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Internet Engineering Task Force                         E. Grossman, Ed.Internet-Draft                                                     DOLBYIntended status: Informational                                T. MizrahiExpires: April 5, 2021                                            HUAWEI                                                               A. Hacker                                                                  MISTIQ                                                         October 2, 2020Deterministic Networking (DetNet) Security Considerationsdraft-ietf-detnet-security-12Abstract   A DetNet (deterministic network) provides specific performance   guarantees to its data flows, such as extremely low data loss rates   and bounded latency.  As a result, securing a DetNet requires that in   addition to the best practice security measures taken for any   mission-critical network, additional security measures may be needed   to secure the intended operation of these novel service properties.   This document addresses DetNet-specific security considerations from   the perspectives of both the DetNet system-level designer and   component designer.  System considerations include a threat model,   taxonomy of relevant attacks, and associations of threats versus use   cases and service properties.  Component-level considerations include   ingress filtering and packet arrival time violation detection.  This   document also addresses DetNet security considerations specific to   the IP and MPLS data plane technologies thereby complementing the   Security Considerations sections of the various DetNet Data Plane   (and other) DetNet documents.Status of This Memo   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the   provisions ofBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-   Drafts is athttps://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months   and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."   This Internet-Draft will expire on April 5, 2021.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 1]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Abbreviations and Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.  Security Considerations for DetNet Component Design . . . . .63.1.  Resource Allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.2.  Explicit Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.3.  Redundant Path Support  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83.4.  Timing (or other) Violation Reporting . . . . . . . . . .9   4.  DetNet Security Considerations Compared With DiffServ       Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.  Security Threats  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105.1.  Threat Model  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115.2.  Threat Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.2.1.  Delay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.2.2.  DetNet Flow Modification or Spoofing  . . . . . . . .125.2.3.  Resource Segmentation (Inter-segment Attack)  . . . .125.2.4.  Packet Replication and Elimination  . . . . . . . . .125.2.4.1.  Replication: Increased Attack Surface . . . . . .125.2.4.2.  Replication-related Header Manipulation . . . . .125.2.5.  Controller Plane  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.5.1.  Path Choice Manipulation  . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.5.2.  Compromised Controller  . . . . . . . . . . . . .145.2.6.  Reconnaissance  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .145.2.7.  Time Synchronization Mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . .145.3.  Threat Summary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .146.  Security Threat Impacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .156.1.  Delay-Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .186.1.1.  Data Plane Delay Attacks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .186.1.2.  Controller Plane Delay Attacks  . . . . . . . . . . .196.2.  Flow Modification and Spoofing  . . . . . . . . . . . . .196.2.1.  Flow Modification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .196.2.2.  Spoofing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 2]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20206.2.2.1.  Dataplane Spoofing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .196.2.2.2.  Controller Plane Spoofing . . . . . . . . . . . .206.3.  Segmentation Attacks (injection)  . . . . . . . . . . . .206.3.1.  Data Plane Segmentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .206.3.2.  Controller Plane Segmentation . . . . . . . . . . . .206.4.  Replication and Elimination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216.4.1.  Increased Attack Surface  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216.4.2.  Header Manipulation at Elimination Routers  . . . . .216.5.  Control or Signaling Packet Modification  . . . . . . . .216.6.  Control or Signaling Packet Injection . . . . . . . . . .216.7.  Reconnaissance  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216.8.  Attacks on Time Sync Mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . . . .226.9.  Attacks on Path Choice  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227.  Security Threat Mitigation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227.1.  Path Redundancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227.2.  Integrity Protection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227.3.  DetNet Node Authentication  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .237.4.  Dummy Traffic Insertion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .247.5.  Encryption  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .247.5.1.  Encryption Considerations for DetNet  . . . . . . . .247.6.  Control and Signaling Message Protection  . . . . . . . .257.7.  Dynamic Performance Analytics . . . . . . . . . . . . . .267.8.  Mitigation Summary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .278.  Association of Attacks to Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . .288.1.  Association of Attacks to Use Case Common Themes  . . . .288.1.1.  Sub-Network Layer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288.1.2.  Central Administration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .298.1.3.  Hot Swap  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .298.1.4.  Data Flow Information Models  . . . . . . . . . . . .308.1.5.  L2 and L3 Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .308.1.6.  End-to-End Delivery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30       8.1.7.  Replacement for Proprietary Fieldbuses and Ethernet-               based Networks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .318.1.8.  Deterministic vs Best-Effort Traffic  . . . . . . . .318.1.9.  Deterministic Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.10. Unused Reserved Bandwidth . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.11. Interoperability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.12. Cost Reductions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.13. Insufficiently Secure Devices . . . . . . . . . . . .338.1.14. DetNet Network Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .338.1.15. Multiple Hops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .348.1.16. Level of Service  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .348.1.17. Bounded Latency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .348.1.18. Low Latency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .358.1.19. Bounded Jitter (Latency Variation)  . . . . . . . . .358.1.20. Symmetrical Path Delays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .358.1.21. Reliability and Availability  . . . . . . . . . . . .358.1.22. Redundant Paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 3]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20208.1.23. Security Measures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .368.2.  Summary of Attack Types per Use Case Common Theme . . . .368.3.  Security Considerations for OAM Traffic . . . . . . . . .399.  DetNet Technology-Specific Threats  . . . . . . . . . . . . .399.1.  IP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .409.2.  MPLS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4110. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4211. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4212. Privacy Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4213. Contributors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4214. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4314.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4314.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .471.  Introduction   A deterministic network is one that can carry data flows for real-   time applications with extremely low data loss rates and bounded   latency.  Deterministic networks have been successfully deployed in   real-time Operational Technology (OT) applications for some years.   However, such networks are typically isolated from external access,   and thus the security threat from external attackers is low.  IETF   Deterministic Networking (DetNet, [RFC8655]) specifies a set of   technologies that enable creation of deterministic networks on IP-   based networks of potentially wide area (on the scale of a corporate   network) potentially bringing the OT network into contact with   Information Technology (IT) traffic and security threats that lie   outside of a tightly controlled and bounded area (such as the   internals of an aircraft).   These DetNet technologies have not previously been deployed together   on a wide area IP-based network, and thus can present security   considerations that may be new to IP-based wide area network   designers; this document provides insight into such system-level   security considerations.  In addition, designers of DetNet components   (such as routers) face new security-related challenges in providing   DetNet services, for example maintaining reliable isolation between   traffic flows in an environment where IT traffic co-mingles with   critical reserved-bandwidth OT traffic; this document also examines   security implications internal to DetNet components.   Security is of particularly high importance in DetNet networks   because many of the use cases which are enabled by DetNet [RFC8578]   include control of physical devices (power grid components,   industrial controls, building controls) which can have high   operational costs for failure, and present potentially attractive   targets for cyber-attackers.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 4]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   This situation is even more acute given that one of the goals of   DetNet is to provide a "converged network", i.e. one that includes   both IT traffic and OT traffic, thus exposing potentially sensitive   OT devices to attack in ways that were not previously common (usually   because they were under a separate control system or otherwise   isolated from the IT network, for example [ARINC664P7]).  Security   considerations for OT networks are not a new area, and there are many   OT networks today that are connected to wide area networks or the   Internet; this document focuses on the issues that are specific to   the DetNet technologies and use cases.   Given the above considerations, securing a DetNet starts with a   scrupulously well-designed and well-managed engineered network   following industry best practices for security at both the data plane   and controller plane; this is the assumed starting point for the   considerations discussed herein.  Such assumptions also depend on the   network components themselves upholding the security-related   properties that are to be assumed by DetNet system-level designers;   for example, the assumption that network traffic associated with a   given flow can never affect traffic associated with a different flow   is only true if the underlying components make it so.  Such   properties, which may represent new challenges to component   designers, are also considered herein.   In this context we view the network design and management aspects of   network security as being primarily concerned with denial-of service   prevention by ensuring that DetNet traffic goes where it's supposed   to and that an external attacker can't inject traffic that disrupts   the DetNet's delivery timing assurance.  The time-specific aspects of   DetNet security presented here take up where the design and   management aspects leave off.   The exact security requirements for any given DetNet network are   necessarily specific to the use cases handled by that network.  Thus   the reader is assumed to be familiar with the specific security   requirements of their use cases, for example those outlined in the   DetNet Use Cases [RFC8578] and the Security Considerations sections   of the DetNet documents applicable to the network technologies in   use, for example [I-D.ietf-detnet-ip]).  A general introduction to   the DetNet architecture can be found in [RFC8655] and it is also   recommended to be familiar with the DetNet Data Plane   [I-D.ietf-detnet-data-plane-framework] and Flow Information Model   [I-D.ietf-detnet-flow-information-model].   