Colleagues, here's the agenda for the Lisbon meeting. There might be some small adjustments to the running order between now and RIPE59. Though there shouldn't be any major changes. If there are updates, they'll be posted here and on the meeting web pages. Hope to see you all in Lisbon next month. # # $Id: dnswg-agenda59,v 1.6 2009/09/18 11:54:26 jim Exp $ # Morning Session A. Administrivia & Agenda Bashing (2 mins) B. Matters arising from RIPE58 Minutes (3 mins) C. Review of Action Items (10 mins) D. IETF Report (10 mins) Carsten Strotmann, Men and Mice E. IANA Update (10 mins) Leo Vegoda, ICANN Progress report on root signing and the ITAR. F. DNSwitness: recent developments (15 mins) Stephane Bortzmeyer, AFNIC DNSwitness is a set of (free software) programs to gather statistics from the DNS. The active component of DNSwitness has now more data to display, showing an increase in IPv6 use in .FR. The new passive component allows us to get information from the packets we receive. G. Provisioning DNSSEC - What Would Operators Do? (15 mins) Ed Lewis, Neustar Recent lapses in the operation of Trust Anchor Repositories illustrate that the need to develop some operationally sound means to exchange DNSSEC Keys amongst operators of DNS servers, both from the operator of a zone upwards (e.g., a TLD) and if needed to ISP-run caches. This talk will discuss the operational considerations and open the floor for suggestions for requirements. H. Followup to EOF Presentations (20 mins) Discussion about the ITAR and root signing, DNSSEC in .pt Afternoon Session I. NCC Update (10 mins) Anand Buddhev, RIPE NCC J. Lame Delegation Analysis for the RIPE region (25 mins) Shane Kerr, ISC Falling Trees (or If a DNS Server is Lame but Nobody Queries It, Should I Get an E-mail?) Queries to the RIPE NCC server for reverse DNS were recorded and compared against which name servers are lame. Based on this, we can see which queries are affected by lameness, and how badly. K. ICANN/OARC Root Zone Augmentation Impact Analysis (15 mins) Duane Wessels, OARC ICANN commissioned DNS-OARC to study upcoming changes to the DNS root zone. In particular we examined signing the zone with DNSSEC, increasing the number of TLDs, and adding more IPv6 glue records. OARC studied how these changes affect zone size, response latency, start and reload times, AXFR and IXFR bandwidth requirements, and potential increases in queries over TCP. L. Root Zone Scaling Survey Findings (15 mins) Lyman Chapin, Interisle M. Open discussion on root scaling (20 mins) N. AOB
participants (1)
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Jim Reid