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Network Working Group                                         R. HousleyRequest for Comments: 2943                                    T. HortingCategory: Standards Track                                         P. Yee                                                                  SPYRUS                                                          September 2000TELNET Authentication Using DSAStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document defines a telnet authentication mechanism using the   Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA) [FIPS186].  It relies on the Telnet   Authentication Option [RFC2941].1. Command Names and Codes    AUTHENTICATION           37      Authentication Commands:        IS                       0        SEND                     1        REPLY                    2        NAME                     3      Authentication Types:        DSS                     14      Modifiers:        AUTH_WHO_MASK            1        AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER    0        AUTH_SERVER_TO CLIENT    1Housley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000        AUTH_HOW_MASK            2        AUTH_HOW_ONE_WAY         0        AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL          2        ENCRYPT_MASK            20        ENCRYPT_OFF              0        ENCRYPT_USING_TELOPT     4        ENCRYPT_AFTER_EXCHANGE  16        ENCRYPT_RESERVED        20        INI_CRED_FWD_MASK        8        INI_CRED_FWD_OFF         0        INI_CRED_FWD_ON          8      Sub-option Commands:        DSS_INITIALIZE           1        DSS_TOKENBA              2        DSS_CERTA_TOKENAB        3        DSS_CERTB_TOKENBA2       42. TELNET Security Extensions   TELNET, as a protocol, has no concept of security.  Without   negotiated options, it merely passes characters back and forth   between the NVTs represented by the two TELNET processes.  In its   most common usage as a protocol for remote terminal access (TCP port   23), TELNET connects to a server that requires user-level   authentication through a user name and password in the clear; the   server does not authenticate itself to the user.   The TELNET Authentication Option provides for user authentication and   server authentication.  User authentication replaces or augments the   normal host password mechanism.  Server authentication is normally   done in conjunction with user authentication.   In order to support these security services, the two TELNET entities   must first negotiate their willingness to support the TELNET   Authentication Option.  Upon agreeing to support this option, the   parties are then able to perform sub-option negotiations to the   authentication protocol to be used, and possibly the remote user name   to be used for authorization checking.   Authentication and parameter negotiation occur within an unbounded   series of exchanges.  The server proposes a preference-ordered list   of authentication types (mechanisms) which it supports.  In addition   to listing the mechanisms it supports, the server qualifies each   mechanism with a modifier that specifies whether the authenticationHousley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000   is to be one-way or mutual, and in which direction the authentication   is to be performed.  The client selects one mechanism from the list   and responds to the server indicating its choice and the first set of   authentication data needed for the selected authentication type.  The   server and the client then proceed through whatever number of   iterations are required to arrive at the requested authentication.3. Use of Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA)   DSA is also known as the Digital Signature Standard (DSS), and the   names are used interchangeably.  This paper specifies a method in   which DSA may be used to achieve certain security services when used   in conjunction with the TELNET Authentication Option.  SHA-1   [FIPS180-1] is used with DSA [FIPS186].   DSA may provide either unilateral or mutual authentication.  Due to   TELNET's character-by-character nature, it is not well-suited to the   application of integrity-only services, therefore use of the DSA   profile provides authentication but it does not provide session   integrity.  This specification follows the token and exchanges   defined in NIST FIPS PUB 196 [FIPS196], Standard for Public Key   Cryptographic Entity Authentication Mechanisms includingAppendix A   on ASN.1 encoding of messages and tokens.  All data that is covered   by a digital signature must be encoded using the Distinguished   Encoding Rules (DER).  However, other data may use either the Basic   Encoding Rules (BER) or DER [X.208].3.1.  Unilateral Authentication with DSA   Unilateral authentication must be done client-to-server.  What   follows are the protocol steps necessary to perform DSA   authentication as specified in FIPS PUB 196 under the TELNET   Authentication Option framework.  Where failure modes are   encountered, the return codes follow those specified in the TELNET   Authentication Option.  They are not enumerated here, as they are   invariant among the mechanisms used.  FIPS PUB 196 employs a set of   exchanges that are transferred to provide authentication.  Each   exchange employs various fields and tokens, some of which are   optional.  In addition, each token has several subfields that are   optional.  A conformant subset of the fields and subfields have been   selected.  The tokens are ASN.1 encoded as defined inAppendix A of   FIPS PUB 196, and each token is named to indicate the direction in   which it flows (e.g., TokenBA flows from Party B to Party A).  All   data that is covered by a digital signature must be encoded using theHousley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000   Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER).  Data that is not covered by a   digital signature may use either the Basic Encoding Rules (BER) or   DER [X.208].  Figure 1 illustrates the exchanges for unilateral   authentication.   During authentication, the client may provide the user name to the   server by using the authentication name sub-option.  If the name   sub-option is not used, the server will generally prompt for a name   and password in the clear.  