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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                         T. KivinenRequest for Comments: 4621                                 Safenet, Inc.Category: Informational                                    H. Tschofenig                                                                 Siemens                                                             August 2006Design of the IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming (MOBIKE) ProtocolStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   The IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming (MOBIKE) protocol is an extension   of the Internet Key Exchange Protocol version 2 (IKEv2).  These   extensions should enable an efficient management of IKE and IPsec   Security Associations when a host possesses multiple IP addresses   and/or where IP addresses of an IPsec host change over time (for   example, due to mobility).   This document discusses the involved network entities and the   relationship between IKEv2 signaling and information provided by   other protocols.  Design decisions for the MOBIKE protocol,   background information, and discussions within the working group are   recorded.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................43. Scenarios .......................................................63.1. Mobility Scenario ..........................................63.2. Multihoming Scenario .......................................73.3. Multihomed Laptop Scenario .................................84. Scope of MOBIKE .................................................85. Design Considerations ..........................................105.1. Choosing Addresses ........................................105.1.1. Inputs and Triggers ................................115.1.2. Connectivity .......................................115.1.3. Discovering Connectivity ...........................125.1.4. Decision Making ....................................125.1.5. Suggested Approach .................................125.2. NAT Traversal (NAT-T) .....................................125.2.1. Background and Constraints .........................125.2.2. Fundamental Restrictions ...........................135.2.3. Moving behind a NAT and Back .......................135.2.4. Responder behind a NAT .............................145.2.5. NAT Prevention .....................................155.2.6. Suggested Approach .................................155.3. Scope of SA Changes .......................................155.4. Zero Address Set Functionality ............................165.5. Return Routability Check ..................................175.5.1. Employing MOBIKE Results in Other Protocols ........195.5.2. Return Routability Failures ........................205.5.3. Suggested Approach .................................215.6. IPsec Tunnel or Transport Mode ............................226. Protocol Details ...............................................226.1. Indicating Support for MOBIKE .............................226.2. Path Testing and Window size ..............................236.3. Message Presentation ......................................246.4. Updating Address Set ......................................257. Security Considerations ........................................268. Acknowledgements ...............................................269. References .....................................................279.1. Normative references ......................................279.2. Informative References ....................................27Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20061.  Introduction   The purpose of IKEv2 is to mutually authenticate two hosts, to   establish one or more IPsec Security Associations (SAs) between them,   and subsequently to manage these SAs (for example, by rekeying or   deleting).  IKEv2 enables the hosts to share information that is   relevant to both the usage of the cryptographic algorithms that   should be employed (e.g., parameters required by cryptographic   algorithms and session keys) and to the usage of local security   policies, such as information about the traffic that should   experience protection.   IKEv2 assumes that an IKE SA is created implicitly between the IP   address pair that is used during the protocol execution when   establishing the IKEv2 SA.  This means that, in each host, only one   IP address pair is stored for the IKEv2 SA as part of a single IKEv2   protocol session, and, for tunnel mode SAs, the host places this   single pair in the outer IP headers.  Existing IPsec documents make   no provision to change this pair after an IKE SA is created (except   for dynamic address update of Network Address Translation Traversal   (NAT-T)).   There are scenarios where one or both of the IP addresses of this   pair may change during an IPsec session.  In principle, the IKE SA   and all corresponding IPsec SAs could be re-established after the IP   address has changed.  However, this is a relatively expensive   operation, and it can be problematic when such changes are frequent.   Moreover, manual user interaction (for example, when using human-   operated token cards (SecurID)) might be required as part of the   IKEv2 authentication procedure.  Therefore, an automatic mechanism is   needed that updates the IP addresses associated with the IKE SA and   the IPsec SAs.  The MOBIKE protocol provides such a mechanism.   The MOBIKE protocol is assumed to work on top of IKEv2 [RFC4306].  As   IKEv2 is built on the IPsec architecture [RFC4301], all protocols   developed within the MOBIKE working group must be compatible with   both IKEv2 and the architecture described inRFC 4301.  This document   does not discuss mobility and multi-homing support for IKEv1   [RFC2409] or the obsoleted IPsec architecture described inRFC 2401   [RFC2401].   This document is structured as follows: After some important terms   are introduced inSection 2, a number of relevant usage scenarios are   discussed inSection 3.Section 4 describes the scope of the MOBIKE   protocol.Section 5 discusses design considerations affecting the   MOBIKE protocol.Section 6 investigates details regarding the MOBIKE   protocol.  Finally, this document concludes inSection 7 with   security considerations.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20062.  Terminology   This section introduces the terminology that is used in this   document.   Peer      A peer is an IKEv2 endpoint.  In addition, a peer implements the      MOBIKE extensions, defined in [RFC4555].   Available address      An address is said to be available if the following conditions are      met:      *  The address has been assigned to an interface.      *  If the address is an IPv6 address, we additionally require (a)         that the address is valid as defined inRFC 2461 [RFC2461], and         (b) that the address is not tentative as defined inRFC 2462         [RFC2462].  In other words, we require the address assignment         to be complete.         Note that this explicitly allows an address to be optimistic as         defined in [RFC4429].      *  If the address is an IPv6 address, it is a global unicast or         unique site-local address, as defined in [RFC4193].  That is,         it is not an IPv6 link-local address.      *  The address and interface is acceptable for sending and         receiving traffic according to a local policy.      This definition is taken from [WIP-Ark06] and adapted for the      MOBIKE context.   Locally operational address      An address is said to be locally operational if it is available      and its use is locally known to be possible and permitted.  This      definition is taken from [WIP-Ark06].   Operational address pair      A pair of operational addresses are said to be an operational      address pair if and only if bidirectional connectivity can be      shown between the two addresses.  Note that sometimes it is      necessary to consider connectivity on a per-flow level between twoKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006      endpoints.  This differentiation might be necessary to address      certain Network Address Translation types or specific firewalls.      