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   PPPEXT Working Group                          Ashwin Palekar   INTERNET-DRAFT                                     Dan Simon   Category: Standards Track                          Microsoft   <draft-josefsson-pppext-eap-tls-eap-06.txt>        Glen Zorn   22 March 2003                                          Cisco                                                   S. Josefsson                                                        Extundo                  Protected EAP Protocol (PEAP)   This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with   all provisions ofSection 10 of RFC 2026.   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 athttp://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt   The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed athttp://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.   Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.   Abstract   The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), defined inRFC 2284,   provides for support of multiple authentication methods. While EAP   was originally created for use with PPP, it has since been adopted   for use with IEEE 802.1X "Network Port Authentication".   Since its deployment, a number of weaknesses in EAP or some EAP   protocols have become apparent. These include no per packet   confidentiality and integrity protection; which results in lack of   protection to user identity, notification messages or EAP   negotiation; and sequencing of EAP methods. In addition, there is no   standardized mechanism for key exchange; no built-in support for   fragmentation and reassembly; no support for acknowledged   success/failure indications; and no support for fast reconnect.   In addition, some EAP protocols (e.g. like EAP-MD5) are susceptible   to  dictionary and brute force attacks; do not provide   confidentiality; do not support server authentication required to   prevent spoofing by rogue servers (gateways), and do not support the   generation of key strength required for 802.11i.   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   By wrapping the EAP protocol within TLS, Protected EAP (PEAP)   addresses these deficiencies in EAP or EAP protocols. EAP method(s)   running within PEAP are provided with built-in support for   Privacy of user identity.   Protection to individual EAP methods. For example, protection can   provide dictionary attack resistance to protocols susceptible to   that attack.   Protected EAP notification.   Protected sequencing of EAP methods.   Protected negotiation.   Protected EAP header.   Protected exchange of parameters (TLVs) between client and server.   Standardized mechanism for key exchange.   Proven key derivation and management.   Session resumption.   Server authentication.   Protected Acknowledged and result exchange.   Fragmentation and reassembly.   Table of Contents   Protected EAP Protocol (PEAP)......................................11.   Introduction.................................................31.1.   Requirements language.......................................51.2.   Terminology.................................................51.3.   Operational model...........................................62.   Protocol overview............................................72.1.   PEAP Part 1.................................................82.2.   PEAP Part 2................................................112.3.   Version negotiation........................................122.4.   Termination................................................122.5.   Error handling.............................................142.6.   Retry behavior.............................................152.7.   Session resumption.........................................152.8.   Fragmentation..............................................162.9.   Key derivation.............................................172.10.  Ciphersuite negotiation....................................183.   Detailed description of the PEAP protocol...................183.1.   PEAP Packet Format.........................................183.2.   PEAP Request Packet........................................204.   EAP TLV method..............................................234.1.   Protected success/failure..................................234.2.   EAP-TLV Request Packet.....................................254.3.   EAP-TLV Response Packet....................................254.4.   EAP-TLV TLV format.........................................264.5.   Result TLV.................................................274.6.   NAK TLV....................................................285.   Security Considerations.....................................28   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 2]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 20035.1.   Authentication and integrity protection....................285.2.   Method negotiation.........................................295.3.   TLS session cache handling.................................295.4.   Certificate revocation.....................................305.5.   Separation of the EAP server and the authenticator.........315.6.   Separation of PEAP Part 1 and Part 2 Servers...............315.7.   Identity verification......................................325.8.   Man-in-the-middle protection...............................346.   IANA Considerations.........................................356.1.   Definition of Terms........................................356.2.   Recommended Registration Policies..........................357.   Normative references........................................358.   Informative references......................................369.Appendix A - Examples.......................................3710.   and Contributions..........................................4911.  Intellectual Property Statement.............................5012.  Full Copyright Statement....................................511.   Introduction   The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), described in   [RFC2284], provides a standard mechanism for support of multiple   authentication methods.  Through the use of EAP, support for a   number of authentication schemes may be added, including smart   cards, Kerberos, Public Key, One Time Passwords, and others.   EAP was developed or use on wired networks, where physical security   was presumed. EAP over PPP, defined in [RFC2284], is typically   deployed with leased lines or modem connections, requiring an   attacker to gain access to the telephone network in order to snoop   on the conversation or inject packets. [IEEE8021X] defines EAP over   IEEE 802 local area networks(EAPOL), presuming the existence of   switched media; in order to snoop or inject packets, an attacker   would need to gain administrative access to   the switch. Due to the presumption of physical security, facilities   for protection of the EAP conversation were not provided.   Where an attacker can easily gain access to the medium (such as on a   wireless network or where EAP is run over IP), the presumption of   physical security is no longer valid. Since the EAP method   negotiation is unprotected, an attacker can inject packets in order   to cause the negotiation of a method with lesser security. Denial of   service attacks are also possible. Since the initial EAP Identity   Request/Response exchange is sent in the clear, an attacker snooping   on the conversation can collect user identities for use in   subsequent attacks.   By initially negotiating a TLS channel, and then conducting the EAP   conversation within it, PEAP provides for per-packet encryption,   authentication, integrity and replay protection of the EAP   conversation.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 3]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   Benefits include:      Identity protection      By encrypting the identity exchange, and allowing client      credentials to be provided after negotiation of the TLS channel,      PEAP provides for identity protection.      Dictionary attack resistance      By conducting the EAP conversation within a TLS channel, PEAP      protects EAP methods that might be subject to an offline      dictionary attack were they to be conducted in the clear.      Protected negotiation      Since within PEAP, the EAP conversation is authenticated,      integrity and replay protected on a per-packet basis, the EAP      method negotiation that occurs within PEAP is protected, as are      error messages sent within the TLS channel (TLS alerts or EAP      Notification packets).      Header protection      Within PEAP, the EAP conversation is conducted within a TLS      channel. As a result, the EAP header is protected against      modification.      Protected termination      By sending success/failure indications within the TLS channel,      PEAP provides support for protected termination of the EAP      conversation. This prevents an attacker from carrying out denial      of service attacks by spoofing EAP Failure messages, or fooling      the EAP peer into accepting a rogue NAS, by spoofing EAP Success      messages.      Fragmentation and Reassembly      Since EAP does not include support for fragmentation and      reassembly, individual methods need to include this capability.      By including support for fragmentation and reassembly within      PEAP,methods leveraging PEAP do not need to support this on their      own.      Fast reconnect      Where EAP is used for authentication in wireless networks, the      authentication latency is a concern. As a result, it is valuable      to be able to do a quick re-authentication on roaming between      access points. PEAP supports this capability by leveraging the      TLS session resumption facility, and any EAP method running under      PEAP can take advantage of it.      Proven and Method independent key management      In order to provide keying material for a wide range of link      layer ciphersuites, EAP methods need to provide a key hierarchy      generating authentication and encryption keys, as well as   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 4]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003      initialization vectors. Development of a secure key hierarchy is      complex, and not easy to generalize for all EAP methods.  By      relying on the well-reviewed TLS [RFC2246] key derivation method,      PEAP provides the required keying material for any EAP method      running within it. This frees EAP method developments from      creating keying material with key strength required for 802.11i      wireless LAN. If EAP methods will also be deployed without the      protection of PEAP or IPSEC, then the EAP methods should derive      key material of sufficient strength to prevent a Man-in-the-      middle attack described in the compound binding draft      [CompoundBinding].1.1. Requirements language   In this document, the key words "MAY", "MUST,  "MUST  NOT",   "OPTIONAL", "RECOMMENDED",  "SHOULD",  and  "SHOULD  NOT",  are to   be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].1.2. Terminology   This document frequently uses the following terms:   Access Point        A Network Access Server implementing 802.11.   Authenticator        The end of the link requiring the authentication.   Backend Authentication Server         An Authentication Server is an entity that provides an         Authentication Service to an NAS. This service verifies from         the credentials provided by the peer, the claim of identity         made by the peer.   EAP server         The EAP server is the entity that terminates the EAP         conversation with the peer. The EAP server may reside on the         NAS, or alternatively within a backend authentication server.   Link layer ciphersuite         The ciphersuite negotiated for use at the link layer.   Master key         The key derived between the EAP client and EAP server during         the EAP authentication process.   Master session key         The keys derived from the master key are subsequently         used in generation of the transient session keys for         authentication, encryption, binding exchange, and         IV-generation.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 5]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   NAS   Short for "Network Access Server".   