The name sub-option must be sent after   the server sends the list of authentication types supported and   before the client finishes the authentication exchange, this ensures   that the server will not prompt for a user name and password.  In   figure 1, the name sub-option is sent immediately after the server   presents the list of authentication types supported.   For one-way DSS authentication, the two-octet authentication type   pair is DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER | AUTH_HOW_ONE_WAY | ENCRYPT_OFF |   INI_CRED_FWD_OFF.  This indicates that the DSS authentication   mechanism will be used to authenticate the client to the server and   that no encryption will be performed.   CertA is the clients certificate.  Both certificates are X.509   certificates that contain DSS public keys[RFC2459].  The client must   validate the server's certificate before using the DSA public key it   contains.   Within the unbounded authentication exchange, implementation is   greatly simplified if each portion of the exchange carries a unique   identifier.  For this reason, a single octet sub-option identifier is   carried immediately after the two-octet authentication type pair.   The exchanges detailed in Figure 1 below presume knowledge of FIPS   PUB 196 and the TELNET Authentication Option.  The client is Party A,   while the server is Party B.  At the end of the exchanges, the client   is authenticated to the server.Housley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000------------------------------------------------------------------ Client (Party A)                   Server (Party B)                                 <-- IAC DO AUTHENTICATION IAC WILL AUTHENTICATION     -->                                 <-- IAC SB AUTHENTICATION SEND                                     <list of authentication options>                                     IAC SE IAC SB AUTHENTICATION NAME <user name>            --> IAC SB AUTHENTICATION IS DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |     AUTH_HOW_ONE_WAY |     ENCRYPT_OFF |     INI_CRED_FWD_OFF DSS_INITIALIZE IAC SE                     -->                                 <-- IAC SB AUTHENTICATION REPLY                                     DSS                                     AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |                                         AUTH_HOW_ONE_WAY |                                         ENCRYPT_OFF |                                         INI_CRED_FWD_OFF                                     DSS_TOKENBA                                     Sequence( TokenID, TokenBA )                                     IAC SE IAC SB AUTHENTICATION IS DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |     AUTH_HOW_ONE_WAY |     ENCRYPT_OFF |     INI_CRED_FWD_OFF DSS_CERTA_TOKENAB Sequence( TokenID, CertA, TokenAB ) IAC SE                     -->------------------------------------------------------------------                              Figure 1Housley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 20003.2.  Mutual Authentication with DSA   Mutual authentication is slightly more complex.  Figure 2 illustrates   the exchanges.   For mutual DSS authentication, the two-octet authentication type pair   is DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER | AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL | ENCRYPT_OFF |   INI_CRED_FWD_OFF.  This indicates that the DSS authentication   mechanism will be used to mutually authenticate the client and the   server and that no encryption will be performed.--------------------------------------------------------------------- Client (Party A)                   Server (Party B)IAC WILL AUTHENTICATION        -->                                    <-- IAC DO AUTHENTICATION                                    <-- IAC SB AUTHENTICATION SEND                                        <list of authentication options>                                        IAC SE IAC SB AUTHENTICATION NAME <user name>              --> IAC SB AUTHENTICATION IS DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |     AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL |     ENCRYPT_OFF |     INI_CRED_FWD_OFF DSS_INITIALIZE IAC SE                        -->                                    <-- IAC SB AUTHENTICATION REPLY                                        DSS                                        AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |                                            AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL |                                            ENCRYPT_OFF |                                            INI_CRED_FWD_OFF                                        DSS_TOKENBA                                        Sequence( TokenID, TokenBA )                                        IAC SEHousley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000 Client (Party A)                   Server (Party B) IAC SB AUTHENTICATION IS DSS AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |     AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL |     ENCRYPT_OFF |     INI_CRED_FWD_OFF DSS_CERTA_TOKENAB Sequence( TokenID, CertA, TokenAB ) IAC SE                        -->                                    <-- IAC SB AUTHENTICATION REPLY                                        DSS                                        AUTH_CLIENT_TO_SERVER |                                            AUTH_HOW_MUTUAL |                                            ENCRYPT_OFF |                                            INI_CRED_FWD_OFF                                        DSS_CERTB_TOKENBA2                                        Sequence( TokenID, CertB,                                                  TokenBA2 )                                        IAC SE---------------------------------------------------------------------                              Figure 24.  ASN.1 Syntax   As stated earlier, a conformant subset of the defined fields and   subfields from FIPS PUB 196 have been selected.  This section   provides the ASN.1 syntax for that conformant subset.   Figure 1 and Figure 2 include representations of the structures   defined in this section.  