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<!-- [CS] updated by Chris 07/13/23 -->

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<!DOCTYPE rfc [
 <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
 <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
 <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
 <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>

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"prepped" format, we created an "unprepped" file so that we could
edit the document properly.  This does not impact the document's
text but resulted in many changes to the XML code. -->

<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
     version="3"
     submissionType="independent"
     category="info"
     docName="draft-schanzen-gns-28"
     number="0000"
     ipr="trust200902"
     sortRefs="false"
     symRefs="true"
     tocDepth="3"
     tocInclude="true"
     updates=""
     obsoletes=""
     xml:lang="en">

  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 2.26.0 -->
 <front>
    <title abbrev="The GNU Name System">The GNU Name System</title>
    <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="0000"/>
    <author fullname="Martin Schanzenbach" initials="M." surname="Schanzenbach">
      <organization>Fraunhofer AISEC</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Lichtenbergstrasse 11</street>
          <city>Garching</city>
          <code>85748</code>
          <country>Germany</country>
        </postal>
        <email>martin.schanzenbach@aisec.fraunhofer.de</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author fullname="Christian Grothoff" initials="C." surname="Grothoff">
      <organization>Berner Fachhochschule</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Hoeheweg 80</street>
          <city>Biel/Bienne</city>
          <code>2501</code>
          <country>Switzerland</country>
        </postal>
        <email>christian.grothoff@bfh.ch</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author fullname="Bernd Fix" initials="B." surname="Fix">
      <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Boltzmannstrasse 3</street>
          <city>Garching</city>
          <code>85748</code>
          <country>Germany</country>
        </postal>
        <email>fix@gnunet.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date month="October" year="2023"/>
    <keyword>name systems</keyword>

<!-- [rfced] Datatracker "idnits" output for the original approved
document included the following warning.  Although an author recently
referred to the lines indicated in this warning as "false positives",
please let us know if any changes are needed as related to this
warning:

 == There are 6 instances of lines with non-RFC2606-compliant FQDNs in
    the document. -->

    <abstract>
      <t>
      This document provides the GNU Name System (GNS) technical
      specification.
      GNS is a decentralized and censorship-resistant domain name
      resolution protocol that provides a privacy-enhancing alternative to the
      Domain Name System (DNS) protocols.
      </t>
      <t>
      This document defines the normative wire format of resource records,
      resolution processes, cryptographic routines, and security and privacy
      considerations for use by implementers.
      </t>
      <t>
      This specification was developed outside the IETF and does not have
      IETF consensus.  It is published here to inform readers about the
      function of GNS, guide future GNS implementations, and ensure
      interoperability among implementations including with the pre-existing
      GNUnet implementation.

<!-- [rfced] Abstract and subsequent:  To what does "including" refer
in the following sentences?  If our suggestions are incorrect, please
clarify the text in each sentence.

Original:
 It is published here to inform readers about the
 function of GNS, guide future GNS implementations, and ensure
 interoperability among implementations including with the pre-
 existing GNUnet implementation.
...
 When names are resolved, signatures on resource
 records including delegations are verified by the recursive
 resolver.
...
 In the remainder of this document, the "implementer" refers to the
 developer building a GNS implementation including the resolver, zone
 master, and supporting configuration such as start zones (see
 Section 7.1).
...
 The encoding and decoding symbols for Base32GNS including
 this modification are defined in Figure 30.
...
 It
 defines the context in which the signature is created so that it
 cannot be reused in other parts of the protocol including possible
 future extensions.
...
 It
 defines the context in which the signature is created so that it
 cannot be reused in other parts of the protocol including possible
 future extensions.

Suggested:
 It is published here to inform readers about the
 function of the GNS, guide future GNS implementations, and ensure
 interoperability among implementations (for example, pre-
 existing GNUnet implementations).
...
 When names are resolved, signatures on resource
 records, including delegations, are verified by the recursive
 resolver.
...
 In the remainder of this document, the "implementer" refers to the
 developer who builds a GNS implementation that includes the
 resolver, zone master, and supporting configuration such as start
 zones (see Section 7.1).
...
 The encoding and decoding symbols for Base32GNS, including
 this variation, are defined in Table 4 (Appendix C).
...
 It
 defines the context in which the signature is created so that it
 cannot be reused in other parts of the protocol that might include
 possible future extensions.
...
 It
 defines the context in which the signature is created so that it
 cannot be reused in other parts of the protocol that might include
 possible future extensions. -->

      </t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <middle>

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Should any artwork element be tagged as sourcecode?  For example,
should the "GET / HTTP/1.1" entries in Appendix A.3 be sourcecode
with type="http-message", and should the test-vector entries in
Appendix D be sourcecode with type="test-vectors"?

Please see
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/materials/sourcecode-types.txt>; if the
current list of preferred values for "type" does not contain an
applicable type, please let us know.  Also, it is acceptable to leave
the "type" attribute unset. -->

<!-- [rfced] The following author comments, as found in the original
XML file, appear to be pending.  Is any action required for the
following?

 FIXME: Is this really really necessary? Really?
 FIXME: add non-normative reference to Tor / Tor hidden services here?
 FIXME replace with RFC
 Check if we want to use RFC8032 instead of paper ed25519 -->

    <section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>
       This specification describes the GNU Name System (GNS), a
       censorship-resistant, privacy-preserving, and decentralized
       domain name resolution protocol.  GNS cryptographically secures
       the binding of names to arbitrary tokens, enabling it to double
       in some respects as an alternative to some of today's public
       key infrastructures.
      </t>
      <t>
       Per Domain Name System (DNS) terminology <xref target="RFC1035"/>, GNS roughly follows the idea of a local
       root zone deployment (see <xref target="RFC8806"/>), with the
       difference that the design encourages alternative roots and
       does not expect all deployments to use the same or any specific
       root zone.  In the GNS reference implementation, users can
       autonomously and freely delegate control of names to zones
       through their local configurations.
       GNS expects each user to be in control of their setup.
       By following the guidelines in <xref target="namespace_ambiguity"/>,
       users should manage to avoid any confusion as to how names are
       resolved.
      </t>
      <t>
       Name resolution and zone dissemination are based on the
       principle of a petname system where users can assign local
       names to zones.  The GNS has its roots in ideas from the Simple
       Distributed Security Infrastructure <xref target="SDSI"/>,
       enabling the decentralized mapping of secure identifiers to
       memorable names.  One of the first academic descriptions of the
       cryptographic ideas behind GNS can be found in <xref target="GNS"/>.

<!-- [rfced] Section 1:  As there can only be one "first", we changed
"A first" to "One of the first" here.  If this is incorrect, please
provide clarifying text.

Original:
 A first academic description of the
 cryptographic ideas behind GNS can be found in [GNS].

Currently:
 One of the first academic
 descriptions of the cryptographic ideas behind GNS can be found in
 [GNS]. -->

      </t>
      <t>
       This document defines the normative wire format of resource
       records, resolution processes, cryptographic routines, and
       security and privacy considerations for use by implementers.
      </t>
      <t>
       This specification was developed outside the IETF and does not have
       IETF consensus.  It is published here to guide implementers of GNS
       and to ensure interoperability among implementations.
      </t>
      <section>
        <name>Requirements Notation</name>
         <t>The key words "<bcp14>MUST</bcp14>", "<bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14>",
         "<bcp14>REQUIRED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL</bcp14>",
         "<bcp14>SHALL NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14>",
         "<bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14>",
         "<bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14>",
         "<bcp14>MAY</bcp14>", and "<bcp14>OPTIONAL</bcp14>" in this document
         are to be interpreted as described in BCP&nbsp;14
         <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only
         when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section>
      <name>Terminology</name>
      <dl newline="false">
        <dt>Apex Label:</dt>
        <dd>
         This type of label is used to publish resource
         records in a zone that can be resolved without providing a specific
         label. It is the GNS method for providing what is called the "zone apex" in DNS
         <xref target="RFC4033"/>.
         The apex label is represented using the character U+0040 ("@" without the quotes).
       </dd>
        <dt>Application:</dt>
        <dd>
         An application is a component that uses a GNS implementation
         to resolve names into records and processes its contents.
       </dd>
        <dt>Blinded Zone Key:</dt>
        <dd>
         The blinded zone key is a key derived from a zone key and a label.
         The zone key and any blinded zone key derived from it are unlinkable
         without knowledge of the specific label used for the derivation.
       </dd>
        <dt>Extension Label:</dt>
        <dd>
         This type of label is used to refer to the authoritative zone that the record is in.
         The primary use for the extension label is in redirections where the redirection
         target is defined relative to the authoritative zone of the redirection
         record (see <xref target="gnsrecords_redirect"/>).
         The extension label is represented using the character U+002B ("+" without the quotes).
       </dd>
        <dt>Label Separator:</dt>
        <dd>
         Labels in a name are separated using the label separator U+002E
         ("." without the quotes).
         In GNS, except for zone Top-Level Domains (zTLDs)
         (see below) and boxed records (see <xref target="gnsrecords_box"/>),
         every label separator in a name indicates delegation to another zone.
       </dd>
        <dt>Label:</dt>
        <dd>
         A GNS label is a label as defined in <xref target="RFC8499"/>.
         Labels are UTF-8 strings in Unicode
         Normalization Form C (NFC) <xref target="Unicode-UAX15"/>.
         The apex label and the extension label have
         special purposes in the resolution protocol that are defined
         in the rest of this document.
         Zone administrators <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> disallow certain labels that
         might be easily confused with other labels through registration policies
         (see also <xref target="security_abuse"/>).
       </dd>
        <dt>Name:</dt>
        <dd>
         A name in GNS is a domain name as defined in  <xref target="RFC8499"/>:
         names are UTF-8 strings <xref target="RFC3629"/> consisting of an
         ordered list of labels concatenated with a label separator.
         Names are resolved starting from the rightmost label.
         GNS does not impose length restrictions on names or labels.
         However, applications <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> ensure that name and label lengths are
         compatible with DNS and, in particular, Internationalized Domain Names for
         Applications (IDNA) <xref target="RFC5890"/>.
         In the spirit of <xref target="RFC5895"/>, applications <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> preprocess
         names and labels to ensure compatibility with DNS or support
         specific user expectations -- for example, according to
         <xref target="Unicode-UTS46"/>.
         A GNS name may be indistinguishable from a DNS name, and care must
         be taken by applications and implementers when handling GNS names
         (see <xref target="namespace_ambiguity"/>).
         In order to avoid misinterpretation of example domains with (reserved)
         DNS domains, this document uses the suffix ".gns.alt" in examples which
         is also registered in the GANA ".alt Subdomains" registry
         <xref target="GANA"/> (see also <xref target="RFC9476"/>).

<!-- [rfced] Section 2:  To what does "in examples which is" refer?
Should it say "in examples that are" or something else?  Please
clarify.

Original:
 In order to avoid misinterpretation of example
 domains with (reserved) DNS domains this draft uses the suffix
 ".gns.alt" in examples which is also registered in the GANA ".alt
 Subdomains" registry [GANA] (see also [I-D.ietf-dnsop-alt-tld]). -->

       </dd>
        <dt>Resolver:</dt>
        <dd>
         In this document, a resolver is the component of a GNS implementation that provides
         the recursive name resolution logic defined in
         <xref target="resolution"/>.
       </dd>
        <dt>Resource Record:</dt>
        <dd>
         A GNS resource record is the information associated with a label in a
         GNS zone.
         A GNS resource record contains information as defined by its
         resource record type.
       </dd>
        <dt>Start Zone:</dt>
        <dd>
         In order to resolve any given GNS name, an initial start zone must be
         determined for this name.
         The start zone can be explicitly defined as part of the name using a
         zTLD.
         Otherwise, it is determined through a local suffix-to-zone mapping
         (see <xref target="governance"/>).
       </dd>
        <dt>Top-Level Domain (TLD):</dt>
        <dd>
	       The rightmost part of a GNS name is a GNS TLD.
         A GNS TLD can consist of one or more labels.
	 Unlike DNS TLDs (defined in <xref target="RFC8499"/>),
	 GNS does not expect all users to use the same global root zone. Instead,
         with the exception of zTLDs (see <xref target="zTLD"/>),
         GNS TLDs are typically part of the configuration of the local resolver
         (see <xref target="governance"/>) and thus might not be globally unique.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone:</dt>
        <dd>
         A GNS zone contains authoritative information (resource records).
         A zone is uniquely identified by its zone key.  Unlike DNS zones,
         a GNS zone does not need to have an SOA record under the apex label.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Key:</dt>
        <dd>
         The zone key is a key that uniquely identifies a zone.
         It is usually a public key of an asymmetric key pair.
         However, the established technical term "public key" is misleading,
         as in GNS a zone key may be a shared secret
         that should not be disclosed to unauthorized parties.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Key Derivation Function:</dt>
        <dd>
         The zone key derivation function (ZKDF) blinds a zone key using a label.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Master:</dt>
        <dd>
         The zone master is the component of a GNS implementation that provides
         local zone management and publication as defined in
         <xref target="publish"/>.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Owner:</dt>
        <dd>
         The zone owner is the holder of the secret (typically a private key),
	 which (together with a label and a value to sign) allows the creation of zone
	 signatures that can be validated against the respective blinded zone key.
       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Top-Level Domain (zTLD):</dt>
        <dd>
         A GNS zTLD is a sequence of GNS labels at
         the end of a GNS name. The zTLD encodes a zone type and
         zone key of a zone (see <xref target="zTLD"/>).
         Due to the statistical uniqueness of zone keys, zTLDs are also globally unique.
	 A zTLD label sequence can only be distinguished from ordinary TLD label sequences
         by attempting to decode the labels into a zone type and zone key.

<!-- [rfced] Section 2:  As it appears that "which" in this text
refers to the zTLD (per Sections 4 and 4.1), we updated this item
accordingly.  If this is incorrect, please provide clarifying text.

Original:
 Zone Top-Level Domain  A GNS Zone Top-Level Domain (zTLD) is a
    sequence of GNS labels at the end of a GNS name which encodes a
    zone type and zone key of a zone (see Section 4.1).

Currently:
 Zone Top-Level Domain (zTLD):  A GNS zTLD is a sequence of GNS labels
    at the end of a GNS name.  The zTLD encodes a zone type and zone
    key of a zone (see Section 4.1). -->

       </dd>
        <dt>Zone Type:</dt>
        <dd>
         The type of a GNS zone determines the cipher system and binary encoding
	 format of the zone key, blinded zone keys, and cryptographic signatures.
       </dd>
      </dl>
    </section>
    <section anchor="overview">
      <name>Overview</name>
      <t>
         GNS exhibits the three properties that are commonly used to describe
         a petname system:
      </t>
      <dl newline="true">
         <dt>
           Global names through the concept of zTLDs:</dt><dd>As zones can be uniquely identified by their zone keys
           and are statistically unique, zTLDs are globally unique mappings to zones.
           Consequently, GNS domain names with a zTLD suffix are also globally unique.
           Names with zTLD suffixes are not human readable.</dd>
        <dt>
           Memorable petnames for zones:</dt>
           <dd>Users can configure local, human-readable references to zones.
           Such petnames serve as zTLD monikers that provide
           convenient names for zones to the local operator.
           The petnames may also be published as suggestions for other
           users searching for a good label to use when referencing the
           respective zone.</dd>
        <dt>
           A secure mapping from names to records:</dt>
           <dd>GNS allows zone owners to map labels to resource records or to
           delegate authority of names in the subdomain induced by a label to other zones.
           Zone owners may choose to publish this information to make it
           available to other users.
           Mappings are encrypted and signed
           using keys derived from the respective label before being published in remote storage.
           When names are resolved, signatures on resource records
           including delegations are verified by the recursive resolver.</dd>
      </dl>
      <t>
         In the remainder of this document, the "implementer" refers to the developer building
         a GNS implementation including the resolver, zone master, and
         supporting configuration such as start zones (see <xref target="governance"/>).
      </t>
      <section anchor="names">
        <name>Names and Zones</name>
        <t>
         It follows from the above that GNS does not support names that are
         simultaneously global, secure, and human readable.
         Instead, names are either global and not human readable or not globally
         unique and human readable.
         An example for a global name pointing to the record "example" in
         a zone is as follows:
        </t>
        <sourcecode>
example.000G006K2TJNMD9VTCYRX7BRVV3HAEPS15E6NHDXKPJA1KAJJEG9AFF884
</sourcecode>
        <t>
         Now consider the case where a user locally configured the petname
         "pet.gns.alt" for the zone with the "example" record of the name
         above.
         The name "example.pet.gns.alt" would then point to the same record as the
         globally unique name above, but name resolution would only
         work on the local system where the "pet.gns.alt" petname is
         configured.
        </t>
        <t>
         The delegation of petnames and subsequent resolution of delegation
         build on ideas from the Simple Distributed Security Infrastructure
         <xref target="SDSI"/>.
         In GNS, any user can create and manage any number of zones
         (see <xref target="zones"/>) if their system provides a zone master implementation.
         For each zone, the zone type determines the respective set of cryptographic operations
         and the wire formats for encrypted data, public keys, and signatures.
         A zone can be populated with mappings from labels to resource records
         (see <xref target="rrecords"/>) by its owner.
         A label can be mapped to a delegation record; this results in the
         corresponding subdomain being delegated to another zone. Circular
         delegations are explicitly allowed, including delegating a subdomain
         to its immediate parent zone.  In
         order to support (legacy) applications as well as to facilitate the use
         of petnames, GNS defines auxiliary record types in addition to
         supporting existing DNS records.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="publishing">
        <name>Publishing Binding Information</name>
        <t>
         Zone contents are encrypted and signed
         before being published in remote key-value storage (see <xref target="publish"/>),
         as illustrated in <xref target="figure_arch_publish"/>.
         In this process, unique zone identification is hidden from the network
         through the use of key blinding.
         Key blinding allows the creation of signatures for zone contents
         using a blinded public/private key pair.
         This blinding is realized using a deterministic key
         derivation from
         the original zone key and corresponding private key using record label values
         as inputs from which blinding factors are derived.
         Specifically, the zone owner can derive blinded private keys for each record
         set published under a label, and a
         resolver can derive the corresponding blinded public keys.
         It is expected that GNS implementations use decentralized remote
         storage entities, such as distributed hash tables (DHTs), in order to facilitate
         availability within a network without the need for dedicated infrastructure.
         The specification of such a distributed or decentralized storage entity is out of
         scope for this document, but possible existing implementations include those
         based on <xref target="RFC7363"/>, <xref target="Kademlia"/>, or
         <xref target="R5N"/>.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_arch_publish">
          <name>An Example Diagram of Two Hosts Publishing GNS Zones</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
       Host A         |   Remote        |      Host B
                      |   Storage       |
                      |                 |
                      |    +---------+  |
                      |   /         /|  |
             Publish  |  +---------+ |  |  Publish
 +---------+ Records  |  |         | |  |  Records +---------+
 |  Zone   |----------|-&gt;| Record  | |&lt;-|----------|  Zone   |
 | Master  |          |  | Storage | |  |          | Master  |
 +---------+          |  |         |/   |          +---------+
      A               |  +---------+    |               A
      |               |                 |               |
   +---------+        |                 |           +---------+
  /   |     /|        |                 |          /    |    /|
 +---------+ |        |                 |         +---------+ |
 |         | |        |                 |         |         | |
 |  Local  | |        |                 |         |  Local  | |
 |  Zones  | |        |                 |         |  Zones  | |
 |         |/         |                 |         |         |/
 +---------+          |                 |         +---------+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <t>
         A zone master implementation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be provided as
         part of a GNS implementation to enable users to create and manage zones.
         If this functionality is not implemented, names can still be resolved
         if zone keys for the initial step in the name resolution have been
         configured (see <xref target="resolution"/>) or if the names end with a
         zTLD suffix.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="resolving">
        <name>Resolving Names</name>
        <t>
         Applications use the resolver to look up GNS names.
         Starting from a configurable start zone, names are resolved by following zone
         delegations recursively, as illustrated in <xref target="figure_arch_resolv"/>.
         For each label in a name, the recursive GNS resolver
         fetches the respective record set from the storage layer (see <xref target="resolution"/>).
         Without knowledge of the label values and the zone keys, the
         different derived keys are unlinkable to both the original zone key and each
         other.
         This prevents zone enumeration (except via expensive online
         brute-force attacks): to confirm the affiliation of a
         query or the corresponding encrypted record set with a
         specific zone requires knowledge of both the zone key and the label,
         neither of which is disclosed to remote storage by the protocol.
         At the same time, the blinded zone key and digital signatures
         associated with each encrypted record set allow resolvers and oblivious remote
         storage to verify the integrity of the published information
         without disclosing anything about the originating zone or the record sets.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_arch_resolv">
          <name>High-Level View of the GNS Resolution Process</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host           |   Remote
                                                |   Storage
                                                |
                                                |    +---------+
                                                |   /         /|
                                                |  +---------+ |
+-----------+ Name     +----------+ Recursive   |  |         | |
|           | Lookup   |          | Resolution  |  | Record  | |
|Application|----------| Resolver |-------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |&lt;---------|          |&lt;------------|--|         |/
+-----------+ Results  +----------+ Intermediate|  +---------+
                          A         Results     |
                          |                     |
                       +---------+              |
                      /   |     /|              |
                     +---------+ |              |
                     |         | |              |
                     |  Start  | |              |
                     |  Zones  | |              |
                     |         |/               |
                     +---------+                |
           </artwork>
        </figure>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="zones">
      <name>Zones</name>
      <t>
       A zone in GNS is uniquely identified by its zone type (ztype) and zone key.
       Each zone can be referenced by its zTLD
       (see <xref target="zTLD"/>), which is a string that encodes the zone type and zone key.
       The ztype is a unique 32-bit number that corresponds to
       a resource record type number identifying a delegation record type
       in the GANA "GNS Record Types" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.
       The ztype is a unique identifier for the set cryptographic functions
       of the zone and the format of the delegation record type.
       Any ztype registration <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> define the following set of cryptographic functions:
      </t>
      <dl newline="true">
        <dt>KeyGen() -&gt; d, zk</dt>
        <dd>
         A function for generating a new private key d and
	 the corresponding public zone key zk.
       </dd>
        <dt>ZKDF(zk,label) -&gt; zk'</dt>
        <dd>
         A ZKDF that blinds a zone key zk
         using a label. &nbsp;zk and zk' must be unlinkable. Furthermore,
         blinding zk with different values for the label must result
         in different, unlinkable zk' values.
       </dd>
        <dt>S-Encrypt(zk,label,expiration,plaintext) -&gt; ciphertext</dt>
        <dd>
         A symmetric encryption function that encrypts the plaintext
         to derive ciphertext based on key material derived from the zone key zk,
         a label, and an expiration timestamp.
         In order to leverage performance-enhancing caching features of certain
         underlying storage entities -- in particular, DHTs -- a deterministic encryption
         scheme is recommended.
       </dd>
        <dt>S-Decrypt(zk,label,expiration,ciphertext) -&gt; plaintext</dt>
        <dd>
         A symmetric decryption function that decrypts the ciphertext
         into plaintext based on key material derived from the zone key,
         a label, and an expiration timestamp.
       </dd>
        <dt>Sign(d,message) -&gt; signature</dt>
        <dd>
         A function for signing a message using the private
         key d, yielding an unforgeable cryptographic signature.
         In order to leverage performance-enhancing caching features of certain
         underlying storage entities -- in particular, DHTs -- a deterministic signature
         scheme is recommended.
       </dd>
        <dt>Verify(zk,message,signature) -&gt; boolean</dt>
        <dd>
         A function for verifying that the signature was created using
         the private key d corresponding to the zone key zk
         where d,zk := Keygen().
         The function returns a boolean value of "TRUE" if the signature is valid
         and "FALSE" otherwise.
       </dd>
        <dt>SignDerived(d,label,message) -&gt; signature</dt>
        <dd>
         A function for signing a message (typically encrypted record data) that
         can be verified using the derived zone key zk' := ZKDF(zk,label).
         In order to leverage performance-enhancing caching features of certain
         underlying storage entities -- in particular, DHTs -- a deterministic signature
         scheme is recommended.
       </dd>
        <dt>VerifyDerived(zk,label,message,signature) -&gt; boolean</dt>
        <dd>
         A function for verifying the signature using the derived zone key
         zk' := ZKDF(zk,label).
         The function returns a boolean value of "TRUE" if the signature is valid
         and "FALSE" otherwise.
       </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>
       The cryptographic functions of the default ztypes are specified with
       their corresponding delegation records as discussed in <xref target="gnsrecords_delegation"/>.
       In order to support cryptographic agility, additional ztypes <bcp14>MAY</bcp14>
       be defined in the future that replace or update the default ztypes defined in this
       document.
       All ztypes <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be registered as dedicated zone delegation
       record types in the GANA "GNS Record Types" registry (see <xref target="GANA"/>).
       When defining new record types, the cryptographic security considerations
       of this document -- in particular, <xref target="security_cryptography"/> -- apply.
      </t>
      <section anchor="zTLD">
        <name>Zone Top-Level Domain (zTLD)</name>
        <t>
         A zTLD is a string that encodes the
         zone type and zone key into a domain name suffix.
         A zTLD is used as a globally unique reference to a
         zone in the process of name resolution.
         It is created by encoding a binary concatenation of the zone type and
         zone key (see <xref target="figure_zid"/>).
         The used encoding is a variation of the Crockford Base32 encoding
         <xref target="CrockfordB32"/> called Base32GNS.
         The encoding and decoding symbols for Base32GNS including this
         modification are defined in <xref target="CrockfordB32Encode"/> (<xref target="app-c"/>).
         The functions for encoding and decoding based on <xref target="CrockfordB32Encode"/> are called
         Base32GNS-Encode and Base32GNS-Decode, respectively.

