS locked down to TCP. It would appear that little specific work has been done already in this area. Peter Koch commented that creating a RIPE Document or bibliography style web page containing links to the various best common practices within DNS operation is not a bad idea. Lars pointed out that an operator facing a problem might not first think of looking at the RIPE Document Store for information about how to resolve his problems. Keith Mitchell commented that a project to address this was under way with ORAC. Lars Liman suggested that this might be well incorporated into a conventional book. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- E. Software Update (Joao Damas, ISC) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/software_update.pdf> There was a short discussion after Peter Koch asked who in the room was already using BIND 9.4 and had found issues with how it handles zones. It was clear this needed some attention, introduction of checks on sibling glue seems to have caused some problems. Joao replied that there is no solution as yet. The change simply produces warnings, although it can produce many of these depending on the zone in question. He pointed out that it is possible to disable that check. Jim asks about the new resolver library. He wanted know if this now meant that the lightweight resolver library (LWRES) was to be phased out. He asked if anyone was using LWRES. Joao said it was impossible to say. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- F. PowerDNS Update (PowerDNS Recursor) (Bert Hubert, PowerDNS/Netherlabs) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/powerdns_update.pdf> Tomas Simonaitis asked if PowerDNS was scalable. Bert replied it can scale as each instance operates independently and does not communicate with another. They do not share a cache. There is a chance that in the future, PowerDNS will look at cache sharing. Roy Arends asked if dnsreplay, dnsstat and dnsscope are publicly available. Bert confirmed that they were all in the PowerDNS repository. Roy asked if the recursor also dealt with unknown records. Bert said that it did. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- G. OARC Update (Keith Mitchell, ISC) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/oarc_update.pdf> Lars Liman commented that it was important to be aware of problems with protecting privacy laws when researching DNS data. There are some nations that impose far stricter rules on how such data can be used than others do. Keith replied that the OARC secretariat is aware of these rules and the various regulations around data protection. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- H. CADR (Bill Manning) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/caadr_update.pdf> After the presentation, Bill did a demonstration using live data. There were no questions on the presentation. Geoff Huston asked if the web interface was necessary to do the work. Bill replied that this was necessary to ensure any updates were made correctly. Ed Lewis asked how do I find all the other delegations to change when changing glue records. Bill replied that it did not really matter as changes did not need to be synchronized between all of them. The child would change the list. Host records are equivalent in peering terms, to a registry or delegation. To change the attributes for a record, it is necessary to log in as an administrator and change the glue records. Ed felt that although the application demonstrated by Bill was useful, it might not suit all registries due to the different issues each faced. Bill agreed that not everything should be run the same way throughout the DNS. Peter Koch wondered if it might be better to feed the glue from the data that has been verified through DNSSEC, rather than from host registrations. Bill agreed that it would and that it should work in 98% of cases. Jim Reid mentioned Keyman used by .se. He wondered if CADR could be used in the .se environment. Bill felt Lars could answer better on this. Lars gave his personal opinion on this. There is a fundamental difference between CADR and Keyman models. The difference lies in authorisation. Keyman is based on individual generating a certificate that has to be signed by a selected group of CAs. The certificate is installed into a browser that then handles authentication. Although both models pick up their data from live DNS, CADR relies on DNS signatures. Bill clarified that the CADR web interface relied on user ID and password authentication. Anyone could request the change, but if it was not visible in the nameservers, then nothing would happen. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- X. I/O with other WGs Already dealt with under action item 52.5. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Y. AOB No other items were raised. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Z. Wrap Up and Close -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Peter,
Meeting: RIPE 53, Istanbul
AFAIR we met in Amsterdam, no? Or has there some kind of wormhole directly to Istanbul been established? ;-) Best, -C.
