[enum-wg] Italian Nameservers for 9.3.164.arpa. dead?
Otmar Lendl lendl at nic.at
Mon Jan 21 22:52:29 CET 2008
On 2008/01/21 20:01, Jim Reid <jim at rfc1035.com> wrote: > On Jan 21, 2008, at 16:55, Bernie Hoeneisen wrote: > > >Would Ripe have the possibility to (temporarly) remove the > >delegation, if such situations occur? > > Personally speaking, I think this a very bad idea. I'm very reluctant to go that route, too. > As John says, a mechanism could be developed to notify a Tier-1 > registry (and ITU?) about a broken ENUM delegation. But this is > probably a discussion for the Powers That Be. It wouldn't hurt I > suppose for this WG to suggest a suitable mechanism. Any volunteers? >From the top of my head, I'd go for a procedure something like this:: * RIPE NCC monitors the nameservers it delegates to. * If serious troubles are spotted, RIPE NCC will notify the Tier1 registry using the email addresses listed as contacts. * If the communication attempts are not answered or the addresses bounce, then RIPE NCC will notify ITU about this fact. * ITU should then basically redo the verification step, asking the local authorities whether the delegation is ok (incl. giving the option for an update to the contact info). If the answer is yes, keep the delegation, if no, instruct RIPE to yank it. * If the Tier1 operators answer, but don't manage to fix theír nameservers within a longer interval, then also invoke the ITU as above. ---- ÍMHO active monitoring and alerts on troubles should be trivial to set up. No special NCC magic dust is needed for that at all, basically anybody could do that. There is no private data involved. Making sure that the contact information is valid should also a no-brainer. In this case, most other registries reserve the right to yank the delegation, so there are precedents here. But in this case, redoing the ITU loop is IMHO the best way to balance national sovereignty with some semblance of "we care for the DNS quality under e164.arpa". /ol -- // Otmar Lendl <lendl at nic.at>, T: +43 1 5056416 - 33, F: - 933 // nic.at Internet Verwaltungs- und Betriebsgesellschaft m.b.H // http://www.nic.at/ LG Salzburg, FN 172568b, Sitz: Salzburg
[ enum-wg Archives ]