This definition is taken from [WIP-Ark06] and adapted for the      MOBIKE context.  Although it is possible to further differentiate      unidirectional and bidirectional operational address pairs, only      bidirectional connectivity is relevant to this document, and      unidirectional connectivity is out of scope.   Path      The sequence of routers traversed by the MOBIKE and IPsec packets      exchanged between the two peers.  Note that this path may be      affected not only by the involved source and destination IP      addresses, but also by the transport protocol.  Since MOBIKE and      IPsec packets have a different appearance on the wire, they might      be routed along a different path, for example, due to load      balancing.  This definition is taken from [RFC2960] and adapted to      the MOBIKE context.   Current path      The sequence of routers traversed by an IP packet that carries the      default source and destination addresses is said to be the Current      Path.  This definition is taken from [RFC2960] and adapted to the      MOBIKE context.   Preferred address      The IP address of a peer to which MOBIKE and IPsec traffic should      be sent by default.  A given peer has only one active preferred      address at a given point in time, except for the small time period      where it switches from an old to a new preferred address.  This      definition is taken from [WIP-Nik06] and adapted to the MOBIKE      context.   Peer address set      We denote the two peers of a MOBIKE session by peer A and peer B.      A peer address set is the subset of locally operational addresses      of peer A that is sent to peer B. A policy available at peer A      indicates which addresses are included in the peer address set.      Such a policy might be created either manually or automatically      through interaction with other mechanisms that indicate new      available addresses.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Bidirectional address pair      The address pair, where traffic can be sent to both directions,      simply by reversing the IP addresses.  Note that the path of the      packets going to each direction might be different.   Unidirectional address pair      The address pair, where traffic can only be sent in one direction,      and reversing the IP addresses and sending reply back does not      work.   For mobility-related terminology (e.g., Make-before-break or Break-   before-make), see [RFC3753].3.  Scenarios   In this section, we discuss three typical usage scenarios for the   MOBIKE protocol.3.1.  Mobility Scenario   Figure 1 shows a break-before-make mobility scenario where a mobile   node (MN) changes its point of network attachment.  Prior to the   change, the mobile node had established an IPsec connection with a   security gateway that offered, for example, access to a corporate   network.  The IKEv2 exchange that facilitated the setup of the IPsec   SA(s) took place over the path labeled as 'old path'.  The involved   packets carried the MN's "old" IP address and were forwarded by the   "old" access router (OAR) to the security gateway (GW).   When the MN changes its point of network attachment, it obtains a new   IP address using stateful or stateless address configuration.  The   goal of MOBIKE, in this scenario, is to enable the MN and the GW to   continue using the existing SAs and to avoid setting up a new IKE SA.   A protocol exchange, denoted by 'MOBIKE Address Update', enables the   peers to update their state as necessary.   Note that in a break-before-make scenario the MN obtains the new IP   address after it can no longer be reached at the old IP address.  In   a make-before-break scenario, the MN is, for a given period of time,   reachable at both the old and the new IP address.  MOBIKE should work   in both of the above scenarios.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006                          (Initial IKEv2 Exchange)                    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>v       Old IP   +--+        +---+                    v       address  |MN|------> |OAR| -------------V     v                +--+        +---+ Old path     V     v                 .                          +----+   v>>>>> +--+                 .move                      | R  | -------> |GW|                 .                          |    |    >>>>> |  |                 v                          +----+   ^      +--+                +--+        +---+ New path     ^     ^       New IP   |MN|------> |NAR|--------------^     ^       address  +--+        +---+                    ^                    >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>^                          (MOBIKE Address Update)              ---> = Path taken by data packets              >>>> = Signaling traffic (IKEv2 and MOBIKE)              ...> = End host movement                        Figure 1: Mobility Scenario3.2.  Multihoming Scenario   Another MOBIKE usage scenario is depicted in Figure 2.  In this   scenario, the MOBIKE peers are equipped with multiple interfaces (and   multiple IP addresses).  Peer A has two interface cards with two IP   addresses, IP_A1 and IP_A2, and peer B has two IP addresses, IP_B1   and IP_B2.  Each peer selects one of its IP addresses as the   preferred address, which is used for subsequent communication.   Various reasons (e.g., hardware or network link failures) may require   a peer to switch from one interface to another.     +------------+                                  +------------+     | Peer A     |           *~~~~~~~~~*            | Peer B     |     |            |>>>>>>>>>> * Network   *>>>>>>>>>>|            |     |      IP_A1 +-------->+             +--------->+ IP_B1      |     |            |         |             |          |            |     |      IP_A2 +********>+             +*********>+ IP_B2      |     |            |          *           *           |            |     +------------+           *~~~~~~~~~*            +------------+              ---> = Path taken by data packets              >>>> = Signaling traffic (IKEv2 and MOBIKE)              ***> = Potential future path through the network                     (if Peer A and Peer B change their preferred                      address)                      Figure 2: Multihoming ScenarioKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Note that MOBIKE does not aim to support load balancing between   multiple IP addresses.  That is, each peer uses only one of the   available address pairs at a given point in time.3.3.  Multihomed Laptop Scenario   The third scenario we consider is about a laptop that has multiple   interface cards and therefore several ways to connect to the network.   It may, for example, have a fixed Ethernet card, a WLAN interface, a   General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) adaptor, a Bluetooth interface,   or USB hardware.  Not all interfaces are used for communication all   the time for a number of reasons (e.g., cost, network availability,   user convenience).  The policies that determine which interfaces are   connected to the network at any given point in time is outside the   scope of the MOBIKE protocol and, as such, this document.  However,   as the laptop changes its point of attachment to the network, the set   of IP addresses under which the laptop is reachable changes too.   In all of these scenarios, even if IP addresses change due to   interface switching or mobility, the IP address obtained via the   configuration payloads within IKEv2 remain unaffected.  The IP   address obtained via the IKEv2 configuration payloads allow the   configuration of the inner IP address of the IPsec tunnel.  As such,   applications might not detect any change at all.4.  Scope of MOBIKE   Getting mobility and multihoming actually working requires many   different components to work together, including coordinating   decisions between different layers, different mobility mechanisms,   and IPsec/IKEv2.  Most of those aspects are beyond the scope of   MOBIKE: MOBIKE focuses only on what two peers need in order to agree   at the IKEv2 level (like new message formats and some aspects of   their processing) required for interoperability.   