Independent submission M. Richardson Internet-Draft SSW Expires: July 11, 2003 D. Redelmeier Mimosa January 10, 2003 Opportunistic Encryption using The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) draft-richardson-ipsec-opportunistic-11.txt Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http:// www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt. The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. This Internet-Draft will expire on July 11, 2003. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved. Abstract This document describes opportunistic encryption (OE) using the Internet Key Exchange (IKE) and IPsec. Each system administrator adds new resource records to his or her Domain Name System (DNS) to support opportunistic encryption. The objective is to allow encryption for secure communication without any pre-arrangement specific to the pair of systems involved. DNS is used to distribute the public keys of each system involved. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 1] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 This is resistant to passive attacks. The use of DNS Security (DNSSEC) secures this system against active attackers as well. As a result, the administrative overhead is reduced from the square of the number of systems to a linear dependence, and it becomes possible to make secure communication the default even when the partner is not known in advance. This document is offered up as an Informational RFC. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 2] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3. Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 4. Impacts on IKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 5. DNS issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 6. Network address translation interaction . . . . . . . . . . . 28 7. Host implementations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 8. Multi-homing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 9. Failure modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 10. Unresolved issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 11. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 12. Security considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 13. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 14. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Normative references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 3] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 1. Introduction 1.1 Motivation The objective of opportunistic encryption is to allow encryption without any pre-arrangement specific to the pair of systems involved. Each system administrator adds public key information to DNS records to support opportunistic encryption and then enables this feature in the nodes' IPsec stack. Once this is done, any two such nodes can communicate securely. This document describes opportunistic encryption as designed and mostly implemented by the Linux FreeS/WAN project. For project information, see http://www.freeswan.org. The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) have taken a strong stand that the Internet should use powerful encryption to provide security and privacy [4]. The Linux FreeS/WAN project attempts to provide a practical means to implement this policy. The project uses the IPsec, ISAKMP/IKE, DNS and DNSSEC protocols because they are standardized, widely available and can often be deployed very easily without changing hardware or software or retraining users. The extensions to support opportunistic encryption are simple. No changes to any on-the-wire formats are needed. The only changes are to the policy decision making system. This means that opportunistic encryption can be implemented with very minimal changes to an existing IPsec implementation. Opportunistic encryption creates a "fax effect". The proliferation of the fax machine was possible because it did not require that everyone buy one overnight. Instead, as each person installed one, the value of having one increased - as there were more people that could receive faxes. Once opportunistic encryption is installed it automatically recognizes other boxes using opportunistic encryption, without any further configuration by the network administrator. So, as opportunistic encryption software is installed on more boxes, its value as a tool increases. This document describes the infrastructure to permit deployment of Opportunistic Encryption. The term S/WAN is a trademark of RSA Data Systems, and is used with permission by this project. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 4] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 1.2 Types of network traffic To aid in understanding the relationship between security processing and IPsec we divide network traffic into four categories: * Deny: networks to which traffic is always forbidden. * Permit: networks to which traffic in the clear is permitted. * Opportunistic tunnel: networks to which traffic is encrypted if possible, but otherwise is in the clear or fails depending on the default policy in place. * Configured tunnel: networks to which traffic must be encrypted, and traffic in the clear is never permitted. Traditional firewall devices handle the first two categories. No authentication is required. The permit policy is currently the default on the Internet. This document describes the third category - opportunistic tunnel, which is proposed as the new default for the Internet. Category four, encrypt traffic or drop it, requires authentication of the end points. As the number of end points is typically bounded and is typically under a single authority, arranging for distribution of authentication material, while difficult, does not require any new technology. The mechanism described here provides an additional way to distribute the authentication materials, that of a public key method that does not require deployment of an X.509 based infrastructure. Current Virtual Private Networks can often be replaced by an "OE paranoid" policy as described herein. 1.3 Peer authentication in opportunistic encryption Opportunistic encryption creates tunnels between nodes that are essentially strangers. This is done without any prior bilateral arrangement. There is, therefore, the difficult question of how one knows to whom one is talking. One possible answer is that since no useful authentication can be done, none should be tried. This mode of operation is named "anonymous encryption". An active man-in-the-middle attack can be used to thwart the privacy of this type of communication. Without peer authentication, there is no way to prevent this kind of attack. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 5] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 Although a useful mode, anonymous encryption is not the goal of this project. Simpler methods are available that can achieve anonymous encryption only, but authentication of the peer is a desireable goal. The latter is achieved through key distribution in DNS, leveraging upon the authentication of the DNS in DNSSEC. Peers are, therefore, authenticated with DNSSEC when available. Local policy determines how much trust to extend when DNSSEC is not available. However, an essential premise of building private connections with strangers is that datagrams received through opportunistic tunnels are no more special than datagrams that arrive in the clear. Unlike in a VPN, these datagrams should not be given any special exceptions when it comes to auditing, further authentication or firewalling. When initiating outbound opportunistic encryption, local configuration determines what happens if tunnel setup fails. It may be that the packet goes out in the clear, or it may be dropped. 1.4 Use of RFC2119 terms The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD, SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL, when they appear in this document, are to be interpreted as described in [5] Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 6] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 2. Overview 2.1 Reference diagram --------------------------------------------------------------------- The following network diagram is used in the rest of this document as the canonical diagram: [Q] [R] . . AS2 [A]----+----[SG-A].......+....+.......[SG-B]-------[B] | ...... AS1 | ..PI.. | ...... [D]----+----[SG-D].......+....+.......[C] AS3 Figure 1: Reference Network Diagram --------------------------------------------------------------------- In this diagram, there are four end-nodes: A, B, C and D. There are three gateways, SG-A, SG-B, SG-D. A, D, SG-A and SG-D are part of the same administrative authority, AS1. SG-A and SG-D are on two different exit paths from organization 1. SG-B/B is an independent organization, AS2. Nodes Q and R are nodes on the Internet. PI is the Public Internet ("The Wild"). 2.2 Terminology The following terminology is used in this document: Security gateway: a system that performs IPsec tunnel mode encapsulation/decapsulation. [SG-x] in the diagram. Alice: node [A] in the diagram. When an IP address is needed, this is 192.1.0.65. Bob: node [B] in the diagram. When an IP address is needed, this is 192.2.0.66. Carol: node [C] in the diagram. When an IP address is needed, this is 192.1.1.67. Dave: node [D] in the diagram. When an IP address is needed, this is 192.3.0.68. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 7] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 SG-A: Alice's security gateway. Internally it is 192.1.0.1, externally it is 192.1.1.4. SG-B: Bob's security gateway. Internally it is 192.2.0.1, externally it is 192.1.1.5. SG-D: Dave's security gateway. Also Alice's backup security gateway. Internally it is 192.3.0.1, externally it is 192.1.1.6. - A single dash represents clear-text datagrams. = An equals sign represents phase 2 (IPsec) cipher-text datagrams. ~ A single tilde represents clear-text phase 1 datagrams. # A hash sign represents phase 1 (IKE) cipher-text datagrams. . A period represents an untrusted network of unknown type. Configured tunnel: a tunnel that is directly and deliberately hand configured on participating gateways. Configured tunnels are typically given a higher level of trust than opportunistic tunnels. Road warrior tunnel: a configured tunnel connecting one node with a fixed IP address and one node with a variable IP address. A road warrior (RW) connection must be initiated by the variable node, since the fixed node cannot know the current address for the road warrior. Anonymous encryption: the process of encrypting a session without any knowledge of who the other parties are. No authentication of identities is done. Opportunistic encryption: the process of encrypting a session with authenticated knowledge of who the other parties are. Lifetime: the period in seconds (bytes or datagrams) for which a security association will remain alive before needing to be re- keyed. Lifespan: the effective time for which a security association remains useful. A security association with a lifespan shorter than its lifetime would be removed when no longer needed. A security association with a lifespan longer than its lifetime would need to be re-keyed one or more times. Phase 1 SA: an ISAKMP/IKE security association sometimes referred to Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 8] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 as a keying channel. Phase 2 SA: an IPsec security association. Tunnel: another term for a set of phase 2 SA (one in each direction). NAT: Network Address Translation (see [20]). NAPT: Network Address and Port Translation (see [20]). AS: an autonomous system (AS) is a group of systems (a network) that are under the administrative control of a single organization. Default-free zone: a set of routers that maintain a complete set of routes to all currently reachable destinations. Having such a list, these routers never make use of a default route. A datagram with a destination address not matching any route will be dropped by such a router. 2.3 Model of operation The opportunistic encryption security gateway (OE gateway) is a regular gateway node as described in [2] section 2.4 and [3] with the additional capabilities described here and in [7]. The algorithm described here provides a way to determine, for each datagram, whether or not to encrypt and tunnel the datagram. Two important things that must be determined are whether or not to encrypt and tunnel and, if so, the destination address or name of the tunnel end point which should be used. 2.3.1 Tunnel authorization The OE gateway determines whether or not to create a tunnel based on the destination address of each packet. Upon receiving a packet with a destination address not recently seen, the OE gateway performs a lookup in DNS for an authorization resource record (see Section 5.2). The record is located using the IP address to perform a search in the in-addr.arpa (IPv4) or ip6.arpa (IPv6) maps. If an authorization record is found, the OE gateway interprets this as a request for a tunnel to be formed. 2.3.2 Tunnel end-point discovery The authorization resource record also provides the address or name of the tunnel end point which should be used. The record may also provide the public RSA key of the tunnel end Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 9] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 point itself. This is provided for efficiency only. If the public RSA key is not present, the OE gateway performs a second lookup to find a KEY resource record for the end point address or name. Origin and integrity protection of the resource records is provided by DNSSEC ([16]). Section 3.2.4.1 documents an optional restriction on the tunnel end point if DNSSEC signatures are not available for the relevant records. 2.3.3 Caching of authorization results The OE gateway maintains a cache, in the forwarding plane, of source/ destination pairs for which opportunistic encryption has been attempted. This cache maintains a record of whether or not OE was successful so that subsequent datagrams can be forwarded properly without additional delay. Successful negotiation of OE instantiates a new security association. Failure to negotiate OE results in creation of a forwarding policy entry either to drop or transmit in the clear future datagrams. This negative cache is necessary to avoid the possibly lengthy process of repeatedly looking up the same information. The cache is timed out periodically, as described in Section 3.4. This removes entries that are no longer being used and permits the discovery of changes in authorization policy. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 10] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 3. Specification The OE gateway is modeled to have a forwarding plane and a control plane. A control channel, such as PF_KEY, connects the two planes. (See [6].) The forwarding plane performs per datagram operations. The control plane contains a keying daemon, such as ISAKMP/IKE, and performs all authorization, peer authentication and key derivation functions. 3.1 Datagram state machine Let the OE gateway maintain a collection of objects -- a superset of the security policy database (SPD) specified in [7]. For each combination of source and destination address, an SPD object exists in one of five following states. Prior to forwarding each datagram, the responder uses the source and destination addresses to pick an entry from the SPD. The SPD then determines if and how the packet is forwarded. 3.1.1 Non-existent policy If the responder does not find an entry, then this policy applies. The responder creates an entry with an initial state of "hold policy" and requests keying material from the keying daemon. The responder does not forward the datagram, rather it attaches the datagram to the SPD entry as the "first" datagram and retains it for eventual transmission in a new state. 3.1.2 Hold policy The responder requests keying material. If the interface to the keying system is lossy (PF_KEY, for instance, can be), the implementation SHOULD include a mechanism to retransmit the keying request at a rate limited to less than 1 request per second. The responder does not forward the datagram. It attaches the datagram to the SPD entry as the "last" datagram where it is retained for eventual transmission. If there is a datagram already so stored, then that already stored datagram is discarded. Because the "first" datagram is probably a TCP SYN packet, the responder retains the "first" datagram in an attempt to avoid waiting for a TCP retransmit. The responder retains the "last" datagram in deference to streaming protocols that find it useful to know how much data has been lost. These are recommendations to decrease latency. There are no operational requirements for this. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 11] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 3.1.3 Pass-through policy The responder forwards the datagram using the normal forwarding table. The responder enters this state only by command from the keying daemon, and upon entering this state, also forwards the "first" and "last" datagrams. 3.1.4 Deny policy The responder discards the datagram. The responder enters this state only by command from the keying daemon, and upon entering this state, discards the "first" and "last" datagrams. Local administration decides if further datagrams cause ICMP messages to be generated (i.e. ICMP Destination Unreachable, Communication Administratively Prohibited. type=3, code=13). 3.1.5 Encrypt policy The responder encrypts the datagram using the indicated security association database (SAD) entry. The responder enters this state only by command from the keying daemon, and upon entering this state, releases and forwards the "first" and "last" datagrams using the new encrypt policy. If the associated SAD entry expires because of byte, packet or time limits, then the entry returns to the Hold policy, and an expire message is sent to the keying daemon. All states may be created directly by the keying daemon while acting as a responder. 