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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          R. BradenRequest for Comments: 1636                                           ISICategory: Informational                                         D. Clark                                     MIT Laboratory for Computer Science                                                              S. Crocker                                       Trusted Information Systems, Inc.                                                              C. Huitema                                                        INRIA, IAB Chair                                                               June 1994Report of IAB Workshop on                 Security in the Internet Architecture                          February 8-10, 1994Status of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo   does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of   this memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document is a report on an Internet architecture workshop,   initiated by the IAB and held at USC Information Sciences Institute   on February 8-10, 1994.  This workshop generally focused on security   issues in the Internet architecture.   This document should be regarded as a set of working notes containing   ideas about security that were developed by Internet experts in a   broad spectrum of areas, including routing, mobility, realtime   service, and provider requirements, as well as security.  It contains   some significant diversity of opinions on some important issues.   This memo is offered as one input in the process of developing viable   security mechanisms and procedures for the Internet.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 1]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994Table of Contents1. INTRODUCTION ..................................................22. OVERVIEW ......................................................42.1  Strategic and Political Issues ...........................42.2  Security Issues ..........................................42.3  DNS Names for Certificates ...............................73. FIREWALL ARCHITECTURE .........................................93.1  Introduction .............................................93.2  Application-Layer Firewalls ..............................113.3  IP-Layer Firewalls .......................................124. SECURE QOS FORWARDING .........................................214.1  The Requirement for Setup ................................214.2  Securing the Setup Process. ..............................224.3  Validating an LLID .......................................244.4  Dynamics of Setup ........................................284.5  Receiver-Initiated Setup .................................304.6  Other Issues .............................................305. AN AUTHENTICATION SERVICE .....................................355.1  Names and Credentials ....................................365.2  Identity-Based Authorization .............................375.3  Choosing Credentials .....................................386. OTHER ISSUES ..................................................396.1  Privacy and Authentication of Multicast Groups ...........396.2  Secure Plug-and-Play a Must ..............................416.3  A Short-Term Confidentiality Mechanism ...................427. CONCLUSIONS ...................................................447.1  Suggested Short-Term Actions .............................447.2  Suggested Medium-Term Actions ............................467.3  Suggested Long-Term Actions ..............................46   APPENDIX A -- Workshop Organization ..............................48   Security Considerations ..........................................52   Authors' Addresses ...............................................521. INTRODUCTION   The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) holds occasional workshops   designed to consider long-term issues and strategies for the   Internet, and to suggest future directions for the Internet   architecture.  This long-term planning function of the IAB is   complementary to the ongoing engineering efforts performed by working   groups of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), under the   leadership of the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) and area   directorates.   An IAB-initiated workshop on the role of security in the Internet   Architecture was held on February 8-10, 1994 at the Information   Sciences Institute of the University of Southern California, inBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 2]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994   Marina del Rey, California.  This RFC reports the results of the   workshop.   In addition to the IAB members, attendees at this meeting included   the IESG Area Directors for the relevant areas (Internet, Transport,   Security, and IPng) and a group of 15 other experts in the following   areas:  IPng, routing, mobility, realtime service, and security (see   Appendix for a list of attendees).  The IAB explicitly tried to   balance the number of attendees from each area of expertise.   Logistics limited the attendance to about 30, which unfortunately   meant that many highly qualified experts were omitted from the   invitation list.   In summary, the objectives of this workshop were (1) to explore the   interconnections between security and the rest of the Internet   architecture, and (2) to develop recommendations for the Internet   community on future directions with respect to security.  These   objectives arose from a conviction in the IAB that the two most   important problem areas for the Internet architecture are scaling and   security.  While the scaling problems have led to a flood of   activities on IPng, there has been less effort devoted to security.   Although some came to the workshop eager to discuss short-term   security issues in the Internet, the workshop program was designed to   focus more on long-term issues and broad principles.  Thus, the   meeting began with the following ground rule: valid topics of   discussion should involve both security and at least one from the   list: (a) routing (unicast and multicast), (b) mobility, and (c)   realtime service.  As a basis for initial discussion, the invitees   met via email to generate a set of scenarios (see Appendix)   satisfying this ground rule.   The 30 attendees were divided into three "breakout" groups, with each   group including experts in all the areas.  The meeting was then   structured as plenary meetings alternating with parallel breakout   group sessions (see the agenda in Appendix).  On the third day, the   groups produced text summarizing the results of their discussions.   This memo is composed of that text, somewhat rearranged and edited   into a single document.   The meeting process determined the character of this document.  It   should be regarded as a set of working notes produced by mostly-   autonomous groups, containing some diversity of opinions as well as   duplication of ideas.  It is not the output of the "security   community", but instead represents ideas about security developed by   a broad spectrum of Internet experts.  It is offered as a step in a   process of developing viable security mechanisms and procedures for   the Internet.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 3]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 19942. OVERVIEW   2.1  Strategic and Political Issues      Despite the workshop emphasis on architectural issues, there was      considerable discussion of the real-politik of security.      For a number of years, the IETF, with IAB backing, has worked on      developing PEM, which provides email security with a great deal of      functionality.  A question was repeatedly raised at the workshop:      why has user acceptance of PEM been slow?  A number of answers to      this question were suggested.      (a)  High-quality implementations have been slow in coming.      (b)  The use of a patented technology, the RSA algorithm, violates           social conventions of the Internet.      (c)  Export restrictions dampen vendor enthusiasm.      (d)  PEM currently depends upon a certificate hierarchy for its           names, and certificates form a new and complex name space.           There is no organizational infrastructure in place for creat-           ing and managing this name space.      (e)  There is no directory infrastructure available for looking up           certificates.           The decision to use X.500 has been a complete failure, due to           the slow deployment of X.500 in the Internet.  Because of UDP           packet size restrictions, it is not currently feasible to           store certificates in the DNS, even if the DNS were expanded           to hold records for individual email users.      It seems probable that more than one, and possibly all, of these      reasons are at work to discourage PEM adoption.      The baleful comment about eating: "Everything I enjoy is either      immoral, illegal, or fattening" seems to apply to the cryptography      technology that is required for Internet security.   2.2  Security Issues      Almost everyone agrees that the Internet needs more and better      security.  However, that may mean different things to different      people.  Four top-level requirements for Internet security were      identified: end-to-end security, end-system security, secure QOS,      and secure network infrastructure.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 4]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      A.   End-to-End Security           One requirement is to support confidentiality, authentication           and integrity for end-to-end communications.  These security           services are best provided on an end-to-end basis, in order           to minimize the number of network components that users must           trust.  Here the "end" may be the end system itself, or a           proxy (e.g., a firewall) acting on behalf of an end system.           For point-to-point applications, the workshop felt that           existing security techniques are well suited to support           confidentiality, authentication and integrity services           efficiently.  These existing techniques include symmetric           encryption applied on an end-to-end basis, message digest           functions, and key management algorithms.  Current work in           these areas in the IETF include the PEM and Common           Authentication Technologies working groups.           The group favored a strategic direction for coping with           export restrictions:  separate authentication from privacy           (i.e., confidentiality).  This will allow work to proceed on           authentication for the Internet, despite government           restrictions on export of privacy technology.  Conversely, it           will allow easy deployment of privacy without authentication,           where this is appropriate.           The workshop explored the implications of multicasting for           end-to-end security.  Some of the unicast security techniques           can be applied directly to multicast applications, while           others must be modified.Section 6.2 contains the results of           these discussions; in summary, the conclusions were:           a)   Existing technology is adequate to support                confidentiality, authentication, and integrity at the                level of an entire multicast group.  Supporting                authentication and integrity at the level of an                individual multicast source is performance-limited and                will require technology advances.           b)   End-to-end controls should be based on end system or                user identifiers, not low level identifiers or locator                information.  This requirement should spawn engineering                work which consists of applying known key distributionBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 5]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994                and cryptographic techniques.      B.   End-System Security           Every host has its own security defenses, but the strength of           these defenses depends upon the care that is taken in           administering them.  Careful host security administration           means plugging security holes in the kernel and applications           as well as enforcing discipline on users to set good (hard to           crack) passwords.           Good security administration is labor-intensive, and           therefore organizations often find it difficult to maintain           the security of a large number of internal machines.  To           protect their machines from outside subversion, organizations           often erect an outer security wall or "perimeter".  Machines           inside the perimeter communicate with the rest of the           Internet only through a small set of carefully managed           machines called "firewalls".  Firewalls may operate at the           application layer, in which case they are application relays,           or at the IP layer, in which case they are firewall routers.           The workshop spent considerable time on the architecture of           firewall routers.  The results are contained inSection 3.      C.   Secure QOS           The Internet is being extended to provide quality-of-service           capabilities; this is the topic called "realtime service" in           the workshop.  These extensions raise a new set of security           issues for the architecture, to assure that users are not           allowed to attach to resources they are not authorized to           use, both to prevent theft of resources and to prevent denial           of service due to unauthorized traffic.  The resources to be           protected include link shares, service classes or queues,           multicast trees, and so on.  These resources are used as           virtual channels within the network, where each virtual           channel is intended to be used by a particular subset or           "class" of packets.           Secure QOS, i.e., protection against improper virtual channel           usage, is a form of access control mechanism.  In general it           will be based on some form of state establishment (setup)           that defines authorized "classes".  This setup may be done           via management configuration (typically in advance and for           aggregates of users), or it may be done dynamically via           control information in packets or special messages (typically           at the time of use by the source or receiver(s) of theBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 6]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           flow/data).  In addition to state establishment, some form of           authentication will be needed to assure that successive           packets belong to the established class.  The general case to           be solved is the multicast group, since in general the           multicast problem includes the two-party case as a subset.           The workshop developed an approach to the secure QOS problem,           which appears inSection 4 below.      D.   Secure Network Infrastructure           Network operation depends upon the management and control           protocols used to configure and operate the network           infrastructure, including routers and DNS servers.  