The DetNet technologies include ways to:   o  Assign data plane resources for DetNet flows in some or all of the      intermediate nodes (routers) along the path of the flowGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 5]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   o  Provide explicit routes for DetNet flows that do not dynamically      change with the network topology in ways that affect the quality      of service received by the affected flow(s)   o  Distribute data from DetNet flow packets over time and/or space to      ensure delivery of each packet's data' in spite of the loss of a      path   This document includes sections considering DetNet component design   as well as system design.  The latter includes threat modeling and   analysis, threat impact and mitigation, and the association of   attacks with use cases (based on the Use Case Common Themes section   of the DetNet Use Cases [RFC8578]).   The structure of the threat model and threat analysis sections were   originally derived from [RFC7384], which also considers time-related   security considerations in IP networks.2.  Abbreviations and Terminology   IT         Information Technology (the application of computers to   store, study, retrieve, transmit, and manipulate data or information,   often in the context of a business or other enterprise - [IT_DEF]).   OT         Operational Technology (the hardware and software   dedicated to detecting or causing changes in physical processes   through direct monitoring and/or control of physical devices such as   valves, pumps, etc. - [OT_DEF])   Component       A component of a DetNet system - used here to refer   to any hardware or software element of a DetNet network which   implements DetNet-specific functionality, for example all or part of   a router, switch, or end system.   Resource Segmentation       Used as a more general form for Network   Segmentation (the act or practice of splitting a computer network   into subnetworks, each being a network segment - [RS_DEF])3.  Security Considerations for DetNet Component Design   As noted above, DetNet provides resource allocation, explicit routes   and redundant path support.  Each of these has associated security   implications, which are discussed in this section, in the context of   component design.  Detection, reporting and appropriate action in the   case of packet arrival time violations are also discussed.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 6]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20203.1.  Resource Allocation   A DetNet system security designer relies on the premise that any   resources allocated to a resource-reserved (OT-type) flow are   inviolable, in other words there is no physical possibility within a   DetNet component that resources allocated to a given flow can be   compromised by any type of traffic in the network; this includes both   malicious traffic as well as inadvertent traffic such as might be   produced by a malfunctioning component, for example one made by a   different manufacturer.  From a security standpoint, this is a   critical assumption, for example when designing against DOS attacks.   It is the responsibility of the component designer to ensure that   this condition is met; this implies protection against excess traffic   from adjacent flows, and against compromises to the resource   allocation/deallocation process, for example through the use of   traffic shaping and policing.   As an example, consider the implementation of Flow Aggregation for   DetNet flows (as discussed in   [I-D.ietf-detnet-data-plane-framework]).  In this example say there   are N flows that are to be aggregated, thus the bandwidth resources   of the aggregate flow must be sufficient to contain the sum of the   bandwidth reservation for the N flows.  However if one of those flows   were to consume more than its individually allocated BW, this could   cause starvation of the other flows.  Thus simply providing and   enforcing the calculated aggregate bandwidth may not be a complete   solution - the bandwidth for each individual flow must still be   guaranteed, for example via ingress policing of each flow (i.e.   before it is aggregated).  Alternatively, if by some other means each   flow to be aggregated can be trusted not to exceed its allocated   bandwidth, the same goal can be achieved.3.2.  Explicit Routes   The DetNet-specific purpose for constraining the network's ability to   re-route OT traffic is to maintain the specified service parameters   (such as upper and lower latency boundaries) for a given flow.  For   example if the network were to re-route a flow (or some part of a   flow) based exclusively on statistical path usage metrics, or due to   malicious activity, it is possible that the new path would have a   latency that is outside the required latency bounds which were   designed into the original TE-designed path, thereby violating the   quality of service for the affected flow (or part of that flow).   However, it is acceptable for the network to re-route OT traffic in   such a way as to maintain the specified latency bounds (and any other   specified service properties) for any reason, for example in responseGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 7]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   to a runtime component or path failure.  From a security standpoint,   the system designer relies on the premise that the packets will be   delivered with the specified latency boundaries; thus any component   that is involved in controlling or implementing any change of the   initially TE-configured flow routes needs to prevent malicious or   accidental re-routing of OT flows that might adversely affect   delivering the traffic within the specified service parameters.3.3.  Redundant Path Support   The DetNet provision for redundant paths (PREOF) (as defined in the   DetNet Architecture [RFC8655]) provides the foundation for high   reliablity of a DetNet, by virtually eliminating packet loss (i.e. to   a degree which is implementation-dependent) through hitless redundant   packet delivery.  (Note that PREOF is not defined for a DetNet IP   data plane).   It is the responsibility of the system designer to determine the   level of reliability required by their use case, and to specify   redundant paths sufficient to provide the desired level of   reliability (in as much as that reliability can be provided through   the use of redundant paths).  It is the responsibility of the   component designer to ensure that the relevant PREOF operations are   executed reliably and securely, to avoid potentially catastrophic   situations for the operational technology relying on them.   However, note that not all PREOF operations are necessarily   implemented in every network; for example a packet re-ordering   function may not be necessary if the packets are either not required   to be in order, or if the ordering is performed in some other part of   the network.   Ideally a redundant path could be specified from end to end of the   flow's path, however given that this is not always possible (as   described in [RFC8655]) the system designer will need to consider the   resulting end-to-end reliability and security resulting from any   given arrangment of network segments along the path, each of which   provides its individual PREOF implementation and thus its individual   level of reliabiilty and security.   At the data plane the implementation of PREOF depends on the correct   assignment and interpretation of packet sequence numbers, as well as   the actions taken based on them, such as elimination (including   elimination of packets with spurious sequence numbers).  Thus the   integrity of these values must be maintained by the component as they   are assigned by the DetNet Data Plane's Service sub-layer, and   transported by the Forwarding sub-layer.  This is no different than   the integrity of the values in any header used by the DetNet (or anyGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 8]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   other) data plane, and is not unique to redundant paths.  From the   sequence number injection perspective, it is no different from any   other protocols that use sequence numbers.3.4.  Timing (or other) Violation Reporting   Another fundamental assumption of a secure DetNet is that in any case   in which an incoming packet arrives with any timing or bandwidth   violation, something can be done about it which doesn't cause damage   to the system.  For example having the network shut down a link if a   packet arrives outside of its prescribed time window may serve the   attacker better than it serves the network.  That means that the   component's data plane must be able to detect and act on a variety of   such violations, at least alerting the controller plane.  Any action   apart from that needs to be carefully considered in the context of   the specific system.  Some possible violations that warrant detection   include cases where a packet arrives:   o  Outside of its prescribed time window   o  Within its time window but with a compromised time stamp that      makes it appear that it is not within its window   o  Exceeding the reserved flow bandwidth   Logging of such issues is unlikely to be adequate, since a delay in   response to the situation could result in material damage, for   example to mechanical devices controlled by the network.  Given that   the data plane component probably has no knowledge of the use case of   the network, or its applications and end systems, it would seem   useful for a data plane component to allow the system designer to   configure its actions in the face of such violations.   Possible direct actions that may be taken at the data plane include   dropping the packet and/or shutting down the link; however if any   such actions are configured to be taken, the system designer must   ensure that such actions do not compromise the continued safe   operation of the system.  For example, the controller plane should   mitigate in a timely fashion any potential adverse effect on   mechanical devices controlled by the network.4.  DetNet Security Considerations Compared With DiffServ Security    Considerations   DetNet is designed to be compatible with DiffServ [RFC2474] as   applied to IT traffic in the DetNet.  DetNet also incorporates the   use of the 6-bit value of the DSCP field of the TOS field of the IP   header for flow identification for OT traffic, however the DetNetGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                 [Page 9]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   interpretation of the DSCP value for OT traffic is not equivalent to   the PHB selection behavior as defined by DiffServ.   Thus security consideration for DetNet have some aspects in common   with DiffServ, in fact overlapping 100% with respect to IP IT   traffic.  Security considerations for these aspects are part of the   existing literature on IP network security, specifically the Security   sections of [RFC2474] and [RFC2475].  However DetNet also introduces   timing and other considerations which are not present in DiffServ, so   the DiffServ security considerations are necessary but not sufficient   for DetNet.   In the case of DetNet OT traffic, the DSCP value, although   interpreted differently than in DiffServ, does contribute to   determination of the service provided to the packet.  Thus in DetNet   there are similar consequences to DiffServ for lack of detection of,   or incorrect handling of, packets with mismarked DSCP values, and   thus many of the points made in the DiffServ draft Security   discussions are also relevant to DetNet OT traffic, though perhaps in   modified form.  For example, in DetNet the effect of an undetected or   incorrectly handled maliciously mismarked DSCP field in an OT packet   is not identical to affecting that packet's PHB, since DetNet does   not use the PHB concept for OT traffic, but nonetheless the service   provided to the packet could be affected, so mitigation measures   analogous to those prescribed by DiffServ would be appropriate for   DetNet.  For example, mismarked DSCP values should not cause failure   of network nodes, and any internal link that cannot be adequately   secured against modification of DSCP values should be treated as a   boundary link (and hence any arriving traffic on that link is treated   as if it were entering the domain at an ingress node).  The remarks   in [RFC2474] regarding IPsec and Tunnelling Interactions are also   relevant (though this is not to say that other sections are less   relevant).5.  Security Threats   This section presents a threat model, and analyzes the possible   threats in a DetNet-enabled network.  The threats considered in this   section are independent of any specific technologies used to   implement the DetNet;Section 9 considers attacks that are associated   with the DetNet technologies encompassed by   [I-D.ietf-detnet-data-plane-framework].   We distinguish controller plane threats from data plane threats.  The   attack surface may be the same, but the types of attacks as well as   the motivation behind them, are different.  For example, a delay   attack is more relevant to data plane than to controller plane.   