3.2 Keying state machine - initiator Let the keying daemon maintain a collection of objects. Let them be called "connections" or "conn"s. There are two categories of connection objects: classes and instances. A class represents an abstract policy - what could be. An instance represents an actual connection - what is implemented at the time. Let there be two further subtypes of connections: keying channels (Phase 1 SAs) and data channels (Phase 2 SAs). Each data channel object may have a corresponding SPD and SAD entry maintained by the datagram state machine. For the purposes of opportunistic encryption, there MUST, at least, be connection classes known as "deny", "always-clear-text", "OE- permissive", and "OE-paranoid". The latter two connection classes define a set of source and/or destination addresses for which Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 12] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 opportunistic encryption will be attempted. The administrator MAY set policy options in a number of additional places. An implementation MAY create additional connection classes to further refine these policies. The simplest system may need only the "OE-permissive" connection, and would list its own (single) IP address as the source address of this policy and the wild-card address 0.0.0.0/0 as the destination IPv4 address. That is, the simplest policy is to try opportunistic encryption with all destinations. The distinction between permissive and paranoid OE use will become clear in the state transition differences. In general a permissive OE will, on failure, install a pass-through policy, while a paranoid OE will, on failure, install a drop policy. In this description of the keying machine's state transitions, the states associated with the keying system itself are omitted because they are best documented in the keying system ([8], [9] and [10] for ISAKMP/IKE), and the details are keying system specific. Opportunistic encryption is not dependent upon any specific keying protocol, but this document does provide requirements for those using ISAKMP/IKE to assure that implementations inter-operate. The state transitions that may be involved in communicating with the forwarding plane are omitted. PF_KEY and similar protocols have their own set of states required for message sends and completion notifications. Finally, the retransmits and recursive lookups that are normal for DNS are not included in this description of the state machine. 3.2.1 Nonexistent connection There is no connection instance for a given source/destination address pair. Upon receipt of a request for keying material for this source/destination pair, the initiator searches through the connection classes to determine the most appropriate policy. Upon determining an appropriate connection class, an instance object is created of that type. Both of the OE types result in a potential OE connection. Failure to find an appropriate connection class results in an administrator defined default. In each case, when the initiator finds an appropriate class for the new flow, an instance connection is made of the class which matched. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 13] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 3.2.2 Clear-text connection The non-existent connection makes a transition to this state when an always-clear-text class is instantiated, or when an OE-permissive connection fails. During the transition, the initiator creates a pass-through policy object in the forwarding plane for the appropriate flow. Timing out is the only way to leave this state (see Section 3.2.7). 3.2.3 Deny connection The empty connection makes a transition to this state when a deny class is instantiated, or when an OE-paranoid connection fails. During the transition, the initiator creates a deny policy object in the forwarding plane for the appropriate flow. Timing out is the only way to leave this state (see Section 3.2.7). 3.2.4 Potential OE connection The empty connection makes a transition to this state when one of either OE class is instantiated. During the transition to this state, the initiator creates a hold policy object in the forwarding plane for the appropriate flow. In addition, when making a transition into this state, DNS lookup is done in the reverse-map for a TXT delegation resource record (see Section 5.2). The lookup key is the destination address of the flow. There are three ways to exit this state: 1. DNS lookup finds a TXT delegation resource record. 2. DNS lookup does not find a TXT delegation resource record. 3. DNS lookup times out. Based upon the results of the DNS lookup, the potential OE connection makes a transition to the pending OE connection state. The conditions for a successful DNS look are: 1. DNS finds an appropriate resource record 2. It is properly formatted according to Section 5.2 3. if DNSSEC is enabled, then the signature has been vouched for. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 14] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 Note that if the initiator does not find the public key present in the TXT delegation record, then the public key must be looked up as a sub-state. Only successful completion of all the DNS lookups is considered a success. If DNS lookup does not find a resource record or DNS times out, then the initiator considers the receiver not OE capable. If this is an OE-paranoid instance, then the potential OE connection makes a transition to the deny connection state. If this is an OE-permissive instance, then the potential OE connection makes a transition to the clear-text connection state. If the initiator finds a resource record but it is not properly formatted, or if DNSSEC is enabled and reports a failure to authenticate, then the potential OE connection should make a transition to the deny connection state. This action SHOULD be logged. If the administrator wishes to override this transition between states, then an always-clear class can be installed for this flow. An implementation MAY make this situation a new class. 3.2.4.1 Restriction on unauthenticated TXT delegation records An implementation SHOULD also provide an additional administrative control on delegation records and DNSSEC. This control would apply to delegation records (the TXT records in the reverse-map) that are not protected by DNSSEC. Records of this type are only permitted to delegate to their own address as a gateway. When this option is enabled, an active attack on DNS will be unable to redirect packets to other than the original destination. 3.2.5 Pending OE connection The potential OE connection makes a transition to this state when the initiator determines that all the information required from the DNS lookup is present. Upon entering this state, the initiator attempts to initiate keying to the gateway provided. Exit from this state occurs either with a successfully created IPsec SA, or with a failure of some kind. Successful SA creation results in a transition to the key connection state. Three failures have caused significant problems. They are clearly not the only possible failures from keying. Note that if there are multiple gateways available in the TXT delegation records, then a failure can only be declared after all have been tried. Further, creation of a phase 1 SA does not constitute success. A set of phase 2 SAs (a tunnel) is considered Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 15] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 success. The first failure occurs when an ICMP port unreachable is consistently received without any other communication, or when there is silence from the remote end. This usually means that either the gateway is not alive, or the keying daemon is not functional. For an OE-permissive connection, the initiator makes a transition to the clear-text connection but with a low lifespan. For an OE-pessimistic connection, the initiator makes a transition to the deny connection again with a low lifespan. The lifespan in both cases is kept low because the remote gateway may be in the process of rebooting or be otherwise temporarily unavailable. The length of time to wait for the remote keying daemon to wake up is a matter of some debate. If there is a routing failure, 5 minutes is usually long enough for the network to re-converge. Many systems can reboot in that amount of time as well. However, 5 minutes is far too long for most users to wait to hear that they can not connect using OE. Implementations SHOULD make this a tunable parameter. The second failure occurs after a phase 1 SA has been created, but there is either no response to the phase 2 proposal, or the initiator receives a negative notify (the notify must be authenticated). The remote gateway is not prepared to do OE at this time. As before, the initiator makes a transition to the clear-text or the deny connection based upon connection class, but this time with a normal lifespan. The third failure occurs when there is signature failure while authenticating the remote gateway. This can occur when there has been a key roll-over, but DNS has not caught up. In this case again, the initiator makes a transition to the clear-text or the deny connection based upon the connection class. However, the lifespan depends upon the remaining time to live in the DNS. (Note that DNSSEC signed resource records have a different expiry time than non- signed records.) 3.2.6 Keyed connection The pending OE connection makes a transition to this state when session keying material (the phase 2 SAs) is derived. The initiator creates an encrypt policy in the forwarding plane for this flow. There are three ways to exit this state. The first is by receipt of an authenticated delete message (via the keying channel) from the peer. This is normal teardown and results in a transition to the expired connection state. The second exit is by expiry of the forwarding plane keying material. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 16] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 This starts a re-key operation with a transition back to pending OE connection. In general, the soft expiry occurs with sufficient time left to continue to use the keys. A re-key can fail, which may result in the connection failing to clear-text or deny as appropriate. In the event of a failure, the forwarding plane policy does not change until the phase 2 SA (IPsec SA) reaches its hard expiry. The third exit is in response to a negotiation from a remote gateway. If the forwarding plane signals the control plane that it has received an unknown SPI from the remote gateway, or an ICMP is received from the remote gateway indicating an unknown SPI, the initiator should consider that the remote gateway has rebooted or restarted. Since these indications are easily forged, the implementation must exercise care. The initiator should make a cautious (rate-limited) attempt to re-key the connection. 