An attack           on the network infrastructure may cause denial-of-service           from the user viewpoint, but from the network operators'           viewpoint, security from attack requires authentication and           integrity for network control and management messages.           Securing the routing protocols seems to be a straightforward           engineering task.  The workshop concluded the following.           a)   All routing information exchanges should be                authenticated between neighboring routers.           b)   The sources of all route information should be                authenticated.           c)   Although authenticating the authority of an injector of                route information is feasible, authentication of                operations on that routing information (e.g.,                aggregation) requires further consideration.           Securing router management protocols (e.g., SNMP, Telnet,           TFTP) is urgent, because of the currently active threats.           Fortunately, the design task should be a straightforward           application of existing authentication mechanisms.           Securing DNS is an important issue, but it did not receive           much attention at the workshop.   2.3  DNS Names for Certificates      As noted inSection 2.1, work on PEM has assumed the use of X.509      distinguished names as the basis for issuing certificates, with      public-key encryption.  The most controversial discussion at the      workshop concerned the possibility of using DNS (i.e., domain)      names instead of X.509 distinguished names as (at least) an      interim basis for Internet security.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 7]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      The argument in favor of DNS names is that they are simple and      well understood in the Internet world.  It is easy for a computer      operating in the Internet to be identified this way, and users who      receive email on such machines already have DNS mailbox names.  In      contrast, introducing X.509 distinguished names for security will      add a new layer of names.  Most importantly, there is an existing      administrative model for assigning DNS names.  There is no      administrative infrastructure for assigning X.509 distinguished      names, and generating them may be too complex for early      acceptance.  The advocates of DNS names for certificates hope that      using DNS names would encourage the widespread use of security in      the Internet.  It is expected that DNS names can be replaced later      by a more capable naming mechanism such as X.509-based      certificates.      The basic argument against DNS names as a basis for security is      that they are too "weak".  Their use may lead to confusion in many      instances, and this confusion can only grow as more organizations      and individuals attach to the Internet.  Some commercial email      systems employ numeric mailbox names, and in many organizations      there are uncertainties such as whether "bumber@foo.edu" belongs      to Bill Umber or Tom Bumber.  While it is feasible to make DNS      names more descriptive, there is a concern that the existing      infrastructure, with millions of short, non-descriptive names,      will be an impediment to adoption of more descriptive names.      It was noted that the question of what name space to use for      certificates is independent of the problem of building an      infrastructure for retrieving those names.  Because of UDP packet      size restrictions, it would not be feasible to store certificates      in the DNS without significant changes, even if the DNS were      expanded to hold records for individual email users.      The group was unable to reach a consensus on the issue of using      DNS names for security; further discussion in the Internet      community is needed.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 8]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 19943. FIREWALL ARCHITECTURE   3.1  Introduction      A firewall may be used to isolate a specific connected segment of      Internet topology.  When such a segment has multiple links to the      rest of the Internet, coordinated firewall machines are required      on all the links.      Firewalls may be implemented at different layers in the protocol      stack.  They are most commonly implemented at the application      layer by forwarding (application) gateways, or at the IP      (Internet) layer by filtering routers.Section 3.2 discusses      application gateways.Section 3.3 concerns Internet-layer      firewalls, which filter IP datagrams entering or leaving a      security perimeter.      The general architectural model for a firewall should separate      policy, i.e., determining whether or not the requester of a      service should be granted access to that service, from control,      i.e., limiting access to resources to those who have been granted      access.      3.1.1  The Use for Firewalls         Firewalls are a very emotional topic in the Internet community.         Some community members feel the firewall concept is very         powerful because firewalls aggregate security functions in a         single place, simplifying management, installation and         configuration.  Others feel that firewalls are damaging for the         same reason: they provide "a hard, crunchy outside with a soft         chewy center", i.e., firewalls foster a false sense of         security, leading to lax security within the firewall         perimeter.  They observe that much of the "computer crime" in         corporate environments is perpetrated by insiders, immune to         the perimeter defense strategy.  Firewall advocates counter         that firewalls are important as an additional safeguard; they         should not be regarded as a substitute for careful security         management within the perimeter.  Firewall detractors are also         concerned about the difficulty of using firewalls, requiring         multiple logins and other out-of-band mechanisms, and their         interference with the usability and vitality of the Internet.         However, firewalls are a fact of life in the Internet today.         They have been constructed for pragmatic reasons by         organizations interested in a higher level of security than may         be possible without them.  This section will try to outline         some of the advantages and disadvantages of firewalls, and someBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                                [Page 9]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         instances where they are useful.         Consider a large organization of thousands of hosts.  If every         host is allowed to communicate directly with the outside world,         attackers will attempt to penetrate the organization by finding         the weakest host in the organization, breaching its defenses,         and then using the resources of that host to extend the         penetration further within the organization.  In some sense,         firewalls are not so much a solution to a security problem as         they are a reaction to a more basic software         engineering/administration problem: configuring a large number         of host systems for good security.  If this more basic problem         could be solved, firewalls would generally be unnecessary.         It is interesting to consider the effect that implementing a         firewall has upon various individuals in the organization.         Consider first the effect upon an organization's most secure         host.  This host basically receives little or no extra         protection, because its own perimeter defenses are as strong or         stronger than the firewall.  In addition, the firewall will         probably reduce the connectivity available to this host, as         well as the reliability of the communications path to the         outside world, resulting in inconvenience to the user(s) of         this host.  From this (most secure) user's point of view, the         firewall is a loss.         On the other hand, a host with poor security can "hide" behind         the firewall.  In exchange for a more limited ability to         communicate with the outside world, this host can benefit from         the higher level of security provided by the firewall, which is         assumed to be based upon the best security available in the         entire  organization.  If this host only wants to communicate         with other hosts inside the organization, the outside         communications limitations imposed by the firewall may not even         be noticed.  From this host's viewpoint, better security has         been gained at little or no cost.         Finally, consider the point of view of the organization as a         whole.  A firewall allows the extension of the best security in         the organization across the whole organization.  This is a         benefit (except in the case where all host perimeter defenses         in the organization are equal).  Centralized access control         also becomes possible, which may be either a benefit or a cost,         depending upon the organization.  The "secure" hosts within the         organization may perceive a loss, while the "unsecure" hosts         receive a benefit.  The cost/benefit ratio to the organization         as a whole thus depends upon the relative numbers of "secure"         and "unsecure" hosts in the organization.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 10]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         Consider some cases where firewalls do not make sense.  An         individual can be thought of as an organization of one host.         The security of all the host(s) is thus (trivially) identical,         and by definition the best available to the organization.  In         this case the choice of firewall is simple.  Does this         individual wish to communicate with the outside or not?  If         not, then the "perfect" firewall is implemented (by complete         disconnection).  If yes, then the host perimeter will be the         same as the firewall perimeter, so a firewall becomes         unnecessary.         Another interesting case is an organization that consists of         individuals with few shared interests.  This might be the case         of a service provider that sells public access to the network.         An unrelated community of subscribers should probably be         considered as individuals, rather than an organization.         Firewalls for the whole organization may make little sense in         this case.         To summarize, the benefit of a firewall depends upon the nature         of the organization it protects.  A firewall can be used to         extend the best available protection within the organization         across the entire organization, and thus be of benefit to large         organizations with large numbers of poorly administered hosts.         A firewall may produce little or no perceived benefit, however,         to the individuals within an organization who have strong host         perimeters already.   3.2  Application-Layer Firewalls      An application-layer firewall can be represented by the following      diagram.          C <---> F <---> S      Here the requesting client C opens its transport connection to the      firewall F rather than directly to the desired server S.  One      mechanism for redirecting C's request to F's IP address rather      than S's could be based on the DNS.  When C attempts to resolve      S's name, its DNS lookup would return a "service redirection"      record (analogous to an MX record) for S.  The service redirection      record would return the IP address of F.      C enters some authentication conversation to identify itself to F,      and specifies its intention to request a specific service from S.      F then decides if C is authorized to invoke this service.  If C is      authorized, F initiates a transport layer connection to S and      begins the operation, passing requests and responses between C andBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 11]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      S.      A major advantage of this scenario over an IP-layer firewall is      that raw IP datagrams are never passed through the firewall.      Because the firewall operates at the application layer, it has the      opportunity to handle and verify all data passing through it, and      it may be more secure against illicit rendezvous attacks (see      below).      Application layer firewalls also have important disadvantages.      For full benefit, an application level firewall must be coded      specifically for each application.  This severely limits the      deployment of new applications.  The firewall also represents a      new point of failure; if it ceases to be reachable, the      application fails.  Application layer firewalls also may affect      performance more than IP-layer firewalls, depending on specific      mechanisms in use.   3.3  IP-Layer Firewalls      Our model of an IP-layer firewall is a multi-ported IP router that      applies a set of rules to each incoming IP datagram, to decide      whether it will be forwarded.  It is said to "filter" IP      datagrams, based on information available in the packet headers.      A firewall router generally has a set of filtering rules, each of      which specifies a "packet profile" and an "action".  The packet      profile specifies values for particular header fields, e.g.,      source and destination IP address, protocol number, and other      suitable source and destination identifying information (for      instance, port numbers).  The set of possible information that may      be used to match packets is called an "association".  The exact      nature of an association is an open issue.      The high-speed datagram forwarding path in the firewall processes      every arriving packet against all the packet profiles of all      active rules, and when a profile matches, it applies the      corresponding action.  Typical actions may include forwarding,      dropping, sending a failure response, or logging for exception      tracking.  There may be a default rule for use when no other rule      matches, which would probably specify a drop action.      In addition to the packet profile, some firewalls may also use      some cryptographic information to authenticate the packet, as      described below insection 3.3.2.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 12]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      3.3.1  Policy Control Level         This section presents a model for the control of a firewall         router, with some examples of specific mechanisms that might be         used.         1.   A client C attempts to access a service S.  (Client here              can mean either a person or a process - that also is an              issue to be resolved.)         2.   The initiation of access to that service may result in an              attempt to cross one or more boundaries of protection via              firewall router(s).         3.   The policy control level sets filters in the firewall              router(s), to permit or deny that attempt.         The policy control level consists of two distinct functions,         authentication and authorization.  Authentication is the         function of verifying the claimed identity of a user.  The         authentication function should be distributed across the         Internet, so that a user in one organization can be         authenticated to another organization.  Once a user is         authenticated, it is then the job of the authorization service         local to the resource being requested to determine if that user         is authorized to access that resource.  If authorization is         granted, the filter in the firewall can be updated to permit         that access.         As an aid to understanding the issues, we introduce a         particular detailed mechanism.  We emphasize that this         mechanism is intended only as an illustrative example; actual         engineering of the mechanism will no doubt lead to many         changes.  Our mechanism is illustrated by the following sketch.         Here a user wishes to connect from a computer C behind firewall         F1, to a server S behind firewall F2.  A1 is a particular         authentication server and Z1 is a particular authorization         server.                C <-------> F1 <-------> F2 <-------> S                 \          /                  \_____   /                   \    \ /                    A1  Z1         C attempts to initiate its conversation by sending an initial         packet to S.  C uses a normal DNS lookup to resolve S's name,         and uses normal IP routing mechanisms.  C's packet reachesBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 13]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         firewall router F1, which rejects the packet because it does         not match any acceptable packet profile.  F1 returns an         "Authentication Required" error indication to C, including a         list of authentication/authorization servers that F1 trusts.         This indication might be a new type of ICMP Destination         Unreachable packet, or some other mechanism for communicating         with C.         When C receives the error indication, authenticates itself with         A1, one of the authentication servers listed in the error         indication, after validating A1's identity.  C then requests         authorization from server Z1 (using a ticket provided by A1),         informs Z1 of the application it wishes to perform, and         provides a profile for the packets it wishes to pass through         F1.  Z1 then performs an authorization function to decide         whether to allow C to penetrate F1.  If C is to be allowed, Z1         then informs the firewall F1 to allow packets matching the         packet profile to pass through the firewall F1.         After C's packets penetrate F1, they may again be rejected by a         second firewall F2.  C could perform the same procedures with         authentication server A2 and authorization server Z2, which F2         trusts.  This is illustrated by the following schematic diagram         of the sequence of events.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 14]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994          ----------+--------+--------+------------+------------+----         |    C     |   A1   |   Z1   |    F1      |     F2     |  S          ----------+--------+--------+------------+------------+----         | Sends pkt|        |        |            |            |         | to S  ----------------------->Intercept;|            |         |          |        |        | requires   |            |         |          |        |        |authenticat'n            |         |   <-------------------------------      |            |         |Auth'cate |        |        |            |            |         | C to A1 ---->     |        |            |            |         |          |Provide |        |            |            |         |    <------- ticket|        |            |            |         | Request  |        |        |            |            |         |authoriz'n|        |        |            |            |         |   -------------------> Is C|            |            |         |          |        |allowed?|            |            |         |          |        |  OK --------->      |            |         |Resend    |        |        | Set filter |            |         | first pkt|        |        |            |            |         | to S -------------------------->(OK)------>Intercept;|         |          |        |        |            | requires   |         |          |        |        |            |authenticat'n         |  <-------------------------------------------        |         | (Repeat  |        |        |            |            |         |procedure |        |        |            |            |         with A2,Z2)|        |        |            |            |         |  ...     |        |        |            |            |         |Resend    |        |        |            |            |         | first pkt|        |        |            |            |         |   ------------------------------>(OK)--------(OK)------>         |          |        |        |            |            |         -----------+--------+--------+------------+------------+----         Again, we emphasize that this is only intended as a partial         sketch of one possible mechanism.  It omits some significant         issues, including the possibility of asymmetric routes (see         3.3.3 below), and the possibility that the profiles may be         different in the two directions between C and S.         We could imagine generalizing this to an arbitrary sequence of         firewalls.  However, security requires that each of the         firewalls be able to verify that data packets actually come         from C.  This packet authentication problem, which is discussed         in the next section, could be extremely difficult if the data         must traverse more than one or possibly two firewalls in         sequence.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 15]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         A firewall router may require re-authentication because:         *    it has been added to the path by a routing change, or         *    it has timed out the profile entry, or         *    it has been newly re-activated, perhaps after a crash that              lost its list of acceptable profiles.         If C contacts authentication and authorization servers that S         trusts, C may utilize tickets given it by these servers when         initiating its use of S, and avoid re-authenticating itself to         S.         Although the authentication server A1 and the authorization         server Z1 are conceptually separate, they may run on the same         computer or router or even be separate aspects of a single         program.  The protocol that C speaks to an An, the protocol         that C speaks to a Zn, and the protocol that Zn speaks to Fn         are not specified in these notes.  The authentication mechanism         used with An and the packet profile required by a firewall Fn         are considered matters of policy.      3.3.2  Source Authentication         We next consider how to protect against spoofing the IP source         address, i.e., injecting packets that are alleged from come         from C but do not.  There are three classes of mechanisms to         prevent such spoofing of IP-level firewalls.  The mechanisms         outlined here are also discussed inSection 4.3 below.         o    Packet Profile Only              The lowest level of security consists of allowing the IP-              layer firewall to filter packets purely on the basis of              the packet profile.  This is essentially the approach used              by filtering routers today, with the addition of (1)              authentication and authorization servers to control the              filtering profiles, and (2) the automatic "Authentication              Required" notification mechanism.  This approach provides              almost no security; it does not prevent other computers              from spoofing packets that appear to be transmitted by C,              or from taking over C's transport level connection to S.         o    Sealed Packets              In the second level of security, each packet is "sealed"              with a secure hash algorithm.  An authentication server AiBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 16]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994              chooses a secret and shares it with the source host S and              also with the authorization server Zi, which shares the              secret with the firewall Fi.  Every packet that C              transmits contains a hash value that depends upon both the              contents of the packet and the secret value.  The firewall              Fi can compute the same hash function and verify that the              packet was originated by a computer that knew the shared              secret.              This approach does raise issues of how much C trusts Zi              and Fi.  Since they know C's secret, Zi or Fi could spoof              C.  If C does not trust all Z's and F's in its path, a              stronger mechanism (see below) is needed.              A more difficult problem arises in authenticating C's              packets when more than one firewall lies in the path.              Carrying a separate seal for each firewall that is              penetrated would be costly in terms of packet size.  On              the other hand, in order to use a single seal, all the              firewalls would have to cooperate, and this might require              a much more complex mechanism than the one sketched in the              previous section.  Morever, it may require mutual trust              among all of the authentication servers Ai and              authorization servers Zi; any of these servers could              undermine all the others.  Another possibility to be              investigated is to use hop-by-hop rather than end-to-end              authentication of C's packets.  That is, each firewall              would substitute into the packet the hash needed by the              next firewall.              Multi-firewall source authentication is a difficult              problem that needs more investigation.         o    Packet Signatures              In the third level of security, each packet is "signed"              using a public/private key algorithm.  C shares its public              key with Zn, which shares it with Fn.  In this scenario, C              can safely use one pair of keys for all authorization              servers and firewalls.  No authorization server or              firewall can spoof C because they cannot sign packets              correctly.              Although packet signing gives a much higher level of              security, it requires public key algorithms that are              patented and currently very expensive to compute; their              time must be added to that for the hash algorithm.  Also,              signing the hash generally makes it larger.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 17]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      3.3.3 Other Firewall Issues         o    Performance              An Internet-layer firewall has the advantage of generality              and flexibility.  However, filtering introduces a              potential performance problem.  Performance may depend              upon the number and position of the packet fields used for              filtering, and upon the number of rules against which a              packet has to be matched.              Denial of service attacks require that the per-packet rule              matching and the drop path be able to keep up with the              interface speed.         o    Multicasting              To allow multicast traffic to penetrate a firewall, the              rule that is needed should be supplied by the receiver              rather than the sender.  However, this will not work with              the challenge mechanism outlined inSection 3.3.1, since              "Authentication Required" notifications would be sent to              the sender, not to the receiver(s).              Multicast conversations may use any of the three levels of              security described in the previous section, but all              firewalls will have to share the same secret with the              originator of the data stream.  That secret would have to              be provided to the receivers through other channels and              then passed to the firewalls at the receivers' initiative              (in much the same way that resources are reserved at              receiver's initiative in RSVP).         o    Asymmetric Routing              Given a client computer C utilizing a service from another              computer C through a firewall F: if the packets returning              from S to C take a different route than packets from C to              S, they may encounter another firewall F' which has not              been authorized to pass packets from S to C (unlike F,              which has been).  F' will challenge S rather than C, but S              may not have credentials to authenticate itself with a              server trusted by F'.              Fortunately, this asymmetric routing situation is not a              problem for the common case of single homed administrative              domains, where any asymmetric routes converge at the              firewall.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 18]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         o    Illicit Rendezvous              None of these mechanisms prevent two users on opposite              sides of a firewall from rendezvousing with a custom              application written over a protocol that may have been              authorized to run through a firewall.              For example, if an organization has a policy that certain              information is sensitive and must not be allowed outside              its premises, a firewall will not be enough to enforce              this policy if users are able to attach sensitive              information to mail and send it outside to arbitrary              parties.  Similarly, a firewall will not prevent all              problems with incoming data.  If users import programs and              execute them, the programs may have Trojan horses which              disclose sensitive information or modify or delete              important data.  Executable code comes in many, many              forms, including PostScript files, scripts for various              interpreters, and even return addresses for sendmail.  A              firewall can detect some of these and scan for some forms              of potentially hazardous code, but it cannot stop users              from transforming things that look like "data" into              programs.              We consider these problems to be somewhat outside the              scope of the firewall router mechanism.  It is a matter of              the policies implemented by the organization owning the              firewalls to address these issues.         o    Transparency for Security Packets              For the mechanisms described above to operate, the              "Authentication Required" notification and the              authentication/authorization protocol that is used between              the client computer and the authentication and              authorization servers trusted by a firewall, must be              passed by all firewalls automatically.  This might be on              the basis of the packet profiles involved in security.              Alternatively, firewall routers might serve as              application-layer firewalls for these types of              communications.  