Domain Name System Operations | J. Kristoff |
Internet-Draft | DePaul University |
Updates: 1123 (if approved) | D. Wessels |
Intended status: Best Current Practice | Verisign |
Expires: May 5, 2020 | November 2, 2019 |
DNS Transport over TCP - Operational Requirements
draft-ietf-dnsop-dns-tcp-requirements-05
This document encourages the practice of permitting DNS messages to be carried over TCP on the Internet. This includes both DNS over unencrypted TCP, as well as over an encrypted TLS session. The document also considers the consequences with this form of DNS communication and the potential operational issues that can arise when this best common practice is not upheld.
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DNS messages may be delivered using UDP or TCP communications. While most DNS transactions are carried over UDP, some operators have been led to believe that any DNS over TCP traffic is unwanted or unnecessary for general DNS operation. When DNS over TCP has been restricted, a variety of communication failures and debugging challenges often arise. As DNS and new naming system features have evolved, TCP as a transport has become increasingly important for the correct and safe operation of an Internet DNS. Reflecting modern usage, the DNS standards were recently updated to declare support for TCP is now a required part of the DNS implementation specifications.[RFC7766] This document is the formal requirements equivalent for the operational community, encouraging system administrators, network engineers, and security staff to ensure DNS over TCP communications support is on par with DNS over UDP communications.
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 RFC 2119.
The curious state of disagreement in operational best practices and guidance for DNS transport protocols derives from conflicting messages operators have gotten from other operators, implementors, and even the IETF. Sometimes these mixed signals have been explicit, on other occasions they have suspiciously implicit. This section presents an interpretation of the storied and conflicting history that led to this document.
In the original suite of DNS specifications, [RFC1034] and [RFC1035] clearly specified that DNS messages could be carried in either UDP or TCP, but they also stated a preference for UDP as the best transport for queries in the general case. As stated in [RFC1035]:
Another early, important, and influential document, [RFC1123], marked the preference for a transport protocol more explicitly:
and further stipulated:
Culminating in [RFC1536], DNS over TCP came to be associated primarily with the zone transfer mechanism, while most DNS queries and responses were seen as the dominion of UDP.
In the original specifications, the maximum DNS over UDP message size was enshrined at 512 bytes. However, even while [RFC1123] preferred UDP for non-zone transfer queries, it foresaw DNS over TCP becoming more popular in the future to overcome this limitation:
At least two new, widely anticipated developments were set to elevate the need for DNS over TCP transactions. The first was dynamic updates defined in [RFC2136] and the second was the set of extensions collectively known as DNSSEC originally specified in [RFC2541]. The former suggested "requestors who require an accurate response code must use TCP", while the later warned "[...] larger keys increase the size of KEY and SIG RRs. This increases the chance of DNS UDP packet overflow and the possible necessity for using higher overhead TCP in responses."
Yet defying some expectations, DNS over TCP remained little used in real traffic across the Internet. Dynamic updates saw little deployment between autonomous networks. Around the time DNSSEC was first defined, another new feature helped solidify UDP transport dominance for message transactions.
In 1999 the IETF published the Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0) in [RFC2671] (superseded in 2013 by an update in [RFC6891]). This document standardized a way for communicating DNS nodes to perform rudimentary capabilities negotiation. One such capability written into the base specification and present in every ENDS0 compatible message is the value of the maximum UDP payload size the sender can support. This unsigned 16-bit field specifies in bytes the maximum (possibly fragmented) DNS message size a node is capable of receiving. In practice, typical values are a subset of the 512 to 4096 byte range. EDNS0 became widely deployed over the next several years and numerous surveys have shown many systems currently support larger UDP MTUs [CASTRO2010], [NETALYZR] with EDNS0.
The natural effect of EDNS0 deployment meant DNS messages larger than 512 bytes would be less reliant on TCP than they might otherwise have been. While a non-negligible population of DNS systems lacked EDNS0 or fall back to TCP when necessary, DNS over TCP transactions remained a very small fraction of overall DNS traffic [VERISIGN].
Although EDNS0 provides a way for endpoints to signal support for DNS messages exceeding 512 bytes, the realities of a diverse and inconsistently deployed Internet may result in some large messages being unable to reach their destination. Any IP datagram whose size exceeds the MTU of a link it transits will be fragmented and then reassembled by the receiving host. Unfortunately, it is not uncommon for middleboxes and firewalls to block IP fragments. If one or more fragments do not arrive, the application does not receive the message and the request times out.