3.2.7 Expiring connection The initiator will periodically place each of the deny, clear-text, and keyed connections into this sub-state. See Section 3.4 for more details of how often this occurs. The initiator queries the forwarding plane for last use time of the appropriate policy. If the last use time is relatively recent, then the connection returns to the previous deny, clear-text or keyed connection state. If not, then the connection enters the expired connection state. The DNS query and answer that lead to the expiring connection state are also examined. The DNS query may become stale. (A negative, i.e. no such record, answer is valid for the period of time given by the MINIMUM field in an attached SOA record. See [12] section 4.3.4.) If the DNS query is stale, then a new query is made. If the results change, then the connection makes a transition to a new state as described in potential OE connection state. Note that when considering how stale a connection is, both outgoing SPD and incoming SAD must be queried as some flows may be unidirectional for some time. Also note that the policy at the forwarding plane is not updated unless there is a conclusion that there should be a change. 3.2.8 Expired connection Entry to this state occurs when no datagrams have been forwarded recently via the appropriate SPD and SAD objects. The objects in the forwarding plane are removed (logging any final byte and packet counts if appropriate) and the connection instance in the keying Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 17] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 plane is deleted. The initiator sends an ISAKMP/IKE delete to clean up the phase 2 SAs as described in Section 3.4. Whether or not to delete the phase 1 SAs at this time is left as a local implementation issue. Implementations that do delete the phase 1 SAs MUST send authenticated delete messages to indicate that they are doing so. There is an advantage to keeping the phase 1 SAs until they expire - they may prove useful again in the near future. 3.3 Keying state machine - responder The responder has a set of objects identical to those of the initiator. The responder receives an invitation to create a keying channel from an initiator. 3.3.1 Unauthenticated OE peer Upon entering this state, the responder starts a DNS lookup for a KEY record for the initiator. The responder looks in the reverse-map for a KEY record for the initiator if the initiator has offered an ID_IPV4_ADDR, and in the forward map if the initiator has offered an ID_FQDN type. (See [8] section 4.6.2.1.) The responder exits this state upon successful receipt of a KEY from DNS, and use of the key to verify the signature of the initiator. Successful authentication of the peer results in a transition to the authenticated OE Peer state. Note that the unauthenticated OE peer state generally occurs in the middle of the key negotiation protocol. It is really a form of pseudo-state. 3.3.2 Authenticated OE Peer The peer will eventually propose one or more phase 2 SAs. The responder uses the source and destination address in the proposal to finish instantiating the connection state using the connection class table. The responder MUST search for an identical connection object at this point. If an identical connection is found, then the responder deletes the old instance, and the new object makes a transition to the pending OE connection state. This means that new ISAKMP connections with a Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 18] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 given peer will always use the latest instance, which is the correct one if the peer has rebooted in the interim. If an identical connection is not found, then the responder makes the transition according to the rules given for the initiator. Note that if the initiator is in OE-paranoid mode and the responder is in either always-clear-text or deny, then no communication is possible according to policy. An implementation is permitted to create new types of policies such as "accept OE but do not initiate it". This is a local matter. 3.4 Renewal and teardown 3.4.1 Aging A potentially unlimited number of tunnels may exist. In practice, only a few tunnels are used during a period of time. Unused tunnels MUST, therefore, be torn down. Detecting when tunnels are no longer in use is the subject of this section. There are two methods for removing tunnels: explicit deletion or expiry. Explicit deletion requires an IKE delete message. As the deletes MUST be authenticated, both ends of the tunnel must maintain the key channel (phase 1 ISAKMP SA). An implementation which refuses to either maintain or recreate the keying channel SA will be unable to use this method. The tunnel expiry method, simply allows the IKE daemon to expire normally without attempting to re-key it. Regardless of which method is used to remove tunnels, the implementation requires a method to determine if the tunnel is still in use. The specifics are a local matter, but the FreeS/WAN project uses the following criteria. These criteria are currently implemented in the key management daemon, but could also be implemented at the SPD layer using an idle timer. Set a short initial (soft) lifespan of 1 minute since many net flows last only a few seconds. At the end of the lifespan, check to see if the tunnel was used by traffic in either direction during the last 30 seconds. If so, assign a longer tentative lifespan of 20 minutes after which, look again. If the tunnel is not in use, then close the tunnel. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 19] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 The expiring state in the key management system (see Section 3.2.7) implements these timeouts. The timer above may be in the forwarding plane, but then it must be re-settable. The tentative lifespan is independent of re-keying; it is just the time when the tunnel's future is next considered. (The term lifespan is used here rather than lifetime for this reason.) Unlike re-keying, this tunnel use check is not costly and should happen reasonably frequently. A multi-step back-off algorithm is not considered worth the effort here. If the security gateway and the client host are the same and not a Bump-in-the-Stack or Bump-in-the-Wire implementation, tunnel teardown decisions MAY pay attention to TCP connection status as reported by the local TCP layer. A still-open TCP connection is almost a guarantee that more traffic is expected. Closing of the only TCP connection through a tunnel is a strong hint that no more traffic is expected. 3.4.2 Teardown and cleanup Teardown should always be coordinated between the two ends of the tunnel by interpreting and sending delete notifications. There is a detailed sub-state in the expired connection state of the key manager that relates to retransmits of the delete notifications, but this is considered to be a keying system detail. On receiving a delete for the outbound SAs of a tunnel (or some subset of them), tear down the inbound ones also and notify the remote end with a delete. If the local system receives a delete for a tunnel which is no longer in existence, then two delete messages have crossed paths. Ignore the delete. The operation has already been completed. Do not generate any messages in this situation. Tunnels are to be considered as bidirectional entities, even though the low-level protocols don't treat them this way. When the deletion is initiated locally, rather than as a response to a received delete, send a delete for (all) the inbound SAs of a tunnel. If the local system does not receive a responding delete for the outbound SAs, try re-sending the original delete. Three tries spaced 10 seconds apart seems a reasonable level of effort. A failure of the other end to respond after 3 attempts, indicates that the possibility of further communication is unlikely. Remove the outgoing SAs. (The remote system may be a mobile node that is no longer present or powered on.) Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 20] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 After re-keying, transmission should switch to using the new outgoing SAs (ISAKMP or IPsec) immediately, and the old leftover outgoing SAs should be cleared out promptly (delete should be sent for the outgoing SAs) rather than waiting for them to expire. This reduces clutter and minimizes confusion for the operator doing diagnostics. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 21] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 4. Impacts on IKE 4.1 ISAKMP/IKE protocol The IKE wire protocol needs no modifications. The major changes are implementation issues relating to how the proposals are interpreted, and from whom they may come. As opportunistic encryption is designed to be useful between peers without prior operator configuration, an IKE daemon must be prepared to negotiate phase 1 SAs with any node. This may require a large amount of resources to maintain cookie state, as well as large amounts of entropy for nonces, cookies and so on. The major changes to support opportunistic encryption are at the IKE daemon level. These changes relate to handling of key acquisition requests, lookup of public keys and TXT records, and interactions with firewalls and other security facilities that may be co-resident on the same gateway. 