Dear WG, Apologies I had to miss it the WG meetings this time. I noticed in these draft minutes that there were some discussions about the iso 3166 alpha-2 country codes: ... Carsten Schiefner commented that .cs was reused recently. Not really recently, but a couple of years ago. Previously it was the code for Czechoslovakia; it was then used for Serbia and Montenegro. Serbia and Montenegro got new codes recently (RS and ME) and therefore the CS coded got retired again. For datails, see the two newsletters, "2006-09-26 ISO 3166-1 Newsletter V-12 'Serbia, Montenegro'" and "2006-09-26 ISO 3166-3 Newsletter I-4" accesible via the ISO 3166 "What's new?" page (http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/01whats-new/index.html). jaap
At 03:32 PM 13-10-06 +0200, Jaap Akkerhuis wrote:
Serbia and Montenegro got new codes recently (RS and ME) and therefore the CS coded got retired again. For datails, see the two newsletters, "2006-09-26 ISO 3166-1 Newsletter V-12 'Serbia, Montenegro'" and "2006-09-26 ISO 3166-3 Newsletter I-4" accesible via the ISO 3166 "What's new?" page (http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/01whats-new/index.html).
Not there yet: http://www.iana.org/root-whois/me.htm http://www.iana.org/root-whois/rs.htm -Hank Nussbacher http://www.interall.co.il
At 03:32 PM 13-10-06 +0200, Jaap Akkerhuis wrote: Not there yet: http://www.iana.org/root-whois/me.htm http://www.iana.org/root-whois/rs.htm They are there but they are "Not assigned". That always takes a while. For AX it took about a year if I remember correctly. BTW, the CS is (still) there. jaap
Jaap Akkerhuis wrote:
At 03:32 PM 13-10-06 +0200, Jaap Akkerhuis wrote:
Not there yet: http://www.iana.org/root-whois/me.htm http://www.iana.org/root-whois/rs.htm
They are there but they are "Not assigned". That always takes a while. For AX it took about a year if I remember correctly.
Traditionally IANA has prioritized getting new ccTLDs on line once an application has been received from appropriate parties in that country.
BTW, the CS is (still) there.
cc'ed David so that he can add taking that page down to the TODO list. Doug -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 01:17:14PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
They are there but they are "Not assigned". That always takes a while. For AX it took about a year if I remember correctly.
Traditionally IANA has prioritized getting new ccTLDs on line once an application has been received from appropriate parties in that country.
it should be noted that defining the 2 letter ISO3166 code and delegating a ccTLD are different issues. There are two other codes without delegation (EH and KP) for more or less obvious reasons.
cc'ed David so that he can add taking that page down to the TODO list.
The two 'pages' Hank missed have already been set up during the weekend. -Peter
Hi, Yet another reason to travel DPRK ;) Peter Koch wrote:
On Sun, Oct 15, 2006 at 01:17:14PM -0700, Doug Barton wrote:
They are there but they are "Not assigned". That always takes a while. For AX it took about a year if I remember correctly. Traditionally IANA has prioritized getting new ccTLDs on line once an application has been received from appropriate parties in that country.
it should be noted that defining the 2 letter ISO3166 code and delegating a ccTLD are different issues. There are two other codes without delegation (EH and KP) for more or less obvious reasons.
cc'ed David so that he can add taking that page down to the TODO list.
The two 'pages' Hank missed have already been set up during the weekend.
-Peter
-- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
Dear WG, here's an updated version and a separate file with just the small diffs.
Please review the minutes, especially if you are quoted by name. The deadline for this first round is October, 30th. Thanks!
That's five days ... -Peter
This prompted by the minutes, but it isn't a comment about the minutes: At 21:20 +0200 10/11/06, Peter Koch wrote: ...
please find below the draft minutes of last week's two DNS WG sessions. ... ICANN/IANA Update (John Crain, ICANN) <http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-53/presentations/icann_dns_wg.pdf>
Questions: Rob Blokzijl asked why there was a move to retire old ccTLDs. He could see no technical reason to do this. John agreed that there was no compelling reason. He added that the question remained about whether this should be done. Rob pointed out that current guidelines preclude reuse of ISO3166 country codes for a period of five years. New guidelines will change this to 50 years. Carsten Schiefner commented that .cs was reused recently. Previously it was the code for Czechoslovakia; it was then used for Serbia and Montenegro.