Implementors should refer to the following   table to determine the ASN.1 definitions that match the figure   references:      Figure 1   Sequence( TokenID, TokenBA )           MessageBA                 Sequence( TokenID, CertA, TokenAB )    MessageAB      Figure 2   Sequence( TokenID, TokenBA )           MessageBA                 Sequence( TokenID, CertA, TokenAB )    MessageAB                 Sequence( TokenID, CertB, TokenBA2 )   MessageBA2   The following ASN.1 definitions specify the conformant subset of FIPS   196.  For simplicity, no optional fields or subfields are included.   The ASN.1 definition for CertificationPath is imported from CCITT   Recommendation X.509 [X.509], and The ASN.1 definition for Name is   imported from CCITT Recommendation X.501 [X.501].  These ASN.1Housley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000   definitions are not repeated here.  All DSA signature values are   encoded as a sequence of two integers, employing the same conventions   specified inRFC 2459, section 7.2.2.      MessageBA  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        tokenId       [0] TokenId,        tokenBA           TokenBA  }      TokenBA  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        ranB              RandomNumber,        timestampB        TimeStamp  }      MessageAB  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        tokenId       [0] TokenId,        certA         [1] CertData,        tokenAB           TokenAB  }      TokenAB  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        ranA              RandomNumber,        ranB              RandomNumber,        entityB           EntityName,        timestampB        TimeStamp,        absigValue        OCTET STRING  }      MessageBA2  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        tokenId       [0] TokenId,        certB         [1] CertData,        tokenBA2          TokenBA2  }      TokenBA2  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        ranB          [0] RandomNumber,        ranA          [1] RandomNumber,        entityA           EntityName,        timestampB2       TimeStamp,        ba2sigValue       OCTET STRING  }      CertData  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        certPath      [0] CertificationPath  }  -- see X.509      EntityName  ::=  SEQUENCE OF CHOICE  {    -- only allow one!        directoryName [4] Name  }               -- see X.501      RandomNumber  ::=  INTEGER                -- 20 octetsHousley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 2000      TokenId  ::=  SEQUENCE  {        tokenType         INTEGER,              -- see table below        protoVerNo        INTEGER  }            -- always 0x0001      TimeStamp  ::=  GeneralizedTime   The TokenId.TokenType is used to distinguish the message type and the   authentication type (either unilateral or mutual).  The following   table provides the values needed to implement this specification:      Message Type    Authentication Type     TokenId.TokenType        MessageBA       Unilateral              0x0001                        Mutual                  0x0011        MessageAB       Unilateral              0x0002                        Mutual                  0x0012        MessageBA       Mutual                  0x00135.  Security Considerations   This entire memo is about security mechanisms.  For DSA to provide   the authentication discussed, the implementation must protect the   private key from disclosure.   Implementations must randomly generate DSS private keys, 'k' values   used in DSS signatures, and nonces.  The use of inadequate pseudo-   random number generators (PRNGs) to generate cryptographic values can   result in little or no security.  An attacker may find it much easier   to reproduce the PRNG environment that produced the values, searching   the resulting small set of possibilities, rather than using a brute   force search.  The generation of quality random numbers is difficult.RFC 1750 [RFC1750] offers important guidance in this area, and   Appendix 3 of FIPS PUB 186 [FIPS186] provides one quality PRNG   technique.6.  Acknowledgements   We would like to thank William Nace for support during implementation   of this specification.Housley, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 20007. IANA Considerations   The authentication type DSS and its associated suboption values are   registered with IANA.  Any suboption values used to extend the   protocol as described in this document must be registered with IANA   before use.  IANA is instructed not to issue new suboption values   without submission of documentation of their use.8.  References   FIPS180-1 Secure Hash Standard. FIPS Pub 180-1. April 17, 1995.             <http://csrc.nist.gov/fips/fips180-1.pdf>   FIPS186   Digital Signature Standard (DSS). FIPS Pub 186.  May 19,             1994. <http://csrc.nist.gov/fips/fips186.pdf>   FIPS196   Standard for Entity Authentication Using Public Key             Cryptography.  FIPS Pub 196. February 18, 1997.             <http://csrc.nist.gov/fips/fips196.pdf>RFC1750   Eastlake, 3rd, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller, "Randomness             Recommendations for Security",RFC 1750, December 1994.RFC2459   Housley, R., Ford, W., Polk, W. and D. Solo, "Internet             X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: X.509 Certificate and CRL             Profile",RFC 2459, January 1999.RFC2941   T'so, T. and J. Altman, "Telnet Authentication Option",RFC2941, September 2000.   X.208     CCITT.  Recommendation X.208: Specification of Abstract             Syntax Notation One (ASN.1).  1988.   X.501     CCITT. Recommendation X.501: The Directory - Models. 1988.   X.509     CCITT.  Recommendation X.509: The Directory -             Authentication Framework.  1988.Housley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 20009.  Authors' Addresses   Russell Housley   SPYRUS   381 Elden Street, Suite 1120   Herndon, VA 20172   USA   EMail: housley@spyrus.com   Todd Horting   SPYRUS   381 Elden Street, Suite 1120   Herndon, VA 20172   USA   EMail: thorting@spyrus.com   Peter Yee   SPYRUS   5303 Betsy Ross Drive   Santa Clara, CA 95054   USA   EMail: yee@spyrus.comHousley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2943            TELNET Authentication Using DSA       September 200010.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Housley, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

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