Internet Engineering Task Force Motonori Nakamura INTERNET-DRAFT Kyoto University Expires: August 6, 2004 Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino IIJ Research Laboratory February 6, 2004 SMTP Operational Experience in Mixed IPv4/v6 Environments draft-motonori-dualstack-smtp-requirement-00.txt Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as ``work in progress.'' To view the list Internet-Draft Shadow Directories, see http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. The internet-draft will expire in 6 months. The date of expiration will be August 6, 2004. Abstract This document talks about SMTP operational experiences in IPv4/v6 dual stack environments. As IPv6-capable SMTP servers are deployed, it has become apparent that certain configurations of MX records are necessary for stable dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) SMTP operation. This document clarifies the problems that exist in the transition period between IPv4 SMTP and IPv6 SMTP. It also defines operational requirements for stable IPv4/v6 SMTP operation. This document does not define any new protocol. NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 1] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 1. Introduction Delivery of mail messages to the final mail drop is not always done by direct IP communication with submitter and final receiver, and there may be some intermediate hosts that relay the messages. So it is difficult to know at message submission (also at receiver side) that all intermediate relay hosts are properly configured. It is not so easy to configure all systems consistently since the DNS configuration used by mail message delivery systems is more complex than other Internet services. During the transition period from IPv4 to IPv6, more care should be applied to IPv4/v6 interoperability. This document talks about SMTP operational experiences in IPv4/v6 dual stack environments. As IPv6-capable SMTP servers are deployed, it has become apparent that certain configurations of MX records are necessary for stable dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) SMTP operation. This document does not discuss the problems encountered when the sending MTA and the receiving MTA have no common protocol (e.g. the sending MTA is IPv4-only while the receiving MTA is IPv6-only). Such a situation can be resolved by making either side dual-stack or by making either side use a protocol translator (see Appendix A on issues with protocol translator). 2. Basic DNS Resource Record Definitions for Mail Routing Mail messages on the Internet are typically delivered based on Domain Name System [Elz, 1997] . MX RRs are looked up in DNS to retrieve the names of hosts running MTAs associated with the domain part of the mail address. DNS lookup uses IN class for both IPv4 and IPv6, and similarly IN MX records will be used for both IPv4 and IPv6 for mail routing for for both IPv4 and IPv6. Hosts which have IPv6 connectivity and want to have the mails delivered also using the IPv6 must define IPv6 addresses for the host name as well as IPv4 IP addresses [Thomson, 2003] . A MX RR have two parameters, a preference value and the name of destination host. The name of destination host will be used to look up an IP address to initiate SMTP connection [Partridge, 1986] . For example, IPv6-only site may have the following DNS definitions: example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. mx1.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::1 mx10.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::2 In transition period from IPv4 to IPv6, there are many IPv4-only sites, and such sites will not have mail interoperability with IPv6-only sites. For the transition period, all mail domains should have MX records such that MX targets with IPv4 and IPv6 addresses exist, e.g, for example: NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 2] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. mx1.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::1 IN A 192.0.2.1 mx10.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::2 IN A 192.0.2.2 But, not every MX target may support dual-stack operation. Some host entries may have only A RRs or AAAA RRs: example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. mx1.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::1 mx10.example.org. IN A 192.0.2.1 The following sections discuss how the sender side should operate with IPv4/v6 combined RRs (section 3) and how the receiver should define RRs to maintain interoperability between IPv4 and IPv6 networks (section 4). 