There is also a difference in terms of security solutions: the wayGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 10]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   you secure the data plane is often different than the way you secure   the controller plane.5.1.  Threat Model   The threat model used in this memo employs organizational elements of   the threat models of [RFC7384] and [RFC7835] . This model classifies   attackers based on two criteria:   o  Internal vs. external: internal attackers either have access to a      trusted segment of the network or possess the encryption or      authentication keys.  External attackers, on the other hand, do      not have the keys and have access only to the encrypted or      authenticated traffic.   o  On-path vs. off-path: on-path attackers are located in a position      that allows interception and modification of in-flight protocol      packets, whereas off-path attackers can only attack by generating      protocol packets.   Care has also been taken to adhere toSection 5 of [RFC3552], both   with respect to which attacks are considered out-of-scope for this   document, but also which are considered to be the most common threats   (explored further inSection 5.2, Threat Analysis).  Most of the   direct threats to DetNet are active attacks (i.e. attacks that modify   DetNet traffic), but it is highly suggested that DetNet application   developers take appropriate measures to protect the content of the   DetNet flows from passive attacks (i.e. attacks that observe but do   not modify DetNet traffic) for example through the use of TLS or   DTLS.   DetNet-Service, one of the service scenarios described in   [I-D.varga-detnet-service-model], is the case where a service   connects DetNet networking islands, i.e. two or more otherwise   independent DetNet network domains are connected via a link that is   not intrinsically part of either network.  This implies that there   could be DetNet traffic flowing over a non-DetNet link, which may   provide an attacker with an advantageous opportunity to tamper with   DetNet traffic.  The security properties of non-DetNet links are   outside of the scope of DetNet Security, but it should be noted that   use of non-DetNet services to interconnect DetNet networks merits   security analysis to ensure the integrity of the DetNet networks   involved.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 11]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20205.2.  Threat Analysis5.2.1.  Delay   An attacker can maliciously delay DetNet data flow traffic.  By   delaying the traffic, the attacker can compromise the service of   applications that are sensitive to high delays or to high delay   variation.  The delay may be constant or modulated.5.2.2.  DetNet Flow Modification or Spoofing   An attacker can modify some header fields of en route packets in a   way that causes the DetNet flow identification mechanisms to   misclassify the flow.  Alternatively, the attacker can inject traffic   that is tailored to appear as if it belongs to a legitimate DetNet   flow.  The potential consequence is that the DetNet flow resource   allocation cannot guarantee the performance that is expected when the   flow identification works correctly.5.2.3.  Resource Segmentation (Inter-segment Attack)   An attacker can inject traffic that will consume network resources   such that it affects DetNet flows.  This can be performed using non-   DetNet traffic that indirectly affects DetNet traffic (hardware   resource exhaustion), or by using DetNet traffic from one DetNet flow   that directly affects traffic from different DetNet flows.5.2.4.  Packet Replication and Elimination5.2.4.1.  Replication: Increased Attack Surface   Redundancy is intended to increase the robustness and survivability   of DetNet flows, and replication over multiple paths can potentially   mitigate an attack that is limited to a single path.  However, the   fact that packets are replicated over multiple paths increases the   attack surface of the network, i.e., there are more points in the   network that may be subject to attacks.5.2.4.2.  Replication-related Header Manipulation   An attacker can manipulate the replication-related header fields.   This capability opens the door for various types of attacks.  For   example:   o  Forward both replicas - malicious change of a packet SN (Sequence      Number) can cause both replicas of the packet to be forwarded.      Note that this attack has a similar outcome to a replay attack.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 12]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   o  Eliminate both replicas - SN manipulation can be used to cause      both replicas to be eliminated.  In this case an attacker that has      access to a single path can cause packets from other paths to be      dropped, thus compromising some of the advantage of path      redundancy.   o  Flow hijacking - an attacker can hijack a DetNet flow with access      to a single path by systematically replacing the SNs on the given      path with higher SN values.  For example, an attacker can replace      every SN value S with a higher value S+C, where C is a constant      integer.  Thus, the attacker creates a false illusion that the      attacked path has the lowest delay, causing all packets from other      paths to be eliminated in favor of the attacked path.  Once the      flow from the compromised path is favored by the elminating      bridge, the flow is hijacked by the attacker.  It is now posible      to either replace en route packets with malicious packets, or      simply injecting errors, causing the packets to be dropped at      their destination.   o  Amplification - an attacker who injects packets into a flow that      is to be replicated will have their attack amplified through the      replication process.  This is no different than any attacker who      injects packets that are delivered through multicast, broadcast,      or other point-to-multi-point mechanisms.5.2.5.  Controller Plane5.2.5.1.  Path Choice Manipulation5.2.5.1.1.  Control or Signaling Packet Modification   An attacker can maliciously modify en route control packets in order   to disrupt or manipulate the DetNet path/resource allocation.5.2.5.1.2.  Control or Signaling Packet Injection   An attacker can maliciously inject control packets in order to   disrupt or manipulate the DetNet path/resource allocation.5.2.5.1.3.  Increased Attack Surface   One of the possible consequences of a path manipulation attack is an   increased attack surface.  Thus, when the attack described in the   previous subsection is implemented, it may increase the potential of   other attacks to be performed.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 13]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20205.2.5.2.  Compromised Controller   An attacker can subvert a controller, or enable a compromised   controller to falsely represent itself as a controller so that the   network nodes believe it to be authorized to instruct them.   Presence of compromised nodes in a DetNet is not a "new" threat that   arises as a result of determinism or time sensitivity; the same   techniques used to prevent or mitigate against compromised nodes in   any network are equally applicable in the DetNet case.  However this   underscores the requirement for careful system security design in a   DetNet, given that the effects of even one bad actor on the network   can be potentially catastrophic.   Security concerns specific to any given controller plane technology   used in DetNet will be addressed by the DetNet documents associated   with that technology.5.2.6.  Reconnaissance   A passive eavesdropper can identify DetNet flows and then gather   information about en route DetNet flows, e.g., the number of DetNet   flows, their bandwidths, their schedules, or other temporal   properties.  The gathered information can later be used to invoke   other attacks on some or all of the flows.   Note that in some cases DetNet flows may be identified based on an   explicit DetNet header, but in some cases the flow identification may   be based on fields from the L3/L4 headers.  If L3/L4 headers are   involved, for the purposes of this document we assume they are   encrypted and/or integrity-protected from external attackers.5.2.7.  Time Synchronization Mechanisms   An attacker can use any of the attacks described in [RFC7384] to   attack the synchronization protocol, thus affecting the DetNet   service.5.3.  Threat Summary   A summary of the attacks that were discussed in this section is   presented in Figure 1.  For each attack, the table specifies the type   of attackers that may invoke the attack.  In the context of this   summary, the distinction between internal and external attacks is   under the assumption that a corresponding security mechanism is being   used, and that the corresponding network equipment takes part in this   mechanism.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 14]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   | Attack                                  |   Attacker Type   |   |                                         +---------+---------+   |                                         |Internal |External |   |                                         |On-P|Off-P|On-P|Off-P|   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Delay attack                             | +  | +  | +  | +  |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |DetNet Flow Modification or Spoofing     | +  | +  |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Inter-segment Attack                     | +  | +  |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Replication: Increased Attack Surface    | +  | +  | +  | +  |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Replication-related Header Manipulation  | +  |    |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Path Manipulation                        | +  | +  |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Path Choice: Increased Attack Surface    | +  | +  | +  | +  |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Control or Signaling Packet Modification | +  |    |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Control or Signaling Packet Injection    |    | +  |    |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Reconnaissance                           | +  |    | +  |    |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+   |Attacks on Time Sync Mechanisms          | +  | +  | +  | +  |   +-----------------------------------------+----+----+----+----+                     Figure 1: Threat Analysis Summary6.  Security Threat Impacts   This section describes and rates the impact of the attacks described   inSection 5, Security Threats.  In this section, the impacts as   described assume that the associated mitigation is not present or has   failed.  Mitigations are discussed inSection 7, Security Threat   Mitigation.   In computer security, the impact (or consequence) of an incident can   be measured in loss of confidentiality, integrity or availability of   information.  In the case of time sensitive networks, the impact of a   network exploit can also include failure or malfunction of mechanical   and/or other OT systems.   DetNet raises these stakes significantly for OT applications,   particularly those which may have been designed to run in an OT-onlyGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 15]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   environment and thus may not have been designed for security in an IT   environment with its associated devices, services and protocols.   The severity of various components of the impact of a successful   vulnerability exploit to use cases by industry is available in more   detail in the DetNet Use Cases [RFC8578].  Each of these use cases is   represented in the table below, including Pro Audio, Electrical   Utilities, Industrial M2M (split into two areas, M2M Data Gathering   and M2M Control Loop), and others.   Components of Impact (left column) include Criticality of Failure,   Effects of Failure, Recovery, and DetNet Functional Dependence.   Criticality of failure summarizes the seriousness of the impact.  The   impact of a resulting failure can affect many different metrics that   vary greatly in scope and severity.  In order to reduce the number of   variables, only the following were included: Financial, Health and   Safety, People well being (People WB), Affect on a single   organization, and affect on multiple organizations.  Recovery   outlines how long it would take for an affected use case to get back   to its pre-failure state (Recovery time objective, RTO), and how much   of the original service would be lost in between the time of service   failure and recovery to original state (Recovery Point Objective,   RPO).  DetNet dependence maps how much the following DetNet service   objectives contribute to impact of failure: Time dependency, data   integrity, source node integrity, availability, latency/jitter.   The scale of the Impact mappings is low, medium, and high.  In some   use cases there may be a multitude of specific applications in which   DetNet is used.  For simplicity this section attempts to average the   varied impacts of different applications.  This section does not   address the overall risk of a certain impact which would require the   likelihood of a failure happening.   In practice any such ratings will vary from case to case; the ratings   shown here are given as examples.   