Phillip Hallam-Baker <phill@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The point of DNS64 is to provide a mechanism that makes it easy to turn on > IPv6 today. All the client needs is a connection to a DNS router that > supports DNS64. You worded that wrong. DNS64 lets people turn off IPv4 (and/or avoid NAT4*4). > Because of network circumstances a client using DNS64 is almost certainly > going to need to use DPRIV for access simply because port 53 has been > sabotaged so thoroughly. So we are going to have to trust the DPRIV > resolver to level 1 at minimum That's an interesting observation: can you elaborate on the sabotage? I think I know, but I'd rather you were more clear about this. I've wanted DNS64 to happen in the host, and given that a number of hosts had to be fixed to function in IPv6 only environments, a change to include DNS64 would not be crazy in my opinion, and eliminates much of the end-to-end DNSSEC-breakage that DNS64 can imply. (or to put it another way: when you turn on end-host DNSSEC validation, and enable DPRIV, you had better provide DNS64 at the same time) -- Michael Richardson <mcr+IETF@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, Sandelman Software Works -= IPv6 IoT consulting =-
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