For IPv4-connected hosts, the de-facto MTU is often the Ethernet payload size of 1500 bytes. This means that the largest unfragmented UDP DNS message that can be sent over IPv4 is likely 1472 bytes. For IPv6, the situation is a little more complicated. First, IPv6 headers are 40 bytes (versus 20 without options in IPv4). Second, it seems as though some people have mis-interpreted IPv6's required minimum MTU of 1280 as a required maximum. Third, fragmentation in IPv6 can only be done by the host originating the datagram. The need to fragment is conveyed in an ICMPv6 "packet too big" message. The originating host indicates a fragmented datagram with IPv6 extension headers. Unfortunately, it is quite common for both ICMPv6 and IPv6 extension headers to be blocked by middleboxes. According to [HUSTON] some 35% of IPv6-capable recursive resolvers were unable to receive a fragmented IPv6 packet.
The practical consequence of all this is that DNS requestors must be prepared to retry queries with different EDNS0 maximum message size values. Administrators of BIND are likely to be familiar with seeing "success resolving ... after reducing the advertised EDNS0 UDP packet size to 512 octets" messages in their system logs.
Often, reducing the EDNS0 UDP packet size leads to a successful response. That is, the necessary data fits within the smaller message size. However, when the data does not fit, the server sets the truncated flag in its response, indicating the client should retry over TCP to receive the whole response. This is undesirable from the client's point of view because it adds more latency, and potentially undesirable from the server's point of view due to the increased resource requirements of TCP.
The issues around fragmentation, truncation, and TCP are driving certain implementation and policy decisions in the DNS. Notably, Cloudflare implemented what it calls "DNSSEC black lies" [CLOUDFLARE] and uses ECDSA algorithms, such that their signed responses fit easily in 512 bytes. The KSK Rollover design team [DESIGNTEAM] spent a lot of time thinking and worrying about response sizes. There is growing sentiment in the DNSSEC community that RSA key sizes beyond 2048-bits are impractical and that critical infrastructure zones should transition to elliptic curve algorithms to keep response sizes manageable.
More recently, renewed security concerns about fragmented DNS messages [AVOID_FRAGS], [FRAG_POISON] are leading implementors to consider lower default EDNS0 UDP payload size values, for both queriers and responders.
Today, the majority of the DNS community expects, or at least has a desire, to see DNS over TCP transactions occur without interference. However there has also been a long held belief by some operators, particularly for security-related reasons, that DNS over TCP services should be purposely limited or not provided at all [CHES94], [DJBDNS]. A popular meme has also held the imagination of some that DNS over TCP is only ever used for zone transfers and is generally unnecessary otherwise, with filtering all DNS over TCP traffic even described as a best practice.
The position on restricting DNS over TCP had some justification given that historic implementations of DNS nameservers provided very little in the way of TCP connection management (for example see Section 6.1.2 of [RFC7766] for more details). However modern standards and implementations are nearing parity with the more sophisticated TCP management techniques employed by, for example, HTTP(S) servers and load balancers.
An average increase in DNS message size (e.g., due to DNSSEC), the continued development of new DNS features [Appendix A], and a denial of service mitigation technique [Section 9] have suggested that DNS over TCP transactions are as important to the correct and safe operation of the Internet DNS as ever, if not more so. Furthermore, there has been serious research that argues connection-oriented DNS transactions may provide security and privacy advantages over UDP transport. [TDNS] In fact [RFC7858], a Standards Track document, is just this sort of specification. Therefore, this document makes explicit that it is undesirable for network operators to artificially inhibit DNS over TCP transport.
Section 6.1.3.2 in [RFC1123] is updated: All DNS resolvers and servers MUST support and service both UDP and TCP queries. [RFC1123] also says:
Regarding the choice of limiting the resources a server devotes to queries, Section 6.1.3.2 in
This requirement is hereby updated: A name server MAY limit the the resources it devotes to queries, but it MUST NOT refuse to service a query just because it would have succeeded with another transport protocol.
Filtering of DNS over TCP is considered harmful in the general case. DNS resolver and server operators MUST suport and provide DNS service over both UDP and TCP transports. Likewise, network operators MUST allow DNS service over both UDP and TCP transports. It is acknowledged that DNS over TCP service can pose operational challenges that are not present when running DNS over UDP alone, and vice-versa. However, it is the aim of this document to argue that the potential damage incurred by prohibiting DNS over TCP service is more detrimental to the continued utility and success of the DNS than when its usage is allowed.