<!-- [rfced] Section 4.1:  As it appears that "this table" refers to
what is now Table 4 in Appendix C, we updated these two sentences
accordingly.  If these updates are not correct, please clarify
"this table".

Original:
 The encoding and decoding symbols for Base32GNS including
 this modification are defined in Figure 30.  The functions for
 encoding and decoding based on this table are called Base32GNS-Encode
 and Base32GNS-Decode, respectively.

Currently:
 The
 encoding and decoding symbols for Base32GNS including this
 modification are defined in Table 4 (Appendix C).  The functions for
 encoding and decoding based on Table 4 are called Base32GNS-Encode
 and Base32GNS-Decode, respectively. -->

        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_zid">
          <name>The Binary Representation of the zTLD</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|       ZONE TYPE       |      ZONE KEY         /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+                       /
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
         </artwork>
        </figure>

<!-- [rfced] Figures 3 through 7 and 20 through 22:  Should the use
of vertical lines ("|") versus slashes "/") be made consistent where
the continuation of fields is indicated?  If so, how?

A few examples (double dashes removed to avoid confusion with XML
  comments):

 |       ZONE TYPE       |      ZONE KEY         /
 +- - -+- - -+- - -+- - -+                       /
 /                                               /
 /                                               /

...

 |       ZONE TYPE       |    ZONE KEY           |
 +- - -+- - -+- - -+- - -+                       |
 /                                               /
 /                                               /

...

 |                    BDATA                      /
 /                                               /
 /                                               |

...

 |                    BDATA                      |
 /                                               /
 /                                               / -->

        <t>
         The ZONE TYPE must be encoded in network byte order.  The format
         of the ZONE KEY depends entirely on the ZONE TYPE.
        </t>
        <t>
         Consequently, a zTLD is encoded and decoded as follows:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
zTLD := Base32GNS-Encode(ztype||zkey)
ztype||zkey := Base32GNS-Decode(zTLD)
         </artwork>
        <t>
         where "||" is the concatenation operator.
        </t>
        <t>
         The zTLD can be used "as is" as a rightmost label in a GNS name.
         If an application wants to ensure DNS compatibility of the name,
         it <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> also represent the zTLD as follows:
         if the zTLD is less than or equal to 63 characters, it can
         be used as a zTLD as is.
         If the zTLD is longer than 63 characters, the
         zTLD is divided into smaller labels separated by the label separator.
         Here, the most significant bytes of the "ztype||zkey" concatenation
         must be contained in the rightmost label of the resulting string and
         the least significant bytes in the leftmost label of the resulting string. This allows the
         resolver to determine the ztype and zTLD length from the rightmost
         label and to subsequently determine how many labels the zTLD should span.
         A GNS implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> support the division of zTLDs
         in DNS-compatible label lengths.
         For example, assuming a zTLD of 130 characters, the division is as follows:
        </t>
        <!-- FIXME: Is this really really necessary? Really? -->
       <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
zTLD[126..129].zTLD[63..125].zTLD[0..62]
         </artwork>
      </section>
      <section anchor="revocation">
        <name>Zone Revocation</name>
        <t>
         In order to revoke a zone key, a signed revocation message <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be
         published.
         This message <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be signed using the private key of the zone.
         The revocation message is broadcast to the network.
         The specification of the broadcast mechanism is out of scope for this
         document.
         A possible broadcast mechanism for efficient flooding in a distributed
         network is implemented in <xref target="GNUnet"/>.
         Alternatively, revocation messages could also be distributed via a
         distributed ledger or a trusted central server.
         To prevent
         flooding attacks, the revocation message <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> contain a proof of work
         (PoW).
         The revocation message, including the PoW, <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be calculated
         ahead of time to support timely revocation.
        </t>
        <t>
         For all occurrences below, "Argon2id" is the password-based key
         derivation function as defined in <xref target="RFC9106"/>. For the
         PoW calculations, the algorithm is instantiated with the
         following parameters:
        </t>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>S:</dt>
          <dd>The salt. Fixed 16-byte string: "GnsRevocationPow"</dd>
          <dt>t:</dt>
          <dd>Number of iterations: 3</dd>
          <dt>m:</dt>
          <dd>Memory size in KiB: 1024</dd>
          <dt>T:</dt>
          <dd>Output length of hash in bytes: 64</dd>
          <dt>p:</dt>
          <dd>Parallelization parameter: 1</dd>
          <dt>v:</dt>
          <dd>Algorithm version: 0x13</dd>
          <dt>y:</dt>
          <dd>Algorithm type (Argon2id): 2</dd>
          <dt>X:</dt>
          <dd>Unused</dd>
          <dt>K:</dt>
          <dd>Unused</dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
         <xref target="figure_revocation"/> illustrates the format
         of the data "P" on which the PoW is calculated.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_revocation">
          <name>The Format of the PoW Data</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                      POW                      |
+-----------------------------------------------+
|                   TIMESTAMP                   |
+-----------------------------------------------+
|       ZONE TYPE       |    ZONE KEY           |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+                       |
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>POW:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 64-bit value that is a solution to the PoW. In network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>TIMESTAMP:</dt>
          <dd>
           Denotes the absolute 64-bit date when the revocation was computed.
           In microseconds since midnight (0 hour), January 1, 1970 UTC in network
           byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE TYPE:</dt>
          <dd>
           The 32-bit zone type in network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE KEY:</dt>
          <dd>
           The 256-bit public key zk of the zone that is being revoked.
           The wire format of this value is defined by the ZONE TYPE.
         </dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
         Usually, PoW schemes require that one POW value be found, such that
         a specific number of leading zeroes are found in the hash result.
         This number is then referred to as the difficulty of the PoW.
         In order to reduce the variance in time it takes to calculate the
         PoW, a valid GNS revocation requires that a number of different PoWs (Z, as defined below)
         must be found that on average have D leading zeroes.

<!-- [rfced] Section 4.2:  We found "a number Z different PoWs"
difficult to follow.  We updated the text per the definition of "Z"
that appears a few lines later.  Please let us know any objections.

Original:
 In order to
 reduce the variance in time it takes to calculate the PoW, a valid
 GNS revocation requires that a number Z different PoWs must be found
 that on average have D leading zeroes.

Currently:
 In order to
 reduce the variance in time it takes to calculate the PoW, a valid
 GNS revocation requires that a number of different PoWs (Z, as
 defined below) must be found that on average have D leading zeroes. -->

        </t>
        <t>
         Given an average difficulty of D, the proofs have an
         expiration time of EPOCH.  Applications <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> calculate proofs
         with a difficulty that is higher than D by providing POW
         values where there are (on average) more than D bits of leading zeroes.
         With each additional bit of difficulty, the
         lifetime of the proof is prolonged by another EPOCH.
         Consequently, by calculating a more difficult PoW, the lifetime of the
         proof -- and thus the persistence of the revocation message --
         can be increased on demand by the zone owner.
        </t>
        <t>
         The parameters are defined as follows:
        </t>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>Z:</dt>
          <dd>The number of PoWs that are required. Its value is fixed at 32.</dd>
          <dt>D:</dt>
          <dd>The lower limit of the average difficulty. Its value is fixed at 22.</dd>
          <dt>EPOCH:</dt>
          <dd>A single epoch. Its value is fixed at 365 days in microseconds.</dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
         The revocation message wire format is illustrated in
         <xref target="figure_revocationdata"/>.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_revocationdata">
          <name>The Revocation Message Wire Format</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   TIMESTAMP                   |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                      TTL                      |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                     POW_0                     |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                       ...                     |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                     POW_Z-1                   |
+-----------------------------------------------+
|       ZONE TYPE       |    ZONE KEY           |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+                       |
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   SIGNATURE                   |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>TIMESTAMP:</dt>
          <dd>
           Denotes the absolute 64-bit date when the revocation was computed.
           In microseconds since midnight (0 hour), January 1, 1970 UTC in network
           byte order. This is the same value as the timestamp used in the
           individual PoW calculations.
         </dd>
          <dt>TTL:</dt>
          <dd>
           Denotes the relative 64-bit time to live of the record in
           microseconds in network byte order.
           The field <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be set to EPOCH * 1.1.
           Given an average number of leading zeroes D', then the field value
           <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be increased up to (D'-D+1) * EPOCH * 1.1.
           Validators <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> reject messages with lower or higher
           values when received.
         </dd>
          <dt>POW_i:</dt>
          <dd>
           The values calculated as part of the PoW, in network byte order.
           Each POW_i <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be unique in the set of POW values.
           To facilitate fast verification
           of uniqueness, the POW values must be given in strictly
           monotonically increasing order in the message.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE TYPE:</dt>
          <dd>
           The 32-bit zone type corresponding to the zone key in network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE KEY:</dt>
          <dd>
           The public key zk of the zone that is being revoked and
           the key to be used to verify SIGNATURE.
         </dd>
          <dt>SIGNATURE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A signature over a timestamp and the zone zk of the zone
           that is revoked and corresponds to the key used in the PoW.
           The signature is created using the Sign() function of
           the cryptosystem of the zone and the private key
           (see <xref target="zones"/>).
         </dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
        The signature over the public key covers a 32-bit header
        prefixed to the timestamp and public key fields.
        The header includes the key length and signature purpose.
        The wire format is illustrated
        in <xref target="figure_revsigwithpseudo"/>.

<!-- [rfced] Section 4.2:  Does "time stamp and public key fields"
mean "TIMESTAMP and PUBLIC KEY fields", even though we only see
"PUBLIC KEY" mentioned in Sections 5.1.1 and 5.1.2?

Original:
 The signature over the public key covers a 32-bit header prefixed to
 the time stamp and public key fields. -->

        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_revsigwithpseudo">
          <name>The Wire Format of the Revocation Data for Signing</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|         SIZE          |       PURPOSE (0x03)  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   TIMESTAMP                   |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|       ZONE TYPE       |     ZONE KEY          |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+                       |
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>

<!-- [rfced] Sections 4.2 and subsequent:  Please note that we
updated some of the GANA registry names to match those found on
[GANA].  Please review, and let us know any objections.

Examples from original:
 .alt subdomains (Section 10.2)
 GNUnet Signature Purpose (Sections 4.2, 6.3, and 10)
 GANA "Overlay Protocols" registry (Section 5.3.3)
 GNU Name System Record Types (Section 10.1) 
 GANA Resource Record (Figure 25 in Section 10.1)

Currently:
 .alt Subdomains (also per Section 10.2, and per [GANA])
 GNUnet Signature Purposes
 GANA "GNUnet Overlay Protocols" registry
 GNS Record Types
 GANA GNS Record Types (title of what is now Table 2) -->

        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>SIZE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 32-bit value containing the length of the signed data in bytes
           in network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>PURPOSE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 32-bit signature purpose flag.
           The value of this field <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be 3.
           The value is encoded in network byte order.
           It defines the context in which
           the signature is created so that it cannot be reused in other parts
           of the protocol including possible future extensions.
           The value of this field corresponds to an entry in the
           GANA "GNUnet Signature Purposes" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.
         </dd>
          <dt>TIMESTAMP:</dt>
          <dd>
           Field as defined in the revocation message above.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE TYPE:</dt>
          <dd>
           Field as defined in the revocation message above.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE KEY:</dt>
          <dd>Field as defined in the revocation message above.</dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
         In order to validate a revocation, the following steps <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be taken:
        </t>
        <ol>
         <li>The signature <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be verified against the zone key.</li>
          <li>The set of POW values <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> contain duplicates; this <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be checked by verifying that the values are strictly monotonically increasing.</li>
          <li>The average number of leading zeroes D' resulting from the provided
         POW values <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be greater than or equal to D.  Implementers
         <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> use an integer data type to calculate or represent D'.</li>
        </ol>
        <t>
         The TTL field in the revocation message is informational.
         A revocation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be discarded without checking the POW
         values or the signature if the TTL (in combination with TIMESTAMP)
         indicates that the revocation has already expired.
         The actual validity period of the
         revocation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be determined by examining the leading
         zeroes in the POW values.
        </t>
        <t>
         The validity period of the revocation is calculated as
         (D'-D+1) * EPOCH * 1.1. The EPOCH is extended by
         10% in order to deal with unsynchronized clocks.
         The validity period added on top of the TIMESTAMP yields the
         expiration date.
         If the current time is after the expiration date, the
         revocation is considered stale.
        </t>
        <t>
         Verified revocations <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be stored locally.
         The implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> discard stale revocations and
         evict them from the local store at any time.

<!-- [rfced] Section 4.2:  As it appears that "evict then from"
should be "evict them from", we updated accordingly.  If this is
incorrect, please clarify "evict then from".

Original (the previous sentence is included for context):
 Verified revocations MUST be stored locally.  The implementation MAY
 discard stale revocations and evict then from the local store at any
 time.

Currently:
 The implementation MAY
 discard stale revocations and evict them from the local store at any
 time. -->

        </t>
        <t>
         Implementations <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> broadcast received revocations
         if they are valid and not stale.
         Should the calculated validity period differ from the TTL field value,
         the calculated value <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be used as the TTL field value
         when forwarding the revocation message.
         Systems might disagree on the current time, so implementations
         <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> use stale but otherwise valid
         revocations but <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> broadcast them.
         Forwarded stale revocations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be discarded.
        </t>
        <t>
         Any locally stored revocation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be considered during
         delegation record processing (see <xref target="delegation_processing"/>).
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="rrecords">
      <name>Resource Records</name>
      <t>
       A GNS implementation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> provide a mechanism for creating and managing local
       zones as well as a persistence mechanism (such as a local database) for resource
       records.
       A new local zone is established by selecting a zone type and creating a
       zone key pair.
       If this mechanism is not implemented,
       no zones can be published in storage (see <xref target="publish"/>)
       and name resolution is limited to non-local start zones
       (see <xref target="governance"/>).
      </t>
      <t>
       A GNS resource record holds the data of a specific record in a zone.
       The resource record format is illustrated in
       <xref target="figure_gnsrecord"/>.
      </t>
      <figure anchor="figure_gnsrecord">
        <name>The Resource Record Wire Format</name>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   EXPIRATION                  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|    SIZE   |   FLAGS   |          TYPE         |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                      DATA                     /
/                                               /
/                                               /
         </artwork>
      </figure>
      <dl newline="false">
        <dt>EXPIRATION:</dt>
        <dd>
         Denotes the absolute 64-bit expiration date of the record.
         In microseconds since midnight (0 hour), January 1, 1970 UTC in network
         byte order.
       </dd>
        <dt>SIZE:</dt>
        <dd>
         Denotes the 16-bit size of the DATA field in bytes in network byte
         order.
       </dd>
        <dt>FLAGS:</dt>
        <dd>
         A 16-bit bit field indicating special properties of the resource record.
         The semantics of the different bits are defined below.

<!-- [rfced] Section 5:  Please confirm that "16-bit bit field" (and
not "16-bit field") is correct.

Original:
 FLAGS  is a 16-bit bit field indicating special properties of the
    resource record.

Possibly:
 FLAGS:  16 bits.  A bit field indicating special properties of the
    resource record. -->

       </dd>
        <dt>TYPE:</dt>
        <dd>
         The 32-bit resource record type in
         network byte order. This type can be one of the GNS resource
         records as defined in <xref target="rrecords"/>, a DNS record
         type as defined in <xref target="RFC1035"/>, or any of the
         complementary standardized DNS resource record types.
         Note that values
         below 2^16 are reserved for 16-bit DNS resource record types allocated by IANA <xref target="RFC6895"/>.
         Values above 2^16 are allocated by the
         GANA "GNS Record Types" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.

<!-- [rfced] Section 5:  xml2rfc v3 permits superscripting.  Would
you like to apply superscripting to numbers where the caret ("^") is
used (e.g., 2^16, 2^255)?  The superscripts would appear in the HTML
and PDF output files, but the textfile would still show the caret.
For an example, please see the last paragraph in Section 2.4.2 of
RFC 9426 (https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9426.html).

If yes, please also let us know if anything else might need to be
superscripted or subscripted. -->

       </dd>
        <dt>DATA:</dt>
        <dd>
         The variable-length resource record data payload. The content is defined
         by the
         respective type of the resource record.
       </dd>
      </dl>
      <t>
       The FLAGS field is used to indicate special properties of the resource record.
       An application creating resource records <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> set all bits
       in FLAGS to 0 unless it specifically understands and
       wants to set the respective flag.
       As additional flags can be defined in future protocol versions,
       if an application or implementation encounters a flag that it does not
       recognize, the flag <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be ignored.  However, all implementations
       <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> understand the SHADOW and CRITICAL flags defined below.
       Any combination of the flags specified below is valid.
       <xref target="figure_flag"/>
       illustrates the flag distribution in the 16-bit FLAGS field of a
       resource record:
      </t>
      <figure anchor="figure_flag">
        <name>The Resource Record Flag Wire Format</name>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0           13            14      15
+--------...+-------------+-------+---------+
| Reserved  |SUPPLEMENTAL |SHADOW |CRITICAL |
+--------...+-------------+-------+---------+
         </artwork>
      </figure>
      <dl newline="false">
        <dt>CRITICAL:</dt>
        <dd>
         If this flag is set, it indicates that processing is critical.
         Implementations that do not support the record type or are otherwise
         unable to process the record <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> abort resolution upon encountering
         the record in the resolution process.
       </dd>
        <dt>SHADOW:</dt>
        <dd>
         If this flag is set, this record <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be ignored by resolvers unless all (other)
         records of the same record type have expired.  Used to allow zone publishers to
         facilitate good performance when records change by allowing them to put future
         values of records into storage.
         This way, future values can propagate and can be
         cached before the transition becomes active.
       </dd>
        <dt>SUPPLEMENTAL:</dt>
        <dd>
         This is a supplemental record. It is provided in addition to the
         other records. This flag indicates that this record is not explicitly
         managed alongside the other records under the respective name but
         might be useful for the application.
       </dd>
      </dl>
      <section anchor="gnsrecords_delegation">
        <name>Zone Delegation Records</name>
        <t>
       This section defines the initial set of zone delegation record types.
       Any implementation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> support all zone types defined here and
       <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> support any number of additional delegation records defined in
       the GANA "GNS Record Types" registry (see <xref target="GANA"/>).
       Not supporting some zone types will result in resolution failures if
       the respective zone type is encountered.
       This can be a valid choice if some zone delegation record types have been
       determined to be cryptographically insecure.
       Zone delegation records <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be stored and published
       under the apex label.
       A zone delegation record type value is the same as the respective ztype
       value.
       The ztype defines the cryptographic primitives for the zone that is
       being delegated to.
       A zone delegation record payload contains the public key of
       the zone to delegate to.
       A zone delegation record <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> have the CRITICAL flag set
       and <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be the only non-supplemental record under a label.
       There <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be inactive records of the same type that have
       the SHADOW flag set in order to facilitate smooth key rollovers.
        </t>
        <t>
       In the following, "||" is the concatenation operator of two byte strings.
       The algorithm specification uses character strings such as GNS labels or
       constant values.
       When used in concatenations or as input to functions, the
       null-terminator of the character strings <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be
       included.
        </t>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_pkey">
          <name>PKEY</name>
          <t>
         In GNS, a delegation of a label to a zone of type "PKEY" is
         represented through a PKEY record.  The PKEY DATA entry wire format is illustrated in <xref target="figure_pkeyrecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_pkeyrecord">
            <name>The PKEY Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   PUBLIC KEY                  |
|                                               |
|                                               |
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>PUBLIC KEY:</dt>
            <dd>
           A 256-bit Ed25519 public key.
         </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
         For PKEY zones, the zone key material is derived using the
         curve parameters of the twisted Edwards representation
         of Curve25519 <xref target="RFC7748"/> (the reasoning behind choosing
         this curve can be found in <xref target="security_cryptography"/>)
         with the ECDSA scheme <xref target="RFC6979"/>.
         The following naming convention is used for the cryptographic primitives of PKEY zones:
          </t>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>d:</dt>
            <dd>
           A 256-bit Ed25519 private key (private scalar).
         </dd>
            <dt>zk:</dt>
            <dd>
           The Ed25519 public zone key corresponding to d.
         </dd>
            <dt>p:</dt>
            <dd>
           The prime of edwards25519 as defined in <xref target="RFC7748"/>, i.e.,
           2^255 - 19.
         </dd>
            <dt>G:</dt>
            <dd>
           The group generator (X(P),Y(P)). With X(P),Y(P) of edwards25519 as defined in
           <xref target="RFC7748"/>.
         </dd>
            <dt>L:</dt>
            <dd>
           The order of the prime-order subgroup of edwards25519 as defined in <xref target="RFC7748"/>.
         </dd>
            <dt>KeyGen():</dt>
            <dd>The generation of the private
           scalar d and the curve point zk := d*G (where G is the group generator
           of the elliptic curve) as defined in <xref target="RFC6979" sectionFormat="of" section="2.2"/> represents the KeyGen() function.
         </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
         The zone type and zone key of a PKEY are 4 + 32 bytes in length. This means that
         a zTLD will always fit into a single label and does
         not need any further conversion.
         Given a label, the output zk' of the ZKDF(zk,label) function is
         calculated as follows for PKEY zones:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
ZKDF(zk,label):
  PRK_h := HKDF-Extract ("key-derivation", zk)
  h := HKDF-Expand (PRK_h, label || "gns", 512 / 8)
  zk' := (h mod L) * zk
  return zk'
        </artwork>
          <t>
         The PKEY cryptosystem uses an HMAC-based key derivation function (HKDF) as defined in
         <xref target="RFC5869"/>, using SHA-512 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the extraction
         phase and SHA-256 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the expansion phase.
         PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF using the string
         "key-derivation" as the salt and the zone key as the initial
         keying material.
         h is the 512-bit HKDF expansion result and must be interpreted in
         network byte order. The expansion information input is
         a concatenation of the label and the string "gns".
         The multiplication of zk with h is a point multiplication,
         while the multiplication of d with h is a scalar multiplication.

