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Network Working Group                                          T. YlonenRequest for Comments: 4253              SSH Communications Security CorpCategory: Standards Track                                C. Lonvick, Ed.                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                            January 2006The Secure Shell (SSH) Transport Layer ProtocolStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   The Secure Shell (SSH) is a protocol for secure remote login and   other secure network services over an insecure network.   This document describes the SSH transport layer protocol, which   typically runs on top of TCP/IP.  The protocol can be used as a basis   for a number of secure network services.  It provides strong   encryption, server authentication, and integrity protection.  It may   also provide compression.   Key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption   algorithm, message authentication algorithm, and hash algorithm are   all negotiated.   This document also describes the Diffie-Hellman key exchange method   and the minimal set of algorithms that are needed to implement the   SSH transport layer protocol.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Contributors ....................................................33. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................34. Connection Setup ................................................44.1. Use over TCP/IP ............................................44.2. Protocol Version Exchange ..................................45. Compatibility With Old SSH Versions .............................55.1. Old Client, New Server .....................................65.2. New Client, Old Server .....................................65.3. Packet Size and Overhead ...................................66. Binary Packet Protocol ..........................................76.1. Maximum Packet Length ......................................86.2. Compression ................................................86.3. Encryption .................................................96.4. Data Integrity ............................................126.5. Key Exchange Methods ......................................136.6. Public Key Algorithms .....................................137. Key Exchange ...................................................157.1. Algorithm Negotiation .....................................177.2. Output from Key Exchange ..................................207.3. Taking Keys Into Use ......................................218. Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange ....................................218.1. diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 ................................238.2. diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 ...............................239. Key Re-Exchange ................................................2310. Service Request ...............................................2411. Additional Messages ...........................................2511.1. Disconnection Message ....................................2511.2. Ignored Data Message .....................................2611.3. Debug Message ............................................2611.4. Reserved Messages ........................................2712. Summary of Message Numbers ....................................2713. IANA Considerations ...........................................2714. Security Considerations .......................................2815. References ....................................................2915.1. Normative References .....................................2915.2. Informative References ...................................30   Authors' Addresses ................................................31   Trademark Notice ..................................................31Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 20061.  Introduction   The SSH transport layer is a secure, low level transport protocol.   It provides strong encryption, cryptographic host authentication, and   integrity protection.   Authentication in this protocol level is host-based; this protocol   does not perform user authentication.  A higher level protocol for   user authentication can be designed on top of this protocol.   The protocol has been designed to be simple and flexible to allow   parameter negotiation, and to minimize the number of round-trips.   The key exchange method, public key algorithm, symmetric encryption   algorithm, message authentication algorithm, and hash algorithm are   all negotiated.  It is expected that in most environments, only 2   round-trips will be needed for full key exchange, server   authentication, service request, and acceptance notification of   service request.  The worst case is 3 round-trips.2.  Contributors   The major original contributors of this set of documents have been:   Tatu Ylonen, Tero Kivinen, Timo J. Rinne, Sami Lehtinen (all of SSH   Communications Security Corp), and Markku-Juhani O. Saarinen   (University of Jyvaskyla).  Darren Moffat was the original editor of   this set of documents and also made very substantial contributions.   Many people contributed to the development of this document over the   years.  People who should be acknowledged include Mats Andersson, Ben   Harris, Bill Sommerfeld, Brent McClure, Niels Moller, Damien Miller,   Derek Fawcus, Frank Cusack, Heikki Nousiainen, Jakob Schlyter, Jeff   Van Dyke, Jeffrey Altman, Jeffrey Hutzelman, Jon Bright, Joseph   Galbraith, Ken Hornstein, Markus Friedl, Martin Forssen, Nicolas   Williams, Niels Provos, Perry Metzger, Peter Gutmann, Simon   Josefsson, Simon Tatham, Wei Dai, Denis Bider, der Mouse, and   Tadayoshi Kohno.  Listing their names here does not mean that they   endorse this document, but that they have contributed to it.3.  Conventions Used in This Document   All documents related to the SSH protocols shall use the keywords   "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",   "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" to describe   requirements.  These keywords are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119].Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The keywords "PRIVATE USE", "HIERARCHICAL ALLOCATION", "FIRST COME   FIRST SERVED", "EXPERT REVIEW", "SPECIFICATION REQUIRED", "IESG   APPROVAL", "IETF CONSENSUS", and "STANDARDS ACTION" that appear in   this document when used to describe namespace allocation are to be   interpreted as described in [RFC2434].   Protocol fields and possible values to fill them are defined in this   set of documents.  Protocol fields will be defined in the message   definitions.  As an example, SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA is defined as   follows.      byte      SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_DATA      uint32    recipient channel      string    data   Throughout these documents, when the fields are referenced, they will   appear within single quotes.  When values to fill those fields are   referenced, they will appear within double quotes.  Using the above   example, possible values for 'data' are "foo" and "bar".4.  Connection Setup   SSH works over any 8-bit clean, binary-transparent transport.  The   underlying transport SHOULD protect against transmission errors, as   such errors cause the SSH connection to terminate.   The client initiates the connection.4.1.  Use over TCP/IP   When used over TCP/IP, the server normally listens for connections on   port 22.  This port number has been registered with the IANA, and has   been officially assigned for SSH.4.2.  Protocol Version Exchange   When the connection has been established, both sides MUST send an   identification string.  