4.2 Gateway discovery process In a typical configured tunnel, the address of SG-B is provided via configuration. Furthermore, the mapping of an SPD entry to a gateway is typically a 1:1 mapping. When the 0.0.0.0/0 SPD entry technique is used, then the mapping to a gateway is determined by the reverse DNS records. The need to do a DNS lookup and wait for a reply will typically introduce a new state and a new event source (DNS replies) to IKE. Although a synchronous DNS request can be implemented for proof of concept, experience is that it can cause very high latencies when a queue of queries must all timeout in series. Use of an asynchronous DNS lookup will also permit overlap of DNS lookups with some of the protocol steps. 4.3 Self identification SG-A will have to establish its identity. Use an IPv4 ID in phase 1. There are many situations where the administrator of SG-A may not be able to control the reverse DNS records for SG-A's public IP address. Typical situations include dialup connections and most residential- type broadband Internet access (ADSL, cable-modem) connections. In these situations, a fully qualified domain name that is under the control of SG-A's administrator may be used when acting as an initiator only. The FQDN ID should be used in phase 1. See Section Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 22] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 5.3 for more details and restrictions. 4.4 Public key retrieval process Upon receipt of a phase 1 SA proposal with either an IPv4 (IPv6) ID or an FQDN ID, an IKE daemon needs to examine local caches and configuration files to determine if this is part of a configured tunnel. If no configured tunnels are found, then the implementation should attempt to retrieve a KEY record from the reverse DNS in the case of an IPv4/IPv6 ID, or from the forward DNS in the case of FQDN ID. It is reasonable that if other non-local sources of policy are used (COPS, LDAP), they be consulted concurrently but some clear ordering of policy be provided. Note that due to variances in latency, implementations must wait for positive or negative replies from all sources of policy before making any decisions. 4.5 Interactions with DNSSEC The implementation described (1.98) neither uses DNSSEC directly to explicitly verify the authenticity of zone information, nor uses the NXT records to provide authentication of the absence of a TXT or KEY record. Rather, this implementation uses a trusted path to a DNSSEC capable caching resolver. To distinguish between an authenticated and an unauthenticated DNS resource record, a stub resolver capable of returning DNSSEC information MUST be used. 4.6 Required proposal types 4.6.1 Phase 1 parameters Main mode MUST be used. The initiator MUST offer at least one proposal using some combination of: 3DES, HMAC-MD5 or HMAC-SHA1, DH group 2 or 5. Group 5 SHOULD be proposed first. [11] The initiator MAY offer additional proposals, but the cipher MUST not be weaker than 3DES. The initiator SHOULD limit the number of proposals such that the IKE datagrams do not need to be fragmented. The responder MUST accept one of the proposals. If any configuration of the responder is required then the responder is not acting in an opportunistic way. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 23] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 SG-A SHOULD use an ID_IPV4_ADDR (ID_IPV6_ADDR for IPv6) of the external interface of SG-A for phase 1. (There is an exception, see Section 5.3.) The authentication method MUST be RSA public key signatures. The RSA key for SG-A SHOULD be placed into a DNS KEY record in the reverse space of SG-A (i.e. using in-addr.arpa). 4.6.2 Phase 2 parameters SG-A MUST propose a tunnel between Alice and Bob, using 3DES-CBC mode, MD5 or SHA1 authentication. Perfect Forward Secrecy MUST be specified. Tunnel mode MUST be used. Identities MUST be ID_IPV4_ADDR_SUBNET with the mask being /32. Authorization for SG-A to act on Alice's behalf is determined by looking for a TXT record in the reverse-map at Alice's address. Compression SHOULD NOT be mandatory. It may be offered as an option. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 24] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 5. DNS issues 5.1 Use of KEY record In order to establish their own identities, SG-A and SG-B SHOULD publish their public keys in their reverse DNS via DNSSEC's KEY record. See section 3 of RFC 2535[16]. For example: KEY 0x4200 4 1 AQNJjkKlIk9...nYyUkKK8 0x4200: The flag bits, indicating that this key is prohibited for confidentiality use (it authenticates the peer only, a separate Diffie-Hellman exchange is used for confidentiality), and that this key is associated with the non-zone entity whose name is the RR owner name. No other flags are set. 4: This indicates that this key is for use by IPsec. 1: An RSA key is present. AQNJjkKlIk9...nYyUkKK8: The public key of the host as described in [17]. Use of several KEY records allows for key rollover. The SIG Payload in IKE phase 1 SHOULD be accepted if the public key given by any KEY RR validates it. 5.2 Use of TXT delegation record Alice publishes a TXT record to provide authorization for SG-A to act on Alice's behalf. Bob publishes a TXT record to provide authorization for SG-B to act on Bob's behalf. These records are located in the reverse DNS (in-addr.arpa) for their respective IP addresses. The reverse DNS SHOULD be secured by DNSSEC, when it is deployed. DNSSEC is required to defend against active attacks. If Alice's address is P.Q.R.S, then she can authorize another node to act on her behalf by publishing records at: S.R.Q.P.in-addr.arpa The contents of the resource record are expected to be a string that uses the following syntax, as suggested in [15]. (Note that the reply to query may include other TXT resource records used by other applications.) Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 25] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 --------------------------------------------------------------------- X-IPsec-Server(P)=A.B.C.D KEY Figure 2: Format of reverse delegation record --------------------------------------------------------------------- P: Specifies a precedence for this record. This is similar to MX record preferences. Lower numbers have stronger preference. A.B.C.D: Specifies the IP address of the Security Gateway for this client machine. KEY: Is the encoded RSA Public key of the Security Gateway. The key is provided here to avoid a second DNS lookup. If this field is absent, then a KEY resource record should be looked up in the reverse-map of A.B.C.D. The key is transmitted in base64 format. The pieces of the record are separated by any whitespace (space, tab, newline, carriage return). An ASCII space SHOULD be used. In the case where Alice is located at a public address behind a security gateway that has no fixed address (or no control over its reverse-map), then Alice may delegate to a public key by domain name. --------------------------------------------------------------------- X-IPsec-Server(P)=@FQDN KEY Figure 3: Format of reverse delegation record (FQDN version) --------------------------------------------------------------------- P: Is as above. FQDN: Specifies the FQDN that the Security Gateway will identify itself with. KEY: Is the encoded RSA Public key of the Security Gateway. If there is more than one such TXT record with strongest (lowest numbered) precedence, one Security Gateway is picked arbitrarily from those specified in the strongest-preference records. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 26] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 5.2.1 Long TXT records When packed into transport format, TXT records which are longer than 255 characters are divided into smaller . (See [13] section 3.3 and 3.3.14.) These MUST be reassembled into a single string for processing. Whitespace characters in the base64 encoding are to be ignored. 5.2.2 Choice of TXT record It has been suggested to use the KEY, OPT, CERT, or KX records instead of a TXT record. None is satisfactory. The KEY RR has a protocol field which could be used to indicate a new protocol, and an algorithm field which could be used to indicate different contents in the key data. However, the KEY record is clearly not intended for storing what are really authorizations, it is just for identities. Other uses have been discouraged. OPT resource records, as defined in [14] are not intended to be used for storage of information. They are not to be loaded, cached or forwarded. They are, therefore, inappropriate for use here. CERT records [18] can encode almost any set of information. A custom type code could be used permitting any suitable encoding to be stored, not just X.509. According to the RFC, the certificate RRs are to be signed internally which may add undesirable and unnecessary bulk. Larger DNS records may require TCP instead of UDP transfers. At the time of protocol design, the CERT RR was not widely deployed and could not be counted upon. Use of CERT records will be investigated, and may be proposed in a future revision of this document. KX records are ideally suited for use instead of TXT records, but had not been deployed at the time of implementation. 