Geo. wrote:
Can anyone point me at any papers that talk about security issues raised by private networks passing dns requests for RFC 1918 private address space out to their ISP's dns servers?
I've never seen the whole paper on the topic. Leaking the fact that you use 10.10.10.0/24 or whatever internally is not a big deal. It's security by obscurity of the very weak kind. Anyone with half of a clue will drop traffic with a source or destination address of their internal RFC1918 networks at the border, (and even if one uses registered addresses internally, you would be dropping traffic with a souce address of the internal network from entering at the border). That's the "real" security.
I'm aware of the issues involved with an ISP passing the requests on to the root servers but was looking specifically for security type issues relating to a private network passing the requests out to their ISP's dns servers.
These requests will not go to the root servers any more than any other reverse lookups ISP's DNS, $ dig -x 10 ns ; <<>> DiG 8.3 <<>> -x ns ;; res options: init recurs defnam dnsrch ;; got answer: ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 2 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 2 ;; QUERY SECTION: ;; 10.in-addr.arpa, type = NS, class = IN ;; ANSWER SECTION: 10.in-addr.arpa. 1W IN NS blackhole-1.iana.org. 10.in-addr.arpa. 1W IN NS blackhole-2.iana.org. ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION: blackhole-1.iana.org. 16m43s IN A 192.175.48.6 blackhole-2.iana.org. 16m43s IN A 192.175.48.42 ;; Total query time: 53 msec ;; FROM: sec-tools.corp.globalstar.com to SERVER: default -- 207.88.152.10 ;; WHEN: Tue Mar 16 09:53:44 2004 The IN-ADDR.ARPA delegations for RFC1918 space are just like any other block. You'll just end up hitting IANA's blackhole servers, and not all that much, the cache times are one week. Of course, the obvious "fix" is to run your own internal DNS which is authorative for your RFC1918 addresses. -- Crist J. Clark crist.clark@globalstar.com Globalstar Communications (408) 933-4387 The information contained in this e-mail message is confidential, intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above. If the reader of this e-mail is not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please contact postmaster@globalstar.com