This identification string MUST be      SSH-protoversion-softwareversion SP comments CR LF   Since the protocol being defined in this set of documents is version   2.0, the 'protoversion' MUST be "2.0".  The 'comments' string is   OPTIONAL.  If the 'comments' string is included, a 'space' character   (denoted above as SP, ASCII 32) MUST separate the 'softwareversion'   and 'comments' strings.  The identification MUST be terminated by a   single Carriage Return (CR) and a single Line Feed (LF) character   (ASCII 13 and 10, respectively).  Implementers who wish to maintainYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   compatibility with older, undocumented versions of this protocol may   want to process the identification string without expecting the   presence of the carriage return character for reasons described inSection 5 of this document.  The null character MUST NOT be sent.   The maximum length of the string is 255 characters, including the   Carriage Return and Line Feed.   The part of the identification string preceding the Carriage Return   and Line Feed is used in the Diffie-Hellman key exchange (seeSection8).   The server MAY send other lines of data before sending the version   string.  Each line SHOULD be terminated by a Carriage Return and Line   Feed.  Such lines MUST NOT begin with "SSH-", and SHOULD be encoded   in ISO-10646 UTF-8 [RFC3629] (language is not specified).  Clients   MUST be able to process such lines.  Such lines MAY be silently   ignored, or MAY be displayed to the client user.  If they are   displayed, control character filtering, as discussed in [SSH-ARCH],   SHOULD be used.  The primary use of this feature is to allow TCP-   wrappers to display an error message before disconnecting.   Both the 'protoversion' and 'softwareversion' strings MUST consist of   printable US-ASCII characters, with the exception of whitespace   characters and the minus sign (-).  The 'softwareversion' string is   primarily used to trigger compatibility extensions and to indicate   the capabilities of an implementation.  The 'comments' string SHOULD   contain additional information that might be useful in solving user   problems.  As such, an example of a valid identification string is      SSH-2.0-billsSSH_3.6.3q3<CR><LF>   This identification string does not contain the optional 'comments'   string and is thus terminated by a CR and LF immediately after the   'softwareversion' string.   Key exchange will begin immediately after sending this identifier.   All packets following the identification string SHALL use the binary   packet protocol, which is described inSection 6.5.  Compatibility With Old SSH Versions   As stated earlier, the 'protoversion' specified for this protocol is   "2.0".  Earlier versions of this protocol have not been formally   documented, but it is widely known that they use 'protoversion' of   "1.x" (e.g., "1.5" or "1.3").  At the time of this writing, many   implementations of SSH are utilizing protocol version 2.0, but it is   known that there are still devices using the previous versions.   During the transition period, it is important to be able to work in aYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   way that is compatible with the installed SSH clients and servers   that use the older version of the protocol.  Information in this   section is only relevant for implementations supporting compatibility   with SSH versions 1.x.  For those interested, the only known   documentation of the 1.x protocol is contained in README files that   are shipped along with the source code [ssh-1.2.30].5.1.  Old Client, New Server   Server implementations MAY support a configurable compatibility flag   that enables compatibility with old versions.  When this flag is on,   the server SHOULD identify its 'protoversion' as "1.99".  Clients   using protocol 2.0 MUST be able to identify this as identical to   "2.0".  In this mode, the server SHOULD NOT send the Carriage Return   character (ASCII 13) after the identification string.   In the compatibility mode, the server SHOULD NOT send any further   data after sending its identification string until it has received an   identification string from the client.  The server can then determine   whether the client is using an old protocol, and can revert to the   old protocol if required.  In the compatibility mode, the server MUST   NOT send additional data before the identification string.   When compatibility with old clients is not needed, the server MAY   send its initial key exchange data immediately after the   identification string.5.2.  New Client, Old Server   Since the new client MAY immediately send additional data after its   identification string (before receiving the server's identification   string), the old protocol may already be corrupt when the client   learns that the server is old.  When this happens, the client SHOULD   close the connection to the server, and reconnect using the old   protocol.5.3.  Packet Size and Overhead   Some readers will worry about the increase in packet size due to new   headers, padding, and the Message Authentication Code (MAC).  The   minimum packet size is in the order of 28 bytes (depending on   negotiated algorithms).  The increase is negligible for large   packets, but very significant for one-byte packets (telnet-type   sessions).  There are, however, several factors that make this a   non-issue in almost all cases:   o  The minimum size of a TCP/IP header is 32 bytes.  Thus, the      increase is actually from 33 to 51 bytes (roughly).Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   o  The minimum size of the data field of an Ethernet packet is 46      bytes [RFC0894].  Thus, the increase is no more than 5 bytes.      When Ethernet headers are considered, the increase is less than 10      percent.   o  The total fraction of telnet-type data in the Internet is      negligible, even with increased packet sizes.   The only environment where the packet size increase is likely to have   a significant effect is PPP [RFC1661] over slow modem lines (PPP   compresses the TCP/IP headers, emphasizing the increase in packet   size).  However, with modern modems, the time needed to transfer is   in the order of 2 milliseconds, which is a lot faster than people can   type.   There are also issues related to the maximum packet size.  To   minimize delays in screen updates, one does not want excessively   large packets for interactive sessions.  The maximum packet size is   negotiated separately for each channel.6.  Binary Packet Protocol   Each packet is in the following format:      uint32    packet_length      byte      padding_length      byte[n1]  payload; n1 = packet_length - padding_length - 1      byte[n2]  random padding; n2 = padding_length      byte[m]   mac (Message Authentication Code - MAC); m = mac_length      packet_length         The length of the packet in bytes, not including 'mac' or the         'packet_length' field itself.      padding_length         Length of 'random padding' (bytes).      payload         The useful contents of the packet.  If compression has been         negotiated, this field is compressed.  Initially, compression         MUST be "none".      random padding         Arbitrary-length padding, such that the total length of         (packet_length || padding_length || payload || random padding)         is a multiple of the cipher block size or 8, whichever isYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006         larger.  There MUST be at least four bytes of padding.  The         padding SHOULD consist of random bytes.  The maximum amount of         padding is 255 bytes.      mac         Message Authentication Code.  If message authentication has         been negotiated, this field contains the MAC bytes.  Initially,         the MAC algorithm MUST be "none".   Note that the length of the concatenation of 'packet_length',   'padding_length', 'payload', and 'random padding' MUST be a multiple   of the cipher block size or 8, whichever is larger.  This constraint   MUST be enforced, even when using stream ciphers.  Note that the   'packet_length' field is also encrypted, and processing it requires   special care when sending or receiving packets.  Also note that the   insertion of variable amounts of 'random padding' may help thwart   traffic analysis.   The minimum size of a packet is 16 (or the cipher block size,   whichever is larger) bytes (plus 'mac').  Implementations SHOULD   decrypt the length after receiving the first 8 (or cipher block size,   whichever is larger) bytes of a packet.6.1.  Maximum Packet Length   All implementations MUST be able to process packets with an   uncompressed payload length of 32768 bytes or less and a total packet   size of 35000 bytes or less (including 'packet_length',   'padding_length', 'payload', 'random padding', and 'mac').  The   maximum of 35000 bytes is an arbitrarily chosen value that is larger   than the uncompressed length noted above.  Implementations SHOULD   support longer packets, where they might be needed.  For example, if   an implementation wants to send a very large number of certificates,   the larger packets MAY be sent if the identification string indicates   that the other party is able to process them.  However,   implementations SHOULD check that the packet length is reasonable in   order for the implementation to avoid denial of service and/or buffer   overflow attacks.6.2.  Compression   If compression has been negotiated, the 'payload' field (and only it)   will be compressed using the negotiated algorithm.  The   'packet_length' field and 'mac' will be computed from the compressed   payload.  Encryption will be done after compression.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   Compression MAY be stateful, depending on the method.  Compression   MUST be independent for each direction, and implementations MUST   allow independent choosing of the algorithm for each direction.  In   practice however, it is RECOMMENDED that the compression method be   the same in both directions.   The following compression methods are currently defined:      none     REQUIRED        no compression      zlib     OPTIONAL        ZLIB (LZ77) compression   The "zlib" compression is described in [RFC1950] and in [RFC1951].   The compression context is initialized after each key exchange, and   is passed from one packet to the next, with only a partial flush   being performed at the end of each packet.  A partial flush means   that the current compressed block is ended and all data will be   output.  If the current block is not a stored block, one or more   empty blocks are added after the current block to ensure that there   are at least 8 bits, counting from the start of the end-of-block code   of the current block to the end of the packet payload.   Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH] and   [SSH-NUMBERS].6.3.  Encryption   An encryption algorithm and a key will be negotiated during the key   exchange.  When encryption is in effect, the packet length, padding   length, payload, and padding fields of each packet MUST be encrypted   with the given algorithm.   The encrypted data in all packets sent in one direction SHOULD be   considered a single data stream.  For example, initialization vectors   SHOULD be passed from the end of one packet to the beginning of the   next packet.  All ciphers SHOULD use keys with an effective key   length of 128 bits or more.   The ciphers in each direction MUST run independently of each other.   Implementations MUST allow the algorithm for each direction to be   independently selected, if multiple algorithms are allowed by local   policy.  In practice however, it is RECOMMENDED that the same   algorithm be used in both directions.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The following ciphers are currently defined:      3des-cbc         REQUIRED          three-key 3DES in CBC mode      blowfish-cbc     OPTIONAL          Blowfish in CBC mode      twofish256-cbc   OPTIONAL          Twofish in CBC mode,                                         with a 256-bit key      twofish-cbc      OPTIONAL          alias for "twofish256-cbc"                                         (this is being retained                                         for historical reasons)      twofish192-cbc   OPTIONAL          Twofish with a 192-bit key      twofish128-cbc   OPTIONAL          Twofish with a 128-bit key      aes256-cbc       OPTIONAL          AES in CBC mode,                                         with a 256-bit key      aes192-cbc       OPTIONAL          AES with a 192-bit key      aes128-cbc       RECOMMENDED       AES with a 128-bit key      serpent256-cbc   OPTIONAL          Serpent in CBC mode, with                                         a 256-bit key      serpent192-cbc   OPTIONAL          Serpent with a 192-bit key      serpent128-cbc   OPTIONAL          Serpent with a 128-bit key      arcfour          OPTIONAL          the ARCFOUR stream cipher                                         with a 128-bit key      idea-cbc         OPTIONAL          IDEA in CBC mode      cast128-cbc      OPTIONAL          CAST-128 in CBC mode      none             OPTIONAL          no encryption; NOT RECOMMENDED   The "3des-cbc" cipher is three-key triple-DES (encrypt-decrypt-   encrypt), where the first 8 bytes of the key are used for the first   encryption, the next 8 bytes for the decryption, and the following 8   bytes for the final encryption.  This requires 24 bytes of key data   (of which 168 bits are actually used).  To implement CBC mode, outer   chaining MUST be used (i.e., there is only one initialization   vector).  This is a block cipher with 8-byte blocks.  This algorithm   is defined in [FIPS-46-3].  Note that since this algorithm only has   an effective key length of 112 bits ([SCHNEIER]), it does not meet   the specifications that SSH encryption algorithms should use keys of   128 bits or more.  However, this algorithm is still REQUIRED for   historical reasons; essentially, all known implementations at the   time of this writing support this algorithm, and it is commonly used   because it is the fundamental interoperable algorithm.  At some   future time, it is expected that another algorithm, one with better   strength, will become so prevalent and ubiquitous that the use of   "3des-cbc" will be deprecated by another STANDARDS ACTION.   The "blowfish-cbc" cipher is Blowfish in CBC mode, with 128-bit keys   [SCHNEIER].  This is a block cipher with 8-byte blocks.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The "twofish-cbc" or "twofish256-cbc" cipher is Twofish in CBC mode,   with 256-bit keys as described [TWOFISH].  This is a block cipher   with 16-byte blocks.   The "twofish192-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 192-bit   key.   The "twofish128-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 128-bit   key.   The "aes256-cbc" cipher is AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)   [FIPS-197], in CBC mode.  This version uses a 256-bit key.   The "aes192-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 192-bit key.   The "aes128-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 128-bit key.   The "serpent256-cbc" cipher in CBC mode, with a 256-bit key as   described in the Serpent AES submission.   The "serpent192-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 192-bit   key.   The "serpent128-cbc" cipher is the same as above, but with a 128-bit   key.   The "arcfour" cipher is the Arcfour stream cipher with 128-bit keys.   The Arcfour cipher is believed to be compatible with the RC4 cipher   [SCHNEIER].  Arcfour (and RC4) has problems with weak keys, and   should be used with caution.   The "idea-cbc" cipher is the IDEA cipher in CBC mode [SCHNEIER].   The "cast128-cbc" cipher is the CAST-128 cipher in CBC mode with a   128-bit key [RFC2144].   The "none" algorithm specifies that no encryption is to be done.   Note that this method provides no confidentiality protection, and it   is NOT RECOMMENDED.  Some functionality (e.g., password   authentication) may be disabled for security reasons if this cipher   is chosen.   Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-ARCH] and in   [SSH-NUMBERS].Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 20066.4.  Data Integrity   Data integrity is protected by including with each packet a MAC that   is computed from a shared secret, packet sequence number, and the   contents of the packet.   The message authentication algorithm and key are negotiated during   key exchange.  Initially, no MAC will be in effect, and its length   MUST be zero.  After key exchange, the 'mac' for the selected MAC   algorithm will be computed before encryption from the concatenation   of packet data:      mac = MAC(key, sequence_number || unencrypted_packet)   where unencrypted_packet is the entire packet without 'mac' (the   length fields, 'payload' and 'random padding'), and sequence_number   is an implicit packet sequence number represented as uint32.  The   sequence_number is initialized to zero for the first packet, and is   incremented after every packet (regardless of whether encryption or   MAC is in use).  It is never reset, even if keys/algorithms are   renegotiated later.  It wraps around to zero after every 2^32   packets.  The packet sequence_number itself is not included in the   packet sent over the wire.   The MAC algorithms for each direction MUST run independently, and   implementations MUST allow choosing the algorithm independently for   both directions.  In practice however, it is RECOMMENDED that the   same algorithm be used in both directions.   The value of 'mac' resulting from the MAC algorithm MUST be   transmitted without encryption as the last part of the packet.  The   number of 'mac' bytes depends on the algorithm chosen.   The following MAC algorithms are currently defined:      hmac-sha1    REQUIRED        HMAC-SHA1 (digest length = key                                   length = 20)      hmac-sha1-96 RECOMMENDED     first 96 bits of HMAC-SHA1 (digest                                   length = 12, key length = 20)      hmac-md5     OPTIONAL        HMAC-MD5 (digest length = key                                   length = 16)      hmac-md5-96  OPTIONAL        first 96 bits of HMAC-MD5 (digest                                   length = 12, key length = 16)      none         OPTIONAL        no MAC; NOT RECOMMENDED   The "hmac-*" algorithms are described in [RFC2104].  The "*-n" MACs   use only the first n bits of the resulting value.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   SHA-1 is described in [FIPS-180-2] and MD5 is described in [RFC1321].   Additional methods may be defined, as specified in [SSH-ARCH] and in   [SSH-NUMBERS].6.5.  Key Exchange Methods   The key exchange method specifies how one-time session keys are   generated for encryption and for authentication, and how the server   authentication is done.   Two REQUIRED key exchange methods have been defined:      diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 REQUIRED      diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 REQUIRED   These methods are described inSection 8.   Additional methods may be defined as specified in [SSH-NUMBERS].  The   name "diffie-hellman-group1-sha1" is used for a key exchange method   using an Oakley group, as defined in [RFC2409].  SSH maintains its   own group identifier space that is logically distinct from Oakley   [RFC2412] and IKE; however, for one additional group, the Working   Group adopted the number assigned by [RFC3526], using diffie-   hellman-group14-sha1 for the name of the second defined group.   Implementations should treat these names as opaque identifiers and   should not assume any relationship between the groups used by SSH and   the groups defined for IKE.6.6.  Public Key Algorithms   This protocol has been designed to operate with almost any public key   format, encoding, and algorithm (signature and/or encryption).   There are several aspects that define a public key type:   o  Key format: how is the key encoded and how are certificates      represented.  The key blobs in this protocol MAY contain      certificates in addition to keys.   o  Signature and/or encryption algorithms.  Some key types may not      support both signing and encryption.  Key usage may also be      restricted by policy statements (e.g., in certificates).  In this      case, different key types SHOULD be defined for the different      policy alternatives.   o  Encoding of signatures and/or encrypted data.  This includes but      is not limited to padding, byte order, and data formats.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The following public key and/or certificate formats are currently   defined:   ssh-dss           REQUIRED     sign   Raw DSS Key   ssh-rsa           RECOMMENDED  sign   Raw RSA Key   pgp-sign-rsa      OPTIONAL     sign   OpenPGP certificates (RSA key)   pgp-sign-dss      OPTIONAL     sign   OpenPGP certificates (DSS key)   Additional key types may be defined, as specified in [SSH-ARCH] and   in [SSH-NUMBERS].   The key type MUST always be explicitly known (from algorithm   negotiation or some other source).  It is not normally included in   the key blob.   Certificates and public keys are encoded as follows:      string    certificate or public key format identifier      byte[n]   key/certificate data   The certificate part may be a zero length string, but a public key is   required.  This is the public key that will be used for   authentication.  The certificate sequence contained in the   certificate blob can be used to provide authorization.   Public key/certificate formats that do not explicitly specify a   signature format identifier MUST use the public key/certificate   format identifier as the signature identifier.   Signatures are encoded as follows:      string    signature format identifier (as specified by the                public key/certificate format)      byte[n]   signature blob in format specific encoding.   The "ssh-dss" key format has the following specific encoding:      string    "ssh-dss"      mpint     p      mpint     q      mpint     g      mpint     y   Here, the 'p', 'q', 'g', and 'y' parameters form the signature key   blob.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   Signing and verifying using this key format is done according to the   Digital Signature Standard [FIPS-186-2] using the SHA-1 hash   [FIPS-180-2].   The resulting signature is encoded as follows:      string    "ssh-dss"      string    dss_signature_blob   The value for 'dss_signature_blob' is encoded as a string containing   r, followed by s (which are 160-bit integers, without lengths or   padding, unsigned, and in network byte order).   The "ssh-rsa" key format has the following specific encoding:      string    "ssh-rsa"      mpint     e      mpint     n   Here the 'e' and 'n' parameters form the signature key blob.   Signing and verifying using this key format is performed according to   the RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 scheme in [RFC3447] using the SHA-1 hash.   The resulting signature is encoded as follows:      string    "ssh-rsa"      string    rsa_signature_blob   The value for 'rsa_signature_blob' is encoded as a string containing   s (which is an integer, without lengths or padding, unsigned, and in   network byte order).   The "pgp-sign-rsa" method indicates the certificates, the public key,   and the signature are in OpenPGP compatible binary format   ([RFC2440]).  This method indicates that the key is an RSA-key.   The "pgp-sign-dss" is as above, but indicates that the key is a   DSS-key.7.  Key Exchange   Key exchange (kex) begins by each side sending name-lists of   supported algorithms.  Each side has a preferred algorithm in each   category, and it is assumed that most implementations, at any given   time, will use the same preferred algorithm.  Each side MAY guessYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   which algorithm the other side is using, and MAY send an initial key   exchange packet according to the algorithm, if appropriate for the   preferred method.   The guess is considered wrong if:   o  the kex algorithm and/or the host key algorithm is guessed wrong      (server and client have different preferred algorithm), or   o  if any of the other algorithms cannot be agreed upon (the      procedure is defined below inSection 7.1).   Otherwise, the guess is considered to be right, and the   optimistically sent packet MUST be handled as the first key exchange   packet.   However, if the guess was wrong, and a packet was optimistically sent   by one or both parties, such packets MUST be ignored (even if the   error in the guess would not affect the contents of the initial   packet(s)), and the appropriate side MUST send the correct initial   packet.   A key exchange method uses explicit server authentication if the key   exchange messages include a signature or other proof of the server's   authenticity.  A key exchange method uses implicit server   authentication if, in order to prove its authenticity, the server   also has to prove that it knows the shared secret, K, by sending a   message and a corresponding MAC that the client can verify.   The key exchange method defined by this document uses explicit server   authentication.  However, key exchange methods with implicit server   authentication MAY be used with this protocol.  After a key exchange   with implicit server authentication, the client MUST wait for a   response to its service request message before sending any further   data.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 20067.1.  Algorithm Negotiation   Key exchange begins by each side sending the following packet:      byte         SSH_MSG_KEXINIT      byte[16]     cookie (random bytes)      name-list    kex_algorithms      name-list    server_host_key_algorithms      name-list    encryption_algorithms_client_to_server      name-list    encryption_algorithms_server_to_client      name-list    mac_algorithms_client_to_server      name-list    mac_algorithms_server_to_client      name-list    compression_algorithms_client_to_server      name-list    compression_algorithms_server_to_client      name-list    languages_client_to_server      name-list    languages_server_to_client      boolean      first_kex_packet_follows      uint32       0 (reserved for future extension)   Each of the algorithm name-lists MUST be a comma-separated list of   algorithm names (see Algorithm Naming in [SSH-ARCH] and additional   information in [SSH-NUMBERS]).  Each supported (allowed) algorithm   MUST be listed in order of preference, from most to least.   The first algorithm in each name-list MUST be the preferred (guessed)   algorithm.  Each name-list MUST contain at least one algorithm name.      cookie         The 'cookie' MUST be a random value generated by the sender.         Its purpose is to make it impossible for either side to fully         determine the keys and the session identifier.      kex_algorithms         Key exchange algorithms were defined above.  The first         algorithm MUST be the preferred (and guessed) algorithm.  If         both sides make the same guess, that algorithm MUST be used.         Otherwise, the following algorithm MUST be used to choose a key         exchange method: Iterate over client's kex algorithms, one at a         time.  Choose the first algorithm that satisfies the following         conditions:         +  the server also supports the algorithm,         +  if the algorithm requires an encryption-capable host key,            there is an encryption-capable algorithm on the server's            server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the            client, andYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006         +  if the algorithm requires a signature-capable host key,            there is a signature-capable algorithm on the server's            server_host_key_algorithms that is also supported by the            client.      If no algorithm satisfying all these conditions can be found, the      connection fails, and both sides MUST disconnect.      server_host_key_algorithms         A name-list of the algorithms supported for the server host         key.  The server lists the algorithms for which it has host         keys; the client lists the algorithms that it is willing to         accept.  There MAY be multiple host keys for a host, possibly         with different algorithms.         Some host keys may not support both signatures and encryption         (this can be determined from the algorithm), and thus not all         host keys are valid for all key exchange methods.         Algorithm selection depends on whether the chosen key exchange         algorithm requires a signature or an encryption-capable host         key.  It MUST be possible to determine this from the public key         algorithm name.  The first algorithm on the client's name-list         that satisfies the requirements and is also supported by the         server MUST be chosen.  If there is no such algorithm, both         sides MUST disconnect.      encryption_algorithms         A name-list of acceptable symmetric encryption algorithms (also         known as ciphers) in order of preference.  The chosen         encryption algorithm to each direction MUST be the first         algorithm on the client's name-list that is also on the         server's name-list.  If there is no such algorithm, both sides         MUST disconnect.         Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be         acceptable.  The defined algorithm names are listed inSection6.3.      mac_algorithms         A name-list of acceptable MAC algorithms in order of         preference.  The chosen MAC algorithm MUST be the first         algorithm on the client's name-list that is also on the         server's name-list.  If there is no such algorithm, both sides         MUST disconnect.         Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be         acceptable.  The MAC algorithm names are listed inSection 6.4.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006      compression_algorithms         A name-list of acceptable compression algorithms in order of         preference.  The chosen compression algorithm MUST be the first         algorithm on the client's name-list that is also on the         server's name-list.  If there is no such algorithm, both sides         MUST disconnect.         Note that "none" must be explicitly listed if it is to be         acceptable.  The compression algorithm names are listed inSection 6.2.      languages         This is a name-list of language tags in order of preference         [RFC3066].  Both parties MAY ignore this name-list.  If there         are no language preferences, this name-list SHOULD be empty as         defined in Section 5 of [SSH-ARCH].  Language tags SHOULD NOT         be present unless they are known to be needed by the sending         party.      first_kex_packet_follows         Indicates whether a guessed key exchange packet follows.  If a         guessed packet will be sent, this MUST be TRUE.  If no guessed         packet will be sent, this MUST be FALSE.         After receiving the SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet from the other side,         each party will know whether their guess was right.  If the         other party's guess was wrong, and this field was TRUE, the         next packet MUST be silently ignored, and both sides MUST then         act as determined by the negotiated key exchange method.  If         the guess was right, key exchange MUST continue using the         guessed packet.   After the SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message exchange, the key exchange   algorithm is run.  It may involve several packet exchanges, as   specified by the key exchange method.   Once a party has sent a SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message for key exchange or   re-exchange, until it has sent a SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS message (Section7.3), it MUST NOT send any messages other than:   o  Transport layer generic messages (1 to 19) (but      SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST and SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT MUST NOT be      sent);   o  Algorithm negotiation messages (20 to 29) (but further      SSH_MSG_KEXINIT messages MUST NOT be sent);   o  Specific key exchange method messages (30 to 49).Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The provisions ofSection 11 apply to unrecognized messages.   Note, however, that during a key re-exchange, after sending a   SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message, each party MUST be prepared to process an   arbitrary number of messages that may be in-flight before receiving a   SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message from the other party.7.2.  Output from Key Exchange   The key exchange produces two values: a shared secret K, and an   exchange hash H.  Encryption and authentication keys are derived from   these.  The exchange hash H from the first key exchange is   additionally used as the session identifier, which is a unique   identifier for this connection.  It is used by authentication methods   as a part of the data that is signed as a proof of possession of a   private key.  Once computed, the session identifier is not changed,   even if keys are later re-exchanged.   Each key exchange method specifies a hash function that is used in   the key exchange.  The same hash algorithm MUST be used in key   derivation.  Here, we'll call it HASH.   Encryption keys MUST be computed as HASH, of a known value and K, as   follows:   o  Initial IV client to server: HASH(K || H || "A" || session_id)      (Here K is encoded as mpint and "A" as byte and session_id as raw      data.  "A" means the single character A, ASCII 65).   o  Initial IV server to client: HASH(K || H || "B" || session_id)   o  Encryption key client to server: HASH(K || H || "C" || session_id)   o  Encryption key server to client: HASH(K || H || "D" || session_id)   o  Integrity key client to server: HASH(K || H || "E" || session_id)   o  Integrity key server to client: HASH(K || H || "F" || session_id)   Key data MUST be taken from the beginning of the hash output.  As   many bytes as needed are taken from the beginning of the hash value.   If the key length needed is longer than the output of the HASH, the   key is extended by computing HASH of the concatenation of K and H and   the entire key so far, and appending the resulting bytes (as many as   HASH generates) to the key.  This process is repeated until enough   key material is available; the key is taken from the beginning of   this value.  In other words:Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006      K1 = HASH(K || H || X || session_id)   (X is e.g., "A")      K2 = HASH(K || H || K1)      K3 = HASH(K || H || K1 || K2)      ...      key = K1 || K2 || K3 || ...   This process will lose entropy if the amount of entropy in K is   larger than the internal state size of HASH.7.3.  Taking Keys Into Use   Key exchange ends by each side sending an SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS message.   This message is sent with the old keys and algorithms.  All messages   sent after this message MUST use the new keys and algorithms.   When this message is received, the new keys and algorithms MUST be   used for receiving.   The purpose of this message is to ensure that a party is able to   respond with an SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT message that the other party can   understand if something goes wrong with the key exchange.      byte      SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS8.  Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange   The Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange provides a shared secret that   cannot be determined by either party alone.  The key exchange is   combined with a signature with the host key to provide host   authentication.  This key exchange method provides explicit server   authentication as defined inSection 7.   The following steps are used to exchange a key.  In this, C is the   client; S is the server; p is a large safe prime; g is a generator   for a subgroup of GF(p); q is the order of the subgroup; V_S is S's   identification string; V_C is C's identification string; K_S is S's   public host key; I_C is C's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message and I_S is S's   SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message that have been exchanged before this part   begins.   1. C generates a random number x (1 < x < q) and computes      e = g^x mod p.  C sends e to S.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   2. S generates a random number y (0 < y < q) and computes      f = g^y mod p.  S receives e.  It computes K = e^y mod p,      H = hash(V_C || V_S || I_C || I_S || K_S || e || f || K)      (these elements are encoded according to their types; see below),      and signature s on H with its private host key.  S sends      (K_S || f || s) to C.  The signing operation may involve a      second hashing operation.   3. C verifies that K_S really is the host key for S (e.g., using      certificates or a local database).  C is also allowed to accept      the key without verification; however, doing so will render the      protocol insecure against active attacks (but may be desirable for      practical reasons in the short term in many environments).  C then      computes K = f^x mod p, H = hash(V_C || V_S || I_C || I_S || K_S      || e || f || K), and verifies the signature s on H.   Values of 'e' or 'f' that are not in the range [1, p-1] MUST NOT be   sent or accepted by either side.  If this condition is violated, the   key exchange fails.   This is implemented with the following messages.  The hash algorithm   for computing the exchange hash is defined by the method name, and is   called HASH.  The public key algorithm for signing is negotiated with   the SSH_MSG_KEXINIT messages.   First, the client sends the following:      byte      SSH_MSG_KEXDH_INIT      mpint     e   The server then responds with the following:      byte      SSH_MSG_KEXDH_REPLY      string    server public host key and certificates (K_S)      mpint     f      string    signature of HYlonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   The hash H is computed as the HASH hash of the concatenation of the   following:      string    V_C, the client's identification string (CR and LF                excluded)      string    V_S, the server's identification string (CR and LF                excluded)      string    I_C, the payload of the client's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT      string    I_S, the payload of the server's SSH_MSG_KEXINIT      string    K_S, the host key      mpint     e, exchange value sent by the client      mpint     f, exchange value sent by the server      mpint     K, the shared secret   This value is called the exchange hash, and it is used to   authenticate the key exchange.  The exchange hash SHOULD be kept   secret.   The signature algorithm MUST be applied over H, not the original   data.  Most signature algorithms include hashing and additional   padding (e.g., "ssh-dss" specifies SHA-1 hashing).  In that case, the   data is first hashed with HASH to compute H, and H is then hashed   with SHA-1 as part of the signing operation.8.1.  diffie-hellman-group1-sha1   The "diffie-hellman-group1-sha1" method specifies the Diffie-Hellman   key exchange with SHA-1 as HASH, and Oakley Group 2 [RFC2409] (1024-   bit MODP Group).  This method MUST be supported for interoperability   as all of the known implementations currently support it.  Note that   this method is named using the phrase "group1", even though it   specifies the use of Oakley Group 2.8.2.  diffie-hellman-group14-sha1   The "diffie-hellman-group14-sha1" method specifies a Diffie-Hellman   key exchange with SHA-1 as HASH and Oakley Group 14 [RFC3526] (2048-   bit MODP Group), and it MUST also be supported.9.  Key Re-Exchange   Key re-exchange is started by sending an SSH_MSG_KEXINIT packet when   not already doing a key exchange (as described inSection 7.1).  When   this message is received, a party MUST respond with its own   SSH_MSG_KEXINIT message, except when the received SSH_MSG_KEXINIT   already was a reply.  Either party MAY initiate the re-exchange, but   roles MUST NOT be changed (i.e., the server remains the server, and   the client remains the client).Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   Key re-exchange is performed using whatever encryption was in effect   when the exchange was started.  Encryption, compression, and MAC   methods are not changed before a new SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS is sent after   the key exchange (as in the initial key exchange).  Re-exchange is   processed identically to the initial key exchange, except for the   session identifier that will remain unchanged.  It is permissible to   change some or all of the algorithms during the re-exchange.  Host   keys can also change.  All keys and initialization vectors are   recomputed after the exchange.  Compression and encryption contexts   are reset.   It is RECOMMENDED that the keys be changed after each gigabyte of   transmitted data or after each hour of connection time, whichever   comes sooner.  However, since the re-exchange is a public key   operation, it requires a fair amount of processing power and should   not be performed too often.   More application data may be sent after the SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS packet   has been sent; key exchange does not affect the protocols that lie   above the SSH transport layer.10.  Service Request   After the key exchange, the client requests a service.  The service   is identified by a name.  The format of names and procedures for   defining new names are defined in [SSH-ARCH] and [SSH-NUMBERS].   Currently, the following names have been reserved:      ssh-userauth      ssh-connection   Similar local naming policy is applied to the service names, as is   applied to the algorithm names.  A local service should use the   PRIVATE USE syntax of "servicename@domain".      byte      SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST      string    service name   If the server rejects the service request, it SHOULD send an   appropriate SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT message and MUST disconnect.   When the service starts, it may have access to the session identifier   generated during the key exchange.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   If the server supports the service (and permits the client to use   it), it MUST respond with the following:      byte      SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT      string    service name   Message numbers used by services should be in the area reserved for   them (see [SSH-ARCH] and [SSH-NUMBERS]).  The transport level will   continue to process its own messages.   Note that after a key exchange with implicit server authentication,   the client MUST wait for a response to its service request message   before sending any further data.11.  Additional Messages   Either party may send any of the following messages at any time.11.1.  Disconnection Message      byte      SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT      uint32    reason code      string    description in ISO-10646 UTF-8 encoding [RFC3629]      string    language tag [RFC3066]   This message causes immediate termination of the connection.  All   implementations MUST be able to process this message; they SHOULD be   able to send this message.   The sender MUST NOT send or receive any data after this message, and   the recipient MUST NOT accept any data after receiving this message.   The Disconnection Message 'description' string gives a more specific   explanation in a human-readable form.  The Disconnection Message   'reason code' gives the reason in a more machine-readable format   (suitable for localization), and can have the values as displayed in   the table below.  Note that the decimal representation is displayed   in this table for readability, but the values are actually uint32   values.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006           Symbolic name                                reason code           -------------                                -----------      SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_NOT_ALLOWED_TO_CONNECT             1      SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_ERROR                          2      SSH_DISCONNECT_KEY_EXCHANGE_FAILED                     3      SSH_DISCONNECT_RESERVED                                4      SSH_DISCONNECT_MAC_ERROR                               5      SSH_DISCONNECT_COMPRESSION_ERROR                       6      SSH_DISCONNECT_SERVICE_NOT_AVAILABLE                   7      SSH_DISCONNECT_PROTOCOL_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED          8      SSH_DISCONNECT_HOST_KEY_NOT_VERIFIABLE                 9      SSH_DISCONNECT_CONNECTION_LOST                        10      SSH_DISCONNECT_BY_APPLICATION                         11      SSH_DISCONNECT_TOO_MANY_CONNECTIONS                   12      SSH_DISCONNECT_AUTH_CANCELLED_BY_USER                 13      SSH_DISCONNECT_NO_MORE_AUTH_METHODS_AVAILABLE         14      SSH_DISCONNECT_ILLEGAL_USER_NAME                      15   If the 'description' string is displayed, the control character   filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by   sending terminal control characters.   Requests for assignments of new Disconnection Message 'reason code'   values (and associated 'description' text) in the range of 0x00000010   to 0xFDFFFFFF MUST be done through the IETF CONSENSUS method, as   described in [RFC2434].  The Disconnection Message 'reason code'   values in the range of 0xFE000000 through 0xFFFFFFFF are reserved for   PRIVATE USE.  As noted, the actual instructions to the IANA are in   [SSH-NUMBERS].11.2.  Ignored Data Message      byte      SSH_MSG_IGNORE      string    data   All implementations MUST understand (and ignore) this message at any   time (after receiving the identification string).  No implementation   is required to send them.  This message can be used as an additional   protection measure against advanced traffic analysis techniques.11.3.  Debug Message      byte      SSH_MSG_DEBUG      boolean   always_display      string    message in ISO-10646 UTF-8 encoding [RFC3629]      string    language tag [RFC3066]Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   All implementations MUST understand this message, but they are   allowed to ignore it.  This message is used to transmit information   that may help debugging.  If 'always_display' is TRUE, the message   SHOULD be displayed.  Otherwise, it SHOULD NOT be displayed unless   debugging information has been explicitly requested by the user.   