On 11/18/2011 8:50 PM, kd6...@yahoo.com wrote:
The RFC also states that the use of TXT-RRs was a temporary measure for rapid deployment 
purposes until its own RR-type could be secured.  The IANA allocated type 99 to the 
SPF-RR in late 2005 (prior to the release of the RFC).  The RFC itself was issued in 
April 2006, and today is a little more than 5.5 years later.  Temporary does not mean 5+ 
years.  Within the RFC itself, it meant "long enough" for there to be 
widespread support of the new allocation.  BIND added support in the fall of 2006.

There are still some (e.g. Verizon, an ISP) who query ONLY for TXT-RRs.  Per RFC 4408 
itself, modern deployments should be querying for SPF-RRs first (and only seek TXT-RRs if 
no SPF-RR is found).  Clearly, the use of any "transitional mechanism" (i.e. 
TXT-RRs) has expired by now.
You know as well as I do that "temporary" has no definition in RFC-eaze and the RFC clearly states MUST regarding TXT records. They know they have no hope of having the RR type be ubiquitous any time soon. Probably right about the time they switch everyone from IPv4 to 6.

Really, until the RFC is changed to use stronger RFC-eaze language, this argument is pointless. People using only TXT records are compliant with the RFC. Anything else is just elitism for the sake of elitism. Then again, I think a plutocracy might be a good form of government... ;-)

regards,
KAM
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