Havard Eidnes <h...@uninett.no> wrote: > > > CD=1 is the wrong thing when querying a forwarder. When a > > domain is partly broken, queries that work with CD=0 can be > > forced to fail with CD=1. > > Relly? I interpreted the use of CD=1 as "I want to do my own > DNSSEC validation, and therefore don't want or need the > validation service which could be provided by the forwarder", > especially as noted above when the communication isn't secured. > It should not make much of a difference wrt. the validity of the > end result whether the forwarder or the unbound resolver does the > DNSSEC validation?
This current case is a perfect example: unbound works when it queries upstream with CD=0 but not with CD=1. If a domain is a bit broken then you can get bogus data into the upstream cache using CD=1 and subsequent CD=1 queries will receive the bogus data. If the downstream validator doesn't have an alternative resolution path it is now stuck. But if it queries with CD=0 it can get unstuck. You need to suppress bogus data at every point in the resolution path. https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/dnsop/current/msg11512.html Tony. -- f.anthony.n.finch <d...@dotat.at> http://dotat.at/ Southeast Iceland: Easterly or northeasterly, 4 or 5, occasionally 6, becoming variable 4 later in west. Moderate or rough, occasionally very rough later in south. Mainly fair. Good.