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BOLT #10: DNS Bootstrap and Assisted Node Location

Overview

This specification describes a node discovery mechanism based on the Domain Name System (DNS). Its purpose is twofold:

  • Bootstrap: providing the initial node discovery for nodes that have no known contacts in the network
  • Assisted Node Location: supporting nodes in discovery of the current network address of previously known peers

A domain name server implementing this specification is referred to as a DNS Seed and answers incoming DNS queries of type A, AAAA, or SRV, as specified in RFCs 10351, 35962, and 27823, respectively. The DNS server is authoritative for a subdomain, referred to as a seed root domain, and clients may query it for subdomains.

The subdomains consist of a number of dot-separated conditions that further narrow the desired results.

Table of Contents

DNS Seed Queries

A client MAY issue queries using the A, AAAA, or SRV query types, specifying conditions for the desired results the seed should return.

Queries distinguish between wildcard queries and node queries, depending on whether the l-key is set or not.

Query Semantics

The conditions are key-value pairs: the key is a single-letter, while the remainder of the key-value pair is the value. The following key-value pairs MUST be supported by a DNS seed:

  • r: realm byte
    • used to specify what realm the returned nodes must support
    • default value: 0 (Bitcoin)
  • a: address types
    • a bitfield that uses the types from BOLT #7 as bit index
    • used to specify what address types should be returned for SRV queries
    • MAY only be used for SRV queries
    • default value: 6 (i.e. 2 || 4, since bit 1 and bit 2 are set for IPv4 and IPv6, respectively)
  • l: node_id
    • a bech32-encoded node_id of a specific node
    • used to ask for a single node instead of a random selection
    • default value: null
  • n: number of desired reply records
    • default value: 25

Conditions are passed in the DNS seed query as individual, dot-separated subdomain components.

For example, a query for r0.a2.n10.lseed.bitcoinstats.com would imply: return 10 (n10) IPv4 (a2) records for nodes supporting Bitcoin (r0).

Requirements

The DNS seed:

  • MUST evaluate the conditions from the seed root domain by 'going up-the-tree', i.e. evaluating right-to-left in a fully qualified domain name.
    • E.g. to evaluate the above case: first evaluate n10, then a2, and finally r0.
  • if a condition (key) is specified more than once:
    • MUST discard any earlier value for that condition AND use the new value instead.
      • E.g. for n5.r0.a2.n10.lseed.bitcoinstats.com, the result is: n10, a2, r0, n5.
  • SHOULD return results that match all conditions.
  • if it does NOT implement filtering by a given condition:
    • MAY ignore the condition altogether (i.e. the seed filtering is best effort only).
  • for A and AAAA queries:
    • MUST return only nodes listening on the default port 9735, as defined in BOLT #1.
  • for SRV queries:
    • MAY return nodes that are listening on non-default ports, since SRV records return a (hostname,port)-tuple.
  • upon receiving a wildcard query:
    • MUST select a random subset of up to n IPv4 or IPv6 addresses of nodes that are listening for incoming connections.
  • upon receiving a node query:
    • MUST select the record matching the node_id, if any, AND return all addresses associated with that node.

Querying clients:

  • MUST NOT rely on any given condition being met by the results.

Reply Construction

The results are serialized in a reply with a query type matching the client's query type. For example, A, AAAA, and SRV queries respectively result in A, AAAA, and SRV replies. Additionally, replies may be augmented with additional records (e.g. to add A or AAAA records matching the returned SRV records).

For A and AAAA queries, the reply contains the domain name and the IP address of the results.

The domain name MUST match the domain in the query, in order not to be filtered by intermediate resolvers.

For SRV queries, the reply consists of (virtual hostnames, port)-tuples. A virtual hostname is a subdomain of the seed root domain that uniquely identifies a node in the network. It is constructed by prepending the node_id condition to the seed root domain.

The DNS seed:

  • MAY additionally return the corresponding A and AAAA records that indicate the IP address for the SRV entries in the additional section of the reply.
  • MAY omit these additional records upon detecting a repeated query.
    • Reason: due to the large size of the resulting reply, the reply may be dropped by intermediate resolvers.
  • if no entries match all the conditions:
    • MUST return an empty reply.

Policies

The DNS seed:

  • MUST NOT return replies with a TTL less than 60 seconds.
  • MAY filter nodes from its local views for various reasons, including faulty nodes, flaky nodes, or spam prevention.
  • MUST reply to random queries (i.e. queries to the seed root domain and to the _nodes._tcp. alias for SRV queries) with random and unbiased samples from the set of all known good nodes, in accordance with the Bitcoin DNS Seed policy4.

Examples

Querying for AAAA records:

$ dig lseed.bitcoinstats.com AAAA
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 60      IN      AAAA    2a02:aa16:1105:4a80:1234:1234:37c1:9c9

Querying for SRV records:

$ dig lseed.bitcoinstats.com SRV
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59   IN      SRV     10 10 6331 ln1qwktpe6jxltmpphyl578eax6fcjc2m807qalr76a5gfmx7k9qqfjwy4mctz.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59   IN      SRV     10 10 9735 ln1qv2w3tledmzczw227nnkqrrltvmydl8gu4w4d70g9td7avke6nmz2tdefqp.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59   IN      SRV     10 10 9735 ln1qtynyymv99pqf0r9cuexvvqtxrlgejuecf8myfsa96vcpflgll5cqmr2xsu.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59   IN      SRV     10 10 4280 ln1qdfvlysfpyh96apy3w3qdwlu8jjkdhnuxa689ka540tnde6gnx86cf7ga2d.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59   IN      SRV     10 10 4281 ln1qwf789tlcpe4n34649xrqllxt97whsvfk5pm07ggqms3vrjwdj3cu6332zs.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.

Querying for the A for the first virtual hostname from the previous example:

$ dig ln1qwktpe6jxltmpphyl578eax6fcjc2m807qalr76a5gfmx7k9qqfjwy4mctz.lseed.bitcoinstats.com A
ln1qwktpe6jxltmpphyl578eax6fcjc2m807qalr76a5gfmx7k9qqfjwy4mctz.lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 60 IN A 139.59.143.87

Querying for only IPv4 nodes (a2) via seed filtering:

$dig a2.lseed.bitcoinstats.com SRV
a2.lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59	IN	SRV	10 10 9735 ln1q2jy22cg2nckgxttjf8txmamwe9rtw325v4m04ug2dm9sxlrh9cagrrpy86.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
a2.lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59	IN	SRV	10 10 9735 ln1qfrkq32xayuq63anmc2zp5vtd2jxafhdzzudmuws0hvxshtgd2zd7jsqv7f.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.

Querying for only IPv6 nodes (a4) supporting Bitcoin (r0) via seed filtering:

$dig r0.a4.lseed.bitcoinstats.com SRV
r0.a4.lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59 IN	SRV	10 10 9735 ln1qwx3prnvmxuwsnaqhzwsrrpwy4pjf5m8fv4m8kcjkdvyrzymlcmj5dakwrx.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.
r0.a4.lseed.bitcoinstats.com. 59 IN	SRV	10 10 9735 ln1qwr7x7q2gvj7kwzzr7urqq9x7mq0lf9xn6svs8dn7q8gu5q4e852znqj3j7.lseed.bitcoinstats.com.

References

Authors

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