| Internet-Draft | DNSSEC automation | June 2026 |
| Wisser, et al. | Expires 14 December 2026 | [Page] |
This document describes an algorithm and protocol to automate the setup, operations, and decommissioning of Multi-Signer DNSSEC [RFC8901] configurations. To accomplish this, it employs Model 2 of the multi-signer specification (where each operator has their own distinct KSK and ZSK sets, or CSK sets), management of DS records from the parent via CDS/CDNSKEY [RFC8078], and Child-to-Parent Synchronization in DNS [RFC7477].¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/ietf-wg-dnsop/draft-ietf-dnsop-dnssec-automation.¶
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[RFC8901] describes the necessary steps and API for a multi-signer DNSSEC configuration. In this document we will combine Model 2 of [RFC8901] with [RFC8078] and [RFC7477] to define an automatable algorithm for setting up, operating, and decommissioning a multi-signer DNSSEC configuration. Besides steady state multi-signer operation, one of the special use cases of this protocol is to enable non-disruptive migration of a signed DNS zone from one provider to another, which employs a transitory state of a multi-signer configuration.¶
In order for any multi-signer group to give consistent answers across all nameservers, the data contents of the zone also have to be synchronized (in addition to infrastructure records like NS, DNSKEY, CDS etc). This content synchronization is out-of-scope for this document.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
Signer¶
An entity signing a zone¶
Multi-signer Group¶
A group of signers that sign the same zone¶
Controller¶
An entity controlling the multi-signer group. Used in the decentralized model.¶
Parent¶
Trust mechanism¶
An authenticated channel used to apply control-plane changes (DNSKEY, CDS/CDNSKEY, CSYNC, NS) on each signer, possibly mediated by the zone owner or a controller. The detailed mechanism is out of scope for this document.¶
DS-Wait-Time¶
Once the parent has picked up and published the new DS record set, any further changes MUST be delayed until the new DS set has propagated.¶
The minimum DS-Wait-Time is the TTL of the DS RRset.¶
DNSKEY-Wait-Time¶
Once the DNSKEY sets of all signers are updated, any further changes MUST be delayed until the new DNSKEY set has propagated.¶
The minimum DNSKEY-Wait-Time is the maximum of all DNSKEY TTL values from all signers plus the time it takes to publish the zone on all secondaries.¶
NS-Wait-Time¶
Once the parent has picked up and published the new NS record set, any further changes MUST be delayed until the new NS set has propagated.¶
The minimum NS-Wait-Time is the maximum of the TTL value of the NS set in the parent zone and all NS sets from all signers.¶
In this document we describe, except for the initial trust, how the steps in the multi-signer DNSSEC setup can be automated.¶
The following two use cases are in the scope of this document.¶
This is the typical use case described in [RFC8901], where multiple DNS providers are used to cooperatively serve a DNS zone, each signing independently with their own keys, in a steady state configuration to increase availability.¶
Changing the nameserver operator of a DNSSEC signed zone can be challenging. Currently the most common method is temporarily "going insecure". This is poor for security, and for users relying on the security of the zone. Furthermore, when DNSSEC is being used for application security functions like DANE [RFC6698], it is critical that the DNSSEC chain of trust remain unbroken during the transfer.¶
Multi-signer DNSSEC Model 2 provides a mechanism for transitioning from one nameserver operator to another without "going insecure". A new operator joins the current operator in a temporary multi-signer group. Once that is accomplished and stable, the old operator leaves the multi-signer group, completing the transition.¶
Automation of the necessary steps can be categorized into two main models, centralized and decentralized. Both have pros and cons, and a zone owner should carefully choose the model that works best.¶
In a centralized model a controller executes all steps necessary and controls all signers.¶
The controller needs to have authorized access to all signers. This can be achieved in a variety of different ways. For example, many service providers offer access through a REST API. Another possibility is access through Dynamic Update [RFC2136] with TSIG authentication.¶
In the decentralized model all signers communicate with each other and execute the necessary steps on their own instance. For this, signers need a specialized protocol to communicate configuration details that are not part of the zone data.¶
In order for any of the models to work, the signer must support the following capabilities.¶
In a centralized model it is the controller's task to compute all waiting times and control the zone in a way that all timing restrictions are met.¶
In the decentralized model every signer must compute all waiting times and adhere to all timing restrictions.¶
In both methods, some of the timing restrictions must be specified as part of the configuration data.¶
Each signer to be added, including the initial signer, must meet the following prerequisites before joining the multi-signer group:¶
The zone is already authoritatively served by one DNS operator and is DNSSEC signed. For full automation, both the KSK and ZSK (or CSK) must be online.¶
This can be viewed as an initial state where the multi-signer group has only one signer.¶
Only when all signers use the same algorithm(s) can all resolvers validate zone data with consistency.¶
This section tries to summarize why that is the case and what trade-offs can be made in situations where using the same algorithm isn't possible.¶
Section 2.2 of [RFC4035] states that a signed zone MUST include a DNSKEY for each algorithm present in the zone's DS RRset and expected trust anchors for the zone. A setup where different signers use different key algorithms therefore violates [RFC4035].¶
According to Section 5.11 of [RFC6840] validators SHOULD NOT insist that all algorithms signaled in the DS RRset work, and they MUST NOT insist that all algorithms signaled in the DNSKEY RRset work.¶
So a multi-signer setup where different signers use different key algorithms should still validate.¶
This could be an acceptable risk in situations where going insecure is undesirable or impossible, and nameservers must be changed between operators that only support disjoint sets of key algorithms.¶
We have to consider the following scenarios:¶
Validator supports both algorithms¶
Validation should be stable through all stages of the multi-signer algorithms.¶
Validator supports none of the algorithms¶
The validator will treat the zone as unsigned. Resolution should work through all stages of the multi-signer algorithms.¶
Validator supports only one of the algorithms¶
The validator will not be able to validate the DNSKEY RRset or any data from one of the signers, and will typically retry other nameservers for the zone until it can find another signer that it does recognize, or return a SERVFAIL response code otherwise.¶
The latter scenario can be mitigated by selecting only well-supported algorithms. [MULTI-ALG-RULES] proposes to formally define such "universal" algorithms and sanction such configurations.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
Multi-signer DNSSEC inherits the security considerations of [RFC7477], [RFC8078] and [RFC8901].¶
Every step of the multi-signer algorithms has to be carefully executed at the right time. Failures could result in the loss of resolution for the domain.¶
Independent of the chosen model, it is crucial that only authorized entities are able to change the zone data. Some providers or software installations allow finer-grained configuration of which changes are permitted. Access to modify zone data should be restricted as much as possible.¶
Multi-signer configurations can strengthen DNS security by avoiding a DNS zone "going insecure" during a DNS operator transition. A steady state multi-signer configuration can also greatly strengthen availability by having multiple distinct DNS providers cooperatively serving the same signed zone. A catastrophic failure of any single provider then cannot take down the zone.¶
The Swedish Internet Foundation has implemented a centralized controller that supports updates via Dynamic DNS or the REST APIs of several vendors.¶
The code can be found as part of the multi-signer project on GitHub https://github.com/DNSSEC-Provisioning/multi-signer-controller¶
The authors would like to thank the following for their review of this work and their valuable comments: Steve Crocker, Eric Osterweil, Roger Murray, Jonas Andersson, Peter Thomassen.¶