The MOBIKE protocol is not trying to be a full mobility protocol;   there is no support for simultaneous movement or rendezvous   mechanism, and there is no support for route optimization, etc.  The   design document focuses on tunnel mode; everything going inside the   tunnel is unaffected by the changes in the tunnel header IP address,   and this is the mobility feature provided by the MOBIKE.  That is,   applications running inside the MOBIKE-controlled IPsec tunnel might   not detect the movement since their IP addresses remain constant.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   The MOBIKE protocol should be able to perform the following   operations (not all of which are done explicitly by the current   protocol):   o  Inform the other peer about the peer address set   o  Inform the other peer about the preferred address   o  Test connectivity along a path and thereby detect an outage      situation   o  Change the preferred address   o  Change the peer address set   o  Ability to deal with Network Address Translation devices   Figure 3 shows an example protocol interaction between a pair of   MOBIKE peers.  MOBIKE interacts with the packet processing module of   the IPsec implementation using an internal API (such as those based   on PF_KEY [RFC2367]).  Using this API, the MOBIKE module can create   entries in the Security Association (SAD) and Security Policy   Databases (SPD).  The packet processing module of the IPsec   implementation may also interact with IKEv2 and MOBIKE module using   this API.  The content of the Security Policy and Security   Association Databases determines what traffic is protected with IPsec   in which fashion.  MOBIKE, on the other hand, receives information   from a number of sources that may run both in kernel-mode and in   user-mode.  These sources form the basis on which MOBIKE makes   decisions regarding the set of available addresses, the peer address   set, and the preferred address.  Policies may also affect the   selection process.   The peer address set and the preferred address needs to be made   available to the other peer.  In order to address certain failure   cases, MOBIKE should perform connectivity tests between the peers   (potentially over a number of different paths).  Although a number of   address pairs may be available for such tests, the most important is   the pair (source address, destination address) of the current path.   This is because this pair is selected for sending and receiving   MOBIKE signaling and IPsec traffic.  If a problem along this current   path is detected (e.g., due to a router failure), it is necessary to   switch to a new current path.  In order to be able to do so quickly,   it may be helpful to perform connectivity tests of other paths   periodically.  Such a technique would also help identify previously   disconnected paths that become operational again.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006     +---------------------+            +----------------+     |    User-space       |            |                |     |   Protocols and     |            |   MOBIKE and   |     | Functions Relevant  |<---------->|  IKEv2 Module  |     | MOBIKE (e.g., DHCP, |            |                |     |     policies)       |            +----------------+     +---------------------+                    ^                ^                               |                |                               |        User space     ++++++++++API++++++++++++++++++++++++++++PF_KEY+++++++++++++++                |                               |      Kernel space                |                               v                |                       +----------------+                v                       |                |     +---------------------+            |  IPsec engine  |     |   Kernel-space      |<---------->| (and databases)|     |     Protocols       |            |                |     |    Relevant for     |            +----------------+     |  MOBIKE (e.g., ND,  |                    ^     |     DNA, L2)        |<---------------+   |     +---------------------+                v   v            ||                          +----------------+            \/                          |                |          Inter-  =====================>| IP forwarding, |          faces   <=====================|input and output|                                        |                |                                        +----------------+         ===> = IP packets arriving/leaving a MOBIKE node         <->  = control and configuration operations                            Figure 3: Framework   Please note that Figure 3 illustrates an example of how a MOBIKE   implementation could work.  It serves illustrative purposes only.5.  Design Considerations   This section discusses aspects affecting the design of the MOBIKE   protocol.5.1.  Choosing Addresses   One of the core aspects of the MOBIKE protocol is the selection of   the address for the IPsec packets we send.  Choosing addresses for   the IKEv2 request is a somewhat separate problem.  In many cases,   they will be the same (and in some design choice they will always be   the same and could be forced to be the same by design).Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20065.1.1.  Inputs and Triggers   How address changes are triggered is largely beyond the scope of   MOBIKE.  The triggers can include changes in the set of addresses,   various link-layer indications, failing dead peer detection, and   changes in preferences and policies.  Furthermore, there may be less   reliable sources of information (such as lack of IPsec packets and   incoming ICMP packets) that do not trigger any changes directly, but   rather cause Dead Peer Detection (DPD) to be scheduled earlier and,   if it fails, it might cause a change of the preferred address.   These triggers are largely the same as for other mobility protocols   such as Mobile IP, and they are beyond the scope of MOBIKE.5.1.2.  Connectivity   There can be two kinds of connectivity "failures": local failures and   path failures.  Local failures are problems locally at a MOBIKE peer   (e.g., an interface error).  Path failures are a property of an   address pair and failures of nodes and links along this path.  MOBIKE   does not support unidirectional address pairs.  Supporting them would   require abandoning the principle of sending an IKEv2 reply to the   address from which the request came.  MOBIKE decided to deal only   with bidirectional address pairs.  It does consider unidirectional   address pairs as broken and does not use them, but the connection   between peers will not break even if unidirectional address pairs are   present, provided there is at least one bidirectional address pair   MOBIKE can use.   Note that MOBIKE is not concerned about the actual path used; it   cannot even detect if some path is unidirectionally operational if   the same address pair has some other unidirectional path back.   Ingress filters might still cause such path pairs to be unusable, and   in that case MOBIKE will detect that there is no operational address   pair.   In a sense having both an IPv4 and an IPv6 address is basically a   case of partial connectivity (putting both an IPv4 and an IPv6   address in the same IP header does not work).  The main difference is   that it is known beforehand; there is no need to discover that an   IPv4/IPv6 combination does not work.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20065.1.3.  Discovering Connectivity   To detect connectivity, the MOBIKE protocol needs to have a mechanism   to test connectivity.  If a MOBIKE peer receives a reply, it can be   sure about the existence of a working (bidirectional) address pair.   If a MOBIKE peer does not see a reply after multiple retransmissions,   it may assume that the tested address pair is broken.   The connectivity tests require congestion problems to be taken into   account because the connection failure might be caused by congestion.   The MOBIKE protocol should not make the congestion problem worse by   sending many DPD packets.5.1.4.  Decision Making   One of the main questions in designing the MOBIKE protocol was who   makes the decisions how to fix a situation when failure is detected,   e.g., symmetry vs. asymmetry in decision making.  