dns query id not changing
Mark Andrews
Mark_Andrews at isc.org
Thu Dec 16 23:34:31 UTC 2004
> well the issue is that this is not a retry. The linux box makes a
> successful DNS request with Transaction ID A, then the DNS Server
> replies with Transaction ID A. Then the linux box makes another
> request with ID A however the Firewall still has the original request
> in its state table so the firewall drops the reply. This is very
> inconsistent behavior, since in almost all other cases the DNS
> Transaction ID is unique per request. So i am trying to figure why in
> some situations is it not unique. If the linux box make 2 reqeusts in
> too short of a time frame for the same A record, coming from the same
> UDP port, same IP and same Transaction ID within say 30ms, the FW
> drops the request. The firewall needs some piece of informatino to
> distinguish DNS requests and it uses DNS Transaction ID.
>
> Can anyone explain why the linux resolver would use the same
> Transaction ID, isnt this supposed to be random per DNS request?
>
> adam
The issue is that the firewall is broken.
A client can re-use a transaction id as fast as it likes. They
are only there to distiguish between multiple concurrent queries.
A nameserver talking to a forwarder can issue thousands of queries
a second. It only takes a couple of seconds to cycle through the
id space (16 bits).
A firewall should just add a entry for <Saddr,Sport,Daddr,Dport,ID>
and allow *multiple* answers to come in that match that tuple for
a short period of time. If a client sends another query with
the same <Saddr,Sport,Daddr,Dport,ID> tuple it should just restart
the expiry timer. Any other behaviour is broken.
> On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 08:31:34 +1100, Mark Andrews <Mark_Andrews at isc.org> wrote
> :
> >
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > I am experiencing an issue on redhat 8 with the resolver where the
> > > "Transaction ID" in the dns query is not changing. This is causing our
> > > firewall to drop packets b/c a second dns request is coming in with the
> > > same udp port, ip, and transaction id. The firewall still has the
> > > first dns request in its state table and is causing the firewall to
> > > drop the susequent packets due to this.
> > >
> > > Has anyone encountered this issue (possibly the resolver in glibc 2.2?)
> > > and know if there is a workaround?
> > >
> > > thanks
> > > adam
> >
> > Get a decent firewall. The transaction ID is allowed
> > (expected) to be the same on retries of an query. A firewall
> > which blocks this is broken.
> >
> > --
> > Mark Andrews, ISC
> > 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
> > PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: Mark_Andrews at isc.org
> >
--
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: Mark_Andrews at isc.org
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