5.3 Use of FQDN IDs Unfortunately, not every administrator has control over the contents of the reverse-map. Where the initiator (SG-A) has no suitable reverse-map, the authorization record present in the reverse-map of Alice may refer to a FQDN instead of an IP address. In this case, the client's TXT record gives the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) in place of its security gateway's IP address. The initiator should use the ID_FQDN ID-payload in phase 1. A forward lookup for a KEY record on the FQDN must yield the Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 27] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 initiator's public key. This method can also be used when the external address of SG-A is dynamic. If SG-A is acting on behalf of Alice, then Alice must still delegate authority for SG-A to do so in her reverse-map. When Alice and SG-A are one and the same (i.e. Alice is acting as an end-node) then there is no need for this when initiating only. However, Alice must still delegate to herself if she wishes others to initiate OE to her. See Figure 3. 5.4 Key roll-over Good cryptographic hygiene says that one should replace public/ private key pairs periodically. Some administrators may wish to do this as often as daily. Typical DNS propagation delays are determined by the SOA Resource Record MINIMUM parameter, which controls how long DNS replies may be cached. For reasonable operation of DNS servers, administrators usually want this value to be at least several hours, sometimes as a long as a day. This presents a problem - a new key MUST not be used prior to it propagating through DNS. This problem is dealt with by having the Security Gateway generate a new public/private key pair at least MINIMUM seconds in advance of using it. It then adds this key to the DNS (both as a second KEY record and in additional TXT delegation records) at key generation time. Note: only one key is allowed in each TXT record. When authenticating, all gateways MUST have available all public keys that are found in DNS for this entity. This permits the authenticating end to check both the key for "today" and the key for "tomorrow". Note that it is the end which is creating the signature (possesses the private key) that determines which key is to be used. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 28] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 6. Network address translation interaction There are no fundamentally new issues for implementing opportunistic encryption in the presence of network address translation. Rather there are only the regular IPsec issues with NAT traversal. There are several situations to consider for NAT. 6.1 Co-located NAT/NAPT If SG-A is also performing network address translation on behalf of Alice, then the packet should be translated prior to being subjected to opportunistic encryption. This is in contrast to typically configured tunnels which often exist to bridge islands of private network address space. SG-A will use the translated source address for phase 2, and so SG-B will look up that address to confirm SG-A's authorization. In the case of NAT (1:1), the address space into which the translation is done MUST be globally unique, and control over the reverse-map is assumed. Placing of TXT records is possible. In the case of NAPT (m:1), the address will be SG-A. The ability to get KEY and TXT records in place will again depend upon whether or not there is administrative control over the reverse-map. This is identical to situations involving a single host acting on behalf of itself. FQDN style can be used to get around a lack of a reverse-map for initiators only. 6.2 SG-A behind NAT/NAPT If there is a NAT or NAPT between SG-A and SG-B, then normal IPsec NAT traversal rules apply. In addition to the transport problem which may be solved by other mechanisms, there is the issue of what phase 1 and phase 2 IDs to use. While FQDN could be used during phase 1 for SG-A, there is no appropriate ID for phase 2 that permits SG-B to determine that SG-A is in fact authorized to speak for Alice. 6.3 Bob is behind a NAT/NAPT If Bob is behind a NAT (perhaps SG-B), then there is, in fact, no way for Alice to address a packet to Bob. Not only is opportunistic encryption impossible, but it is also impossible for Alice to initiate any communication to Bob. It may be possible for Bob to initiate in such a situation. This creates an asymmetry, but this is common for NAPT. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 29] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 7. Host implementations When Alice and SG-A are components of the same system, they are considered to be a host implementation. The packet sequence scenario remains unchanged. Components marked Alice are the upper layers (TCP, UDP, the application), and SG-A is the IP layer. Note that tunnel mode is still required. As Alice and SG-A are acting on behalf of themselves, no TXT based delegation record is necessary for Alice to initiate. She can rely on FQDN in a forward map. This is particularly attractive to mobile nodes such as notebook computers at conferences. To respond, Alice/ SG-A will still need an entry in Alice's reverse-map. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 30] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 8. Multi-homing If there are multiple paths between Alice and Bob (as illustrated in the diagram with SG-D), then additional DNS records are required to establish authorization. In Figure 1, Alice has two ways to exit her network: SG-A and SG-D. Previously SG-D has been ignored. Postulate that there are routers between Alice and her set of security gateways (denoted by the + signs and the marking of an autonomous system number for Alice's network). Datagrams may, therefore, travel to either SG-A or SG-D en route to Bob. As long as all network connections are in good order, it does not matter how datagrams exit Alice's network. When they reach either security gateway, the security gateway will find the TXT delegation record in Bob's reverse-map, and establish an SA with SG-B. SG-B has no problem establishing that either of SG-A or SG-D may speak for Alice, because Alice has published two equally weighted TXT delegation records: --------------------------------------------------------------------- X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.1.1.5 AQMM...3s1Q== X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.1.1.6 AAJN...j8r9== Figure 4: Multiple gateway delegation example for Alice --------------------------------------------------------------------- Alice's routers can now do any kind of load sharing needed. Both SG- A and SG-D send datagrams addressed to Bob through their tunnel to SG-B. Alice's use of non-equal weight delegation records to show preference of one gateway over another, has relevance only when SG-B is initiating to Alice. If the precedences are the same, then SG-B has a more difficult time. It must decide which of the two tunnels to use. SG-B has no information about which link is less loaded, nor which security gateway has more cryptographic resources available. SG-B, in fact, has no knowledge of whether both gateways are even reachable. The Public Internet's default-free zone may well know a good route to Alice, but the datagrams that SG-B creates must be addressed to Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 31] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 either SG-A or SG-D; they can not be addressed to Alice directly. SG-B may make a number of choices: 1. It can ignore the problem and round robin among the tunnels. This causes losses during times when one or the other security gateway is unreachable. If this worries Alice, she can change the weights in her TXT delegation records. 2. It can send to the gateway from which it most recently received datagrams. This assumes that routing and reachability are symmetrical. 3. It can listen to BGP information from the Internet to decide which system is currently up. This is clearly much more complicated, but if SG-B is already participating in the BGP peering system to announce Bob, the results data may already be available to it. 4. It can refuse to negotiate the second tunnel. (It is unclear whether or not this is even an option.) 5. It can silently replace the outgoing portion of the first tunnel with the second one while still retaining the incoming portions of both. SG-B can, thus, accept datagrams from either SG-A or SG-D, but send only to the gateway that most recently re-keyed with it. Local policy determines which choice SG-B makes. Note that even if SG-B has perfect knowledge about the reachability of SG-A and SG-D, Alice may not be reachable from either of these security gateways because of internal reachability issues. FreeS/WAN implements option 5. Implementing a different option is being considered. The multi-homing aspects of OE are not well developed and may be the subject of a future document. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 32] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 9. Failure modes 9.1 DNS failures If a DNS server fails to respond, local policy decides whether or not to permit communication in the clear as embodied in the connection classes in Section 3.2. It is easy to mount a denial of service attack on the DNS server responsible for a particular network's reverse-map. Such an attack may cause all communication with that network to go in the clear if the policy is permissive, or fail completely if the policy is paranoid. Please note that this is an active attack. There are still many networks that do not have properly configured reverse-maps. Further, if the policy is not to communicate, the above denial of service attack isolates the target network. Therefore, the decision of whether or not to permit communication in the clear MUST be a matter of local policy. 