They could then validate the data they              pass to avoid spoofing or illicit rendezvous.      3.3.4 Firewall-Friendly Applications         Firewall routers have problems with certain communication         patterns where requests are initiated by the server, including         callbacks and multiple connections (e.g., FTP).  It wasBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 19]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         suggested that it would be useful to have guidelines to         application designers to help them to build 'firewall-friendly         applications'.  The following guidelines were suggested:         1)   no inbound calls (the xterm problem),         2)   fixed port numbers (no portmapper or tcpmux),         3)   integral redirection is good (application gateways),         4)   no redirection in the protocol,         5)   32 bit sequence numbers that are crypto-strong random #'s,              and         6)   fixed length and number of header fields.         Type fields are good, but they may not be needed if there are         fixed port numbers.      3.3.5  Conclusions         Compared to an application-layer firewall, an IP-layer firewall         scheme could provide a number of benefits:         -    No extra authentication is required for end hosts.         -    A single authentication protocol can be used for all              intended applications.         -    An IP-layer firewall causes less performance degradation.         -    An IP-layer firewall may be able to crash and recover              state without disturbing open TCP connections.         -    Routes can shift without disturbing open TCP connections.         -    There is no single point of failure.         -    It is independent of application.         However, there are substantial difficult design issues to be         solved, particularly in the areas of multiple firewalls,         assymmetric routes, multicasting, and performance.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 20]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 19944. SECURE QOS FORWARDING   When the Internet supports special qualities-of-service (QOS) for   particular packet flows, there will be a new set of security   problems.  There will be a need to authenticate and authorize users   asking for those QOS values that are expensive in network resources,   and it will be necessary to prevent theft of these resources and   denial-of-service attacks by others.  This section contains a   conceptual model for these problems, which we may call secure QOS   forwarding.  The issues here differ from end-to-end security and   firewalls, because QOS forwarding security may need to be enforced at   every router along a path.   It was noted that this is not a new problem; it was stated and solved   in a theoretical way in a thesis by Radia Perlman.   4.1  The Requirement for Setup      Setup is an essential part of any QOS mechanism.  However, it may      be argued that there are also good engineering reasons for setup      in any Internet-layer security mechanism, even without QOS      support.  In the abstract, one could imagine a pure datagram model      in which each IP packet separately carried the necessary      authorizations for all the stages in the forwarding path.      Realistically, this is not practical, since the security      information may be both unacceptably large and computationally      demanding for inclusion in every packet.  This seems to imply the      need for some form of state setup for security.      Thus, we presume a two stage process that moves somewhat away from      the pure datagram model.  In the first stage, the setup stage,      some state is established in the routers (and other network      elements) that describes how a subsequent stream of packets is to      be treated.  In the second stage, the classification stage, the      arriving packets are matched with the correct state information      and processed.  The terminology in use today calls these different      state descriptions "classes", and the process of sorting      "classification".      Setup can take many forms.  It could be dynamic, invoked across      the network by an application as described above.  The setup      process could also be the manual configuration of a router by      means of a protocol such as SNMP or remote login.  For example, a      network link, such as a link across the Atlantic, might be shared      by a number of users who purchase it jointly.  They might      implement this sharing by configuring a router with      specifications, or filters, which describe the sorts of packets      that are permitted to use each share.  Whether the setup isBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 21]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      dynamic or manual, short-lived or semi-permanent, it has the same      effect: it creates packet classes in the router and defines how      packets are to be classified as they arrive.      Much of the current research on extensions to IP for QOS, such as      realtime service, has assumed an explicit setup phase and a      classification stage.  The setup stage is accomplished using      protocols such as RSVP or ST-II, which also specify how the      subsequent classification is to be done.  Security at the setup      stage would thus simply be an extension to such a protocol.  It      should be noted that there are alternative proposals for realtime      QOS, based on an implicit setup process.   4.2  Securing the Setup Process.      To secure the setup process, we require that a setup request be      accompanied by user credentials that provide a trustworthy      assurance that the requester is known and is authorized to make      the request in question.  We refer to the credentials used in the      setup phase as the high-level identification (HLID).      A simple version of this authorization would be a password on the      management interface to a router (the limitations of such a      password scheme are well known and not the issue here).  In the      case of setup requests made by individual applications, some      user-specific authorization must be assumed.      While there could be any number of ways to organize the HLIDs, the      objective of scaling suggests that a global framework for user      naming and authentication would be useful.  The choice of naming      framework is discussed further inSection 5.  Note that this      discussion, which concerns controlling access to network resources      and security devices, is distinct from end-to-end authentication      and access control; however, the same authentication      infrastructure could be used for both.      In general, while significant engineering effort will be required      to define a setup architecture for the Internet, there is no need      to develop new security techniques.  However, for the security      aspects of the classification process, there are significant      problems related to performance and cost.  We thus focus on that      aspect of the overall framework in more detail.      Above, we defined the high-level ID (HLID) as that set of      information presented as part of a setup request.  There may also      be a "low-level ID" (LLID), sometimes called a "cookie", carried      in each packet to drive classification.  In current proposals for      IP extensions for QOS, packets are classified based on existingBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 22]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      packet fields, e.g., source and destination addresses, ports, and      protocol type.      It is important to note that the LLID is distinct from the address      of the user, at least conceptually.  By stressing this distinction      we make the point that the privileges of the user are not      determined by the address in use.  If the user's address changes,      the privileges do not.      The LLID in a packet acts as a form of tag that is used by some or      all routers along a path to make decisions about the sort of QOS      that shall be granted to this packet.  An LLID might refer to a      data stream between a single source-destination address pair, or      it might be more general and encompass a range of data streams.      There is no requirement that the LLID embody a syntax that permits      a router to discern the QOS parameters that it represents, but      there also is no prohibition against imposing such a structure.      We propose that an IP datagram contain one LLID, which can be used      at various stages of the network to map the packet to a class.  We      reject the alternative that the packet should have a variable      number of LLIDs, each one for a different point in the net.      Again, this is not just a security comment, but it has security      implications.      The attributes of the LLID should be picked to match as broad a      range of requirements as possible.      *    Its duration (discussed below) must match both the needs of           the security protocol, balancing robustness and efficiency,           and the needs of the application, which will have to deal           with renewal of the setup when the LLID expires.  A useful           end-node facility would be a service to renew setup requests           automatically.      *    The degree of trust must be high enough to meet the most           stringent requirement we can reasonably meet.      *    The granularity of the LLID structure must permit packet           classification into classes fine-grained enough for any           resource selection in the network.  We should therefore           expect that each separate stream of packets from an           application will have a distinct LLID.  There will be little           opportunity for aggregating multiple streams under one LLID           or one authenticator.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 23]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994   4.3  Validating an LLID      At a minimum, it is necessary to validate the use of an LLID in      context, i.e., to ensure that it is being asserted in an      authorized fashion.  Unauthorized use of an LLID could result in      theft of service or denial-of-service attacks, where packets not      emitted by an authorized sender are accorded the QOS treatment      reserved for that sender (or for a group of which the sender is a      member).  Thus, use of an LLID should be authenticated by routers      that make QOS decisions based on that LLID.  (Note that not all      routers may "pay attention" to the LLID.)      In principle, the validity of an LLID assertion needs to be      checked on every packet, though not necessarily at every router;      it may be possible to restrict the checks to security perimeters.      At those routers that must validate LLIDs, there is an obvious      concern over the performance impact.  Therefore, a router may      adopt a less rigorous approach to LLID validation.  For example, a      router may elect to sample a data stream and validate some, but      not all, packets.  It may also elect to forward packets first and      perform selective validation as a background activity.  In the      least stringent approach, a router might log selected packets and      validate them as part of an audit activity much later.      There are several candidate techniques for validating the use of      LLIDs.  We have identified three basic techniques, which differ in      terms of computational performance, bandwidth overhead, and      effectiveness (resistance to various forms of attack).      *    Digital Signatures           The first technique entails the use of public key           cryptography and digital signatures.  The sender of each           packet signs the packet (header and payload) by computing a           one-way hash over the packet and transforming the hash value           using a private key associated with the LLID.  The resulting           authenticator value is included in the packet header.  The           binding between the public key and the LLID is established           through a connection setup procedure that might make use of           public keys that enjoy a much longer lifetime.  Using public           key technology yields the advantage that any router can           validate a packet, but no router is entrusted with data that           would enable it to generate a packet with a valid           authenticator (i.e., which would be viewed as valid by other           routers.)  This characteristic makes this technique ideal           from the standpoint of the "principle of least privilege."Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 24]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           Public key cryptosystems such as RSA have the advantage that           validation of a signature is much faster than signing, which           reduces the router processing burden.  Nonetheless, this           approach is not likely to be feasible for anything other than           selective checking by routers, given current public key           algorithm performance.      *    Sealing           The next technique is based on the use of the same type of           one-way hash function used for digital signatures, but it           does not require signing the hash value.  Here the sender           computes a one-way hash with a secret quantity (essentially a           "key") appended to the packet.  This process is an example of           what is sometimes referred to more generically as           cryptographic "sealing."  The inclusion of this key at the           end of the hash computation results in a hash value that is           not predictable by any entity not possessing the key.  The           resulting hash value is the authenticator and is included in           the packet header.  A router validates a packet by           recomputing the hash value over the received packet with the           same secret quantity appended.  If the transmitted hash value           matches the recomputed hash value, the packet is declared           valid.  Unlike the signature technique, sealing implies that           all routers capable of verifying a seal are also capable of           generating (forging) a seal.  Thus, this technique requires           that the sender trust the routers not to misuse the key.           This technique has been described in terms of a single secret           key shared between the sender and all the routers that need           to validate packets associated with an LLID.  A related           alternative strategy uses the same authenticator technique,           but shares the secret key on a pairwise basis, e.g., between           the sender and the first router, between the first router and           the next, etc.  This avoids the need to distribute the secret           key among a large group of routers, but it requires that the           setup mechanism enable Router A to convince his neighbor           (Router B) that Router A is authorized to represent traffic           on a specific LLID or set of LLIDs.  This might best be done           by encapsulating the packet inside a wrapper that both ends           of the link can validate.  Once this strategy is in place, it           may even be most efficient for routers to aggregate traffic           between them, providing authentication not on a per-LLID           basis, since the router pairs are prepared to "trust" one           another to accurately represent the data stream LLIDs.           