The 'message' doesn't need to contain a newline.  It is, however,   allowed to consist of multiple lines separated by CRLF (Carriage   Return - Line Feed) pairs.   If the 'message' string is displayed, the terminal control character   filtering discussed in [SSH-ARCH] should be used to avoid attacks by   sending terminal control characters.11.4.  Reserved Messages   An implementation MUST respond to all unrecognized messages with an   SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED message in the order in which the messages were   received.  Such messages MUST be otherwise ignored.  Later protocol   versions may define other meanings for these message types.      byte      SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED      uint32    packet sequence number of rejected message12.  Summary of Message Numbers   The following is a summary of messages and their associated message   number.         SSH_MSG_DISCONNECT             1         SSH_MSG_IGNORE                 2         SSH_MSG_UNIMPLEMENTED          3         SSH_MSG_DEBUG                  4         SSH_MSG_SERVICE_REQUEST        5         SSH_MSG_SERVICE_ACCEPT         6         SSH_MSG_KEXINIT                20         SSH_MSG_NEWKEYS                21   Note that numbers 30-49 are used for kex packets.  Different kex   methods may reuse message numbers in this range.13.  IANA Considerations   This document is part of a set.  The IANA considerations for the SSH   protocol as defined in [SSH-ARCH], [SSH-USERAUTH], [SSH-CONNECT], and   this document, are detailed in [SSH-NUMBERS].Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 200614.  Security Considerations   This protocol provides a secure encrypted channel over an insecure   network.  It performs server host authentication, key exchange,   encryption, and integrity protection.  It also derives a unique   session ID that may be used by higher-level protocols.   Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in   [SSH-ARCH].Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 200615.  References15.1.  Normative References   [SSH-ARCH]     Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell                  (SSH) Protocol Architecture",RFC 4251, January 2006.   [SSH-USERAUTH] Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell                  (SSH) Authentication Protocol",RFC 4252, January                  2006.   [SSH-CONNECT]  Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell                  (SSH) Connection Protocol",RFC 4254, January 2006.   [SSH-NUMBERS]  Lehtinen, S. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell                  (SSH) Protocol Assigned Numbers",RFC 4250, January                  2006.   [RFC1321]      Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm ",RFC1321, April 1992.   [RFC1950]      Deutsch, P. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data                  Format Specification version 3.3",RFC 1950, May 1996.   [RFC1951]      Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format                  Specification version 1.3",RFC 1951, May 1996.   [RFC2104]      Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC:                  Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication",RFC 2104,                  February 1997.   [RFC2119]      Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                  Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2144]      Adams, C., "The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm",RFC2144, May 1997.   [RFC2409]      Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange                  (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [RFC2434]      Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing                  an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC2434, October 1998.   [RFC2440]      Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., and R.                  Thayer, "OpenPGP Message Format",RFC 2440, November                  1998.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   [RFC3066]      Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of                  Languages",BCP 47,RFC 3066, January 2001.   [RFC3447]      Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography                  Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications                  Version 2.1",RFC 3447, February 2003.   [RFC3526]      Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo, "More Modular Exponential                  (MODP) Diffie-Hellman groups for Internet Key Exchange                  (IKE)",RFC 3526, May 2003.   [RFC3629]      Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO                  10646", STD 63,RFC 3629, November 2003.   [FIPS-180-2]   US National Institute of Standards and Technology,                  "Secure Hash Standard (SHS)", Federal Information                  Processing Standards Publication 180-2, August 2002.   [FIPS-186-2]   US National Institute of Standards and Technology,                  "Digital Signature Standard (DSS)", Federal                  Information Processing Standards Publication 186-2,                  January 2000.   [FIPS-197]     US National Institute of Standards and Technology,                  "Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)", Federal                  Information Processing Standards Publication 197,                  November 2001.   [FIPS-46-3]    US National Institute of Standards and Technology,                  "Data Encryption Standard (DES)", Federal Information                  Processing Standards Publication 46-3, October 1999.   [SCHNEIER]     Schneier, B., "Applied Cryptography Second Edition:                  protocols algorithms and source in code in C", John                  Wiley and Sons, New York, NY, 1996.   [TWOFISH]      Schneier, B., "The Twofish Encryptions Algorithm: A                  128-Bit Block Cipher, 1st Edition", March 1999.15.2.  Informative References   [RFC0894]      Hornig, C., "Standard for the transmission of IP                  datagrams over Ethernet networks", STD 41,RFC 894,                  April 1984.   [RFC1661]      Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD                  51,RFC 1661, July 1994.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006   [RFC2412]      Orman, H., "The OAKLEY Key Determination Protocol",RFC 2412, November 1998.   [ssh-1.2.30]   Ylonen, T., "ssh-1.2.30/RFC", File within compressed                  tarballftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/unix/security/login/ssh/ssh-1.2.30.tar.gz, November 1995.Authors' Addresses   Tatu Ylonen   SSH Communications Security Corp   Valimotie 17   00380 Helsinki   Finland   EMail: ylo@ssh.com   Chris Lonvick (editor)   Cisco Systems, Inc.   12515 Research Blvd.   Austin  78759   USA   EMail: clonvick@cisco.comTrademark Notice   "ssh" is a registered trademark in the United States and/or other   countries.Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4253              SSH Transport Layer Protocol          January 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM 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.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights 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; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat 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 implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Ylonen &  Lonvick           Standards Track                    [Page 32]
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RFC 4253
RFC - Proposed Standard

DocumentDocument typeRFC - Proposed Standard
January 2006
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AuthorsChris M. Lonvick,Tatu Ylonen
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