Internet DRAFT - draft-ietf-shim6-hba
draft-ietf-shim6-hba
Network Working Group M. Bagnulo
Internet-Draft UC3M
Intended status: Standards Track December 22, 2007
Expires: June 24, 2008
Hash Based Addresses (HBA)
draft-ietf-shim6-hba-05
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
Abstract
This memo describes a mechanism to provide a secure binding between
the multiple addresses with different prefixes available to a host
within a multihomed site. This mechanism employs either
Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) or a new variant of the
same theme that uses the same format in the addresses. The main idea
in the new variant is that information about the multiple prefixes is
included within the addresses themselves. This is achieved by
generating the interface identifiers of the addresses of a host as
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hashes of the available prefixes and a random number. Then, the
multiple addresses are generated by prepending the different prefixes
to the generated interface identifiers. The result is a set of
addresses, called Hash Based Addresses (HBAs), that are inherently
bound to each other.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1. Threat Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.2. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.3. Motivations for the HBA design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4. Cryptographic Generated Addresses (CGA) compatibility
considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
5. Multi-Prefix Extension for CGA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6. HBA-Set Generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
7. HBA verification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7.1. Verification that a particular HBA address corresponds
to a given CGA Parameter Data Structure . . . . . . . . . 12
7.2. Verification that a particular HBA address belongs to
the HBA set associated to a given CGA Parameter Data
Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
8. Example of HBA application to a multihoming scenario . . . . . 14
8.1. Dynamic Address Set Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9. DNS considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
10. IANA considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
11. Security considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
11.1. Security considerations when using HBAs in the Shim6
protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
11.2. Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
11.3. SHA-1 Dependency Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
12. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
13. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
14. Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
14.1. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-04 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
14.2. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-03 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-04 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
14.3. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-02 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
14.4. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-01 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-02 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
14.5. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-00 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-01 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
14.6. Changes from draft-ietf-multi6-hba-00 to
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draft-ietf-shim6-hba-00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
14.7. Changes from draft-bagnulo-multi6dt-hba-00 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
15. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
15.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
15.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 28
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1. Introduction
In order to preserve inter-domain routing system scalability, IPv6
sites obtain addresses from their Internet Service Providers. Such
addressing strategy significantly reduces the amount of routes in the
global routing tables, since each ISP only announces routes to its
own address blocks, rather than announcing one route per customer
site. However, this addressing scheme implies that multihomed sites
will obtain multiple prefixes, one per ISP. Moreover, since each ISP
only announces its own address block, a multihomed site will be
reachable through a given ISP if the ISP prefix is contained in the
destination address of the packets. This means that, if an
established communication needs to be routed through different ISPs
during its lifetime, addresses with different prefixes will have to
be used. Changing the address used to carry packets of an
established communication exposes the communication to numerous
attacks, as described in [11], so security mechanisms are required to
provide the required protection to the involved parties. This memo
describes a tool that can be used to provide protection against some
of the potential attacks, in particular against future / premeditated
attacks (a.k.a. time shifting attacks in [12]).
This memo describes a mechanism to provide a secure binding between
the multiple addresses with different prefixes available to a host
within a multihomed site.
It should be noted that, as opposed to the mobility case where the
addresses that will be used by the mobile node are not known a
priori, the multiple addresses available to a host within the
multihomed site are pre-defined and known in advance in most of the
cases. The mechanism proposed in this memo employs either
Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) [2] or a new variant of
the same theme that uses the same format in the addresses. The new
variant, Hash Based Address (HBA), takes advantage of the address set
stability. In either case, a secure binding between the addresses of
a node in a multihomed site can be provided. CGAs employ public key
cryptography and can deal with changing address sets. HBAs employ
only symmetric key cryptography, and have smaller computational
requirements.
For the purposes of the Shim6 protocol, the other characteristics of
the CGAs and HBAs are similar. Both can be generated by the host
itself without any reliance on external infrastructure. Both employ
the same format of addresses and same format of data fed to generate
the addresses. It is not required that all interface identifiers of
a node's addresses are equal, preserving some degree of privacy
through changes in the addresses used during the communications.
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The main idea in HBAs is that information about the multiple prefixes
is included within the addresses themselves. This is achieved by
generating the interface identifiers of the addresses of a host as
hashes of the available prefixes and a random number. Then, the
multiple addresses are obtained by prepending the different prefixes
to the generated interface identifiers. The result is a set of
addresses that are inherently bound. A cost efficient mechanism is
available to determine if two addresses belong to the same set, since
given the prefix set and the additional parameters used to generate
the HBA, a single hash operation is enough to verify if an HBA
belongs to a given HBA set.
2. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119."
3. Overview
3.1. Threat Model
The threat analysis for the multihoming problem is described in [11].
This analysis basically identifies attacks based on redirection of
packets by a malicious attacker towards addresses that do not belong
to the multihomed node. There are essentially two type of
redirection attacks: communication hijacking and flooding attacks.
communication hijacking attacks are about an attacker stealing on-
going and/or future communications from a victim. Flooding attacks
are about redirecting the traffic generated by a legitimate source
towards a third party, flooding it. The HBA solution provides full
protection against the communication hijacking attacks. The Shim6
protocol [9] protects against flooding attacks. Residual threats are
described in the security considerations section.
3.2. Overview
The basic goal of the HBA mechanism is to securely bind together
multiple IPv6 addresses that belong to the same multihomed host.
This allows rerouting of traffic without worrying that the
communication is being redirected to an attacker. The technique that
is used is to include a hash of the permitted prefixes in the low
order bits of the IPv6 address.