This section describes measures that systems and applications can take to optimize performance over TCP and to protect themselves from TCP-based resource exhaustion and attacks.
The SYN flooding attack is a denial-of-service method affecting hosts that run TCP server processes [RFC4987]. This attack can be very effective if not mitigated. One of the most effective mitigation techniques is SYN cookies, which allows the server to avoid allocating any state until the successful completion of the three-way handshake.
Services not intended for use by the public Internet, such as most recursive name servers, SHOULD be protected with access controls. Ideally these controls are placed in the network, well before before any unwanted TCP packets can reach the DNS server host or application. If this is not possible, the controls can be placed in the application itself. In some situations (e.g. attacks) it may be necessary to deploy access controls for DNS services that should otherwise be globally reachable.
The FreeBSD operating system has an "accept filter" feature that postpones delivery of TCP connections to applications until a complete, valid request has been received. The dns_accf(9) filter ensures that a valid DNS message is received. If not, the bogus connection never reaches the application. Applications must be coded and configured to make use of this filter.
Per [RFC7766], applications and administrators are advised to remember that TCP MAY be used before sending any UDP queries. Networks and applications MUST NOT be configured to refuse TCP queries that were not preceded by a UDP query.
TCP Fast Open [RFC7413] (TFO) allows TCP clients to shorten the handshake for subsequent connections to the same server. TFO saves one round-trip time in the connection setup. DNS servers SHOULD enable TFO when possible. Furthermore, DNS servers clustered behind a single service address (e.g., anycast or load-balancing), SHOULD use the same TFO server key on all instances.
DNS clients MAY also enable TFO when possible. Currently, on some operating systems it is not implemented or disabled by default. [WIKIPEDIA_TFO] describes applications and operating systems that support TFO.
Since host memory for TCP state is a finite resource, DNS servers MUST actively manage their connections. Applications that do not actively manage their connections can encounter resource exhaustion leading to denial of service. For DNS, as in other protocols, there is a tradeoff between keeping connections open for potential future use and the need to free up resources for new connections that will arrive.
DNS server software SHOULD provide a configurable limit on the total number of established TCP connections. If the limit is reached, the application is expected to either close existing (idle) connections or refuse new connections. Operators SHOULD ensure the limit is configured appropriately for their particular situation.
DNS server software MAY provide a configurable limit on the number of established connections per source IP address or subnet. This can be used to ensure that a single or small set of users can not consume all TCP resources and deny service to other users. Operators SHOULD ensure this limit is configured appropriately, based on their number of diversity of users.
DNS server software SHOULD provide a configurable timeout for idle TCP connections. For very busy name servers this might be set to a low value, such as a few seconds. For less busy servers it might be set to a higher value, such as tens of seconds. DNS clients and servers SHOULD signal their timeout values using the edns-tcp-keepalive option.[RFC7828]
DNS server software MAY provide a configurable limit on the number of transactions per TCP connection. This document does not offer advice on particular values for such a limit.
Similarly, DNS server software MAY provide a configurable limit on the total duration of a TCP connection. This document does not offer advice on particular values for such a limit.
Since clients may not be aware of server-imposed limits, clients utilizing TCP for DNS need to always be prepared to re-establish connections or otherwise retry outstanding queries.
In general, it is preferable for clients to initiate the close of a TCP connection. The TCP peer that initiates a connection close retains the socket in the TIME_WAIT state for some amount of time, possibly a few minutes. On a busy server, the accumulation of many sockets in TIME_WAIT can cause performance problems or even denial of service.
On systems where large numbers of sockets in TIME_WAIT are observed, it may be beneficial to tune the local TCP parameters. For example, the Linux kernel provides a number of "sysctl" parameters related to TIME_WAIT, such as net.ipv4.tcp_fin_timeout, net.ipv4.tcp_tw_recycle, and net.ipv4.tcp_tw_reuse. In extreme cases, implementors and operators of very busy servers may find it necessary to utilize the SO_LINGER socket option ([Stevens] Section 7.5) with a value of zero so that the server doesn't accumulate TIME_WAIT sockets.
Networks that filter DNS over TCP risk losing access to significant or important pieces of the DNS name space. For a variety of reasons a DNS answer may require a DNS over TCP query. This may include large message sizes, lack of EDNS0 support, DDoS mitigation techniques, or perhaps some future capability that is as yet unforeseen will also demand TCP transport.