Table, Part One (of Two)   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |                  | Pro A | Util | Bldg |Wire- | Cell |M2M  |M2M  |   |                  |       |      |      | less |      |Data |Ctrl |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   | Criticality      | Med   | Hi   | Low  | Med  | Med  | Med | Med |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   | Effects   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Financial       | Med   | Hi   | Med  | Med  | Low  | Med | Med |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 16]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   |  Health/Safety   | Med   | Hi   | Hi   | Med  | Med  | Med | Med |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  People WB       | Med   | Hi   | Hi   | Low  | Hi   | Low | Low |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Effect 1 org    | Hi    | Hi   | Med  | Hi   | Med  | Med | Med |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Effect >1 org   | Med   | Hi   | Low  | Med  | Med  | Med | Med |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |Recovery   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Recov Time Obj  | Med   | Hi   | Med  | Hi   | Hi   | Hi  | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Recov Point Obj | Med   | Hi   | Low  | Med  | Low  | Hi  | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |DetNet Dependence   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Time Dependency | Hi    | Hi   | Low  | Hi   | Med  | Low | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Latency/Jitter  | Hi    | Hi   | Med  | Med  | Low  | Low | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Data Integrity  | Hi    | Hi   | Med  | Hi   | Low  | Hi  | Low |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Src Node Integ  | Hi    | Hi   | Med  | Hi   | Med  | Hi  | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   |  Availability    | Hi    | Hi   | Med  | Hi   | Low  | Hi  | Hi  |   +------------------+-----------------------------------------+-----+   Table, Part Two (of Two)   +------------------+--------------------------+   |                  | Mining | Block | Network |   |                  |        | Chain | Slicing |   +------------------+--------------------------+   | Criticality      | Hi     | Med   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   | Effects   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Financial       | Hi     | Hi    | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Health/Safety   | Hi     | Low   | Med     |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  People WB       | Hi     | Low   | Med     |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Effect 1 org    | Hi     | Hi    | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Effect >1 org   | Hi     | Low   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |Recovery   +------------------+--------------------------+Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 17]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   |  Recov Time Obj  | Hi     | Low   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Recov Point Obj | Hi     | Low   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |DetNet Dependence   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Time Dependency | Hi     | Low   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Latency/Jitter  | Hi     | Low   | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Data Integrity  | Hi     | Hi    | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Src Node Integ  | Hi     | Hi    | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+   |  Availability    | Hi     | Hi    | Hi      |   +------------------+--------------------------+             Figure 2: Impact of Attacks by Use Case Industry   The rest of this section will cover impact of the different groups in   more detail.6.1.  Delay-Attacks6.1.1.  Data Plane Delay Attacks   Note that 'delay attack' also includes the possibility of a 'negative   delay' or early arrival of a packet, or possibly adversely changing   the timestamp value.   Delayed messages in a DetNet link can result in the same behavior as   dropped messages in ordinary networks as the services attached to the   DetNet flow have strict deterministic requirements.   For a single path scenario, disruption is a real possibility, whereas   in a multipath scenario, large delays or instabilities in one DetNet   flow can lead to increased buffer and processor resources at the   eliminating router.   A data-plane delay attack on a system controlling substantial moving   devices, for example in industrial automation, can cause physical   damage.  For example, if the network promises a bounded latency of   2ms for a flow, yet the machine receives it with 5ms latency, the   machine's control loop can become unstable.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 18]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20206.1.2.  Controller Plane Delay Attacks   In and of itself, this is not directly a threat to the DetNet   service, but the effects of delaying control messages can have quite   adverse effects later.   o  Delayed tear-down can lead to resource leakage, which in turn can      result in failure to allocate new DetNet flows, finally giving      rise to a denial of service attack.   o  Failure to deliver, or severely delaying, controller plane      messages adding an endpoint to a multicast-group will prevent the      new endpoint from receiving expected frames thus disrupting      expected behavior.   o  Delaying messages removing an endpoint from a group can lead to      loss of privacy as the endpoint will continue to receive messages      even after it is supposedly removed.6.2.  Flow Modification and Spoofing6.2.1.  Flow Modification   If the contents of a packet header or body can be modified by the   attacker, this can cause the packet to be routed incorrectly or   dropped, or the payload to be corrupted or subtly modified.6.2.2.  Spoofing6.2.2.1.  Dataplane Spoofing   Spoofing dataplane messages can result in increased resource   consumptions on the routers throughout the network as it will   increase buffer usage and processor utilization.  This can lead to   resource exhaustion and/or increased delay.   If the attacker manages to create valid headers, the false messages   can be forwarded through the network, using part of the allocated   bandwidth.  This in turn can cause legitimate messages to be dropped   when the resource budget has been exhausted.   Finally, the endpoint will have to deal with invalid messages being   delivered to the endpoint instead of (or in addition to) a valid   message.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 19]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20206.2.2.2.  Controller Plane Spoofing   A successful controller plane spoofing-attack will potentionally have   adverse effects.  It can do virtually anything from:   o  modifying existing DetNet flows by changing the available      bandwidth   o  add or remove endpoints from a DetNet flow   o  drop DetNet flows completely   o  falsely create new DetNet flows (exhaust the systems resources, or      to enable DetNet flows that are outside the Network Engineer's      control)6.3.  Segmentation Attacks (injection)6.3.1.  Data Plane Segmentation   Injection of false messages in a DetNet flow could lead to exhaustion   of the available bandwidth for that flow if the routers attribute   these false messages to that flow's budget.   In a multipath scenario, injected messages will cause increased   processor utilization in elimination routers.  If enough paths are   subject to malicious injection, the legitimate messages can be   dropped.  Likewise it can cause an increase in buffer usage.  In   total, it will consume more resources in the routers than normal,   giving rise to a resource exhaustion attack on the routers.   If a DetNet flow is interrupted, the end application will be affected   by what is now a non-deterministic flow.6.3.2.  Controller Plane Segmentation   In a successful controller plane segmentation attack, control   messages are acted on by nodes in the network, unbeknownst to the   central controller or the network engineer.  This has the potential   to:   o  create new DetNet flows (exhausting resources)   o  drop existing DetNet flows (denial of service)   o  add end-stations to a multicast group (loss of privacy)   o  remove end-stations from a multicast group (reduction of service)Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 20]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   o  modify the DetNet flow attributes (affecting available bandwidth)6.4.  Replication and Elimination   The Replication and Elimination is relevant only to data plane   messages as controller plane messages are not subject to multipath   routing.6.4.1.  Increased Attack Surface   Covered briefly inSection 6.3, Segmentation Attacks.6.4.2.  Header Manipulation at Elimination Routers   Covered briefly inSection 6.3, Segmentation Attacks.6.5.  Control or Signaling Packet Modification   If control packets are subject to manipulation undetected, the   network can be severely compromised.6.6.  Control or Signaling Packet Injection   If an attacker can inject control packets undetected, the network can   be severely compromised.6.7.  Reconnaissance   Of all the attacks, this is one of the most difficult to detect and   counter.  Often, an attacker will start out by observing the traffic   going through the network and use the knowledge gathered in this   phase to mount future attacks.   The attacker can, at their leisure, observe over time all aspects of   the messaging and signalling, learning the intent and purpose of all   traffic flows.  At some later date, possibly at an important time in   an operational context, the attacker can launch a multi-faceted   attack, possibly in conjunction with some demand for ransom.   The flow-id in the header of the data plane messages gives an   attacker a very reliable identifier for DetNet traffic, and this   traffic has a high probability of going to lucrative targets.   Applications which are ported from a private OT network to the higher   visibility DetNet environment may need to be adapted to limit   distinctive flow properties that could make them susceptible to   reconnaissance.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 21]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20206.8.  Attacks on Time Sync Mechanisms   Attacks on time sync mechanisms are addressed in [RFC7384].6.9.  Attacks on Path Choice   This is covered in part inSection 6.3, Segmentation Attacks, and as   with Replication and Elimination (Section 6.4), this is relevant for   DataPlane messages.7.  Security Threat Mitigation   This section describes a set of measures that can be taken to   mitigate the attacks described inSection 5, Security Threats.  These   mitigations should be viewed as a toolset that includes several   different and diverse tools.  Each application or system will   typically use a subset of these tools, based on a system-specific   threat analysis.7.1.  Path Redundancy   Description      A DetNet flow that can be forwarded simultaneously over multiple      paths.  Path replication and elimination [RFC8655] provides      resiliency to dropped or delayed packets.  This redundancy      improves the robustness to failures and to on-path attacks.  Note:      At the time of this writing, PREOF is not defined for the IP data      plane.   Related attacks      Path redundancy can be used to mitigate various on-path attacks,      including attacks described inSection 5.2.1,Section 5.2.2,Section 5.2.3, andSection 5.2.7.  However it is also possible      that multiple paths may make it more difficult to locate the      source of an on-path attacker.      A delay modulation attack could result in extensively exercising      parts of the code that wouldn't normally be extensively exercised      and thus might expose flaws in the system that might otherwise not      be exposed.7.2.  Integrity Protection   DescriptionGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 22]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020      An integrity protection mechanism, such as a hash-based Message      Authentication Code (MAC) can be used to mitigate modification      attacks on IP packets.  Such MAC usage needs to be part of a      security association that is established and managed by a security      association protocol (such as IKEv2 for IPsec security      associations).  Integrity protection in the controller plane is      discussed inSection 7.6.   Packet Sequence Number Integrity Considerations      The use of PREOF in a DetNet implementation implies the use of a      sequence number for each packet.  There is a trust relationship      between the device that adds the sequence number and the device      that removes the sequence number.  The sequence number may be end-      to-end source to destination, or may be added/deleted by network      edge devices.  The adder and remover(s) have the trust      relationship because they are the ones that ensure that the      sequence numbers are not modifiable.  Between those two points,      there may or may not be replication and elimination functions.      The elimination functions must be able to see the sequence      numbers.  