So, eliding some details, say the available prefixes are A, B, C, and
D, the host would generate a prefix list P consisting of (A,B,C,D)
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and a random number called Modifier M. Then it would generate the new
addresses:
A || H(M || A || P)
B || H(M || B || P)
C || H(M || C || P)
D || H(M || D || P)
Thus, given one valid address out of the group and the prefix list P
and the random Modifier M it is possible to determine whether another
address is part of the group by computing the hash and checking
against the low order bits.
3.3. Motivations for the HBA design
The design of the HBA technique was driven by the following
considerations:
First of all, the goal of HBA is to provide a secure binding between
the IPv6 address used as identifier by the upper layer protocols and
the alternative locators available in the multihomed node, so that
redirection attacks are prevented.
Second, in order to achieve such protection, the selected approach
was to include security information in the identifier itself, instead
of relying in third trusted parties to secure the binding, such as
the ones based on repositories or Public Key Infrastructure. This
decision was driven by deployment considerations i.e. the cost of
deploying the trusted third party infrastructure.
Third, application support considerations described in [16] resulted
in selecting routable IPv6 addresses to be used as identifiers.
Hence, security information is stuffed within the interface
identifier part of the IPv6 address.
Fourth, performance considerations as described in [17] motivated the
usage of a hash based approach as opposed to a public key based
approach based on pure Cryptographic Generated Addresses (CGA), in
order to avoid imposing the performance of public key operations for
every communication in multihomed environments. The HBA approach
presented in this document presents a cheaper alternative that is
attractive to many common usage cases. Note that the HBA approach
and the CGA approaches are not mutually exclusive and that it is
possible to generate addresses that are both valid CGA and HBA
addresses providing the benefits of both approaches if needed.
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4. Cryptographic Generated Addresses (CGA) compatibility considerations
As described in previous section, the HBA technique uses the
interface identifier part of the IPv6 address to encode information
about the multiple prefixes available to a multihomed host. However,
the interface identifier is also used to carry cryptographic
information when Cryptographic Generated Addresses (CGA) [2] are
used. Therefore, conflicting usages of the interface identifier bits
may result if this is not taken into account during the HBA design.
There are at least two valid reasons to provide CGA-HBA
compatibility:
First, the current Secure Neighbor Discovery (SeND) specification [3]
uses the CGAs defined in [2] to prove address ownership. If HBAs are
not compatible with CGAs, then nodes using HBAs for multihoming
wouldn't be able to do Secure Neighbor Discovery using the same
addresses (at least the parts of SeND that require CGAs). This would
imply that nodes would have to choose between security (from SeND)
and fault tolerance (from IPv6 multihoming support provided by the
Shim6 protocol [9]). In addition to SeND, there are other protocols
that are considering to benefit from the advantages offered by the
CGA scheme, such as mobility support protocols [13]. Those protocols
could not be used with HBAs if HBAs are not compatible with CGAs.
Second, CGAs provide additional features that cannot be achieved
using only HBAs. In particular, because of its own nature, the HBA
technique only supports a predetermined prefix set that is known at
the time of the generation of the HBA set. No additions of new
prefixes to this original set are supported after the HBA set
generation. In most of the cases relevant for site multihoming, this
is not a problem because the prefix set available to a multihomed set
is not very dynamic. New prefixes may be added in a multihomed site
when a new ISP is available, but the timing of those events are
rarely in the same time scale than the lifetime of established
communications. It is then enough for many situations that the new
prefix is not available for established communications and that only
new communications benefit from it. However, in the case that such
functionality is required, it is possible to use CGAs to provide it.
This approach clearly requires that HBA and CGA approaches are
compatible. If this is the case, it then would be possible to create
HBA/CGA addresses that support CGA and HBA functionality
simultaneously. The inputs to the HBA/CGA generation process will be
both a prefix set and a public key. In this way, a node that has
established a communication using one address of the CGA/HBA set can
tell its peer to use the HBA verification when one of the addresses
of its HBA/CGA set is used as locator in the communication or to use
CGA (public/private key based) verification when a new address that
does not belong to the HBA/CGA set is used as locator in the
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communication.
So, because of the aforementioned reasons, it is a goal of the HBA
design to define HBAs in a way that they are compatible with CGAs as
defined in [2] and their usages described in [3] (Consequently, to
understand the rest of this note, the reader should be familiar with
the CGA specification defined in [2]). This means that it must be
possible to generate addresses that are both an HBA and a CGA i.e.
that the interface identifier contains cryptographic information of
CGA and the prefix-set information of an HBA. The CGA specification
already considers the possibility of including additional information
into the CGA generation process through the usage of Extension Fields
in the CGA Parameter Data Structure. It is then possible to define a
Multi-Prefix Extension for CGA so that the prefix set information is
included in the interface identifier generation process.
Even though a CGA compatible approach is adopted, it should be noted
that HBAs and CGAs are different concepts. In particular, the CGA is
inherently bound to a public key, while a HBA is inherently bound to
a prefix set. This means that a public key is not required to
generate an HBA-only address. Because of that, we define three
different types of addresses:
- CGA-only addresses: These are addresses generated as specified in
[2] without including the Multi-Prefix Extension. They are bound
to a public key and to a single prefix (contained in the basic CGA
Parameter Data Structure). These addresses can be used for SeND
[3] and if used for multihoming, their application will have to be
based on the public key usage.
- CGA/HBA addresses: These addresses are CGAs that include the
Multi-Prefix Extension in the CGA Parameters Data Structure used
for their generation. These addresses are bound to a public key
and a prefix set and they provide both CGA and HBA
functionalities. They can be used for SeND as defined in [3] and
for any usage defined for HBA (such as a Shim6 protocol)
- HBA-only addresses: These addresses are bound to a prefix set but
they are not bound to a public key. Because HBAs are compatible
with CGA, the CGA Parameter Data Structure will be used for their
generation, but a random nonce will be included in the Public Key
field instead of a public key. These addresses can be used for
HBA based multihoming protocols, but they cannot be used for SeND.