Symmetric decision   making (i.e., both peers can make decisions) may cause the different   peers to make different decisions, thus causing asymmetric upstream/   downstream traffic.  In the mobility case, it is desirable that the   mobile peer can move both upstream and downstream traffic to some   particular interface, and this requires asymmetric decision making   (i.e. only one peer makes decisions).   Working with stateful packet filters and NATs is easier if the same   address pair is used in both upstream and downstream directions.   Also, in common cases, only the peer behind NAT can actually perform   actions to recover from the connectivity problems, as the other peer   might not be able to initiate any connections to the peer behind NAT.5.1.5.  Suggested Approach   The working group decided to select a method whereby the initiator   will decide which addresses are used.  As a consequence, the outcome   is always the same for both parties.  It also works best with NATs,   as the initiator is most likely the node that is located behind a   NAT.5.2.  NAT Traversal (NAT-T)5.2.1.  Background and Constraints   Another core aspect of MOBIKE is the treatment of different NATs and   Network Address Port Translations (NAPTs).  In IKEv2 the tunnel   header IP addresses are not sent inside the IKEv2 payloads, and thus   there is no need to do unilateral self-address fixing (UNSAFKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   [RFC3424]).  The tunnel header IP addresses are taken from the outer   IP header of the IKE packets; thus, they are already processed by the   NAT.   The NAT detection payloads are used to determine whether the   addresses in the IP header were modified by a NAT along the path.   Detecting a NAT typically requires UDP encapsulation of IPsec ESP   packets to be enabled, if desired.  MOBIKE is not to change how IKEv2   NAT-T works in particular, any kind of UNSAF or explicit interaction   with NATs (e.g., MIDCOM [RFC3303] or NSIS NATFW NSLP [WIP-Sti06]) is   beyond the scope of the MOBIKE protocol.  The MOBIKE protocol will   need to define how MOBIKE and NAT-T are used together.   The NAT-T support should also be optional.  If the IKEv2   implementation does not implement NAT-T, as it is not required in   some particular environment, implementing MOBIKE should not require   adding support for NAT-T either.   The property of being behind NAT is actually a property of the   address pair and thereby of the path taken by a packet.  Thus, one   peer can have multiple IP addresses, and some of those might be   behind NAT and some might not.5.2.2.  Fundamental Restrictions   There are some cases that cannot be carried out within MOBIKE.  One   of those cases is when the party "outside" a symmetric NAT changes   its address to something not known by the other peer (and the old   address has stopped working).  It cannot send a packet containing the   new addresses to the peer because the NAT does not contain the   necessary state.  Furthermore, since the party behind the NAT does   not know the new IP address, it cannot cause the NAT state to be   created.   This case could be solved using some rendezvous mechanism outside   IKEv2, but that is beyond the scope of MOBIKE.5.2.3.  Moving behind a NAT and Back   The MOBIKE protocol should provide a mechanism whereby a peer that is   initially not behind a NAT can move behind NAT when a new preferred   address is selected.  The same effect might be accomplished with the   change of the address pair if more than one path is available (e.g.,   in the case of a multi-homed host).  An impact for the MOBIKE   protocol is only caused when the currently selected address pair   causes MOBIKE packets to traverse a NAT.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Similarly, the MOBIKE protocol provides a mechanism to detect when a   NATed path is changed to a non-NATed path with the change of the   address pair.   As we only use one address pair at time, effectively the MOBIKE peer   is either behind NAT or not behind NAT, but each address change can   change this situation.  Because of this, and because the initiator   always chooses the addresses, it is enough to send keepalive packets   only to that one address pair.   Enabling NAT-T involves a few different things.  One is to enable the   UDP encapsulation of ESP packets.  Another is to change the IKE SA   ports from port 500 to port 4500.  We do not want to do unnecessary   UDP encapsulation unless there is really a NAT between peers, i.e.,   UDP encapsulation should only be enabled when we actually detect NAT.   On the other hand, as all implementations supporting NAT-T must be   able to respond to port 4500 all the time, it is simpler from the   protocol point of view to change the port numbers from 500 to 4500   immediately upon detecting that the other end supports NAT-T.  This   way it is not necessary to change ports after we later detected NAT,   which would have caused complications to the protocol.   If we changed the port only after we detected NAT, then the responder   would not be able to use the IKE and IPsec SAs immediately after   their address is changed to be behind NAT.  Instead, it would need to   wait for the next packet from the initiator to see what IP and port   numbers are used after the initiator changed its port from 500 to   4500.  The responder would also not be able to send anything to the   initiator before the initiator sent something to the responder.  If   we do the port number changing immediately after the IKE_SA_INIT and   before IKE_AUTH phase, then we get the rid of this problem.5.2.4.  Responder behind a NAT   MOBIKE can work in cases where the responder is behind a static NAT,   but the initiator would need to know all the possible addresses to   which the responder can move.  That is, the responder cannot move to   an address which is not known by the initiator, in case initiator   also moves behind NAT.   If the responder is behind a NAPT, then it might need to communicate   with the NAT to create a mapping so the initiator can connect to it.   Those external firewall pinhole opening mechanisms are beyond the   scope of MOBIKE.   In case the responder is behind NAPT, then finding the port numbers   used by the responder is outside the scope of MOBIKE.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20065.2.5.  NAT Prevention   One new feature created by MOBIKE is NAT prevention.  If we detect   NAT between the peers, we do not allow that address pair to be used.   This can be used to protect IP addresses in cases where the   configuration knows that there is no NAT between the nodes (for   example IPv6, or fixed site-to-site VPN).  This avoids any   possibility of on-path attackers modifying addresses in headers.   This feature means that we authenticate the IP address and detect if   they were changed.  As this is done on purpose to break the   connectivity if NAT is detected, and decided by the configuration,   there is no need to do UNSAF processing.5.2.6.  Suggested Approach   The working group decided that MOBIKE uses NAT-T mechanisms from the   IKEv2 protocol as much as possible, but decided to change the dynamic   address update (see[RFC4306], Section 2.23, second to last   paragraph) for IKEv2 packets to "MUST NOT" (it would break path   testing using IKEv2 packets; seeSection 6.2).  The working group   also decided only to send keepalives to the current address pair.5.3.  Scope of SA Changes   Most sections of this document discuss design considerations for   updating and maintaining addresses in the database entries that   relate to an IKE SA.  However, changing the preferred address also   affects the entries of the IPsec SA database.  The outer tunnel   header addresses (source and destination IP addresses) need to be   modified according to the current path to allow the IPsec protected   data traffic to travel along the same path as the MOBIKE packets.  If   the MOBIKE messages and the IPsec protected data traffic travel along   a different path, then NAT handling is severely complicated.   The basic question is then how the IPsec SAs are changed to use the   new address pair (the same address pair as the MOBIKE signaling   traffic).  One option is that when the IKE SA address is changed, all   IPsec SAs associated with it are automatically moved along with it to   a new address pair.  