Therefore any encryption that is done between adders and      removers must not obscure the sequence number.  If the sequence      removers and the eliminators are in the same physical device, it      may be possible to obscure the sequence number, however that is a      layer violation, and is not recommended practice.  Note: At the      time of this writing, PREOF is not defined for the IP data plane.   Related attacks      Integrity protection mitigates attacks related to modification and      tampering, including the attacks described inSection 5.2.2 andSection 5.2.4.7.3.  DetNet Node Authentication   Description      Authentication verifies the identity of DetNet nodes (including      DetNet Controller Plane nodes), enabling mitigation of spoofing      attacks.  Note that while integrity protection (Section 7.2)      prevents intermediate nodes from modifying information,      authentication (such as provided by IPsec or MACsec) can provide      traffic origin verification, i.e. to verify that each packet in a      DetNet flow is from a trusted source.   Related attacksGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 23]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020      DetNet node authentication is used to mitigate attacks related to      spoofing, including the attacks ofSection 5.2.2, andSection 5.2.4.7.4.  Dummy Traffic Insertion   Description      With some queueing methods such as [IEEE802.1Qch-2017] it is      possible to introduce dummy traffic in order to regularize the      timing of packet transmission.   Related attacks      Removing distinctive temporal properties of individual packets or      flows can be used to mitigate against reconnaissance attacksSection 5.2.6.7.5.  Encryption   Description      DetNet flows can in principle be forwarded in encrypted form at      the DetNet layer, however, regarding encryption of IP headers seeSection 9.      DetNet nodes do not have any need to inspect the payload of any      DetNet packets, making them data-agnostic.  This means that end-      to- end encryption at the application layer is an acceptable way      to protect user data.      Encryption can also be applied at the subnet layer, for example      for Ethernet using MACSec, as noted inSection 9.   Related attacks      Encryption can be used to mitigate recon attacks (Section 5.2.6).      However, for a DetNet network to give differentiated quality of      service on a flow-by-flow basis, the network must be able to      identify the flows individually.  This implies that in a recon      attack the attacker may also be able to track individual flows to      learn more about the system.7.5.1.  Encryption Considerations for DetNet   Any compute time which is required for encryption and decryption   processing ('crypto') must be included in the flow latency   calculations.  Thus, crypto algorithms used in a DetNet must haveGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 24]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   bounded worst-case execution times, and these values must be used in   the latency calculations.   Some crypto algorithms are symmetric in encode/decode time (such as   AES) and others are asymmetric (such as public key algorithms).   There are advantages and disadvantages to the use of either type in a   given DetNet context.  The discussion in this document relates to the   timing implications of crypto for DetNet; it is assumed that   integrity considerations are covered elsewhere in the literature.   Asymmetrical crypto is typically not used in networks on a packet-by-   packet basis due to its computational cost.  For example, if only   endpoint checks or checks at a small number of intermediate points   are required, asymmetric crypto can be used to authenticate   distribution or exchange of a secret symmetric crypto key; a   successful check based on that key will provide traffic origin   verification, as long as the key is kept secret by the participants.   TLS and IKE (for IPsec) are examples of this for endpoint checks.   However, if secret symmetrical keys are used for this purpose the key   must be given to all relays, which increases the probability of a   secret key being leaked.  Also, if any relay is compromised or   misbehaving it may inject traffic into the flow.   Alternatively, asymmetric crypto can provide traffic origin   verification at every intermediate node.  For example, a DetNet flow   can be associated with an (asymmetric) keypair, such that the private   key is available to the source of the flow and the public key is   distributed with the flow information, allowing verification at every   node for every packet.  However, this is more computationally   expensive.   In either case, origin verification also requires replay detection as   part of the security protocol to prevent an attacker from recording   and resending traffic, e.g., as a denial of service attack on flow   forwarding resources.   If crypto keys are to be regenerated over the duration of the flow   then the time required to accomplish this must be accounted for in   the latency calculations.7.6.  Control and Signaling Message Protection   Description      Control and sigaling messages can be protected using      authentication and integrity protection mechanisms.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 25]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   Related attacks      These mechanisms can be used to mitigate various attacks on the      controller plane, as described inSection 5.2.5,Section 5.2.7 andSection 5.2.5.1.7.7.  Dynamic Performance Analytics   Description      The expectation is that the network will have a way to monitor to      detect if timing guarantees are not being met, and a way to alert      the controller plane in that event.  Information about the network      performance can be gathered in real-time in order to detect      anomalies and unusual behavior that may be the symptom of a      security attack.  The gathered information can be based, for      example, on per-flow counters, bandwidth measurement, and      monitoring of packet arrival times.  Unusual behavior or      potentially malicious nodes can be reported to a management      system, or can be used as a trigger for taking corrective actions.      The information can be tracked by DetNet end systems and transit      nodes, and exported to a management system, for example using      YANG.      If the monitoring or reporting mechanism itself is attacked or      subverted, this can result in malfunction of the network.  The      design of the monitoring system needs to take this into account      based on the specifics of the monitoring or reporting system being      considered.   Related attacks      Performance analytics can be used to mitigate various attacks,      including the ones described inSection 5.2.1 (Delay Attack),Section 5.2.3 (Resource Segmentation Attack), andSection 5.2.7      (Time Sync Attack).      For example, in the case of data plane delay attacks, one possible      mitigation is to timestamp the data at the source, and timestamp      it again at the destination, and if the resulting latency exceeds      the promised bound, discard that data and warn the operator (and/      or enter a fail-safe mode).  Note that DetNet specifies packet      sequence numbering, however it does not specify use of packet      timestamps, although they may be used by the underlying transport      (for example TSN) to provide the service.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 26]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20207.8.  Mitigation Summary   The following table maps the attacks ofSection 5, Security Threats,   to the impacts ofSection 6, Security Threat Impacts, and to the   mitigations of the current section.  Each row specifies an attack,   the impact of this attack if it is successfully implemented, and   possible mitigation methods.   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   | Attack               |      Impact         |     Mitigations     |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Delay Attack          |-Non-deterministic   |-Path redundancy     |   |                      | delay               |-Performance         |   |                      |-Data disruption     | analytics           |   |                      |-Increased resource  |                     |   |                      | consumption         |                     |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Reconnaissance        |-Enabler for other   |-Encryption          |   |                      | attacks             |-Dummy traffic       |   |                      |                     |           insertion |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |DetNet Flow Modificat-|-Increased resource  |-Path redundancy     |   |ion or Spoofing       | consumption         |-Integrity protection|   |                      |-Data disruption     |-DetNet Node         |   |                      |                     | authentication      |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Inter-Segment Attack  |-Increased resource  |-Path redundancy     |   |                      | consumption         |-Performance         |   |                      |-Data disruption     | analytics           |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Replication: Increased|-All impacts of other|-Integrity protection|   |attack surface        | attacks             |-DetNet Node         |   |                      |                     | authentication      |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Replication-related   |-Non-deterministic   |-Integrity protection|   |Header Manipulation   | delay               |-DetNet Node         |   |                      |-Data disruption     | authentication      |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Path Manipulation     |-Enabler for other   |-Control message     |   |                      | attacks             | protection          |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Path Choice: Increased|-All impacts of other|-Control message     |   |Attack Surface        | attacks             | protection          |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Control or Signaling  |-Increased resource  |-Control message     |   |Packet Modification   | consumption         | protection          |   |                      |-Non-deterministic   |                     |Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 27]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   |                      | delay               |                     |   |                      |-Data disruption     |                     |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Control or Signaling  |-Increased resource  |-Control message     |   |Packet Injection      | consumption         | protection          |   |                      |-Non-deterministic   |                     |   |                      | delay               |                     |   |                      |-Data disruption     |                     |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+   |Attacks on Time Sync  |-Non-deterministic   |-Path redundancy     |   |Mechanisms            | delay               |-Control message     |   |                      |-Increased resource  | protection          |   |                      | consumption         |-Performance         |   |                      |-Data disruption     | analytics           |   +----------------------+---------------------+---------------------+            Figure 3: Mapping Attacks to Impact and Mitigations8.  Association of Attacks to Use Cases   Different attacks can have different impact and/or mitigation   depending on the use case, so we would like to make this association   in our analysis.  However since there is a potentially unbounded list   of use cases, we categorize the attacks with respect to the common   themes of the use cases as identified in the Use Case Common Themes   section of the DetNet Use Cases [RFC8578].   See also Figure 2 for a mapping of the impact of attacks per use case   by industry.8.1.  Association of Attacks to Use Case Common Themes   In this section we review each theme and discuss the attacks that are   applicable to that theme, as well as anything specific about the   impact and mitigations for that attack with respect to that theme.   The table Figure 5, Mapping Between Themes and Attacks, then provides   a summary of the attacks that are applicable to each theme.8.1.1.  Sub-Network Layer   DetNet is expected to run over various transmission mediums, with   Ethernet being the first identified.  Attacks such as Delay or   Reconnaissance might be implemented differently on a different   transmission medium, however the impact on the DetNet as a whole   would be essentially the same.  We thus conclude that all attacks and   impacts that would be applicable to DetNet over Ethernet (i.e. all   those named in this document) would also be applicable to DetNet over   other transmission mediums.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 28]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   With respect to mitigations, some methods are specific to the   Ethernet medium, for example time-aware scheduling using 802.1Qbv   [IEEE802.1Qbv-2015] can protect against excessive use of bandwidth at   the ingress - for other mediums, other mitigations would have to be   implemented to provide analogous protection.8.1.2.  Central Administration   A DetNet network can be controlled by a centralized network   configuration and control system.  Such a system may be in a single   central location, or it may be distributed across multiple control   entities that function together as a unified control system for the   network.   All attacks named in this document which are relevant to controller   plane packets (and the controller itself) are relevant to this theme,   including Path Manipulation, Path Choice, Control Packet Modification   or Injection, Reconaissance and Attacks on Time Sync Mechanisms.8.1.3.  Hot Swap   A DetNet network is not expected to be "plug and play" - it is   expected that there is some centralized network configuration and   control system.  However, the ability to "hot swap" components (e.g.   due to malfunction) is similar enough to "plug and play" that this   kind of behavior may be expected in DetNet networks, depending on the   implementation.   An attack surface related to Hot Swap is that the DetNet network must   at least consider input at runtime from devices that were not part of   the initial configuration of the network.  Even a "perfect" (or   "hitless") replacement of a device at runtime would not necessarily   be ideal, since presumably one would want to distinguish it from the   original for OAM purposes (e.g. to report hot swap of a failed   device).   This implies that an attack such as Flow Modification, Spoofing or   Inter-segment (which could introduce packets from a "new" device   (i.e. one heretofore unknown on the network) could be used to exploit   the need to consider such packets (as opposed to rejecting them out   of hand as one would do if one did not have to consider introduction   of a new device).   Similarly if the network was designed to support runtime replacement   of a clock device, then presence (or apparent presence) and thus   consideration of packets from a new such device could affect the   network, or the time sync of the network, for example by initiating a   new Best Master Clock selection process.  Thus attacks on time syncGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 29]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   should be considered when designing hot swap type functionality (see   [RFC7384]).8.1.4.  Data Flow Information Models   Data Flow YANG models specific to DetNet networks are specified by   DetNet, and thus are 'new' and thus potentially present a new attack   surface.8.1.5.  L2 and L3 Integration   A DetNet network integrates Layer 2 (bridged) networks (e.g.  AVB/TSN   LAN) and Layer 3 (routed) networks via the use of well-known   protocols such as IP, MPLS Pseudowire, and Ethernet.   There are no specific entries in the mapping table Figure 4, however   that does not imply that there could be no relevant attacks related   to L2-L3 integration.8.1.6.  End-to-End Delivery   Packets sent over DetNet are not to be dropped by the network due to   congestion.  (Packets may however intentionally be dropped for   intended reasons, e.g. per security measures).   A data plane attack may force packets to be dropped, for example a   "long" Delay or Replication/Elimination or Flow Modification attack.   The same result might be obtained by a controller plane attack, e.g.   Path Manipulation or Signaling Packet Modification.   It may be that such attacks are limited to Internal on-path   attackers, but other possibilities should be considered.   An attack may also cause packets that should not be delivered to be   delivered, such as by forcing packets from one (e.g. replicated) path   to be preferred over another path when they should not be   (Replication attack), or by Flow Modification, or by Path Choice or   Packet Injection.  A Time Sync attack could cause a system that was   expecting certain packets at certain times to accept unintended   packets based on compromised system time or time windowing in the   scheduler.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 30]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20208.1.7.  Replacement for Proprietary Fieldbuses and Ethernet-based        Networks   There are many proprietary "field buses" used in today's industrial   and other industries, as well as proprietary non-interoperable   deterministic Ethernet-based networks.  DetNet is intended to provide   an open-standards-based alternative to such buses/networks.  In cases   where a DetNet intersects with such fieldbuses/networks or their   protocols, such as by protocol emulation or access via a gateway, new   attack surfaces can be opened.   For example an Inter-Segment or Controller plane attack such as Path   Manipulation, Path Choice or Control Packet Modification/Injection   could be used to exploit commands specific to such a protocol, or   that are interpreted differently by the different protocols or   gateway.8.1.8.  Deterministic vs Best-Effort Traffic   Most of the themes described in this document address OT (reserved)   DetNet flows - this item is intended to address issues related to IT   traffic on a DetNet.   DetNet is intended to support coexistence of time-sensitive   operational (OT, deterministic) traffic and information (IT, "best   effort") traffic on the same ("unified") network.   With DetNet, this coexistance will become more common, and   mitigations will need to be established.  The fact that the IT   traffic on a DetNet is limited to a corporate controlled network   makes this a less difficult problem compared to being exposed to the   open Internet, however this aspect of DetNet security should not be   underestimated.   An Inter-segment attack can flood the network with IT-type traffic   with the intent of disrupting handling of IT traffic, and/or the goal   of interfering with OT traffic.  Presumably if the DetNet flow   reservation and isolation of the DetNet is well-designed (better-   designed than the attack) then interference with OT traffic should   not result from an attack that floods the network with IT traffic.   However the DetNet's handling of IT traffic may not (by design) be as   resilient to DOS attack, and thus designers must be otherwise   prepared to mitigate DOS attacks on IT traffic in a DetNet.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 31]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20208.1.9.  Deterministic Flows   Reserved bandwidth data flows (deterministic flows) must provide the   allocated bandwidth, and must be isolated from each other.   A Spoofing or Inter-segment attack which adds packet traffic to a   bandwidth-reserved DetNet flow could cause that flow to occupy more   bandwidth than it was allocated, resulting in interference with other   DetNet flows.   A Flow Modification or Spoofing or Header Manipulation or Control   Packet Modification attack could cause packets from one flow to be   directed to another flow, thus breaching isolation between the flows.8.1.10.  Unused Reserved Bandwidth   If bandwidth reservations are made for a DetNet flow but the   associated bandwidth is not used at any point in time, that bandwidth   is made available on the network for best-effort traffic.  However,   note that security considerations for best-effort traffic on a DetNet   network is out of scope of the present document, provided that such   an attack does not affect performance for DetNet OT traffic.8.1.11.  Interoperability   The DetNet network specifications are intended to enable an ecosystem   in which multiple vendors can create interoperable products, thus   promoting device diversity and potentially higher numbers of each   device manufactured.   Given that the DetNet specifications are unambiguously written and   that the implementations are accurate, then this should not in and of   itself cause a security concern; however, in the real world, it could   be.  The network operator can mitigate this through sufficient   interoperability testing.8.1.12.  Cost Reductions   The DetNet network specifications are intended to enable an ecosystem   in which multiple vendors can create interoperable products, thus   promoting higher numbers of each device manufactured, promoting cost   reduction and cost competition among vendors.   This envisioned breadth of DetNet-enabled products is in general a   positive factor, however implementation flaws in any individual   component can present an attack surface.  In addition, implementation   differences between components from different vendors can result inGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 32]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   attack surfaces (resulting from their interaction) which may not   exist in any individual component.   Network operators can mitigate such concerns through sufficient   product and interoperability testing.8.1.13.  Insufficiently Secure Devices   The DetNet network specifications are intended to enable an ecosystem   in which multiple vendors can create interoperable products, thus   promoting device diversity and potentially higher numbers of each   device manufactured.  However this raises the possibility that a   vendor might repurpose for DetNet applications a hardware or software   component that was originally designed for operation in an isolated   OT network, and thus may not have been designed to be sufficiently   secure, or secure at all.  Deployment of such a device on a DetNet   network that is intended to be highly secure may present an attack   surface.   The DetNet network operator may need to take specific actions to   protect such devices, such as implementing a dedicated security layer   around the device.8.1.14.  DetNet Network Size   DetNet networks range in size from very small, e.g. inside a single   industrial machine, to very large, for example a Utility Grid network   spanning a whole country.   The size of the network might be related to how the attack is   introduced into the network, for example if the entire network is   local, there is a threat that power can be cut to the entire network.   If the network is large, perhaps only a part of the network is   attacked.   A Delay attack might be as relevant to a small network as to a large   network, although the amount of delay might be different.   Attacks sourced from IT traffic might be more likely in large   networks, since more people might have access to the network,   presenting a larger attack surface.  Similarly Path Manipulation,   Path Choice and Time Sync attacks seem more likely relevant to large   networks.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 33]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20208.1.15.  Multiple Hops   Large DetNet networks (e.g. a Utility Grid network) may involve many   "hops" over various kinds of links for example radio repeaters,   microwave links, fiber optic links, etc.   An attack that takes advantage of flaws (or even normal operation) in   the device drivers for the various links (through internal knowledge   of how the individual driver or firmware operates) could take   proportionately greater advantage of this topology.   It is also possible that this DetNet topology will not be in as   common use as other more homogeneous topologies so there may be more   opportunity for attackers to exploit software and/or protocol flaws   in the implementations which have not been tested through extensive   use, particularly in the case of early adopters.   Of the attacks we have defined, the ones identified inSection 8.1.14   as germane to large networks are the most relevant.8.1.16.  Level of Service   A DetNet is expected to provide means to configure the network that   include querying network path latency, requesting bounded latency for   a given DetNet flow, requesting worst case maximum and/or minimum   latency for a given path or DetNet flow, and so on.  It is an   expected case that the network cannot provide a given requested   service level.  In such cases the network control system should reply   that the requested service level is not available (as opposed to   accepting the parameter but then not delivering the desired   behavior).   Controller plane attacks such as Signaling Packet Modification and   Injection could be used to modify or create control traffic that   could interfere with the process of a user requesting a level of   service and/or the network's reply.   Reconnaissance could be used to characterize flows and perhaps target   specific flows for attack via the controller plane as noted inSection 6.7.8.1.17.  Bounded Latency   DetNet provides the expectation of guaranteed bounded latency.   Delay attacks can cause packets to miss their agreed-upon latency   boundaries.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 34]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   Time Sync attacks can corrupt the system's time reference, resulting   in missed latency deadlines (with respect to the "correct" time   reference).8.1.18.  Low Latency   Applications may require "extremely low latency" however depending on   the application these may mean very different latency values; for   example "low latency" across a Utility grid network is on a different   time scale than "low latency" in a motor control loop in a small   machine.  The intent is that the mechanisms for specifying desired   latency include wide ranges, and that architecturally there is   nothing to prevent arbitrarily low latencies from being implemented   in a given network.   Attacks on the controller plane (as described in the Level of Service   themeSection 8.1.16) and Delay and Time attacks (as described in the   Bounded Latency themeSection 8.1.17) both apply here.8.1.19.  Bounded Jitter (Latency Variation)   DetNet is expected to provide bounded jitter (packet to packet   latency variation).   Delay attacks can cause packets to vary in their arrival times,   resulting in packet to packet latency variation, thereby violating   the jitter specification.8.1.20.  Symmetrical Path Delays   Some applications would like to specify that the transit delay time   values be equal for both the transmit and return paths.   Delay attacks can cause path delays to materially differ between   paths.   Time Sync attacks can corrupt the system's time reference, resulting   in path delays that may be perceived to be different (with respect to   the "correct" time reference) even if they are not materially   different.8.1.21.  Reliability and Availability   DetNet based systems are expected to be implemented with essentially   arbitrarily high availability (for example 99.9999% up time, or even   12 nines).  The intent is that the DetNet designs should not make any   assumptions about the level of reliability and availability that mayGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 35]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   be required of a given system, and should define parameters for   communicating these kinds of metrics within the network.   Any attack on the system, of any type, can affect its overall   reliability and availability, thus in the mapping table Figure 4 we   have marked every attack.  Since every DetNet depends to a greater or   lesser degree on reliability and availability, this essentially means   that all networks have to mitigate all attacks, which to a greater or   lesser degree defeats the purpose of associating attacks with use   cases.  It also underscores the difficulty of designing "extremely   high reliability" networks.8.1.22.  Redundant Paths   DetNet based systems are expected to be implemented with essentially   arbitrarily high reliability/availability.  A strategy used by DetNet   for providing such extraordinarily high levels of reliability is to   provide redundant paths that can be seamlessly switched between, all   the while maintaining the required performance of that system.   Replication-related attacks are by definition applicable here.   Controller plane attacks can also interfere with the configuration of   redundant paths.8.1.23.  Security Measures   A DetNet network must be made secure against devices failures,   attackers, misbehaving component, and so on.  If the security   mechanisms protecting the DetNet are attacked or subverted, this can   result in malfunction of the network.  The design of the security   system itself needs to take this into account based on the specifics   of the security system being considered.  The general topic of   protection of security mechanisms is not unique to DetNet; it is   identical to the case of securing any security mechanism for any   network.  The text of this document addresses these concerns to the   extent that they are relevant to DetNet.8.2.  Summary of Attack Types per Use Case Common Theme   The List of Attacks table Figure 4 lists the attacks ofSection 5,   Security Threats, assigning a number to each type of attack.  That   number is then used as a short form identifier for the attack in   Figure 5, Mapping Between Themes and Attacks.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 36]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   +----+----------------------------------------+   |    | Attack                                 |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  1 |Delay Attack                            |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  2 |DetNet Flow Modification or Spoofing    |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  3 |Inter-Segment Attack                    |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  4 |Replication: Increased attack surface   |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  5 |Replication-related Header Manipulation |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  6 |Path Manipulation                       |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  7 |Path Choice: Increased Attack Surface   |   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  8 |Control or Signaling Packet Modification|   +----+----------------------------------------+   |  9 |Control or Signaling Packet Injection   |   +----+----------------------------------------+   | 10 |Reconnaissance                          |   +----+----------------------------------------+   | 11 |Attacks on Time Sync Mechanisms         |   +--+----------------------------------------+                         Figure 4: List of Attacks   The Mapping Between Themes and Attacks table Figure 5 maps the use   case themes of [RFC8578] (as also enumerated in this document) to the   attacks of Figure 4.  Each row specifies a theme, and the attacks   relevant to this theme are marked with a '+'.  The row items which   have no threats associated with them are included in the table for   completeness of the list of Use Case Common Themes, and do not have   DetNet-specific threats associated with them.   +----------------------------+--------------------------------+   | Theme                      |             Attack             |   |                            +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |                            | 1| 2| 3| 4| 5| 6| 7| 8| 9|10|11|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Network Layer - AVB/TSN Eth.| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Central Administration      |  |  |  |  |  | +| +| +| +| +| +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Hot Swap                    |  | +| +|  |  |  |  |  |  |  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 37]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   |Data Flow Information Models|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |L2 and L3 Integration       |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |End-to-end Delivery         | +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +|  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Proprietary Deterministic   |  |  | +|  |  | +| +| +| +|  |  |   |Ethernet Networks           |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Replacement for Proprietary |  |  | +|  |  | +| +| +| +|  |  |   |Fieldbuses                  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Deterministic vs. Best-     |  |  | +|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   |Effort Traffic              |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Deterministic Flows         |  | +| +|  | +| +|  | +|  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Unused Reserved Bandwidth   |  | +| +|  |  |  |  | +| +|  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Interoperability            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Cost Reductions             |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Insufficiently Secure       |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   |Devices                     |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |DetNet Network Size         | +|  |  |  |  | +| +|  |  |  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Multiple Hops               | +| +|  |  |  | +| +|  |  |  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Level of Service            |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | +| +| +|  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Bounded Latency             | +|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Low Latency                 | +|  |  |  |  |  |  | +| +| +| +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Bounded Jitter              | +|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Symmetric Path Delays       | +|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Reliability and Availability| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +| +|   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Redundant Paths             |  |  |  | +| +|  |  | +| +|  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+   |Security Measures           |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   +----------------------------+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+               Figure 5: Mapping Between Themes and AttacksGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 38]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 20208.3.  Security Considerations for OAM Traffic   This section considers DetNet-specific security considerations for   packet traffic that is generated and transmitted over a DetNet as   part of OAM (Operations, Administration, and Maintenance).  For the   purposes of this discussion, OAM traffic falls into one of two basic   types:   o  OAM traffic generated by the network itself.  The additional      bandwidth required for such packets is added by the network      administration, presumably transparent to the customer.  Security      considerations for such traffic are not DetNet-specific (apart      from such traffic being subject to the same DetNet-specific      security considerations as any other DetNet data flow) and are      thus not covered in this document.   o  OAM traffic generated by the customer.  From a DetNet security      point of view, DetNet security considerations for such traffic are      exactly the same as for any other customer data flows.   From the perspective of an attack, OAM traffic is indistinguishable   from DetNet traffic and the network needs to be secure against   injection, removal, or modification of traffic of any kind, including   OAM traffic.  A DetNet is sensitive to any form of packet injection,   removal or manipulation and in this respect DetNet OAM traffic is no   different.  Techniques for securing a DetNet against these threats   have been discussed elsewhere in this document.9.  DetNet Technology-Specific ThreatsSection 5, Security Threats, described threats which are independent   of a DetNet implementation.  This section considers threats   specifically related to the IP- and MPLS-specific aspects of DetNet   implementations.   The primary security considerations for the data plane specifically   are to maintain the integrity of the data and the delivery of the   associated DetNet service traversing the DetNet network.   The primary relevant differences between IP and MPLS implementations   are in flow identification and OAM methodologies.   As noted in [RFC8655], DetNet operates at the IP layer   ([I-D.ietf-detnet-ip]) and delivers service over sub-layer   technologies such as MPLS ([I-D.ietf-detnet-mpls]) and IEEE 802.1   Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN) ([I-D.ietf-detnet-ip-over-tsn]).   Application flows can be protected through whatever means are   provided by the layer and sub-layer technologies.  For example,Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 39]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   technology-specific encryption may be used, such as that provided by   IPSec [RFC4301] for IP flows and/or by an underlying sub-net using   MACSec [IEEE802.1AE-2018] for IP over Ethernet (Layer-2) flows.   However, if the DetNet nodes cannot decrypt IPsec traffic, IPSec may   not be a valid option; this is because the DetNet IP Data Plane   identifies flows via a 6-tuple that consists of two IP addresses, the   transport protocol ID, two transport protocol port numbers and the   DSCP in the IP header.  When IPsec is used, the transport header is   encrypted and the next protocol ID is an IPsec protocol, usually ESP,   and not a transport protocol (e.g., neither TCP nor UDP, etc.)   leaving only three components of the 6-tuple, which are the two IP   addresses and the DSCP, which are in general not sufficient to   identify a DetNet flow.   Sections below discuss threats specific to IP and MPLS in more   detail.9.1.  IP   The IP protocol has a long history of security considerations and   architectural protection mechanisms.  From a data plane perspective   DetNet does not add or modify any IP header information, so the   carriage of DetNet traffic over an IP data plane does not introduce   any new security issues that were not there before, apart from those   already described in the data-plane-independent threats sectionSection 5, Security Threats.   Thus the security considerations for a DetNet based on an IP data   plane are purely inherited from the rich IP Security literature and   code/application base, and the data-plane-independent section of this   document.   Maintaining security for IP segments of a DetNet may be more   challenging than for the MPLS segments of the network, given that the   IP segments of the network may reach the edges of the network, which   are more likely to involve interaction with potentially malevolent   outside actors.  Conversely MPLS is inherently more secure than IP   since it is internal to routers and it is well-known how to protect   it from outside influence.   