I think there is a reason to retire ccTLDs. Perhaps it is not technical, but, if the ccTLDs are granted according to ISO3166, then straying from ISO3166 as it retires country codes means that IANA would have to have a policy and process for determining when to stray. I think we are protected from having to deal with politics if we have a strict policy of following ISO3166 (plus whatever exceptions we've already grandfathered-in). Once a country code is pulled from ISO3166, if there is a plan for phasing it out (I don't think it is appropriate to debate a plan here as this is an IANA matter) that's what any IANA plan should match. I.e., how long until we yank them from the root zone? At what point should an on-going registry refuse to list an NS record in a retired country code domain? -- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Edward Lewis +1-571-434-5468 NeuStar Secrets of Success #107: Why arrive at 7am for the good parking space? Come in at 11am while the early birds drive out to lunch.
Edward Lewis wrote:
I think there is a reason to retire ccTLDs. Perhaps it is not technical, but, if the ccTLDs are granted according to ISO3166, then straying from ISO3166 as it retires country codes means that IANA would have to have a policy and process for determining when to stray. I think we are protected from having to deal with politics if we have a strict policy of following ISO3166 (plus whatever exceptions we've already grandfathered-in).
I think we should also take a look at each of that domain individually. Is it usable? Is it grows? Does the community need it? For example, SU grows fast (even it costs $100 per year now), need by community and usable because of many people associate themselves with ex-USSR, and many companies working in ex-USSR market. So this community need it, as like as European people need EU domain (that also not in ISO3166). (of course, I'm protecting my cool e-mail too ;) ) -- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
At 12:27 +0000 10/31/06, Max Tulyev wrote:
Edward Lewis wrote:
I think there is a reason to retire ccTLDs. Perhaps it is not technical, but, if the ccTLDs are granted according to ISO3166, then straying from ISO3166 as it retires country codes means that IANA would have to have a policy and process for determining when to stray. I think we are protected from having to deal with politics if we have a strict policy of following ISO3166 (plus whatever exceptions we've already grandfathered-in).
I think we should also take a look at each of that domain individually. Is it usable? Is it grows? Does the community need it?
For example, SU grows fast (even it costs $100 per year now), need by community and usable because of many people associate themselves with ex-USSR, and many companies working in ex-USSR market. So this community need it, as like as European people need EU domain (that also not in ISO3166).
(of course, I'm protecting my cool e-mail too ;) )
The dotSU domain was the first time I was aware of the issue - when someone tried to register a name server with a ".su" domain name. I don't have a particular opinion on whether old ccTLDs are to be shut down or not be shut down based on ISO3166 membership. But IANA has a choice - blindly/faithfully follow that list and abide by the policies governing it or use that list as a guideline and put in place policies and processes for deviation. There are other imaginative solutions - but that's for an IANA forum to discuss. When I said "I think there is a reason" it's because I wouldn't want to be involved in the set up of policies and processes for this. If others want to, that's fine by me. ;) -- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Edward Lewis +1-571-434-5468 NeuStar Secrets of Success #107: Why arrive at 7am for the good parking space? Come in at 11am while the early birds drive out to lunch.
Max Tulyev wrote:
For example, SU grows fast (even it costs $100 per year now), need by community and usable because of many people associate themselves with ex-USSR, and many companies working in ex-USSR market. So this community need it, as like as European people need EU domain (that also not in ISO3166).
Actually, that is incorrect. EU is in the ISO-3166 list as a special reservation, SU is not. kim
Kim, Could you please point me it on the site? I can't figure it out :( There is no EU (as well as SU) at the list there or at the links nearby: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/lis... Kim Davies wrote:
Max Tulyev wrote:
For example, SU grows fast (even it costs $100 per year now), need by community and usable because of many people associate themselves with ex-USSR, and many companies working in ex-USSR market. So this community need it, as like as European people need EU domain (that also not in ISO3166).