<!-- [rfced] Sections 5.1.1 and 5.1.2:  "using an HKDF using" reads
oddly.  Does it mean "using an HKDF that uses", "using an HKDF and
using" (i.e., the key material is retrieved by using an HKDF as well
as the string "key-derivation"), or something else?  If this needs to
be clarified, please provide updated text.

Original:
 PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF using the string "key-
 derivation" as salt and the zone key as initial keying material.
...
 PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF using the string "key-
 derivation" as salt and the zone key as initial keying material.

Possibly:
 PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF that uses the string
 "key-derivation" as the salt and the zone key as the initial keying
 material.
...
 PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF that uses the string
 "key-derivation" as the salt and the zone key as the initial keying
 material. -->

          </t>
          <t>
         The Sign() and Verify() functions
         for PKEY zones are implemented using 512-bit ECDSA deterministic
         signatures as specified in <xref target="RFC6979"/>.
         The same functions can be used for derived keys:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
SignDerived(d,label,message):
  zk := d * G
  PRK_h := HKDF-Extract ("key-derivation", zk)
  h := HKDF-Expand (PRK_h, label || "gns", 512 / 8)
  d' := (h * d) mod L
  return Sign(d',message)
           </artwork>
          <t>
           A signature (R,S) is valid if the following holds:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
VerifyDerived(zk,label,message,signature):
  zk' := ZKDF(zk,label)
  return Verify(zk',message,signature)
           </artwork>
          <t>
         The S-Encrypt() and S-Decrypt() functions use AES in counter mode
         as defined in <xref target="MODES"/> (CTR-AES256):
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
S-Encrypt(zk,label,expiration,plaintext):
  PRK_k := HKDF-Extract ("gns-aes-ctx-key", zk)
  PRK_n := HKDF-Extract ("gns-aes-ctx-iv", zk)
  K := HKDF-Expand (PRK_k, label, 256 / 8)
  NONCE := HKDF-Expand (PRK_n, label, 32 / 8)
  IV := NONCE || expiration || 0x0000000000000001
  return CTR-AES256(K, IV, plaintext)

S-Decrypt(zk,label,expiration,ciphertext):
  PRK_k := HKDF-Extract ("gns-aes-ctx-key", zk)
  PRK_n := HKDF-Extract ("gns-aes-ctx-iv", zk)
  K := HKDF-Expand (PRK_k, label, 256 / 8)
  NONCE := HKDF-Expand (PRK_n, label, 32 / 8)
  IV := NONCE || expiration || 0x0000000000000001
  return CTR-AES256(K, IV, ciphertext)
           </artwork>
          <t>
         The key K and counter IV (Initialization Vector) are derived from
         the record label and the zone key zk, using an HKDF as defined in <xref target="RFC5869"/>.

<!-- [rfced] Section 5.1.1:  For ease of the reader, we defined "IV"
as "Initialization Vector" here, per the title of Figure 12.  Please
let us know any concerns.

Original:
 The key K and counter IV are derived from the record label and the
 zone key zk using an HKDF as defined in [RFC5869].

Currently:
 The key K and counter IV (Initialization Vector) are derived from the
 record label and the zone key zk, using an HKDF as defined in
 [RFC5869]. -->

         SHA-512 <xref target="RFC6234"/> is used for the
         extraction phase and SHA-256 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the expansion phase.
         The output keying material is 32 bytes (256 bits) for the symmetric
         key and 4 bytes (32 bits) for the nonce.
         The symmetric key K is a 256-bit AES key <xref target="RFC3826"/>.
          </t>
          <t>
         The nonce is combined with a 64-bit IV and a
         32-bit block counter as defined in <xref target="RFC3686"/>.
         The block counter begins with a value of 1, and it is incremented
         to generate subsequent portions of the key stream.
         The block counter is a 32-bit integer value in network byte order.
         The IV is the expiration time of the
         resource record block in network byte order.
         The resulting counter (IV) wire format is illustrated in
         <xref target="figure_hkdf_ivs_pkey"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_hkdf_ivs_pkey">
            <name>The Block Counter Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|         NONCE         |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|       EXPIRATION      |
|                       |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|      BLOCK COUNTER    |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_edkey">
          <name>EDKEY</name>
          <t>
         In GNS, a delegation of a label to a zone of type "EDKEY" is
         represented through an EDKEY record.
         The EDKEY DATA entry wire format
         is illustrated in <xref target="figure_edkeyrecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_edkeyrecord">
            <name>The EDKEY DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   PUBLIC KEY                  |
|                                               |
|                                               |
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>PUBLIC KEY:</dt>
            <dd>
           A 256-bit EdDSA zone key.
         </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
           For EDKEY zones, the zone key material is derived using the
           curve parameters of the twisted Edwards representation
           of Curve25519 <xref target="RFC7748"/> (a.k.a.&nbsp;Ed25519)
           with the Ed25519 scheme <xref target="ed25519"/> as specified in
           <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           The following naming convention is used for the
           cryptographic primitives of EDKEY zones:
          </t>
          <!-- Check if we want to use RFC8032 instead of paper ed25519 -->
         <dl newline="false">
            <dt>d:</dt>
            <dd>
             A 256-bit EdDSA private key.
           </dd>
            <dt>a:</dt>
            <dd>
             An integer derived from d using the SHA-512 hash function
             as defined in <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           </dd>
            <dt>zk:</dt>
            <dd>
             The EdDSA public key corresponding to d. It is defined
             as the curve point a*G where G is the
             group generator of the elliptic curve
             as defined in <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           </dd>
            <dt>p:</dt>
            <dd>
             The prime of edwards25519 as defined in <xref target="RFC8032"/>, i.e.,
             2^255 - 19.
           </dd>
            <dt>G:</dt>
            <dd>
             The group generator (X(P),Y(P)). With X(P),Y(P) of edwards25519 as defined in
              <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           </dd>
            <dt>L:</dt>
            <dd>
             The order of the prime-order subgroup of edwards25519 as defined in <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           </dd>
            <dt>KeyGen():</dt>
            <dd>
             The generation of the private key d and the associated public
             key zk := a*G where G is the
             group generator of the elliptic curve and a is an integer
             derived from d using the SHA-512 hash function
             as defined
             in <xref target="RFC8032" sectionFormat="of" section="5.1.5"/>
 represents the KeyGen()
             function.

<!-- [rfced] Section 5.1.2:  This sentence is very difficult to
parse; it is not clear what represents the KeyGen() function.  Should
parentheses be added, per the definition of KeyGen() provided in
Section 5.1.1?

Original:
 KeyGen()  The generation of the private key d and the associated
    public key zk := a*G where G is the group generator of the
    elliptic curve and a is an integer derived from d using the
    SHA-512 hash function as defined in Section 5.1.5 of [RFC8032]
    represents the KeyGen() function.

Definition in Section 5.1.1 (for comparison purposes):
 KeyGen()  The generation of the private scalar d and the curve point
    zk := d*G (where G is the group generator of the elliptic curve)
    as defined in Section 2.2. of [RFC6979] represents the KeyGen()
    function. -->

            </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
           The zone type and zone key of an EDKEY are 4 + 32 bytes in length. This means that
           a zTLD will always fit into a single label and does
           not need any further conversion.
          </t>
          <t>
           The "EDKEY" ZKDF instantiation is based on <xref target="Tor224"/>.
           The calculation of a is defined in <xref target="RFC8032" sectionFormat="of" section="5.1.5"/>.
           Given a label, the output of the ZKDF function is
           calculated as follows:

<!-- [rfced] Section 5.1.2:  For ease of the reader, may we clarify
this text as suggested?

Original:
 The calculation
 of a is defined in Section 5.1.5 of [RFC8032].

Suggested:
 As noted above for KeyGen(), a is calculated from d using the
 SHA-512 hash function as defined in Section 5.1.5 of [RFC8032]. -->

          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
ZKDF(zk,label):
  /* Calculate the blinding factor */
  PRK_h := HKDF-Extract ("key-derivation", zk)
  h := HKDF-Expand (PRK_h, label || "gns", 512 / 8)
  /* Ensure that h == h mod L */
  h[31] &amp;= 7

  zk' := h * zk
  return zk'
           </artwork>
          <t>
           Implementers <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> employ a constant-time scalar
           multiplication for the constructions above to protect against
           timing attacks. Otherwise, timing attacks could leak private key
           material if an attacker can predict when a system starts the
           publication process.
          </t>
          <t>
           The EDKEY cryptosystem uses an HKDF as defined in
           <xref target="RFC5869"/>, using SHA-512 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the extraction
           phase and HMAC-SHA-256 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the expansion phase.
           PRK_h is key material retrieved using an HKDF using the string
           "key-derivation" as the salt and the zone key as the initial
           keying material.
           The blinding factor h is the 512-bit HKDF expansion result.
           The expansion information input is
           a concatenation of the label and the string "gns".
           The result of the HKDF must be clamped and interpreted in network
           byte order.
           a is the 256-bit integer corresponding to the 256-bit private
           key d.
           The multiplication of zk with h is a point multiplication,
           while the division and multiplication of a and a1 with the
           cofactor are integer operations.
          </t>
          <t>
           The Sign(d,message) and Verify(zk,message,signature) procedures <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
           be implemented as defined in <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
          </t>
          <t>
           Signatures for EDKEY zones use a derived private scalar d';
           this is not compliant with <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           As the corresponding private key to the derived private scalar
           is not known, it is not possible to deterministically derive the
           signature part R according to <xref target="RFC8032"/>.
           Instead, signatures <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be generated as follows for any given
           message and private zone key:
           a nonce is calculated from the highest 32 bytes of the
           expansion of the private key d and the blinding factor h.
           The nonce is then hashed with the message to r.
           This way, the full derivation path is included in the calculation
           of the R value of the signature, ensuring that it is never reused
           for two different derivation paths or messages.

<!-- [rfced] Section 5.1.2:
a) Because it appears that using d' (as opposed to d' itself) is not
compliant with [RFC8032], we updated this sentence accordingly.  If
this is not correct, please provide clarifying text.

Original:
 Signatures for EDKEY zones use a derived private scalar d' which is
 not compliant with [RFC8032].

Currently:
 Signatures for EDKEY zones use a derived private scalar d'; this is
 not compliant with [RFC8032].

b) We found "key to" confusing in this context.  Should "key to" be
"key for" here?

Original:
 As the corresponding private key to
 the derived private scalar is not known, it is not possible to
 deterministically derive the signature part R according to [RFC8032].

Perhaps:
 As the corresponding private key for
 the derived private scalar is not known, it is not possible to
 deterministically derive the signature part R according to [RFC8032].

Or possibly:
 As the private key that corresponds to
 the derived private scalar is not known, it is not possible to
 deterministically derive the signature part R according to [RFC8032]. -->

          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
SignDerived(d,label,message):
  /* Key expansion */
  dh := SHA-512 (d)
  /* EdDSA clamping */
  a := dh[0..31]
  a[0] &amp;= 248
  a[31] &amp;= 127
  a[31] |= 64
  /* Calculate zk corresponding to d */
  zk := a * G

  /* Calculate blinding factor */
  PRK_h := HKDF-Extract ("key-derivation", zk)
  h := HKDF-Expand (PRK_h, label || "gns", 512 / 8)
  /* Ensure that h == h mod L */
  h[31] &amp;= 7

  zk' := h * zk
  a1 := a &gt;&gt; 3
  a2 := (h * a1) mod L
  d' := a2 &lt;&lt; 3
  nonce := SHA-256 (dh[32..63] || h)
  r := SHA-512 (nonce || message)
  R := r * G
  S := r + SHA-512(R || zk' || message) * d' mod L
  return (R,S)
           </artwork>
          <t>
           A signature (R,S) is valid if the following holds:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
VerifyDerived(zk,label,message,signature):
  zk' := ZKDF(zk,label)
  (R,S) := signature
  return S * G == R + SHA-512(R, zk', message) * zk'
           </artwork>
          <t>
           The S-Encrypt() and S-Decrypt() functions use XSalsa20
           as defined in <xref target="XSalsa20"/>
           (XSalsa20-Poly1305):

<!-- [rfced] Section 5.1.2:  We could not find any mention of
"Poly1305", "Poly", or "1305" in [XSalsa20].  Will this sentence be
clear to readers?

Original:
 The S-Encrypt() and S-Decrypt() functions use XSalsa20 as defined in
 [XSalsa20] (XSalsa20-Poly1305):

Possibly:
 The S-Encrypt() and S-Decrypt() functions use XSalsa20 as defined in
 [XSalsa20] and use the XSalsa20-Poly1305 encryption function: -->

          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
S-Encrypt(zk,label,expiration,plaintext):
  PRK_k := HKDF-Extract ("gns-xsalsa-ctx-key", zk)
  PRK_n := HKDF-Extract ("gns-xsalsa-ctx-iv", zk)
  K := HKDF-Expand (PRK_k, label, 256 / 8)
  NONCE := HKDF-Expand (PRK_n, label, 128 / 8)
  IV := NONCE || expiration
  return XSalsa20-Poly1305(K, IV, plaintext)

S-Decrypt(zk,label,expiration,ciphertext):
  PRK_k := HKDF-Extract ("gns-xsalsa-ctx-key", zk)
  PRK_n := HKDF-Extract ("gns-xsalsa-ctx-iv", zk)
  K := HKDF-Expand (PRK_k, label, 256 / 8)
  NONCE := HKDF-Expand (PRK_n, label, 128 / 8)
  IV := NONCE || expiration
  return XSalsa20-Poly1305(K, IV, ciphertext)
           </artwork>
          <t>
           The result of the XSalsa20-Poly1305 encryption function is the encrypted
           ciphertext followed by the 128-bit authentication
           tag.
           Accordingly, the length of encrypted data equals the length of the
           data plus the 16 bytes of the authentication tag.
          </t>
          <t>
           The key K and counter IV are derived from
           the record label and the zone key zk using an HKDF as defined in
           <xref target="RFC5869"/>.
           SHA-512 <xref target="RFC6234"/> is used for the
           extraction phase and SHA-256 <xref target="RFC6234"/> for the expansion phase.
           The output keying material is 32 bytes (256 bits) for the symmetric
           key and 16 bytes (128 bits) for the NONCE.
           The symmetric key K is a 256-bit XSalsa20 key
           <xref target="XSalsa20"/>.
           No additional authenticated data (AAD) is used.
          </t>
          <t>
           The nonce is combined with an 8-byte IV.
           The IV is the expiration time of the
           resource record block in network byte order.
           The resulting counter (IV) wire format is illustrated in
           <xref target="figure_hkdf_ivs_edkey"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_hkdf_ivs_edkey">
            <name>The Counter Block Initialization Vector</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|         NONCE         |
|                       |
|                       |
|                       |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|       EXPIRATION      |
|                       |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+
             </artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="gnsrecords_redirect">
        <name>Redirection Records</name>
        <t>
       Redirect records are used to redirect resolution.
       Any implementation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> support all redirection record types defined here
       and <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> support any number of additional redirection records defined in
       the GANA "GNS Record Types" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.
       Redirection records <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> have the CRITICAL flag set.
       Not supporting some record types can result in resolution failures.
       This can be a valid choice if some redirection record types have been
       determined to be insecure, or if an application has reasons to not
       support redirection to DNS for reasons such as complexity or security.
       Redirection records <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be stored and published under the apex label.
        </t>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_rdr">
          <name>REDIRECT</name>
          <t>
         A REDIRECT record is the GNS equivalent of a CNAME record in DNS.
         A REDIRECT record <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be the only non-supplemental
         record under a label.
         There <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be inactive records of the same type that have
         the SHADOW flag set in order to facilitate smooth changes of redirection
         targets.
         No other records are allowed.
         Details on the processing of this record are provided in <xref target="redirect_processing"/>.

         A REDIRECT DATA entry is illustrated in <xref target="figure_redirectrecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_redirectrecord">
            <name>The REDIRECT DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   REDIRECT NAME               |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>REDIRECT NAME:</dt>
            <dd>
           The name to continue with.
           The value of a redirect record can be a regular name or a relative
           name.
           Relative GNS names are indicated by an extension label (U+002B ("+"))
           as the rightmost label.
           The string is UTF-8 encoded and zero terminated.

<!-- [rfced] Sections 5.2.1 and subsequent:  Per more common usage in
published RFCs, we changed "0-terminated" to "zero terminated", as this
term is not used as a modifier.  Please let us know any objections.

Original:
 The string is UTF-8 encoded and 0-terminated.
...
 The value is UTF-8 encoded
    and 0-terminated.
...
 The value is UTF-8 encoded and 0-terminated.
...
 A UTF-8 string (which is not 0-terminated)
    representing the legacy hostname.
...
 A UTF-8 string (which is not 0-terminated) representing the
    preferred label of the zone.

Currently:
 The string is UTF-8 encoded and zero terminated.
...
 The value is UTF-8 encoded
    and zero terminated.
...
 The value is UTF-8 encoded and zero terminated.
...
 A UTF-8 string (which is not zero terminated)
    representing the legacy hostname.
...
 A UTF-8 string (which is not zero terminated) representing
    the preferred label of the zone. -->

         </dd>
          </dl>
        </section>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_gns2dns">
          <name>GNS2DNS</name>
          <t>
         A GNS2DNS record delegates resolution to DNS.
         The resource record contains a DNS name for the resolver to continue with
         in DNS followed by a DNS server. Both names are in the format defined in
         <xref target="RFC1034"/> for DNS names.
         There <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be multiple GNS2DNS records under a label.
         There <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> also be DNSSEC DS records or any other records used to
         secure the connection with the DNS servers under the same label.
         There <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be inactive records of the same type or types that have
         the SHADOW flag set in order to facilitate smooth changes of redirection
         targets.
         No other non-supplemental record types are allowed in the same record set.
         A GNS2DNS DATA entry is illustrated in <xref target="figure_gns2dnsrecord"/>.</t>
          <figure anchor="figure_gns2dnsrecord">
            <name>The GNS2DNS DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                      NAME                     |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                 DNS SERVER NAME               |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----------------------------------------------+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>NAME:</dt>
            <dd>
           The name to continue with in DNS. The value is UTF-8 encoded and
           zero terminated.
         </dd>
            <dt>DNS SERVER NAME:</dt>
            <dd>
           The DNS server to use. This value can be an IPv4 address in dotted-decimal
           form, an IPv6 address in colon-hexadecimal form, or a DNS name.
           It can also be a relative GNS name ending with a
           "+" as the rightmost label.
           The implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> check the string syntactically for
           an IP address in the respective notation before checking for a
           relative GNS name.
           If all three checks fail, the name <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be treated as a DNS name.
           The value is UTF-8 encoded and zero terminated.
         </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
         NOTE: If an application uses DNS names obtained from GNS2DNS records
         in a DNS request, they <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> first be converted to an IDNA-compliant
         representation <xref target="RFC5890"/>.
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="gnsrecords_other">
        <name>Auxiliary Records</name>
        <t>
         This section defines the initial set of auxiliary GNS record types. Any
         implementation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be able to process the specified record types
         according to <xref target="record_processing"/>.
        </t>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_leho">
          <name>LEHO</name>
          <t>
         The LEHO (LEgacy HOstname) record is used to provide a hint for legacy hostnames:
         applications can use the GNS to look up IPv4 or IPv6 addresses of
         Internet services.
         However, connecting to such services sometimes not only requires
         the knowledge of an address and port but also requires the canonical
         DNS name of the service to be transmitted over the transport protocol.
         In GNS, legacy hostname records provide applications the DNS name that
         is required to establish a connection to such a service.
         The most common use case is HTTP virtual hosting and TLS Server Name
         Indication <xref target="RFC6066"/>, where a DNS name must
         be supplied in the HTTP "Host"-header and the TLS handshake,
         respectively.
         Using a GNS name in those cases might not work, as
         it might not be globally unique. Furthermore, even if uniqueness is
         not an issue, the legacy service might not even be aware of GNS.
          </t>
          <t>
         A LEHO resource record is expected to be found together in a single
         resource record with an IPv4 or IPv6 address.
           A LEHO DATA entry is illustrated in <xref target="figure_lehorecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_lehorecord">
            <name>The LEHO DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                 LEGACY HOSTNAME               |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>LEGACY HOSTNAME:</dt>
            <dd>
           A UTF-8 string (which is not zero terminated) representing the legacy hostname.
         </dd>
          </dl>
          <t>
         NOTE: If an application uses a LEHO value in an HTTP request header
         (e.g., a "Host:" header), it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be converted to an IDNA-compliant representation
         <xref target="RFC5890"/>.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_nick">
          <name>NICK</name>
          <t>
         Nickname records can be used by zone administrators to publish a
         label that a zone prefers to have used when it is referred to.
         This is a suggestion for other zones regarding what label to use when creating a
         delegation record (<xref target="gnsrecords_delegation"/>) containing
         this zone key.
         This record <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> only be stored locally
         under the apex label "@" but <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be
         returned with record sets under any label as a supplemental record.
         <xref target="nick_processing"/> details how a resolver must process
         supplemental and non-supplemental NICK records.
         A NICK DATA entry is illustrated in <xref target="figure_nickrecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_nickrecord">
            <name>The NICK DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                  NICKNAME                     |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>NICKNAME:</dt>
            <dd>
           A UTF-8 string (which is not zero terminated) representing the preferred
           label of the zone. This string <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be a valid GNS label.
         </dd>
          </dl>
        </section>
        <section anchor="gnsrecords_box">
          <name>BOX</name>
          <t>
         GNS lookups are expected to return all of the required useful
         information in one record set. This avoids unnecessary additional
         lookups and cryptographically ties together information that belongs
         together, making it impossible for an adversarial storage entity to provide
         partial answers that might omit information critical for security.
          </t>
          <t>
         This general strategy is incompatible with the
         special labels used by DNS for SRV and TLSA records.  Thus, GNS
         defines the BOX record format to box up SRV and TLSA records and
         include them in the record set of the label they are associated
         with.  For example, a
         TLSA record for "_https._tcp.example.org" will be stored in the record set of
         "example.org" as a BOX record with service (SVC) 443 (https), protocol (PROTO) 6
         (tcp), and record TYPE "TLSA".
         For reference, see also <xref target="RFC2782"/>.
           A BOX DATA entry is illustrated in <xref target="figure_boxrecord"/>.
          </t>
          <figure anchor="figure_boxrecord">
            <name>The BOX DATA Wire Format</name>
            <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|   PROTO   |    SVC    |       TYPE            |
+-----------+-----------------------------------+
|                 RECORD DATA                   |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
          </figure>
          <dl newline="false">
            <dt>PROTO:</dt>
            <dd>
           The 16-bit protocol number in network byte order.
           Values
           below 2^8 are reserved for 8-bit Internet Protocol numbers allocated by IANA <xref target="RFC5237"/>
           (e.g., 6 for TCP).
           Values above 2^8 are allocated by the
           GANA "GNUnet Overlay Protocols" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.
         </dd>
            <dt>SVC:</dt>
            <dd>
           The 16-bit service value of the boxed record in network byte order. In the case of
           TCP and UDP, it is the port number.
         </dd>
            <dt>TYPE:</dt>
            <dd>
           The 32-bit record type of the boxed record in network byte order.
         </dd>
            <dt>RECORD DATA:</dt>
            <dd>
           A variable-length field containing the "DATA" format of TYPE as
           defined for the respective TYPE.  Thus, for TYPE values below 2^16, the
           format is the same as the respective record type's binary format in DNS.
         </dd>
          </dl>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="publish">
      <name>Record Encoding for Remote Storage</name>
      <t>
       Any API that allows storing a block under a 512-bit key and retrieving
       one or more blocks from a key can be used by an implementation for remote storage.
       To be useful, the API <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> permit storing at least 176 byte blocks
       to be able to support the defined zone delegation record encodings
       and <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> allow at least 1024 byte blocks.
       In the following, it is assumed that an implementation realizes two
       procedures on top of storage:

<!-- [rfced] Section 6:  Do "176 byte blocks" and "1024 byte blocks"
refer to blocks that are (at least) 176 bytes or 1024 bytes in size,
or is "byte blocks" a proper term (as in some number of byte blocks)?