5. Multi-Prefix Extension for CGA
The Multi-Prefix Extension has the following TLV format as defined in
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[8] :
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Extension Type | Extension Data Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|P| Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
+ Prefix[1] +
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
+ Prefix[2] +
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
. . .
. . .
. . .
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
+ Prefix[n] +
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Ext Type: 16-bit type identifier of the Multi-Prefix Extension (See
IANA Considerations section)
Ext Len: 16-bit unsigned integer. Length of the Extension in
octets, not including the first 4 octets.
P flag: P flag: Set if a public key is included in the Public Key
field of the CGA Parameter Data Structure, reset otherwise.
Reserved: 31-bit reserved field. MUST be initialized to zero, and
ignored upon receipt.
Prefix[1...n]: Vector of 64-bit prefixes, numbered 1 to n.
6. HBA-Set Generation
The HBA generation process is based on the CGA generation process
defined in section 4 of [2]. The goal is to require the minimum
amount of changes to the CGA generation process. It should be noted
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that the following procedure is only valid for Sec values of 0, 1 and
2. For other Sec values, RFC4982 [10] has defined a CGA SEC registry
which will contain the specifications used to generate CGAs. The
generation procedures defined in such specifications must be used for
Sec values other than 0,1 or 2.
The CGA generation process has three inputs: a 64-bit subnet prefix,
a public key (encoded in DER as an ASN.1 structure of the type
SubjectPublicKeyInfo), and the security parameter Sec.
The main difference between the CGA generation and the HBA generation
is that while a CG A can be generated independently, all the HBAs of
a given HBA set have to be generated using the same parameters, which
implies that the generation of the addresses of an HBA set will occur
in a coordinated fashion. In this memo, we will describe a mechanism
to generate all the addresses of a given HBA set. The generation
process of each one of the HBA address of an HBA set will be heavily
based in the CGA generation process defined in [2]. More precisely,
the HBA set generation process will be defined as a sequence of
lightly modified CGA generations.
The changes required in the CGA generation process when generating a
single HBA are the following: First, the Multi-Prefix Extension has
to be included in the CGA Parameters Data Structure. Second, in the
case that the address being generated is an HBA-only address, a
random nonce will have to be used as input instead of a valid public
key. For backwards compatibility issues with pure CGAs, the random
nonce MUST be encoded as a public key as defined in [2]. In
particular, the random nonce MUST be formatted as a DER-encoded ASN.1
structure of the type SubjectPublicKeyInfo, defined in the Internet
X.509 certificate profile [5]. The algorithm identifier MUST be
rsaEncryption, which is 1.2.840.113549.1.1.1, and the random nonce
MUST be formatted by using the RSAPublicKey type as specified in
Section 2.3.1 of RFC 3279 [4]. The random nonce length is 384 bits.
The resulting HBA-set generation process is the following:
The inputs to the HBA generation process are:
o A vector of n 64-bit prefixes
o A Sec parameter, and
o In the case of the generation of a set of HBA/CGA addresses a
public key is also provided as input (not required when generating
HBA-only addresses)
The output of the HBA generation process are:
o An HBA-set
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o their respective CGA Parameters Data Structures
The steps of the HBA-set generation process are:
1. Multi-Prefix Extension generation. Generate the Multi-Prefix
Extension with the format defined in section 5. Include the
vector of n 64-bit prefixes in the Prefix[1...n] fields. The Ext
Len field value is (n*8 + 4). If a public key is provided, then
the P flag is set to one. Otherwise, the P flag is set to zero.
2. Modifier generation. Generate a Modifier as a random or
pseudorandom 128-bit value. If a public key has not been provided
as an input, generate the Extended Modifier as a 384-bit random or
pseudorandom value. Encode the Extended Modifier value as a RSA
key in a DER-encoded ASN.1 structure of the type
SubjectPublicKeyInfo defined in the Internet X.509 certificate
profile [5].
3. Concatenate from left to right the Modifier, 9 zero octets, the
encoded public key or the encoded Extended Modifier (if no public
key was provided) and the Multi-Prefix Extension. Execute the
SHA-1 algorithm on the concatenation. Take the 112 leftmost bits
of the SHA-1 hash value. The result is Hash2.
4. Compare the 16*Sec leftmost bits of Hash2 with zero. If they are
all zero (or if Sec=0), continue with step (5). Otherwise,
increment the modifier by one and go back to step (3).
5. Set the 8-bit collision count to zero.
6. For i=1 to n (number of prefixes) do
6.1. Concatenate from left to right the final Modifier value,
Prefix[i], the collision count, the encoded public key or the
encoded Extended Modifier (if no public key was provided) and
the Multi-Prefix Extension. Execute the SHA-1 algorithm on the
concatenation. Take the 64 leftmost bits of the SHA-1 hash
value. The result is Hash1[i].
6.2. Form an interface identifier from Hash1[i] by writing the
value of Sec into the three leftmost bits and by setting bits 6
and 7 (i.e., the "u" and "g" bits) both to zero.
6.3. Generate address HBA[i] by concatenating Prefix[i] and the
64-bit interface identifier to form a 128-bit IPv6 address with
the subnet prefix to the left and interface identifier to the
right as in a standard IPv6 address [6].
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6.4. Perform duplicate address detection if required. If an
address collision is detected, increment the collision count by
one and go back to step (6). However, after three collisions,
stop and report the error.