For a unicast data stream, the use of pairwise keying between           routers does not represent a real change in the trustBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 25]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           required of the routers or of the setup mechanism, because of           the symmetric sharing of the secret key.  However, for a           multicast connection, this pairwise keying approach is           superior in that it prevents a router at one point in a           multicast tree from being able to generate traffic that could           be inserted at another point in the tree.  At worst, a router           can generate spurious, but authenticatable, traffic only for           routers "below" it in the multicast tree.           Note that the use of network management fault isolation           techniques, e.g., sampling router traffic statistics at           different points along a data stream, should permit post hoc           detection of packet forgery attacks mounted by rogue routers           along a data stream path.  Use of this technique could           provide a deterrent to such activity by routers, further           arguing for the pairwise keying approach.           The sealing technique is faster than the digital signature           technique, because the incremental hash calculation           (including the appended secret quantity) is much faster than           the cryptographic transformation required to sign a hash.           The processing burden is symmetric here, i.e., the sender and           each router devote the same amount of processing power to           seal a packet and to verify the seal.  Also, a sealed hash           may be smaller than a signed hash, even if the same function           is used in both cases.  (This is because the modulus size of           the public key signature algorithm and any ancillary           parameters tend to increase the size of the signed hash           value.)  Moreover, one could use a hash function with a           "wide" value and truncate that value, if necessary to reduce           overhead; this option is not available when the authenticator           is a signed hash value.           As a variant on this technique, one could imagine a           "clearinghouse" that would receive, from the sender, the           secret key used to generate and validate authenticators.  A           router needing to validate a packet would send a copy of the           packet to the clearinghouse, which would check the packet and           indicate to the router whether it was a valid packet           associated with the LLID in question.  Obviously, this           variant is viable only if the router is performing           infrequent, selective packet validation.  However, it does           avoid the need to share the authenticator secret among all           the routers that must validate packets.           For both of these techniques, there is a residual           vulnerability to denial-of-service attacks based on replay of           valid packets during the lifetime of a data stream.  UnlessBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 26]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           packets carry sequence numbers and routers track a sequence           number window for each data stream, an (external) attacker           can copy valid packets and replay them.  It may be easiest to           protect against this form of attack by aggregating all           traffic between a pair of routers into a single flow and           providing replay protection for the flow as a whole, rather           than on a per data stream basis.      *    Temporary Passwords           The final technique explored in the workshop takes a very           different tack to packet validation.  The preceding           techniques compute a function of the bits in a packet and           transform that value in a fashion that prevents an intruder           from generating packets with valid authenticators.  The           ability to generate packets with valid authenticators for a           given LLID requires access to a secret value that is           available only to the sender, or to the sender and to routers           participating in a given data stream.           In contrast, this third technique calls for the authenticator           to be a short term, secret quantity that is carried in the           packet header, without benefit of further protection.  In           essence, this technique incorporates a short term "password"           into each packet header.  This approach, like its           predecessor, requires that all of the routers validating the           LLID be privy to this authenticator.  Moreover, the           authenticator is visible to any other router or other           equipment along the path, and thus this technique is much           more vulnerable than the previous ones.           Here the same authenticator may be applied to all packets           with the same LLID, since the authenticator is not a function           of the packet it authenticates.  In fact, this suggests that           it is feasible to use the LLID as the authenticator.           However, adopting this tack would not be consistent with the           two previous techniques, each of which requires an explicit,           separate authenticator, and so we recommend against this           optimization.           Nonetheless, the fact that the authenticator is independent           of the packet context makes it trivial to generate (forge)           apparently authentic packets if the authenticator is           intercepted from any legitimate packet.  Also, if the           authenticator can be guessed, an attacker need not even           engage in passive wiretapping to defeat this scheme.  This           latter observation suggests that the authenticator must be of           sufficient size to make guessing unlikely, and making theBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 27]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           LLID and the authenticator separate further supports this           requirement.           The major advantage of this approach is one of performance.           The authenticator can be validated very quickly through a           simple comparison.  Consistent with the need to protect           against guessing attacks, the authenticator need not consume           a significant amount of space in the packet header.           The use of a sequence number visible to the routers is an           interesting technique to explore to make these somewhat           vulnerable methods more robust.  If each stream (each source           of packets) numbers its packets, then an intruder attempting           to use the network resource must delete the legitimate           packets, which in many cases would be difficult.  Otherwise,           the router being attacked would notice duplicate sequence           numbers and similar anomalies.  The exact details of the           numbering would have to be worked out, since for the           legitimate stream packets might be lost, which would cause           holes in the sequence space.      We do not consider here the issues of collusion, in which a user      with a given LLID and authenticator deliberately shares this with      another unauthorized user.  This possibility should be explored,      to see if there is a practical advantage to this act, and thus a      real threat.   4.4  Dynamics of Setup      o    Duration of LLID's           A key question in the use of LLIDs is how long they remain           valid.  At one extreme, they last only a very short time,           perhaps seconds.  This limits the damage that can be done if           the authenticator for the LLID is stolen.  At the other           extreme, LLIDs are semi-permanent, like credit card numbers.           The techniques proposed above for securing the LLID traded           strength for efficiency, under the assumption that the peril           was limited by the limited validity of the LLID.           The counterbalancing advantage of long-term or semi-permanent           LLIDs is that it becomes practical to use primitive setup           techniques, such as manual configuration of routers to           establish packet classes.  This will be important in the           short run, since deployment of security and dynamic resource           allocation protocols may not exactly track in time.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 28]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           We conclude that the correct short-term action is to design           LLIDs under the assumption that they are fairly short lived,           and to tolerate, in the short run, a longer period of           validity.  This would imply that we will get an acceptable           long-term mechanism in place, which operationally will have a           lower level of security at first.  As we get better tools for           automatic setup, we can shorten the duration of validity on a           individual basis, without replacing mechanism in the packet           forwarding path.      o    Setup Latency           The tradition of the Internet is not to impose any setup           latency in the communication path between end nodes.  This           supports the classic datagram model for quick transactions,           etc., and it is a feature that should be preserved.           For setup that is done "in advance", either through a           management interface or by an end-node in the background, the           issue of latency does not arise.  The latency issue occurs           for dynamic reservations made in response to a specific           application request.           We observe that while latency is a key issue, it is not           materially influenced by security concerns.  The designers of           resource reservation protocols such as RSVP and ST-II are           debating the latency of these protocols today, absent           security.  Adding an authenticator to the request message           will increase the processing needed to validate the request,           and might even imply a message exchange with an           authentication service, but should not substantially change           the real time of the setup stage, which might already take           time on the order of a round-trip delay.  But the design of           the high level authentication and authorization methods for           the setup protocol should understand that this process, while           not demanding at the level of the per-packet processing, is           still somewhat time-critical.           One way of dealing with an expensive setup process is to set           up the request provisionally and perform the validation in           the background. This would limit the damage from one bad           setup request to a short period of time.  Note, however, that           the system is still vulnerable to an attack that uses a           sequence of setup requests, each of which allows unauthorized           usage for at least a short period of time.           Note also that a denial-of-service attack can be mounted by           flooding the setup process with invalid setup requests, allBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 29]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           of which need to be processed and rejected.  This could           prevent a valid user from setting up any state.  However,           denial-of-service attacks based upon flooding leave very           large "finger prints"; they should not normally be an           important threat.  If it is a problem, it may be possible to           incorporate a mechanism at the level of setup processing that           is equivalent to "fair queueing", to limits the damage from a           flooding attack at the packet level.   4.5  Receiver-Initiated Setup      Recent work on a QOS extension for the Internet, embodied in the      RSVP protocol, uses the model that the receiver will reserve      resources.  This scheme is consistent with the current IP      multicast paradigm, which requires the receiver to join the      multicast group.  The receiver reserves the resources to insure      that the multicast traffic reaches the receiver with the desired      QOS.  In this case, it is the credentials (the HLIDs) of the      receivers that will be presented to the setup phase.      Note that receiver initiation requires an explicit setup phase.      Suppose setup were implicit, driven by pre-existing fields in the      packet.  Then there would be no way to associate a packet with a      particular receiver, since in multicast, the address of the      receiver never appears in the packet.      Further, it is impossible in this case to perform a setup "in      advance", unless the sender and the receiver are very tightly co-      ordinated; otherwise, the receiver will not know in advance what      LLID will be in the packet.  It is certainly impossible, in this      case, for the receiver to set up "semi-permanent" reservations for      multicast traffic coming to it.  This, again, is not a security      issue; the problem exists without adding security concerns, but      the security architecture must take it into account.   4.6  Other Issues      4.6.1  Encrypting Firewalls and Bypass         Our view of security, both end node and network protection,         includes the use of firewalls, which partition the network into         regions of more or less trust.  This idea has something in         common with the encrypting-firewall model used in the         military/intelligence community: red (trusted) networks         partitioned from black (untrusted) networks.  The very         significant difference is that, in the military model, the         partition uses an encryption unit that encodes as much as         possible of the packet for its trip across the black network toBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 30]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         another red network.  That is, the purpose of the encryption         unit, among others, is to provide a very high degree of         protection against disclosure for data housed within the red         networks.  In contrast, our version of a firewall is more to         protect the trusted (red) region of the network from outside         attacks.  It is concerned both with what comes in and with what         goes out.  It does permit communication between a node on the         trusted and nodes in the untrusted parts of the network.         We would like to be able to adapt our model of secure QOS to         the case of military-style encrypting firewalls.  However, this         use of encryption raises a problem with our model of secure         resource management, discussed above, which was based on a         two-stage process of setup and classification.  This model is         problematic because it requires information to pass from the         red region to the black region in the clear.  This information         includes both the setup packets themselves, if setup is done         dynamically from the end node, and the classification fields         (the LLIDs) in the data packets.  Obviously, this information         cannot be encrypted when leaving the red region of the network,         since it would then be meaningless to the black net, so that         the black network would be unable to make resource allocation         decisions based on it.         