Original:
 To be useful, the API MUST permit
 storing at least 176 byte blocks to be able to support the defined
 zone delegation record encodings, and SHOULD allow at least 1024 byte
 blocks.

Possibly:
 To be useful, and to be able to support the defined zone delegation
 record encodings, the API MUST permit storing blocks of size 176 bytes
 or more and SHOULD allow blocks of size 1024 bytes or more. -->

      </t>
      <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
PUT(key,block)
GET(key) -&gt; block
</artwork>
      <t>
       A GNS implementation publishes blocks
       in accordance with the properties and recommendations of the underlying
       remote storage. This can include a periodic refresh operation to preserve the
       availability of published blocks.
      </t>
      <t>
       There is no mechanism for explicitly deleting individual blocks from remote storage.
       However, blocks include an EXPIRATION field, which guides remote
       storage implementations to decide when to delete blocks.  Given multiple blocks
       for the same key, remote storage implementations <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> try
       to preserve and return the block with the largest EXPIRATION value.
      </t>
      <t>
       All resource records from the same zone sharing the same label are
       encrypted and published together in a single resource records block
       (RRBLOCK) in the remote storage under a key q, as illustrated
       in <xref target="figure_storage_publish"/>.
       A GNS implementation <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> include expired resource
       records in blocks.
       An implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> use the PUT storage procedure
       when record sets change to update the zone contents.  Implementations
       <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> ensure that the EXPIRATION fields of RRBLOCKs
       increase strictly monotonically for every change, even if the smallest
       expiration time of records in the block does not.
      </t>
      <figure anchor="figure_storage_publish">
        <name>Management and Publication of Local Zones in Distributed Storage</name>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host          |   Remote
                                               |   Storage
                                               |
                                               |    +---------+
                                               |   /         /|
                                               |  +---------+ |
+-----------+                                  |  |         | |
|           |       +---------+PUT(q, RRBLOCK) |  | Record  | |
|    User   |       |  Zone   |----------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |       | Master  |                |  |         |/
+-----------+       +---------+                |  +---------+
     |                     A                   |
     |                     | Zone records      |
     |                     | grouped by label  |
     |                     |                   |
     |                 +---------+             |
     |Create / Delete /    |    /|             |
     |and Update     +---------+ |             |
     |Local Zones    |         | |             |
     |               |  Local  | |             |
     +--------------&gt;|  Zones  | |             |
                     |         |/              |
                     +---------+               |
         </artwork>
      </figure>
      <t>
       Storage key derivation and records
       block creation are specified in the following sections and
       illustrated in <xref target="figure_storage_derivations"/>.
      </t>
      <figure anchor="figure_storage_derivations">
        <name>Storage Key and Records Block Creation Overview</name>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
+----------+ +-------+ +------------+ +-------------+
| Zone Key | | Label | | Record Set | | Private Key |
+----------+ +-------+ +------------+ +-------------+
    |          |            |               |
    |          |            v               |
    |          |           +-----------+    |
    |          +----------&gt;| S-Encrypt |    |
    +----------|----------&gt;+-----------+    |
    |          |               |    |       |
    |          |               |    v       v
    |          |               |   +-------------+
    |          +---------------|--&gt;| SignDerived |
    |          |               |   +-------------+
    |          |               |        |
    |          v               v        v
    |      +------+        +---------------+
    +-----&gt;| ZKDF |-------&gt;| Records Block |
           +------+        +---------------+
              |
              v
           +------+        +-------------+
           | Hash |-------&gt;| Storage Key |
           +------+        +-------------+
         </artwork>
      </figure>
      <section anchor="blinding">
        <name>The Storage Key</name>
        <t>
         The storage key is derived from the zone key and the respective
         label of the contained records.
         The required knowledge of both the zone key and the label in combination
         with the similarly derived symmetric secret keys and blinded zone keys
         ensures query privacy (see <xref target="RFC8324" sectionFormat="comma" section="3.5"/>).
        </t>
        <t>
         Given a label, the storage key q is derived as follows:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
q := SHA-512 (ZKDF(zk, label))
         </artwork>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>label:</dt>
          <dd>A UTF-8 string under which the resource records are published.
         </dd>
          <dt>zk:</dt>
          <dd>
           The zone key.
         </dd>
          <dt>q:</dt>
          <dd>
           The 512-bit storage key under which the resource records block is
           published.
           It is the SHA-512 hash <xref target="RFC6234"/> over the derived zone key.
         </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
      <section anchor="rdata">
        <name>Plaintext Record Data (RDATA)</name>
        <t>
         GNS records from a zone are grouped by their labels such that all
         records under the same label are published together as a single
         block in storage. Such grouped record sets <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be paired with
         supplemental records.
        </t>
        <t>
         Record data (RDATA) is the format used to encode such a group of GNS records.
         The binary format of RDATA is illustrated in
         <xref target="figure_rdata"/>.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_rdata">
          <name>The RDATA Wire Format</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                 EXPIRATION                    |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|    SIZE   |    FLAGS  |        TYPE           |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                      DATA                     /
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   EXPIRATION                  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|    SIZE   |    FLAGS  |        TYPE           |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                     DATA                      /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
/                     PADDING                   /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>EXPIRATION, SIZE, TYPE, FLAGS, and DATA:</dt>
          <dd>
           Definitions for these fields are provided below <xref target="figure_gnsrecord"/>
           in <xref target="rrecords"/>.
         </dd>
          <dt>PADDING:</dt>
          <dd>
           When serializing records into RDATA, a GNS implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> ensure that
           the size of the RDATA is a power of two
           using this field. The field <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be set to zero and <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be
           ignored on receipt.
           As a special exception, record sets with (only) a zone delegation
           record type are never padded.
         </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
      <section anchor="records_block">
        <name>The Resource Records Block</name>
        <t>
         The resource records grouped in an RDATA are encrypted using the S-Encrypt()
         function defined by the zone type of the zone to which the resource records belong
         and prefixed with metadata into a resource record block (RRBLOCK) for remote storage.
         The GNS RRBLOCK wire format is illustrated in
         <xref target="figure_record_block"/>.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_record_block">
          <name>The RRBLOCK Wire Format</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|          SIZE         |    ZONE TYPE          |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
/                  ZONE KEY                     /
/                  (BLINDED)                    /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   SIGNATURE                   |
/                                               /
/                                               /
|                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   EXPIRATION                  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                    BDATA                      /
/                                               /
/                                               |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>SIZE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 32-bit value containing the length of the block in bytes in network byte order.
           Despite the message format's use of a 32-bit value,
           implementations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> refuse to publish blocks beyond a certain
           size significantly below the theoretical block size limit of 4 GB.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE TYPE:</dt>
          <dd>
           The 32-bit ztype in network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>ZONE KEY (BLINDED):</dt>
          <dd>
           The blinded zone key "ZKDF(zk, label)"
           to be used to verify SIGNATURE.
           The length and format of the blinded public key depend on the ztype.
         </dd>
          <dt>SIGNATURE:</dt>
          <dd>
           The signature is computed over the EXPIRATION and BDATA fields
           as shown in <xref target="figure_rrsigwithpseudo"/>.
           The length and format of the signature depend on the ztype.
           The signature is created using the SignDerived() function of
           the cryptosystem of the zone (see <xref target="zones"/>).
         </dd>
          <dt>EXPIRATION:</dt>
          <dd>
           Specifies when the RRBLOCK expires and the encrypted block
           <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be removed from storage and caches, as it is likely stale.
           However, applications <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> continue to use non-expired individual
           records until they expire.  The value <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be set to the maximum of
           the expiration time of the resource record contained within this block with the
           smallest expiration time and the previous EXPIRATION value (if any) plus one
           to ensure strict monotonicity (see <xref target="security_cryptography"/>).
           If the RDATA includes shadow records, then the maximum
           expiration time of all shadow records with matching type and the
           expiration times of the non-shadow records is considered.
           This is a 64-bit absolute date in microseconds since midnight
           (0 hour), January 1, 1970 UTC in network byte order.

<!-- [rfced] Section 6.3:  Does "is considered" refer to the maximum
expiration time only (in which case "is" is correct) or the maximum
expiration time and also the expiration times of the non-shadow
records (in which case "is" should be "are")?

Original:
 If the RDATA includes shadow
 records, then the maximum expiration time of all shadow records
 with matching type and the expiration times of the non-shadow
 records is considered. -->

         </dd>
          <dt>BDATA:</dt>
          <dd>
           The encrypted RDATA computed using S-Encrypt() with the
           zone key, label, and expiration time as additional inputs.
           Its ultimate size and content are determined by
           the S-Encrypt() function of the ztype.
         </dd>
        </dl>
        <t>
         The signature over the public key covers a 32-bit pseudo header
         conceptually prefixed to the EXPIRATION and BDATA fields.
         The wire format is illustrated
         in <xref target="figure_rrsigwithpseudo"/>.
        </t>
        <figure anchor="figure_rrsigwithpseudo">
          <name>The Wire Format Used for Creating the Signature of the RRBLOCK</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
0     8     16    24    32    40    48    56
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|         SIZE          |       PURPOSE (0x0F)  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                   EXPIRATION                  |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
|                    BDATA                      |
/                                               /
/                                               /
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
           </artwork>
        </figure>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>SIZE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 32-bit value containing the length of the signed data in bytes
           in network byte order.
         </dd>
          <dt>PURPOSE:</dt>
          <dd>
           A 32-bit signature purpose flag in network byte order. The value of this
           field <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be 15.  It defines the context in which
           the signature is created so that it cannot be reused in other parts
           of the protocol including possible future extensions.
           The value of this field corresponds to an entry in the
           GANA "GNUnet Signature Purposes" registry <xref target="GANA"/>.
         </dd>
          <dt>EXPIRATION:</dt>
          <dd>
           Field as defined in the RRBLOCK message above.
         </dd>
          <dt>BDATA:</dt>
          <dd>Field as defined in the RRBLOCK message above.</dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="resolution">
      <name>Name Resolution</name>
      <t>
       Names in GNS are resolved by recursively querying the record storage.
       Recursive in this context means that a resolver does not provide
       intermediate results for a query to the application.
       Instead, it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> respond to a resolution request with either the
       requested resource record or an error message if resolution
       fails.
       <xref target="figure_resolution"/> illustrates how an application
       requests the lookup of a GNS name (1).
       The application <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> provide a desired record type to the resolver.
       Subsequently, a Start Zone is determined (2) and the recursive
       resolution process started.
       This is where the desired record type is used to guide processing.
       For example, if a zone delegation record type is requested, the
       resolution of the apex label in that zone must be skipped, as
       the desired record is already found.
       Details on how the resolution process is initiated and each iterative
       result (3a,3b) in the resolution is processed are provided in the sections below.
       The results of the lookup are eventually returned to the application (4).
       The implementation <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> filter the returned resource
       record sets according to the desired record type.
       Filtering of record sets is typically done by the application.
      </t>
      <figure anchor="figure_resolution">
        <name>The Recursive GNS Resolution Process</name>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host             |   Remote
                                                  |   Storage
                                                  |
                                                  |    +---------+
                                                  |   /         /|
                                                  |  +---------+ |
+-----------+ (1) Name +----------+               |  |         | |
|           | Lookup   |          | (3a) GET(q)   |  | Record  | |
|Application|----------| Resolver |---------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |&lt;---------|          |&lt;--------------|--|         |/
+-----------+ (4)      +----------+ (3b) RRBLOCK  |  +---------+
              Records     A                       |
                          |                       |
     (2) Determination of |                       |
         Start Zone       |                       |
                          |                       |
                       +---------+                |
                      /   |     /|                |
                     +---------+ |                |
                     |         | |                |
                     |  Start  | |                |
                     |  Zones  | |                |
                     |         |/                 |
                     +---------+                  |
         </artwork>
      </figure>
      <section anchor="governance">
        <name>Start Zones</name>
        <t>
         The resolution of a GNS name starts by identifying the start zone
         suffix. Once the start zone suffix is identified, recursive resolution
         of the remainder of the name is initiated (see <xref target="recursion"/>).
         There are two types of start zone suffixes: zTLDs and local
         suffix-to-zone mappings.
         The choice of available suffix-to-zone mappings is at the sole
         discretion of the local system administrator or user.
         This property addresses the issue of a single hierarchy with a
         centrally controlled root and the related issue of distribution and
         management of root servers in DNS (see Sections&nbsp;<xref target="RFC8324" section="3.12"
 sectionFormat="bare"/> and <xref target="RFC8324" section="3.10"
 sectionFormat="bare"/> of <xref target="RFC8324"/>, respectively).
        </t>
        <t>
         For names ending with a zTLD, the start zone is explicitly given in the
         suffix of the name to resolve.
         In order to ensure uniqueness of names with zTLDs, any
         implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> use the given zone as the start zone.
         An implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> first try to interpret the rightmost label of
         the given name as the beginning of a zTLD (see <xref target="zTLD"/>).
         If the rightmost label cannot be (partially) decoded or if it does not
         indicate a supported ztype, the name is treated as a normal name and
         start zone discovery <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> continue with finding a local suffix-to-zone
         mapping.
         If a valid ztype can be found in the rightmost label, the
         implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> try to synthesize and decode the zTLD to retrieve
         the start zone key according to <xref target="zTLD"/>.
         If the zTLD cannot be synthesized or decoded, the resolution of
         the name fails and an error is returned to the application.
         Otherwise, the zone key <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be used as the start zone:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Example name: www.example.&lt;zTLD&gt;
=&gt; Start zone: zk of type ztype
=&gt; Name to resolve from start zone: www.example
         </artwork>
        <t>
         For names not ending with a zTLD, the resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> determine the start
         zone through a local suffix-to-zone mapping.
         Suffix-to-zone mappings <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be configurable through a local
         configuration file or database by the user or system administrator.
         A suffix <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> consist of multiple GNS labels concatenated with a
         label separator.
         If multiple suffixes match the name to resolve, the longest
         matching suffix <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be used. The suffix length of two results
         <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be equal. This indicates a misconfiguration, and the
         implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> return an error.
         The following is a non-normative example mapping of start zones:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Example name: www.example.xyz.gns.alt
Local suffix mappings:
xyz.gns.alt = zTLD0 := Base32GNS(ztype0||zk0)
example.xyz.gns.alt = zTLD1 := Base32GNS(ztype1||zk1)
example.com.gns.alt = zTLD2 := Base32GNS(ztype2||zk2)
...
=&gt; Start zone: zk1
=&gt; Name to resolve from start zone: www
         </artwork>
        <t>
         The process given above <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be supplemented with other mechanisms if
         the particular application requires a different process.
         If no start zone can be discovered, resolution <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> fail and an
         error <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be returned to the application.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="recursion">
        <name>Recursion</name>
        <t>
           In each step of the recursive name resolution, there is an
           authoritative zone zk and a name to resolve.
           The name <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be empty.
           If the name is empty, it is interpreted as the apex label "@".
           Initially, the authoritative zone is the start zone.
        </t>
        <t>
           From here, the following steps are recursively executed, in order:
        </t>
        <ol>
           <li>Extract the rightmost label from the name to look up.</li>
          <li>Calculate q using the label and zk as defined in
           <xref target="blinding"/>.</li>
          <li>Perform a storage query GET(q) to retrieve the RRBLOCK.</li>
          <li>Check that (a) the block is not expired, (b) the SHA-512 hash
             of the derived authoritative zone key zk' from the RRBLOCK matches
             the query q, and (c) the signature is valid. If any of these
             tests fail, the RRBLOCK <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
             be ignored and, if applicable, the storage lookup GET(q)
             <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> continue to look for other RRBLOCKs.</li>
          <li>Obtain the RDATA by decrypting the BDATA contained in the
              RRBLOCK using S-Decrypt() as defined by the zone type, effectively
              inverting the process described in <xref target="records_block"/>.</li>
        </ol>
        <t>
           Once a well-formed block has been decrypted, the records from
           RDATA are subjected to record processing.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="record_processing">
        <name>Record Processing</name>
        <t>
           In record processing, only the valid records obtained are considered.
           To filter records by validity, the resolver
           <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> at least check the expiration time and the FLAGS field of the
           respective record.
           Specifically, the resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> disregard expired records.
           Furthermore, SHADOW and
           SUPPLEMENTAL flags can also exclude records from being considered.
           If the resolver encounters a record with the CRITICAL flag set and
           does not support the record type, the resolution <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be aborted
           and an error <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be returned. Information indicating that the critical
           record could not be processed <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be returned in the error
           description. The implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> choose not to return the reason for the failure,
           merely complicating troubleshooting for the user.
        </t>
        <t>
           The next steps depend on the context of the name that is being
           resolved:
        </t>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>Case 1:</dt>
           <dd>If the filtered record set consists of a single REDIRECT record,
           the remainder of the name is prepended to the REDIRECT data and the
           recursion is started again from the resulting name.
           Details are provided in <xref target="redirect_processing"/>.</dd>
          <dt>Case 2:</dt>
           <dd>If the filtered record set consists exclusively of one or more GNS2DNS records,
           resolution continues with DNS.
           Details are provided in <xref target="gns2dns_processing"/>.</dd>
          <dt>Case 3:</dt>
           <dd>If the remainder of the name to be resolved is of the format
           "_SERVICE._PROTO" and the record set contains one or more matching BOX
           records, the records in the BOX records are the final result and the recursion
           is concluded as described in <xref target="box_processing"/>.</dd>
          <dt>Case 4:</dt>
           <dd>If the current record set
           consists of a single delegation record,
           resolution of the remainder of the name is delegated to
           the target zone as described in <xref target="delegation_processing"/>.</dd>
          <dt>Case 5:</dt>
           <dd>If the remainder of the name to resolve is empty,
           the record set is the final result.
           If any NICK records are in the final result set, they <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
           first be processed according to <xref target="nick_processing"/>.
           Otherwise, the record result set is directly returned as the final result.</dd>
	</dl>
           <t>Finally, if none of the above cases are applicable, resolution fails and the
           resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> return an empty record set.</t>

        <section anchor="redirect_processing">
          <name>REDIRECT</name>
          <t>
             If the remaining name is empty and the desired record type is
             REDIRECT, the resolution concludes with the REDIRECT record.
             If the rightmost label of the redirect name is the extension label
             (U+002B ("+")),
             resolution continues in GNS with the new name in the
             current zone.
             Otherwise, the resulting name is resolved via the
             default operating system name resolution process.
             This can in turn trigger a GNS name resolution process, depending
             on the system configuration.
             If resolution continues in DNS, the name <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> first be
             converted to an IDNA-compliant representation <xref target="RFC5890"/>.
          </t>
          <t>
             In order to prevent infinite loops, the resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
             implement loop detection or limit the number of recursive
             resolution steps.
             The loop detection <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be effective even
             if a REDIRECT found in GNS triggers subsequent GNS lookups via
             the default operating system name resolution process.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="gns2dns_processing">
          <name>GNS2DNS</name>
          <t>
             When a resolver encounters one or more GNS2DNS records, the remaining name
             is empty, and the desired record type is GNS2DNS, the GNS2DNS
             records are returned.

<!-- [rfced] Section 7.3.2:  We had trouble following the "and"
relationships in this sentence.  We updated as follows.  If this is
incorrect, please clarify the text.

Original:
 When a resolver encounters one or more GNS2DNS records and the
 remaining name is empty and the desired record type is GNS2DNS, the
 GNS2DNS records are returned.

Currently:
 When a resolver encounters one or more GNS2DNS records, the
 remaining name is empty, and the desired record type is GNS2DNS, the
 GNS2DNS records are returned. -->

          </t>
          <t>
             Otherwise, it is expected that the resolver first resolves the
             IP addresses of the specified DNS name servers.
             The DNS name <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be converted to an IDNA-compliant
             representation <xref target="RFC5890"/> for resolution in DNS.
             GNS2DNS records <bcp14>MAY</bcp14>
             contain numeric IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, allowing the resolver to
             skip this step.
             The DNS server names might themselves be names in GNS or DNS.
             If the rightmost label of the DNS server name is the extension label
             (U+002B ("+")), the rest of the name is to be
             interpreted relative to the zone of the GNS2DNS record.
             If the DNS server name ends in a label representation of a
             zone key, the DNS server name is to be resolved against
             the GNS zone zk.
          </t>
          <t>
             Multiple GNS2DNS records can be stored under the same label,
             in which case the resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> try all of them.
             The resolver <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> try them in any order or even in parallel.
             If multiple GNS2DNS records are present, the DNS name <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be
             identical for all of them. Otherwise, it is not clear which name
             the resolver is supposed to follow. If different DNS names are
             present, the resolution fails and an
             appropriate error <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be returned to the application.

<!-- [rfced] Section 7.3.2:  We changed "error is SHOULD be returned"
to "error SHOULD be returned" here.  Please let us know if the text
should be "error is returned" instead.

Original:
 If
 different DNS names are present the resolution fails and an
 appropriate error is SHOULD be returned to the application.