Actually, that is incorrect. EU is in the ISO-3166 list as a special reservation, SU is not.
kim
-- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
Max Tulyev wrote:
Kim,
Could you please point me it on the site? I can't figure it out :(
Kim already posted the URL you want to look at, but I'll include it here for you just in case: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/iso... Speaking from experience, I'd like to emphasize what others have said. You do not want what you are asking for. You do not want ICANN (remember, IANA is ICANN) making decisions about what ccTLDs are "worthy" of being in the root absent some objective, third party reference. You do not want them making decisions about the factors that you mentioned in your first message (usability, growth rate, community "need"), and you do not want ICANN in the middle of all the political wrangling that would happen if you ever opened that door. You do not want this. Now I know that you THINK you want it, because you want to make a case for preserving YOUR ccTLD. But you really don't want to open that can of worms. Doug -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
Now I know that you THINK you want it, because you want to make a case for preserving YOUR ccTLD. But you really don't want to open that can of worms.
your mail system seems broken. it has regurgitated an old mail. one pre the issuance of EU randy
Randy Bush wrote:
Now I know that you THINK you want it, because you want to make a case for preserving YOUR ccTLD. But you really don't want to open that can of worms.
your mail system seems broken. it has regurgitated an old mail. one pre the issuance of EU
As Kim pointed out, EU is "in the list" as exceptionally reserved, just like UK and AC. If you'd like to have a discussion about not including any exceptionally reserved names in the root, the ccNSO and/or the ccNSO-IANA working group are probably the best forums for that. If you choose to have that discussion, it's probably worth noting that it is not uncommon for names to move from "exceptionally reserved" status to "officially assigned" status, as has happened over the last two years for GG, IM, and JE. Sure it would be nice if the world was simple, but it's not. On the other hand, SU has specifically been deleted by ISO, hence the ccTLD needs to be deleted as well (just like ZR was back in the day). For that matter, TP is way overdue for being deleted, as the TL domain has been up and running for a long time now. I think we can cut YU some slack until the ME and SE domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too. My point is, we actually do have a policy here, and the SU operators are running their operation with deliberate disregard for it. If you don't like the policy, there are places to debate it, however since this isn't one of them, I think I'll leave it at that. Doug -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
--On tisdag, tisdag 31 okt 2006 11.45.34 -0800 Doug Barton <dougb@dougbarton.us> wrote:
some slack until the ME and SE domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too.
Methinks SE is up and running and has been so for some time. I think Björn got the delegation from Jon Postel 1984, and we've been trying to not fall of the Internet since then. I believe you're confusing Konungariket Sverige (SE) with Republika Srbija (RS), in some form. -- Måns Nilsson Systems Specialist +46 70 681 7204 cell KTHNOC +46 8 790 6518 office MN1334-RIPE I wonder if I should put myself in ESCROW!!
Måns Nilsson wrote:
--On tisdag, tisdag 31 okt 2006 11.45.34 -0800 Doug Barton <dougb@dougbarton.us> wrote:
some slack until the ME and SE domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too.
Methinks SE is up and running and has been so for some time. I think Björn got the delegation from Jon Postel 1984, and we've been trying to not fall of the Internet since then. I believe you're confusing Konungariket Sverige (SE) with Republika Srbija (RS), in some form.
I believe you're right. :) Thanks for pointing this out. -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
On Tue, 31 Oct 2006, Måns Nilsson wrote:
Methinks SE is up and running and has been so for some time. I think Björn got the delegation from Jon Postel 1984, and we've been trying to not fall of the Internet since then. I believe you're confusing Konungariket Sverige (SE) with Republika Srbija (RS), in some form.