To make this sort of control scheme work, it is necessary for         the encryption device to be programmed to permit certain         packets and fields in packets to pass through the encryptor in         the clear.  This bypass of the encryption is considered highly         undesirable.  In a high security situation, the process         generating the bypassing information might be corrupted, with         the result that information that should be controlled is         removed from the secure network by hiding it in the bypassed         fields of the packets.         We concluded, however, that this bypass problem is not         insurmountable.  The key idea, as in all cases of bypass, is to         limit, rather than wholly outlaw, the information passing in         the clear.  To limit the information needed for bypass, one can         either perform the setup as a management function totally         within the black environment, or divide the process into two         stages.  The first stage, again totally in the black context,         defines a limited number of setup situations.  The second stage         involves sending from the red net a very small message that         selects one request to be instantiated from among the pre-         defined set.         Perhaps the more difficult issue is the LLID in the packet         header.  If the LLID is an explicit field (as we have discussedBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 31]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         so far, but see below), it represents a new field in each         packet, with perhaps as many as 32 bits.  Again, the solution         is to limit the way this field can be used.  When the end-node         performs a setup, it will specify the value of the LLID to be         used.  This fact can be observed by the red/black encryption         unit, which can then limit the components of this field to the         values currently in use.  To further improve the situation, the         encryption unit might be able to aggregate a number of flows         onto one flow for the purpose of crossing the black net, which         would permit a further reduction in the number of distinct         LLIDs that must escape the red region.         The details of this proposal, including some important issues         such as the time duration of LLIDs in this case, must be         considered further.  However, the initial conclusion that         bypass can be incorporated into a general resource control         framework is very encouraging, since it suggests that both         military and commercial forms of security can be built out of         the same building blocks.      4.6.2  The Principle of Consistent Privilege         A well understood principle of security is the principle of         least privilege, which states that a system is most robust when         it is structured to demand the least privilege from its         components.         A related rule we observe is the principle of consistent         privilege.  This can be illustrated simply in the case of         denial of service, where it is particularly relevant.  For a         particular route, no assumption of service can be justified         unless we trust the routers to deliver the packets.  If a         router is corrupted and will not forward packets, the only         solution is to find another route not involving this router.         We do not concern ourselves here with protocols for finding new         routes in the presence of a corrupted router, since this topic         is properly part of another topic, securing the network         infrastructure.  We only observe that either we will get         service from the router or we will not.  If the router is         corrupted, it does not matter how it chooses to attack us.         Thus, as long as the router is part of a forwarding path (most         generally a multicast forwarding tree), we should not hesitate         to trust it in other ways, such as by giving it shared resource         keys or LLID verifiers.         This illustrates the principle of consistent privilege.  This         principle is exploited in the scheme for hop-by-hop or pairwise         use of secrets to validate LLIDs in a multicast tree.  If aBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 32]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994         single key is issued for the whole tree, then the privilege is         not consistent.  We only need to trust a router with respect to         the nodes "below" it in the tree.  If it fails to forward         traffic, it can affect only those nodes.  But if we give it the         group key, then it can generate bogus traffic and inject it         into the tree at any point, affecting traffic for other parts         of the tree.  If, on the other hand, we use pairwise keys, then         a corrupt node can only generate bogus traffic with the key for         traffic it would directly receive, which is the part of the         tree it could damage anyway.         Another requirement we must place on the network concerns         routing.  If a firewall is in place, we must trust the routing         architecture not to bypass that firewall.  One way to         accomplish this is to eliminate any physical path between the         regions other than those that go through the firewall.         Operational experience will be required to see if this simple         physical limit is an acceptable constraint.      4.6.3  Implicit LLID's         We stress the importance of a strong conceptual distinction         between the addresses in a packet and the LLID which is used to         classify the packet.  The conceptual distinction is important,         but under limited circumstances it may be possible to overload         some of the packet fields and create an LLID from the current         packet header.  For example, current packet classifiers for         IPv4, which are not secure but which seem to work for         classifying the packets into service classes, use a number of         the packet fields together as a form of LLID: the source and         destination IP addresses and ports plus the protocol type.         This sort of "implicit" LLID must be short-lived, especially if         the host can change its IP address as it moves.  But if the         LLID is established by some sort of dynamic setup protocol, it         should be possible reestablish the LLID as needed.         The current IPv4 header has no authenticator field to validate         the LLID.  An authenticator field could be optionally carried         in an option; adding it gives robustness to network         reservations.  Any of the schemes described above for creating         an authenticator could be used, except that if the simple         password-style authenticator is used, it must be an explicit         separate field, since the LLID cannot be picked randomly.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 33]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      4.6.4  Security without Setup         As we describe this architecture, the setup phase is an         essential part of the sequence.  This suggests that the current         Internet, which has no setup protocols, cannot be secured         against denial-of-service attacks.  It is important to explore         the limits of this point.  As we stressed above, setup can         occur in many ways.  Routers today offer management options to         classify packets based on protocol types and other fields found         in the header, and to use this classification to create a few         fair queueing classes that can prevent one class from         overloading the net to the exclusion of the others.         There are two problem here.  The first is that for a setup done         using a management interface, the secret that is shared among         the source and the routers to validate the LLID must remain         valid for a long time, and it must be manually configured.  The         second problem is that the granularity of the categories may be         coarse.  However, it has been proposed, in a thesis by Radia         Perlman, that a router might create a separate fair queueing         class implicitly for each source address.  This approach, which         uses the addresses as an implicit LLID, must have some form of         authenticator for robustness.  But if the LLID can be trusted,         this scheme provides classification of traffic based only on an         implicit setup operation.  The granularity of classification is         not sufficient to provide any QOS distinction.  The only         objective is to prevent the traffic from one source from         flooding the net to the exclusion of another.      4.6.5  Validating Addresses         We make a claim here that if the LLID and the addresses in the         packet are conceptually distinct, and if there is a suitable         means to validate the LLID, then there is no reason to validate         the addresses.  For example, a packet constructed with a false         source address does not seem to represent any security problem,         if its LLID can be validated.         An exception to this might possibly lie in communication with         mobile hosts, but it will require a complete model of threats         and requirements in the mobile environment to be sure.         However, we make the claim, as a starting point for discussion,         that if LLIDs are distinguished from addresses, many of the         security concerns with mobility are mitigated and perhaps         removed.  This point should be validated by more detailed         consideration of the mobility problem.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 34]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994   4.6  Conclusions      a)   It is important to conceptually separate a LLID (Low-Level           IDentifier) carried in a packet from addresses in the packet.      b)   There will be a single LLID carried in each packet.  Although           this might imply some additional state in the routers than if           multiple LLIDs were used, using only one LLID choice is more           scalable.      c)   Hop-by-hop LLID authentication mechanisms might provide a           highly scalable approach that limits the distribution of           secrets.  However, the robustness limitations must be           investigated thoroughly.      d)   Statistical sampling or after-the-fact detection mechanisms           may be employed by routers to address performance concerns.5. AN AUTHENTICATION SERVICE   The purpose of an authentication service is simply to verify names,   or more precisely to verify the origin of "messages".  It differs   from the authorization service, which determines what services are   available to an authenticated name.  We expect that authentication   will be an Internet-wide service, while authorization will be   specific to the resources to which access is being authorized.   This "identification" function can be used in several contexts, for   example:   *    One-time passwords: "it is really <huitema@inria.fr> that is        responding to this challenge".   *    Access to a firewall: "it is really <huitema@inria.fr> that is        trying to send data to host-A at port-a".   There are many Internet objects that we may want to name, e.g.,:           domain names:   sophia.inria.fr           machine names:  jupiter.inria.fr           service names:  www.sophia.inria.fr                           (in fact, a data base)           users:          huitema@sophia.inria.frBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 35]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           processes:      p112.huitema@sophia.inria.fr                           p112.sophia.inria.fr           universal resource locators:                           http//www.sophia.inria.fr:222/tmp/foobar   One could be tempted to believe that the authentication service will   only be concerned with naming humans, as only humans are   "responsible"; a process obtains some access rights because it is   acting on behalf of a person.  However, this is too reductive and   potentially misleading.  We may have to authenticate "machines" or   hardware components.  For example:   *    When a machine boots it needs to access resources for        configuring itself, but it is not yet "used" by a person; there        is no user.   *    On a "distributed processor", component CPUs may need to        authenticate each other.   Machines do differ from users; machines cannot keep their "secrets"   in the same way that people do.  However, there is a big value in   having a simple and extensible name space.   5.1  Names and Credentials      We make the hypothesis that the authorization services will      generally use "access control lists" (ACLs), i.e., some definition      of a set of authorized users.  A compact way to represent such a      set would be to allow "wildcard" authorizations, e.g., "anybody at      <Bellcore.com>", or "any machine at <INRIA.FR>".  The      authentication service should be designed to facilitate the      realization of the authorization service and should support      "wildcards".      However, wildcards are not general enough.  Assuming that we have      a hierarchical name space, a wildcarded entry is limited to the      naming hierarchy.  For example, a name like      <huitema@sophia.inria.fr> could be matched by the wildcard      <*@sophia.inria.fr> or <*.inria.fr> or <*.fr>.  This is useful as      long as one stays at INRIA, but does not solve the generic      problem.  Suppose that an IETF file server at CNRI is to be      accessible by all IAB members: its ACL will explicitly list the      members by name.      The classic approach to naming, as exemplified in the X.500 model,      is to consider that people have "distinguished names".  Once one      has discovered such a name through some "white pages" service, canBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 36]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      use it as an access key in a global directory service.      An individual may acquire authorizations from a variety of      sources.  Using a pure, identity-based access control system, the      user would have to acquire multiple identities (i.e.,      distinguished names), corresponding to the roles in which she is      authorized to access different services.  We discuss this approach      in the next section.      An alternative approach is for the user to have a very small      number of identities, and to have the grantors of authorizations      issue (signed) credentials granting permissions to the user,      linked to her ID.  These additional signed credentials are known      as "capabilities".  The user can then establish her identity      through a generic identity credential, e.g., an X.509 certificate,      and can establish authorization by presenting capabilities as      required.  This is somewhat analogous to a person acquiring credit      cards linked to the name on a driver's license, and presenting the      appropriate credit card, plus the license for picture verification      of identity.   5.2  Identity-Based Authorization      Let's open the wallet of an average person: we find several      "credit cards" in it.  We all have many "credit cards", e.g.,      company cards, credit cards, airline frequent flyers memberships,      driver licenses.  Each of these cards is in fact a token asserting      the existence of a relation: the bank certifies that checks      presented by the bearer will be paid, the traffic authorities      certifies that the bearer has learned how to drive, etc.  