Currently:
 If
 different DNS names are present, the resolution fails and an
 appropriate error SHOULD be returned to the application. -->

          </t>
          <t>
             If there are DNSSEC DS records or any other records used to
             secure the connection with the DNS servers stored under the label,
             the DNS resolver <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> use them to secure the connection with
             the DNS server.
          </t>
          <t>
             Once the IP addresses of the DNS servers have been determined,
             the DNS name from the GNS2DNS record is appended
             to the remainder of the name to be resolved and is
             resolved by querying the DNS name server(s).
             The synthesized name has to be converted to an IDNA-compliant
             representation <xref target="RFC5890"/> for resolution in DNS.
             If such a conversion is not possible, the resolution <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be aborted
             and an error <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be returned. Information indicating that the critical
             record could not be processed <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be returned in the error
             description. The implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> choose not to return the reason for the failure,
             merely complicating troubleshooting for the user.
          </t>
          <t>
             As the DNS servers
             specified are possibly authoritative DNS servers, the GNS resolver <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
             support recursive DNS resolution and <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> delegate this to the
             authoritative DNS servers.
             The first successful recursive name resolution result
             is returned to the application.
             In addition, the resolver <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> return the queried DNS name as a
             supplemental LEHO record (see <xref target="gnsrecords_leho"/>) with a
             relative expiration time of one hour.
          </t>
          <t>
             Once the transition from GNS to DNS is made through a
             GNS2DNS record, there is no "going back".
             The (possibly recursive) resolution of the DNS name <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14>
             delegate back into GNS and should only follow the DNS specifications.
             For example, names contained in DNS CNAME records <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be
             interpreted by resolvers that support both DNS and GNS as GNS names.
          </t>
          <t>
             GNS resolvers <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> offer a configuration
             option to disable DNS processing to avoid information leakage
             and provide a consistent security profile for all name resolutions.
             Such resolvers would return an empty record set upon encountering
             a GNS2DNS record during the recursion. However, if GNS2DNS records
             are encountered in the record set for the apex label and a GNS2DNS record
             is explicitly requested by the application, such records <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
             still be returned, even if DNS support is disabled by the
             GNS resolver configuration.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="box_processing">
          <name>BOX</name>
          <t>
             When a BOX record is received, a GNS resolver must unbox it if the
             name to be resolved continues with "_SERVICE._PROTO".
             Otherwise, the BOX record is to be left untouched. This way, TLSA
             (and SRV) records do not require a separate network request, and
             TLSA records become inseparable from the corresponding address
             records.
          </t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="delegation_processing">
          <name>Zone Delegation Records</name>
          <t>
             When the resolver encounters a record of a supported
             zone delegation record type (such as PKEY or EDKEY)
             and the remainder of the name is not empty, resolution continues
             recursively with the remainder of the name in the
             GNS zone specified in the delegation record.
          </t>
          <t>
             Whenever a resolver encounters a new GNS zone, it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
             check against the local revocation list (see <xref target="revocation"/>) to see
             whether the respective
             zone key has been revoked. If the zone key was revoked, the
             resolution <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> fail with an empty result set.
          </t>
          <t>
             Implementations <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> allow multiple different zone
             delegations under a single label (except if some are shadow records).
             Implementations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> support any subset of ztypes.
             Implementations <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> process zone delegation records
             stored under the apex label ("@").  If a zone delegation record is encountered under
             the apex label, resolution fails and an error <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be returned. The
             implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> choose not to return the reason for the failure,
             merely impacting troubleshooting information for the user.
          </t>
          <t>
             If the remainder of the name to resolve is empty and a record set
             was received containing only a single delegation record, the
             recursion is continued with the record value as authoritative zone
             and the apex label "@" as remaining name.
             Except in the case where the desired record type as specified by
             the application is equal to the ztype, in which case the delegation
             record is returned.

<!-- [rfced] Section 7.3.4:  This paragraph is difficult to parse.
For example, the last sentence is a fragment, and it isn't clear
under what circumstances the delegation record is returned.  If the
suggested text is not correct, please clarify.

Original:
 If the remainder of the name to resolve is empty and a record set was
 received containing only a single delegation record, the recursion is
 continued with the record value as authoritative zone and the apex
 label "@" as remaining name.  Except in the case where the desired
 record type as specified by the application is equal to the ztype, in
 which case the delegation record is returned.

Suggested:
 If the remainder of the name to resolve is empty and a record set was
 received containing only a single delegation record, the recursion is
 continued with the record value as the authoritative zone and the
 apex label "@" as the remaining name.  The exception is the case
 where the desired record type as specified by the application is
 equal to the ztype, in which case the delegation record is returned. -->

          </t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="nick_processing">
          <name>NICK</name>
          <t>
             NICK records are only relevant to the recursive resolver
             if the record set in question is the final result, which is to
             be returned to the application. The encountered NICK records can be either
             supplemental (see <xref target="rrecords"/>) or
             non-supplemental.
             If the NICK record is supplemental, the resolver only returns the
             record set if one of the non-supplemental records matches the
             queried record type.
             It is possible that one record set contains both supplemental
             and non-supplemental NICK records.
          </t>
          <t>
             The differentiation between a supplemental and non-supplemental
             NICK record allows the application to match the record to the
             authoritative zone. Consider the following example:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Query: alice.example.gns.alt (type=A)
Result:
A: 192.0.2.1
NICK: eve (non-supplemental)
         </artwork>
          <t>
          In this example, the returned NICK record is non-supplemental.
          For the application, this means that the NICK belongs to the zone
          "alice.example.gns.alt" and is published under the apex label along with an A
          record. The NICK record is interpreted as follows: the zone defined by
          "alice.example.gns.alt" wants to be referred to as "eve".
          In contrast, consider the following:
          </t>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Query: alice.example.gns.alt (type=AAAA)
Result:
AAAA: 2001:db8::1
NICK: john (supplemental)
         </artwork>
          <t>
       In this case, the NICK record is marked as supplemental. This means that
       the NICK record belongs to the zone "example.gns.alt" and is published under the
       label "alice" along with a AAAA record.  Here, the NICK record should be
       interpreted as follows: the zone defined by "example.gns.alt" wants to be referred to as
       "john". This distinction is likely useful for other records published as
       supplemental.
          </t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="encoding">
      <name>Internationalization and Character Encoding</name>
      <t>
         All names in GNS are encoded in UTF-8 <xref target="RFC3629"/>.
         Labels <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be canonicalized using
         Normalization Form C (NFC) <xref target="Unicode-UAX15"/>.
         This does not include any DNS names found in DNS records, such as CNAME
         record data, which is internationalized through the IDNA specifications;
         see <xref target="RFC5890"/>.
      </t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security">
      <name>Security and Privacy Considerations</name>
      <section anchor="security_availability">
        <name>Availability</name>
        <t>
           In order to ensure availability of records beyond their
           absolute expiration times, implementations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> allow 
           relative expiration time values of records to be locally defined.
           Records can then be published recurringly with updated
           absolute expiration times by the implementation.
        </t>
        <t>
           Implementations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> allow users to manage private records in
           their zones that are not published in storage.
           Private records are considered just like
           regular records when resolving labels in local zones,
           but their data is completely unavailable to non-local users.

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.1:  Does "considered just like" here mean
"treated just like", "also considered to be just like", or something
else?  Please clarify.

Original:
 Private records are
 considered just like regular records when resolving labels in local
 zones, but their data is completely unavailable to non-local users. -->

        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_agility">
        <name>Agility</name>
        <t>
           The security of cryptographic systems depends on both the strength of
           the cryptographic algorithms chosen and the strength of the keys used
           with those algorithms.  This security also depends on the engineering
           of the protocol used by the system to ensure that there are no
           non-cryptographic ways to bypass the security of the overall system.
           This is why developers of applications managing GNS zones <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14>
           select a default ztype considered secure at the time of
           releasing the software.
           For applications targeting end users that are not expected to
           understand cryptography, the application developer <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> leave
           the ztype selection of new zones to end users.
        </t>
        <t>
           This document concerns itself with the selection of cryptographic
           algorithms used in GNS.
           The algorithms identified in this document are not known to be
           broken (in the cryptographic sense) at the current time, and
           cryptographic research so far leads us to believe that they are
           likely to remain secure into the foreseeable future.  However, this
           is not necessarily forever, and it is expected that new revisions of
           this document will be issued from time to time to reflect the current
           best practices in this area.
        </t>
        <t>
           In terms of crypto-agility, whenever the need for an updated cryptographic
           scheme arises to, for example, replace ECDSA over Ed25519 for
           PKEY records, it can simply be introduced
           through a new record type.
           Zone administrators can then replace
           the delegation record type for future records.
           The old record type remains,
           and zones can iteratively migrate to the updated zone keys.
           To ensure that implementations correctly generate an error message
           when encountering a ztype that they do not support,
           current and future delegation records must always have the
           CRITICAL flag set.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_cryptography">
        <name>Cryptography</name>
        <t>
           The following considerations provide background on the design choices
           of the ztypes specified in this document.
           When specifying new ztypes as per <xref target="zones"/>, the same
           considerations apply.
        </t>
        <t>
           GNS PKEY zone keys use ECDSA over Ed25519.
           This is an unconventional choice,
           as ECDSA is usually used with other curves.  However, standardized
           ECDSA curves are problematic for a range of reasons described in
           the Curve25519 and EdDSA papers <xref target="ed25519"/>.
           Using EdDSA directly is also
           not possible, as a hash function is used on the private key which
           destroys the linearity that the key blinding in GNS depends upon.
           We are not aware of anyone suggesting that using Ed25519 instead
           of another common curve of similar size would lower the security of
           ECDSA.  GNS uses 256-bit curves; that way, the encoded (public)
           keys fit into a single DNS label, which is good for usability.

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.3:  In the first sentence, [ed25519] appears
to be one paper.  Should RFC 7748 also be cited here as the other
paper?

In the second sentence, does the hash function or the key destroy the
linearity that the key blinding in GNS depends upon?

If the suggested text is not correct, please provide clarifying text.

Original:
 However,
 standardized ECDSA curves are problematic for a range of reasons
 described in the Curve25519 and EdDSA papers [ed25519].  Using EdDSA
 directly is also not possible, as a hash function is used on the
 private key which destroys the linearity that the key blinding in GNS
 depends upon.

Suggested (guessing the hash function and including RFC 7748):
 However,
 standardized ECDSA curves are problematic for a range of reasons, as
 described in the Curve25519 and EdDSA papers [RFC7748] [ed25519].
 Using EdDSA directly is also not possible, as a hash function is
 used on the private key and will destroy the linearity that the key
 blinding in GNS depends upon. -->

        </t>
        <t>
           In order to ensure ciphertext indistinguishability, care must be
           taken with respect to the IV in the counter
           block. In our design, the IV always includes the expiration time of the
           record block.
           When applications store records with relative expiration times,
           monotonicity is implicitly
           ensured because each time a block is published in storage, its IV is
           unique, as the expiration time is calculated dynamically and increases
           monotonically with the system time. Still,
           an implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> ensure that when relative expiration times
           are decreased, the expiration time of the next record block <bcp14>MUST</bcp14>
           be after the last published block.
           For records where an absolute expiration time is used, the implementation
           <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> ensure that the expiration time is always increased when the record
           data changes. For example, the expiration time on the wire could be increased
           by a single microsecond even if the user did not request a change.
           In the case of deletion of all resource records under a label, the
           implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> keep track of the last absolute expiration time
           of the last published resource block.  Implementations <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> define
           and use a special record type as a tombstone that preserves the last
           absolute expiration time but then <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> take care to not publish a
           block with such a tombstone record.
           When new records are added under this label later, the implementation
           <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> ensure that the expiration times are after the last published
           block.
           Finally, in order to ensure monotonically increasing expiration times,
           the implementation <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> keep a local record of the last time obtained
           from the system clock, so as to construct a monotonic clock if
           the system clock jumps backwards.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_abuse">
        <name>Abuse Mitigation</name>
        <t>
           GNS names are UTF-8 strings. Consequently, GNS faces issues
           with respect to name spoofing similar to those for DNS with respect to internationalized
           domain names.
           In DNS, attackers can register similar-sounding or similar-looking
           names (see above) in order to execute phishing attacks.
           GNS zone administrators must take into account this attack vector and
           incorporate rules in order to mitigate it.
        </t>
        <t>
           Further, DNS can be used to combat illegal content on the Internet
           by having the respective domains seized by authorities.
           However, the same mechanisms can also be abused in order to impose
           state censorship.
           Avoiding that possibility is one of the motivations behind GNS.
           In GNS, TLDs are not enumerable. By design, the start zone of
           the resolver is defined locally, and hence such a seizure is
           difficult and ineffective in GNS.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_keymanagement">
        <name>Zone Management</name>
        <t>
           In GNS, zone administrators need to manage and protect their zone
           keys. Once a private zone key is lost, it cannot be recovered, and
           the zone revocation message cannot be computed anymore.
           Revocation messages can be precalculated if revocation is
           required in cases where a private zone key is lost.
           Zone administrators, and for GNS this includes end users, are
           required to responsibly and diligently protect their cryptographic
           keys.
           GNS supports signing records in advance ("offline") in order to
           support processes (such as air gaps) that aim to protect private keys.
        </t>
        <t>
           Similarly, users are required to manage their local start zone configuration.
           In order to ensure the integrity and availability of names, users must
           ensure that their local start zone information is not compromised or
           outdated.
           It can be expected that the processing of zone revocations and an
           initial start zone is provided with a GNS implementation
           ("drop shipping").
           Shipping an initial start zone configuration effectively establishes
           a root zone.
           Extension and customization of the zone are at the full discretion of
           the user.

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.5:  Because it appears that "or names" should
be "of names" here, we updated accordingly.  Please let us know if
this is incorrect.

Original:
 In order to ensure integrity and availability or
 names, users must ensure that their local start zone information is
 not compromised or outdated.

Currently:
 In order to ensure the integrity and availability of
 names, users must ensure that their local start zone information is
 not compromised or outdated. -->

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.5:  Does "provided" only refer to the
processing, or does it also refer to the initial start zone (in
which case "is" should be "are")?

Original:
 It can be expected that the processing
 of zone revocations and an initial start zone is provided with a GNS
 implementation ("drop shipping"). -->

        </t>
        <t>
           While implementations following this specification will be
           interoperable, if two implementations connect to different remote storage entities,
           they are mutually unreachable.
           This can lead to a state where a record exists in the global
           namespace for a particular name, but the implementation is not
           communicating with the remote storage entity that contains the respective
           block and is hence unable to resolve it.
           This situation is similar to a split-horizon DNS configuration.
           Which remote storage entities are implemented usually depends on the application
           it is built for.
           The remote storage entity used will most likely depend on the specific application
           context using GNS resolution.
           For example, one application is the resolution of hidden services
           within the Tor network, which would suggest using Tor routers for remote storage.
           <!-- FIXME: add non-normative reference to Tor / Tor hidden services here? -->
           Implementations of "aggregated" remote storage entities are conceivable but
           are expected to be the exception.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_dht">
        <name>DHTs as Remote Storage</name>
        <t>
           This document does not specify the properties of the underlying
           remote storage, which is required by any GNS implementation.
           It is important to note that the properties of the underlying
           remote storage are directly inherited by the
           GNS implementation. This includes both security and
           other non-functional properties such as scalability and performance.
           Implementers should take great care when selecting or implementing
           a DHT for use as remote storage in a GNS implementation.
           DHTs with reasonable security and performance properties exist
           <xref target="R5N"/>.
           It should also be taken into consideration that GNS implementations
           that build upon different DHT overlays are unlikely to be
           interoperable with each other.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security_rev">
        <name>Revocations</name>
        <t>
           Zone administrators are advised to pregenerate zone revocations
           and to securely store the revocation information if the zone
           key is lost, compromised, or replaced in the future.
           Precalculated revocations can cease to be valid due to expirations
           or protocol changes such as epoch adjustments.
           Consequently, implementers and users must take precautions in order
           to manage revocations accordingly.
        </t>
        <t>
           Revocation payloads do not include a "new" key for key replacement.
           Inclusion of such a key would have two major disadvantages:
        </t>
        <ol>
           <li>
           If a revocation is published after a private key was compromised,
           allowing key replacement would be dangerous: if an
           adversary took over the private key, the adversary could then
           broadcast a revocation with a key replacement. For the replacement,
           the compromised owner would have no chance to issue a
           revocation. Thus, allowing a revocation message to replace a private
           key makes dealing with key compromise situations worse.
           </li>
          <li>
           Sometimes, key revocations are used with the objective of changing
           cryptosystems. Migration to another cryptosystem by replacing keys
           via a revocation message would only be secure as long as both
           cryptosystems are still secure against forgery. Such a planned,
           non-emergency migration to another cryptosystem should be done by
           running zones for both cipher systems in parallel for a while. The
           migration would conclude by revoking the legacy zone key only when
           it is deemed no longer secure and, hopefully, after most users have
           migrated to the replacement.
           </li>
        </ol>
      </section>
      <section anchor="privacy_labels">
        <name>Zone Privacy</name>
        <t>
           GNS does not support authenticated denial of existence of names
           within a zone.
           Record data is published in encrypted form using keys derived from the
           zone key and record label. Zone administrators should
           carefully consider whether (1) a label and zone key are public or 
           (2) one or both of these keys should be used as a shared secret to restrict access
           to the corresponding record data.
           Unlike public zone keys, low-entropy labels can be guessed by an attacker. If an attacker
           knows the public zone key, the use of well-known or guessable
           labels effectively threatens the disclosure of the corresponding records.
        </t>
        <t>
           It should be noted that the guessing attack on labels only applies if the
           zone key is somehow disclosed to the adversary. GNS itself
           does not disclose it during a lookup or when resource records are
           published (as only the blinded zone keys are used on the network).
           However, zone keys do become public during revocation.
        </t>
        <t>
           It is thus <bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14> to use a
           label with sufficient entropy to prevent guessing attacks
           if any data in a resource record set is sensitive.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec_governance">
        <name>Zone Governance</name>
        <t>
           While DNS is distributed, in practice it
           relies on centralized, trusted registrars to provide globally unique
           names. As awareness of the central role DNS plays on the Internet
           increases, various institutions are using their power (including legal means)
           to engage in attacks on the DNS, thus threatening the global availability
           and integrity of information on the Internet.
           While a wider discussion of this issue is out of scope for this document,
           analyses and investigations can be found in recent academic research
           works, including <xref target="SecureNS"/>.
        </t>
        <t>
           GNS is designed to provide a secure, privacy-enhancing alternative to the
           DNS name resolution protocol, especially when censorship or manipulation
           is encountered.
           In particular, it directly addresses concerns in DNS with respect to
           query privacy.
           However, depending on the governance of the root zone, any deployment
           will likely suffer from the issue of a
           single hierarchy with a centrally controlled root and the
           related issue of distribution and management of root servers in DNS, as
           raised in Sections&nbsp;<xref target="RFC8324" section="3.12"
           sectionFormat="bare"/> and <xref target="RFC8324" section="3.10"
           sectionFormat="bare"/> of <xref target="RFC8324"/>, respectively.
           In DNS, those issues directly result from the centralized root
           zone governance at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
           Numbers (ICANN), which allows it to provide globally unique names.
        </t>
        <t>
           In GNS, start zones give users local authority over their preferred
           root zone governance.
           It enables users to replace or enhance a trusted root zone
           configuration provided by a third party (e.g., the implementer or a
           multi-stakeholder governance body like ICANN) with secure delegation of
           authority using local petnames while operating under a
           very strong adversary model.
           In combination with zTLDs, this provides users of GNS with a global,
           secure, and memorable mapping without a trusted authority.
        </t>
        <t>
           Any GNS implementation <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> provide a default
           governance model in the form of an initial start zone mapping.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="namespace_ambiguity">
        <name>Namespace Ambiguity</name>
        <t>
           Technically, the GNS protocol can be used to resolve names in the
           namespace of the global DNS.
           However, this would require the respective governance bodies and
           stakeholders (e.g., the IETF and ICANN) to standardize the use of GNS for this particular use
           case.
        </t>
        <t>
           However, this capability implies that GNS names may be
           indistinguishable from DNS names in their
           respective common display format <xref target="RFC8499"/> or
           other special-use domain names <xref target="RFC6761"/> if
           a local start zone configuration maps suffixes from the
           global DNS to GNS zones.
           For applications, which name system should be
           used in order to resolve a given name will then be ambiguous.
           This poses a risk when trying to resolve a name through DNS when
           it is actually a GNS name, as discussed in <xref target="RFC8244"/>.
           In such a case, the GNS name is likely to be leaked as part of the DNS
           resolution.
        </t>
        <t>
           In order to prevent disclosure of queried GNS names, it is
           <bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14> that GNS-aware applications try to resolve
           a given name in GNS before any other method, taking into account
           potential suffix-to-zone mappings and zTLDs.
           Suffix-to-zone mappings are expected to be configured by the user or
           local administrator, and as such the resolution in GNS is
           in line with user expectations even if the name could also be resolved
           through DNS.
           If no suffix-to-zone mapping for the name exists and no zTLD is found,
           resolution <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> continue with other methods such as DNS.
           If a suffix-to-zone mapping for the name exists or the name ends with
           a zTLD, it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be resolved using GNS, and
           resolution <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> continue by any other means
           independent of the GNS resolution result.

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.10:  As it appears that "taking into account"
applies to the applications and not some other method, we updated
this sentence accordingly.  If this is incorrect, please provide
clarifying text.

Original:
 In order to prevent disclosure of queried GNS names it is RECOMMENDED
 that GNS-aware applications try to resolve a given name in GNS before
 any other method taking into account potential suffix-to-zone
 mappings and zTLDs.

Currently:
 In order to prevent disclosure of queried GNS names, it is
 RECOMMENDED that GNS-aware applications try to resolve a given name
 in GNS before any other method, taking into account potential suffix-
 to-zone mappings and zTLDs. -->

        </t>
        <t>
           Mechanisms such as the Name Service Switch (NSS) of UNIX-like
           operating systems are an example of how such a resolution process
           can be implemented and used.
           The NSS allows system administrators to configure hostname resolution
           precedence and is integrated with the system resolver implementation.

<!-- [rfced] Section 9.10:  As it appears that "It" in this sentence
refers to the NSS and not to a resolution process, we updated
accordingly, in line with text in the third paragraph of
Appendix A.4.  If this is incorrect, please provide clarifying text.

Original (the previous sentence is included for context):
 Mechanisms such as the Name Service Switch (NSS) of Unix-like
 operating systems are an example of how such a resolution process can
 be implemented and used.  It allows system administrators to
 configure host name resolution precedence and is integrated with the
 system resolver implementation.

Currently:
 The NSS allows system administrators to
 configure hostname resolution precedence and is integrated with the
 system resolver implementation. -->

        </t>
        <t>
           For use cases where GNS names may be confused with names
           of other name resolution mechanisms (in particular, DNS), the
           ".gns.alt" domain <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be used.
           For use cases like implementing sinkholes to block
           malware sites or serving DNS domains via GNS to bypass censorship,
           GNS <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be deliberately used in ways that interfere
           with resolution of another name system.
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="gana">
      <name>GANA Considerations</name>
      <t>
         GANA <xref target="GANA"/> has assigned signature purposes in its
         "GNUnet Signature Purposes" registry as listed in
         <xref target="tab_purposenums"/>.
      </t>

<!-- [rfced] Section 10:  The title of this table seems to indicate
that the requested assignments have not yet been made.  Should
"Requested" be "Assigned", as suggested below?

Original:
 Figure 24: Requested Changes in the GANA GNUnet Signature Purpose
                                  Registry.

Perhaps:
 Table 1: Assigned Changes in the GANA GNUnet Signature Purposes
                                  Registry

Or possibly:
        Table 1: The GANA GNUnet Signature Purposes Registry -->

<table anchor="tab_purposenums">
  <name>Requested Changes in the GANA GNUnet Signature Purposes
Registry</name>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Purpose</th>
      <th>Name</th>
      <th>References</th>
      <th>Comment</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>3</td>
      <td>GNS_REVOCATION</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS zone key revocation</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>15</td>
      <td>GNS_RECORD_SIGN</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS record set signature</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>
      <section anchor="gana_gnsrr">
        <name>GNS Record Types Registry</name>
        <t>
         GANA <xref target="GANA"/>
         manages the "GNS Record Types" registry.
         Each entry has the following format:
        </t>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>Name:</dt><dd>The name of the record type (case-insensitive ASCII
           string, restricted to alphanumeric characters). For zone delegation
       records, the assigned number represents the ztype value of the zone.</dd>
          <dt>Number:</dt><dd>A 32-bit number above 65535.</dd>
          <dt>Comment:</dt><dd>Optionally, brief English text describing the purpose of
           the record type (in UTF-8).</dd>
          <dt>Contact:</dt><dd>Optionally, the contact information for a person to contact for
           further information.</dd>
          <dt>References:</dt><dd>Optionally, references (such as an RFC) describing the record type.</dd>
	</dl>
        <t>
         The registration policy for this registry is "First Come First
         Served". This policy is modeled on that described in <xref target="RFC8126"/>
         and describes the actions taken by GANA:

<!-- [rfced] Sections 10.1 and 10.2:  Which paragraph or paragraphs
are referenced by these "by GANA:" sentences?  We ask because of the
use of the colon (":"); it appears that one or more of the paragraphs
after the colon should appear as a list (i.e., should be
"bullet items").

Alternatively, should the colons be periods?

Original:
 The registration policy for this registry is "First Come First
 Served".  This policy is modeled on that described in [RFC8126], and
 describes the actions taken by GANA:

 Adding new entries is possible after review by any authorized GANA
 contributor, using a first-come-first-served policy for unique name
 allocation.  Reviewers are responsible to ensure that the chosen
 "Name" is appropriate for the record type.  The registry will define
 a unique number for the entry.

 Authorized GANA contributors for review of new entries are reachable
 at gns-registry@gnunet.org.

 Any request MUST contain a unique name and a point of contact.  The
 contact information MAY be added to the registry given the consent of
 the requester.  The request MAY optionally also contain relevant
 references as well as a descriptive comment as defined above.

 GANA has assigned numbers for the record types defined in this
 specification in the "GNU Name System Record Types" registry as
 listed in Figure 25.
...
 The registration policy for this registry is "First Come First
 Served".  This policy is modeled on that described in [RFC8126], and
 describes the actions taken by GANA:

 Adding new entries is possible after review by any authorized GANA
 contributor, using a first-come-first-served policy for unique
 subdomain allocation.  Reviewers are responsible to ensure that the
 chosen "Subdomain" is appropriate for the purpose.

 Authorized GANA contributors for review of new entries are reachable
 at alt-registry@gnunet.org.

 Any request MUST contain a unique subdomain and a point of contact.
 The contact information MAY be added to the registry given the
 consent of the requester.  The request MAY optionally also contain
 relevant references as well as a descriptive comment as defined
 above.

 GANA has assigned the subdomain defined in this specification in the
 ".alt subdomains" registry as listed in Figure 26.

Perhaps (Section 10.1; assuming that the next three paragraphs, and
 not the "GANA has assigned" paragraph, should be in list form):
 This policy is modeled on that described in [RFC8126] and
 describes the actions taken by GANA:

 *  Adding new entries is possible after review by any authorized
    GANA contributor, using a first-come-first-served policy for
    unique name allocation.  Reviewers are responsible for ensuring
    that the chosen "Name" is appropriate for the record type.  The
    registry will define a unique number for the entry.

 *  Authorized GANA contributors for review of new entries are
    reachable at mailto:gns-registry@gnunet.org.

 *  Any request MUST contain a unique name and a point of contact.
    The contact information MAY be added to the registry, with the
    consent of the requester.  The request MAY optionally also
    contain relevant references as well as a descriptive comment, as
    defined above.

 GANA has assigned numbers for the record types defined in this
 specification in the "GNS Record Types" registry as listed in
 Table 2. -->

        </t>
        <t>
         Adding new entries is possible after review by any authorized
         GANA contributor, using a
         first-come-first-served policy for unique name allocation.
         Reviewers are responsible for ensuring that the chosen "Name" is
         appropriate for the record type.
         The registry will define a unique number for the entry.
        </t>
        <t>
         Authorized GANA contributors for review of new entries are reachable at
         <eref target="mailto:gns-registry@gnunet.org"/>.
        </t>
        <t>
         Any request <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> contain a unique name and a point of contact.
         The contact information <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be added to the registry, with the consent
         of the requester.
         The request <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> optionally also contain relevant references as well
         as a descriptive comment, as defined above.
        </t>
        <t>
         GANA has assigned numbers for the record types defined in this
         specification in the "GNS Record Types" registry as listed in
         <xref target="tab_rrtypenums"/>.
        </t>

<table anchor="tab_rrtypenums">
  <name>The GANA GNS Record Types Registry</name>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Number</th>
      <th>Name</th>
      <th>Contact</th>
      <th>References</th>
      <th>Comment</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>65536</td>
      <td>PKEY</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS zone delegation (PKEY)</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65537</td>
      <td>NICK</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS zone nickname</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65538</td>
      <td>LEHO</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS legacy hostname</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65540</td>
      <td>GNS2DNS</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>Delegation to DNS</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65541</td>
      <td>BOX</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>Boxed records</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65551</td>
      <td>REDIRECT</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>Redirection record</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>65556</td>
      <td>EDKEY</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>GNS zone delegation (EDKEY)</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
  <tfoot>
    <tr>
      <td align="left" colspan="5">(*): <eref target="mailto:gns-registry@gnunet.org"/></td>
    </tr>
  </tfoot>
</table>

<!-- [rfced] Section 10.1:  We see a discrepancy between this
document and [GANA] for the "BOX" entry (number 65541).  It appears
that all other entries match.  Should the listings be made
consistent between this document and [GANA]?  If so, how?

"Comment" entry for this document:  Boxed records
"Comment" entry in the GANA "GNS Record Types" registry:  Box record
-->

      </section>
      <section anchor="gana_alt">
        <name>.alt Subdomains Registry</name>
        <t>
         GANA <xref target="GANA"/>
         manages the ".alt Subdomains" registry.
         Each entry has the following format:
        </t>
        <dl newline="false">
          <dt>Label:</dt><dd>The label of the subdomain (in DNS "letters, digits, hyphen" (LDH) format as defined in <xref target="RFC5890" sectionFormat="of" section="2.3.1"/>).</dd>
        <dt>Comment:</dt><dd>Optionally, brief English text describing the purpose of
           the subdomain (in UTF-8).</dd>
          <dt>Contact:</dt><dd>Optionally, the contact information for a person to contact for
           further information.</dd>
          <dt>References:</dt><dd>Optionally, references (such as an RFC) describing the record type.</dd>
	</dl>

<!-- [rfced] Section 10.2:  Should "Comment" be "Description" in
these entries and should "Subdomain" be "Label" here, per [GANA]?

We also see "a first-come-first-served policy for unique subdomain
allocation" in the text in this section, so it's not clear whether
"Subdomain" or "Label" might be preferred for this document and
[GANA] (if they should indeed match).

Original:
 *  Label: The label of the subdomain (in DNS LDH format as defined in
    Section 2.3.1 of [RFC5890]).

 *  Comment: Optionally, a brief English text describing the purpose
    of the subdomain (in UTF-8)
...
 Subdomain | Contact | References | Comment -->

        <t>
         The registration policy for this registry is "First Come First
         Served". This policy is modeled on that described in <xref target="RFC8126"/>
         and describes the actions taken by GANA:
        </t>
        <t>
         Adding new entries is possible after review by any authorized
         GANA contributor, using a
         first-come-first-served policy for unique subdomain allocation.
         Reviewers are responsible for ensuring that the chosen "Subdomain" is
         appropriate for the purpose.
        </t>
        <t>
         Authorized GANA contributors for review of new entries are reachable at
         <eref target="mailto:alt-registry@gnunet.org"/>.
        </t>
        <t>
         Any request <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> contain a unique subdomain and a point of contact.
         The contact information <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be added to the registry, with the consent
         of the requester.
         The request <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> optionally also contain relevant references as well
         as a descriptive comment, as defined above.
        </t>
        <t>
         GANA has assigned the subdomain defined in this
         specification in the ".alt Subdomains" registry
         as listed in <xref target="tab_altsubdomains"/>.
        </t>
<table anchor="tab_altsubdomains">
  <name>The GANA .alt Subdomains Registry</name>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Subdomain</th>
      <th>Contact</th>
      <th>References</th>
      <th>Comment</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>gns</td>
      <td>(*)</td>
      <td>RFC 0000</td>
      <td>The .alt subdomain for GNS</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
  <tfoot>
    <tr>
      <td align="left" colspan="4">(*):
 <eref target="mailto:alt-registry@gnunet.org"/></td>
    </tr>
  </tfoot>
</table>

      </section>
    </section>
     <section>
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>
       This document has no IANA actions.
      </t>
    </section>
    <section>
      <name>Implementation and Deployment Status</name>
      <t>
         There are two implementations conforming to this specification, written
         in C and Go, respectively. The C implementation as part of GNUnet
         <xref target="GNUnetGNS"/> represents the original
         and reference implementation. The Go implementation
         <xref target="GoGNS"/> demonstrates how two implementations of GNS are
         interoperable if they are built on top of the same underlying
         DHT storage.
      </t>
      <t>
         Currently, the GNUnet peer-to-peer network <xref target="GNUnet"/>
         is an active deployment of GNS on top of its DHT <xref target="R5N"/>. The Go implementation <xref target="GoGNS"/> uses this deployment
         by building on top of the GNUnet DHT services available on any
         GNUnet peer. It shows how GNS implementations
         can attach to this existing deployment and participate in name
         resolution as well as zone publication.
      </t>
      <t>
         The self-sovereign identity system re:claimID <xref target="reclaim"/>
         is using GNS in order to selectively share identity attributes and
         attestations with third parties.
      </t>
      <t>
         The Ascension tool <xref target="Ascension"/> facilitates the migration of DNS zones to
         GNS zones by translating information retrieved from a DNS zone
         transfer into a GNS zone.
      </t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
   <references>
    <name>References</name>
     <references>
      <name>Normative References</name>

<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.1034.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.1035.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2782.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2119.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3629.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3686.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3826.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.5237.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.5869.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.5890.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.5895.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6234.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6895.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6979.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.7748.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8032.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8126.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8174.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8499.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.9106.xml"/>

      <reference anchor="GANA" target="https://gana.gnunet.org/">
        <front>
          <title>GNUnet Assigned Numbers Authority (GANA)</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
          </author>
          <date year="2023"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="MODES" target="https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-38A">
        <front>
          <title>Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation: Methods and Techniques</title>
          <author initials="M." surname="Dworkin" fullname="Morris Dworkin">
            <organization>NIST</organization>
          </author>
          <date year="2001" month="December"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>NIST Special Publication 800-38A</refcontent>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.6028/NIST.SP.800-38A"/>
      </reference>
       <reference anchor="CrockfordB32" target="https://www.crockford.com/base32.html">
        <front>
          <title>Base 32</title>
          <author initials="D." surname="Crockford" fullname="Douglas Crockford">
          </author>
          <date year="2019" month="March"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="XSalsa20" target="https://cr.yp.to/snuffle/xsalsa-20110204.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Extending the Salsa20 nonce</title>
          <author initials="D. J." surname="Bernstein" fullname="Daniel Bernstein">
            <organization>University of Illinois at Chicago</organization>
          </author>
          <date year="2011"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] Normative References:  Please confirm that the URL
provided for [XSalsa20] is stable.

Original:
 [XSalsa20] Bernstein, D., "Extending the Salsa20 nonce", 2011,
            <https://cr.yp.to/snuffle/xsalsa-20110204.pdf>. -->

      <reference anchor="Unicode-UAX15" target="https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/tr15-31.html">
        <front>
          <title>Unicode Standard Annex #15: Unicode Normalization Forms</title>
          <author initials="M." surname="Davis" fullname="Mark Davis">
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <author initials="K." surname="Whistler" fullname="Ken Whistler">
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <author initials="M." surname="Dürst" fullname="Martin Dürst">
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date year="2009" month="September"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>Revision 31, The Unicode Consortium, Mountain View</refcontent>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="Unicode-UTS46" target="https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr46">
        <front>
          <title>Unicode Technical Standard #46: Unicode IDNA Compatibility Processing</title>
          <author initials="M." surname="Davis" fullname="Mark Davis">
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <author initials="M." surname="Suignard" fullname="Michel Suignard">
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date year="2023" month="September"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>Revision 31, The Unicode Consortium, Mountain View</refcontent>
      </reference>
     </references>
    <references>
      <name>Informative References</name>

<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.1928.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4033.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6066.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.7363.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8324.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8806.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6761.xml"/>
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8244.xml"/>

<!-- draft-ietf-dnsop-alt-tld (RFC 9476; published) -->
<xi:include href="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.9476.xml"/>

      <reference anchor="Tor224" target="https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/proposals/224-rend-spec-ng.txt#n2135">
        <front>
          <title>Next-Generation Hidden Services in Tor</title>
          <author initials="D." surname="Goulet" fullname="David Goulet">
          </author>
          <author initials="G." surname="Kadianakis" fullname="George Kadianakis">
          </author>
          <author initials="N." surname="Mathewson" fullname="Nick Mathewson">
          </author>
          <date year="2013" month="November"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>Appendix A.2 ("Tor's key derivation scheme")</refcontent>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="SDSI" target="http://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/Sdsi10.ps">
        <front>
          <title>SDSI - A Simple Distributed Security Infrastructure</title>
          <author initials="R." surname="Rivest" fullname="Ron Rivest">
           </author>
          <author initials="B." surname="Lampson" fullname="Butler Lampson">
           </author>
          <date year="1996" month="April"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] [SDSI]:  The provided URL yields a "Not Found" error.
We see that 
<https://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/pubs/RL96.ver-1.1.html>, dated
October 1996, works, but is it stable?  We have been advised that
".edu" URLs are not always stable.

Please advise regarding how to update this listing, noting that we
try to use "https://" instead of "http://" as much as possible.

Original:
 [SDSI]     Rivest, R. and B. Lampson, "SDSI - A Simple Distributed
            Security Infrastructure", April 1996,
            <http://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/Sdsi10.ps>. -->

      <reference anchor="Kademlia" target="https://css.csail.mit.edu/6.824/2014/papers/kademlia.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Kademlia: A Peer-to-peer Information System Based on the XOR Metric</title>
          <author initials="P." surname="Maymounkov" fullname="Petar Maymounkov">
          </author>
          <author initials="D." surname="Mazières" fullname="David Mazières">
        </author>
          <date year="2002"/>
        </front>
       <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1007/3-540-45748-8_5"/>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] Informative References:  Please confirm that the URL
provided for [Kademlia] is stable.

Original:
 [Kademlia] Maymounkov, P. and D. Mazieres, "Kademlia: A peer-to-peer
            information system based on the xor metric.", 2002,
            <http://css.csail.mit.edu/6.824/2014/papers/kademlia.pdf>. -->

       <reference anchor="ed25519" target="https://ed25519.cr.yp.to/ed25519-20110926.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>High-speed high-security signatures</title>
          <author initials="D. J." surname="Bernstein" fullname="Daniel Bernstein">
            <organization>University of Illinois at Chicago</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="N." surname="Duif" fullname="Niels Duif">
            <organization>Technische Universiteit Eindhoven</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="T." surname="Lange" fullname="Tanja Lange">
            <organization>Technische Universiteit Eindhoven</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="P." surname="Schwabe" fullname="Peter Schwabe">
            <organization>National Taiwan University</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="B-Y." surname="Yang" fullname="Bo-Yin Yang">
            <organization>Academia Sinica</organization>
          </author>
          <date year="2011"/>
        </front>
       <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1007/s13389-012-0027-1"/>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="GNS" target="https://sci-hub.st/10.1007/978-3-319-12280-9_9">
        <front>
          <title>A Censorship-Resistant, Privacy-Enhancing and Fully Decentralized Name System</title>
          <author initials="M." surname="Wachs" fullname="Matthias Wachs">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M." surname="Schanzenbach" fullname="Martin Schanzenbach">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="C." surname="Grothoff" fullname="Christian Grothoff">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <date month="October" year="2014"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>13th International Conference on Cryptology and Network Security (CANS)</refcontent>
      <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.13140/2.1.4642.3044"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="R5N" target="https://sci-hub.st/10.1109/ICNSS.2011.6060022">
        <front>
          <title>R5N: Randomized Recursive Routing for Restricted-Route Networks</title>
          <author initials="N. S." surname="Evans" fullname="Nathan S. Evans">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="C." surname="Grothoff" fullname="Christian Grothoff">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <date month="September" year="2011"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>5th International Conference on Network and System Security (NSS)</refcontent>
      <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1109/ICNSS.2011.6060022"/>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="SecureNS" target="https://sci-hub.st/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cose.2018.01.018">
        <front>
          <title>Toward secure name resolution on the Internet</title>
          <author initials="C." surname="Grothoff" fullname="Christian Grothoff">
            <organization>Bern University of Applied Sciences</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M." surname="Wachs" fullname="Matthias Wachs">
            <organization>Technische Universität München</organization>
          </author>
          <author initials="M." surname="Ermert" fullname="Monika Ermert">
          </author>
          <author initials="J." surname="Appelbaum" fullname="Jacob Appelbaum">
            <organization>TU Eindhoven</organization>
          </author>
          <date month="August" year="2018"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>Computers and Security, Volume 77, Issue C, pp. 694-708</refcontent>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1016/j.cose.2018.01.018"/>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="GNUnetGNS" target="https://git.gnunet.org/gnunet.git/tree/src/gns">
        <front>
          <title>The GNUnet GNS Implementation</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
          </author>
         <date year="2023"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] [GNUnetGNS]:  The title as provided in this document
doesn't appear on the provided page.  May we change the title to
"gnunet.git - GNUnet core repository"?

Original:
 [GNUnetGNS]
            GNUnet e.V., "The GNUnet GNS Implementation",
            <https://git.gnunet.org/gnunet.git/tree/src/gns>. -->

      <reference anchor="Ascension" target="https://git.gnunet.org/ascension.git">
        <front>
          <title>The Ascension Implementation</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
          </author>
         <date year="2023"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] [Ascension]:  The title as provided in this document
doesn't appear on the provided page.  May we change the title to
"ascension.git - DNS zones to GNS migrating using incremental zone
transfer (AXFR/IXFR)"?

Original:
 [Ascension]
            GNUnet e.V., "The Ascension Implementation",
            <https://git.gnunet.org/ascension.git>. -->

      <reference anchor="GNUnet" target="https://gnunet.org">
        <front>
          <title>The GNUnet Project</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
          </author>
         <date year="2023"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

<!-- [rfced] [GNUnet]:  The title as provided in this document
doesn't appear on the provided page.  Should the title be updated?

Original:
 [GNUnet]   GNUnet e.V., "The GNUnet Project", <https://gnunet.org>.

Perhaps:
 [GNUnet]   GNUnet e.V., "The GNUnet Project (Home Page)",
            2023, <https://gnunet.org>. -->

      <reference anchor="reclaim" target="https://reclaim.gnunet.org">
        <front>
          <title>re:claimID - Self-sovereign, Decentralised Identity Management and Personal Data Sharing</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNUnet e.V.</organization>
          </author>
         <date year="2023"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="GoGNS" target="https://github.com/bfix/gnunet-go/tree/master/src/gnunet/service/gns">
        <front>
          <title>gnunet-go (Go GNS)</title>
          <author initials="B." surname="Fix" fullname="Bernd Fix">
          </author>
        <date month="July" year="2023"/>
        </front>
        <refcontent>commit 5c815ba</refcontent>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="nsswitch" target="https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Name-Service-Switch.html">
        <front>
          <title>System Databases and Name Service Switch (Section 29)</title>
          <author>
            <organization>GNU Project</organization>
          </author>
        </front>
      </reference>
    </references>
  </references>
    <section>
      <name>Usage and Migration</name>
      <t>
         This section outlines a number of specific use cases that may
         help readers of this technical specification better understand the protocol.
         The considerations below are not meant to be normative for the
         GNS protocol in any way.
         Instead, they are provided in order to give context and to provide
         some background on what the intended use of the protocol is
         by its designers.
         Further, this section provides pointers to migration paths.
      </t>
      <section anchor="day_in_zoneowner">
        <name>Zone Dissemination</name>
        <t>
           In order to become a zone owner, it is sufficient to generate
           a zone key and a corresponding secret key using a GNS implementation.
           At this point, the zone owner can manage GNS resource records in a
           local zone database.
           The resource records can then be published by a GNS implementation
           as defined in <xref target="publish"/>.
           For other users to resolve the resource records, the respective
           zone information must be disseminated first.
           The zone owner may decide to make the zone key and labels known
           to a selected set of users only or to make this information available
           to the general public.
        </t>
        <t>
           Sharing zone information directly with specific users not only allows
           an implementation to potentially preserve zone and record privacy but also allows
           the zone owner and the user to establish strong trust relationships.
           For example, a bank may send a customer letter with a QR code that
           contains the GNS zone of the bank.
           This allows the user to scan the QR code and establish a strong
           link to the zone of the bank and with it, for example, the IP address
           of the online banking web site.
        </t>
        <t>
           Most Internet services likely want to make their zones available
           to the general public in the most efficient way possible.
           First, it is reasonable to assume that zones that are commanding
           high levels of reputation and trust are likely included in the
           default suffix-to-zone mappings of implementations.
           Hence, dissemination of a zone through delegation under such zones
           can be a viable path in order to disseminate a zone publicly.
           For example, it is conceivable that organizations such as ICANN
           or country-code TLD registrars also manage GNS zones
           and offer registration or delegation services.
        </t>
        <t>
           Following best practices, particularly those related to
           security and abuse mitigation, are methods that allow zone owners
           and aspiring registrars to gain a good reputation and, eventually,
           trust.
           This includes, of course, diligent protection of private zone key
           material.
           Formalizing such best practices is out of scope for this
           specification and should be addressed in a separate document that takes
           <xref target="security"/> of this document into account.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section>
        <name>Start Zone Configuration</name>
        <t>
           A user is expected to install a GNS implementation if it is not already
           provided through other means such as the operating system
           or the browser.
           It is likely that the implementation ships with a
           default start zone configuration.
           This means that the user is able to resolve GNS names ending on a
           zTLD or ending on any suffix-to-name mapping that is part of the
           default start zone configuration.
           At this point, the user may delete or otherwise modify the
           implementation's default configuration:

<!-- [rfced] Appendix A.2:  Does the colon after "configuration" mean
that only the first paragraph that follows it applies, or do both
subsequent paragraphs apply?  In other words, it appears that one or
both of the subsequent paragraphs should be in list form (i.e., a
bullet list).  Please advise.

Alternatively, should the colon be a period?

