Thanks to the response Ben. After looking at the results, it seems we do
have a different firewall between the 4 servers and they have IPs out of
the same subnet for 2 of them which are failing. So this lets me know it is
firewall related and now I can check that.

Do you know what type of rule (in general, not anything specific) needs to
be added to allow for larger EDNS packets? Is it as simple as allowing the
maximum size for payload specified in the RFC (
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6891#section-6.2.5) which is 4096 bytes?

Regards,
Max

On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 11:07 AM Ben Croswell <ben.crosw...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> As long as all 4 DNS servers are running the same version, my first
> suggestion would be to check firewalls for dropped packets.
>
> Some FW/IPS drop packets with edns versions other 0 because they see it as
> an attack.
>
> On Fri, Jan 18, 2019, 12:02 PM N. Max Pierson <nmaxpier...@gmail.com
> wrote:
>
>> Hi List,
>>
>> I am trying to ensure our Bind servers comply with EDNS for the upcoming
>> Flag Day (https://dnsflagday.net/). I am somewhat ignorant to EDNS but
>> from what I have read, the information is somewhat conflicting as some
>> documentation states EDNS is not a record that you configure in your zone
>> file then other sites refer to some sort of OPT record you can configure.
>> So my first question is which of the documentation is correct from what I
>> have read? Is it DNS server functionality that supports EDNS or do you also
>> have to configure something in the zone files?
>>
>> Also, I have 4 (well 5 counting the master that isn't queryable)
>> nameservers with multiple domains served on them. When I run one of my
>> primary domains through the ISC EDNS tool, it comes back as 2 out of the 4
>> are failing EDNS queries.They are all on the same version of Bind
>> (9.8.2rc1) and they are all slaves of the master so they should all have
>> the same records. Can anyone please explain what I need to do to resolve
>> the timeouts listed on the ISC testing tool?
>>
>> Here is what the tool says ...
>>
>>
>> venyu.com. @208.79.48.30 (ns4.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok *edns1=timeout*
>>  edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok *edns1opt=timeout* do=ok ednsflags=ok
>> docookie=ok edns512tcp=ok *optlist=timeout*
>>
>> venyu.com. @69.2.33.250 (ns1.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok edns1=ok
>> edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok edns1opt=ok do=ok ednsflags=ok docookie=ok
>> edns512tcp=ok optlist=ok
>> venyu.com. @2604:d800:12::250 (ns1.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok edns1=ok
>> edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok edns1opt=ok do=ok ednsflags=ok docookie=ok
>> edns512tcp=ok optlist=ok
>>
>> venyu.com. @69.2.63.250 (ns3.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok edns1=ok
>> edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok edns1opt=ok do=ok ednsflags=ok docookie=ok
>> edns512tcp=ok optlist=ok
>> venyu.com. @2604:d800:13::250 (ns3.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok edns1=ok
>> edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok edns1opt=ok do=ok ednsflags=ok docookie=ok
>> edns512tcp=ok optlist=ok
>>
>> venyu.com. @208.79.48.26 (ns2.venyu.com.): dns=ok edns=ok *edns1=timeout*
>>  edns@512=ok ednsopt=ok *edns1opt=timeout* do=ok ednsflags=ok
>> docookie=ok edns512tcp=ok *optlist=timeout*
>>
>>
>> TIA!!
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Max
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