For example, [RFC7901] describes a latency-avoiding technique that sends extra data in DNS responses. This makes responses larger and potentially increases the risk of DDoS reflection attacks. The specification mandates the use of TCP or DNS Cookies.[RFC7873]
Even if any or all particular answers have consistently been returned successfully with UDP in the past, this continued behavior cannot be guaranteed when DNS messages are exchanged between autonomous systems. Therefore, filtering of DNS over TCP is considered harmful and contrary to the safe and successful operation of the Internet. This section enumerates some of the known risks known at the time of this writing when networks filter DNS over TCP.
Networks that filter DNS over TCP may inadvertently cause problems for third party resolvers as experienced by [TOYAMA]. If for instance a resolver receives a truncated answer from a server, but when the resolver resends the query using TCP and the TCP response never arrives, not only will a complete answer be unavailable, but the resolver will incur the full extent of TCP retransmissions and time outs. This situation might place extreme strain on resolver resources. If the number and frequency of these truncated answers are sufficiently high, the steady-state of lost resources as a result is a "DNS wedgie". A DNS wedgie is generally not easily or completely mitigated by the affected DNS resolver operator.
The plans for deploying a new root zone DNSSEC KSK highlighted a potential problem in retrieving the keys.[LEWIS] During some phases of the KSK rollover process, root zone DNSKEY reponses were larger than 1280 bytes, the IPv6 minimum MTU for links carrying IPv6 traffic.[RFC2460] There was some concern that any DNS server unable to receive large DNS messages over UDP, or any DNS message over TCP, would experience disruption while performing DNSSEC validation.
However, during the year-long posponment of the KSK rollover there were no reported problems that could be attributed to the 1414 octet DNSKEY response when both the old and new keys were publised in the zone. Additionaly, there were no reported problems during the two month period when the old key was published as revoked and the DNSKEY response was 1425 octets in size.[ROLL_YOUR_ROOT]
DNS messages may be sent over TLS to provide privacy between stubs and recursive resolvers. [RFC7858] is a standards track document describing how this works. Although it utilizes TCP port 853 instead of port 53, this document applies equally well to DNS-over-TLS. Note, however, DNS-over-TLS is currently only defined between stubs and recursives.
The use of TLS places even stronger operational burdens on DNS clients and servers. Cryptographic functions for authentication and encryption require additional processing. Unoptimized connection setup takes two additional round-trips compared to TCP, but can be reduced with Fast TLS connection resumption [RFC5077] and TLS False Start [RFC7918].
Developers of applications that log or monitor DNS are advised to not ignore TCP because it is rarely used or because it is hard to process. Operators are advised to ensure that their monitoring and logging applications properly capture DNS message over TCP. Otherwise, attacks, exfiltration attempts, and normal traffic may go undetected.
DNS messages over TCP are in no way guaranteed to arrive in single segments. In fact, a clever attacker may attempt to hide certain messages by forcing them over very small TCP segments. Applications that capture network packets (e.g., with libpcap) should be prepared to implement and perform full TCP segment reassembly. dnscap [dnscap] is an open-source example of a DNS logging program that implements TCP reassembly.
Developers should also keep in mind connection reuse, pipelining, and out-of-order responses when building and testing DNS monitoring applications.
This document was initially motivated by feedback from students who pointed out that they were hearing contradictory information about filtering DNS over TCP messages. Thanks in particular to a teaching colleague, JPL, who perhaps unknowingly encouraged the initial research into the differences of what the community has historically said and did. Thanks to all the NANOG 63 attendees who provided feedback to an early talk on this subject.
The following individuals provided an array of feedback to help improve this document: Piet Barber, Sara Dickinson, Bob Harold, Tatuya Jinmei, and Paul Hoffman. The authors are also indebted to the contributions stemming from discussion in the tcpm working group meeting at IETF 104. Any remaining errors or imperfections are the sole responsibility of the document authors.
This memo includes no request to IANA.
Ironically, returning truncated DNS over UDP answers in order to induce a client query to switch to DNS over TCP has become a common response to source address spoofed, DNS denial-of-service attacks [RRL]. Historically, operators have been wary of TCP-based attacks, but in recent years, UDP-based flooding attacks have proven to be the most common protocol attack on the DNS. Nevertheless, a high rate of short-lived DNS transactions over TCP may pose challenges. While many operators have provided DNS over TCP service for many years without duress, past experience is no guarantee of future success.