Another way to look at DetNet IP security is to consider it in the   light of VPN security; as an industry we have a lot of experience   with VPNs running through networks with other VPNs, it is well known   how to secure the network for that.  However for a DetNet we have the   additional subtlety that any possible interaction of one packet with   another can have a potentially deleterious effect on the time   properties of the flows.  So the network must provide sufficientGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 40]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   isolation between flows, for example by protecting the forwarding   bandwidth and related resources so that they are available to detnet   traffic, by whatever means are appropriate for that network's data   plane, for example through the use of queueing mechanisms.   In a VPN, bandwidth is generally guaranteed over a period of time,   whereas in DetNet it is not aggregated over time.  This implies that   any VPN-type protection mechanism must also maintain the DetNet   timing constraints.9.2.  MPLS   An MPLS network carrying DetNet traffic is expected to be a "well-   managed" network.  Given that this is the case, it is difficult for   an attacker to pass a raw MPLS encoded packet into a network because   operators have considerable experience at excluding such packets at   the network boundaries, as well as excluding MPLS packets being   inserted through the use of a tunnel.   MPLS security is discussed extensively in [RFC5920] ("Security   Framework for MPLS and GMPLS Networks") to which the reader is   referred.   [RFC6941] builds on [RFC5920] by providing additional security   considerations that are applicable to the MPLS-TP extensions   appropriate to the MPLS Transport Profile [RFC5921], and thus to the   operation of DetNet over some types of MPLS network.   [RFC5921] introduces to MPLS new Operations, Administration, and   Maintenance (OAM) capabilities, a transport-oriented path protection   mechanism, and strong emphasis on static provisioning supported by   network management systems.   The operation of DetNet over an MPLS network is modeled on the   operation of multi-segment pseudowires (MS-PW).  Thus for guidance on   securing the DetNet elements of DetNet over MPLS the reader is   referred to the MS-PW security mechanisms as defined in [RFC4447],   [RFC3931], [RFC3985], [RFC6073], and [RFC6478].   Having attended to the conventional aspects of network security it is   necessary to attend to the dynamic aspects.  The closest experience   that the IETF has with securing protocols that are sensitive to   manipulation of delay are the two way time transfer protocols (TWTT),   which are NTP [RFC5905] and Precision Time Protocol [IEEE1588].  The   security requirements for these are described in [RFC7384].   One particular problem that has been observed in operational tests of   TWTT protocols is the ability for two closely but not completelyGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 41]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   synchronized flows to beat and cause a sudden phase hit to one of the   flows.  This can be mitigated by the careful use of a scheduling   system in the underlying packet transport.   Further consideration of protection against dynamic attacks is work   in progress.  New work on MPLS security may also be applicable, for   example [I-D.ietf-mpls-opportunistic-encrypt].10.  IANA Considerations   This memo includes no requests from IANA.11.  Security Considerations   The security considerations of DetNet networks are presented   throughout this document.12.  Privacy Considerations   Privacy in the context of DetNet is maintained by the base   technologies specific to the DetNet and user traffic.  For example   TSN can use MACsec, IP can use IPsec, applications can use IP   transport protocol-provided methods e.g.  TLS and DTLS.  MPLS   typically uses L2/L3 VPNs combined with the previously mentioned   privacy methods.13.  Contributors   The Editor would like to recognize the contributions of the following   individuals to this draft.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 42]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020       Subir Das (Applied Communication Sciences)       150 Mount Airy Road, Basking Ridge       New Jersey, 07920, USA       email sdas@appcomsci.com       John Dowdell (Airbus Defence and Space)       Celtic Springs, Newport, NP10 8FZ, United Kingdom       email john.dowdell.ietf@gmail.com       Henrik Austad (SINTEF Digital)       Klaebuveien 153, Trondheim, 7037, Norway       email henrik@austad.us       Norman Finn       email nfinn@nfinnconsulting.com       Stewart Bryant       Futurewei Technologies       email: stewart.bryant@gmail.com       David Black       Dell EMC       176 South Street, Hopkinton, MA  01748, USA       email: david.black@dell.com       Carsten Bormann14.  References14.1.  Normative References   [I-D.ietf-detnet-ip]              Varga, B., Farkas, J., Berger, L., Fedyk, D., and S.              Bryant, "DetNet Data Plane: IP",draft-ietf-detnet-ip-07              (work in progress), July 2020.   [I-D.ietf-detnet-mpls]              Varga, B., Farkas, J., Berger, L., Malis, A., Bryant, S.,              and J. Korhonen, "DetNet Data Plane: MPLS",draft-ietf-detnet-mpls-12 (work in progress), September 2020.   [RFC8655]  Finn, N., Thubert, P., Varga, B., and J. Farkas,              "Deterministic Networking Architecture",RFC 8655,              DOI 10.17487/RFC8655, October 2019,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8655>.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 43]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 202014.2.  Informative References   [ARINC664P7]              ARINC, "ARINC 664 Aircraft Data Network, Part 7, Avionics              Full-Duplex Switched Ethernet Network", 2009.   [I-D.ietf-detnet-data-plane-framework]              Varga, B., Farkas, J., Berger, L., Malis, A., and S.              Bryant, "DetNet Data Plane Framework",draft-ietf-detnet-data-plane-framework-06 (work in progress), May 2020.   [I-D.ietf-detnet-flow-information-model]              Varga, B., Farkas, J., Cummings, R., Jiang, Y., and D.              Fedyk, "DetNet Flow Information Model",draft-ietf-detnet-flow-information-model-10 (work in progress), May 2020.   [I-D.ietf-detnet-ip-over-tsn]              Varga, B., Farkas, J., Malis, A., and S. Bryant, "DetNet              Data Plane: IP over IEEE 802.1 Time Sensitive Networking              (TSN)",draft-ietf-detnet-ip-over-tsn-03 (work in              progress), June 2020.   [I-D.ietf-mpls-opportunistic-encrypt]              Farrel, A. and S. Farrell, "Opportunistic Security in MPLS              Networks",draft-ietf-mpls-opportunistic-encrypt-03 (work              in progress), March 2017.   [I-D.varga-detnet-service-model]              Varga, B. and J. Farkas, "DetNet Service Model",draft-varga-detnet-service-model-02 (work in progress), May              2017.   [IEEE1588]              IEEE, "IEEE 1588 Standard for a Precision Clock              Synchronization Protocol for Networked Measurement and              Control Systems Version 2", 2008.   [IEEE802.1AE-2018]              IEEE Standards Association, "IEEE Std 802.1AE-2018 MAC              Security (MACsec)", 2018,              <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8585421>.   [IEEE802.1Qbv-2015]              IEEE Standards Association, "IEEE Standard for Local and              metropolitan area networks -- Bridges and Bridged Networks              - Amendment 25: Enhancements for Scheduled Traffic", 2015,              <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8613095>.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 44]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   [IEEE802.1Qch-2017]              IEEE Standards Association, "IEEE Standard for Local and              metropolitan area networks--Bridges and Bridged Networks--              Amendment 29: Cyclic Queuing and Forwarding", 2017,              <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7961303>.   [IT_DEF]   Wikipedia, "IT Definition", 2020,              <https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Information_technology>.   [OT_DEF]   Wikipedia, "OT Definition", 2020,              <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_technology>.   [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,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2474, December 1998,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2474>.   [RFC2475]  Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.,              and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated              Services",RFC 2475, DOI 10.17487/RFC2475, December 1998,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2475>.   [RFC3552]  Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC              Text on Security Considerations",BCP 72,RFC 3552,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3552, July 2003,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3552>.   [RFC3931]  Lau, J., Ed., Townsley, M., Ed., and I. Goyret, Ed.,              "Layer Two Tunneling Protocol - Version 3 (L2TPv3)",RFC 3931, DOI 10.17487/RFC3931, March 2005,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3931>.   [RFC3985]  Bryant, S., Ed. and P. Pate, Ed., "Pseudo Wire Emulation              Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Architecture",RFC 3985,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3985, March 2005,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3985>.   [RFC4301]  Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the              Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, DOI 10.17487/RFC4301,              December 2005, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4301>.   [RFC4447]  Martini, L., Ed., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T., and              G. Heron, "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using the              Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)",RFC 4447,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4447, April 2006,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4447>.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 45]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020   [RFC5905]  Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,              "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms              Specification",RFC 5905, DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5905>.   [RFC5920]  Fang, L., Ed., "Security Framework for MPLS and GMPLS              Networks",RFC 5920, DOI 10.17487/RFC5920, July 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5920>.   [RFC5921]  Bocci, M., Ed., Bryant, S., Ed., Frost, D., Ed., Levrau,              L., and L. Berger, "A Framework for MPLS in Transport              Networks",RFC 5921, DOI 10.17487/RFC5921, July 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5921>.   [RFC6073]  Martini, L., Metz, C., Nadeau, T., Bocci, M., and M.              Aissaoui, "Segmented Pseudowire",RFC 6073,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6073, January 2011,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6073>.   [RFC6478]  Martini, L., Swallow, G., Heron, G., and M. Bocci,              "Pseudowire Status for Static Pseudowires",RFC 6478,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6478, May 2012,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6478>.   [RFC6941]  Fang, L., Ed., Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Mansfield, S., Ed.,              and R. Graveman, Ed., "MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)              Security Framework",RFC 6941, DOI 10.17487/RFC6941, April              2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6941>.   [RFC7384]  Mizrahi, T., "Security Requirements of Time Protocols in              Packet Switched Networks",RFC 7384, DOI 10.17487/RFC7384,              October 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7384>.   [RFC7835]  Saucez, D., Iannone, L., and O. Bonaventure, "Locator/ID              Separation Protocol (LISP) Threat Analysis",RFC 7835,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7835, April 2016,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7835>.   [RFC8578]  Grossman, E., Ed., "Deterministic Networking Use Cases",RFC 8578, DOI 10.17487/RFC8578, May 2019,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8578>.   [RS_DEF]   Wikipedia, "RS Definition", 2020,              <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_segmentation>.Grossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 46]

Internet-Draft               DetNet Security                October 2020Authors' Addresses   Ethan Grossman (editor)   Dolby Laboratories, Inc.   1275 Market Street   San Francisco, CA  94103   USA   Phone: +1 415 465 4339   Email: ethan@ieee.org   URI:http://www.dolby.com   Tal Mizrahi   Huawei Network.IO Innovation Lab   Email: tal.mizrahi.phd@gmail.com   Andrew  J. Hacker   MistIQ Technologies, Inc   Harrisburg, PA   USA   Email: ajhacker@mistiqtech.com   URI:http://www.mistiqtech.comGrossman, et al.          Expires April 5, 2021                [Page 47]
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