Another option is to have a separate exchange to   move the IPsec SAs separately.   If IPsec SAs should be updated separately, then a more efficient   format than the Notify payload is needed to preserve bandwidth.  A   Notify payload can only store one Security Parameter Index (SPI) per   payload.  A separate payload could have a list of IPsec SA SPIs and   the new preferred address.  If there is a large number of IPsec SAs,   those payloads can be quite large unless list of ranges of SPI values   are supported.  If we automatically move all IPsec SAs when the IKEKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   SA moves, then we only need to keep track of which IKE SA was used to   create the IPsec SA, and fetch the IP addresses from the IKE SA,   i.e., there is no need to store IP addresses per IPsec SA.  Note that   IKEv2 [RFC4306] already requires the implementations to keep track of   which IPsec SAs are created using which IKE SA.   If we do allow the address set of each IPsec SA to be updated   separately, then we can support scenarios where the machine has fast   and/or cheap connections and slow and/or expensive connections and   wants to allow moving some of the SAs to the slower and/or more   expensive connection, and prevent the move, for example, of the news   video stream from the WLAN to the GPRS link.   On the other hand, even if we tie the IKE SA update to the IPsec SA   update, we can create separate IKE SAs for this scenario.  For   example, we create one IKE SA that has both links as endpoints, and   it is used for important traffic; then we create another IKE SA which   has only the fast and/or cheap connection, which is used for that   kind of bulk traffic.   The working group decided to move all IPsec SAs implicitly when the   IKE SA address pair changes.  If more granular handling of the IPsec   SA is required, then multiple IKE SAs can be created one for each set   of IPsec SAs needed.5.4.  Zero Address Set Functionality   One of the features that is potentially useful is for the peer to   announce that it will now disconnect for some time, i.e., it will not   be reachable at all.  For instance, a laptop might go to suspend   mode.  In this case, it could send address notification with zero new   addresses, which would mean that it will not have any valid addresses   anymore.  The responder would then acknowledge that notification and   could then temporarily disable all SAs and therefore stop sending   traffic.  If any of the SAs get any packets, they are simply dropped.   This could also include some kind of ACK spoofing to keep the TCP/IP   sessions alive (or simply setting the TCP/IP keepalives and timeouts   large enough not to cause problems), or it could simply be left to   the applications, e.g., allow TCP/IP sessions to notice if the link   is broken.   The local policy could then indicate how long the peer should allow   remote peers to remain disconnected.   From a technical point of view, this would provide following two   features:Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   o  There is no need to transmit IPsec data traffic.  IPsec-protected      data can be dropped, which saves bandwidth.  This does not provide      a functional benefit, i.e., nothing breaks if this feature is not      provided.   o  MOBIKE signaling messages are also ignored.  The IKE SA must not      be deleted, and the suspend functionality (realized with the zero      address set) may require the IKE SA to be tagged with a lifetime      value since the IKE SA should not be kept alive for an undefined      period of time.  Note that IKEv2 does not require that the IKE SA      has a lifetime associated with it.  In order to prevent the IKE SA      from being deleted, the dead-peer detection mechanism needs to be      suspended as well.   Due to its complexity and no clear requirement for it, it was decided   that MOBIKE does not support this feature.5.5.  Return Routability Check   Changing the preferred address and subsequently using it for   communication is associated with an authorization decision: Is a peer   allowed to use this address?  Does this peer own this address?  Two   mechanisms have been proposed in the past to allow a peer to   determine the answer to these questions:   o  The addresses a peer is using are part of a certificate.      [RFC3554] introduced this approach.  If the other peer is, for      example, a security gateway with a limited set of fixed IP      addresses, then the security gateway may have a certificate with      all the IP addresses appearing in the certificate.   o  A return routability check is performed by the remote peer before      the address is updated in that peer's Security Association      Database.  This is done in order to provide a certain degree of      confidence to the remote peer that the local peer is reachable at      the indicated address.   Without taking an authorization decision, a malicious peer can   redirect traffic towards a third party or a black hole.   A MOBIKE peer should not use an IP address provided by another MOBIKE   peer as a current address without computing the authorization   decision.  If the addresses are part of the certificate, then it is   not necessary to execute the return routability check.  The return   routability check is a form of authorization check, although it   provides weaker guarantees than the inclusion of the IP address as a   part of a certificate.  If multiple addresses are communicated to the   remote peer, then some of these addresses may be already verified.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Finally, it would be possible not to execute return routability   checks at all.  In case of indirect change notifications (i.e.,   something we notice from the network, not from the peer directly), we   only move to the new preferred address after successful dead-peer   detection (i.e., a response to a DPD test) on the new address, which   is already a return routability check.  With a direct notification   (i.e., notification from the other end directly) the authenticated   peer may have provided an authenticated IP address (i.e., inside IKE   encrypted and authenticated payload; seeSection 5.2.5).  Thus, it is   would be possible simply to trust the MOBIKE peer to provide a proper   IP address.  In this case, a protection against an internal attacker   (i.e., the authenticated peer forwarding its traffic to the new   address) would not provided.  On the other hand, we know the identity   of the peer in that case.  There might be problems when extensions   are added to IKEv2 that do not require authentication of end points   (e.g., opportunistic security using anonymous Diffie-Hellman).   There is also a policy issue of when to schedule a return routability   check.  Before moving traffic?  After moving traffic?   The basic format of the return routability check could be similar to   dead-peer detection, but potential attacks are possible if a return   routability check does not include some kind of a nonce.  In these   attacks, the valid end point could send an address update   notification for a third party, trying to get all the traffic to be   sent there, causing a denial-of-service attack.  If the return   routability check does not contain any nonce or other random   information not known to the other peer, then the other peer could   reply to the return routability checks even when it cannot see the   request.  This might cause a peer to move the traffic to a location   where the original recipient cannot be reached.   The IKEv2 NAT-T mechanism does not perform return routability checks.   It simply uses the last seen source IP address used by the other peer   as the destination address to which response packets are to be sent.   An adversary can change those IP addresses and can cause the response   packets to be sent to a wrong IP address.  The situation is self-   fixing when the adversary is no longer able to modify packets and the   first packet with an unmodified IP address reaches the other peer.   