Original:
 At
 this point the user may delete or otherwise modify the
 implementation's default configuration:

 Deletion of suffix-to-zone mappings may become necessary of the zone
 owner referenced by the mapping has lost the trust of the user.  For
 example, this could be due to lax registration policies resulting in
 phishing activities.  Modification and addition of new mappings are
 means to heal the namespace perforation which would occur in the case
 of a deletion or to simply establish a strong direct trust
 relationship.  However, this requires the user's knowledge of the
 respective zone keys.  This information must be retrieved out of
 band, as illustrated in Appendix A.1: A bank may send the user a
 letter with a QR code which contains the GNS zone of the bank.  The
 user scans the QR code and adds a new suffix-to-name mapping using a
 chosen local name for his bank.  Other examples include scanning zone
 information off the device of a friend, from a storefront, or an
 advertisement.  The level of trust in the respective zone is
 contextual and likely varies from user to user.  Trust in a zone
 provided through a letter from a bank which may also include a credit
 card is certainly different from a zone found on a random
 advertisement in the streets.  However, this trust is immediately
 tangible to the user and can be reflected in the local naming as
 well.

 User clients should facilitate the modification of the start zone
 configuration, for example by providing a QR code reader or other
 import mechanisms.  Implementations are ideally implemented according
 to best practices and addressing applicable points from Section 9.
 Formalizing such best practices is out of scope of this
 specification. -->

        </t>
        <t>
            Deletion of suffix-to-zone mappings may become necessary if the
            zone owner referenced by the mapping has lost the trust of the user.
            For example, this could be due to lax registration policies resulting
            in phishing activities.
            Modification and addition of new mappings are means to heal the
            namespace perforation that would occur in the case of a deletion
            or to simply establish a strong direct trust relationship.
            However, this requires the user's knowledge of the respective zone
            keys.
            This information must be retrieved out of band, as illustrated in
            <xref target="day_in_zoneowner"/>:
            a bank may send the user a letter with a QR code that contains the
            GNS zone of the bank.
            The user scans the QR code and adds a new suffix-to-name mapping
            using a chosen local name for his bank.
            Other examples include scanning zone information off the device of
            a friend, from a storefront, or from an advertisement.
            The level of trust in the respective zone is contextual and likely
            varies from user to user.
            Trust in a zone provided through a letter from a bank that
            may also include a credit card is certainly different from a zone
            found on a random advertisement on the street.
            However, this trust is immediately tangible to the user and can
            be reflected in the local naming as well.

<!-- [rfced] Appendix A.2:  We changed "necessary of" to "necessary
if" here.  If this is incorrect, please provide clarifying text.

Original:
 Deletion of suffix-to-zone mappings may become necessary of the zone
 owner referenced by the mapping has lost the trust of the user.

Currently:
 Deletion of suffix-to-zone mappings may become necessary if the zone
 owner referenced by the mapping has lost the trust of the user. -->

        </t>
        <t>
            Users that are also clients should facilitate the modification of the start zone
            configuration -- for example, by providing a QR code reader or other
            import mechanisms.
            Implementations are ideally implemented
            according to best practices and addressing applicable points
            from <xref target="security"/>.
            Formalizing such best practices is out of scope for this
            specification.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="uc_virthost">
        <name>Globally Unique Names and the Web</name>
        <t>
           HTTP virtual hosting and TLS Server Name Indication (SNI) are common
           use cases on the Web.
           HTTP clients supply a DNS name in the HTTP
           "Host"-header or as part of the TLS handshake, respectively.
           This allows the HTTP server to serve the indicated virtual host
           with a matching TLS certificate.
           The global uniqueness of DNS names is a prerequisite of those use cases.
        </t>
        <t>
           Not all GNS names are globally unique.
           However, any resource record in GNS can be represented as a
           concatenation of a GNS label and the zTLD of the zone.
           While not human readable, this globally unique GNS name can be
           leveraged in order to facilitate the same use cases.
           Consider the GNS name "www.example.gns" entered in a GNS-aware
           HTTP client.
           At first, "www.example.gns" is resolved using GNS, yielding a record
           set.
           Then, the HTTP client determines the virtual host as follows:
        </t>
        <t>
            If there is a LEHO record (<xref target="gnsrecords_leho"/>)
            containing "www.example.com" in the record set, then the HTTP
            client uses this as the value of the
            "Host"-header field of the HTTP request:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.com
          </artwork>
        <t>
              If there is no LEHO record in the record set,
              then the HTTP client tries to find the zone of the record
              and translates the GNS name into a globally unique
              zTLD representation before using it in the "Host"-header field of
             the HTTP request:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: www.000G0037FH3QTBCK15Y8BCCNRVWPV17ZC7TSGB1C9ZG2TPGHZVFV1GMG3W
           </artwork>
        <t>
            In order to determine the canonical representation of the record with
            a zTLD, at most two queries are required:
            first, it must be checked to see whether "www.example.gns.alt" itself points to
            a zone delegation record; this would imply that the record set that
            was originally resolved is published under the apex label.
            If it does, the unique GNS name is simply the zTLD representation
            of the delegated zone:

<!-- [rfced] Appendix A.3: We could not determine what a second
query might be or whether it might be important to point it out.
Will this text be clear to readers?  If not, please provide
clarifying text.

Original:
 In order to determine the canonical representation of the record with
 a zTLD, at most two queries are required: First, it must be checked
 whether "www.example.gns.alt" itself points to a zone delegation
 record which would imply that the record set which was originally
 resolved is published under the apex label. -->

        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: 000G0037FH3QTBCK15Y8BCCNRVWPV17ZC7TSGB1C9ZG2TPGHZVFV1GMG3W
            </artwork>
        <t>
            If it does not, the unique GNS name is the concatenation of the
            label "www" and the zTLD representation of the zone as given in the
            example above.
            In any case, this representation is globally unique.
            As such, it can be configured by the HTTP server administrator as a
            virtual hostname and respective certificates may be issued.
        </t>
        <t>
            If the HTTP client is a browser, the use of a unique GNS name
            for virtual hosting or TLS SNI does not necessarily have to be
            shown to the user.
            For example, the name in the URL bar may remain as "www.example.gns.alt"
            even if the used unique name differs.
        </t>
      </section>
      <section>
        <name>Migration Paths</name>
        <t>
            DNS resolution is built into a variety of existing software
            components -- most significantly, operating systems and HTTP clients.
            This section illustrates possible migration paths for both in order
            to enable legacy applications to resolve GNS names.
        </t>
        <t>
            One way to efficiently facilitate the resolution of GNS names
            is via GNS-enabled DNS server implementations.
            Local DNS queries are thereby either rerouted or explicitly configured
            to be resolved by a "DNS-to-GNS" server that runs locally.
            This DNS server tries to interpret any incoming query for a name
            as a GNS resolution request.
            If no start zone can be found for the name and it does not end in
            a zTLD, the server tries to resolve the name in DNS.
            Otherwise, the name is resolved in GNS.
            In the latter case, the resulting record set is converted to a DNS
            answer packet and is returned accordingly.
            An implementation of a DNS-to-GNS server can be found in
            <xref target="GNUnet"/>.
        </t>
        <t>
            A similar approach is to use operating system extensions such as
            the NSS <xref target="nsswitch"/>.
            It allows the system administrator to configure plugins
            that are used for hostname resolution.
            A GNS nsswitch plugin can be used in a fashion similar to
            that used for the DNS-to-GNS server.
            An implementation of a glibc-compatible nsswitch plugin for GNS
            can be found in <xref target="GNUnet"/>.
        </t>
        <t>
            The methods above are usually also effective for HTTP client
            software.
            However, HTTP clients are commonly used in combination with
            TLS.
            TLS certificate validation, and SNI in particular, require additional logic in HTTP clients when GNS names are
            in play (<xref target="uc_virthost"/>).
            In order to transparently enable this functionality for migration
            purposes, a local GNS-aware SOCKS5 proxy <xref target="RFC1928"/>
            can be configured to resolve domain names.
            The SOCKS5 proxy, similar to the DNS-to-GNS server, is capable
            of resolving both GNS and DNS names.
            In the event of a TLS connection request with a GNS name, the SOCKS5
            proxy can act as a man-in-the-middle, terminating the TLS connection
            and establishing a secure connection against the requested host.
            In order to establish a secure connection, the proxy may use LEHO
            and TLSA records stored in the record set under the GNS name.
            The proxy must provide a locally trusted certificate for the GNS
            name to the HTTP client; this usually requires the generation and
            configuration of a local trust anchor in the browser.
            An implementation of this SOCKS5 proxy can be found in
            <xref target="GNUnet"/>.
        </t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section>
      <name>Example Flows</name>
      <section>
        <name>AAAA Example Resolution</name>
        <figure anchor="figure_resolution_ex_aaaa">
          <name>Example Resolution of an IPv6 Address</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host             |   Remote
                                                  |   Storage
                                                  |
                                                  |    +---------+
                                                  |   /         /|
                                                  |  +---------+ |
+-----------+ (1)      +----------+               |  |         | |
|           |          |          |      (4,6)    |  | Record  | |
|Application|----------| Resolver |---------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |&lt;---------|          |&lt;--------------|--|         |/
+-----------+ (8)      +----------+      (5,7)    |  +---------+
                          A                       |
                          |                       |
                    (2,3) |                       |
                          |                       |
                          |                       |
                       +---------+                |
                      /   v     /|                |
                     +---------+ |                |
                     |         | |                |
                     |  Start  | |                |
                     |  Zones  | |                |
                     |         |/                 |
                     +---------+                  |
         </artwork>
        </figure>
        <ol>
           <li>Look up AAAA record for name: www.example.gnu.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Determine start zone for www.example.gnu.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Start zone: zk0 - Remainder: www.example.</li>
          <li>Calculate q0=SHA512(ZKDF(zk0, "example")) and initiate GET(q0).</li>
          <li>Retrieve and decrypt RRBLOCK consisting of a single PKEY record containing zk1.</li>
          <li>Calculate q1=SHA512(ZKDF(zk1, "www")) and initiate GET(q1).</li>
          <li>Retrieve RRBLOCK consisting of a single AAAA record containing the IPv6 address 2001:db8::1.</li>
          <li>Return record set to application.</li>
        </ol>
      </section>
      <section>
        <name>REDIRECT Example Resolution</name>
        <figure anchor="figure_resolution_ex_redir">
          <name>Example Resolution of an IPv6 Address with Redirect</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host              |   Remote
                                                   |   Storage
                                                   |
                                                   |    +---------+
                                                   |   /         /|
                                                   |  +---------+ |
+-----------+ (1)      +----------+                |  |         | |
|           |          |          |      (4,6,8)   |  | Record  | |
|Application|----------| Resolver |----------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |&lt;---------|          |&lt;---------------|--|         |/
+-----------+ (10)     +----------+      (5,7,9)   |  +---------+
                          A                        |
                          |                        |
                    (2,3) |                        |
                          |                        |
                          |                        |
                       +---------+                 |
                      /   v     /|                 |
                     +---------+ |                 |
                     |         | |                 |
                     |  Start  | |                 |
                     |  Zones  | |                 |
                     |         |/                  |
                     +---------+                   |
         </artwork>
        </figure>
        <ol>
           <li>Look up AAAA record for name: www.example.tld.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Determine start zone for www.example.tld.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Start zone: zk0 - Remainder: www.example.</li>
          <li>Calculate q0=SHA512(ZKDF(zk0, "example")) and initiate GET(q0).</li>
          <li>Retrieve and decrypt RRBLOCK consisting of a single PKEY record containing zk1.</li>
          <li>Calculate q1=SHA512(ZKDF(zk1, "www")) and initiate GET(q1).</li>
          <li>Retrieve and decrypt RRBLOCK consisting of a single REDIRECT record containing www2.+.</li>
          <li>Calculate q2=SHA512(ZKDF(zk1, "www2")) and initiate GET(q2).</li>
          <li>Retrieve and decrypt RRBLOCK consisting of a single AAAA record containing the IPv6 address 2001:db8::1.</li>
          <li>Return record set to application.</li>
        </ol>
      </section>
      <section>
        <name>GNS2DNS Example Resolution</name>
        <figure anchor="figure_resolution_ex_gnsdns">
          <name>Example Resolution of an IPv6 Address with DNS Handover</name>
          <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
                           Local Host                |   Remote
                                                     |   Storage
                                                     |
                                                     |    +---------+
                                                     |   /         /|
                                                     |  +---------+ |
+-----------+ (1)      +----------+                  |  |         | |
|           |          |          |      (4)         |  | Record  | |
|Application|----------| Resolver |------------------|-&gt;| Storage | |
|           |&lt;---------|          |&lt;-----------------|--|         |/
+-----------+ (8)      +----------+      (5)         |  +---------+
                          A    A                     |
                          |    |    (6,7)            |
                    (2,3) |    +----------+          |
                          |               |          |
                          |               v          |
                       +---------+    +------------+ |
                      /   v     /|    | System DNS | |
                     +---------+ |    | Resolver   | |
                     |         | |    +------------+ |
                     |  Start  | |                   |
                     |  Zones  | |                   |
                     |         |/                    |
                     +---------+                     |
         </artwork>
        </figure>
        <ol>
           <li>Look up AAAA record for name: www.example.gnu.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Determine start zone for www.example.gnu.gns.alt.</li>
          <li>Start zone: zk0 - Remainder: www.example.</li>
          <li>Calculate q0=SHA512(ZKDF(zk0, "example")) and initiate GET(q0).</li>
          <li>Retrieve and decrypt RRBLOCK consisting of a single GNS2DNS record containing the name "example.com" and the DNS server IPv4 address 192.0.2.1.</li>
          <li>Use system resolver to look up a AAAA record for the DNS name www.example.com.</li>
          <li>Retrieve a DNS reply consisting of a single AAAA record containing the IPv6 address 2001:db8::1.</li>
          <li>Return record set to application.</li>
        </ol>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="app-c">
      <name>Base32GNS</name>
      <t>
         Encoding converts a byte array into a string of symbols.
         Decoding converts a string of symbols into a byte array.
         Decoding fails if the input string has symbols outside the defined set.
      </t>
      <t>
         <xref target="CrockfordB32Encode"/> defines the encoding and decoding symbols for a given
         symbol value.
         Each symbol value encodes 5 bits.
         It can be used to implement the encoding by reading it as follows:
         a symbol "A" or "a" is decoded to a 5-bit value 10 when decoding.
         A 5-bit block with a value of 18 is encoded to the character "J" when encoding.
         If the bit length of the byte string to encode is not a multiple of 5,
         it is padded to the next multiple with zeroes.
         In order to further increase tolerance for failures in character
         recognition, the letter "U" <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be decoded to the same value as the
         letter "V" in Base32GNS.
      </t>
<table anchor="CrockfordB32Encode">
  <name>The Base32GNS Alphabet, Including the Additional Encoding Symbol &quot;U&quot;</name>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Symbol Value</th>
      <th>Decoding Symbol</th>
      <th>Encoding Symbol</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>0</td>
      <td>0 O o</td>
      <td>0</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>1</td>
      <td>1 I i L l</td>
      <td>1</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>2</td>
      <td>2</td>
      <td>2</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>3</td>
      <td>3</td>
      <td>3</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>4</td>
      <td>4</td>
      <td>4</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>5</td>
      <td>5</td>
      <td>5</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>6</td>
      <td>6</td>
      <td>6</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>7</td>
      <td>7</td>
      <td>7</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>8</td>
      <td>8</td>
      <td>8</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>9</td>
      <td>9</td>
      <td>9</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>10</td>
      <td>A a</td>
      <td>A</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>11</td>
      <td>B b</td>
      <td>B</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>12</td>
      <td>C c</td>
      <td>C</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>13</td>
      <td>D d</td>
      <td>D</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>14</td>
      <td>E e</td>
      <td>E</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>15</td>
      <td>F f</td>
      <td>F</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>16</td>
      <td>G g</td>
      <td>G</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>17</td>
      <td>H h</td>
      <td>H</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>18</td>
      <td>J j</td>
      <td>J</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>19</td>
      <td>K k</td>
      <td>K</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>20</td>
      <td>M m</td>
      <td>M</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>21</td>
      <td>N n</td>
      <td>N</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>22</td>
      <td>P p</td>
      <td>P</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>23</td>
      <td>Q q</td>
      <td>Q</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>24</td>
      <td>R r</td>
      <td>R</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>25</td>
      <td>S s</td>
      <td>S</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>26</td>
      <td>T t</td>
      <td>T</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>27</td>
      <td>V v U u</td>
      <td>V</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>28</td>
      <td>W w</td>
      <td>W</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>29</td>
      <td>X x</td>
      <td>X</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>30</td>
      <td>Y y</td>
      <td>Y</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>31</td>
      <td>Z z</td>
      <td>Z</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

    </section>
    <section>
      <name>Test Vectors</name>
      <t>
         The following test vectors can be used by implementations to test
         for conformance with this specification. Unless indicated otherwise,
         the test vectors are provided as hexadecimal byte arrays.
      </t>
      <section>
        <name>Base32GNS Encoding/Decoding</name>
        <t>
           The following are test vectors for the Base32GNS encoding used for zTLDs. The input strings are encoded without the zero terminator.
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Base32GNS-Encode:
  Input string: "Hello World"
  Output string: "91JPRV3F41BPYWKCCG"

  Input bytes: 474e55204e616d652053797374656d
  Output string: "8X75A82EC5PPA82KF5SQ8SBD"

Base32GNS-Decode:
  Input string: "91JPRV3F41BPYWKCCG"
  Output string: "Hello World"

  Input string: "91JPRU3F41BPYWKCCG"
  Output string: "Hello World"
         </artwork>
      </section>
      <section>
        <name>Record Sets</name>
        <t>
           The test vectors include record sets with a variety
           of record types and flags for both PKEY and EDKEY zones.
           This includes labels with UTF-8 characters to demonstrate
           internationalized labels.
        </t>
        <t><strong>(1) PKEY zone with ASCII label and one delegation record</strong></t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d, big-endian):
  50 d7 b6 52 a4 ef ea df
  f3 73 96 90 97 85 e5 95
  21 71 a0 21 78 c8 e7 d4
  50 fa 90 79 25 fa fd 98

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 00 67 7c 47 7d
  2d 93 09 7c 85 b1 95 c6
  f9 6d 84 ff 61 f5 98 2c
  2c 4f e0 2d 5a 11 fe df
  b0 c2 90 1f

zTLD:
000G0037FH3QTBCK15Y8BCCNRVWPV17ZC7TSGB1C9ZG2TPGHZVFV1GMG3W

Label:
  74 65 73 74 64 65 6c 65
  67 61 74 69 6f 6e

Number of records (integer): 1

Record #0 := (
  EXPIRATION: 8143584694000000 us
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 20

  TYPE:
  00 01 00 00

  FLAGS:   00 01

  DATA:
  21 e3 b3 0f f9 3b c6 d3
  5a c8 c6 e0 e1 3a fd ff
  79 4c b7 b4 4b bb c7 48
  d2 59 d0 a0 28 4d be 84

)

RDATA:
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  00 20 00 01 00 01 00 00
  21 e3 b3 0f f9 3b c6 d3
  5a c8 c6 e0 e1 3a fd ff
  79 4c b7 b4 4b bb c7 48
  d2 59 d0 a0 28 4d be 84

Encryption NONCE|EXPIRATION|BLOCK COUNTER:
  e9 0a 00 61 00 1c ee 8c
  10 e2 59 80 00 00 00 01

Encryption key (K):
  86 4e 71 38 ea e7 fd 91
  a3 01 36 89 9c 13 2b 23
  ac eb db 2c ef 43 cb 19
  f6 bf 55 b6 7d b9 b3 b3

Storage key (q):
  4a dc 67 c5 ec ee 9f 76
  98 6a bd 71 c2 22 4a 3d
  ce 2e 91 70 26 c9 a0 9d
  fd 44 ce f3 d2 0f 55 a2
  73 32 72 5a 6c 8a fb bb
  b0 f7 ec 9a f1 cc 42 64
  12 99 40 6b 04 fd 9b 5b
  57 91 f8 6c 4b 08 d5 f4

ZKDF(zkey):
  18 2b b6 36 ed a7 9f 79
  57 11 bc 27 08 ad bb 24
  2a 60 44 6a d3 c3 08 03
  12 1d 03 d3 48 b7 ce b6

Derived private key (d', big-endian):
  0a 4c 5e 0f 00 63 df ce
  db c8 c7 f2 b2 2c 03 0c
  86 28 b2 c2 cb ac 9f a7
  29 aa e6 1f 89 db 3e 9c

BDATA:
  0c 1e da 5c c0 94 a1 c7
  a8 88 64 9d 25 fa ee bd
  60 da e6 07 3d 57 d8 ae
  8d 45 5f 4f 13 92 c0 74
  e2 6a c6 69 bd ee c2 34
  62 b9 62 95 2c c6 e9 eb

RRBLOCK:
  00 00 00 a0 00 01 00 00
  18 2b b6 36 ed a7 9f 79
  57 11 bc 27 08 ad bb 24
  2a 60 44 6a d3 c3 08 03
  12 1d 03 d3 48 b7 ce b6
  0a d1 0b c1 3b 40 3b 5b
  25 61 26 b2 14 5a 6f 60
  c5 14 f9 51 ff a7 66 f7
  a3 fd 4b ac 4a 4e 19 90
  05 5c b8 7e 8d 1b fd 19
  aa 09 a4 29 f7 29 e9 f5
  c6 ee c2 47 0a ce e2 22
  07 59 e9 e3 6c 88 6f 35
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  0c 1e da 5c c0 94 a1 c7
  a8 88 64 9d 25 fa ee bd
  60 da e6 07 3d 57 d8 ae
  8d 45 5f 4f 13 92 c0 74
  e2 6a c6 69 bd ee c2 34
  62 b9 62 95 2c c6 e9 eb
         </artwork>
        <t><strong>(2) PKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three records</strong></t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d, big-endian):
  50 d7 b6 52 a4 ef ea df
  f3 73 96 90 97 85 e5 95
  21 71 a0 21 78 c8 e7 d4
  50 fa 90 79 25 fa fd 98

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 00 67 7c 47 7d
  2d 93 09 7c 85 b1 95 c6
  f9 6d 84 ff 61 f5 98 2c
  2c 4f e0 2d 5a 11 fe df
  b0 c2 90 1f

zTLD:
000G0037FH3QTBCK15Y8BCCNRVWPV17ZC7TSGB1C9ZG2TPGHZVFV1GMG3W

Label:
  e5 a4 a9 e4 b8 8b e7 84
  a1 e6 95 b5

Number of records (integer): 3

Record #0 := (
  EXPIRATION: 8143584694000000 us
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 10

  TYPE:
  00 00 00 1c

  FLAGS:   00 00

  DATA:
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 de ad be ef

)

Record #1 := (
  EXPIRATION: 17999736901000000 us
  00 3f f2 aa 54 08 db 40

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 06

  TYPE:
  00 01 00 01

  FLAGS:   00 00

  DATA:
  e6 84 9b e7 a7 b0

)

Record #2 := (
  EXPIRATION: 11464693629000000 us
  00 28 bb 13 ff 37 19 40

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 0b

  TYPE:
  00 00 00 10

  FLAGS:   00 04

  DATA:
  48 65 6c 6c 6f 20 57 6f
  72 6c 64

)