9.2 DNS configured, IKE failures DNS records claim that opportunistic encryption should occur, but the target gateway either does not respond on port 500, or refuses the proposal. This may be because of a crash or reboot, a faulty configuration, or a firewall filtering port 500. The receipt of ICMP port, host or network unreachable messages indicates a potential problem, but MUST NOT cause communication to fail immediately. ICMP messages are easily forged by attackers. If such a forgery caused immediate failure, then an active attacker could easily prevent any encryption from ever occurring, possibly preventing all communication. In these situations a clear log should be produced and local policy should dictate if communication is then permitted in the clear. 9.3 System reboots Tunnels sometimes go down because the remote end crashes, disconnects, or has a network link break. In general there is no notification of this. Even in the event of a crash and successful reboot, other SGs don't hear about it unless the rebooted SG has specific reason to talk to them immediately. Over-quick response to temporary network outages is undesirable. Note that a tunnel can be torn down and then re-established without any effect visible to the user except a pause in traffic. On the other hand, if one end reboots, the other end can't get datagrams to it at all (except via IKE) until the situation is noticed. So a bias toward quick response Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 33] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 is appropriate even at the cost of occasional false alarms. A mechanism for recovery after reboot is a topic of current research and is not specified in this document. A deliberate shutdown should include an attempt, using deletes, to notify all other SGs currently connected by phase 1 SAs that communication is about to fail. Again, a remote SG will assume this is a teardown. Attempts by the remote SGs to negotiate new tunnels as replacements should be ignored. When possible, SGs should attempt to preserve information about currently-connected SGs in non-volatile storage, so that after a crash, an Initial-Contact can be sent to previous partners to indicate loss of all previously established connections. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 34] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 10. Unresolved issues 10.1 Control of reverse DNS The method of obtaining information by reverse DNS lookup causes problems for people who cannot control their reverse DNS bindings. This is an unresolved problem in this version, and is out of scope. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 35] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 11. Examples 11.1 Clear-text usage (permit policy) Two example scenarios follow. In the first example GW-A (Gateway A) and GW-B (Gateway B) have always-clear-text policies, and in the second example they have an OE policy. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Alice SG-A DNS SG-B Bob (1) ------(2)--------------> <-----(3)--------------- (4)----(5)-----> ----------(6)------> ------(7)-----> <------(8)------ <----------(9)------ <----(10)----- (11)-----------> ----------(12)-----> --------------> <--------------- <------------------- <------------- Figure 5: Timing of regular transaction --------------------------------------------------------------------- Alice wants to communicate with Bob. Perhaps she wants to retrieve a web page from Bob's web server. In the absence of opportunistic encryptors, the following events occur: (1) Human or application 'clicks' with a name. (2) Application looks up name in DNS to get IP address. (3) Resolver returns A record to application. (4) Application starts a TCP session or UDP session and OS sends datagram. (5) Datagram is seen at first gateway from Alice (SG-A). (SG-A makes a transition through Empty connection to always-clear connection and instantiates a pass-through policy at the forwarding plane.) Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 36] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 (6) Datagram is seen at last gateway before Bob (SG-B). (7) First datagram from Alice is seen by Bob. (8) First return datagram is sent by Bob. (9) Datagram is seen at Bob's gateway. (SG-B makes a transition through Empty connection to always-clear connection and instantiates a pass-through policy at the forwarding plane.) (10) Datagram is seen at Alice's gateway. (11) OS hands datagram to application. Alice sends another datagram. (12) A second datagram traverses the Internet. 11.2 Opportunistic encryption In the presence of properly configured opportunistic encryptors, the event list is extended. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Alice SG-A DNS SG-B Bob (1) ------(2)--------------> <-----(3)--------------- (4)----(5)----->+ ----(5B)-> <---(5C)-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~(5D)~~~> <~~~~~~~~~~~~(5E1)~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~(5E2)~~> <~~~~~~~~~~~~(5E3)~~~ #############(5E4)##> <############(5E5)### <----(5F1)-- -----(5F2)-> #############(5G1)##> <----(5H1)-- -----(5H2)-> <############(5G2)### #############(5G3)##> ============(6)====> ------(7)-----> <------(8)------ Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 37] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 <==========(9)====== <-----(10)---- (11)-----------> ==========(12)=====> --------------> <--------------- <=================== <------------- Figure 6: Timing of opportunistic encryption transaction --------------------------------------------------------------------- (1) Human or application clicks with a name. (2) Application initiates DNS mapping. (3) Resolver returns A record to application. (4) Application starts a TCP session or UDP. (5) SG-A (host or SG) sees datagram to target, and buffers it. (5B) SG-A asks DNS for TXT record. (5C) DNS returns TXT record(s). (5D) Initial IKE Main Mode Packet goes out. (5E) IKE ISAKMP phase 1 succeeds. (5F) SG-B asks DNS for TXT record to prove SG-A is an agent for Alice. (5G) IKE phase 2 negotiation. (5H) DNS lookup by responder (SG-B). (6) Buffered datagram is sent by SG-A. (7) Datagram is received by SG-B, decrypted, and sent to Bob. (8) Bob replies, and datagram is seen by SG-B. (9) SG-B already has tunnel up with SG-A, and uses it. (10) SG-A decrypts datagram and gives it to Alice. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 38] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 (11) Alice receives datagram. Sends new packet to Bob. (12) SG-A gets second datagram, sees that tunnel is up, and uses it. For the purposes of this section, we will describe only the changes that occur between Figure 5 and Figure 6. This corresponds to time points 5, 6, 7, 9 and 10 on the list above. 11.2.1 (5) IPsec datagram interception At point (5), SG-A intercepts the datagram because this source/ destination pair lacks a policy (the non-existent policy state). SG- A creates a hold policy, and buffers the datagram. SG-A requests keys from the keying daemon. 11.2.2 (5B) DNS lookup for TXT record SG-A's IKE daemon, having looked up the source/destination pair in the connection class list, creates a new Potential OE connection instance. SG-A starts DNS queries. 11.2.3 (5C) DNS returns TXT record(s) DNS returns properly formed TXT delegation records, and SG-A's IKE daemon causes this instance to make a transition from Potential OE connection to Pending OE connection. Using the example above, the returned record might contain: --------------------------------------------------------------------- X-IPsec-Server(10)=192.1.1.5 AQMM...3s1Q== Figure 7: Example of reverse delegation record for Bob --------------------------------------------------------------------- with SG-B's IP address and public key listed. 11.2.4 (5D) Initial IKE main mode packet goes out Upon entering Pending OE connection, SG-A sends the initial ISAKMP message with proposals. See Section 4.6.1. 11.2.5 (5E1) Message 2 of phase 1 exchange SG-B receives the message. A new connection instance is created in Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 39] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 the unauthenticated OE peer state. 11.2.6 (5E2) Message 3 of phase 1 exchange SG-A sends a Diffie-Hellman exponent. This is an internal state of the keying daemon. 11.2.7 (5E3) Message 4 of phase 1 exchange SG-B responds with a Diffie-Hellman exponent. This is an internal state of the keying protocol. 11.2.8 (5E4) Message 5 of phase 1 exchange SG-A uses the phase 1 SA to send its identity under encryption. The choice of identity is discussed in Section 4.6.1. This is an internal state of the keying protocol. 11.2.9 (5F1) Responder lookup of initiator key SG-B asks DNS for the public key of the initiator. DNS looks for a KEY record by IP address in the reverse-map. That is, a KEY resource record is queried for 4.1.1.192.in-addr.arpa (recall that SG-A's external address is 192.1.1.4). SG-B uses the resulting public key to authenticate the initiator. See Section 5.1 for further details. 11.2.10 (5F2) DNS replies with public key of initiator Upon successfully authenticating the peer, the connection instance makes a transition to authenticated OE peer on SG-B. The format of the TXT record returned is described in Section 5.2. 11.2.11 (5E5) Responder replies with ID and authentication SG-B sends its ID along with authentication material. This is an internal state for the keying protocol. 