Peer         The other end of the point-to-point link (PPP),         point-to-point LAN segment (IEEE 802.1X) or 802.11         wireless link, which is being authenticated by the NAS.         In IEEE 802.1X, this end is known as the Supplicant.   TLS Ciphersuite         The ciphersuite negotiated for protection of the PEAP Part 2         conversation.   Transient session keys         The transient session keys are derived from the master session         keys, and are of the appropriate size and type for use with         the chosen link layer ciphersuite.1.3. Operational model   In EAP, the EAP server may be implemented either within a Network   Access Server (NAS) or on a backend authentication server. Where the   EAP server resides on a NAS, the NAS is required to implement the   desired EAP methods, and therefore needs to be upgraded to support   each new EAP method.   One of the goals of EAP is to enable development of new   authentication methods without requiring deployment of new code on   the Network Access Server (NAS). Where a backend authentication   server is deployed, the NAS acts as a "passthrough" and need not   understand specific EAP methods.   This allows new EAP methods to be deployed on the EAP peer and   backend authentication server, without the need to upgrade code   residing on the NAS.   Figure 1 describes the relationship between the EAP peer, NAS and   EAP server.  As described in the figure, the EAP conversation occurs   between the EAP peer and EAP server, "passing through" the NAS. In   order for the conversation to proceed in the case where the NAS and   EAP server reside on separate machines, the NAS and EAP server need   to establish trust beforehand.   In PEAP, the conversation between the EAP peer and the EAP server is   encrypted, authenticated, integrity and replay protected within a   TLS channel, and mutual authentication is required between the EAP   peer and the EAP server.   As a result, where the NAS acts as a "passthrough" it does not have   knowledge of the TLS master secret derived between the EAP Peer and   the EAP server. In order to provide keying material for link-layer   ciphersuites, the NAS obtains the master session keys, which are   derived from the TLS master secret via a one-way function. This   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 6]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   enables the NAS and EAP peer to derive keys suitable for encrypting,   authenticating and integrity protecting session data. However, the   NAS cannot decrypt the PEAP conversation or spoof session   resumption, since this requires knowledge of the TLS master secret.   +-+-+-+-+-+               +-+-+-+-+-+   |         |               |         |   | Link    |               | Link    |   | Layer   |               | Layer   |   | Cipher- |               | Cipher- |   | Suite   |               | Suite   |   |         |               |         |   +-+-+-+-+-+               +-+-+-+-+-+       ^                         ^       |                         |       |                         |       |                         |       V                         V   +-+-+-+-+-+               +-+-+-+-+-+  Trust +-+-+-+-+-+   |         |  EAP          |         |<======>|         |   |         |  Conversation |         |        |         |   | EAP     |<================================>|  EAP    |   | Peer    |  (over PPP,   |   NAS   |        |  Server |   |         |  802.11,etc.) |         |<=======|         |   |         |               |         |  Keys  |         |   |         |               |         |        |         |   +-+-+-+-+-+               +-+-+-+-+-+        +-+-+-+-+-+       ^                                            ^       |                                            |       | EAP API                                    | EAP API       |                                            |       V                                            V   +-+-+-+-+-+                                  +-+-+-+-+-+   |         |                                  |         |   |         |                                  |         |   |  EAP    |                                  |  EAP    |   |  Method |                                  |  Method |   |         |                                  |         |   +-+-+-+-+-+                                  +-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 1 - Relationship between EAP client, backend authentication              server and NAS.2.   Protocol overview   Protected EAP (PEAP) is comprised of a two-part conversation:   [1]  In Part 1, a TLS session is negotiated, with server        authenticating to the client and optionally the client to the        server. The negotiated key is then used to encrypt the rest of        the conversation.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 7]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   [2]  In Part 2, within the TLS session, a complete EAP conversation        is carried out, unless part 1 provided client authentication.   In the next two sections, we provide an overview of each of the   parts of the PEAP conversation.2.1. PEAP Part 1   The PEAP conversation typically begins with an optional identity   exchange. The authenticator will typically send an EAP-   Request/Identity packet to the peer, and the peer will respond with   an EAP-Response/Identity packet to the authenticator, containing the   peer's EAP-ID.  Since the initial identity exchange is used   primarily to route the EAP conversation to the EAP server, if the   EAP server is known in advance (such as when all users authenticate   against the same backend server infrastructure and roaming is not   supported), or if the identity is otherwise determined (such as from   the dialing phone number or client MAC address), then the identity   exchange MAY be omitted.   Once the optional initial Identity Request/Response exchange is   completed, while nominally the EAP conversation occurs between the   authenticator and the peer, the authenticator MAY act as a   passthrough device, with the EAP packets received from the peer   being encapsulated for transmission to a backend authentication   server. However, PEAP does not require a backend authentication   server; if the authenticator implements PEAP and is provisioned with   the appropriate certificates, then it can authenticate local users.   In the discussion that follows, we will use the term "EAP server" to   denote the ultimate endpoint conversing with the peer.   Once having received the peer's Identity, and determined that PEAP   authentication is to occur, the EAP server MUST respond with a   PEAP/Start packet, which is an EAP-Request packet with EAP-   Type=PEAP,the Start (S) bit set, and no data.  Assuming that the   peer supports PEAP, the PEAP conversation will then begin, with the   peer sending an EAP-Response packet with EAP-Type=PEAP.   The data field of the EAP-Response packet will encapsulate one or   more TLS records in TLS record layer format, containing a TLS   client_hello handshake message.  The current cipher spec for the TLS   records will be TLS_NULL_WITH_NULL_NULL and null compression.  This   current cipher spec remains the same until the change_cipher_spec   message signals that subsequent records will have the negotiated   attributes for the remainder of the handshake.   The client_hello message contains the client's TLS version number, a   sessionId, a random number, and a set of TLS ciphersuites supported   by the client. The version offered by the client MUST correspond to   TLS v1.0 or later.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 8]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   The EAP server will then respond with an EAP-Request packet with   EAP-Type=PEAP. The data field of this packet will encapsulate one or   more TLS records.  These will contain a TLS server_hello handshake   message, possibly followed by TLS certificate, server_key_exchange,   certificate_request, server_hello_done and/or finished handshake   messages, and/or a TLS change_cipher_spec message.   Since after the TLS session is established, another complete EAP   negotiation will occur and the peer will authenticate using a   secondary mechanism, with PEAP the client need not authenticate as   part of TLS session establishment. As a result, although the EAP-   Request packet sent by the EAP Server MAY contain a   certificate_request message, this is not required.   The certificate_request message indicates that the server desires   the client to authenticate itself via public key. Typically when the   EAP server sends a certificate_request message, the intent is to   complete the PEAP authentication without requiring negotiation of an   additional EAP method.  However, it is valid for the server to   request a certificate in the server_hello and for the client refuse   to provide one. In this case, the EAP server MUST require that PEAP   Part 2 be completed.   Note that since TLS client certificates are sent in the clear, if   identity protection is required, then it is possible for the TLS   authentication to be re-negotiated after the first server   authentication.  To accomplish this, the server will typically not   request a certificate in the server_hello, then after the   server_finished message is sent, and before PEAP part 2,  the server   MAY send a TLS hello_request.  This allows the  client to perform   client authentication by sending a client_hello if it wants to, or   send a no_renegotiation alert to the server indicating that it wants   to continue with PEAP part 2 instead.  Assuming that the client   permits renegotiation by sending a client_hello, then the server   will respond with server_hello, a certificate and   certificate_request messages.  The client replies with certificate,   client_key_exchange and certificate_verify messages.  Since this re-   negotiation occurs within the encrypted TLS channel, it does not   reveal client certificate details.   The server_hello handshake message contains a TLS version number,   another random number, a sessionId, and a TLS ciphersuite.  The   version offered by the server MUST correspond to TLS v1.0 or later.   In order to provide confidentiality, integrity and replay   protection, and authentication, the negotiated TLS ciphersuite MUST   provide all of these security services.   If the client's sessionId is null or unrecognized by the server, the   server MUST choose the sessionId to establish a new session;   otherwise, the sessionId  will  match  that  offered by the client,   indicating a resumption of the previously established session with   that sessionId. The server will also choose a TLS ciphersuite from   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 9]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   those offered by the client; if the session matches the client's,   then the TLS ciphersuite MUST match the one negotiated during the   handshake protocol execution that established the session.   PEAP implementations need not necessarily support all TLS   ciphersuites listed in [RFC2246]. Not all TLS ciphersuites are   supported by available TLS tool kits and licenses may be required to   support some TLS ciphersuites (e.g. TLS ciphersuites utilizing the   IDEA encryption algorithm). To ensure interoperability, PEAP peers   and Authenticators MUST support and be able to negotiate the   following TLS ciphersuites:       TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5       TLS_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA       TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA (FIPS compliant)   TLS as described in [RFC2246] supports compression as well as   ciphersuite negotiation. Therefore during the PEAP Part 1   conversation the EAP endpoints MAY request or negotiate TLS   compression.   If the EAP server is not resuming a previously established session,   then it MUST include a TLS server_certificate handshake message, and   a server_hello_done handshake message MUST be the last handshake   message encapsulated in this EAP-Request packet.   The certificate message contains a public key certificate chain for   either a key exchange public key (such as an RSA or Diffie-Hellman   key exchange public key) or a signature public key (such as an RSA   or DSS signature public key).  