6.5. Form the CGA Parameters Data Structure that corresponds to
HBA[i] by concatenating from left to right the final modifier
value, Prefix[i], the final collision count value, the encoded
public key or the encoded Extended Modifier and the Multi-
Prefix Extension.
[Note: most of the steps of the process are taken from [2]]
7. HBA verification
The following procedure is only valid for Sec values of 0, 1 and 2.
For other Sec values, RFC4982 [10] has defined a CGA SEC registry
which will contain the specifications used to verify CGAs. The
verification procedures defined in such specifications must be used
for Sec values other than 0,1 or 2.
7.1. Verification that a particular HBA address corresponds to a given
CGA Parameter Data Structure
HBAs are constructed as a CGA Extension, so a properly formatted HBA
and its correspondent CGA Parameter Data Structure will successfully
finish the verification process described in section 5 of [2]. Such
verification is useful when the goal is the verification of the
binding between the public key and the HBA.
7.2. Verification that a particular HBA address belongs to the HBA set
associated to a given CGA Parameter Data Structure
For multihoming applications, it is also relevant to verify if a
given HBA address belongs to a certain HBA set. An HBA set is
identified by a CGA Parameter Data structure that contains a Multi-
Prefix Extension. So, we need to verify if a given HBA belongs to
the HBA set defined by a CGA Parameter Data Structure. It should be
noted that we may need to verify if an HBA belongs to the HBA set
defined by the CGA Parameter Data Structure of another HBA of the
set. If this is the case, HBAs will fail to pass the CGA
verification process defined in [2], because the prefix included in
the Subnet Prefix field of the CGA Parameter Data Structure will not
match the prefix of the HBA that is being verified. To verify if an
HBA belongs to an HBA set associated with another HBA, verify that
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the HBA prefix is included in the prefix set defined in the Multi-
Prefix Extension, and if this is the case, then substitute the prefix
included in the Subnet Prefix field by the prefix of the HBA, and
then perform the CGA verification process defined in [2].
So, the process to verify that an HBA belongs to an HBA set
determined by a CGA Parameter Data Structure is called HBA
verification and it is the following:
The inputs to the HBA verification process are:
o An HBA
o A CGA Parameter Data Structure
The steps of the HBA verification process are the following:
1. Verify that the 64-bit HBA prefix is included in the prefix set of
the Multi-Prefix Extension. If it is not included, the
verification fails. If it is included, replace the prefix
contained in the Subnet Prefix field of the CGA Parameter Data
Structure by the 64-bit HBA prefix.
2. Run the verification process described in section 5 of [2] with
the HBA and the new CGA Parameters Data Structure (including the
Multi-Prefix Extension) as inputs. The steps of the process are
included below, extracted from [2]
2.1. Check that the collision count in the CGA Parameters Data
Structure is 0, 1 or 2. The CGA verification fails if the
collision count is out of the valid range.
2.2. Check that the subnet prefix in the CGA Parameters Data
Structure is equal to the subnet prefix (i.e., the leftmost 64
bits) of the address. The CGA verification fails if the prefix
values differ. [Note: This step always succeeds because of the
action taken in step 1]
2.3. Execute the SHA-1 algorithm on the CGA Parameters Data
Structure. Take the 64 leftmost bits of the SHA-1 hash value.
The result is Hash1.
2.4. Compare Hash1 with the interface identifier (i.e., the
rightmost 64 bits) of the address. Differences in the three
leftmost bits and in bits 6 and 7 (i.e., the "u" and "g" bits)
are ignored. If the 64-bit values differ (other than in the
five ignored bits), the CGA verification fails.
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2.5. Read the security parameter Sec from the three leftmost bits
of the 64-bit interface identifier of the address. (Sec is an
unsigned 3-bit integer.)
2.6. Concatenate from left to right the modifier, 9 zero octets,
and the public key, and any extension fields [in this case, the
Multi-Prefix Extension will be included, at least] that follow
the public key in the CGA Parameters data structure. Execute
the SHA-1 algorithm on the concatenation. Take the 112
leftmost bits of the SHA-1 hash value. The result is Hash2.
2.7. Compare the 16*Sec leftmost bits of Hash2 with zero. If any
one of them is non-zero, the CGA verification fails.
Otherwise, the verification succeeds. (If Sec=0, the CGA
verification never fails at this step.)
8. Example of HBA application to a multihoming scenario
In this section, we will describe a possible application of the HBA
technique to IPv6 multi-homing.
We will consider the following scenario: a multihomed site obtains
Internet connectivity through two providers ISPA and ISPB. Each
provider has delegated a prefix to the the multihomed site
(PrefA::/nA and PrefB::/nb respectively). In order to benefit from
multihoming, the hosts within the multihomed site will configure
multiple IP addresses, one per available prefix. The resulting
configuration is depicted in the next figure.
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+-------+
| Host2 |
|IPHost2|
+-------+
|
|
(Internet)
/ \
/ \
+------+ +------+
| ISPA | | ISPB |
| | | |
+------+ +------+
| |
\ /
\ /
+---------------------+
| multihomed site |
| PA::/nA |
| PB::/nB +------+ |
| |Host1 | |
| +------+ |
+---------------------+
We assume that both Host1 and Host2 support the Shim6 protocol.
Host2 is not located in a multihomed site, so there is no need for it
to create HBAs (it must be able to verify them though, in order to
support the Shim6 protocol, as we will describe next.)
Host1 is located in the multihomed site, so it will generate its
addresses as HBAs. In order to do that, it needs to execute the HBA-
set generation process as detailed in Section 6 of this memo. The
inputs of the HBA-set generation process will be: a prefix vector
containing the two prefixes available in its link i.e. PA:LA::/64
and PB:LB::/64, a Sec parameter value, and optionally a public key.