3. SMTP Sender Algorithm in a Dual-Stack Environment In a dual-stack environment MX records for a domain resemble the following: example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. mx1.example.org. IN A 192.0.2.1 ; dual-stack IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::1 mx10.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::2 ; IPv6-only For a single MX record there are multiple possible final settings, including: (a) one or more A records for the IPv4 destination, (b) one or more AAAA records for the IPv6 destination, (c) a mixture of A and AAAA records. Because multiple MX records may be defined using different preference values, multiple addresses based on multiple MX's must be traversed. Domains without MX records and failure recovery cases must be handled properly as well. The algorithm for a dual-stack SMTP sender is basically the same as that for an IPv4-only sender, but it now includes AAAA lookups of MX records for SMTP-over-IPv6 delivery. IPv4/v6 dual stack destinations should be treated just like multihomed destinations as described in RFC2821 [Klensin, 2001] section 5. When there is no usable destination address record found (for example, the sender MTA is IPv4-only and there are no A records available) the case should be treated just like MX records without address records, and deliveries should fail just like MX records without address records. NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 3] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 ; if the sender MTA is IPv4-only, email delivery to a.example.org ; should fail with the same error as deliveries to b.example.org. a.example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.a.example.org. mx1.a.example.org. IN AAAA 2001:db8:ffff::1 ; IPv6-only b.example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.b.example.org. ; no address An algorithm for a dual-stack SMTP sender is as follows: (1) Lookup the MX record for the destination domain. If a CNAME record is returned, go to the top of step (1) with replacing the destination domain by the query's result. If any MX records are returned, go to step (2) with the query's result (explicit MX). If NO_DATA (i.e. empty answer with NOERROR(0) RCODE) is returned, there is no MX record but the name is valid. Assume that there is a record like "name. IN MX 0 name." (implicit MX) and go to step (3). If HOST_NOT_FOUND (i.e. empty answer with NXDOMAIN(3) RCODE) is returned, there is no such domain. Raise a permanent email delivery failure. Finish. If SERVFAIL is returned, raise a permanent email delivery failure. Finish. (2) Compare each host name in MX records with the names of sending host. If there is any match, drop MX records which have equal to or larger than the value of the lowest-preference matching MX record (including itself). If multiple MX records remain, sort the MX records in ascending order based on their preference values. Loop over steps (3) to (9) on each host name in MX records in a sequence. If no MX records remain, the sending host must be the primary MX host. Other routing rule should be applied. Finish. (3) If the sending MTA has IPv4 capability, lookup the A records. Keep the resulting address until step (5). (4) If the sending MTA has IPv6 capability, lookup the AAAA records. NOTE: IPv6 addresses for hosts defined by MX records may be informed in additional information section of DNS queries' result as well as IPv4 addresses. If there is no additional address information for the MX hosts, separate queries for A or AAAA records should be sent. There is no way to query A and AAAA records at once in current DNS implementation. (5) If there is no A and no AAAA record present, try the next MX record (go to step (3)). Note that the next MX record could have the same preference. NOTE: If one or more address records are found, an implementation may sort addresses based on the implementation's preference of A or AAAA records. To encourage the transition from IPv4 SMTP to IPv6 SMTP, AAAA records should take precedence. The sorting may only reorder addresses from MX records of the same preference. RFC2881 section 5 paragraph 4 suggests randomization of destination addresses. Randomization should only happen among A records, and NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 4] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 among AAAA records (do not mix A and AAAA records). (6) For each of the addresses, loop over steps (7) to (9). (7) Try to make a TCP connection to the destination's SMTP port (25). The client needs to follow timeouts documented in RFC2821 section 4.5.3.2. If successful, go to step (9). (8) If unsuccessful and there is another available address, try the next available address. Go to step (7). If all addresses are not reachable and if a list of MX records is being traversed, try the next MX record (go to step (3)). If there is no list of MX records, or if the end of the list of MX records has been reached, raise a temporary email delivery failure. Finish. (9) Attempt to deliver the e-mail over the connection established, as specified in RFC2821 [Klensin, 2001] . If a transient failure condition reported, try the next MX record (go to step (3)). If an error condition reported, raise a permanent email delivery error, and further MX records are not tried. Finish. If successful, SMTP delivery has succeeded. Finish. 