Mobility environments make this attack more difficult for an   adversary since the attack requires the adversary to be located   somewhere on the individual paths ({CoA1, ..., CoAn} towards the   destination IP address), to have a shared path, or, if the adversary   is located near the MOBIKE client, to follow the user mobility   patterns.  With IKEv2 NAT-T, the genuine client can cause third-party   bombing by redirecting all the traffic pointed to him to a thirdKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   party.  As the MOBIKE protocol tries to provide equal or better   security than IKEv2 NAT-T mechanism, it should protect against these   attacks.   There may be return routability information available from the other   parts of the system too (as shown in Figure 3), but the checks done   may have a different quality.  There are multiple levels for return   routability checks:   o  None; no tests.   o  A party willing to answer the return routability check is located      along the path to the claimed address.  This is the basic form of      return routability check.   o  There is an answer from the tested address, and that answer was      authenticated and integrity- and replay-protected.   o  There was an authenticated and integrity- and replay-protected      answer from the peer, but it is not guaranteed to originate at the      tested address or path to it (because the peer can construct a      response without seeing the request).   The return routability checks do not protect against third-party   bombing if the attacker is along the path, as the attacker can   forward the return routability checks to the real peer (even if those   packets are cryptographically authenticated).   If the address to be tested is carried inside the MOBIKE payload,   then the adversary cannot forward packets.  Thus, third-party   bombings are prevented (seeSection 5.2.5).   If the reply packet can be constructed without seeing the request   packet (for example, if there is no nonce, challenge, or similar   mechanism to show liveness), then the genuine peer can cause third-   party bombing, by replying to those requests without seeing them at   all.   Other levels might only provide a guarantee that there is a node at   the IP address that replied to the request.  There is no indication   as to whether or not the reply is fresh or whether or not the request   may have been transmitted from a different source address.5.5.1.  Employing MOBIKE Results in Other Protocols   If MOBIKE has learned about new locations or verified the validity of   a remote address through a return routability check, can this   information be useful for other protocols?Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   When the basic MOBIKE VPN scenario is considered, the answer is no.   Transport and application layer protocols running inside the VPN   tunnel are unaware of the outer addresses or their status.   Similarly, IP-layer tunnel termination at a gateway rather than a   host endpoint limits the benefits for "other protocols" that could be   informed -- all application protocols at the other side are unaware   of IPsec, IKE, or MOBIKE.   However, it is conceivable that future uses or extensions of the   MOBIKE protocol make such information distribution useful.  For   instance, if transport mode MOBIKE and SCTP were made to work   together, it would potentially be useful for SCTP dynamic address   reconfiguration [WIP-Ste06] to learn about the new addresses at the   same time as MOBIKE.  Similarly, various IP-layer mechanisms may make   use of the fact that a return routability check of a specific type   has been performed.  However, care should be exercised in all these   situations.   [WIP-Cro04] discusses the use of common locator information pools in   a IPv6 multi-homing context; it assumes that both transport and IP-   layer solutions are used in order to support multi-homing, and that   it would be beneficial for different protocols to coordinate their   results in some way, for instance, by sharing throughput information   of address pairs.  This may apply to MOBIKE as well, assuming it   coexists with non-IPsec protocols that are faced with the same or   similar multi-homing choices.   Nevertheless, all of this is outside the scope of the current MOBIKE   base protocol design and may be addressed in future work.5.5.2.  Return Routability Failures   If the return routability check fails, we need to tear down the IKE   SA if we are using IKEv2 INFORMATIONAL exchanges to send return   routability checks.  On the other hand, return routability checks can   only fail permanently if there was an attack by the other end; thus,   tearing down the IKE SA is a suitable action in that case.   There are some cases, where the return routability check temporarily   fails, that need to be considered here.  In the first case, there is   no attacker, but the selected address pair stops working immediately   after the address update, before the return routability check.   What happens is that the initiator performs the normal address   update; it succeeds, and then the responder starts a return   routability check.  If the address pair has broken down before that,   the responder will never get back the reply to the return routabilityKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   check.  The responder might still be using the old IP address pair,   which could still work.   The initiator might be still seeing traffic from the responder, but   using the old address pair.  The initiator should detect that this   traffic is not using the latest address pair, and after a while it   should start dead peer detection on the current address pair.  If   that fails, then it should find a new working address pair and update   addresses to that.  The responder should notice that the address pair   was updated after the return routability check was started and change   the ongoing return routability check to use the new address pair.   The result of that return routability check needs to be discarded as   it cannot be trusted; the packets were retransmitted to a different   IP address.  So normally the responder starts a new return   routability check afterward with the new address pair.   The second case is where there is an attacker along the path   modifying the IP addresses.  The peers will detect this as NAT and   will enable NAT-T recovery of changes in the NAT mappings.  If the   attacker is along the path long enough for the return routability   check to succeed, then the normal recovery of changes in the NAT   mappings will take care of the problem.  If the attacker disappears   before return routability check is finished, but after the update, we   have a case similar to the last.  The only difference is that now the   dead peer detection started by the initiator will succeed because the   responder will reply to the addresses in the headers, not the current   address pair.  The initiator will then detect that the NAT mappings   are changed, and it will fix the situation by doing an address   update.   The important thing for both of these cases is that the initiator   needs to see that the responder is both alive and synchronized with   initiator address pair updates.  That is, it is not enough that the   responder is sending traffic to an initiator; it must also be using   the correct IP addresses before the initiator can believe it is alive   and synchronized.  From the implementation point of view, this means   that the initiator must not consider packets having wrong IP   addresses as packets that prove the other end is alive, i.e., they do   not reset the dead peer detection timers.5.5.3.  Suggested Approach   The working group selected to use IKEv2 INFORMATIONAL exchanges as a   return routability check, but included a random cookie to prevent   redirection by an authenticated attacker.  Return routability checks   are performed by default before moving the traffic.  However, these   tests are optional.  Nodes may also perform these tests upon their   own initiative at other times.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   It is worth noting that the return routability check in MOBIKE is   different from Mobile IPv6 [RFC3775], which does not perform return   routability operations between the mobile node and its home agent at   all.5.6.  IPsec Tunnel or Transport Mode   The current MOBIKE design is focused only on the VPN type usage and   tunnel mode.  