In the latter case, a TLS   server_key_exchange handshake message MUST also be included to allow   the key exchange to take place.   The peer MUST respond to the EAP-Request with an EAP-Response packet   of EAP-Type=PEAP.  The data field of this packet will encapsulate   one or more TLS records containing a TLS change_cipher_spec message   and finished handshake message, and possibly certificate,   certificate_verify and/or client_key_exchange handshake messages.   If the preceding server_hello message sent by the EAP server in the   preceding EAP-Request packet indicated the resumption of a previous   session, then the peer MUST send only the change_cipher_spec and   finished handshake messages.   The finished message contains the peer's authentication response to   the EAP server.   If the preceding server_hello message sent by the EAP server in the   preceding EAP-Request packet did not indicate the resumption of a   previous session, then the peer MUST send, in addition to the   change_cipher_spec and finished messages, a client_key_exchange   message, which completes the exchange of a shared master secret   between the peer and the EAP server.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 10]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   The EAP server MUST then respond with an EAP-Request packet with   EAP-Type=PEAP, which includes, in the case of a new TLS session, one   or more TLS records containing TLS change_cipher_spec and finished   handshake messages.  The latter contains the EAP server's   authentication response to the peer.  The peer will then verify the   hash in order to authenticate the EAP server.   If the EAP server authenticates unsuccessfully, the peer MAY send an   EAP-Response packet of EAP-Type=PEAP containing a TLS Alert message   identifying the reason for the failed authentication. The peer MAY   send a TLS alert message rather than immediately terminating the   conversation so as to allow the EAP server to log the cause of the   error for examination by the system administrator.   To ensure that the EAP Server receives the TLS alert message, the   peer MUST wait for the EAP-Server to reply before terminating the   conversation.  The EAP Server MUST reply with an EAP-Failure packet   since server authentication failure is a terminal condition.   If the EAP server authenticates successfully, the peer MUST send an   EAP-Response packet of EAP-Type=PEAP, and no data.  The EAP-Server   then continues with Part 2 of the PEAP conversation.2.2. PEAP Part 2   The second portion of the PEAP conversation consists of another   complete EAP conversation occurring within the TLS session   negotiated in PEAP Part 1. It will therefore occur only if   establishment of a new TLS session in Part 1 is successful or a TLS   session is successfully resumed in Part 1.   It MUST NOT occur if the EAP Server authenticates unsuccessfully or   if an EAP-Failure has been sent by the EAP Server to the peer,   terminating the conversation.  Since all packets sent within the   PEAP Part 2 conversation occur after TLS session establishment, they   are protected using the negotiated TLS ciphersuite. All EAP packets   of the EAP conversation in part 2 including the EAP header are   protected using the negotiated TLS ciphersuite.   Part 2 of the PEAP conversation typically begins with the   Authenticator sending an EAP-Request/Identity packet to the peer,   protected by the TLS ciphersuite negotiated in PEAP Part 1. The peer   responds with an EAP-Response/Identity packet to the authenticator,   containing the peer's userId. Since this Identity Request/Response   exchange is protected by   the ciphersuite negotiated in TLS, it is protected against snooping   or packet modification attacks.   After the TLS session-protected Identity exchange, the EAP server   will then select authentication method(s) for the peer, and will   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 11]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   send an EAP-Request with the EAP-Type set to the initial method. As   described in [RFC2284], the peer can NAK the suggested EAP method,   suggesting an alternative. Since the NAK will be sent within the TLS   channel, it is protected from snooping or packet modification. As a   result, an attacker snooping on the exchange will be unable to   inject NAKs in order to "negotiate down" the authentication method.   An attacker will also not be able to determine which EAP method was   negotiated.2.3. Version negotiation   PEAP packets contain a three bit version field, which enables PEAP   implementations to be backward compatible with previous versions of   the protocol. Implementations of this specification MUST use a   version field set to 2.  This specification documents the protocol   for version 2.   Version negotiation proceeds as follows:   [1]  In the first EAP-Request sent with EAP type=PEAP, the EAP   server MUST set the version field to the highest supported version   number.   [2]  If the EAP client supports this version of the protocol, it   MUST respond with an EAP-Response of EAP type=PEAP, and the version   number proposed by the EAP server.   [3]  If the EAP client does not support this version, it responds   with an EAP-Response of EAP type=PEAP and the highest supported   version number.   [4]  If the EAP server supports the version proposed by the client,   then all future EAP-Request packets of EAP type=PEAP MUST include   the version field set to the agreed upon version number. Similarly,   the EAP client MUST include the agreed upon version number in all   EAP-Response packets of EAP type=PEAP.   [5]  If the PEAP server does not support the version number proposed   by the PEAP client, it terminates the conversation, as described inSection 2.4.   This version negotiation procedure guarantees that the EAP client   and server will agree to the latest version supported by both   parties. If version negotiation fails, then use of PEAP will not be   possible, and another mutually acceptable EAP method will need to be   negotiated if authentication is to proceed. In order to protect   against a downgrade version attack between PEAP versions support by   the peers, the peers MUST exchange information on the highest   version number supported during the binding exchange.2.4. Termination   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 12]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   As described in [RFC2284], EAP Success and Failure packets are not   authenticated, so that they may be forged by an attacker without   fear of detection.  Forged EAP Failure packets can be used to   convince an EAP peer to disconnect.  Forged EAP Success packets may   be used by a rogue NAS to convince a peer to let itself access the   network, even though the NAS has not authenticated itself.   By requiring mutual authentication and by supporting encrypted,   authenticated and integrity protected success/failure indications,   (described below as "protected" indications) PEAP provides   protection against these attacks. Within PEAP, protected   success/failure indications are supported by sending these   indications within the TLS channel.   PEAP support for protected success/failure indications is   constrained by the [RFC2284] and [IEEE8021X] specifications. In   [IEEE8021X], the authenticator "manufactures" cleartext EAP Success   and Failure packets based on the result indicated by the backend   authentication server. As a result, were a PEAP server to send a   protected EAP Success or EAP Failure packet as the final packet   within the EAP exchange, authenticators compliant with [IEEE8021X]   would silently discard the packet, and replace it with a cleartext   EAP Success or Failure.  Since the client will discard these   unprotected indications, where an authenticator compliant with   [IEEE8021X] is present, it is not be possible to conclude a   successful authentication.  As a result, this approach does not   provide reliable authenticated success/failure indications on all   media.   In addition, [RFC2284] states that an EAP Success or EAP Failure   packet terminates the EAP conversation, so that no response is   possible. Since EAP Success and EAP Failure packets are not   retransmitted, if the final packet is lost, then authentication will   fail. As a result, where packet loss is expected to be non-   negligible, unacknowledged success/failure indications lack   robustness.   As a result, a PEAP server SHOULD NOT send a protected EAP Success   or EAP Failure packet as the final packet within a PEAP   conversation. However, in the spirit of being "conservative in what   you send, liberal in what you receive", a PEAP client SHOULD accept   and process such a packet if it is received. This behavior makes it   possible for implementations to save a round-trip (improving the   performance of fast reconnect), assuming that the authentication   occurs within a low packet loss environment in which "manufacture"   of packets is guaranteed not to occur.   Instead, EAP servers MUST utilize the acknowledged and protected   success/failure indications defined inSection 4. In this approach,   the PEAP server sends the success/failure indication as an EAP-   Request with type=33 (EAP TLV), protected within the TLS channel.   The PEAP client then replies with a protected success/failure   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 13]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   indication as an EAP-Response with type=33 (EAP TLV).  The   conversation concludes with the PEAP server sending a cleartext   success/failure indication.   Since both sides have already concluded a protected termination   conversation, this final packet is ceremonial.   Use of a protected and acknowledged success/failure indication   provides the PEAP protocol immunity against the "manufacture" of   cleartext success/failure indications mandated by [IEEE8021X].  It   also enables both sides of the conversation to communicate the   outcome of PEAP mutual authentication, although the TLS alert   mechanism already provides this capability to some extent.  On the   other hand, this approach requires an extra round-trip, which   affects the performance of fast reconnect.   Once PEAP has been selected as the authentication method, compliant   PEAP implementations MUST silently discard unprotected success   indications (e.g. cleartext EAP Success) unless both the PEAP peer   and server have indicated a successful authentication exchange via   the mechanism described inSection 4.   Similarly, once the TLS channel has been set up, compliant PEAP   implementations MUST silently discard unprotected failure   indications (e.g. cleartext EAP Failure) unless they are proceeded   by a protected failure indication. Protected failure indications   include the TLS alert mechanism, as well the indication mechanism   described inSection 4. For example, if a PEAP peer has previously   received a protected EAP-Request of Type=33 (EAP TLV) with   Result=Failure, or if it has received a protected EAP-Request of   Type=33 (EAP-TLV) with Result=Success, and responded with a   protected EAP-Response of Type=33 (EAP-TLV) with Result=Failure,   then it will accept and process a cleartext EAP Failure.   However, if a PEAP peer has previously received a protected EAP-   Request of Type=33 (EAP-TLV) with Result=Success, and has responded   with a protected EAP-Request of Type=33 (EAP-TLV) with   Result=Success, then an unprotected failure indication MUST be   silently discarded.   Prior to establishment of the TLS channel, no keying material   exists, so that protected success/failure indications are not   possible. However, within PEAP a failure to establish the TLS   channel (e.g. failure to verify the server certificate) is   considered an unrecoverable error, so that where this failure has   occurred, an unprotected failure indication can be safely accepted.2.5. Error handling   Other than supporting TLS alert messages, PEAP does not have its own   error message capabilities. This is unnecessary since errors in the   PEAP Part 1 conversation are communicated via TLS alert messages,   and errors in the PEAP Part 2 conversation are expected to be   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 14]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   handled by individual EAP methods.   If an error occurs at any point in the PEAP conversation, the EAP   server SHOULD send an EAP-Request packet with EAP-Type=PEAP,   encapsulating a TLS record containing the appropriate TLS alert   message.  The EAP server SHOULD send a TLS alert message rather than   immediately terminating the conversation so as to allow the peer to   inform the user of the cause of the failure and possibly allow for a   restart of the conversation.  To ensure that the peer receives the   TLS alert message, the EAP server MUST wait for the peer to reply   with an EAP-Response packet.2.6. Retry behavior   As with other EAP protocols, the EAP server is responsible for retry   behavior. This means that if the EAP server does not receive a reply   from the peer, it MUST resend the EAP-Request for which it has not   yet received an EAP-Response. However, the peer MUST NOT resend EAP-   Response packets without first being prompted by the EAP server.   For example, if the initial PEAP start packet sent by the EAP server   were to be lost, then the peer would not receive this packet, and   would not respond to it. As a result, the PEAP start packet would be   resent by the EAP server. Once the peer received the PEAP start   packet, it would send an EAP-Response encapsulating the client_hello   message.  If the EAP-Response were to be lost, then the EAP server   would resend the initial PEAP start, and the peer would resend the   EAP-Response.   As a result, it is possible that a peer will receive duplicate EAP-   Request messages, and may send duplicate EAP-Responses.  Both the   peer and the EAP Server should be engineered to handle this   possibility.2.7. Session resumption   The purpose of the sessionId within the TLS protocol is to allow for   improved efficiency in the case where a client repeatedly attempts   to authenticate to an EAP server within a short period of time. This   capability is particularly useful for support of wireless roaming.   It is left up to the peer whether to attempt to continue a previous   session, thus shortening the PEAP Part 1 conversation. Typically the   peer's decision will be made based on the time elapsed since the   previous authentication attempt to that EAP server.   Based on the sessionId chosen by the peer, and the time elapsed   since the previous authentication, the EAP server will decide   whether to allow the continuation, or whether to choose a new   session.   In the case where the EAP server and the authenticator reside on the   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 15]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   same device, then the client will only be able to continue sessions   when connecting to the same NAS or channel server. Should these   devices be set up in a rotary or round-robin then it may not be   possible for the peer to know in advance the authenticator it will   be connecting to, and therefore which sessionId to attempt to reuse.   As a result, it is likely that the continuation attempt will fail.   In the case where the EAP authentication is remoted then   continuation is much more likely to be successful, since multiple   NAS devices and channel servers will remote their EAP   authentications to the same backend authentication server.   If the EAP server is resuming a previously established session, then   it MUST include only a TLS change_cipher_spec message and a TLS   finished handshake message after the server_hello message.  The   finished message contains the EAP server's authentication response   to the peer.   After a session is successfully resumed, the EAP-Server starts with   Part 2 of the PEAP conversation. The peer may have roamed to a   different network and successfully resumed with same EAP server. The   peer and the EAP server MUST not assume that a session resume   implies either of them will skip inner EAP methods.2.8. Fragmentation   A single TLS record may be up to 16384 octets in length, but a TLS   message may span multiple TLS records, and a TLS certificate message   may in principle be as long as 16MB. The group of PEAP messages sent   in a single round may thus be larger than the PPP MTU size, the   maximum RADIUS packet size of 4096 octets, or even the Multilink   Maximum Received Reconstructed Unit (MRRU).  As described in [2],   the multilink MRRU is negotiated via the Multilink MRRU LCP option,   which includes an MRRU length field of two octets, and thus can   support MRRUs as large as 64 KB.   However, note that in order to protect against reassembly lockup and   denial of service attacks, it may be desirable for an implementation   to set a maximum size for one such group of TLS messages. Since a   typical certificate chain is rarely longer than a few thousand   octets, and no other field is likely to be anywhere near as long, a   reasonable choice of maximum acceptable message length might be 64   KB.   If this value is chosen, then fragmentation can be handled via the   multilink PPP fragmentation mechanisms described in [RFC1990]. While   this is desirable, EAP methods are used in other applications such   as [IEEE80211] and there may be cases in which multilink or the MRRU   LCP option cannot be negotiated. As a result, a PEAP implementation   MUST provide its own support for fragmentation and reassembly.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 16]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   Since EAP is an ACK-NAK protocol, fragmentation support can be added   in a simple manner. In EAP, fragments that are lost or damaged in   transit will be retransmitted, and since sequencing information is   provided by the Identifier field in EAP, there is no need for a   fragment offset field as is provided in IPv4.   PEAP fragmentation support is provided through addition of flag bits   within the EAP-Response and EAP-Request packets, as well as a TLS   Message Length field of four octets. Flags include the Length   included (L), More fragments (M), and PEAP Start (S) bits. The L   flag is set to indicate the presence of the four octet TLS Message   Length field, and MUST be set for the first fragment of a fragmented   TLS message or set of messages. The M flag is set on all but the   last fragment. The S flag is set only within the PEAP start message   sent from the EAP server to the peer. The TLS Message Length field   is four octets, and provides the total length of the TLS message or   set of messages that is being fragmented; this simplifies buffer   allocation.   When a PEAP peer receives an EAP-Request packet with the M bit set,   it MUST respond with an EAP-Response with EAP-Type=PEAP and no data.   This serves as a fragment ACK. The EAP server MUST wait until it   receives the EAP-Response before sending another fragment. In order   to prevent errors in processing of fragments, the EAP server MUST   increment the Identifier field for each fragment contained within an   EAP-Request, and the peer MUST include this Identifier value in the   fragment ACK contained within the EAP-Response. Retransmitted   fragments will contain the same Identifier value.   Similarly, when the EAP server receives an EAP-Response with the M   bit set, it MUST respond with an EAP-Request with EAP-Type=PEAP and   no data. This serves as a fragment ACK. The EAP peer MUST wait until   it receives the EAP-Request before sending another fragment.  In   order to prevent errors in the processing of fragments, the EAP   server MUST increment the Identifier value for each fragment ACK   contained within an EAP-Request, and the peer MUST include this   Identifier value in the subsequent fragment contained within an EAP-   Response.2.9. Key derivation   Since the normal TLS keys are used in the handshake, and therefore   should not be used in a different context, new keys must be derived   from the TLS master secret for use with the selected link layer   ciphersuites.   In the most general case, keying material must be provided for   authentication, encryption and initialization vectors (IVs) in each   direction.   Since EAP methods may not know the link layer ciphersuite that has   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 17]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   been negotiated, it may not be possible for them to provide link   layer ciphersuite-specific keys. In addition, attempting to provide   such keys is undesirable, since it would require the EAP method to   be revised each time a new link layer ciphersuite is developed. As a   result, PEAP derives master session keys which can subsequently be   truncated for use with a particular link layer ciphersuite.  Since   the truncation algorithms are ciphersuite-specific, they are not   discussed here; examples of such algorithms are provided in   [RFC3079]. This draft also does not discuss the format of the   attributes used to communicate the master session keys from the   backend authentication server to the NAS; examples of such   attributes are provided in [RFC2548].   Both the peer and EAP server MUST derive master session keys as   described in the compound Session Key derivation section (section4.2) of the draft Compound Authentication Binding Problem   [compoundbinding].   Algorithms for the truncation of these encryption and authentication   master session keys are specific to each link layer ciphersuite.   Link layer ciphersuites in use with PPP include DESEbis [RFC2419],   3DES [RFC2420] and MPPE [RFC3078]. IEEE 802.11 ciphersuites are   described in [IEEE80211]. An example of how encryption keys for use   with MPPE [RFC3078] are derived from the TLS master session keys is   given in [RFC3079].2.10.     Ciphersuite negotiation   Since TLS supports TLS ciphersuite negotiation, peers completing the   TLS negotiation will also have selected a TLS ciphersuite, which   includes key strength, encryption and hashing methods. However,   unlike in [RFC2716], within PEAP, the negotiated TLS ciphersuite   relates only to the mechanism by which the PEAP Part 2 conversation   will be protected, and has no relationship to link layer security   mechanisms negotiated within the PPP Encryption Control Protocol   (ECP) [RFC1968] or within IEEE 802.11 [IEEE80211].   As a result, this specification currently does not support secure   negotiation of link layer ciphersuites, although this capability may   be added in future by addition of TLVs to the EAP TLV method defined   inSection 4.3.   Detailed description of the PEAP protocol3.1. PEAP Packet Format   A summary of the PEAP Request/Response packet format is shown below.   The fields are transmitted from left to right.    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   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 18]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |   Flags | Ver |  Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Code      1 - Request      2 - Response   Identifier      The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses   with requests.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the   EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Data   fields. Octets outside the range of the Length field should be   treated as Data Link Layer padding and should be ignored on   reception.   Type      25 - PEAP   Flags       0 1 2 3 4      +-+-+-+-+-+      |L M S R R|      +-+-+-+-+-+      L = Length included      M = More fragments      S = PEAP start      R = Reserved (must be zero)      The L bit (length included) is set to indicate the presence of   the four octet TLS Message Length field, and MUST be set for the   first fragment of a fragmented TLS message or set of messages. The M   bit(more fragments) is set on all but the last fragment. The S bit   (PEAP start) is set in a PEAP Start message. This differentiates the   PEAP Start message from a fragment acknowledgment.   Version       0 1 2      +-+-+-+      |R|1|0|   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 19]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003      +-+-+-+      R = Reserved (must be zero)   Data      The format of the Data field is determined by the Code field.3.2. PEAP Request Packet   A summary of the PEAP Request packet format is shown below.  The   fields   are transmitted from left to right.    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |   Flags | Ver |      TLS Message Length   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     TLS Message Length        |       TLS Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Code      1   Identifier      The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses   with requests.  The Identifier field MUST be changed on each Request   packet.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the   EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and TLS   Response fields.   Type      25 - PEAP   Flags       0 1 2 3 4      +-+-+-+-+-+      |L M S R R|      +-+-+-+-+-+   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 20]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003      L = Length included      M = More fragments      S = PEAP start      R = Reserved (must be zero)      The L bit (length included) is set to indicate the presence of   the four octet TLS Message Length field, and MUST be set for the   first fragment of a fragmented TLS message or set of messages. The M   bit(more fragments) is set on all but the last fragment. The S bit   (PEAP start) is set in a PEAP Start message. This differentiates the   PEAP Start message from a fragment acknowledgment.   Version       0 1 2      +-+-+-+      |R|1|0|      +-+-+-+      R = Reserved (must be zero)   TLS Message Length      The TLS Message Length field is four octets, and is present only   if the L bit is set.  This field provides the total length of the   TLS message or set of messages that is being fragmented.   TLS data      The TLS data consists of the encapsulated packet in TLS record      format.   3.3.  PEAP Response Packet   A summary of the PEAP Response packet format is shown below.  The   fields are transmitted from left to right.    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |   Flags   |Ver|      TLS Message Length   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     TLS Message Length        |       TLS Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Code      2   Identifier   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 21]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003      The Identifier field is one octet and MUST match the Identifier   field from the corresponding request.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the   EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and TLS   data fields.   Type      25 - PEAP   Flags       0 1 2 3 4      +-+-+-+-+-+      |L M S R R|      +-+-+-+-+-+      L = Length included      M = More fragments      S = PEAP start      R = Reserved (must be zero)      The L bit (length included) is set to indicate the presence of   the four octet TLS Message Length field, and MUST be set for the   first fragment of a fragmented TLS message or set of messages. The M   bit (more fragments) is set on all but the last fragment. The S bit   (PEAP start) is set in a PEAP Start message. This differentiates the   PEAP Start message from a fragment acknowledgment.   Version       0 1 2      +-+-+-+      |R|1|0|      +-+-+-+      R = Reserved (must be zero)   TLS Message Length      The TLS Message Length field is four octets, and is present only   if the L bit is set. This field provides the total length of the TLS   message or set of messages that is being fragmented.   TLS data   The TLS data consists of the encapsulated TLS packet in TLS record   format.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 22]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 20034.    EAP TLV method   The EAP-TLV method is a payload with standard Type-Length-Value   (TLV) objects. The TLV objects could be used to carry arbitrary   parameters between EAP peer and EAP server. Possible uses for TLV   objects include: language and character set for Notification   messages; cryptographic binding; IPv6 Binding Update.   The EAP peer may not necessarily implement all the TLVs supported by   the EAP server; and hence to allow for interoperability, the TLV   method allows a EAP server to discover if a TLV is supported by the   EAP peer, using the NAK TLV.   The mandatory bit in a TLV indicates that the peer MUST understand   the TLV. A peer can determine that a TLV is unknown when it does not   support the TLV; or when the TLV is corrupted. The mandatory bit   does not indicate that the peer successfully applied the value of   the TLV. The specification of a TLV could define additional   conditions under which the TLV can be determined to be unknown.   If an EAP peer finds an unknown TLV which is marked as mandatory; it   MUST indicate a failure to the EAP server using the NAK TLV; and all   the other TLVs in the message MUST be ignored.   If an EAP peer finds an unknown TLV which is marked as optional;   then it MUST ignore the TLV. The EAP peer is not required to inform   the EAP server of unknown TLVs which are marked as optional. If the   EAP peer finds that the packet has no TLVs, then it MUST send a   response with EAP-TLV Response Packet. The Response packet may   contain no TLVs.   If an EAP server finds an unknown TLV which is marked as mandatory;   the other TLVs in the message MUST be ignored. The EAP server can   drop the connection or send a EAP-TLV request packet with NAK-TLV to   the EAP client.   Compliant PEAP implementations MUST support the EAP TLV method,   processing of mandatory/optional settings on the TLV, the NAK TLV.   TLVs can be contained/nested in other TLVs. A EAP-TLV Request packet   is a EAP method; and it can be sequenced before or after any other   EAP method. The packet does not have to contain any TLVs or does not   have to contain any mandatory TLVs.4.1. Protected success/failure   Compliant PEAP implementations MUST support acknowledged protected   success/failure together with the Binding exchange.   The Result TLV is used to indicate success or failure of the PEAP   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 23]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   tunnel. The PEAP tunnel success/failure packet MUST contain a Result   TLV along with the Cryto-Binding TLV. Crypto-Binding TLV may be used   in other EAP-TLV packets. Result TLV MUST NOT be sent in packets   other than the protected success/failure indication.   If a CRYPTO BINDING TLV does not exist in a packet that contains   Result TLV, then the EAP peer must disconnect the connection.   If a CRYPTO BINDING TLV fails validation, then peer must disconnect   the connection. Implementations that can delete the TLS handle MUST   delete the TLS handle. Implementations that keep track of session   state MUST ensure that the session handle cannot be used to skip   stage2 authentication.   When using the Result-TLV, the only outcome which should be   considered as successful authentication is when an EAP Request of   Type=EAP-TLVs with Result TLV of Status=Success is answered by an   EAP Response of Type=EAP-TLVs with Result TLV of Status=Success.   If the EAP server has set Result-TLV with Status=Success; and the   response from the EAP peer is Status=Failure, then the server MUST   either continue EAP conversation or return Result=TLV with   Status=Failure. This allows EAP peer to indicate that it refuses to   accept the authentication without negotiating certain auth methods   as per its policy.   All other combinations (EAP-TLVs Failure, EAP-TLVs Success), (EAP-   TLVs Failure, EAP-TLVs Failure), (no EAP-TLVs exchange or no   protected EAP Success or Failure, no Crypto-Binding TLVs, crypto-   binding TLV validation is not successful) should be considered   failed authentications, both by the PEAP peer and authenticator.   Once the PEAP peer and authenticator considers them as failed   authentications, they are the last packets inside the protected   tunnel. These are considered failed authentications regardless of   whether a cleartext EAP Success or EAP Failure packet is   subsequently sent.  Because the EAP-TLVs method is protected within   the TLS channel, these packets cannot be spoofed, whereas cleartext   EAP Success and EAP Failure messages can be sent by an attacker.   In order for the validation of crypto-binding TLV to be successful,   the EAP server and EAP peer should be in-sync on which EAP methods   inside the tunnel have been successful. If any or all EAP methods   inside the tunnels have failed as per EAP server or EAP peer, then   that does not mean the Result will always be set to failure.   In a successful authentication for a tunnel, the last packet   exchange (both request and response) inside the tunnel MUST always   contain a valid Crypto-Binding TLV and Result-TLV=Success.   Compliant PEAP implementations MUST support the EAP TLV method,   processing of mandatory/optional settings on the TLV, the NAK TLV,   Result-TLV, Method-Identity-TLV, Crypto-Binding-TLV.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 24]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 20034.2. EAP-TLV Request Packet   A summary of the EAP EAP-TLVs Request packet format is shown below.   The fields are transmitted from left to right.    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |                  Data....   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Code      1   Identifier      The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses   with requests.  The Identifier field MUST be changed on each Request   packet.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the   EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Data   fields.   Type      33 - EAP-TLV   Data      The Data field is of variable length, and contains EAP-TLV TLVs.4.3. EAP-TLV Response Packet   A summary of the EAP-TLV Response packet format is shown below.  The   fields are transmitted from left to right.    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |                  Data....   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 25]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   Code      2   Identifier      The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses   with requests.  The Identifier field MUST be changed on each Request   packet.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the   EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Data   fields.   Type      33 - EAP EAP-TLV   Data      The Data field is of variable length, and contains Attribute-   Value Pairs (TLVs).4.4. EAP-TLV TLV format   EAP-TLV TLVs are defined as follows:    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|            TLV Type       |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                              Value...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 - Non-mandatory TLV      1 - Mandatory TLV   R      Reserved, set to 0.   TLV Type      A 14-bit field, denoting the attribute type. Allocated TLV Types      include:      0 - Reserved      1 - Reserved      2 - Reserved   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 26]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003      3 -        - RESULT_TLV - Acknowledged Result      4 -  NAK_TLV      5 -  CRYPTO_BINDING TLV      6 -  METHOD_IDENTITY TLV   Length      The length of the Value field in octets.   Value      The value of the attribute.   CRYPTO_BINDING_TLV and METHOD_IDENTITY_TLV are defined in the draft   Compound Authentication Binding Problem[CompoundBinding].4.5. Result TLV   The Result TLV provides support for acknowledged Success and Failure   messages within PEAP. It is defined as follows:    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             Status            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      1 - Mandatory TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      3 - Success/Failure   Length      2   Status      The status field is two octets. Values include:      1 - Success      2 -        - Failure   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 27]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 20034.6. NAK TLV   The NAK TLV allows a peer to detect when TLVs that are not supported   by the other peer. It is defined as follows:    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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      TLV Type number      | TLVsà                             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      1 - Mandatory TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      4 -   Length      <tbd>   TLV Type number.      The field contains TLV type that is not supported.   TLVs..      The field contains a list of optional TLVs. These could be used      in future to send information on why the field was determined to      be unknown.5.   Security Considerations5.1. Authentication and integrity protection   The EAP-TLV method is presumed to run before or after an EAP   method that supports mutual authentication and establishes a   protected channel.  PEAP is such a method, and as a result the   acknowledged Success and Failure messages are always protected.   Note however, that [IEEE8021X] manufactures cleartext EAP Success   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 28]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   and EAP Failure messages, so that even though the Result TLV will be   protected, this will be followed by a cleartext EAP Success or EAP   Failure packet.5.2. Method negotiation   If the peer does not support PEAP, or does not wish to utilize PEAP   authentication, it MUST respond to the initial EAP-Request/PEAP-   Start with a NAK, suggesting an alternate authentication method.   Since the NAK is sent in cleartext with no integrity protection or   authentication, it is subject to spoofing.  Unauthentic NAK packets   can be used to trick the peer and Authenticator into "negotiating   down" to a weaker form of authentication, such as EAP-MD5 (which   only provides one way authentication and does not derive a key).   Since a subsequent protected EAP conversation can take place within   the TLS session, selection of PEAP as an authentication method does   not limit the potential secondary authentication methods. As a   result, the only legitimate reason for a peer to NAK PEAP as an   authentication method is that it does not support it. Where the   additional security of PEAP is required, server implementations   SHOULD respond to a NAK with an EAP-Failure, terminating the   authentication conversation.5.3. TLS session cache handling   In cases where a TLS session has been successfully resumed, in some   circumstances, it is possible for the EAP server  to skip the PEAP   Part 2 conversation, and successfully conclude the conversation as   described inSection 2.4.   PEAP "fast reconnect" is desirable in applications such as wireless   roaming, since it minimizes interruptions in connectivity.  It is   also desirable when the "inner" EAP mechanism used is such that it   requires user interaction.  The user should not be required to re-   authenticate herself, using biometrics, token cards or similar,   every time the radio connectivity is handed over between access   points in wireless environments.   However, there are issues that need to be understood in order to   avoid introducing security vulnerabilities.   Since PEAP Part 1 may not provide client authentication,   establishment of a TLS session (and an entry in the TLS session   cache) does not by itself provide an indication of the peer's   authenticity.  The peer's authenticity is only proven after   successful completion of the protected acknowledge exchange in PEAP   part 2.   Some PEAP implementations may not be capable of removing TLS session   cache entries established in PEAP Part 1 after an unsuccessful PEAP   Part 2 authentication. In such implementations, the existence of a   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 29]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   TLS session cache entry provides no indication that the peer has   previously been authenticated. As a result, implementations that do   not remove TLS session cache entries after a failed PEAP Part 2   authentication or failed protected ack MUST use other means than   successful TLS resumption as the indicator of whether the client is   authenticated or not.  The implementation MUST determine that the   client is authenticated only after the protected acknowledge has   been successfully exchanged.  Failing to do this would enable a   peer to gain access by completing PEAP Part 1, tearing down the   connection, re-connecting and resuming PEAP Part 1, thereby proving   herself authenticated.  Thus, TLS resumption MUST only be enabled if   the implementation supports TLS session cache removal.   If an EAP server implementing PEAP removes TLS session cache entries   of peers failing PEAP Part 2 authentication, then it MAY skip the   PEAP Part 2 conversation entirely after a successful session   resumption, successfully terminating the PEAP conversation as   described inSection 2.4.5.4. Certificate revocation   Since the EAP server is on the Internet during the EAP conversation,   the server is capable of following a certificate chain or verifying   whether the peer's certificate has been revoked. In contrast, the   peer may or may not have Internet connectivity, and thus while it   can validate the EAP server's certificate based on a pre-configured   set of CAs, it may not be able to follow a certificate chain or   verify whether the EAP server's certificate has been revoked.   In the case where the peer is initiating a voluntary Layer 2 channel   using PPTP or L2TP, the peer will typically already have Internet   connectivity established at the time of channel initiation.  As a   result, during the EAP conversation it is capable of checking for   certificate revocation.   As part of the TLS negotiation, the server presents a certificate to   the peer.  The peer SHOULD verify the validity of the EAP server   certificate, and SHOULD also examine the EAP server name presented   in the certificate, in order to determine whether the EAP server can   be trusted. Please note that in the case where the EAP   authentication is remoted, the EAP server will not reside on the   same machine as the authenticator, and therefore the name in the EAP   server's certificate cannot be expected to match that of the   intended destination. In this case, a more appropriate test might be   whether the EAP server's certificate is signed by a CA controlling   the intended destination and whether the EAP server exists within a   target sub-domain.   In the case where the peer is attempting to obtain network access,   it will not have Internet connectivity. The TLS Extensions [TLSEXT]   support piggybacking of an Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP)   response within TLS, therefore can be utilized by the peer in order   to verify the validity of server certificate. However, since all TLS   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 30]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   implementations do not implement the TLS extensions, it may be   necessary for the peer to wait to check for certificate revocation   until after Internet access has been obtained.  In this case, the   peer SHOULD conduct the certificate status check immediately upon   going online and SHOULD NOT send data until it has received a   positive response to the status request.  If the server certificate   is found to be invalid, then the peer SHOULD disconnect.5.5. Separation of the EAP server and the authenticator   As a result of a complete PEAP Part 1 and Part 2 conversation, the   EAP endpoints will mutually authenticate, and derive a session key   for subsequent use in link layer security. Since the peer and EAP   client reside on the same machine, it is necessary for the EAP   client module to pass the session key to the link layer encryption   module.   The situation may be more complex on the Authenticator, which may or   may not reside on the same machine as the EAP server. In the case   where the EAP server and the Authenticator reside on different   machines, there are several implications for security. Firstly, the   mutual authentication defined in PEAP will occur between the peer   and the EAP server, not between the peer and the authenticator. This   means that as a result of the PEAP conversation, it is not possible   for the peer to validate the identity of the NAS or channel server   that it is speaking to.   The second issue is that the session key negotiated between the peer   and EAP server will need to be transmitted to the authenticator.   Therefore a mechanism needs to be provided to transmit the session   key from the EAP server to the authenticator or channel server that   needs to use the key. The specification of this transit mechanism is   outside the scope of this document.5.6. Separation of PEAP Part 1 and Part 2 Servers   The EAP server involved in PEAP Part 2 need not necessarily be the   same as the EAP server involved in PEAP Part 1. For example, a local   authentication server or proxy might serve as the endpoint for the   Part 1 conversation, establishing the TLS channel. Subsequently,   once the EAP-Response/Identity has been received within the TLS   channel, it can be decrypted and forwarded in cleartext to the   destination realm EAP server. The rest of the conversation will   therefore occur between the destination realm EAP server and the   peer, with the local authentication server or proxy acting as an   encrypting/decrypting gateway. This permits a non-TLS capable EAP   server to participate in the PEAP conversation.   Note however that such an approach introduces security   vulnerabilities. Since the EAP Response/Identity is sent in the   clear between the proxy and the EAP server, this enables an attacker   to snoop the user's identity.  It also enables a remote   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 31]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   environments, which may be public hot spots or Internet coffee   shops, to gain knowledge of the identity of their users.  Since one   of the potential benefits of PEAP is identity protection, this is   undesirable.   If the EAP method negotiated during PEAP Part 2 does not support   mutual authentication, then if the Part 2 conversation is proxied to   another destination, the PEAP peer will not have the opportunity to   verify the secondary EAP server's identity. Only the initial EAP   server's identity will have been verified as Part of TLS session   establishment.   Similarly, if the EAP method negotiated during PEAP Part 2 is   vulnerable to dictionary attack, then an attacker capturing the   cleartext exchange will be able to mount an offline dictionary   attack on the password.   Finally, when a Part 2 conversation is terminated at a different   location than the Part 1 conversation, the Part 2 destination is   unaware that the EAP client has negotiated PEAP. As a result, it is   unable to enforce policies requiring PEAP. Since some EAP methods   require PEAP in order to generate keys or lessen security   vulnerabilities, where such methods are in use, such a configuration   may be unacceptable.   In summary, PEAP encrypting/decrypting gateway configurations are   vulnerable to attack and SHOULD NOT be used.  Instead, the entire   PEAP connection SHOULD be proxied to the final destination, and the   subsequently derived master session keys need to be transmitted   back. This provides end to end protection of PEAP.  The   specification of this transit mechanism is outside the scope of this   document, but mechanisms similar to [RFC2548] can be used.  These   steps protects the client from revealing her identity to the remote   environment.   In order to find the proper PEAP destination, the EAP client SHOULD   place a Network Access Identifier (NAI) conforming to [RFC2486] in   the Identity Response.   There may be cases where a natural trust relationship exists between   the (foreign) authentication server and final EAP server, such as on   a campus or between two offices within the same company, where there   is no danger in revealing the identity of the station to the   authentication server.  In these cases, using a proxy solution   without end to end protection of PEAP MAY be used. The PEAP   encrypting/decrypting gateway SHOULD provide support for IPsec   protection of RADIUS in order to provide confidentiality for the   portion of the conversation between the gateway and the EAP server,   as described in [RFC3162].5.7. Identity verification   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 32]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   Since the TLS session has not yet been negotiated, the initial   Identity request/response occurs in the clear without integrity   protection or authentication. It is therefore subject to snooping   and packet modification.   In configurations where all users are required to authenticate with   PEAP and the first portion of the PEAP conversation is terminated at   a local backend authentication server, without routing by proxies,   the initial cleartext Identity Request/Response exchange is not   needed in order to determine the required authentication method(s)   or route the authentication conversation to its destination. As a   result, the initial Identity and Request/Response exchange MAY NOT   be present, and a subsequent Identity Request/Response exchange MAY   occur after the TLS session is established.   If the initial cleartext Identity Request/Response has been tampered   with, after the TLS session is established, it is conceivable that   the EAP Server will discover that it cannot verify the peer's claim   of identity. For example, the peer's userID may not be valid or may   not be within a realm handled by the EAP server. Rather than   attempting to proxy the authentication to the server within the   correct realm, the EAP server SHOULD terminate the conversation.   The PEAP peer can present the server with multiple identities. This   includes the claim of identity within the initial EAP-   Response/Identity(MyID) packet, which is typically used to route the   EAP conversation to the appropriate home backend authentication   server. There may also be subsequent EAP-Response/Identity packets   sent by the peer once the TLS channel has been established.   Note that since the PEAP peer may not present a certificate, it is   not always possible to check the initial EAP-Response/Identity   against the identity presented in the certificate, as is done in   [RFC2716].   Moreover, it cannot be assumed that the peer identities presented   within multiple EAP-Response/Identity packets will be the same. For   example, the initial EAP-Response/Identity might correspond to a   machine identity, while subsequent identities might be those of the   user. Thus, PEAP implementations SHOULD NOT abort the authentication   just because the identities do not match.  However, since the   initial EAP-Response/Identity will determine the EAP server handling   the authentication, if this or any other identity is inappropriate   for use with the destination EAP server, there is no alternative but   to terminate the PEAP conversation.   The protected identity or identities presented by the peer within   PEAP Part 2 may not be identical to the cleartext identity presented   in PEAP Part 1, for legitimate reasons. In order to shield the   userID from snooping, the cleartext Identity may only provide enough   information to enable routing of the authentication request to the   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 33]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   correct realm. For example, the peer may initially claim the   identity of "nouser@bigco.com" in order to route the authentication   request to the bigco.com EAP server. Subsequently, once the TLS   session has been negotiated, in PEAP Part 2, the peer may claim the   identity of "fred@bigco.com".  Thus, PEAP can provide protection for   the user's identity, though not necessarily the destination realm,   unless the PEAP Part 1 conversation terminates at the local   authentication server.   As a result, PEAP implementations SHOULD NOT attempt to compare the   Identities claimed with Parts 1 and 2 of the PEAP conversation.   Similarly, if multiple Identities are claimed within PEAP Part 2,   these SHOULD NOT be compared. An EAP conversation may involve more   than one EAP authentication method, and the identities claimed for   each of these authentications could be different (e.g. a machine   authentication, followed by a user authentication).5.8. Man-in-the-middle protection   If an EAP method protected by PEAP is also deployed without   protection (from PEAP or IPSEC), and if the same credential is   allowed in both cases, then a man-in-the-middle attack is possible.   A man-in-the-middle can spoof the client to authenticate to it   instead of the real EAP server; and forward the authentication to   the real server over a protected tunnel. Since the attacker has   access to the keys derived from the tunnel, it can gain access to   the network.   The compound binding draft [CompoundBinding] identifies a number of   solutions to this attack.   The preferred solution is to deploy the authentication method with   protection from PEAP or IPSEC. Protection can address the man-in-   the-middle attack; and in addition can address EAP method and EAP   protocol weaknesses listed in the abstract and introduction sections   in this document.   Another solution is to use knowledge known only to the real peers to   verify that there is no man-in-the-middle. A number of protocols   derive keys for encryption, and these keys are not known to the man-   in-the-middle. These keys can be used in the binding phase exchange   described in compound binding [compoundbinding] draft to detect man-   in-the-middle. PEAP implementations MUST support the binding phase   exchange using compound MACs as described in thesection 4.2 of the   compound binding draft[CompoundBinding].   Another solution is for EAP methods to securely signal to peers that   they are inside the protected channel. This may require changes to   the EAP protocol. In order to allow EAP methods to implement secure   signaling, PEAP implementations SHOULD inform the EAP methods that   they are being protected by PEAP.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 34]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 20036.   IANA Considerations   This section provides guidance to the Internet Assigned Numbers   Authority (IANA) regarding registration of values related to the EAP   protocol, in accordance withBCP 26, [RFC2434].   There is one name space in EAP-TLV that require registration: TLV-   Types.6.1. Definition of Terms   The following terms are used here with the meanings defined inBCP26:   "name space", "assigned value", "registration".   The following policies are used here with the meanings defined inBCP26: "Private Use", "First Come First Served", "Expert Review",   "Specification Required", "IETF Consensus", "Standards Action".6.2. Recommended Registration Policies   For registration requests where a Designated Expert should be   consulted, the responsible IESG area director should appoint the   Designated Expert. For Designated Expert with Specification   Required, the request is posted to the EAP WG mailing list (or, if   it has been disbanded, a successor designated by the Area Director)   for comment and review, and MUST include a pointer to a public   specification. Before a period of 30 days has passed, the Designated   Expert will either approve or deny the registration request and   publish a notice of the decision to the EAP WG mailing list or its   successor. A denial notice must be justified by an explanation and,   in the cases where it is possible, concrete suggestions   on how the request can be modified so as to become acceptable.   For registration requests requiring Expert Review, the EAP mailing   list should be consulted. If the EAP mailing list is no longer   operational, an alternative mailing list may be designated by the   responsible IESG Area Director.   EAP-TLVs have a 14-bit field, of which 1-6 have been allocated.7.   Normative references   [RFC1321] Rivest, R., Dusse, S., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm",RFC1321, April 1992.   [RFC1570] Simpson, W., Editor, "PPP LCP Extensions",RFC 1570,   January             1994.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 35]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   [RFC1661] Simpson, W., Editor, "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)",   STD             51,RFC 1661, July 1994.   [RFC1962] D. Rand.  "The PPP Compression Control Protocol",RFC1962,             Novell, June 1996.   [RFC1968] Meyer, G., "The PPP Encryption Protocol (ECP)",RFC 1968,   June             1996.   [RFC1990] Sklower, K., Lloyd, B., McGregor, G., Carr, D., and T.             Coradetti, "The PPP Multilink Protocol (MP)",RFC 1990,   August             1996.   [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate             Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2246] Dierks, T., Allen, C., "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",RFC2246, November 1998.   [RFC2284] Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., "PPP Extensible Authentication             Protocol (EAP)",RFC 2284, March 1998.   [RFC2486] Aboba, B., Beadles, M., "The Network Access Identifier",RFC 2486, January 1999.   [TLSEXT]  Blake-Wilson, S., et al. "TLS Extensions", Internet draft             (work in progress),draft-ietf-tls-extensions-06.txt, Feb             2003.   [IEEE8021X]             IEEE Standards for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks:   Port             based Network Access Control, IEEE Std 802.1X-2001, June   2001.   [CompoundBinding]             Puthenkulam, J., Lortz, V., Palekar, A., Simon, D.,             "The Compound Authentication Binding Problem", March 2003;draft-puthenkulam-eap-binding-02.txt.8.    Informative references   [RFC2419] Sklower, K., Meyer, G., "The PPP DES Encryption Protocol,             Version 2 (DESE-bis)",RFC 2419, September 1998.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 36]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   [RFC2420] Hummert, K., "The PPP Triple-DES Encryption Protocol   (3DESE)",RFC 2420, September 1998.   [RFC2548] Zorn, G., "Microsoft Vendor-specific RADIUS Attributes",RFC2548, March 1999.   [RFC2716] Aboba, B., Simon, D., "PPP EAP TLS Authentication   Protocol",RFC 2716, October 1999.   [RFC3078] Pall, G., Zorn, G., "Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption             (MPPE) Protocol",RFC 3078, March 2001.   [RFC3079] Zorn, G., "Deriving Keys for use with Microsoft Point-to-   Point             Encryption (MPPE)",RFC 3079, March 2001.   [FIPSDES] National Bureau of Standards, "Data Encryption Standard",   FIPS             PUB 46 (January 1977).   [IEEE80211]             Information technology - Telecommunications and   information             exchange between systems - Local and metropolitan area             networks - Specific Requirements Part 11:  Wireless LAN   Medium             Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY)   Specifications,             IEEE Std. 802.11-1999, 1999.   [MODES]   National Bureau of Standards, "DES Modes of Operation",   FIPS             PUB 81 (December 1980).   [PEAP version 0]             Kamath, V., Palekar, A., Wodrich, M.,             "Microsoft's PEAP version 0 (Implementation in Windows XP   SP1)",draft-kamath-pppext-peapv0-00.txt.9.Appendix A - Examples   In the case where an identity exchange occurs within PEAP Part 1,   the conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 37]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID1) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (PEAP Start, S bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=1   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                    [TLS certificate_request,]                        TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   ([TLS certificate,]    TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP ->   TLS channel established   (messages sent within the TLS channel)                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID2) ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X or NAK ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X  ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 38]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   methods=1, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (EAP-Type=X,   EAP-Type-Version=0, keylengthusedforderivation,   ClientIdentityLength= sizeof(MyID2), MyID2, ServerIdentityLength=0,   Media-type=19), Method_Identity_TLV (EAP-Type=PEAP, EAP-Type-   Version=2, keylengthusedforderivation, ClientIdentityLength=   sizeof(MyID1), MyID1, ServerIdentityLength=0, Media-type=19),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV inside the tunnel including EAP-   header))   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Result=Success   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=1, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (EAP-Type=X,   EAP-Type-Version=0, keylengthusedforderivation,   ClientIdentityLength= sizeof(MyID2), MyID2, ServerIdentityLength=0,   Media-type=19), Method_Identity_TLV (EAP-Type=PEAP, EAP-Type-   Version=2, keylengthusedforderivation, ClientIdentityLength=   sizeof(MyID1), MyID1, ServerIdentityLength=0, Media-type=19),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV inside the tunnel including EAP-   header))   ->   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Success   Where all peers are known to support PEAP, a non-certificate   authentication is desired for the client and the PEAP Part 1   conversation is carried out between the peer and a local EAP server,   the cleartext identity exchange may be omitted and the conversation   appears as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=1                           (PEAP Start, S bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=1   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                    [TLS certificate_request,]                        TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 39]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   ([TLS certificate,]    TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->   TLS channel established   (messages sent within the TLS channel)                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X or NAK ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X  ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Success   Where all peers are known to support PEAP, where client certificate   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 40]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   authentication is desired and the PEAP Part 1 conversation is   carried out between the peer and a local EAP server, the cleartext   identity exchange may be omitted and the conversation appears as   follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (PEAP Start, S bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                            [TLS server_key_exchange,]                            TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_key_exchange,    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->   TLS channel established   (messages sent within the TLS channel)                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS hello_request)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                    [TLS certificate_request,]                        TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   ([TLS certificate,]   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 41]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003    TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each successful EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for   PEAP), CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel   including EAP-header))   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Success   In the case where the PEAP fragmentation is required, the   conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (PEAP Start, S bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 42]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                    [TLS certificate_request,]                        TLS server_hello_done)                    (Fragment 1: L, M bits set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (Fragment 2: M bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (Fragment 3)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   ([TLS certificate,]    TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished)    (Fragment 1: L, M bits set)->                            <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2    (Fragment 2)->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->   TLS channel established   (messages sent within the TLS channel)                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X or NAK ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X  ->   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 43]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Success   In the case where the server authenticates to the client   successfully in PEAP Part 1, but the client fails to authenticate to   the server in PEAP Part 2, the conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (PEAP Start, S bit set)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                    [TLS certificate_request,]                        TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   ([TLS certificate,]    TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 44]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->   TLS channel established   (messages sent within the TLS channel)                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X or NAK ->                          <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=X   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=X  ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Failure), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   // Compound MAC calculated using TLS key material only.   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=<number>, Result TLV (Failure), Method_Identity_TLV (for   each EAP-Type inside PEAP), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   Result=Failure  ->   (TLS session cache entry flushed)   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Failure   In the case where server authentication is unsuccessful in PEAP Part   1, the conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 45]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (PEAP Start)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS certificate,                    [TLS server_key_exchange,]                        TLS server_hello_done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_key_exchange,   [TLS certificate_verify,]    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS change_cipher_spec,   TLS finished)                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS Alert message) ->                           <- EAP-Failure                           (TLS session cache entry flushed)   In the case where a previously established session is being resumed,   the EAP server supports TLS session cache flushing for unsuccessful   PEAP Part 2 authentications and both sides authenticate   successfully, the conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP,V=2   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 46]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           (PEAP Start)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                           TLS change_cipher_spec                           TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=0, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header))   // Compound MAC calculated using TLS keys since there were no inner   EAP methods.   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=EAP-TLV   Crypto-Binding-TLV=(Version=0, Nounce, Number of inner EAP   methods=0, Result TLV (Success), Method_Identity_TLV (for PEAP),   CompoundMAC (over entire EAP TLV packet inside the tunnel including   EAP-header)) .   ->   TLS channel torn down   (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-Success   In the case where a previously established session is being resumed,   and the server authenticates to the client successfully but the   client fails to authenticate to the server, the conversation will   appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS Start)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello) ->   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 47]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished) ->                           <- EAP-Request                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS Alert message)   EAP-Response   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2 ->                            <- EAP-Failure                            (TLS session cache entry flushed)   In the case where a previously established session is being resumed,   and the server authentication is unsuccessful, the conversation will   appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS Start)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS change_cipher_spec,   TLS finished)                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2   (TLS Alert message) ->   (TLS session cache entry flushed)                           <- EAP-Failure   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 48]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   In the case where the peer and authenticator have mismatched PEAP   versions (e.g. the peer has a pre-standard implementation with   version 0, and the authenticator has an implementation compliant   with this specification), the session is being resumed, but the   authentication is unsuccessful, the conversation will occur as   follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                          <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=2                           (TLS Start)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=0   (TLS client_hello)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=0                           (TLS server_hello,                            TLS change_cipher_spec,                            TLS finished)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=0   (TLS change_cipher_spec,   TLS finished)                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=PEAP, V=0   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=PEAP, V=0   (TLS Alert message) ->   (TLS session cache entry flushed)                            <- EAP-Failure10.  Acknowledgments and Contributions   Thanks to Jan-Ove Larsson, Magnus Nystrom of RSA Security; Bernard   Aboba, Vivek Kamath, Stephen Bensley, Narendra Gidwani of Microsoft;   Joe Salowey, Hao Zhou, Ilan Frenkel, Nancy Cam-Winget of Cisco;   Hakan Andersson of RSA; Jose Puthenkulam of Intel for their   contributions and critiques.   The compound binding exchange to address man-in-the-middle attack is   based on the draft "The Compound Authentication Binding   Problem"[CompoundBinding].   The vast majority of the work by Simon Josefsson and Hakan Andersson   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 49]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   was done while he was employed at RSA Laboratories.   Author Addresses   Ashwin Palekar   Microsoft Corporation   One Microsoft Way   Redmond, WA 98052   Phone: +1 425 882 8080   EMail: ashwinp@microsoft.com   Dan Simon   Microsoft Corporation   One Microsoft Way   Redmond, WA 98052   Phone: +1 425 706 6711   EMail: dansimon@microsoft.com   Glen Zorn   Cisco Systems   500 108th Avenue N.E.   Suite 500   Bellevue, Washington 98004   USA   Phone: + 1 425 438 8210   Fax:   + 1 425 438 1848   EMail: gwz@cisco.com   Simon Josefsson   Drottningholmsv„gen 70   112 42 Stockholm   Sweden   Phone: +46 8 619 04 22   EMail: jas@extundo.com11.  Intellectual Property Statement   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it   has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the   IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and   standards-related documentation can be found inBCP-11.  Copies of   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 50]

   INTERNET-DRAFT               PEAP                   March 24, 2003   claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances   of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made   to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such   proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification   can be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive   Director.12.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph   are included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and   will not be revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or   assigns.  This document and the information contained herein is   provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE   INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR   IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."Expiration Date   This memo is filed as <draft-josefsson-pppext-eap-tls-eap-06.txt>,   and expires after six months.   Palekar, et all.         Expires in Six Months           [Page 51]
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