Doug, I'm sorry, but I can't understand what you are talking about. That is at least in part because you are using vocabulary that does not appear in 2821bis or other common IETF standardized email technology. You also seem to be making assumptions that aren't part of the 2821 model (whether they are valid or not). In 2821 and its predecessors, MX records and the associated preferences were specified as the preferred mechanism for finding the next-hop SMTP server. There was also a special case, originally part of a transition mechanism for RFC 974, that, if no MX records were found for a particular name, one or more A RRs would be located for the name and treated as if they were the targets of an MX record with preference zero. While various implementations have been more permissive over time, the data field in an MX RR has always been expected to be a DNS name that would, in turn, resolve to one or more A RRs. That is the mechanism that has been used for Internet mail over IPv4 for many years. Now, as far as I know, 2821bis makes only two changes in this area. The first is to be explicit about the expected data value in MX records. The second is to explicitly specify that names with AAAA records are permitted as an alternative to names with A records. Without that change, which was anticipated in 2821 but not as explicit because of the state of development experience at the time, it would be impossible to run SMTP over IPv6 without local imaginative extensions of the standard. It does not provide for an extension of the "if there are no MX records, look for an A RR" model because the mailing list concluded that the transition mechanism was not needed for IPv6 transition and because it would have required the standard to specify preferential rules for A and AAAA records. It seemed much better to let those configuring mail systems to use the existing MX preference mechanism to specify what treatment they thought appropriate. That is really all the material to which you refer does (or changes). Now, are you suggesting that: (1) It is time to abandon the current Internet email fabric in terms of, e.g., your "notify and retrieve" proposals? (2) That we should not specify operation of SMTP over IPv6 but either prohibit that or leave it to the imagination? (3) That MX records are so useless that we should deprecate them and embark on some other "discovery" mechanism rather than updating 2821? (4) Something else? john --On Thursday, 20 March, 2008 09:33 -0700 Douglas Otis <dotis@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > While this response may be a bit late, the change in section > 5.1 indicating SMTP server discovery now explicitly supports > IPv6 address records represents a significant change from > RFC2821. > > While a desire to retain current practices has some > justification, extending an already dubious and archaic > practice to the explicit use of IPv6 raises significant > questions. > > The level of misuse afflicted upon SMTP often results in an > exploration of DNS SMTP discovery records to determine whether > a purported domain might be valid in the forward direction. > To remain functional, reverse DNS checks are often avoided > due to the poor level of maintenance given this zone. A > move to deprecate A records for discovery when performing > these checks to ascertain domain validity would favourably > impact the level of undesired transactions. To combat > rampant domain spoofing, some domains also publish various > types of SMTP related policy records. To counter problems > related to wildcard policy records, a lack of policy may be > conditioned upon presences of possible SMTP discovery > records. > > Adding IPv6 to the list transactions needed to qualify SMTP > domains that is predominately triggered by geometrically > growing levels of abuse or misuse appears to be a remarkably > poor choice. To suggest a domain might reply upon this > mechanism again appears to be remarkably poor advice. > Reliance upon a communication system should not be > predicated upon such a questionable mechanisms. During the > next disaster, would you want FEMA to not use MX records or > to depend upon IPv6 address records? Not including IPv6 as > a discovery record would better protect networks in the face > of growing misuse of SMTP while also better ensuring the > integrity of SMTP. > > -Doug > _______________________________________________ > IETF mailing list > IETF@xxxxxxxx > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf _______________________________________________ IETF mailing list IETF@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf