Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:



IPv6 maintenance Working Group (6man)                            F. GontInternet-Draft                                    SI6 Networks / UTN-FRHIntended status: Informational                         December 19, 2014Expires: June 22, 2015Security Implications of Predictable Fragment Identification Valuesdraft-ietf-6man-predictable-fragment-id-02Abstract   IPv6 specifies the Fragment Header, which is employed for the   fragmentation and reassembly mechanisms.  The Fragment Header   contains an "Identification" field which, together with the IPv6   Source Address and the IPv6 Destination Address of a packet,   identifies fragments that correspond to the same original datagram,   such that they can be reassembled together at the receiving host.   The only requirement for setting the "Identification" value is that   it must be different than that employed for any other fragmented   packet sent recently with the same Source Address and Destination   Address.  Some implementations use simple a global counter for   setting the Identification field, thus leading to predictable values.   This document analyzes the security implications of predictable   Identification values, and provides implementation guidance for   selecting the Identification field of the Fragment Header, such that   the aforementioned security implications are mitigated.Status of This Memo   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the   provisions ofBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-   Drafts is athttp://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.   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."   This Internet-Draft will expire on June 22, 2015.Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 1]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2   2.  Security Implications of Predictable Fragment Identification       values  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3   3.  Constraints for the selection of Fragment Identification       Values  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.  Algorithms for Selecting Fragment Identification Values . . .7     4.1.  Per-destination counter (initialized to a random value) .   74.2.  Randomized Identification values  . . . . . . . . . . . .8     4.3.  Hash-based Fragment Identification selection algorithm  .   85.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107.  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .118.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .118.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .118.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12Appendix A.  Information leakage produced by vulnerable                implementations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13Appendix B.  Survey of Fragment Identification selection                algorithms employed by popular IPv6 implementations   15   Author's Address  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .161.  Introduction   IPv6 specifies the Fragment Header, which is employed for the   fragmentation and reassembly mechanisms.  The Fragment Header   contains an "Identification" field which, together with the IPv6   Source Address and the IPv6 Destination Address of a packet,   identifies fragments that correspond to the same original datagram,   such that they can be reassembled together at the receiving host.   The only requirement for setting the "Identification" value is that   it must be different than that employed for any other fragmentedGont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 2]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   packet sent recently with the same Source Address and Destination   Address.   The most trivial algorithm to avoid reusing Fragment Identification   values too quickly is to maintain a global counter that is   incremented for each fragmented packet that is transmitted.  However,   this trivial algorithm leads to predictable Identification values,   which can be leveraged to perform a variety of attacks.Section 2 of this document analyzes the security implications of   predictable Identification values.Section 3 discusses constraints   in the possible algorithms for selecting Fragment Identification   values.Section 4 specifies a number of algorithms that could be   used for generating Identification values.  Finally,Appendix B   contains a survey of the Fragment Identification algorithms employed   by popular IPv6 implementations.2.  Security Implications of Predictable Fragment Identification values   Predictable Identification values result in an information leakage   that can be exploited in a number of ways.  Among others, they may   potentially be exploited to:   o  determine the packet rate at which a given system is transmitting      information,   o  perform stealth port scans to a third-party,   o  uncover the rules of a number of firewalls,   o  count the number of systems behind a middle-box,   o  perform Denial of Service (DoS) attacks, or,   o  perform data injection attacks against transport or application      protocols   [CPNI-IPv6] contains a detailed analysis of possible vulnerabilities   introduced by predictable Fragment Identification values.  In   summary, their security implications are very similar to those of   predictable Identification values in IPv4.      [Sanfilippo1998a] originally pointed out how the IPv4      Identification field could be examined to determine the packet      rate at which a given system is transmitting information.  Later,      [Sanfilippo1998b] described how a system with such an      implementation could be used to perform a stealth port scan to a      third (victim) host.  [Sanfilippo1999] explains how to exploitGont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 3]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014      this implementation strategy to uncover the rules of a number of      firewalls.  [Bellovin2002] explains how the IPv4 Identification      field can be exploited to count the number of systems behind a      NAT.  [Fyodor2004] is an entire paper on most (if not all) the      ways to exploit the information provided by the Identification      field of the IPv4 header (and these results apply in a similar way      to IPv6).  [Zalewski2003] originally envisioned the exploitation      of IP fragmentation/reassembly for performing data injection      attacks against upper-layer protocols.  [Herzberg2013] explores      the use of IPv4/IPv6 fragmentation and predictable Identification      values for performing DNS cache poisoning attacks in great detail.      [RFC6274] covers the security implications of the IPv4 case in      detail.   One key difference between the IPv4 case and the IPv6 case is that in   IPv4 the Identification field is part of the fixed IPv4 header (and   thus usually set for all packets), while in IPv6 the Identification   field is present only in those packets that carry a Fragment Header.   As a result, successful exploitation of the IPv6 Fragment   Identification field depends on two different factors:   o  vulnerable IPv6 Fragment Identification generators, and,   o  the ability of an attacker to trigger the use of IPv6      fragmentation for packets sent from/to the victim node   As noted in the previous section, some implementations have been   known to use predictable Fragment Identification values.  For   instance,Appendix B of this document shows that recent versions of a   number of popular IPv6 implementations have been employing   predictable values for the IPv6 Fragment Identification.   Additionally, we note that [RFC2460] states that when an ICMPv6   Packet Too Big error message advertising an MTU smaller than 1280   bytes is received, the receiving host is not required to reduce the   Path-MTU for the corresponding destination address, but must simply   include a Fragment Header in all subsequent packets sent to that   destination.  This triggers the use of the so-called IPv6 "atomic   fragments" [RFC6946]: IPv6 fragments with a Fragment Offset equal to   0, and the "M" ("More fragments") bit clear.   [I-D.ietf-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation] aims at deprecating the   generation of IPv6 atomic fragments.   Thus, an attacker can usually cause a victim host to "fragment" its   outgoing packets by sending it a forged ICMPv6 'Packet Too Big' (PTB)   error message that advertises a Next-Hop MTU smaller than 1280 bytes.   There are a number of aspects that should be considered, though:Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 4]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   o  All the implementations the author is aware of record the Path-MTU      information on a per-destination basis.  Thus, an attacker can      only cause the victim to enable fragmentation for those packets      sent to the Source Address of IPv6 packet embedded in the payload      of the ICMPv6 PTB message.  However, we note thatSection 5.2 of      [RFC1981] notes that an implementation could maintain a single      system-wide PMTU value to be used for all packets sent to that      node.  Clearly, such an implementations would exacerbate the      problem of any attacks based on PMTUD [RFC5927] or IPv6      fragmentation.   o  If the victim node implements some of the counter-measures for      ICMP attacks described inRFC 5927 [RFC5927], it might be      difficult for an attacker to cause the victim node to use      fragmentation for its outgoing packets.  However, many current      implementations fail to enforce these validation checks.  For      example, Linux 2.6.38-8 does not even require received ICMPv6      error messages to correspond to an ongoing communication instance.   Implementations that employ predictable Identification values and   also fail to enforce validation checks on ICMPv6 error messages   become vulnerable to the same type of attacks that can be exploited   with IPv4 fragmentation, discussed earlier in this section.   One possible way in which predictable Identification values could be   leveraged for performing a Denial of Service (DoS) attack is as   follows: Let us assume that Host A is communicating with Host B, and   that an attacker wants to DoS such communication.  The attacker would   learn the the Identification value currently in use by Host A,   possibly by sending any packet that would elicit a fragmented   response (e.g., an ICPMv6 echo request with a large payload).  The   attacker would then send a forged ICMPv6 Packet Too Big error message   to Host A (with the IPv6 Destination Address of the embedded IPv6   packet set to the IPv6 address of a Host B), such that any subsequent   packets sent by Host A to Host B include a Fragment Header.  Finally,   the attacker would send forged IPv6 fragments to Host B, with their   IPv6 Source Address set to that of Host A, and Identification values   that would result in collisions with the Identification values   employed for the legitimate traffic sent by Host A to Host B.  If   Host B discards fragments that result in collisions of Identification   values (e.g., such fragments overlap, and the host implements   [RFC5722]), the attacker could simply trash the Identification space   by sending multiple forged fragments with different Identification   values, such that any subsequent packets from Host A to Host B are   discarded at Host B as a result of the malicious fragments sent by   the attacker.   NOTES:Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 5]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014      For example, Linux 2.6.38-10 is vulnerable to the aforementioned      issue.      [RFC6946] describes an improved processing of these packets that      would eliminate this specific attack vector, at least in the case      of TCP connections that employ the Path-MTU Discovery mechanism.   The previous attack scenario is simply included to illustrate the   problem of employing predictable fragment Identification values.  We   note that regardless of the attacker's ability to cause a victim host   to employ fragmentation when communicating with third-parties, use of   predictable Identification values makes communication flows that   employ fragmentation vulnerable to any fragmentation-based attacks.3.  Constraints for the selection of Fragment Identification Values   The "Identification" field of the Fragmentation Header is 32-bits   long.  However, when translators [RFC6145] are employed, the   "effective" length of the IPv6 Fragment Identification field is 16   bits.      NOTE: [RFC6145] notes that, when translating in the IPv6-to-IPv4      direction, "if there is a Fragment Header in the IPv6 packet, the      last 16 bits of its value MUST be used for the IPv4 identification      value".  This means that the high-order 16 bits are effectively      ignored.   As a result, at least during the IPv6/IPv4 transition/co-existence   phase, it is probably safer to assume that only the low-order 16 bits   of the IPv6 Fragment Identification are of use to the destination   system.   Regarding the selection of Fragment Identification values, the only   requirement specified in [RFC2460] is that the Fragment   Identification must be different than that of any other fragmented   packet sent recently with the same Source Address and Destination   Address.  Failure to comply with this requirement could lead to the   interoperability problems discussed in [RFC4963].   From a security standpoint, unpredictable Identification values are   desirable.  However, this is somewhat at odds with the "re-use"   requirements specified in [RFC2460].   Finally, since Fragment Identification values need to be selected for   each outgoing datagram that requires fragmentation, the performance   impact should be considered when choosing an algorithm for the   selection of Fragment Identification values.Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 6]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 20144.  Algorithms for Selecting Fragment Identification Values   This section specifies a number of algorithms that may be used for   selecting Fragment Identification values.4.1.  Per-destination counter (initialized to a random value)   1.  Whenever a packet must be sent with a Fragment Header, the       sending host should look-up in the Destinations Cache an entry       corresponding to the Destination Address of the packet.   2.  If such an entry exists, it contains the last Fragment       Identification value used for that Destination Address.       Therefore, such value should be incremented by 1, and used for       setting the Fragment Identification value of the outgoing packet.       Additionally, the updated value should be recorded in the       corresponding entry of the Destination Cache.   3.  If such an entry does not exist, it should be created, and the       "Identification" value for that destination should be initialized       with a random value (e.g., with a pseudorandom number generator),       and used for setting the Identification field of the Fragment       Header of the outgoing packet.   The advantages of this algorithm are:   o  It is simple to implement, with the only complexity residing in      the Pseudo-Random Number Generator (PRNG) used to initialize the      "Identification" value contained in each entry of the Destinations      Cache.   o  The "Identification" re-use frequency will typically be lower than      that achieved by a global counter (when sending traffic to      multiple destinations), since this algorithm uses per-destination      counters (rather than a single system-wide counter).   o  It has good performance properties (once the corresponding entry      in the Destinations Cache has been created, each subsequent      "Identification" value simply involves the increment of a      counter).   The possible drawbacks of this algorithm are:   o  If as a result of resource management an entry of the Destinations      Cache must be removed, the last Fragment Identification value used      for that Destination will be lost.  Thus, subsequent traffic to      that destination would cause that entry to be re-created and re-Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 7]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014      initialized to random value, thus possibly leading to Fragment      Identification "collisions".   o  Since the Fragment Identification values are predictable by the      destination host, a vulnerable host might possibly leak to third-      parties the Fragment Identification values used by other hosts to      send traffic to it (i.e., Host B could leak to Host C the Fragment      Identification values that Host A is using to send packets to Host      B).Appendix A describes one possible scenario for such leakage      in detail.4.2.  Randomized Identification values   Clearly, use of a Pseudo-Random Number Generator for selecting the   Fragment Identification would be desirable from a security   standpoint.  With such a scheme, the Fragment Identification of each   fragmented datagram would be selected as:                  Identification = random()   where "random()" is the PRNG.   The specific properties of such scheme would clearly depend on the   specific PRNG algorithm used.  For example, some PRNGs may result in   higher Fragment Identification reuse frequencies than others, in the   same way that some PRNGs may be more expensive (in terms of   processing requirements and/or implementation complexity) than   others.   Discussion of the properties of possible PRNGs is considered out of   the scope of this document.  However, we do note that some PRNGs   employed in the past by some implementations have been found to be   predictable [Klein2007].  Please see [RFC4086] for randomness   requirements for security.4.3.  Hash-based Fragment Identification selection algorithm   Another alternative is to implement a hash-based algorithm similar to   that specified in [RFC6056] for the selection of transport port   numbers.  With such a scheme, the Fragment Identification value of   each fragment datagram would be selected with the expression:   Identification = F(Src IP, Dst IP, secret1)  +                    counter[G(src IP, Dst Pref, secret2)]   where:   Identification:Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 8]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014      Identification value to be used for the fragmented datagram   F():      Hash function   Src IP:      IPv6 Source Address of the datagram to be fragmented   Dst IP:      IPv6 Destination Address of the datagram to be fragmented   secret1:      Secret data unknown to the attacker   counter[]:      System-wide array of 32-bit counters (e.g. with 8K elements or      more)   G():      Hash function.  May or may not be the same hash function as that      used for F()   Dst Pref:      IPv6 "Destination Prefix" of datagram to be fragmented (can be      assumed to be the first eight bytes of the Destination Address of      such packet).  Note: the "Destination Prefix" (rather than      Destination Address) is used, such that the ability of an attacker      of searching the "increments" space by using multiple addresses of      the same subnet is reduced.   secret2:      Secret data unknown to the attacker   NOTE: counter[G(src IP, Dst Pref, secret2)] should be incremented by   one each time an Identification value is selected.   The advantages of this algorithm are:   o  The "Identification" re-use frequency will typically be lower than      that achieved by a global counter (when sending traffic to      multiple destinations), since this algorithm uses multiple system-      wide counters (rather than a single system-wide counter).  The      extent to which the re-use frequency will be lower will depend on      the number of elements in counter[], and the number of other      active flows that result in the same value of G() (and hence cause      the same counter to be incremented for each fragmented datagram      that is sent).Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                 [Page 9]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   o  It is possible to implement the algorithm such that good      performance is achieved.  For example, the result of F() could be      stored in the Destinations Cache (such that it need not be      recomputed for each packet that must be sent) along with the      computed "index"/argument for counter[].         NOTE: If this implementation approach is followed, and an entry         of the Destinations Cache must be removed as a result of         resource management, the last Fragment Identification value         used for that Destination will *not* be lost.  This is an         improvement over the algorithm specified inSection 4.1.   The possible drawbacks of this algorithm are:   o  Since the Fragment Identification values are predictable by the      destination host, a vulnerable host could possibly leak to third-      parties the Fragment Identification values used by other hosts to      send traffic to it (i.e., Host B could leak to Host C the Fragment      Identification values that Host A is using to send packets to Host      B).Appendix A describes a possible scenario in which that      information leakage could take place.  We note, however, that this      algorithm makes the aforementioned attack less reliable for the      attacker, since each counter could be possibly shared by multiple      traffic flows (i.e., packets destined to other destinations might      cause the same counter to be incremented).   This algorithm might be preferable (over the one specified inSection 4.1) in those scenarios in which a node is expected to   communicate with a large number of destinations, and thus it is   desirable to limit the amount of information to be maintained in   memory.      NOTE: In such scenarios, if the algorithm specified inSection 4.1      were implemented, entries from the Destinations Cache might need      to be pruned frequently, thus increasing the risk of fragment      Identification collisions.5.  IANA Considerations   There are no IANA registries within this document.  The RFC-Editor   can remove this section before publication of this document as an   RFC.6.  Security Considerations   This document discusses the security implications of predictable   Fragment Identification values, and provides implementation guidance   such that the aforementioned security implications can be mitigated.Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 10]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   A number of possible algorithms are described, to provide some   implementation alternatives to implementers.  We note that the   selection of such an algorithm usually implies a number of trade-offs   (security, performance, implementation complexity, interoperability   properties, etc.).7.  Acknowledgements   The author would like to thank Ivan Arce for proposing the attack   scenario described inAppendix A.   The author would like to thank Ivan Arce, Ron Bonica, Tassos   Chatzithomaoglou, Brian Haberman, Bob Hinden, Tatuya Jinmei, Merike   Kaeo, Will Liu, Juan Antonio Matos, Simon Perreault, Hosnieh Rafiee,   Mark Smith, and Dave Thaler for providing valuable comments on   earlier versions of this document.   This document is based on the technical report "Security Assessment   of the Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6)" [CPNI-IPv6] authored by   Fernando Gont on behalf of the UK Centre for the Protection of   National Infrastructure (CPNI).8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [RFC1981]  McCann, J., Deering, S., and J. Mogul, "Path MTU Discovery              for IP version 6",RFC 1981, August 1996.   [RFC2460]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6              (IPv6) Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998.   [RFC4086]  Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness              Requirements for Security",BCP 106,RFC 4086, June 2005.   [RFC5722]  Krishnan, S., "Handling of Overlapping IPv6 Fragments",RFC 5722, December 2009.   [RFC6056]  Larsen, M. and F. Gont, "Recommendations for Transport-              Protocol Port Randomization",BCP 156,RFC 6056, January              2011.   [RFC6145]  Li, X., Bao, C., and F. Baker, "IP/ICMP Translation              Algorithm",RFC 6145, April 2011.   [RFC6946]  Gont, F., "Processing of IPv6 "Atomic" Fragments",RFC6946, May 2013.Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 11]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 20148.2.  Informative References   [RFC4963]  Heffner, J., Mathis, M., and B. Chandler, "IPv4 Reassembly              Errors at High Data Rates",RFC 4963, July 2007.   [RFC5927]  Gont, F., "ICMP Attacks against TCP",RFC 5927, July 2010.   [RFC6274]  Gont, F., "Security Assessment of the Internet Protocol              Version 4",RFC 6274, July 2011.   [I-D.ietf-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation]              Gont, F., Will, W., and t. tore, "Deprecating the              Generation of IPv6 Atomic Fragments",draft-ietf-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation-00 (work in progress),              November 2014.   [Bellovin2002]              Bellovin, S., "A Technique for Counting NATted Hosts",              IMW'02 Nov. 6-8, 2002, Marseille, France, 2002.   [CPNI-IPv6]              Gont, F., "Security Assessment of the Internet Protocol              version 6 (IPv6)", UK Centre for the Protection of              National Infrastructure, (available on request).   [Fyodor2004]              Fyodor, , "Idle scanning and related IP ID games", 2004,              <http://www.insecure.org/nmap/idlescan.html>.   [Herzberg2013]              Herzberg, A. and H. Shulman, "Fragmentation Considered              Poisonous", Technical Report 13-03, March 2013,              <http://u.cs.biu.ac.il/~herzbea/security/13-03-frag.pdf>.   [Klein2007]              Klein, A., "OpenBSD DNS Cache Poisoning and Multiple O/S              Predictable IP ID Vulnerability", 2007,              <http://www.trusteer.com/files/OpenBSD_DNS_Cache_Poisoning_and_Multiple_OS_Predictable_IP_ID_Vulnerability.pdf>.   [Sanfilippo1998a]              Sanfilippo, S., "about the ip header id", Post to Bugtraq              mailing-list, Mon Dec 14 1998,              <http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/papers/ipid.html>.   [Sanfilippo1998b]              Sanfilippo, S., "Idle scan", Post to Bugtraq mailing-list,              1998, <http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/papers/dumbscan.html>.Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 12]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   [Sanfilippo1999]              Sanfilippo, S., "more ip id", Post to Bugtraq mailing-              list, 1999,              <http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/papers/moreipid.html>.   [SI6-IPv6]              "SI6 Networks' IPv6 toolkit",              <http://www.si6networks.com/tools/ipv6toolkit>.   [Zalewski2003]              Zalewski, M., "A new TCP/IP blind data injection              technique?", Post to Bugtraq mailing-list, Thu, 11 Dec              2003 00:28:28 +0100 (CET), 2003,              <http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/ipfrag.txt>.Appendix A.  Information leakage produced by vulnerable implementationsSection 2 provides a number of references describing a number of ways   in which a vulnerable implementation may reveal the Fragment   Identification values to be used in subsequent packets, thus opening   the door to a number of attacks.  In all of those scenarios, a   vulnerable implementation leaks/reveals its own Identification   number.   This section presents a attack scenario, in which a vulnerable   implementation leaks/reveals the Identification number of a non-   vulnerable implementation.  That is, a vulnerable implementation   (Host A) leaks the current Fragment Identification value in use by a   third-party host (Host B) to send fragmented datagrams from Host B to   Host A.      For the most part, this section is included to illustrate how a      vulnerable implementation might be leveraged to leak-out the      Fragment Identification value of an otherwise non-vulnerable      implementation.   The following scenarios assume:   Host A:      Is an IPv6 host that implements the the algorithm specified inSection 4.1, implements [RFC5722], but does not implement      [RFC6946].   Host B:      Victim node.  Selects the Fragment Identification values from a      global counter.   Host C:Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 13]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014      Attacker.  Can forge the IPv6 Source Address of his packets at      will.   In the following scenarios, large ICMPv6 Echo Request packets are   employed to "sample" the Fragment Identification value of a host.  We   note that while the figures show only one packet for the ICMPv6 Echo   Request and the ICMPv6 Echo Response, each of those packets will   typically comprise two fragments, such that the corresponding   unfragmented datagram is larger than the MTU of the networks to which   Host B and Host C are attached.   In lines #1-#2 (and lines #8-#9), the attacker samples the current   Fragment Identification value.  In line #3, the attacker sends a   forged TCP SYN segment to Host A.  If corresponding TCP port is   closed, and the attacker fails when trying to produce a collision of   Fragment Identifications (see line #4), the following packet exchange   might take place:       A                          B                               C   #1                              <------ Echo Req #1 -----------   #2                              --- Echo Resp #1, FID=5000 --->   #3  <------------------- SYN #1, src= B -----------------------   #4                              <--- SYN/ACK, FID=42 src = A---   #5  ---- SYN/ACK, FID=9000 --->   #6  <----- RST, FID= 5001 -----   #7  <----- RST, FID= 5002 -----   #8                              <-------- Echo Req #2 ---------   #9                              --- Echo Resp #2, FID=5003 --->   The two RST segments are elicited by the SYN/ACK segment from line   #4, and the (illegitimately elicited by the SYN in line #3) SYN/ACK   segment from line #5.  On the other hand, if the attacker succeeds to   produce a collision of Fragment Identification values, the following   packet exchange could take place:       A                          B                              C   #1                              <------- Echo Req #1 ----------   #2                              --- Echo Resp #1, FID=5000 --->   #3  <------------------- SYN #1, src= B -----------------------   #4              <-- SYN/ACK, FID=9000 src=A ---   #5  ---- SYN/ACK, FID=9000 --->                           ... (RFC5722) ...   #6                              <------- Echo Req #2 ----------   #7                              ---- Echo Resp #2, FID=5001 -->Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 14]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   Clearly, the Fragment Identification value sampled from the second   ICMPv6 Echo Response packet ("Echo Resp #2") implicitly indicates   whether the Fragment Identification in the forged SYN/ACK (see line   #4 in both figures) was the current Fragment Identification in use by   Host A.   As a result, the attacker could employ this technique to learn the   current Fragment Identification value used by host A to send packets   to host B, even when Host A itself has a non-vulnerable   implementation.Appendix B.  Survey of Fragment Identification selection algorithms             employed by popular IPv6 implementations   This section includes a survey of the Fragment Identification   selection algorithms employed in some popular operating systems.      The survey was produced with the SI6 Networks IPv6 toolkit      [SI6-IPv6].Gont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 15]

Internet-Draft  Implications of Predictable Fragment IDs   December 2014   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |    Operating System   |                 Algorithm                 |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |      FreeBSD 9.0      |           Unpredictable (Random)          |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |     Linux 3.0.0-15    |    Predictable (Global Counter, Init=0,   |   |                       |                  Incr=1)                  |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |     Linux-current     |      Unpredictable (Per-dest Counter,     |   |                       |            Init=random, Incr=1)           |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |       NetBSD 5.1      |           Unpredictable (Random)          |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |    OpenBSD-current    |              Random (SKIP32)              |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |       Solaris 10      |   Predictable (Per-dst Counter, Init=0,   |   |                       |                  Incr=1)                  |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |     Windows XP SP2    |    Predictable (Global Counter, Init=0,   |   |                       |                  Incr=2)                  |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |  Windows Vista (Build |    Predictable (Global Counter, Init=0,   |   |         6000)         |                  Incr=2)                  |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+   |     Windows 7 Home    |    Predictable (Global Counter, Init=0,   |   |        Premium        |                  Incr=2)                  |   +-----------------------+-------------------------------------------+     Table 1: Fragment Identification algorithms employed by different                                   OSes      In the text above, "predictable" should be taken as "easily      guessable by an off-path attacker, by sending a few probe      packets".Author's Address   Fernando Gont   SI6 Networks / UTN-FRH   Evaristo Carriego 2644   Haedo, Provincia de Buenos Aires  1706   Argentina   Phone: +54 11 4650 8472   Email: fgont@si6networks.com   URI:http://www.si6networks.comGont                      Expires June 22, 2015                [Page 16]
Datatracker

draft-ietf-6man-predictable-fragment-id-02

This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published asRFC 7739.

DocumentDocument type
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published asRFC 7739.
Select version
Compare versions
AuthorFernando Gont
Replacesdraft-gont-6man-predictable-fragment-id
RFC streamIETF LogoIETF Logo
Other formats
Additional resources Mailing list discussion
Report a datatracker bug

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp