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INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                          E. BoschiRequest for Comments: 5153                                Hitachi EuropeCategory: Informational                                          L. Mark                                                        Fraunhofer FOKUS                                                              J. Quittek                                                          M. Stiemerling                                                                     NEC                                                               P. Aitken                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                              April 2008IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX) Implementation GuidelinesStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Abstract   The IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX) protocol defines how IP Flow   information can be exported from routers, measurement probes, or   other devices.  This document provides guidelines for the   implementation and use of the IPFIX protocol.  Several sets of   guidelines address Template management, transport-specific issues,   implementation of Exporting and Collecting Processes, and IPFIX   implementation on middleboxes (such as firewalls, network address   translators, tunnel endpoints, packet classifiers, etc.).Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1.  IPFIX Documents Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2.  Overview of the IPFIX Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  Template Management Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.1.  Template Management  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.2.  Template Records versus Options Template Records . . . . .53.3.  Using Scopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.4.  Multiple Information Elements of the Same Type . . . . . .63.5.  Selecting Message Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.  Exporting Process Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.  Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.2.  Information Element Coding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.3.  Using Counters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84.4.  Padding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008       4.4.1.  Alignment of Information Elements within a Data               Record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9       4.4.2.  Alignment of Information Element Specifiers within               a Template Record  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.4.3.  Alignment of Records within a Set  . . . . . . . . . .94.4.4.  Alignment of Sets within an IPFIX Message  . . . . . .94.5.  Time Issues  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.6.  IPFIX Message Header Export Time and Data Record Time  . .104.7.  Devices without an Absolute Clock  . . . . . . . . . . . .115.  Collecting Process Guidelines  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.1.  Information Element (De)Coding . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.2.  Reduced-Size Encoding of Information Elements  . . . . . .125.3.  Template Management  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.  Transport-Specific Guidelines  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.1.  SCTP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.2.  UDP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.3.  TCP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187.  Guidelines for Implementation on Middleboxes . . . . . . . . .187.1.  Traffic Flow Scenarios at Middleboxes  . . . . . . . . . .207.2.  Location of the Observation Point  . . . . . . . . . . . .217.3.  Reporting Flow-Related Middlebox Internals . . . . . . . .227.3.1.  Packet Dropping Middleboxes  . . . . . . . . . . . . .237.3.2.  Middleboxes Changing the DSCP  . . . . . . . . . . . .237.3.3.  Middleboxes Changing IP Addresses and Port Numbers . .248.  Security Guidelines  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .258.1.  Introduction to TLS and DTLS for IPFIX Implementers  . . .25     8.2.  X.509-Based Identity Verification for IPFIX over TLS           or DTLS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .258.3.  Implementing IPFIX over TLS over TCP . . . . . . . . . . .268.4.  Implementing IPFIX over DTLS over UDP  . . . . . . . . . .268.5.  Implementing IPFIX over DTLS over SCTP . . . . . . . . . .279.  Extending the Information Model  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .279.1.  Adding New IETF-Specified Information Elements . . . . . .279.2.  Adding Enterprise-Specific Information Elements  . . . . .2810. Common Implementation Mistakes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2810.1. IPFIX and NetFlow Version 9  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2810.2. Padding of the Data Set  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2910.3. Field ID Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3010.4. Template ID Numbers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3011. Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3012. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3113. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3113.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3113.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20081.  Introduction   The IPFIX protocol [RFC5101] defines how IP Flow information can be   exported from routers, measurement probes, or other devices.  In this   document, we provide guidelines for its implementation.   The guidelines are split into seven main sets.  These sets address   implementation aspects for Template management, Exporting Process,   Collecting Process, transport, implementation on middleboxes,   security, and extending the information model.   Finally, this document contains a list of common mistakes related to   issues that had been misinterpreted in the first IPFIX   implementations and that created (and still might create)   interoperability problems.1.1.  IPFIX Documents Overview   The IPFIX protocol [RFC5101] provides network administrators with   access to IP Flow information.  The architecture for the export of   measured IP Flow information out of an IPFIX Exporting Process to a   Collecting Process is defined in the IPFIX architecture [IPFIX-ARCH],   per the requirements defined in [RFC3917].   The IPFIX architecture [IPFIX-ARCH] specifies how IPFIX Data Records   and Templates are carried via a congestion-aware transport protocol   from IPFIX Exporting Processes to IPFIX Collecting Processes.   IPFIX has a formal description of IPFIX Information Elements, their   name, type, and additional semantic information, as specified in the   IPFIX information model [RFC5102].   Finally, the IPFIX applicability statement [IPFIX-AS] describes what   type of applications can use the IPFIX protocol and how they can use   the information provided.  It furthermore shows how the IPFIX   framework relates to other architectures and frameworks.1.2.  Overview of the IPFIX Protocol   In the IPFIX protocol, { type, length, value } tuples are expressed   in Templates containing { type, length } pairs, specifying which   { value } fields are present in Data Records conforming to the   Template, giving great flexibility as to what data is transmitted.   Since Templates are sent very infrequently compared with Data   Records, this results in significant bandwidth savings.Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   Different Data Records may be transmitted simply by sending new   Templates specifying the { type, length } pairs for the new data   format.  See [RFC5101] for more information.   The IPFIX information model [RFC5102] defines a large number of   standard Information Elements that provide the necessary   { type } information for Templates.   The use of standard elements enables interoperability among different   vendors' implementations.  The list of standard elements may be   extended in the future through the process defined inSection 9,   below.  Additionally, non-standard enterprise-specific elements may   be defined for private use.2.  Terminology   The terminology used in this document is fully aligned with the   terminology defined in [RFC5101].  Therefore, the terms defined in   the IPFIX terminology are capitalized in this document, as in other   IPFIX documents ([RFC5101], [RFC5102], [IPFIX-ARCH]).   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].   This document is Informational.  It does not specify a protocol and   does not useRFC 2119 key words [RFC2119] such as "MUST" and   "SHOULD", except in quotations and restatements from the IPFIX   standards documents.  The normative specification of the protocol is   given in the IPFIX protocol [RFC5101] and information model [RFC5102]   documents.3.  Template Management Guidelines3.1.  Template Management   The Exporting Process should always endeavor to send Template Records   before the related Data Records.  However, since the Template Record   may not arrive before the corresponding Data Records, the Collecting   Process MAY store Data Records with an unknown Template ID pending   the arrival of the corresponding Template (seeSection 9 of   [RFC5101]).  If no Template becomes available, we recommend logging   the event and discarding the corresponding Data Records, and for SCTP   and TCP we recommend resetting the Transport Session.  The amount of   time the Collecting Process waits for a Template before resetting   should be configurable.  We recommend a default of 30 minutes.  NoteBoschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   that when using UDP as the transport protocol, this delay should be   bound, when possible, by the Template Retransmit and the Template   Expiry times (seeSection 6.2).   The Exporting Process must be able to resend active Templates.   Templates must be resent in the case of a Stream Control Transport   Protocol (SCTP) association restart, a User Datagram Protocol (UDP)   template refresh, or a Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) connection   restart.   The Exporting Process is responsible for the management of Template   IDs.  Should an insufficient number of Template IDs be available, the   Exporting Process must send a Template Withdrawal Message in order to   free up the allocation of unused Template IDs.  Note that UDP doesn't   use the Template Withdrawal Message, and the Template lifetime on the   Collecting Process relies on timeout.3.2.  Template Records versus Options Template Records   The IPFIX protocol [RFC5101] defines and specifies the use of   Templates and Options Templates.  Templates define the layout of Data   Records, which represent Flow data.  Options Templates additionally   specify scope Information Elements, which can be used to define   scoped Data Records.  Scoped Data Records generally export control   plane data (such as metadata about processes in the IPFIX collection   architecture) or data otherwise applicable to multiple Flow Data   Records (such as common properties as in [IPFIX-REDUCING]).   Aside fromSection 4 of [RFC5101], which defines specific Options   Templates to use for reporting Metering Process and Exporting Process   statistics and configuration information, the choice to use Options   Templates is left up to the implementer.  Indeed, there is a trade-   off between bandwidth efficiency and complexity in the use of Options   Templates and scoped Data Records.   For example, control plane information about an Observation Point   could be exported with every Flow Record measured at that Observation   Point, or in a single Data Record described by an Options Template,   scoped to the Observation Point identifier.  In the former case,   simplicity of decoding the data is gained in exchange for redundant   export of the same data with every applicable Flow Record.  The   latter case is more bandwidth-efficient, but at the expense of   requiring the Collecting Process to maintain the relationship between   each applicable Flow Record and the Observation Point.   A generalized method of using Options Templates to increase bandwidth   efficiency is fully described in [IPFIX-REDUCING].Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20083.3.  Using Scopes   The root scope for all IPFIX Messages is the Observation Domain,   which appears in the Message Header.  In other words, all Data   Records within a message implicitly belong to the Observation Domain.   All Data Records described by Options Templates (and only those) must   be restricted to an additional scope within the Observation Domain,   as defined by the scope Information Elements in the Options Template   Record.   In IPFIX, any Information Element can be used for scope.  However,   Information Elements such as counters, timestamps, padding elements,   Flow properties like timeout, Flow end reason, duration, or Min/Max   Flow properties [RFC5102] may not be appropriate.   Note that it is sometimes necessary to export information about   entities that exist outside any Observation Domain, or within   multiple Observation Domains (e.g., information about Metering   Processes scoped to meteringProcessID).  Such information SHOULD be   exported in an IPFIX Message with Observation Domain ID 0 (see[RFC5101], Section 3.1).3.4.  Multiple Information Elements of the Same Type   The Exporting Process and Collecting Process MUST support the use of   multiple Information Elements of the same type in a single Template   [RFC5101].  This was first required by Packet Sampling (PSAMP)   [PSAMP-PROTO] for the export of multiple Selector IDs.  Note that the   IPFIX protocol recommends that Metering Processes SHOULD use packet   treatment order when exporting multiple Information Elements of the   same type in the same record ([RFC5101] Section 8).  This implies   that ordering is important, and changes to the order of multiple   identical Information Elements could cause information loss.   Therefore, we strongly recommend preservation of the order of   multiple Information Elements of the same type by Exporting and   Collecting Processes for correct processing and storage.3.5.  Selecting Message SizeSection 10.3.3 of the IPFIX protocol defines the maximum message size   for IPFIX Messages transported over UDP to be constrained by the path   MTU, or if the path MTU is not available, 512 bytes, which is the   minimum datagram size all IP implementations must support (see alsoSection 8.4).  However, no maximum message size is imposed on other   transport protocols, beyond the 65535-byte limit imposed by the 16-   bit Message Length field in the IPFIX Message Header specified inSection 3.1 of [RFC5101].Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   An IPFIX Exporting Process operating over SCTP or TCP may export   IPFIX Messages up to this 64-kB limit, and an IPFIX Collecting   Process must accept any IPFIX Message up to that size.4.  Exporting Process Guidelines4.1.  Sets   A Set is identified by a Set ID [RFC5101].  A Set ID has an integral   data type and its value is in the range of 0-65535.  The Set ID   values of 0 and 1 are not used for historical reasons [RFC3954].  A   value of 2 identifies a Template Set.  A value of 3 identifies an   Options Template Set.  Values from 4 to 255 are reserved for future   use.  Values above 255 are used for Data Sets.  In this case, the Set   ID corresponds to the Template ID of the used Template.   A Data Set received with an unknown Set ID may be stored pending the   arrival of the corresponding Template (seeSection 9 of [RFC5101]).   If no Template becomes available, we recommend logging the event and   discarding the corresponding Data Records, and for SCTP and TCP we   recommend resetting the Transport Session.  The amount of time the   Collecting Process waits for a Template before resetting should be   configurable.  We recommend a default of 30 minutes.  Note that when   using UDP as the transport protocol, this delay should be bound, when   possible, by the Template Retransmit and the Template Expiry times   (seeSection 6.2).   The arrival of a Set with a reserved Set ID should be logged, and the   Collector must ignore the Set.4.2.  Information Element Coding   [IPFIX-ARCH] does not specify which entities are responsible for the   encoding and decoding of Information Elements transferred via IPFIX.   An IPFIX device can do the encoding either within the Metering   Process or within the Exporting Process.  The decoding of the   Information Elements can be done by the Collecting Process or by the   data processing application.   If an IPFIX node simply relays IPFIX Records (like a proxy), then no   decoding or encoding of Information Elements is needed.  In this   case, the Exporting Process may export unknown Information Elements,   i.e., Information Elements with an unknown Information Element   identifier.Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20084.3.  Using Counters   IPFIX offers both Delta and Total counters (e.g., octetDeltaCount,   octetTotalCount).  If information about a Flow is only ever exported   once, then it's not important whether Delta or Total counters are   used.  However, if further information about additional packets in a   Flow is exported after the first export, then either:   o  the metering system must reset its counters to zero after the      first export and report the new counter values using Delta      counters, or   o  the metering system must carefully maintain its counters and      report the running total using Total counters.   At first, reporting the running total may seem to be the obvious   choice.  However, this requires that the system accurately maintains   information about the Flow over a long time without any loss or   error, because when reported to a Collecting Process, the previous   total values will be replaced with the new information.   Delta counters offer some advantages: information about Flows doesn't   have to be permanently maintained, and any loss of information has   only a small impact on the total stored at the Collecting Process.   Finally, Deltas may be exported in fewer bytes than Total counters   using the IPFIX "Reduced Size Encoding" scheme [RFC5101].   Note that Delta counters have an origin of zero and that a Collecting   Process receiving Delta counters for a Flow that is new to the   Collecting Process must assume the Deltas are from zero.4.4.  Padding   The IPFIX information model defines an Information Element for   padding called paddingOctets [RFC5102].  It is of type octetArray,   and the IPFIX protocol allows encoding it as a fixed-length array as   well as a variable-length array.   The padding Information Element can be used to align Information   Elements within Data Records, Records within Sets, and Sets within   IPFIX Messages, as described below.Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20084.4.1.  Alignment of Information Elements within a Data Record   The padding Information Element gives flexible means for aligning   Information Elements within a Data Record.  Aligning within a Data   Record can be useful, because internal data structures can be easily   converted into Flow Records at the Exporter and vice versa at the   Collecting Process.   Alignment of Information Elements within a Data Record is achieved by   inserting an instance of the paddingOctets Information Element with   appropriate length before each unaligned Information Element.  This   insertion is explicitly specified within the Template Record or   Options Template Record, respectively, that corresponds to the Data   Record.4.4.2.  Alignment of Information Element Specifiers within a Template        Record   There is no means for aligning Information Element specifiers within   Template Records.  However, there is limited need for such a method,   as Information Element specifiers are always 32-bit aligned, and 32-   bit alignment is generally sufficient.4.4.3.  Alignment of Records within a Set   There is no means for aligning Template Records within a Set.   However, there is limited need for such a method, as Information   Element specifiers are always 32-bit aligned, and 32-bit alignment is   generally sufficient.   Data Records can be aligned within a Set by appending instances of   the paddingOctets Information Element at the end of the Record.   Since all Data Records within a Set have the same structure and size,   aligning one Data Record implies aligning all the Data Records within   a single Set.4.4.4.  Alignment of Sets within an IPFIX Message   If Records are already aligned within a Set by using paddingOctets   Information Elements, then this alignment will already be achieved.   But for aligning Sets within an IPFIX Message, padding Information   Elements can be used at the end of the Set so that the subsequent Set   starts at an aligned boundary.  This padding mechanism is described   inSection 3.3.1 of [RFC5101] and can be applied even if the Records   within the Set are not aligned.  However, it should be noted that   this method is limited by the constraint that "the padding length   MUST be shorter than any allowable Record in the Set", to prevent the   padding from being misinterpreted as an additional Data Record.Boschi, et al.               Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20084.5.  Time Issues   IPFIX Messages contain the export time in the Message Header.  In   addition, there is a series of Information Elements defined to   transfer time values.  [RFC5102] defines four abstract data types to   transfer time values in second, millisecond, microsecond, and   nanosecond resolution.   The accuracy and precision of these values depend on the accuracy and   the precision of the Metering Process clock.  The accuracy and   precision of the Exporting Process clock, and the synchronization of   the Metering Process and Exporting Process clocks, are also important   when using the delta timestamp Information Elements.  To ensure   accuracy, the clocks should be synchronized to a UTC time source.   Normally, it would be sufficient to derive the time from a remote   time server using the Network Time Protocol (NTP) [RFC1305].  IPFIX   Devices operating with time values of microsecond or nanosecond   resolution need direct access to a time source, for example, to a GPS   (Global Positioning System) unit.   The most important consideration in selecting timestamp Information   Elements is to use a precision appropriate for the timestamps as   generated from the Metering Process.  Specifically, an IPFIX Device   should not export timestamp Information Elements of higher precision   than the timestamps used by the Metering Process (e.g., millisecond-   precision Flows should not be exported with flowStartMicroseconds and   flowEndMicroseconds).4.6.  IPFIX Message Header Export Time and Data Record TimeSection 5 of [RFC5101] defines a method for optimized export of time-   related Information Elements based upon the Export Time field of the   IPFIX Message Header.  The architectural separation of the Metering   Process and Exporting Process in [IPFIX-ARCH] raises some   difficulties with this method, of which implementers should be aware.   Since the Metering Process has no information about the export time   of the IPFIX Message (that is, when the message leaves the Exporting   Process), it cannot properly use the delta time Information Elements;   it must store absolute timestamps and transmit these to the Exporting   Process.  The Exporting Process must then convert these to delta   timestamps once the export time is known.  This increases the   processing burden on the Exporting Process.  Note also that the   absolute timestamps require more storage than their delta timestamp   counterparts.  However, this method can result in reduced export   bandwidth.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   Alternatively, the Exporting Process may simply export absolute   timestamp Information Elements.  This simplifies the Exporting   Process' job and reduces processing burden, but increases export   bandwidth requirements.4.7.  Devices without an Absolute Clock   Exporting just relative times in a device without an absolute clock   is often not sufficient.  For instance, observed traffic could be   retained in the device's cache for some time before being exported   (e.g., if the Exporter runs once per minute), or stuck in an Inter   Process Communication (IPC) queue, or stuck in the export stack, or   delayed in the network between the Exporter and Collector.   For these reasons, it can be difficult for the Collecting Process to   convert the relative times exported using the flowStartSysUpTime and   flowEndSysUpTime Information Elements to absolute times with any sort   of accuracy without knowing the systemInitTimeMilliseconds.   Therefore, the sending of the flowStartSysUpTime and flowEndSysUpTime   Information Elements without also sending the   systemInitTimeMilliseconds Information Element is not recommended.5.  Collecting Process Guidelines5.1.  Information Element (De)CodingSection 9 of [RFC5101] specifies: "The Collecting Process MUST note   the Information Element identifier of any Information Element that it   does not understand and MAY discard that Information Element from the   Flow Record".  The Collecting Process may accept Templates with   Information Elements of unknown types.  In this case, the value   received for these Information Elements should be decoded as an octet   array.   Alternatively, the Collecting Process may ignore Templates and   subsequent Data Sets that contain Information Elements of unknown   types.   It is recommended that Collecting Processes provide means to flexibly   add types of new Information Elements to their knowledge base.  An   example is a configuration file that is read by the Collecting   Process and that contains a list of Information Element identifiers   and their corresponding types.  Particularly for adding enterprise-   specific Information Elements, such a feature can be very useful.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20085.2.  Reduced-Size Encoding of Information Elements   Since a Collector may receive data from the same device and   Observation Domain in two Templates using different reduced-size   encodings, it is recommended that the data be stored using full-size   encoding, to ensure that the values can be stored or even aggregated   together.5.3.  Template Management   Template IDs are generated dynamically by the Exporting Process.   They are unique per Transport Session and Observation Domain.   Therefore, for each Transport Session, the Collecting Process has to   maintain a list of Observation Domains.  For each Observation Domain,   the Collecting Process has to maintain a list of current Template IDs   in order to decode subsequent Data Records.   Note that a restart of the Transport Session may lead to a Template   ID renumbering.6.  Transport-Specific Guidelines   IPFIX can use SCTP, TCP, or UDP as a transport protocol.  IPFIX   implementations MUST support SCTP with partial reliability extensions   (PR-SCTP), and MAY support TCP and/or UDP (see [RFC5101],Section10.1).  In the IPFIX documents, the terms SCTP and PR-SCTP are often   used interchangeably to mean SCTP with partial reliability   extensions.6.1.  SCTP   PR-SCTP is the preferred transport protocol for IPFIX because it is   congestion-aware, reducing total bandwidth usage in the case of   congestion, but with a simpler state machine than TCP.  This saves   resources on lightweight probes and router line cards.   SCTP, as specified in [RFC4960] with the PR-SCTP extension defined in   [RFC3758], provides several features not available in TCP or UDP.   The two of these most universally applicable to IPFIX   implementations, and which IPFIX implementers need to know about, are   multiple streams and per-message partial reliability.   An SCTP association may contain multiple streams.  Streams are useful   for avoiding head-of-line blocking, thereby minimizing end-to-end   delay from the Exporting Process to the Collecting Process.  ExampleBoschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   applications for this feature would be using one SCTP stream per   Observation Domain, one stream per type of data (or Template ID), or   one stream for Flow data and one for metadata.   An Exporting Process may request any number of streams, and may send   IPFIX Messages containing any type of Set (Data Set, Template Set,   etc.) on any stream.  A Collecting Process MUST be able to process   any Message received on any stream.   Stream negotiation is a feature of the SCTP protocol.  Note, however,   that the IPFIX protocol doesn't provide any mechanism for the   Exporter to convey any information about which streams are in use to   the Collector.  Therefore, stream configuration must be done out of   band.   One extra advantage of the PR-SCTP association is its ability to send   messages with different levels of reliability, selected according to   the application.  For example, billing or security applications might   require reliable delivery of all their IPFIX Messages, while capacity   planning applications might be more tolerant of message loss.  SCTP   allows IPFIX Messages for all these applications to be transported   over the same association with the appropriate level of reliability.   IPFIX Messages may be sent with full or partial reliability, on a   per-message basis.  Fully reliable delivery guarantees that the IPFIX   Message will be received at the Collecting Process or that that SCTP   association will be reset, as with TCP.  Partially reliable delivery   does not guarantee the receipt of the IPFIX Message at the Collecting   Process.  This feature may be used to allow Messages to be dropped   during network congestion, i.e., while observing a Denial of Service   attack.   [RFC3758] defines the concept of a Partial Reliability policy, which   specifies the interface used to control partially reliable delivery.   It also defines a single example Partial Reliability policy called   "timed reliability", which uses a single parameter: lifetime.  The   lifetime is specified per message in milliseconds, and after it   expires, no further attempt will be made to transmit the message.   Longer lifetimes specify more retransmission attempts per message and   therefore higher reliability; however, it should be noted that the   absolute reliability provided by a given lifetime is highly dependent   on network conditions, so an Exporting Process using the timed   reliability service should provide a mechanism for configuring the   lifetime of exported IPFIX Messages.  Another possible Partial   Reliability policy could be limited retransmission, which guarantees   a specified number of retransmissions for each message.  It is up to   the implementer to decide which Partial Reliability policy is most   appropriate for its application.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   There is an additional service provided by SCTP and useful in   conjunction with PR-SCTP: unordered delivery.  This also works on a   per-message basis by declaring that a given message should be   delivered to the receiver as soon as it is queued rather than kept in   sequence; however, it should be noted that unless explicitly   requested by the sender, even messages sent partially reliably will   still be delivered in order.  Unordered delivery should not be used   when the order of IPFIX Messages may matter: e.g., a Template or   Options Template.  Unordered delivery should not be used when Total   counters are used, as reordering could result in the counter value   decreasing at the Collecting Process and even being left with a stale   value if the last message processed is stale.   By convention, when the IPFIX documents state a requirement for   reliable delivery (as, for example, the IPFIX protocol document does   for Template Sets, Options Template Sets, and Template Withdrawal   Messages), an IPFIX Exporting Process must not use partially reliable   delivery for those Messages.  By default, and explicitly if the IPFIX   documents call for "partially reliable" or "unreliable" delivery, an   IPFIX Exporting Process may use partially reliable delivery if the   other requirements of the application allow.   The Collecting Process may check whether IPFIX Messages are lost by   checking the Sequence Number in the IPFIX header.  The Collecting   Process should use the Sequence Number in the IPFIX Message Header to   determine whether any messages are lost when sent with partial   reliability.  Sequence Numbers should be tracked independently for   each stream.   The following may be done to mitigate message loss:   o  Increase the SCTP buffer size on the Exporter.   o  Increase the bandwidth available for communicating the exported      Data Records.   o  Use sampling, filtering, or aggregation in the Metering Process to      reduce the amount of exported data (see [RFC5101],Section10.4.2.3).   o  If partial reliability is used, switch to fully reliable delivery      on the Exporting Process or increase the level of partial      reliability (e.g., when using timed reliability, by specifying a      longer lifetime for exported IPFIX Messages).Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   If the SCTP association is brought down because the IFPIX Messages   can't be exported reliably, the options are:   o  Increase the SCTP buffer size on the Exporter.   o  Increase the bandwidth available for communicating the exported      Data Records.   o  Use sampling, filtering, or aggregation in the Metering Process to      reduce the amount of exported data.   Note that Templates must not be resent when using SCTP, without an   intervening Template Withdrawal or SCTP association reset.  Note also   that since Template Sets and Template Withdrawal Messages may be sent   on any SCTP stream, a Template Withdrawal Message may withdraw a   Template sent on a different stream, and a Template Set may reuse a   Template ID withdrawn by a Template Withdrawal Message sent on a   different stream.  Therefore, an Exporting Process sending Template   Withdrawal Messages should ensure to the extent possible that the   Template Withdrawal Messages and subsequent Template Sets reusing the   withdrawn Template IDs are received and processed at the Collecting   Process in proper order.  The Exporting Process can achieve this by   one of two possible methods: 1. by sending a Template Withdrawal   Message reliably, in order, and on the same stream as the subsequent   Template Set reusing its ID; or 2. by waiting an appropriate amount   of time (on the scale of one minute) after sending a Template   Withdrawal Message before attempting to reuse the withdrawn Template   ID.6.2.  UDP   UDP is useful in simple systems where an SCTP stack is not available,   and where there is insufficient memory for TCP buffering.   However, UDP is not a reliable transport protocol, and IPFIX Messages   sent over UDP might be lost as with partially reliable SCTP streams.   UDP is not the recommended protocol for IPFIX and is intended for use   in cases in which IPFIX is replacing an existing NetFlow   infrastructure, with the following properties:   o  A dedicated network,   o  within a single administrative domain,   o  where SCTP is not available due to implementation constraints, and   o  the Collector is as topologically close as possible to the      Exporter.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   Note that because UDP itself provides no congestion control   mechanisms, it is recommended that UDP transport be used only on   managed networks, where the network path has been explicitly   provisioned for IPFIX traffic through traffic engineering mechanisms,   such as rate limiting or capacity reservations.   An important example of an explicitly provisioned, managed network   for IPFIX is the use of IPFIX to replace a functioning NetFlow   implementation on a dedicated network.  In this situation, the   dedicated network should be provisioned in accordance with the   NetFlow deployment experience that Flow export traffic generated by   monitoring an interface will amount to 2-5% of the monitored   interface's bandwidth.   As recommended in [TSVWG-UDP], an application should not send UDP   messages that result in IP packets that exceed the MTU of the path to   the destination and should enable UDP checksums (see Sections3.2 and   3.4 of [TSVWG-UDP], respectively).   Since IPFIX assumes reliable transport of Templates over SCTP, this   necessitates some changes for IPFIX Template management over UDP.   Templates sent from the Exporting Process to the Collecting Process   over UDP MUST be resent at regular time intervals; these intervals   MUST be configurable (seeSection 10.3 of [RFC5101]).   We recommend a default Template-resend time of 10 minutes,   configurable between 1 minute and 1 day.   Note that this could become an interoperability problem; e.g., if an   Exporter resends Templates once per day, while a Collector expires   Templates hourly, then they may both be IPFIX-compatible, but not be   interoperable.   Retransmission time intervals that are too short waste bandwidth on   unnecessary Template retransmissions.  On the other hand, time   intervals that are too long introduce additional costs or risk of   data loss by potentially requiring the Collector to cache more data   without having the Templates available to decode it.   To increase reliability and limit the amount of potentially lost   data, the Exporting Process may resend additional Templates using a   packet-based schedule.  In this case, Templates are resent depending   on the number of data packets sent.  Similarly to the time interval,   resending a Template every few packets introduces additional   overhead, while resending after a large amount of packets have   already been sent means high costs due to the data caching and   potential data loss.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   We recommend a default Template-resend interval of 20 packets,   configurable between 1 and 1000 data packets.   Note that a sufficiently small resend time or packet interval may   cause a system to become stuck, continually resending Templates or   Options Data.  For example, if the resend packet interval is 2 (i.e.,   Templates or Options Data are to be sent in every other packet) but   more than two packets are required to send all the information, then   the resend interval will have expired by the time the information has   been sent, and Templates or Options Data will be sent continuously --   possibly preventing any data from being sent at all.  Therefore, the   resend intervals should be considered from the last data packet, and   should not be tied to specific Sequence Numbers.   The Collecting Process should use the Sequence Number in the IPFIX   Message Header to determine whether any messages are lost.   The following may be done to mitigate message loss:   o  Move the Collector topologically closer to the Exporter.   o  Increase the bandwidth of the links through which the Data Records      are exported.   o  Use sampling, filtering, or aggregation in the Metering Process to      reduce the amount of exported data.   o  Increase the buffer size at the Collector and/or the Exporter.   Before using a Template for the first time, the Exporter may send it   in several different IPFIX Messages spaced out over a period of   packets in order to increase the likelihood that the Collector has   received the Template.   Template Withdrawal Messages MUST NOT be sent over UDP (perSection10.3.6 of [RFC5101]).  The Exporter must rely on expiration at the   Collector to expire old Templates or to reuse Template IDs.   We recommend that the Collector implements a Template Expiry of three   times the Exporter refresh rate.   However, since the IPFIX protocol doesn't provide any mechanism for   the Exporter to convey any information about the Template Expiry time   to the Collector, configuration must be done out of band.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   If no out-of-band configuration is made, we recommend to initially   set a Template Expiry time at the Collector of 60 minutes.  The   Collecting Process may estimate each Exporting Process's resend time   and adapt the Expiry time for the corresponding Templates   accordingly.6.3.  TCP   TCP can be used as a transport protocol for IPFIX if one of the   endpoints has no support for SCTP, but a reliable transport is needed   and/or the network between the Exporter and the Collector has not   explicitly been provisioned for the IPFIX traffic.  TCP is one of the   core protocols of the Internet and is widely supported.   The Exporting Process may resend Templates (per UDP, above), but it's   not required to do so, perSection 10.4.2.2 of [RFC5101]:   "A Collecting Process MUST record all Template and Options Template   Records for the duration of the connection, as an Exporting Process   is not required to re-export Template Records."   If the available bandwidth between Exporter and Collector is not   sufficient or the Metering Process generates more Data Records than   the Collector is capable of processing, then TCP congestion control   may cause the Exporter to block.  Options in this case are:   o  Increase the TCP buffer size on the Exporter.   o  Increase the bandwidth of the links through which the Data Records      are exported.   o  Use sampling, filtering, or aggregation in the Metering Process to      reduce the amount of exported data.7.  Guidelines for Implementation on Middleboxes   The term middlebox is defined in [RFC3234] as:   "any intermediary device performing functions other than the normal,   standard functions of an IP router on the datagram path between a   source host and destination host."   The list of middleboxes discussed in [RFC3234] contains:   1.   Network Address Translation (NAT),   2.   NAT-Protocol Translation (NAT-PT),Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   3.   SOCKS gateway,   4.   IP tunnel endpoints,   5.   packet classifiers, markers, schedulers,   6.   transport relay,   7.   TCP performance enhancing proxies,   8.   load balancers that divert/munge packets,   9.   IP firewalls,   10.  application firewalls,   11.  application-level gateways,   12.  gatekeepers / session control boxes,   13.  transcoders,   14.  proxies,   15.  caches,   16.  modified DNS servers,   17.  content and applications distribution boxes,   18.  load balancers that divert/munge URLs,   19.  application-level interceptors,   20.  application-level multicast,   21.  involuntary packet redirection,   22.  anonymizers.   It is likely that since the publication ofRFC 3234 new kinds of   middleboxes have been added.   While the IPFIX specifications [RFC5101] based the requirements on   the export protocol only (as the IPFIX name implies), these sections   cover the guidelines for the implementation of the Metering Process   by recommending which Information Elements to export for the   different middlebox considerations.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20087.1.  Traffic Flow Scenarios at Middleboxes   Middleboxes may delay, reorder, drop, or multiply packets; they may   change packet header fields and change the payload.  All these   actions have an impact on traffic Flow properties.  In general, a   middlebox transforms a unidirectional original traffic Flow T that   arrives at the middlebox into a transformed traffic Flow T' that   leaves the middlebox.                                 +-----------+                          T ---->| middlebox |----> T'                                 +-----------+       Figure 1: Unidirectional traffic Flow traversing a middlebox   Note that in an extreme case, T' may be an empty traffic Flow (a Flow   with no packets), for example, if the middlebox is a firewall and   blocks the Flow.   In case of a middlebox performing a multicast function, a single   original traffic Flow may be transformed into more than one   transformed traffic Flow.                                           +------> T'                                           |                                 +---------+-+                          T ---->| middlebox |----> T''                                 +---------+-+                                           |                                           +------> T'''     Figure 2: Unidirectional traffic Flow traversing a middlebox with                            multicast function   For bidirectional traffic Flows, we identify Flows on different sides   of the middlebox; say, T_l on the left side and T_r on the right   side.                                 +-----------+                        T_l <--->| middlebox |<---> T_r                                 +-----------+    Figure 3: Bidirectional unicast traffic Flow traversing a middlebox   In case of a NAT, T_l might be a traffic Flow in a private address   realm and T_r the translated traffic Flow in the public address   realm.  If the middlebox is a NAT-PT, then T_l may be an IPv4 traffic   Flow and T_r the translated IPv6 traffic Flow.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   At tunnel endpoints, Flows are multiplexed or demultiplexed.  In   general, tunnel endpoints can deal with bidirectional traffic Flows.                                           +------> T_r1                                           v                                 +---------+-+                        T_l <--->| middlebox |<---> T_r2                                 +---------+-+                                           ^                                           +------> T_r3                     Figure 4: Multiple data reduction   An example is a traffic Flow T_l of a tunnel and Flows T_rx that are   multiplexed into or demultiplexed out of a tunnel.  According to the   IPFIX definition of traffic Flows in [RFC5101], T and T' or T_l and   T_rx, respectively, are different Flows in general.   However, from an application point of view, they might be considered   as closely related or even as the same Flow, for example, if the   payloads they carry are identical.7.2.  Location of the Observation Point   Middleboxes might be integrated with other devices.  An example is a   router with a NAT or a firewall at a line card.  If an IPFIX   Observation Point is located at the line card, then the properties of   measured traffic Flows may depend on the side of the integrated   middlebox at which packets were captured for traffic Flow   measurement.   Consequently, an Exporting Process reporting traffic Flows measured   at a device that hosts one or more middleboxes should clearly   indicate to Collecting Processes the location of the used Observation   Point(s) with respect to the middlebox(es).  This can be done by   using Options with Observation Point as scope and elements like, for   instance, lineCardID or samplerID.  Otherwise, processing the   measured Flow data could lead to wrong results.   At first glance, choosing an Observation Point that covers the entire   middlebox looks like an attractive choice.  But this leads to   ambiguities for all kinds of middleboxes.  Within the middlebox,   properties of packets are modified, and it should be clear at a   Collecting Process whether packets were observed and metered before   or after modification.  For example, it must be clear whether a   reported source IP address was observed before or after a NAT changed   it or whether a reported packet count was measured before or after aBoschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   firewall dropped packets.  For this reason, [RFC5102] provides   Information Elements with prefix "post" for Flow properties that are   changed within a middlebox.   If an Observation Point is located inside a middlebox, the middlebox   must have well-defined and well-separated internal functions, for   example, a combined NAT and firewall, and the Observation Point   should be located on a boundary between middlebox functions rather   than within one of the functions.7.3.  Reporting Flow-Related Middlebox Internals   While this document recommends IPFIX implementations using   Observation Points outside of middlebox functions, there are a few   special cases where reporting Flow-related internals of a middlebox   is of interest.   For many applications that use traffic measurement results, it is   desirable to get more information than can be derived from just   observing packets on one side of a middlebox.  If, for example,   packets are dropped by the middlebox acting as a firewall, NAT, or   traffic shaper, then information about how many observed packets are   dropped may be of high interest.   This section gives recommendations on middlebox internal information   that may be reported if the IPFIX Observation Point is co-located   with one or more middleboxes.  Since the internal information to be   reported depends on the kind of middlebox, it is discussed per kind.   The recommendations cover middleboxes that act per packet and that do   not modify the application-level payload of the packet (except by   dropping the entire packet) and that do not insert additional packets   into an application-level or transport-level traffic stream.   Covered are the packet-level middleboxes of kinds 1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 10,   21, and 22 (according to the enumeration given at the beginning ofSection 7 of this document).  Not covered are 4, 6-8 and 11-20.  TCP   performance-enhancing proxies (7) are not covered because they may   add ACK packets to a TCP connection.   Still, if possible, IPFIX implementations co-located with uncovered   middleboxes (i.e., of type 7 or 11-20) should follow the   recommendations given in this section if they can be applied in a way   that reflects the intention of these recommendations.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20087.3.1.  Packet Dropping Middleboxes   If an IPFIX Observation Point is co-located with one or more   middleboxes that potentially drop packets, then the corresponding   IPFIX Exporting Process should be able to report the number of   packets that were dropped per reported Flow.   Concerned kinds of middleboxes are NAT (1), NAT-PT (2), SOCKS gateway   (3), packet schedulers (5), IP firewalls (9) and application-level   firewalls (10).7.3.2.  Middleboxes Changing the DSCP   If an IPFIX Observation Point is co-located with one or more   middleboxes that potentially modify the Diffserv Code Point (DSCP,   see [RFC2474]) in the IP header, then the corresponding IPFIX   Exporting Process should be able to report both the observed incoming   DSCP value and also the DSCP value on the 'other' side of the   middlebox (if this is a constant value for the particular traffic   flow).  The related Information Elements specified in [RFC5102] are:   IpClassOfService and postIpClassOfService.   Note that the current IPFIX information model only contains   Information Elements supporting packets observed before the DSCP   change, i.e. ipClassOfService and postIpClassOfService, where the   latter reports the value of the IP TOS field after the DSCP change.   We recommend, whenever possible, to move the Observation Point to the   point before the DSCP change and report the Observed and post-   values.  If reporting the value of the IP TOS field before DSCP   change is required, "pre" values can be exported using enterprise-   specific Information Elements.   Note also that a classifier may change the same DSCP value of packets   from the same Flow to different values depending on the packet or   other conditions.  Also, it is possible that packets of a single   unidirectional arriving Flow contain packets with different DSCP   values that are all set to the same value by the middlebox.  In both   cases, there is a constant value for the DSCP field in the IP packet   header to be observed on one side of the middlebox, but on the other   side the value may vary.  In such a case, reliable reporting of the   DSCP value on the 'other' side of the middlebox is not possible by   just reporting a single value.  According to the IPFIX information   model [RFC5102], the first value observed for the DSCP is reported by   the IPFIX protocol in that case.   This recommendation applies to packet markers (5).Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20087.3.3.  Middleboxes Changing IP Addresses and Port Numbers   If an IPFIX Observation Point is co-located with one or more   middleboxes that potentially modify the:   o  IP version field,   o  IP source address header field,   o  IP destination address header field,   o  Source transport port number, or   o  Destination transport port number   in one of the headers, then the corresponding IPFIX Exporting Process   should be able to report the 'translated' value of these fields, as   far as they have constant values for the particular traffic Flow, in   addition to the observed values of these fields.   If the changed values are not constant for the particular traffic   Flow but still reporting is desired, then it is recommended that the   general rule from [RFC5102] for Information Elements with changing   values is applied: the reported value is the one that applies to the   first packet observed for the reported Flow.   Note that the 'translated' value of the fields can be the values   before or after the translation depending on the Flow direction and   the location of the Observation Point with respect to the middlebox.   We always call the value that is not the one observed at the   Observation Point the translated value.   Note also that a middlebox may change the same port number value of   packets from the same Flow to different values depending on the   packet or other conditions.  Also, it is possible that packets of   different unidirectional arriving Flows with different source/   destination port number pairs may be mapped to a single Flow with a   single source/destination port number pair by the middlebox.  In both   cases, there is a constant value for the port number pair to be   observed on one side of the middlebox, but on the other side the   values may vary.  In such a case, reliable reporting of the port   number pairs on the 'other' side of the middlebox is not possible.   According to the IPFIX information model [RFC5102], the first value   observed for each port number is reported by the IPFIX protocol in   that case.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   This recommendation applies to NAT (1), NAT-PT (2), SOCKS gateway (3)   and involuntary packet redirection (21) middleboxes.  It may also be   applied to anonymizers (22), though it should be noted that this   carries the risk of losing the effect of anonymization.8.  Security Guidelines8.1.  Introduction to TLS and DTLS for IPFIX Implementers   Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC4346] and Datagram Transport Layer   Security (DTLS) [RFC4347] are the REQUIRED protocols for securing   network traffic exported with IPFIX (seeSection 11 of [RFC5101]).   TLS requires a reliable transport channel and is selected as the   security mechanism for TCP.  DTLS is a version of TLS capable of   securing datagram traffic and is selected for UDP, SCTP, and PR-SCTP.   When mapping TLS terminology used in [RFC4346] to IPFIX terminology,   keep in mind that the IPFIX Exporting Process, as it is the   connection initiator, corresponds to the TLS client, and the IPFIX   Collecting Process corresponds to the TLS server.  These terms apply   only to the bidirectional TLS handshakes done at Transport Session   establishment and completion time; aside from TLS connection set up   between the Exporting Process and the Collecting Process, and   teardown at the end of the session, the unidirectional Flow of   messages from Exporting Process to Collecting Process operates over   TLS just as over any other transport layer for IPFIX.8.2.  X.509-Based Identity Verification for IPFIX over TLS or DTLS   When using TLS or DTLS to secure an IPFIX Transport Session, the   Collecting Process and Exporting Process must use strong mutual   authentication.  In other words, each IPFIX endpoint must have its   own X.509 certificate [RFC3280] and private key, and the Collecting   Process, which acts as the TLS or DTLS server, must send a   Certificate Request to the Exporting Process during the TLS   handshake, and fail to establish a session if the Exporting Process   does not present a valid certificate.   Each Exporting Process and Collecting Process must verify the   identity of its peer against a set of authorized peers.  This may be   done by configuring a set of authorized distinguished names and   comparing the peer certificate's subject distinguished name against   each name in the set.  However, if a private certification authority   (CA) is used to sign the certificates identifying the Collecting   Processes and Exporting Processes, and the set of certificates signed   by that private CA may be restricted to those identifying peers   authorized to communicate with each other, it is sufficient to merely   verify that the peer's certificate is issued by this private CA.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   When verifying the identity of its peer, an IPFIX Exporting Process   or Collecting Process must verify that the peer certificate's subject   common name or subjectAltName extension dNSName matches the fully-   qualified domain name (FQDN) of the peer.  This involves retrieving   the expected domain name from the peer certificate and the address of   the peer, then verifying that the two match via a DNS lookup.  Such   verification should require both that forward lookups (FQDN to peer   address) and reverse lookups (peer address to FQDN) match.  In   deployments without DNS infrastructure, it is acceptable to represent   the FQDN as an IPv4 dotted-quad or a textual IPv6 address as in   [RFC1924].8.3.  Implementing IPFIX over TLS over TCP   Of the security solutions specified for IPFIX, TLS over TCP is as of   this writing the most mature and widely implemented.  Until stable   implementations of DTLS over SCTP are widely available (seeSection 8.5, below), it is recommended that applications requiring   secure transport for IPFIX Messages use TLS over TCP.   When using TLS over TCP, IPFIX Exporting Processes and Collecting   Processes should behave in all other aspects as if using TCP as the   transport protocol, especially as regards the handling of Templates   and Template withdrawals.8.4.  Implementing IPFIX over DTLS over UDP   An implementation of the DTLS protocol version 1, described in   [RFC4347] and required to secure IPFIX over UDP, is available in   OpenSSL [OPENSSL] as of version 0.9.8.  However, DTLS support is as   of this writing under active development and certain implementations   might be unstable.  We recommend extensive testing of DTLS-based   IPFIX implementations to build confidence in the DTLS stack over   which your implementation runs.   When using DTLS over UDP, IPFIX Exporting Processes and Collecting   Processes should behave in all other aspects as if using UDP as the   transport protocol, especially as regards the handling of Templates   and Template timeouts.   Note that the selection of IPFIX Message sizes for DTLS over UDP must   account for overhead per packet introduced by the DTLS layer.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 20088.5.  Implementing IPFIX over DTLS over SCTP   As of this writing, there is no publicly available implementation of   DTLS over SCTP as described in [RFC4347] and [TUEXEN].   When using DTLS over SCTP, IPFIX Exporting Processes and Collecting   Processes should behave in all other aspects as if using SCTP as the   transport protocol, especially as regards the handling of Templates   and the use of reliable transport for Template and scope information.   An implementation of the DTLS protocol version 1, described in   [RFC4347] and required to secure IPFIX over SCTP, is available in   OpenSSL [OPENSSL] as of version 0.9.8.  However, DTLS support is as   of this writing under active development and certain implementations   might be unstable.  We recommend extensive testing of DTLS-based   IPFIX implementations to build confidence in the DTLS stack over   which your implementation runs.9.  Extending the Information Model   IPFIX supports two sets of Information Elements: IANA-registered   Information Elements and enterprise-specific Information Elements.   New Information Elements can be added to both sets as described in   this section.  If an Information Element is considered of general   interest, it should be added to the set of IETF-specified Information   Elements that is maintained by IANA.   Alternatively, private enterprises can define proprietary Information   Elements for internal purposes.  There are several potential reasons   for doing so.  For example, the Information Element might only relate   to proprietary features of a device or protocol of the enterprise.   Also, pre-standard product delivery or commercially sensitive product   features might cause the need for enterprise-specific Information   Elements.   The IPFIX information model [RFC5102] document contains an XML-based   specification of Template, abstract data types, and IPFIX Information   Elements, which may be used to create consistent machine-readable   extensions to the IPFIX information model.  This description can be   used for automatically checking syntactic correctness of the   specification of IPFIX Information Elements and for generating code   that deals with processing IPFIX Information Elements.9.1.  Adding New IETF-Specified Information Elements   New IPFIX Information Elements that are considered to be of general   interest should be added to the set of IETF-specified Information   Elements that is maintained by IANA.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   The introduction of new Information Elements in the IANA registry is   subject to expert review.  As described inSection 7.1 of [RFC5102],   an expert review is performed by one of a group of experts designated   by an IETF Operations and Management Area Director.  The experts will   initially be drawn from the Working Group Chairs and document editors   of the IPFIX and PSAMP Working Groups.  The group of experts must   double check the Information Elements definitions with already   defined Information Elements for completeness, accuracy, redundancy,   and correct naming following the naming conventions in[RFC5102],   Section 2.3.   The specification of new IPFIX Information Elements must use the   Template specified in[RFC5102], Section 2.1, and must be published   using a well-established and persistent publication medium.9.2.  Adding Enterprise-Specific Information Elements   Enterprises or other organizations holding a registered Structure of   Management Information (SMI) network management private enterprise   code number can specify enterprise-specific Information Elements.   Their identifiers can be chosen arbitrarily within the range of   1-32767 and have to be coupled with a Private Enterprise Identifier   [PEN].  Enterprise identifiers MUST be registered as SMI network   management private enterprise code numbers with IANA.  The registry   can be found athttp://www.iana.org/assignments/enterprise-numbers.10.  Common Implementation Mistakes   The issues listed in this section were identified during   implementation and interoperability testing.  They do not stem from   insufficient clarity in the protocol, but each of these was an actual   mistake made in a tested IPFIX implementation.  They are listed here   for the convenience of future implementers.10.1.  IPFIX and NetFlow Version 9   A large group of mistakes stems from the fact that many implementers   started implementing IPFIX from an existing version of NetFlow   version 9 [RFC3954].  Despite their similarity, the two protocols   differ in many aspects.  We list here some of the most important   differences.   o  Transport protocol: NetFlow version 9 initially ran over UDP,      while IPFIX must have a congestion-aware transport protocol.      IPFIX specifies PR-SCTP as its mandatory protocol, while TCP and      UDP are optional.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   o  IPFIX differentiates between IANA-registered and enterprise-      specific Information Elements.  Enterprise-specific Information      Elements can be specified by coupling a non-IANA-registered      Information Element identifier with an Enterprise ID      (corresponding to the vendor that defined the Information      Element).   o  Options Templates: in IPFIX, an Options Template must have a      scope, and the scope is not allowed to be of length zero.  The      NetFlow version 9 specifications [RFC3954] don't specify that the      scope must not be of length zero.   Message Header:   o  Set ID: Even if the packet headers are different between IPFIX and      NetFlow version 9, similar fields are used in both of them.  The      difference between the two protocols is in the values that these      fields can assume.  A typical example is the Set ID values: the      Set ID values of 0 and 1 are used in NetFlow version 9, while they      are not used in IPFIX.   o  Length field: in NetFlow version 9, this field (called count)      contains the number of Records.  In IPFIX, it indicates the total      length of the IPFIX Message, measured in octets (including Message      Header and Set(s)).   o  Timestamp: the NetFlow version 9 header has an additional      timestamp: sysUpTime.  It indicates the time in milliseconds since      the last reboot of the Exporting Process.   o  The version number is different.  