Transport mode behavior would also be useful and might   be discussed in future documents.6.  Protocol Details6.1.  Indicating Support for MOBIKE   In order for MOBIKE to function, both peers must implement the MOBIKE   extension of IKEv2.  If one of the peers does not support MOBIKE,   then, whenever an IP address changes, IKEv2 will have to be re-run in   order to create a new IKE SA and the respective IPsec SAs.  In   MOBIKE, a peer needs to be confident that its address change messages   are understood by the other peer.  If these messages are not   understood, it is possible that connectivity between the peers is   lost.   One way to ensure that a peer receives feedback on whether its   messages are understood by the other peer is to use IKEv2 messaging   for MOBIKE and to mark some messages as "critical".  According to the   IKEv2 specification, either such messages have to be understood by   the receiver, or an error message has to be returned to the sender.   A second way to ensure receipt of the above-mentioned feedback is by   using Vendor ID payloads that are exchanged during the initial IKEv2   exchange.  These payloads would then indicate whether or not a given   peer supports the MOBIKE protocol.   A third approach would use the Notify payload to indicate support of   MOBIKE extension.  Such Notify payloads are also used for indicating   NAT traversal support (via NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP and   NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP payloads).   Both a Vendor ID and a Notify payload may be used to indicate the   support of certain extensions.   Note that a MOBIKE peer could also attempt to execute MOBIKE   opportunistically with the critical bit set when an address change   has occurred.  The drawback of this approach is, however, that an   unnecessary message exchange is introduced.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Although Vendor ID payloads and Notify payloads are technically   equivalent, Notify payloads are already used in IKEv2 as a capability   negotiation mechanism.  Hence, Notify payloads are used in MOBIKE to   indicate support of MOBIKE protocol.   Also, as the information of the support of MOBIKE is not needed   during the IKE_SA_INIT exchange, the indication of the support is   done inside the IKE_AUTH exchange.  The reason for this is the need   to keep the IKE_SA_INIT messages as small as possible so that they do   not get fragmented.  IKEv2 allows that the responder can do stateless   processing of the first IKE_SA_INIT packet and request a cookie from   the other end if it is under attack.  To mandate the responder to be   able to reassemble initial IKE_SA_INIT packets would not allow fully   stateless processing of the initial IKE_SA_INIT packets.6.2.  Path Testing and Window size   As IKEv2 has a window of outgoing messages, and the sender is not   allowed to violate that window (meaning that if the window is full,   then the sender cannot send packets), it can cause some complications   to path testing.  Another complication created by IKEv2 is that once   the message is created and sent to the other end, it cannot be   modified in its future retransmissions.  This makes it impossible to   know what packet actually reached the other end first.  We cannot use   IP headers to find out which packet reached the other end first   because if the responder gets retransmissions of the packet it has   already processed and replied to (and those replies might have been   lost due unidirectional address pair), it will retransmit the   previous reply using the new address pair of the request.  Because of   this, it might be possible that the responder has already used the IP   address information from the header of the previous packet, and the   reply packet ending up at the initiator has a different address pair.   Another complication comes from NAT-T.  The current IKEv2 document   says that if NAT-T is enabled, the node not behind NAT SHOULD detect   if the IP address changes in the incoming authenticated packets and   update the remote peers' addresses accordingly.  This works fine with   NAT-T, but it causes some complications in MOBIKE, as MOBIKE needs   the ability to probe other address pairs without breaking the old   one.   One approach to fix this would be to add a completely new protocol   that is outside the IKE SA message id limitations (window code),   outside identical retransmission requirements, and outside the   dynamic address updating of NAT-T.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   Another approach is to make the protocol so that it does not violate   window restrictions and does not require changing the packet on   retransmissions, and change the dynamic address updating of NAT-T to   "MUST NOT" for IKE SA packets if MOBIKE is used.  In order not to   violate window restrictions, the addresses of the currently ongoing   exchange need to be changed to test different paths.  In order not to   require that the packet be changed after it is first sent requires   that the protocol restart from the beginning in case the packet was   retransmitted to different addresses (because the sender does not   know which packet the responder got first, i.e., which IP addresses   it used).   The working group decided to use normal IKEv2 exchanges for path   testing and decided to change the dynamic address updating of NAT-T   to MUST NOT for IKE SA packets; a new protocol outside of IKEv2 was   not adopted.6.3.  Message Presentation   The IP address change notifications can be sent either via an   informational exchange already specified in IKEv2, or via a MOBIKE-   specific message exchange.  Using an informational exchange has the   main advantage that it is already specified in the IKEv2 protocol and   implementations can already incorporate the functionality.   Another question is the format of the address update notifications.   The address update notifications can include multiple addresses, of   which some may be IPv4 and some IPv6 addresses.  The number of   addresses is most likely going to be limited in typical environments   (with less than 10 addresses).  The format may need to indicate a   preference value for each address.  The format could either contain a   preference number that determines the relative order of the addresses   or could simply be an ordered list of IP addresses.  If using   preference numbers, then two addresses can have the same preference   value; an ordered list avoids this situation.   Load balancing is currently outside the scope of MOBIKE; however,   future work might include support for it.  The selected format needs   to be flexible enough to include additional information in future   versions of the protocol (e.g., to enable load balancing).  This may   be realized with an reserved field, which can later be used to store   additional information.  As other information may arise that may have   to be tied to an address in the future, a reserved field seems like a   prudent design in any case.   There are two basic formats that place IP address lists into a   message.  One includes each IP address as separate payload (where the   payload order indicates the preference order, or the payload itselfKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   might include the preference number).  Alternatively, we can put the   IP address list as one payload to the exchange, and that one payload   will then have an internal format that includes the list of IP   addresses.   Having multiple payloads, each one carrying one IP address, makes the   protocol probably easier to parse, as we can already use the normal   IKEv2 payload parsing procedures.  It also offers an easy way for the   extensions, as the payload probably contains only the type of the IP   address (or the type is encoded to the payload type), and the IP   address itself.  As each payload already has a length field   associated to it, we can detect if there is any extra data after the   IP address.  Some implementations might have problems parsing more   than a certain number of IKEv2 payloads, but if the sender sends them   in the most preferred first, the receiver can only use the first   addresses it was willing to parse.   Having all IP addresses in one big MOBIKE-specified internal format   provides more compact encoding and keeps the MOBIKE implementation   more concentrated to one module.   Another choice is which type of payloads to use.  IKEv2 already   specifies a Notify payload.  It includes some extra fields (SPI size,   SPI, protocol, etc.), which gives 4 bytes of the extra overhead, and   there is the notification data field, which could include the   MOBIKE-specific data.   Another option would be to have a custom payload type, which would   then include the information needed for the MOBIKE protocol.   The working group decided to use IKEv2 Notify payloads, and put only   one data item per notify.  There will be one Notify payload for each   item to be sent.6.4.  Updating Address Set   Because the initiator decides all address updates, the initiator   needs to know all the addresses used by the responder.  The responder   also needs that list in case it happens to move to an address not   known by the initiator, and it needs to send an address update   notification to the initiator.  It might need to try different   addresses for the initiator.   MOBIKE could send the whole peer address list every time any of the   IP addresses change (addresses are added or removed, the order   changes, or the preferred address is updated) or an incremental   update.  Sending incremental updates provides more compact packets   (meaning we can support more IP addresses), but on the other handKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   this approach has more problems in the synchronization and packet   reordering cases.  That is, incremental updates must be processed in   order, but for full updates we can simply use the most recent one and   ignore old ones, even if they arrive after the most recent one (IKEv2   packets have a message ID that is incremented for each packet; thus,   it is easy to know the sending order).   The working group decided to use a protocol format where both ends   send a full list of their addresses to the other end, and that list   overwrites the previous list.  To support NAT-T, the IP addresses of   the received packet are considered as one address of the peer, even   when they are not present in the list.7.  Security Considerations   As all the packets are already authenticated by IKEv2, there is no   risk that any attackers would undetectedly modify the contents of the   packets.  The IP addresses in the IP header of the packets are not   authenticated; thus, the protocol defined must take care that they   are only used as an indication that something might be different, and   that they do not cause any direct actions, except when doing NAT   traversal.   An attacker can also spoof ICMP error messages in an effort to   confuse the peers about which addresses are not working.  At worst,   this causes denial of service and/or the use of non-preferred   addresses.   One type of attack that needs to be taken care of in the MOBIKE   protocol is the bombing attack type.  See [RFC4225] and [Aur02] for   more information about flooding attacks.   See the security considerations section of [RFC4555] for more   information about security considerations of the actual protocol.8.  Acknowledgements   This document is the result of discussions in the MOBIKE working   group.  The authors would like to thank Jari Arkko, Pasi Eronen,   Francis Dupont, Mohan Parthasarathy, Paul Hoffman, Bill Sommerfeld,   James Kempf, Vijay Devarapalli, Atul Sharma, Bora Akyol, Joe Touch,   Udo Schilcher, Tom Henderson, Andreas Pashalidis, and Maureen   Stillman for their input.   We would like to particularly thank Pasi Eronen for tracking open   issues on the MOBIKE mailing list.  He helped us make good progress   on the document.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 20069.  References9.1.  Normative references   [RFC4301]    Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the                Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.   [RFC4306]    Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",RFC 4306, December 2005.9.2.  Informative References   [Aur02]      Aura, T., Roe, M., and J. Arkko, "Security of Internet                Location Management", In Proc. 18th Annual Computer                Security Applications Conference, pages 78-87, Las                Vegas, NV USA, December 2002.   [RFC2367]    McDonald, D., Metz, C., and B. Phan, "PF_KEY Key                Management API, Version 2",RFC 2367, July 1998.   [RFC2401]    Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the                Internet Protocol",RFC 2401, November 1998.   [RFC2409]    Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange                (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [RFC2461]    Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor                Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)",RFC 2461,                December 1998.   [RFC2462]    Thomson, S. and T. Narten, "IPv6 Stateless Address                Autoconfiguration",RFC 2462, December 1998.   [RFC2960]    Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,                Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla, M.,                Zhang, L., and V. Paxson, "Stream Control Transmission                Protocol",RFC 2960, October 2000.   [RFC3303]    Srisuresh, P., Kuthan, J., Rosenberg, J., Molitor, A.,                and A. Rayhan, "Middlebox communication architecture and                framework",RFC 3303, August 2002.   [RFC3424]    Daigle, L. and IAB, "IAB Considerations for UNilateral                Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address                Translation",RFC 3424, November 2002.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006   [RFC3554]    Bellovin, S., Ioannidis, J., Keromytis, A., and R.                Stewart, "On the Use of Stream Control Transmission                Protocol (SCTP) with IPsec",RFC 3554, July 2003.   [RFC3753]    Manner, J. and M. Kojo, "Mobility Related Terminology",RFC 3753, June 2004.   [RFC3775]    Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility                Support in IPv6",RFC 3775, June 2004.   [RFC4193]    Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast                Addresses",RFC 4193, October 2005.   [RFC4225]    Nikander, P., Arkko, J., Aura, T., Montenegro, G., and                E. Nordmark, "Mobile IP Version 6 Route Optimization                Security Design Background",RFC 4225, December 2005.   [RFC4429]    Moore, N., "Optimistic Duplicate Address Detection (DAD)                for IPv6",RFC 4429, April 2006.   [RFC4555]    Eronen, P., "IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming Protocol                (MOBIKE)",RFC 4555, June 2006.   [WIP-Ark06]  Arkko, J. and I. Beijnum, "Failure Detection and Locator                Pair Exploration Protocol for IPv6 Multihoming", Work in                Progress, June 2006.   [WIP-Cro04]  Crocker, D., "Framework for Common Endpoint Locator                Pools", Work in Progress, February 2004.   [WIP-Nik06]  Nikander, P., "End-Host Mobility and Multihoming with                the Host Identity Protocol", Work in Progress,                June 2006.   [WIP-Ste06]  Stewart, R., Ramalho, M., Xie, Q., Tuexen, M., and P.                Conrad, "Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)                Dynamic Address Reconfiguration", Work in Progress,                June 2006.   [WIP-Sti06]  Stiemerling, M., Tschofenig, H., Aoun, C., and E.                Davies, "NAT/Firewall NSIS Signaling Layer Protocol                (NSLP)", Work in Progress, June 2006.Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006Authors' Addresses   Tero Kivinen   Safenet, Inc.   Fredrikinkatu 47   HELSINKI  FI-00100   FI   EMail: kivinen@safenet-inc.com   Hannes Tschofenig   Siemens   Otto-Hahn-Ring 6   Munich, Bavaria  81739   Germany   EMail: Hannes.Tschofenig@siemens.com   URI:http://www.tschofenig.comKivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 4621             Design of the MOBIKE Protocol           August 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Kivinen & Tschofenig         Informational                     [Page 30]

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