Here's a chart summarizing the situation: Timing of |Useful in|RFC 1034 |BIND 8 |BIND 9 |tinydns data change |practice |compliant|support|support|support ------------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+------- Synchronized |Yes |Yes |No |No |Yes Semi-synchronized |Yes |No |Yes |Yes |Yes Unsynchronized |No |No |No |Yes |No The BIND company observes that * synchronized changes are hard to do with BIND, even though they're required by RFC 1034; and * unsynchronized changes can fail miserably with BIND 8 et al., which account for the majority of DNS servers. The obvious solution is semi-synchronized changes, which work with the entire installed base. I wouldn't object to modifying RFC 1034 to allow semi-synchronized changes. (To repeat the relevant definitions: A synchronized change happens at the same time in all the parent servers and all the child servers. A semi-synchronized change happens in the parent zone---specifically, the parent serial is changed---after it happens in all the child servers.) I certainly _do_ object to allowing unsynchronized changes. They don't work correctly with the installed base, and they have no advantages over semi-synchronized changes. It's insane to demand massive redeployment of DNS servers for the sake of a useless protocol modification. Mark.Andrews@isc.org writes: > you need to write up a draft _I_ don't need to write anything. I am not the one trying to change the requirements in RFC 1034. My software follows the spec. _Your_ company is trying to impose requirements that aren't in RFC 1034. You are claiming that most DNS server installations on the Internet have to be changed. You are demanding that we tolerate configurations that violate RFC 1034. Even worse, instead of honestly proposing this protocol change, you are trying to sneak it past us as part of an ``AXFR clarification''; and someone who has been paid for BIND work is abusing his position as WG chair by fraudulently claiming ``consensus.'' This is a sham. ---D. J. Bernstein, Associate Professor, Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, University of Illinois at Chicago