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| Subject: | Re: recursive DNS servers DDoS as a growing DDoS problem |
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| Date: | Tue, 21 Mar 2006 00:01:13 +0000 |
Michael Sierchio <kudzu@tenebras.com> writes:
Robert Story wrote:VG> In the scenario you describe, I cannot see any actual amplification... The amplification isn't in the number of hosts responding, but in packet size. A very small DNS request packet results in a huge response packet.Are you talking about rogue authoritative servers? Otherwise, responses will be limited to 512 bytes, possibly with the truncation bit set.
Unless it supports EDNS, in which case it may be persuaded to send larger replies. BIND does currently have "you cannot be serious" cutoff at 4096 bytes. The reason that it is more awkward to use the method against authoritative-only nameservers is that you have to find a large RRset in the wild (or one that will come with large authority and/or additional sections in the reply) and then use the authoritative nameservers for that RRset, not any old open recursive nameserver (or many of them). You cannot craft your own RRset for the purpose. But you can still get amplification, certainly. -- Chris Thompson Email: cet1@cam.ac.uk
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