11.2.12 (5G) IKE phase 2 11.2.12.1 (5G1) Initiator proposes tunnel Having established mutually agreeable authentications (via KEY) and authorizations (via TXT), SG-A proposes to create an IPsec tunnel for datagrams transiting from Alice to Bob. This tunnel is established only for the Alice/Bob combination, not for any subnets that may be behind SG-A and SG-B. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 40] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 11.2.12.2 (5H1) Responder determines initiator's authority While the identity of SG-A has been established, its authority to speak for Alice has not yet been confirmed. SG-B does a reverse lookup on Alice's address for a TXT record. Upon receiving this specific proposal, SG-B's connection instance makes a transition into the potential OE connection state. SG-B may already have an instance, and the check is made as described above. 11.2.12.3 (5H2) DNS replies with TXT record(s) The returned key and IP address should match that of SG-A. 11.2.12.4 (5G2) Responder agrees to proposal Should additional communication occur between, for instance, Dave and Bob using SG-A and SG-B, a new tunnel (phase 2 SA) would be established. The phase 1 SA may be reusable. SG-A, having successfully keyed the tunnel, now makes a transition from Pending OE connection to Keyed OE connection. The responder MUST setup the inbound IPsec SAs before sending its reply. 11.2.12.5 (5G3) Final acknowledgment from initiator The initiator agrees with the responder's choice and sets up the tunnel. The initiator sets up the inbound and outbound IPsec SAs. The proper authorization returned with keys prompts SG-B to make a transition to the keyed OE connection state. Upon receipt of this message, the responder may now setup the outbound IPsec SAs. 11.2.13 (6) IPsec succeeds, and sets up tunnel for communication between Alice and Bob SG-A sends the datagram saved at step (5) through the newly created tunnel to SG-B, where it gets decrypted and forwarded. Bob receives it at (7) and replies at (8). 11.2.14 (9) SG-B already has tunnel up with G1 and uses it At (9), SG-B has already established an SPD entry mapping Bob->Alice via a tunnel, so this tunnel is simply applied. The datagram is Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 41] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 encrypted to SG-A, decrypted by SG-A and passed to Alice at (10). Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 42] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 12. Security considerations 12.1 Configured vs opportunistic tunnels Configured tunnels are those which are setup using bilateral mechanisms: exchanging public keys (raw RSA, DSA, PKIX), pre-shared secrets, or by referencing keys that are in known places (distinguished name from LDAP, DNS). These keys are then used to configure a specific tunnel. A pre-configured tunnel may be on all the time, or may be keyed only when needed. The end points of the tunnel are not necessarily static: many mobile applications (road warrior) are considered to be configured tunnels. The primary characteristic is that configured tunnels are assigned specific security properties. They may be trusted in different ways relating to exceptions to firewall rules, exceptions to NAT processing, and to bandwidth or other quality of service restrictions. Opportunistic tunnels are not inherently trusted in any strong way. They are created without prior arrangement. As the two parties are strangers, there MUST be no confusion of datagrams that arrive from opportunistic peers and those that arrive from configured tunnels. A security gateway MUST take care that an opportunistic peer can not impersonate a configured peer. Ingress filtering MUST be used to make sure that only datagrams authorized by negotiation (and the concomitant authentication and authorization) are accepted from a tunnel. This is to prevent one peer from impersonating another. An implementation suggestion is to treat opportunistic tunnel datagrams as if they arrive on a logical interface distinct from other configured tunnels. As the number of opportunistic tunnels that may be created automatically on a system is potentially very high, careful attention to scaling should be taken into account. As with any IKE negotiation, opportunistic encryption cannot be secure without authentication. Opportunistic encryption relies on DNS for its authentication information and, therefore, cannot be fully secure without a secure DNS. Without secure DNS, opportunistic encryption can protect against passive eavesdropping but not against active man-in-the-middle attacks. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 43] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 12.2 Firewalls versus Opportunistic Tunnels Typical usage of per datagram access control lists is to implement various kinds of security gateways. These are typically called "firewalls". Typical usage of a virtual private network (VPN) within a firewall is to bypass all or part of the access controls between two networks. Additional trust (as outlined in the previous section) is given to datagrams that arrive in the VPN. Datagrams that arrive via opportunistically configured tunnels MUST not be trusted. Any security policy that would apply to a datagram arriving in the clear SHOULD also be applied to datagrams arriving opportunistically. 12.3 Denial of service There are several different forms of denial of service that an implementor should concern themselves with. Most of these problems are shared with security gateways that have large numbers of mobile peers (road warriors). The design of ISAKMP/IKE, and its use of cookies, defend against many kinds of denial of service. Opportunism changes the assumption that if the phase 1 (ISAKMP) SA is authenticated, that it was worthwhile creating. Because the gateway will communicate with any machine, it is possible to form phase 1 SAs with any machine on the Internet. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 44] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 13. IANA Considerations There are no known numbers which IANA will need to manage. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 45] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 14. Acknowledgments Substantive portions of this document are based upon previous work by Henry Spencer. Thanks to Tero Kivinen, Sandy Harris, Wes Hardarker, Robert Moskowitz, Jakob Schlyter, Bill Sommerfeld, John Gilmore and John Denker for their comments and constructive criticism. Sandra Hoffman and Bill Dickie did the detailed proof reading and editing. Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 46] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 Normative references [1] Redelmeier, D. and H. Spencer, "Opportunistic Encryption", paper http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1.91/doc/ opportunism.spec, May 2001. [2] Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Information Processing Techniques Office and University of Southern California (USC)/Information Sciences Institute, "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791, September 1981. [3] Braden, R. and J. Postel, "Requirements for Internet gateways", RFC 1009, June 1987. [4] IAB, IESG, Carpenter, B. and F. Baker, "IAB and IESG Statement on Cryptographic Technology and the Internet", RFC 1984, August 1996. [5] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [6] McDonald, D., Metz, C. and B. Phan, "PF_KEY Key Management API, Version 2", RFC 2367, July 1998. [7] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998. [8] Piper, D., "The Internet IP Security Domain of Interpretation for ISAKMP", RFC 2407, November 1998. [9] Maughan, D., Schneider, M. and M. Schertler, "Internet Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP)", RFC 2408, November 1998. [10] Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998. [11] Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo, "More MODP Diffie-Hellman groups for IKE", ID internet-draft (draft-ietf-ipsec-ike-modp-groups-03) (normative), November 2001. [12] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities", STD 13, RFC 1034, November 1987. [13] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987. [14] Vixie, P., "Extension Mechanisms for DNS (EDNS0)", RFC 2671, Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 47] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 August 1999. [15] Rosenbaum, R., "Using the Domain Name System To Store Arbitrary String Attributes", RFC 1464, May 1993. [16] Eastlake, D., "Domain Name System Security Extensions", RFC 2535, March 1999. [17] Eastlake, D., "RSA/SHA-1 SIGs and RSA KEYs in the Domain Name System (DNS)", RFC 3110, May 2001. [18] Eastlake, D. and O. Gudmundsson, "Storing Certificates in the Domain Name System (DNS)", RFC 2538, March 1999. [19] Durham, D., Boyle, J., Cohen, R., Herzog, S., Rajan, R. and A. Sastry, "The COPS (Common Open Policy Service) Protocol", RFC 2748, January 2000. [20] Srisuresh, P. and M. Holdrege, "IP Network Address Translator (NAT) Terminology and Considerations", RFC 2663, August 1999. Authors' Addresses Michael C. Richardson Sandelman Software Works 470 Dawson Avenue Ottawa, ON K1Z 5V7 CA EMail: mcr@sandelman.ottawa.on.ca URI: http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ D. Hugh Redelmeier Mimosa Toronto, ON CA EMail: hugh@mimosa.com Richardson & Redelmeier Expires July 11, 2003 [Page 48] Internet-Draft opportunistic January 2003 Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved. 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