This is      an example of identity-based authorization, in which an individual      is given different names corresponding to different relations      entered into by that individual.      If we imagine that the name space is based upon DNS (domain)      names, then for example, the person mentioned above could be      authenticated with the names:              customer@my-big-bank.com              customer@frequent-flyer.airline.com      The model we used here is that "the name is an association". This      is consistent with name verification procedures, in which that one      builds a "chain of trust" between the user and the "resource      agent".  By following a particular path in the trust graph, one      can both establish the trust and show that the user belongs to an      "authorized group".Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 37]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      The existence of "multiple names" for a person may or may not      imply the existence of an "equivalence" relation.  It may be      useful to know that <huitema@sophia.inria.fr> and      <huitema@iab.isoc.org> are two names for the same person, but      there are many cases where the user does not want to make all his      tokens visible.   5.3  Choosing Credentials      Let's consider again the example of Christian Huitema accessing a      file at CNRI.  He will have to interact with INRIA's outgoing      firewall and with CNRI's incoming controls.  Regardless of whether      authorization depends upon capabilities or upon multiple      association names, a different credential may be needed in each      firewall on the path.  For example, assuming multiple names are      used, he will use an INRIA name, <huitema@sophia.inria.fr>, to be      authorized by INRIA to use network resources, and he will use an      IAB name, <huitema@iab.isoc.org>, to access the file server.  Thus      comes an obvious problem: how does he choose the credential      appropriate to a particular firewall?  More precisely, how does      the computer program that manages the connection discover that it      should use one credential in response to INRIA's firewall      challenge and another in response to CNRI's request?      There are many possible answers.  The program could simply pass      all the user's credentials and let the remote machine pick one.      This works, but poses some efficiency problems: passing all      possible names is bulky, looking through many names is long.      Advertising many names is also very undesirable for privacy and      security reasons: one does not want remote servers to collect      statistics on all the credentials that a particular user may have.      Another possibility is to let the agent that requests an      authorization pass the set of credentials that it is willing to      accept, e.g., "I am ready to serve CNRI employees and IAB      members".  This poses the same privacy and security problems as      the previous solutions, although to a lesser degree.  In fact, the      problem of choosing a name is the same as the generic "trust path"      model.  The name to choose is merely a path in the authentication      graph, and network specialists are expected to know how to find      paths in graphs.      In the short term, it is probably possible to use a "default name"      or "principal name", at least for local transactions, and to count      on the user to "guess" the credential that is required by remote      services.  To leave the local environment we need only the local      credentials; to contact a remote server we need only the      destination credentials.  So we need one or maybe two credentials,Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 38]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      which may be derived from the destination.  It will be very often      the case that the generic credential is enough; then wildcards;      then "FTP provided" tokens.6. OTHER ISSUES   6.1  Privacy and Authentication of Multicast Groups      Multicast applications are becoming an increasingly important part      of Internet communications.  Packet voice, video and shared      whiteboard can be powerful productivity tools for users.  For      these applications to have maximum value to their users, a variety      of security services will be required.      Existing techniques are directly applicable to providing privacy      for a private teleconference.  If each member of the conference      shares a single key for a symmetric encryption algorithm (such as      DES), existing point-to-point security techniques can be extended      to protect communication within the group from outsiders.      However, slight modifications to existing techniques are required      to accommodate the multicast environment.  Each packet will      require independent cryptographic processing to ensure that      packets from multiple sources can be independently decrypted by      the numerous receivers, particularly in the presence of lost      packets.  N-party authentication and key management will be      required to establish the shared key among the proper group      members.  This can be done by extending existing two-party key      management techniques pairwise.  For example, the conference      manager may provide the key to each member following individual      authentication; for example, this could be implemented trivially      using PEM technology.  The overhead experienced by each host      computer in the conference will be similar to that of existing      point-to-point encryption applications,  This overhead is be low      enough that, today, software encryption can offer adequate      performance to secure whiteboard and voice traffic, while hardware      encryption is adequate for video.      The nature of multicast communication adds an additional      requirement.  Existing multicast conferences provide gradual      degradation in quality as the packet loss rate increases.  To be      acceptable, authentication protocols must tolerate lost packets.      Techniques to accomplish this efficiently need to be developed.      One initial sketch is outlined below.  Engineering work will be      required to validate the practicality of this approach.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 39]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      The use of symmetric encryption provides the members of the      conference with effective protection from outsiders.  However,      because all members of the conference share a single key, it does      not provide a means of authenticating individual conference      members.  In principle, existing techniques, based on one-way hash      functions coupled with digital signatures based on asymmetric      encryption algorithms, can provide individual authentication.      One-way hash functions such as MD5 are comparable in cost to      symmetric encryption.  However, digital signatures are      considerably more costly, both in computation and in communication      size.  The degree of overhead depends on the quality of      authentication required.      In summary, realtime authentication at the granularity of group      membership is easy and cheap, but individual authentication is      costly in time and space.  Over time, the costs of both      communications and processing are expected to decline.  It is      possible that this will help make authentication at the level of      individual conference participants.  There are two conflicting      trends:  (1) increasing CPU speeds to provide symmetric      encryption, and (2) increasing communication data rates.  If both      technologies increase proportionally, there will be no net gain,      at least if the grain size is measured in terms of bits, rather      than as a period in seconds.      The group felt that the correct approach to end-to-end controls is      the use of encryption, as discussed above.  The alternative is to      control the ability of a user to join a multicast group as a      listener, or as a speaker.  However, we are not comfortable with      the level of assurance that we can offer if we attempt to ensure      end-to-end semantics using these means.  Any passive penetration      of the network, i.e., any wire-tap, can compromise the privacy of      the transmitted information.  We must acknowledge, however, that      problems with deployment of encryption code and hardware, and      especially problems of export controls, will create a pressure to      use the tools described inSection 4 to implement a form of end-      to-end control.  Such a decision would raise no new issues in      security technology.  The shared key now used for encrypting the      data could instead be used as the basis for authenticating a      multicast group join request.  This would require modification of      the multicast packet format, but nothing more.  Our concern is not      the technical difficulty of this approach, but the level of      assurance we can offer the user.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 40]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994   6.2  Secure Plug-and-Play a Must      Plug-and-play is the ability to plug a new device into a network      and have it obtain the information it needs to communicate with      other devices, without requiring any new configuration      information.  Secure plug-and-play is an important Internet      requirement, and a central architectural issue is whether it can      be made to scale well.      For plug-and-play operation, a new machine that is "plugged" into      the network needs to:      (1)  Obtain an locator so it can communicate with other devices      (2)  Register or obtain a name to be identified by (e.g., machine           name)      (3)  Discover services available on the network (e.g., printers,           routers, file servers, etc.)      (4)  Discover other systems on the network so it can communicate           with them.      In some environments, no security mechanisms are required because      physical security and local knowledge of the users are sufficient      protection.  At the other end of the spectrum is a large network      with many groups of users, different types of outside connections,      and levels of administrative control.  In such environments,      similar plug-and-play capabilities are needed, but the new device      must be "authenticated" before it can perform these functions.  In      each step in the discovery process the new device must      authenticate itself prior to learning about services.      The steps might be:      -    Obtain a HLID from a smart card, smart disk, or similar           device.      -    Authenticate itself with the first plug-and-play server using           its HLID, to register a name and to find the location of           other services.      -    Discover services available on the network (e.g., printers,           routers, file servers, etc.) based on its HLID.      -    Discover other systems on the network so it can communicate           with them.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 41]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      The problem of taking a system out of the box and initially      configuring it is similar to the problem of a mobile or portable      machine  that a human wants to connect to a local network      temporarily in order to receive services on that network.  How can      the local network authenticate the human (and therefore the      human's machine) and know which services this visiting machine is      permitted to use?      The human must be endowed with a high level identifier (HLID)      which acts as his/her passport and can be verified by the local      network.  This high level identifier must be globally unique and      registered/assigned by some recognized authority.      When the human plugs the machine onto a local net, the machine      identifies itself to the net with the human's high level      identifier.  If local net has a policy of permitting anyone to      plug and play on its network, it will ignore the HLID and assign      an address (locator), permitting the visitor unrestricted access      and privileges.  More likely, the local net will authenticate the      HLID prior to granting the visitor an address or any privileges.      At this point, the HLID has only authenticated the visitor to the      local network; the issue of which services or resources the      visitor is entitled to use has not been addressed.  It is      desirable to develop a low-overhead approach to granting      authentications to new users. This will help in the case of      visitors to a site, as well as new users joining a facility.   6.3  A Short-Term Confidentiality Mechanism      Authentication has customarily been achieved using passwords.  In      the absence of active attacks, the greatest threat to computer      system security may be the ease with which passwords can be      "snooped" by the promiscuous monitoring of shared-media networks.      There are known security techniques for achieving authentication      without exposing passwords to interception, for example the      techniques implemented in the well-known Kerberos system.      However, authentication systems such as Kerberos currently operate      only in isolation within organizational boundaries.  Developing      and deploying a global authentication infrastructure is an      important objective, but it will take some years.  Another useful      approach in the short term is the use of a challenge-response user      authentication scheme (e.g., S/Key).      One of the groups explored another interim approach to guarding      passwords: introducing a readily-used confidentiality mechanism      based on an encrypted TCP connection.  This would operate at the      IP level to encrypt the IP payload, including the TCP header, toBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 42]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      allow the nature as well of the contents of the communication to      be kept private.  It could be implemented to provide either      "strict" protection (the connection fails if the other side cannot      decrypt your data stream) or "loose" protection (falling back to      non-private TCP if decryption fails).      Loose protection would allow interoperability with older hosts in      a seamless (non-user-intrusive) manner.      One-time keys may be exchanged during the SYN handshake that      starts the TCP connection.  Using one-time keys avoids a need for      infrastructure support and does not require trust between the      organizations on the two ends of the connection.  Tieing the key      exchange to the SYN handshake will avoid the possibility of having      the connection fully open without knowing the state of encryption      on both ends of the connection.  Although it may still be      theoretically possible to intercept the SYN exchange and subvert      the connection by an active "man-in-the-middle" attack, in      practice such attacks on TCP connections are quite difficult      unless the routing protocols have been subverted.      The keys could be exchanged using a new option that specifies the      key exchange protocol, the data encryption algorithm, and the key      to be used to decrypt the connection.  It could be possible to      include multiple options in the same SYN segment, specifying      different encryption models; the far end would then need to      acknowledge the option that it is willing to use.  