RDATA:
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  00 10 00 00 00 00 00 1c
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 de ad be ef
  00 3f f2 aa 54 08 db 40
  00 06 00 00 00 01 00 01
  e6 84 9b e7 a7 b0 00 28
  bb 13 ff 37 19 40 00 0b
  00 04 00 00 00 10 48 65
  6c 6c 6f 20 57 6f 72 6c
  64 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

Encryption NONCE|EXPIRATION|BLOCK COUNTER:
  ee 96 33 c1 00 1c ee 8c
  10 e2 59 80 00 00 00 01

Encryption key (K):
  fb 3a b5 de 23 bd da e1
  99 7a af 7b 92 c2 d2 71
  51 40 8b 77 af 7a 41 ac
  79 05 7c 4d f5 38 3d 01

Storage key (q):
  af f0 ad 6a 44 09 73 68
  42 9a c4 76 df a1 f3 4b
  ee 4c 36 e7 47 6d 07 aa
  64 63 ff 20 91 5b 10 05
  c0 99 1d ef 91 fc 3e 10
  90 9f 87 02 c0 be 40 43
  67 78 c7 11 f2 ca 47 d5
  5c f0 b5 4d 23 5d a9 77

ZKDF(zkey):
  a5 12 96 df 75 7e e2 75
  ca 11 8d 4f 07 fa 7a ae
  55 08 bc f5 12 aa 41 12
  14 29 d4 a0 de 9d 05 7e

Derived private key (d', big-endian):
  0a be 56 d6 80 68 ab 40
  e1 44 79 0c de 9a cf 4d
  78 7f 2d 3c 63 b8 53 05
  74 6e 68 03 32 15 f2 ab

BDATA:
  d8 c2 8d 2f d6 96 7d 1a
  b7 22 53 f2 10 98 b8 14
  a4 10 be 1f 59 98 de 03
  f5 8f 7e 7c db 7f 08 a6
  16 51 be 4d 0b 6f 8a 61
  df 15 30 44 0b d7 47 dc
  f0 d7 10 4f 6b 8d 24 c2
  ac 9b c1 3d 9c 6f e8 29
  05 25 d2 a6 d0 f8 84 42
  67 a1 57 0e 8e 29 4d c9
  3a 31 9f cf c0 3e a2 70
  17 d6 fd a3 47 b4 a7 94
  97 d7 f6 b1 42 2d 4e dd
  82 1c 19 93 4e 96 c1 aa
  87 76 57 25 d4 94 c7 64
  b1 55 dc 6d 13 26 91 74

RRBLOCK:
  00 00 00 f0 00 01 00 00
  a5 12 96 df 75 7e e2 75
  ca 11 8d 4f 07 fa 7a ae
  55 08 bc f5 12 aa 41 12
  14 29 d4 a0 de 9d 05 7e
  08 5b d6 5f d4 85 10 51
  ba ce 2a 45 2a fc 8a 7e
  4f 6b 2c 1f 74 f0 20 35
  d9 64 1a cd ba a4 66 e0
  00 ce d6 f2 d2 3b 63 1c
  8e 8a 0b 38 e2 ba e7 9a
  22 ca d8 1d 4c 50 d2 25
  35 8e bc 17 ac 0f 89 9e
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  d8 c2 8d 2f d6 96 7d 1a
  b7 22 53 f2 10 98 b8 14
  a4 10 be 1f 59 98 de 03
  f5 8f 7e 7c db 7f 08 a6
  16 51 be 4d 0b 6f 8a 61
  df 15 30 44 0b d7 47 dc
  f0 d7 10 4f 6b 8d 24 c2
  ac 9b c1 3d 9c 6f e8 29
  05 25 d2 a6 d0 f8 84 42
  67 a1 57 0e 8e 29 4d c9
  3a 31 9f cf c0 3e a2 70
  17 d6 fd a3 47 b4 a7 94
  97 d7 f6 b1 42 2d 4e dd
  82 1c 19 93 4e 96 c1 aa
  87 76 57 25 d4 94 c7 64
  b1 55 dc 6d 13 26 91 74          
         </artwork>
        <t><strong>(3) EDKEY zone with ASCII label and delegation record</strong></t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d):
  5a f7 02 0e e1 91 60 32
  88 32 35 2b bc 6a 68 a8
  d7 1a 7c be 1b 92 99 69
  a7 c6 6d 41 5a 0d 8f 65

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 14 3c f4 b9 24
  03 20 22 f0 dc 50 58 14
  53 b8 5d 93 b0 47 b6 3d
  44 6c 58 45 cb 48 44 5d
  db 96 68 8f

zTLD:
000G051WYJWJ80S04BRDRM2R2H9VGQCKP13VCFA4DHC4BJT88HEXQ5K8HW

Label:
  74 65 73 74 64 65 6c 65
  67 61 74 69 6f 6e

Number of records (integer): 1

Record #0 := (
  EXPIRATION: 8143584694000000 us
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 20

  TYPE:
  00 01 00 00

  FLAGS:   00 01

  DATA:
  21 e3 b3 0f f9 3b c6 d3
  5a c8 c6 e0 e1 3a fd ff
  79 4c b7 b4 4b bb c7 48
  d2 59 d0 a0 28 4d be 84

)

RDATA:
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  00 20 00 01 00 01 00 00
  21 e3 b3 0f f9 3b c6 d3
  5a c8 c6 e0 e1 3a fd ff
  79 4c b7 b4 4b bb c7 48
  d2 59 d0 a0 28 4d be 84

Encryption NONCE|EXPIRATION:
  98 13 2e a8 68 59 d3 5c
  88 bf d3 17 fa 99 1b cb
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

Encryption key (K):
  85 c4 29 a9 56 7a a6 33
  41 1a 96 91 e9 09 4c 45
  28 16 72 be 58 60 34 aa
  e4 a2 a2 cc 71 61 59 e2

Storage key (q):
  ab aa ba c0 e1 24 94 59
  75 98 83 95 aa c0 24 1e
  55 59 c4 1c 40 74 e2 55
  7b 9f e6 d1 54 b6 14 fb
  cd d4 7f c7 f5 1d 78 6d
  c2 e0 b1 ec e7 60 37 c0
  a1 57 8c 38 4e c6 1d 44
  56 36 a9 4e 88 03 29 e9

ZKDF(zkey):
  9b f2 33 19 8c 6d 53 bb
  db ac 49 5c ab d9 10 49
  a6 84 af 3f 40 51 ba ca
  b0 dc f2 1c 8c f2 7a 1a

nonce := SHA-256 (dh[32..63] || h):
  14 f2 c0 6b ed c3 aa 2d
  f0 71 13 9c 50 39 34 f3
  4b fa 63 11 a8 52 f2 11
  f7 3a df 2e 07 61 ec 35

Derived private key (d', big-endian):
  3b 1b 29 d4 23 0b 10 a8
  ec 4d a3 c8 6e db 88 ea
  cd 54 08 5c 1d db 63 f7
  a9 d7 3f 7c cb 2f c3 98

BDATA:
  57 7c c6 c9 5a 14 e7 04
  09 f2 0b 01 67 e6 36 d0
  10 80 7c 4f 00 37 2d 69
  8c 82 6b d9 2b c2 2b d6
  bb 45 e5 27 7c 01 88 1d
  6a 43 60 68 e4 dd f1 c6
  b7 d1 41 6f af a6 69 7c
  25 ed d9 ea e9 91 67 c3

RRBLOCK:
  00 00 00 b0 00 01 00 14
  9b f2 33 19 8c 6d 53 bb
  db ac 49 5c ab d9 10 49
  a6 84 af 3f 40 51 ba ca
  b0 dc f2 1c 8c f2 7a 1a
  9f 56 a8 86 ea 73 9d 59
  17 50 8f 9b 75 56 39 f3
  a9 ac fa ed ed ca 7f bf
  a7 94 b1 92 e0 8b f9 ed
  4c 7e c8 59 4c 9f 7b 4e
  19 77 4f f8 38 ec 38 7a
  8f 34 23 da ac 44 9f 59
  db 4e 83 94 3f 90 72 00
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  57 7c c6 c9 5a 14 e7 04
  09 f2 0b 01 67 e6 36 d0
  10 80 7c 4f 00 37 2d 69
  8c 82 6b d9 2b c2 2b d6
  bb 45 e5 27 7c 01 88 1d
  6a 43 60 68 e4 dd f1 c6
  b7 d1 41 6f af a6 69 7c
  25 ed d9 ea e9 91 67 c3
         </artwork>
        <t><strong>(4) EDKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three records</strong></t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d):
  5a f7 02 0e e1 91 60 32
  88 32 35 2b bc 6a 68 a8
  d7 1a 7c be 1b 92 99 69
  a7 c6 6d 41 5a 0d 8f 65

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 14 3c f4 b9 24
  03 20 22 f0 dc 50 58 14
  53 b8 5d 93 b0 47 b6 3d
  44 6c 58 45 cb 48 44 5d
  db 96 68 8f

zTLD:
000G051WYJWJ80S04BRDRM2R2H9VGQCKP13VCFA4DHC4BJT88HEXQ5K8HW

Label:
  e5 a4 a9 e4 b8 8b e7 84
  a1 e6 95 b5

Number of records (integer): 3

Record #0 := (
  EXPIRATION: 8143584694000000 us
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 10

  TYPE:
  00 00 00 1c

  FLAGS:   00 00

  DATA:
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 de ad be ef

)

Record #1 := (
  EXPIRATION: 17999736901000000 us
  00 3f f2 aa 54 08 db 40

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 06

  TYPE:
  00 01 00 01

  FLAGS:   00 00

  DATA:
  e6 84 9b e7 a7 b0

)

Record #2 := (
  EXPIRATION: 11464693629000000 us
  00 28 bb 13 ff 37 19 40

  DATA_SIZE:
  00 0b

  TYPE:
  00 00 00 10

  FLAGS:   00 04

  DATA:
  48 65 6c 6c 6f 20 57 6f
  72 6c 64

)

RDATA:
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  00 10 00 00 00 00 00 1c
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 de ad be ef
  00 3f f2 aa 54 08 db 40
  00 06 00 00 00 01 00 01
  e6 84 9b e7 a7 b0 00 28
  bb 13 ff 37 19 40 00 0b
  00 04 00 00 00 10 48 65
  6c 6c 6f 20 57 6f 72 6c
  64 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

Encryption NONCE|EXPIRATION:
  bb 0d 3f 0f bd 22 42 77
  50 da 5d 69 12 16 e6 c9
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80

Encryption key (K):
  3d f8 05 bd 66 87 aa 14
  20 96 28 c2 44 b1 11 91
  88 c3 92 56 37 a4 1e 5d
  76 49 6c 29 45 dc 37 7b

Storage key (q):
  ba f8 21 77 ee c0 81 e0
  74 a7 da 47 ff c6 48 77
  58 fb 0d f0 1a 6c 7f bb
  52 fc 8a 31 be f0 29 af
  74 aa 0d c1 5a b8 e2 fa
  7a 54 b4 f5 f6 37 f6 15
  8f a7 f0 3c 3f ce be 78
  d3 f9 d6 40 aa c0 d1 ed

ZKDF(zkey):
  74 f9 00 68 f1 67 69 53
  52 a8 a6 c2 eb 98 48 98
  c5 3a cc a0 98 04 70 c6
  c8 12 64 cb dd 78 ad 11

nonce := SHA-256 (dh[32..63] || h):
  f8 6a b5 33 8a 74 d7 a1
  d2 77 ea 11 ff 95 cb e8
  3a cf d3 97 3b b4 ab ca
  0a 1b 60 62 c3 7a b3 9c

Derived private key (d', big-endian):
  17 c0 68 a6 c3 f7 20 de
  0e 1b 69 ff 3f 53 e0 5d
  3f e5 c5 b0 51 25 7a 89
  a6 3c 1a d3 5a c4 35 58

BDATA:
  4e b3 5a 50 d4 0f e1 a4
  29 c7 f4 b2 67 a0 59 de
  4e 2c 8a 89 a5 ed 53 d3
  d4 92 58 59 d2 94 9f 7f
  30 d8 a2 0c aa 96 f8 81
  45 05 2d 1c da 04 12 49
  8f f2 5f f2 81 6e f0 ce
  61 fe 69 9b fa c7 2c 15
  dc 83 0e a9 b0 36 17 1c
  cf ca bb dd a8 de 3c 86
  ed e2 95 70 d0 17 4b 82
  82 09 48 a9 28 b7 f0 0e
  fb 40 1c 10 fe 80 bb bb
  02 76 33 1b f7 f5 1b 8d
  74 57 9c 14 14 f2 2d 50
  1a d2 5a e2 49 f5 bb f2
  a6 c3 72 59 d1 75 e4 40
  b2 94 39 c6 05 19 cb b1

RRBLOCK:
  00 00 01 00 00 01 00 14
  74 f9 00 68 f1 67 69 53
  52 a8 a6 c2 eb 98 48 98
  c5 3a cc a0 98 04 70 c6
  c8 12 64 cb dd 78 ad 11
  75 6d 2c 15 7a d2 ea 4f
  c0 b1 b9 1c 08 03 79 44
  61 d3 de f2 0d d1 63 6c
  fe dc 03 89 c5 49 d1 43
  6c c3 5b 4e 1b f8 89 5a
  64 6b d9 a6 f4 6b 83 48
  1d 9c 0e 91 d4 e1 be bb
  6a 83 52 6f b7 25 2a 06
  00 1c ee 8c 10 e2 59 80
  4e b3 5a 50 d4 0f e1 a4
  29 c7 f4 b2 67 a0 59 de
  4e 2c 8a 89 a5 ed 53 d3
  d4 92 58 59 d2 94 9f 7f
  30 d8 a2 0c aa 96 f8 81
  45 05 2d 1c da 04 12 49
  8f f2 5f f2 81 6e f0 ce
  61 fe 69 9b fa c7 2c 15
  dc 83 0e a9 b0 36 17 1c
  cf ca bb dd a8 de 3c 86
  ed e2 95 70 d0 17 4b 82
  82 09 48 a9 28 b7 f0 0e
  fb 40 1c 10 fe 80 bb bb
  02 76 33 1b f7 f5 1b 8d
  74 57 9c 14 14 f2 2d 50
  1a d2 5a e2 49 f5 bb f2
  a6 c3 72 59 d1 75 e4 40
  b2 94 39 c6 05 19 cb b1
       </artwork>

<!-- [rfced] Appendix D.2:  Should the following entries be written
consistently (i.e., with or without "delegation", with or without the
number of (delegation) records)?

Original:
 *(1) PKEY zone with ASCII label and one delegation record*
 *(2) PKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three records*
 *(3) EDKEY zone with ASCII label and delegation record*
 *(4) EDKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three records*

Possibly (assuming that "delegation" also applies to UTF-8 labels):
 *(1) PKEY zone with ASCII label and one delegation record*
 *(2) PKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three delegation records*
 *(3) EDKEY zone with ASCII label and one delegation record*
 *(4) EDKEY zone with UTF-8 label and three delegation records* -->

      </section>
      <section>
        <name>Zone Revocation</name>
        <t>
         The following is an example revocation for a PKEY zone:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d, big-endian):
  6f ea 32 c0 5a f5 8b fa
  97 95 53 d1 88 60 5f d5
  7d 8b f9 cc 26 3b 78 d5
  f7 47 8c 07 b9 98 ed 70

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 00 2c a2 23 e8
  79 ec c4 bb de b5 da 17
  31 92 81 d6 3b 2e 3b 69
  55 f1 c3 77 5c 80 4a 98
  d5 f8 dd aa

Encoded zone identifier (zkl = zTLD):
000G001CM8HYGYFCRJXXXDET2WRS50EP7CQ3PTANY71QEQ409ACDBY6XN8

Difficulty (5 base difficulty + 2 epochs): 7

Signed message:
  00 00 00 34 00 00 00 03
  00 05 ff 1c 56 e4 b2 68
  00 01 00 00 2c a2 23 e8
  79 ec c4 bb de b5 da 17
  31 92 81 d6 3b 2e 3b 69
  55 f1 c3 77 5c 80 4a 98
  d5 f8 dd aa

Proof:
  00 05 ff 1c 56 e4 b2 68
  00 00 39 5d 18 27 c0 00
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 ac a2
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 ad 62
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 af 3e
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 af 93
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b0 bf
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b0 ee
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b1 c9
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b1 e5
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b2 78
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b2 b2
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b2 d6
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b2 e4
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 2c
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 5a
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 9d
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 c0
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 dd
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b3 f4
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 42
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 76
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 8c
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 a4
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 c9
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 f0
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b4 f7
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b5 79
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b6 34
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b6 8e
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b7 b4
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b8 7e
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b8 f8
  38 0b 54 aa 70 16 b9 2a
  00 01 00 00 2c a2 23 e8
  79 ec c4 bb de b5 da 17
  31 92 81 d6 3b 2e 3b 69
  55 f1 c3 77 5c 80 4a 98
  d5 f8 dd aa 08 ca ff de
  3c 6d f1 45 f7 e0 79 81
  15 37 b2 b0 42 2d 5e 1f
  b2 01 97 81 ec a2 61 d1
  f9 d8 ea 81 0a bc 2f 33
  47 7f 04 e3 64 81 11 be
  71 c2 48 82 1a d6 04 f4
  94 e7 4d 0b f5 11 d2 c1
  62 77 2e 81
       </artwork>
        <t>
         The following is an example revocation for an EDKEY zone:
        </t>
        <artwork name="" type="" alt="">
Zone private key (d):
  5a f7 02 0e e1 91 60 32
  88 32 35 2b bc 6a 68 a8
  d7 1a 7c be 1b 92 99 69
  a7 c6 6d 41 5a 0d 8f 65

Zone identifier (ztype|zkey):
  00 01 00 14 3c f4 b9 24
  03 20 22 f0 dc 50 58 14
  53 b8 5d 93 b0 47 b6 3d
  44 6c 58 45 cb 48 44 5d
  db 96 68 8f

Encoded zone identifier (zkl = zTLD):
000G051WYJWJ80S04BRDRM2R2H9VGQCKP13VCFA4DHC4BJT88HEXQ5K8HW

Difficulty (5 base difficulty + 2 epochs): 7

Signed message:
  00 00 00 34 00 00 00 03
  00 05 ff 1c 57 35 42 bd
  00 01 00 14 3c f4 b9 24
  03 20 22 f0 dc 50 58 14
  53 b8 5d 93 b0 47 b6 3d
  44 6c 58 45 cb 48 44 5d
  db 96 68 8f

Proof:
  00 05 ff 1c 57 35 42 bd
  00 00 39 5d 18 27 c0 00
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2a 08
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2d f7
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2e 21
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2e 2a
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2e 53
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2e 8e
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2f 13
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2f 2d
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2f 3c
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2f 41
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 2f fd
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 30 33
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 30 82
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 30 a2
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 30 e1
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 31 ce
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 31 de
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 32 12
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 32 4e
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 32 9f
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 33 31
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 33 87
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 33 8c
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 33 e5
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 33 f3
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 34 26
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 34 30
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 34 68
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 34 88
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 34 8a
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 35 4c
  58 4c 93 3c b0 99 35 bd
  00 01 00 14 3c f4 b9 24
  03 20 22 f0 dc 50 58 14
  53 b8 5d 93 b0 47 b6 3d
  44 6c 58 45 cb 48 44 5d
  db 96 68 8f 04 ae 26 f7
  63 56 5a b7 aa ab 01 71
  72 4f 3c a8 bc c5 1a 98
  b7 d4 c9 2e a3 3c d9 34
  4c a8 b6 3e 04 53 3a bf
  1a 3c 05 49 16 b3 68 2c
  5c a8 cb 4d d0 f8 4c 3b
  77 48 7a ac 6e ce 38 48
  0b a9 d5 00
       </artwork>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section numbered="false">
      <name>Acknowledgements</name>
      <t>
          The authors thank all reviewers for their comments. In particular,
          we thank <contact fullname="D. J. Bernstein"/>, <contact fullname="S. Bortzmeyer"/>, <contact fullname="A. Farrel"/>, <contact fullname="E. Lear"/>, and <contact fullname="R. Salz"/> for their
          insightful and detailed technical reviews. We thank <contact fullname="J. Yao"/> and <contact fullname="J. Klensin"/> for the
          internationalization reviews. We thank NLnet and NGI DISCOVERY for funding
          work on the GNU Name System.
      </t>
    </section>   
  </back>

<!-- [rfced] Please review the "Inclusive Language" portion of the
online Style Guide at
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/styleguide/part2/#inclusive_language>,
and let us know if any changes are needed.

For example, please consider whether the following should be updated: 
 master (zone master) (perhaps "zone administrator")
 his (generally changed to "their")
 man-in-the-middle (sometimes changed to "on-path attacker") -->

<!-- [rfced] Please let us know if any changes are needed for the
following:

a) The following terms were used inconsistently in this document.
We chose to use the latter forms.  Please let us know any objections.

 encode and decode symbols (Appendix C) / encoding and decoding symbols

 internet services / Internet services

 legacy host name / legacy hostname*

   * We also changed "host name" to "hostname" where used generally,
     per "hostname resolution" in Appendix A.4.  Please let us know
     any objections.

 zeros / zeroes

b) The following terms/phrases appear to be used inconsistently in
this document.  Please let us know which form is preferred.

 for the nonce / for the NONCE

 "Host"-header (noun) / "Host:" header (noun)
   (We also see '"Host"-header field' in Appendix A.3.)

 Keygen() / KeyGen()

 records block / record block (e.g., "resource records block
   (RRBLOCK)", "resource record block (RRBLOCK)")

 REDIRECT DATA ("REDIRECT DATA entry") /
   REDIRECT data ("the REDIRECT data")

 redirect name / REDIRECT NAME

 Redirect record (first sentence of Section 5.2) /
   REDIRECT record (We also see "redirection record" in running text
    and "with redirect" in Appendix B.2.)

 Start Zone / start zone (e.g., "a Start Zone", "the start zone")

c) We see that "zone key" is defined as "zk" but that "zkey" is also
used.  Please confirm that this is as intended and will be clear to
readers (e.g., are "zk" and "zkey" the same thing or two different
things?).  We have a similar question regarding the use of
"zone type" and "ztype"; do they both mean the same thing?

d) Should "record data" be defined as "RDATA" at first use and
"RDATA" used thereafter?  We ask because of "6.2.  Plaintext Record
Data (RDATA)" and "Record data (RDATA) is the format ..." used a few
lines into Section 6.2.

e) Please confirm that the usage of "boxed record" versus "BOX record"
is correct.

f) Should the spacing of parameters in parentheses be made
consistent for the following?  If so, how?

For example:

 ZKDF(zk, label)
 ZKDF(zk,label)
 S-Encrypt(zk,label,expiration,plaintext)
 Sign(d,message)
 Verify(zk,message,signature)
 PUT(key,block)
 PUT(q, RRBLOCK)
 ZKDF(zk0, "example")

g) Should the following be consistently quoted in text or unquoted?

For example:
 the character U+0040
 the character U+002B
 the character "J"
 the GNS name "www.example.gns"
 the DNS name www.example.com
 LEHO record (Section 5.3.1) containing "www.example.com"
 a single REDIRECT record containing www2.+ -->

</rfc>