DNS over TCP is not unlike many other Internet TCP services. TCP threats and many mitigation strategies have been well documented in a series of documents such as [RFC4953], [RFC4987], [RFC5927], and [RFC5961].
Since DNS over both UDP and TCP use the same underlying message format, the use of one transport instead of the other does change the privacy characteristics of the message content (i.e., the name being queried). DNS over TLS or DTLS is the recommended way to achieve DNS privacy.
Because TCP is somewhat more complex than UDP, some characteristics of a TCP conversation may enable fingerprinting and tracking that is not possible with UDP. For example, the choice of initial sequence numbers, window size, and options might be able to identify a particular TCP implementation, or even individual hosts behind shared resources such as network address translators (NATs).
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997. |
This section enumerates all known IETF RFC documents that are currently of status standard, informational, best common practice or experimental and either implicitly or explicitly make assumptions or statements about the use of TCP as a transport for the DNS germane to this document.
The internet standard [RFC1035] is the base DNS specification that explicitly defines support for DNS over TCP.
The informational document [RFC1536] states UDP is the "chosen protocol for communication though TCP is used for zone transfers." That statement should now be considered in its historical context and is no longer a proper reflection of modern expectations.
The [RFC1995] standards track document documents the use of TCP as the fallback transport when IXFR responses do not fit into a single UDP response. As with AXFR, IXFR messages are typically delivered over TCP by default in practice.
The [RFC1996] standards track document suggests a zone master may decide to issue NOTIFY messages over TCP. In practice NOTIFY messages are generally sent over UDP, but this specification leaves open the possibility that the choice of transport protocol is up to the master, and therefore a slave ought to be able to operate over both UDP and TCP.
The [RFC2181] standards track document includes clarifying text on how a client should react to the TC flag set on responses. It is advised the the response should be discarded and the query resent using TCP.
The informational document [RFC2694] enumerates considerations for network address translation (NAT) middle boxes to properly handle DNS traffic. This document is noteworthy in its suggestion that DNS over TCP is "[t]ypically" used for zone transfer requests, further evidence that helps explain why DNS over TCP may often have been treated very differently than DNS over UDP in operational networks.
The [RFC3225] standards track document makes statements indicating DNS over TCP is "detrimental" as a result of increased traffic, latency, and server load. This document is a companion to the next document in the RFC series expressing the requirement for EDNS0 support for DNSSEC.
The [RFC3226] standards track document, although updated by later DNSSEC strongly argued in favor of UDP messages over TCP largely for performance reasons. The document declares EDNS0 a requirement for DNSSEC servers and advocated packet fragmentation may be preferable to TCP in certain situations
This informational document [RFC4472] notes that IPv6 data may increase DNS responses beyond what would fit in a UDP message. Particularly noteworthy, perhaps less common today then when this document was written, refers to implementations that truncate data without setting the TC bit to encourge the client to resend the query using TCP.
This informational document [RFC5452] arose as public DNS systems began to experience widespread abuse from spoofed queries, resulting in amplification and reflection attacks against unwitting victims. One of the leading justifications for supporting DNS over TCP to thwart these attacks is briefly described in this document's 9.3 Spoof Detection and Countermeasure section.
This informational document [RFC5507] was largely an attempt to dissuade new DNS data types from overloading the TXT resource record type. In so doing it summarizes the conventional wisdom of DNS design and implementation practices. The authors suggest TCP overhead and stateful properties pose challenges compared to UDP, and imply that UDP is generally preferred for performance and robustness.
This best current practice document [RFC5625] provides DNS proxy implementation guidance including the mandate that a proxy "MUST [...] be prepared to receive and forward queries over TCP" even though it suggests historically TCP transport has not been strictly mandatory in stub resolvers or recursive servers.
The [RFC5936] standards track document provides a detailed specification for the zone transfer protocol, as originally outlined in the early DNS standards. AXFR operation is limited to TCP and not specified for UDP. This document discusses TCP usage at length.
This standards track document [RFC5966] instructs DNS implementers to provide support for carrying DNS over TCP messages in their software. The authors explicitly make no recommendations to operators, which we seek to address here.
[RFC6304] is an informational document enumerating the requirements for operation of AS112 project DNS servers. New AS112 nodes are tested for their ability to provide service on both UDP and TCP transports, with the implication that TCP service is an expected part of normal operations.
In this standards track document [RFC6762] the TC bit is deemed to have essentially the same meaning as described in the original DNS specifications. That is, if a response with the TCP bit set is receiver "[...] the querier SHOULD reissue its query using TCP in order to receive the larger response."
