HTTP Working Group | T. Pauly |
Internet-Draft | Apple, Inc. |
Intended status: Standards Track | January 4, 2023 |
Expires: July 8, 2023 |
This document defines an HTTP Proxy-Status Parameter that contains a list of aliases received over DNS when establishing a connection to the next hop.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
Status information for this document may be found at <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-httpbis-alias-proxy-status/>.¶
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Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at <https://github.com/httpwg/http-extensions/labels/alias-proxy-status>.¶
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The Proxy-Status HTTP response field [PROXY-STATUS] allows proxies to convey information about how a proxied request was handled in HTTP responses sent to clients. It defines a set of parameters that provide information, such as the name of the next hop.¶
[PROXY-STATUS] defines a next-hop parameter, which can contain a hostname, IP address, or alias of the next hop. This parameter can contain only one such item, so it cannot be used to communicate a chain of aliases encountered during DNS resolution when connecting to the next hop.¶
Knowing the full chain of aliases that were used during DNS resolution is particularly useful for clients of forward proxies, in which the client is requesting to connect to a specific target hostname using the CONNECT method [HTTP] or UDP proxying [CONNECT-UDP]. DNS aliases can be used to "cloak" hosts that perform tracking or malicious activity behind more innocuous hostnames, and clients such as web browsers use the chain of DNS aliases to influence behavior like cookie usage policies [COOKIES] or blocking of malicious hosts.¶
This document allows clients to receive the chain of DNS aliases for the next hop by including the list of names in a new next-hop-aliases Proxy-Status parameter.¶
The next-hop-aliases parameter's value is a String that contains one or more DNS names in a comma-separated list. The items in the list include all names received in CNAME records [DNS] during the course of resolving the next hop's hostname using DNS. Since DNS names can include comma (,) characters in them, any commas that appear in a DNS names MUST be represented using a percent-encoded %2C value instead. The aliases SHOULD appear in the order in which they were received in DNS; that is, if a name has a CNAME record with a first alias, which has a CNAME record for a second alias, the aliases should appear in that order.¶
For example:¶
Proxy-Status: proxy.example.net; next-hop=2001:db8::1; next-hop-aliases="tracker.example.com.,service1.example-cdn.com."
indicates that proxy.example.net, which used the IP address "2001:db8::1" as the next hop for this request, encountered the CNAMEs "tracker.example.com." and "service1.example-cdn.com" in the DNS resolution chain. Note that while this example includes both the next-hop and next-hop-aliases parameters, next-hop-aliases can be included without including next-hop.¶
The next-hop-aliases parameter only applies when DNS was used to resolve the next hop's name, and does not apply in all situations. Clients can use the information in this parameter to determine how to use the connection established through the proxy, but need to gracefully handle situations in which this parameter is not present.¶
The next-hop-aliases parameter does not include any DNSSEC information or imply that DNSSEC was used. The information included in the parameter can only be trusted to be valid insofar as the client trusts its proxy to provide accurate information. This information is intended to be used as a hint, and SHOULD NOT be used for making security decisions about the identity of a resource accessed through the proxy.¶
This document registers the "next-hop-aliases" parameter in the "HTTP Proxy-Status Parameters" registry <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-proxy-status>.¶