4. MX Configuration in the Recipient Domain 4.1. Ensuring Reachability for Both Protocol Versions If a site has dual-stack reachability, the site should configure both A and AAAA records for its MX hosts (NOTE: MX hosts can be outside of the site). This will help both IPv4 and IPv6 senders to reach the site efficiently. 4.2. Reachability Between the Primary and Secondary MX When registering MX records in a DNS database in a dual-stack environment, reachability between MX hosts must be considered carefully. Suppose all inbound email is to be gathered at the primary MX host, "mx1.example.org.": example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. IN MX 100 mx100.example.org. If "mx1.example.org" is an IPv6-only node, and the others are IPv4-only nodes, there is no reachability between the primary MX host and the other MX hosts. When email reaches one of the lower MX hosts, it cannot be relayed to the primary MX host based on MX preferencing mechanism, therefore mx1.example.org will not be able to collect all the emails (unless there is another transport mechanism(s) between lower-preference MX hosts and mx1.example.org). NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 5] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 ; This configuration is troublesome. ; No secondary MX can reach mx1.example.org. example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. ; IPv6-only IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. ; IPv4-only IN MX 100 mx100.example.org. ; IPv4-only The easiest possible configuration is to configure the primary MX host as a dual-stack node. By doing so, secondary MX hosts will have no problem reaching the primary MX host. ; This configuration works well. ; The secondary MX hosts are able to relay email to the primary MX host ; without any problems. example.org. IN MX 1 mx1.example.org. ; dual-stack IN MX 10 mx10.example.org. ; IPv4-only IN MX 100 mx100.example.org. ; IPv6-only It may not be needed that the primary MX host and lower MX hosts reach directly one another with IPv4 or IPv6 transport. For example, it is possible to establish a routing path with UUCP or an IPv4/v6 translator. It is also possible to drop messages into single mailbox with shared storage using NFS or something else offered by a dual-stack server. It is receiver site's matter that all messages delivered to each MX hosts must be reached to recipient's mail drop. In such cases, dual-stack MX host may not be listed in the MX list. 5. Operational Experience Many of the existing IPv6-ready MTA's appear to work in the way documented in section 3. There were, however, cases where IPv6-ready MTA's were confused by broken DNS servers. When attempting to obtain a canonical hostname, some broken name servers return SERVFAIL (RCODE 2), a temporary failure, on AAAA record lookups. Upon this temporary failure, the email is queued for a later attempt. In the interest of IPv4/v6 interoperability, these broken DNS servers should be fixed. A draft by Yasuhiro Morishita [Morishita, 2003] has more detail on misconfigured/misbehaving DNS servers and their bad sideeffects. 6. Open Issues o How should scoped addresses (i.e. link-local addresses) in email addresses be interpreted on MTA's? We suggest prohibiting the use of IPv6 address literals in destination specification. o A future specification of SMTP (revision of RFC2821) should be updated to include the information in this memo. NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 6] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 7. Security Considerations It could be problematic if the route-addr email address format [Crocker, 1982] (or "obs-route" address format in [Resnick, 2001] ) is used across multiple scope zones. MTAs would need to reject email with route-addr email address formats which crosses scope zone borders. Appendix A. Considreations on Translators IPv6-only MTA to IPv4-only MTA case could use help from IPv6-to-IPv4 translators such as [Hagino, 2001] . Normally there are no special SMTP considerations for translators needed. If there is SMTP traffic from an IPv6 MTA to an IPv4 MTA over an IPv6-to-IPv4 translator, the IPv4 MTA will consider this as a normal IPv4 SMTP traffic. Protocols like IDENT [St.Johns, 1993] may require special consideration when translators are used. Also, there are MTAs which perform strict check on SMTP HELO/EHLO "domain" parameter (perform reverse/forward DNS lookups and see if the "domain" really associates to the SMTP client's IP address). In such case we need a special consideration when translators are used. References Elz, 1997. R. Elz and R. Bush, "Clarifications to the DNS Specification" in RFC2181 (July 1997). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2181.txt. Thomson, 2003. S. Thomson, C. Huitema, V. Ksinant, and M. Souissi, "DNS Extensions to support IP version 6" in RFC3596 (October 2003). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in- notes/rfc3596.txt. Partridge, 1986. C. Partridge, "Mail routing and the domain system" in RFC974 (January 1986). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc974.txt. Klensin, 2001. J. Klensin, Editor, "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol" in RFC2821 (April 2001). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2821.txt. Morishita, 2003. Y. Morishita and T. Jinmei, "Common Misbehavior against DNS Queries for IPv6 Addresses" in draft-morishita-dnsop-misbehavior-against-aaaa-00.txt (June 2003). work in progress material. Crocker, 1982. D. Crocker, "Standard for the format of ARPA Internet text messages" in RFC822 (August 1982). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc822.txt. NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 7] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 Resnick, 2001. P. Resnick, editor, "Internet Message Format" in RFC2822 (April 2001). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt. Hagino, 2001. Jun-ichiro Hagino and Hal Snyder, "IPv6 multihoming support at site exit routers" in RFC3178 (October 2001). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in- notes/rfc3178.txt. St.Johns, 1993. M. St.Johns, "Identification Protocol" in RFC1413 (January 1993). ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1413.txt. Change history [This section should be removed on publication as an RFC] draft-ietf-ngtrans-ipv6-smtp-requirement-00 -> 01 Corrected the email address notation for source-routed emails, based on a comment from Gregory Neil Shapiro. 01 -> 02 Change a reference to refer to RFC2822, not 822. Used "example.org", not "sample.org". These changes were based on comments from Arnt Gulbrandsen. Added an ``Operational experiences'' section. Clarified the case where an MX record points to a CNAME record, based on comments from Mohsen Souissi. 02 -> 03 In some cases, IPv6-ready MTAs are troubled by incorrect DNS server responses for AAAA queries. This change was based on comments from Gregory Neil Shapiro. 03 -> 04 Grammar cleanups by JJ Behrens. More text on the delivery error cases. 04 -> 05 Change title, suggested by Alain Durand. Limit the scope of the document to dual stack environment (interoperation of IPv6-only cloud and IPv4-only cloud is out of scope). 05 -> 06 Section on summary of IPv4 MX operation is deleted (Replaced by Introduction). Clarify on CNAME chain. Cleanups on sender's algorithm. Suggested by Patrik Faltstrom. 06 -> 07 Site local address is being obsoleted in IPv6 wg, so remove reference to site-locals. Reflect comments from John C Klensin: fixes to sending rules, correct route-addr issues. Reflect NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 8] ^L DRAFT SMTP in Dual Stack Environments February 2004 comments from Michael A. Patton: HELO on connection via translator. Reflect comments from Robert Elz. 07 -> 08 Refer a draft by Yasuhiro Morishita. 08 -> draft-motonori-dualstack-smtp-requirement-00 Back to personal submission as suggested by ADs. Many comments from Dean Strik and Pekka Savola. Split consideration on translators into Appendix A. Acknowledgements This draft was written based on discussions with Japanese IPv6 users and help from the WIDE research group. Here is a (probably incomplete) list of people who contributed to the draft: Gregory Neil Shapiro, Arnt Gulbrandsen, Mohsen Souissi, JJ Behrens, John C Klensin, Michael A. Patton, Robert Elz, Dean Strik, and Pekka Savola. Authors' address Motonori NAKAMURA Academic Center for Computing and Media Studies, Kyoto University Yoshida-honmachi, Sakyo, Kyoto 606-8501, JAPAN Fax: +81-75-753-7450 Email: motonori@media.kyoto-u.ac.jp Jun-ichiro itojun HAGINO Research Laboratory, Internet Initiative Japan Inc. 1-105, Kanda Jinbo-cho, Chiyoda-ku,Tokyo 101-0051, JAPAN Tel: +81-3-5205-6464 Fax: +81-3-5205-6466 Email: itojun@iijlab.net NAKAMURA, HAGINO Expires: August 6, 2004 [Page 9] ^L