In this case we will assume that a public key is provided so that we
can also illustrate how a renumbering event can be supported when
HBA/CGA addresses are used (see the sub-section referring to dynamic
address set support). So, after executing the HBA-set generation
process, Host1 will have: an HBA-set consisting in two addresses i.e.
PA:LA:iidA and PB:LB:iidB with their respective CGA Parameter Data
Structures i.e. CGA_PDS_A and CGA_PDS_B. Note that iidA and iidB are
different but both contain information about the prefix set available
in the multihomed site.
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We will next consider a communication between Host1 and Host2.
Assume that both ISPs of the multihomed site are working properly, so
any of the available addresses in Host1 can be used for the
communication. Suppose then that the communication is established
using PA:LA:iidA and IPHost2 for Host1 and Host2 respectively. So
far, no special Shim6 support has been required, and PA:LA:iidA is
used as any other global IP address.
Suppose that at a certain moment one of the hosts involved in the
communication decides that multihoming support is required in this
communication (this basically means that one of the hosts involved in
the communication desires enhanced fault tolerance capabilities for
this communication, so that if an outage occurs, the communication
can be re-homed to an alternative provider).
At this moment, the Shim6 protocol Host-Pair Context establishment
exchange will be performed between the two hosts (see [9].). In this
exchange, Host1 will send CGA_PDS_A to Host2.
After the reception of CGA_PDS_A, Host2 will verify that the received
CGA Parameter Data Structure corresponds to the address being used in
the communication PA:LA:iidA. This means that Host2 will execute the
HBA verification process described in Section 7 of this memo with PA:
LA:iidA and CGA_PDS_A as inputs. In this case, the verification will
succeed since the CGA Parameter Data Structure and the addresses used
in the verification match.
As long as there are no outages affecting the communication path
through ISPA, packets will continue flowing. If a failure affects
the path through ISPA, Host1 will attempt to re-home the
communication to an alternative address i.e. PB:LB:iidB. For that,
after detecting the outage, Host1 will inform Host2 about the
alternative address. Host2 will verify that the new address belongs
to the HBA set of the initial address. For that, Host2 will execute
the HBA verification process with the CGA Parameter Data Structure of
the original address (i.e. CGA_PDS_A) and the new address (i.e. PB:
LB:iidB) as inputs. The verification process will succeed because
PB:LB::/64 has been included in the Multi-Prefix Extension during the
HBA-set generation process. Additional verifications may be required
to prevent flooding attacks (see the comments about flooding attacks
prevention in the Security Considerations section of this memo).
Once the new address is verified, it can be used as an alternative
locator to re-home the communication, while preserving the original
address (PA:LA:iidA) as an identifier for the upper layers. This
means that following packets will be addressed to/from this new
address. Note that no additional HBA verification is required for
the following packets, since the new valid address can be stored in
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Host2.
In this example, only the HBA capabilities of the Host1 addresses
were used. In other words, neither the public key included in the
CGA Parameter Data Structure nor its correspondent private key was
used in the protocol. In the following section we will consider a
case where its usage is required.
8.1. Dynamic Address Set Support
In the previous section we have presented the mechanisms that allow a
host to use different addresses of a pre-determined set to exchange
packets of a communication. The set of addresses involved was pre-
determined and known when the communication was initiated. To
achieve such functionality, only HBA functionalities of the addresses
were needed. In this section we will explore the case where the goal
is to exchange packets using additional addresses that were not known
when the communication was established. An example of such situation
is for instance when a new prefix is available in a site after a
renumbering event. In this case, the hosts that have the new address
available may want to use it in communications that were established
before the renumbering event. In this case, HBA functionalities of
the addresses are not enough and CGA capabilities are to be used.
Consider then the previous case of the communication between Host1
and Host2. Suppose that the communication is up and running, as
described earlier. Host1 is using PA:LA:iidA and Host2 is using
IPHost2 to exchange packets. Now suppose that a new address, PC:LC:
addC is available in Host1. Note that this address is just a regular
IPv6 address, and it is neither an HBA nor a CGA. Host1 wants to use
this new address in the existent communication with Host2. It should
be noted that the HBA mechanism described in the previous section
cannot be used to verify this new address, since this address does
not belong to the HBA set (since the prefix was not available at the
moment of the generation of the HBA set). This means that
alternative verification mechanisms will be needed.
In order to verify this new address, CGA capabilities of PA:LA:iidA
are used. Note that the same address is used, only that the
verification mechanism is different. So, if Host1 wants to use PC:
LC:addC to exchange packets in the established communication, it will
use the UPDATE message defined in the Shim6 protocol [9], conveying
the new address, PC:LC:addC, and this message will be signed using
the private key corresponding to the public key contained in
CGA_PDS_A. When Host2 receives the message, it will verify the
signature using the public key contained in the CGA Parameter Data
Structure associated with the address used for establishing the
communication i.e. CGA_PDS_A and PA:LA:iidA respectively. Once that
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the signature is verified, the new address (PC:LC:addC) can be used
in the communication.
In any case, a renumbering event has an impact on a site that is
using the HBA technique. In particular, the new prefix added will
not be included in the existing HBA set, so it is only possible t use
the new prefix with the existing HBA set if CGA capabilities are
used. While this is acceptable for the short term, in the long run
the site will need to renumber its HBA addresses. In order to do
that, it will need to re-generate the HBA sets assigned to hosts
including the new prefix in the prefix set, which will result in
different addresses, not only because we need to add a new address
with the new prefix but also because the addresses with the existing
prefixes will also change because the inclusion of a new prefix in
the prefix set. Moreover, since HBA addresses need to be generated
locally, once that these are generated after the renumbering event,
the new address information needs to be conveyed to the DNS manager
in case that such address information is to be published in the DNS
(see DNS considerations section for more details).