This standards track document [RFC6891] helped slow the use and need for DNS over TCP messages. This document highlights concerns over server load and scalability in widespread use of DNS over TCP.
An informational document [RFC6950] that draws attention to large data in the DNS. TCP is referenced in the context as a common fallback mechnanism and counter to some spoofing attacks.
This standards track document [RFC7477] specifies a RRType and protocol to signal and synchronize NS, A, and AAAA resource record changes from a child to parent zone. Since this protocol may require multiple requests and responses, it recommends utilizing DNS over TCP to ensure the conversation takes place between a consistent pair of end nodes.
This best current practice[RFC7720] declares root name service "MUST support UDP [RFC768] and TCP [RFC793] transport of DNS queries and responses."
The standards track document [RFC7766] might be considered the direct ancestor of this operational requirements document. The implementation requirements document codifies mandatory support for DNS over TCP in compliant DNS software.
This standards track document [RFC7828] defines an EDNS0 option to negotiate an idle timeout value for long-lived DNS over TCP connections. Consequently, this document is only applicable and relevant to DNS over TCP sessions and between implementations that support this option.
This standards track document [RFC7858] defines a method for putting DNS messages into a TCP-based encrypted channel using TLS. This specification is noteworthy for explicitly targetting the stub-to-recursive traffic, but does not preclude its application from recursive-to-authoritative traffic.
This standards track document [RFC7873] describes an EDNS0 option to provide additional protection against query and answer forgery. This specification mentions DNS over TCP as a reasonable fallback mechanism when DNS Cookies are not available. The specification does make mention of DNS over TCP processing in two specific situations. In one, when a server receives only a client cookie in a request, the server should consider whether the request arrived over TCP and if so, it should consider accepting TCP as sufficient to authenticate the request and respond accordingly. In another, when a client receives a BADCOOKIE reply using a fresh server cookie, the client should retry using TCP as the transport.
This experimental specification [RFC7901] describes an EDNS0 option that can be used by a security-aware validating resolver to request and obtain a complete DNSSEC validation path for any single query. This document requires the use of DNS over TCP or a source IP address verified transport mechanism such as EDNS-COOKIE.[RFC7873]
This document [RFC8027] details observed problems with DNSSEC deployment and mitigation techniques. Network traffic blocking and restrictions, including DNS over TCP messages, are highlighted as one reason for DNSSEC deployment issues. While this document suggests these sorts of problems are due to "non-compliant infrastructure" and is of type BCP, the scope of the document is limited to detection and mitigation techniques to avoid so-called DNSSEC roadblocks.
This experimental specification [RFC8094] details a protocol that uses a datagram transport (UDP), but stipulates that "DNS clients and servers that implement DNS over DTLS MUST also implement DNS over TLS in order to provide privacy for clients that desire Strict Privacy [...]". This requirement implies DNS over TCP must be supported in case the message size is larger than the path MTU.
This experimental specification [RFC8162] describes a technique to authenticate user X.509 certificates in an S/MIME system via the DNS. The document points out that the new experimental resource record types are expected to carry large payloads, resulting in the suggestion that "applications SHOULD use TCP -- not UDP -- to perform queries for the SMIMEA resource record."
An informational document [RFC8324] that briefly discusses the common role and challenges of DNS over TCP throughout the history of DNS.
An experimental document [RFC8467] reminds implementers to consider the underlying transport protocol (e.g. TCP) when calculating the padding length when artificially increasing the DNS message size with an EDNS(0) padding option.
This informational document [RFC8483] describes a testbed environment that highlights some DNS over TCP behaviors, including issues involving packet fragmentation and operational requirements for TCP stream assembly in order to conduct DNS measurement and analysis.
This standards track document [RFC8484] defines a protocol for sending DNS queries and responses over HTTPS. This specification assumes TLS and TCP for the underlying security and transport layers respectively. Self-described as a a technique that more closely resembles a tunneling mechanism, DoH nevertheless likely implies DNS over TCP in some sense if not directly.
This standards track document [RFC8490] updates the base protocol specification with a new OPCODE to help manage stateful operations in persistent sessions such as those that might be used by DNS over TCP.
This informational document [RFC8501] identifies potential operational challenges with Dynamic DNS including denial-of-service threats. The document suggests TCP may provide some advantages, but that updating hosts would need to be explicitly configured to use TCP instead of UDP.