NetFlow version 9 uses the      version number 9, while IPFIX uses the version number 10.10.2.  Padding of the Data Set   [RFC5101] specifies that the Exporting Process MAY insert some octets   for set padding to align Data Sets within a Message.  The padding   length must be shorter than any allowable Record in that set.   It is important to respect this limitation: if the padding length is   equal to or longer than the length of the shortest Record, it will be   interpreted as another Record.   An alternative is to use the paddingOctets Information Element in the   Template definition.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 200810.3.  Field ID Numbers   Information Element numbers in IPFIX have the range 0-32767   (0-0x7FFF).  Information Element numbers outside this range (i.e.,   with the high bit set) are taken to be enterprise-specific   Information Elements, which have an additional four-byte Private   Enterprise Number following the Information Element number and   length.  Inadvertently setting the high bit of the Information   Element number by selecting a number out of this range will therefore   cause Template scanning errors.10.4.  Template ID Numbers   Template IDs are generated as required by the Exporting Process.   When the same set of Information Elements is exported at different   times, the corresponding Template is usually identified by different   Template IDs.  Similarly, if multiple co-existing Templates are   composed of the same set of Information Elements, they are also   identified by different Template IDs.  The Collecting Process does   not know in advance which Template ID a particular Template will use.11.  Security Considerations   This document describes the implementation guidelines of IPFIX.  The   security requirements for the IPFIX target applications are addressed   in the IPFIX requirements document [RFC3917].  These requirements are   considered for the specification of the IPFIX protocol [RFC5101], for   which a Security Considerations Section exists.Section 7 of this document recommends that IPFIX Exporting Processes   report internals about middleboxes.  These internals may be security-   relevant, and the reported information needs to be protected   appropriately for reasons given below.   Reporting of packets dropped by firewalls and other packet-dropping   middleboxes carries the risk that this information can be used by   attackers for analyzing the configuration of the middlebox and for   developing attacks against it.  Address translation may be used for   hiding the network structure behind an address translator.  If an   IPFIX Exporting Process reports the translations performed by an   address translator, then parts of the network structure may be   revealed.  If an IPFIX Exporting Process reports the translations   performed by an anonymizer, the main function of the anonymizer may   be compromised.   Note that there exist vulnerabilities in DTLS over SCTP as specified   in the IPFIX protocol, such that a third party could cause messages   to be undetectably lost, or an SCTP association to shut down.  TheseBoschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   vulnerabilities are addressed by [TUEXEN]; however, it is unclear   whether initial OpenSSL-based implementations of DTLS over SCTP will   contain the required fixes.  DTLS over SCTP should be used with   caution in production environments until these issues are completely   addressed.12.  Acknowledgments   We would like to thank the MoMe project for organizing two IPFIX   Interoperability Events in July 2005 and in March 2006, and   Fraunhofer Fokus for organizing the third one in November 2006.  The   Interoperability Events provided us precious input for this document.   Thanks to Brian Trammell for his contributions to the SCTP section   and the security guidelines and for the multiple thorough reviews.   We would also like to thank Benoit Claise, Carsten Schmoll, and   Gerhard Muenz for the technical review and feedback, and Michael   Tuexen, Randall Stewart, and Peter Lei for reviewing the SCTP   section.13.  References13.1.  Normative References   [RFC5101]         Claise, B., Ed., "Specification of the IP Flow                     Information Export (IPFIX) Protocol for the                     Exchange of IP Traffic Flow Information",RFC 5101,                     January 2008.   [RFC5102]         Quittek, J., Bryant, S., Claise, B., Aitken, P.,                     and J. Meyer, "Information Model for IP Flow                     Information Export",RFC 5102, January 2008.   [RFC2119]         Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                     Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.13.2.  Informative References   [IPFIX-AS]        Zseby, T., Boschi, E., Brownlee, N., and B. Claise,                     "IPFIX Applicability", Work in Progress, July 2007.   [IPFIX-ARCH]      Sadasivan, G., Brownlee, N., Claise, B., and J.                     Quittek, "Architecture for IP Flow Information                     Export", Work in Progress, September 2006.   [IPFIX-REDUCING]  Boschi, E., Mark, L., and B. Claise, "Reducing                     Redundancy in IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX)                     and Packet Sampling (PSAMP) Reports", Work                     in Progress, May 2007.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   [PSAMP-PROTO]     Claise, B., Quittek, J., and A. Johnson, "Packet                     Sampling (PSAMP) Protocol Specifications", Work                     in Progress, December 2007.   [TUEXEN]          Tuexen, M. and E. Rescorla, "Datagram Transport                     Layer Security for Stream Control Transmission                     Protocol", Work in Progress, November 2007.   [TSVWG-UDP]       Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "UDP Usage Guidelines                     for Application Designers", Work in Progress,                     February 2008.   [RFC1305]         Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)                     Specification, Implementation and Analysis",RFC 1305, March 1992.   [RFC1924]         Elz, R., "A Compact Representation of IPv6                     Addresses",RFC 1924, April 1996.   [RFC2474]         Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black,                     "Definition of the Differentiated Services Field                     (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers",RFC 2474,                     December 1998.   [RFC3234]         Carpenter, B. and S. Brim, "Middleboxes: Taxonomy                     and Issues",RFC 3234, February 2002.   [RFC3280]         Housley, R., Polk, W., Ford, W., and D. Solo,                     "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure                     Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL)                     Profile",RFC 3280, April 2002.   [RFC3758]         Stewart, R., Ramalho, M., Xie, Q., Tuexen, M., and                     P. Conrad, "Stream Control Transmission Protocol                     (SCTP) Partial Reliability Extension",RFC 3758,                     May 2004.   [RFC3917]         Quittek, J., Zseby, T., Claise, B., and S. Zander,                     "Requirements for IP Flow Information Export                     (IPFIX)",RFC 3917, October 2004.   [RFC3954]         Claise, B., Ed., "Cisco Systems NetFlow Services                     Export Version 9",RFC 3954, October 2004.   [RFC4346]         Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer                     Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.1",RFC 4346,                     April 2006.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   [RFC4347]         Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport                     Layer Security",RFC 4347, April 2006.   [RFC4960]         Stewart, R., Ed., "Stream Control Transmission                     Protocol",RFC 4960, September 2007.   [OPENSSL]         OpenSSL, "OpenSSL: The Open Source toolkit for SSL/                     TLS", <http://www.openssl.org/>.   [PEN]             IANA, "PRIVATE ENTERPRISE NUMBERS", <http://www.iana.org/assignments/enterprise-numbers>.Authors' Addresses   Elisa Boschi   Hitachi Europe   c/o ETH Zurich   Gloriastr. 35   8092 Zurich   Switzerland   Phone: +41 44 6327057   EMail: elisa.boschi@hitachi-eu.com   Lutz Mark   Fraunhofer FOKUS   Kaiserin Augusta Allee 31   10589 Berlin   Germany   Phone: +49 421 2246-206   EMail: lutz.mark@ifam.fraunhofer.de   Juergen Quittek   NEC Europe Ltd.   Kurfuersten-Anlage 36   69115 Heidelberg   Germany   Phone: +49 6221 4342-115   EMail: quittek@nw.neclab.euBoschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008   Martin Stiemerling   NEC Europe Ltd.   Kurfuersten-Anlage 36   69115 Heidelberg   Germany   Phone: +49 6221 4342-113   EMail: stiemerling@nw.neclab.eu   Paul Aitken   Cisco Systems, Inc.   96 Commercial Quay   Edinburgh  EH6 6LX   Scotland   Phone: +44 131 561 3616   EMail: paitken@cisco.comBoschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 5153            IPFIX Implementation Guidelines           April 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   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, THE IETF TRUST 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.Boschi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 35]

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