9. DNS considerations
HBA sets can be generated using any prefix set. Actually, the only
particularity of the HBA is that they contain information about the
prefix set in the interface identifier part of the address in the
form of a hash, but no assumption about the properties of prefixes
used for the HBA generation is made. This basically means that
depending on the prefixes used for the HBA set generation, it may or
may not be recommended to publish the resulting (HBA) addresses in
the DNS. For instance, when ULA prefixes [18] are included in the
HBA generation process specific DNS considerations related to the
local nature of the ULA should be taken into account and proper
recommendations related to publishing such prefixes in the DNS should
followed. Moreover, a given host can have among its addresses some
HBAs and some other IPv6 addresses. The consequence from this is
that only HBA addresses will be bound together by the HBA technique,
while other addresses would not be bound to the HBA set. This would
basically mean that if one of the other addresses are used for
initiating a Shim6 communication, it won't be possible to use the HBA
technique to bind the address used with the HBA set. Furthermore,
since HBA are indistinguishable from other IPv6 addresses in their
format, an initiator will not be able to distinguish by merely
looking at the different addresses which ones belong to the HBA set
and which ones do not, so alternative means would be required the
initiator is supposed to use only HBA for establishing communications
in the presence of non-HBA addresses in the DNS.
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In addition, it should be noted that the actual HBA values are a
result of the HBA generation procedure meaning that they cannot be
arbitrarily chosen. This has an implication with respect to DNS
management, because the party that generates the HBA address set
needs to convey the address information to the DNS manager, so that
the addresses are published and not the other way round. The
situation is similar to regular CGA addresses and even to the case
where stateless address autoconfiguration is used. In order to do
that, it is possible to use Dynamic DNS updates [19] or other
proprietary tools. A similar consideration applies when the host
wants to publish reverse DNS entries. Since the host needs to
generate its HBA addresses, it will need to convey the address
information to the DNS manager so the proper reverse DNS entry is
populated in case it is needed. It should be noted that neither the
Shim6 protocol nor the HBA technique rely on the reverse DNS for its
proper functioning and the general reasons for requiring reverse DNS
population apply as for any other regular IPv6 address.
10. IANA considerations
This document defines a new CGA Extension, the Multi-Prefix
Extension. This extension has been assigned the CGA Extension Type
value TBD (IANA).
To be removed prior publication: The 0x12 value is recommended for
trials while IANA does not assign the value. We request IANA to
assign the 0x12 value, in order not to impose changes on existent
implementations.
11. Security considerations
The goal of HBAs is to create a group of addresses that are securely
bound, so that they can be used interchangeably when communicating
with a node. If there is no secure binding between the different
addresses of a node, a number of attacks are enabled, as described in
[11]. In particular, it would possible for an attacker to redirect
the communications of a victim to an address selected by the
attacker, hijacking the communication. When using HBAs, only the
addresses belonging to an HBA set can be used interchangeably,
limiting the addresses that can be used to redirect the communication
to a well, pre-determined set, that belongs to the original node
involved in the communication. So, when using HBAs, a node that is
communicating using address A can redirect the communication to a new
address B if and only if B belongs to the same HBA set than A.
This means that if an attacker wants to redirect communications
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addressed to address HBA1 to an alternative address IPX, the attacker
will need to create a CGA Parameters data structure that generates an
HBA set that contains both HBA1 and IPX.
In order to generate the required HBA set, the attacker needs to find
a CGA Parameter data structure that fulfills the following
conditions:
o the prefix of HBA1 and the prefix of IPX are included in the
Multi-Prefix Extension
o HBA1 is included in the HBA set generated.
(this assumes that it is acceptable for the attacker to redirect HBA1
to any address of the prefix of IPX).
The remaining fields that can be changed at will by the attacker in
order to meet the above conditions are: the Modifier, other prefixes
in the Multi-Prefix Extension and other extensions. In any case, in
order to obtain the desired HBA set, the attacker will have to use a
brute force attack, which implies the generation of multiple HBA sets
with different parameters (for instance with a different Modifier)
until the desired conditions are meet. The expected number of times
that the generation process will have to be repeated until the
desired HBA set is found is exponentially related with the number of
bits containing hash information included in the interface identifier
of the HBA. Since 59 of the 64 bits of the interface identifier
contain hash bits, then the expected number of generations that will
have to be performed by the attacker are O(2^59). Note: We assume
brute force is the best attack against HBA/CGAs. Also, note that the
assumption that the Sec tool defined in [2] multiplies the attack
factor holds for brute force attacks but may not hold for other
attack classes.
The protection against brute force attacks can be improved increasing
the Sec parameter. A non zero Sec parameter implies that steps 3-4
of the generation process will be repeated O(2^(16*Sec)) times
(expected number of times). If we assimilate the cost of repeating
the steps 3-4 to the cost of generating the HBA address, we can
estimate the number of times that the generation is to be repeated in
O(2^(59+16*Sec)) in the case of Sec values of 1 and 2. For other Sec
values, Sec protection mechanisms will be defined by the
specifications pointed by the CGA SEC registry defined in RFC 4982
[10].
11.1. Security considerations when using HBAs in the Shim6 protocol
In this section we will analyze the security provided by HBAs in the
context of a Shim6 protocol as described in section 8 of this memo.
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First of all, it must be noted that HBAs cannot prevent man-in-the-
middle (hereafter MITM) attacks. This means, that in the scenario
described in Section 8, if an attacker is located along the path
between Host1 and Host2 during the lifetime of the communication, the
attacker will be able to change the addresses used for the
communication. This means that he will be able to change the
addresses used in the communication, adding or removing prefixes at
his will. However, the attacker must make sure that the CGA
Parameter Data Structure and the HBA set is changed accordingly.
This essentially means that the attacker will have to change the
interface identifier part of the addresses involved, since a change
in the prefix set will result in different interface identifiers of
the addresses of the HBA set, unless the appropriate Modifier value
is used (which would require O(2(59+16*Sec)) attempts). So, HBA
don't provide MITM attacks protection, but a MITM attacker will have
to change the address used in the communication in order to change
the prefix set valid for the communication.
HBAs provide protection against time shifting attacks [11], [12]. In
the multihoming context, an attacker would perform a time-shifted
attack in the following way: an attacker placed along the path of the
communication will modify the packets to include an additional
address as a valid address for the communication. Then the attacker
would leave the on-path location, but the effects of the attack would
remain (i.e. the address would still be considered as a valid address
for that communication). Next we will present how HBAs can be used
to prevent such attacks.
If the attacker is not on-path when the initial CGA Parameter Data
Structure is exchanged, his only possibility to launch a redirection
attack is to fake the signature of the message for adding new
addresses using CGA capabilities of the addresses. This implies
discovering the public key used in the CGA Parameter Data Structure
and then cracking the key pair, which doesn't seem feasible. So in
order to launch a redirection attack, the attacker needs to be on-
path when the CGA Parameter Data Structure is exchanged, so he can
modify it. Now, in order to launch the redirection attack, the
attacker needs to add his own prefix in the prefix set of the CGA
Parameter Data Structure. We have seen in the previous section that
there are two possible approaches for this:
1. Find the right Modifier value, so that the address initially used
in the communication is contained in the new HBA set. The cost of
this attack is O(2(59+16*Sec)) iterations of the generation
process, so it is deemed unfeasible
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2. Use any Modifier value, so that the address initially used in the
communication is probably not included in the HBA set. In this
case, the attacker must remain on-path, since he needs to rewrite
the address carried in the packets (if not the endpoints will
notice a change in the address used in the communication). This
essentially means that the attacker cannot launch a time-shifted
attack, but he must be a full time man-in-the-middle.
So, the conclusion is that HBAs provide protection against time-
shifted attacks
HBAs do not provide complete protection against flooding attacks, and
as a result the SHIM6 protocol has other means to deal with them.
However, HBAs make very difficult to launch a flooding attack towards
a specific address. It is possible though, to launch a flooding
attack against a prefix. And of course, the protection that HBA
offers applies only to nodes that employ it; HBA provides no solution
for general purpose flooding attack protection for other nodes.
Suppose that an attacker has easy access to a prefix PX::/nX and that
he wants to launch a flooding attack to a host located in the address
P:iid. The attack would consist in establishing a communication with
a server S and requesting a heavy flow from it. Then simply redirect
the flow to P:iid, flooding the target. In order to perform this
attack the attacker needs to generate an HBA set including P and PX
in the prefix set and that the resulting HBA set contains P:iid. In
order to do this, the attacker needs to find the appropriate Modifier
value. The expected number of attempts required to find such
Modifier value is O(2(59+16*Sec)), as presented earlier. So, we can
conclude that such attack is not feasible.
However, the target of a flooding attack is not limited to specific
hosts, but it can also be launched against other element of the
infrastructure, such as router or access links. In order to do that,
the attacker can establish a communication with a server S and
request a download of a heavy flow. Then, the attacker redirects the
communication to any address of the target network. Even if the
target address is not assigned to any host, the flow will flood the
access link of the target site, and the site access router will also
suffer the overload. Such attack cannot be prevented using HBAs,
since the attacker can easily generate an HBA set using his own
prefix and the target network prefix. In order to prevent such
attacks, additional mechanisms are required, such as reachability
tests.
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11.2. Privacy Considerations
HBAs can be used as RFC 4941 [7] addresses. If a node wants to use
temporary addresses, it will need to periodically generate new HBA
sets. The effort required for this operation depends on the Sec
parameter value. If Sec=0, then the cost of generating a new HBA set
is similar to the cost of generating a random number i.e. one
iteration of the HBA set generation procedure. However, if Sec>0,
then the cost of generating an HBA set is significantly increased,
since it required O(2(16*Sec)) iterations of the generation process.
In this case, depending on the frequency of address change required,
the support for RFC 4941 address may be more expensive.
11.3. SHA-1 Dependency Considerations.
Recent attacks on currently used hash functions have motivated a
considerable amount of concern in the Internet community. The
recommended approach [14] [15] to deal with this issue is first to
analyze the impact of these attacks on the different Internet
protocols that use hash functions and second to make sure that the
different Internet protocols that use hash functions are capable of
migrating to an alternative (more secure) hash function without a
major disruption in the Internet operation.
The aforementioned analysis for CGAs and its extensions (including
HBAs) is performed in RFC4982 [10]. The conclusion of the analysis
is that the security of the protocols using CGAs and its extensions
is not affected by the recently available attacks against hash
functions. In spite of that, the CGA specification [2] was updated
by RFC4982 [10] to enable the support of alternative hash functions.
12. Contributors
This document was originally produced of a MULTI6 design team
consisting of (in alphabetical order): Jari Arkko, Marcelo Bagnulo,
Iljitsch van Beijnum, Geoff Huston, Erik Nordmark, Margaret
Wasserman, and Jukka Ylitalo.
13. Acknowledgments
The initial discussion about HBA benefited from contributions from
Alberto Garcia-Martinez, Tuomas Aura and Arturo Azcorra.
The HBA-set generation and HBA verification processes described in
this document contain several steps extracted from [2].
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Jari Arkko, Matthew Ford, Francis Dupont, Mohan Parthasarathy, Pekka
Savola, Brian Carpenter, Eric Rescorla, Robin Whittle, Matthijs
Mekking, Hannes Tschofenig, Spencer Dawkins, Lars Eggert, Tim Polk,
Peter Koch, Niclas Comstedt and Sam Hartman have reviewed this
document and provided valuable comments.
The text included in section 3.2 Overview was provided by Eric
Rescorla.
We would also like to thanks Francis Dupont for providing the first
implementation of HBA
14. Change Log
To be removed prior publication
14.1. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-04 to draft-ietf-multi6-hba-05
addressed comments from reviews from Matthijs Mekking, Hannes
Tschofenig, Spencer Dawkins, Sam Hartman, Lars Eggert, Tim Polk, Jari
Arkko
14.2. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-03 to draft-ietf-multi6-hba-04
Reworded the definition of the P flag
Changed IANA considerations to include a request to IANA to assign
the trial value.
Updated HBA generation and verification process to make coherent with
rfc4982
Updated the sha1 consideration section to make it coherent with
rfc4982
Updated the DNS consideration section to include an explicit
references to ULAs and added a section about DNS management of HBAs
Editorial changes
Updatred references
14.3. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-02 to draft-ietf-multi6-hba-03
added terminology section
updated references
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14.4. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-01 to draft-ietf-multi6-hba-02
A new section SHA-1 Dependency Considerations has been added in the
Security Considerations Section (addressing Eric Rescorla (SecDir)
comment)
A new Overview section containing a Threat model subsection, a
general description subsection and a motivations subsection has been
added (addressing Eric Rescorla (SecDir) comment)
Modified section of HBA verification in order to improve readability
14.5. Changes from draft-ietf-shim6-hba-00 to draft-ietf-multi6-hba-01
Changed the format of the Multi-Prefix extension to make it compliant
with the generic TLV format proposed for CGA extensions
Added IANA considerations section
Added DNS considerations section
14.6. Changes from draft-ietf-multi6-hba-00 to draft-ietf-shim6-hba-00
Editorial changes
14.7. Changes from draft-bagnulo-multi6dt-hba-00 to
draft-ietf-multi6-hba-00
Added "Example of HBA application to a multihoming scenario" section
Added Privacy Considerations section
Added flooding attacks comments in the Security Considerations
section
Added the Multi-Prefix extension in step 6.1 of the HBA-set
generation process
Added the Security considerations when using HBAs in a multi6
protocol sub-section in the Security Considerations section
Added Ext type value recommended for trials
Changed the name of the draft
Some rewording
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15. References
15.1. Normative References
[1] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[2] Aura, T., "Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGA)",
RFC 3972, April 2004.
[3] Arkko, J., Kempf, J., Sommerfeld, B., Zill, B., and P.
Nikander, "SEcure Neighbor Discovery (SEND)", RFC 3971,
July 2004.
[4] Bassham, L., Polk, W., and R. Housley, "Algorithms and
Identifiers for the Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure
Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile",
RFC 3279, April 2002.
[5] Housley, R., Polk, W., Ford, W., and D. Solo, "Internet X.509
Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate
Revocation List (CRL) Profile", RFC 3280, April 2002.
[6] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
[7] Narten, T., Draves, R., and S. Krishnan, "Privacy Extensions
for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6", RFC 4941,
September 2007.
[8] Bagnulo, M. and J. Arkko, "Cryptographically Generated
Addresses (CGA) Extension Field Format", RFC 4581,
October 2006.
[9] Bagnulo, M. and E. Nordmark, "Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming Shim
Protocol for IPv6", draft-ietf-shim6-proto-08 (work in
progress), April 2007.
[10] Bagnulo, M. and J. Arkko, "Support for Multiple Hash Algorithms
in Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs)", RFC 4982,
July 2007.
15.2. Informative References
[11] Nordmark, E., "Threats relating to IPv6 multihoming solutions",
RFC 4218, October 2005.
[12] Nikander, P., Arkko, J., Aura, T., Montenegro, G., and E.
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Nordmark, "Mobile IP version 6 Route Optimization Security
Design Background", RFC 4225, December 2005.
[13] Arkko, J., Vogt, C., and W. Haddad, "Enhanced Route
Optimization for Mobile IPv6", RFC 4866, May 2007.
[14] Hoffman, P. and B. Schneier, "Attacks on Cryptographic Hashes
in Internet Protocols", RFC 4270, November 2005.
[15] Bellovin, S. and E. Rescorla, "Deploying a new hash algorithm",
2005 September.
[16] Nordmark, E., "Multi6 Application Referral Issues",
draft-nordmark-multi6dt-refer-00 (work in progress),
October 2004.
[17] Bagnulo, M., Garcia-Martinez, A., and A. Azcorra, "Efficient
Security for IPv6 Multihoming.", ACM Computer Communications
Review Vol 35 n 2, April 2005.
[18] Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast
Addresses", RFC 4193, October 2005.
[19] Vixie, P., Thomson, S., Rekhter, Y., and J. Bound, "Dynamic
Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE)", RFC 2136,
April 1997.
Author's Address
Marcelo Bagnulo
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Av. Universidad 30
Leganes, Madrid 28911
SPAIN
Phone: 34 91 6249500
Email: marcelo@it.uc3m.es
URI: http://www.it.uc3m.es
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The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
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Acknowledgment
Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
Bagnulo Expires June 24, 2008 [Page 28]