In this case,      the lack of an acknowledgement would imply disinterest in      decrypting the datastream.  If a loose privacy policy were in      force, the connection could continue even without an      acknowledgment.  The policy, "strict" or "loose", would be set by      either the user or the default configuration for the machine.      One must however observe that a TCP option can carry only a      limited amount of data.  Efficient protection against crypto-      analysis of the Diffie-Hellmann scheme may require the use of a      very long modulus, e.g., 1024 bits, which cannot be carried in the      40 bytes available for TCP options.  One would thus have either to      define an "extended option" format or to implement encryption in a      separate protocol layered between TCP and IP, perhaps using a      version of "IP security".  The detailed engineering of such a      solution would have to be studied by a working group.      A TCP connection encryption mechanism such as that just outlined      requires no application changes, although it does require kernel      changes.  It has important drawbacks, including failure to provide      privacy for privacy for UDP, and the great likelihood of export      control restrictions.  If Diffie-Hellman were used, there wouldBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 43]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      also be patent issues.7. CONCLUSIONS   As a practical matter, security must be added to the Internet   incrementally.  For example, a scheme that requires, as a   precondition for any improvement, changes to application code, the   DNS, routers and firewalls all at once will be very hard to deploy.   One of the reasons the workshop explored schemes that are local to   the IP layer is that we surmise that they might be easier to deploy   in practice.   There are two competing observations that must shape planning for   Internet security.  One is the well known expression: "the best is   the enemy of the good."  The other is the observation that the   attacks are getting better.   Finally, it should noted that the principle of least privilege, which   was mentioned above, may be in contradiction to the principle of   least cost.   7.1  Suggested Short-Term Actions      The general recommendation for short-term Internet security policy      was that the IETF should make a list of desirable short-term      actions and then reach out to work with other organizations to      carry them out.  Other organizations include regionals, which may      be in a good position to provide site security counseling services      to their customers, vendors and other providers, and other      societies.  We should also give input to the US government to      influence their posture on security in the direction desired by      the community.      A suggested preliminary list of short-term actions was developed.      o    Perform external diagnostic security probes           Organizations should be encouraged to use CRACK and other           tools to check the robustness of their own passwords.  It           would also be useful to run a variety of security probes from           outside.  Since this is a very sensitive issue, some care           needs to be taken to get the proper auspices for such           probing.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 44]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           Useful probe tools include:               ISS: Klaus (GA)               SATAN: Farmer Venema               ICEPICK: NRL      o    Determine Security-Risk Publication Channels           What channels should be used for disseminating information of           security risks?      o    Encourage use of one-time passwords.           Available packages: S/Key, SecurID, Enigma, Digital Pathways.      o    Develop and publish guidelines for protocol developers, for           security-friendliness and firewall-friendliness.      o    Control topology to isolate threats      o    Set privacy policy:           *    Always           *    As much as possible      o    Bring Site Security Handbook up to date      o    Support use of Kerberos      The subject of the "Clipper chip" came up several times, but there      was not sufficient discussion of this very complex issue for this      grouip to reach a recommendation.  It has been observed that there      are a number of quite differing viewpoints about Clipper.           o    Some people accept the government's Clipper proposal,                including key escrow by the US government and the                requirement that encryption be in hardware.           o    Some people don't mind key escrow by the government in                principle, but the object to the hardware requirement.           o    Some people don't mind key escrow in principle, but                don't want the government to hold the keys.  They would                be comfortable with having the organization which owns                the data hold the keys.           o    Some people don't want key escrow at all.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 45]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994           o    Some people don't mind the hardware or the key escrow,                but they don't think this will be acceptable to other                countries and thus will not work internationally.      This report takes no position on any of these viewpoints.   7.2  Suggested Medium-Term Actions      These actions require some protocol design or modification;      however, they use existing security technology and require no      research.      o    Authentication Protocol           There is a problem of the choice of technology.  Public key           technology is generally deemed superior, but it is patented           and can also induce relatively long computations.  Symmetric           key technology (Needham-Schroeder algorithm, as used in           Kerberos) has some technical drawbacks but it is not           patented.  A system based on symmetric keys and used only for           authentication would be freely exportable without being           subject to patents.      o    Push Kerberos           Engineering is needed on Kerberos to allow it to interoperate           with mechanisms that use public key cryptography.      o    Push PEM/RIPEM/PGP...      o    Develop an authenticated DNS      o    Develop a key management mechanism      o    Set up a certificate server infrastructure           Possible server mechanisms include the DNS, Finger, SNMP,           Email, Web, and FTP.      o    Engineer authentication for the Web   7.3  Suggested Long-Term Actions      In this category, we have situations where a threat has been      identified and solutions are imaginable, but closure has not been      reached on the principles.Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 46]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994      o    Executable Apps      o    Router sabotage counter-measures      o    Prevent Byzantine routing.      o    Proxy Computing      o    Decomposition of computers      o    Are there "good" viruses?Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 47]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994APPENDIX A -- Workshop Organization   The following list of attendees indicates also the breakout group to   which they were assigned.   Breakout Groups   Group I.1 Leader:   1 Christian Huitema, INRIA        (IAB)   1 Steve Bellovin, AT&T   1 Bob Braden, ISI                 (IAB)   1 John Curran, NEARNET   1 Phill Gross, ANS                (IETF/IAB)   1 Stev Knowles, FTP Software      (Internet AD)   1 Barry Leiner, USRA              (IAB)   1 Paul Mockapetris, ISI   1 Yakov Rekhter, IBM              (IAB)   1 Dave Sincoskie, Bellcore        (IAB)   Group I.2 Leader:   2 Steve Crocker, TIS              (Security AD)   2 Jon Crowcroft   2 Steve Deering, PARC   2 Paul Francis, NTT   2 Van Jacobson, LBL   2 Phil Karn, Qualcomm   2 Allison Mankin, NRL             (Transport AD, IPng AD)   2 Radia Perlman, Novell   2 John Romkey, ELF                (IAB)   2 Mike StJohns, ARPA              (IAB)   Group I.3 Leader:   3 Dave Clark, MIT   3 Deborah Estrin, USC   3 Elise Gerich, Merit             (IAB)   3 Steve Kent, BBN                 (IAB)   3 Tony Lauck, DEC                 (IAB)   3 Tony Li, CISCO   3 Bob Hinden, Sun                 (IESG->IAB liaison, Routing AD)   3 Jun Murai, WIDE                 (IAB)   3 Scott Shenker, PARC   3 Abel Weinrib, Bellcore   The following were able to attend only the third day, due to a   conflicting ISOC Board of Trustees meeting:Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 48]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994     Scott Bradner, Harvard           (IPng AD)     Jon Postel, ISI                  (IAB)   The workshop agenda was as follows.      Tues Feb 8          9:00 - 10:30  Plenary              Discuss facilities, meeting goals, agenda, organization.              Establish some minimal common understandings.  Assign              scenarios to Breakout I groups.          10:30 - 13:00  Breakout I meetings              Each breakout group examine one or more scenarios and              formulate a list of design questions.  Lunch available on              11th floor.          13:00 - 15:00  Plenary              Report, discuss.  Collate and shorten list of design              issues.  Organize Breakout II groups to work on these              issues.          15:00 - 17:30  Breakout IIa meetings              Work on design issues.      Wed Feb 9           9:00 - 10:00   Plenary              Report, discuss.          10:00 - 13:30  Breakout IIb meetings              More work on design questions, develop list of              requirements.          13:30 - 14:30  Plenary              Report, discuss.          15:30 - 17:30  Breakout III groups      Thurs Feb 10          9:00 - 9:30 Plenary          9:30 - 11:00 Breakout Groups (wrapup)          11:00 - 12:00 Plenary              Discuss possible short-term security recommendations          13:00 - 14:00  Plenary --  Discuss short-term security issues          14:00 - 14:30  Plenary --  Presentation by Steve BellovinBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 49]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994          14:30 - 16:00  Plenary --  Long- and Medium-term                                     Recommendations   The following scenarios were used as a starting point for   discussions.  It distinguished security-S (security as a service to   the end systems) from security-M, security as a mechanism to support   other services.  The workshop was intended to be primarily concerned   with interactions among the following different *services*:   o    Security-S   o    Routing   o    Multi-destination delivery (mcast-S)   o    Realtime Packet scheduling (realtime)   o    Mobility   o    Accounting        (and maybe large-scale?)   These categories were then applied to the following scenarios:   S1.  Support a private teleconference among mobile hosts connected to        the Internet.  [Security-S, mcast-S, realtime, mobility]   S2.  The group in S1 is 1/3 the Internet, i.e., there are VERY severe        scaling problems.  [Security-S, mcast-S, realtime, mobility,        large-scale]   S3.  Charge for communication to support a video teleconference.        [Accounting, realtime, mcast-S]   S4.  I am travelling with my laptop. I tune in to radio channel IP-        RADIO, pick-up the beacon and start using it.  Who gets the        bill?  Why do they believe this is me?  Is "me" a piece of        hardware (IP address) or a certified user (PEM certificate)?        [Mobility, accounting (, realtime, mcast-S)]   S5.  A Politically Important Person will mcast an Internet        presentation, without danger of interruptions from the audience.   S6.  The travel industry wants to use Internet to deliver tickets to        customer premises directly in a secure way, but the customer has        only dial-up capability.  [Security-S, mobility]Braden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 50]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994   S7.  I am traveling with my laptop and this friendly host is running        the autoconfiguration protocol. I immediately get an address as        "mac1.friendly.host.com".   (What is the difference between my        laptop and a bona fide autoconfigured local station?)        [Security-S, mobility]   S8.  Multiple people are connected to a subnetwork providing mobility        (e.g., cellular, packet radio). The subnetwork is connected to        multiple places in the "fixed" backbone. How can routing be done        efficiently?  [Routing, mobility]   The following scenarios that were suggested do not fit into the   primary thrust of the workshop, generally because they are single-   issue topics.  Most of them are pure security topics and are   concerned with the security perimeter.  The last two do not fit into   our classification system at all.   S9.  XYZ corporation has two major branches on opposite ends of the        world, and they want to communicate securely over the Internet,        with each branch having IP-level connectivity to the other (not        through application gateways).   S10. I am visiting XYZ corporation, with my laptop.  I want to        connect it to their LAN to read my email remotely over the        Internet.  Even though I am inside their corporate firewall,        they want to be protect their machines from me.   S11. XYZ corporation is trying to use the Internet to support both        private and public networking.  It wants to provide full        connectivity internally between all of its resources, and to        provide public access to certain resources (analogous of        anonymous ftp servers)   S12. The travel industry wants to use Internet to deliver tickets to        customer premises directly in a secure way.   S13. Some hacker is deliberately subverting routing protocols,        including mobile and multicast routing.  Design counter        measures.   S14. Part of the Internet is running IPv4 and part is running IPng        (i.e.  the Internet is in transition). How can we assure        continued secure operation through such a transition?   S15. A corporation uses ATM to connect a number of its sites. It also        uses Internet. It wants to make use of the ATM as its primary        carrier, but also wants to utilize other networking technologies        as appropriate (e.g., mobile radio).  It wants to support allBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 51]

RFC 1636                  IAB Workshop Report                  June 1994        media (data, voice, video).Security Considerations   This memo is entirely concerned with security issues.Authors' Addresses   Bob Braden [Editor]   USC Information Sciences Institute   4676 Admiralty Way   Marina del Rey, CA 90292-6695   Phone: (310) 822-1511   EMail: Braden@ISI.EDU   David Clark   MIT Laboratory for Computer Science   545 Technology Square   Cambridge, MA 02139-1986   Phone: 617-253-6003   EMail: ddc@lcs.mit.edu   Steve Crocker   Trusted Information Systems, Inc.   3060 Washington Road (Rte 97)   Glenwood, MD 21738   Phone: (301) 854-6889   EMail: crocker@tis.com   Christian Huitema   INRIA, Sophia-Antipolis   2004 Route des Lucioles   BP 109   F-06561 Valbonne Cedex   France   Phone:  +33 93 65 77 15   EMail: Christian.Huitema@MIRSA.INRIA.FRBraden, Clark, Crocker & Huitema                               [Page 52]

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