Close but no cigar. :-) SE was only created by Jon in Sept 1986: http://www.interall.co.il/cctld.html IANA confirms: http://www.iana.org/root-whois/se.htm Regards, Hank
Dear Doug, Experience shown (with EU representatives being present on the list) that "EU" was not considered by the ietf-languages@alvestrand.no supposed reviewer of the IANA Language Subtags and Extension Registries as part of ISO 3166 codes and therefore the leading economic language "en-EU" could not be documented along with the IANA registry. The implications of your kind of points IANA/ISO respective weight and importance and the resulting implications on the DNS root(s) and IDNs are key questions right now in Athens. I understand that you are here. May I suggest we try to spot one another and quickly discuss this. jfc At 20:45 31/10/2006, Doug Barton wrote:
Randy Bush wrote:
Now I know that you THINK you want it, because you want to make a case for preserving YOUR ccTLD. But you really don't want to open that can of worms.
your mail system seems broken. it has regurgitated an old mail. one pre the issuance of EU
As Kim pointed out, EU is "in the list" as exceptionally reserved, just like UK and AC. If you'd like to have a discussion about not including any exceptionally reserved names in the root, the ccNSO and/or the ccNSO-IANA working group are probably the best forums for that. If you choose to have that discussion, it's probably worth noting that it is not uncommon for names to move from "exceptionally reserved" status to "officially assigned" status, as has happened over the last two years for GG, IM, and JE. Sure it would be nice if the world was simple, but it's not.
On the other hand, SU has specifically been deleted by ISO, hence the ccTLD needs to be deleted as well (just like ZR was back in the day). For that matter, TP is way overdue for being deleted, as the TL domain has been up and running for a long time now. I think we can cut YU some slack until the ME and SE domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too.
My point is, we actually do have a policy here, and the SU operators are running their operation with deliberate disregard for it. If you don't like the policy, there are places to debate it, however since this isn't one of them, I think I'll leave it at that.
Doug
-- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
On Tue, Oct 31, 2006 at 11:45:34AM -0800, Doug Barton wrote:
On the other hand, SU has specifically been deleted by ISO, hence the ccTLD needs to be deleted as well (just like ZR was back in the day). For that matter, TP is way overdue for being deleted, as the TL domain has been up and running for a long time now. I think we can cut YU some slack until the ME and SE domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too.
Hello Doug. IIRC the initial discussion came from some not seing this as something which "needs to be done" and from Crain saying there was no policy. Indeed your own posts seems to indicate this lack of policy too. But just for clarification, I wonder if you would like to say if the wording above stems from a policy somewhere or from your own conviction? Kind regards, Robert Martin-Legène
Robert Martin-Legène wrote:
On Tue, Oct 31, 2006 at 11:45:34AM -0800, Doug Barton wrote:
On the other hand, SU has specifically been deleted by ISO, hence the ccTLD needs to be deleted as well (just like ZR was back in the day). For that matter, TP is way overdue for being deleted, as the TL domain has been up and running for a long time now. I think we can cut YU some slack until the ME and RS domains are up and running, but then that one needs to go too.
Hello Doug.
IIRC the initial discussion came from some not seing this as something which "needs to be done"
Disappointing on its face to start with.
and from Crain saying there was no policy.
I am not in a position to comment on what John may or may not have said, how it may or may not have been interpreted, or the environment John was operating in during the early days of ICANN.
Indeed your own posts seems to indicate this lack of policy too.
I'm honestly confused as to how you could come to that conclusion, but it's not worth debating. I'll do my best to make my thoughts clear below.
But just for clarification, I wonder if you would like to say if the wording above stems from a policy somewhere or from your own conviction?
Let's start with RFC 1591 ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1591.txt (which any of you who are involved with the administration of a TLD should probably go back and read periodically), especially Section 4.2: 2) Country Codes The IANA is not in the business of deciding what is and what is not a country. The selection of the ISO 3166 list as a basis for country code top-level domain names was made with the knowledge that ISO has a procedure for determining which entities should be and should not be on that list. Then in May of 1999, ICANN reaffirmed those principles in ICP-1. http://www.icann.org/icp/icp-1.htm There is a policy, and there is precedent (for names being removed from the root after the country code is deleted from the ISO list). What there is not is a clearly defined procedure on how and when it should be done. In the past that has been left up to the good will of the ccTLD operators. Unfortunately, it seems that in at least some cases that good will can no longer be relied on. Max Tulyev wrote:
You also can take a look at official SU statistics, for example, previous month:
http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/trend-20061031.shtml http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/summ_trend-20061031.shtml
This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it.
A) Wanting something is not the same as needing it. B) My feeling is that what you're saying here (substantial registration growth in spite of the high price) speaks more to the motivations of the SU operators for maintaining their domain than it does for the necessity of keeping it in the root. Doug -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
Doug Barton wrote:
This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it.
A) Wanting something is not the same as needing it.
The magic is who decides what I need and what I don't need.
B) My feeling is that what you're saying here (substantial registration growth in spite of the high price) speaks more to the motivations of the SU operators for maintaining their domain than it does for the necessity of keeping it in the root.
Nobody push people to buy .SU domains. Only issue they do it - they need it. Am I wrong? -- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
On Thu, 2006-11-02 at 11:34 +0300, Max Tulyev wrote:
Doug Barton wrote:
This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it.
A) Wanting something is not the same as needing it.
The magic is who decides what I need and what I don't need.
That you _prefer_ .su doesn't mean that the TLDs it's been split into can't meet your _needs_. preferences != needs
B) My feeling is that what you're saying here (substantial registration growth in spite of the high price) speaks more to the motivations of the SU operators for maintaining their domain than it does for the necessity of keeping it in the root.
Nobody push people to buy .SU domains. Only issue they do it - they need it. Am I wrong?
Are anybody pushing people to avoid .su? I.e. how much effort are the .su-maintainers putting into convincing people to use the individual ccTLDs instead? ;-) -- Per Heldal - http://heldal.eml.cc/
Doug Barton wrote:
My point is, we actually do have a policy here, and the SU operators are running their operation with deliberate disregard for it. If you don't like the policy, there are places to debate it, however since this isn't one of them, I think I'll leave it at that.
You also can take a look at official SU statistics, for example, previous month: http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/trend-20061031.shtml http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/summ_trend-20061031.shtml This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it. -- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
Max, If you believe IANA should depart from historical and existing policies with regards to delegations and removals of two-letter top- level domains, I would suggest you initiate an ICANN policy development process within the appropriate supporting organization (s). Until that time, IANA is pretty much constrained to follow existing policies despite the fact that some people might be making money registering names for a country that no longer exists. Rgds, -drc On Nov 1, 2006, at 1:13 AM, Max Tulyev wrote:
Doug Barton wrote:
My point is, we actually do have a policy here, and the SU operators are running their operation with deliberate disregard for it. If you don't like the policy, there are places to debate it, however since this isn't one of them, I think I'll leave it at that.
You also can take a look at official SU statistics, for example, previous month:
http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/trend-20061031.shtml http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/summ_trend-20061031.shtml
This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it.
-- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
On Wed, Nov 01, 2006 at 10:49:44AM -0800, David Conrad wrote:
Max,
If you believe IANA should depart from historical and existing policies with regards to delegations and removals of two-letter top- level domains, I would suggest you initiate an ICANN policy development process within the appropriate supporting organization (s). Until that time, IANA is pretty much constrained to follow existing policies despite the fact that some people might be making money registering names for a country that no longer exists.
Or, convince the people maintaining the iso list, to re-add SU as at least a reserved TLD, as the country code still seems to be used. Politically it's better to solve the problem there then try to have ICANN make an exception. Regards, Andre Koopal
Rgds, -drc
On Nov 1, 2006, at 1:13 AM, Max Tulyev wrote:
Doug Barton wrote:
My point is, we actually do have a policy here, and the SU operators are running their operation with deliberate disregard for it. If you don't like the policy, there are places to debate it, however since this isn't one of them, I think I'll leave it at that.
You also can take a look at official SU statistics, for example, previous month:
http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/trend-20061031.shtml http://stat.nic.ru/en_su/2006/10/31/summ_trend-20061031.shtml
This domain grows even it have huge price ( http://www.nic.ru/en/index.html ). So people really need it.
-- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
-- Andre Koopal EMEA Server & Service Management - Int ITSD Verizon Business H.J.E. Wenckebachweg 123 1096 AM Amsterdam Netherlands VNET: 711 6990 tel : +31 (0)20 711 6990 fax : +31 (0)20 711 2519 Verizon and MCI are now operating as Verizon Business ! This e-mail is strictly confidential and intended only for use by the addressee unless otherwise indicated.
Jefsey_Morfin wrote:
IDNs are key questions right now in Athens. I understand that you are here.
I would be fascinated to learn how you came to that conclusion. :) Doug -- If you're never wrong, you're not trying hard enough
Doug Barton wrote:
Now I know that you THINK you want it, because you want to make a case for preserving YOUR ccTLD. But you really don't want to open that can of worms.
People usually keep silence unless something cares them personally ;) And of course, it is mine only for 0.0125%, as you can see in statistic. -- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
On Oct 31, 2006, at 16:46, Kim Davies wrote:
Actually, that is incorrect. EU is in the ISO-3166 list as a special reservation, SU is not.
So what? UK isn't in 3166 either. BTW, the "official" ISO list doesn't have EU: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code- lists/list-en1.html
Jim Reid wrote:
On Oct 31, 2006, at 16:46, Kim Davies wrote:
Actually, that is incorrect. EU is in the ISO-3166 list as a special reservation, SU is not.
So what? UK isn't in 3166 either.
BTW, the "official" ISO list doesn't have EU:
http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/lis...
So we have huge desync in TLD and ISO-3166 in the real life. Is it an issue to return to my talks with ICANN about TLD for Transdnistria country? ;) -- WBR, Max Tulyev (MT6561-RIPE, 2:463/253@FIDO)
Hi, Max Tulyev wrote:
So we have huge desync in TLD and ISO-3166 in the real life.
Actually there are only three: SU, YU and TP. IANA has had constructive dialogue with YU and TP on their decommissioning. Naturally YU first will require the successor domains (RS, ME) to be established before that could happen in earnest. kim
Jim Reid wrote:
On Oct 31, 2006, at 16:46, Kim Davies wrote:
Actually, that is incorrect. EU is in the ISO-3166 list as a special reservation, SU is not.
So what? UK isn't in 3166 either.
BTW, the "official" ISO list doesn't have EU: Both EU and UK are in the ISO 3166 standard as "exceptionally reserved", which allows for usage.
SU, on the other hand is listed as retired ("transitionally reserved"). You can see an overview of the status of the codes at: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/iso... kim
Both EU and UK are in the ISO 3166 standard as "exceptionally reserved", which allows for usage.
SU, on the other hand is listed as retired ("transitionally reserved").
You can see an overview of the status of the codes at:
http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/iso...
live sure seemed a bit simpler when we followed simpler rules. randy
Note, the ISO information is somewhat confusing. BTW, the "official" ISO list doesn't have EU: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code- lists/list-en1.html This is just a subset of the 3166 list. To quote: This list states the country names (official short names in English) in alphabetical order as given in ISO 3166-1 and the corresponding ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 code elements. and European Union(*) is clearly not country. The UNITED KINGDOM(**) is (GB) but the United Kingdom(*) (UK) apparently not. The list Kim points to, the "decoding table" (http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code- lists/iso_3166-1_decoding_table.html) contains all codes covered by 3166. To quote: This decoding table provides the user of ISO 3166-1 with an easy access to the definition of all 676 code elements available in the alpha-2 code of ISO's country code standard. So, be careful what you quote. jaap (*) Spelling according to the code table. See also footnote (b) of this table (**) Short name; Official name: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Nothern Island (according to 3166 5th edition).
participants (16)
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Andre Koopal
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Carsten Schiefner
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David Conrad
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Doug Barton
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Edward Lewis
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Hank Nussbacher
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Jaap Akkerhuis
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Jefsey_Morfin
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Jim Reid
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Kim Davies
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Max Tulyev
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Måns Nilsson
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Per Heldal
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Peter Koch
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Randy Bush
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Robert Martin-Legène