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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                              J. WuRequest for Comments: 5210                                         J. BiCategory: Experimental                                             X. Li                                                                  G. Ren                                                                   K. Xu                                                     Tsinghua University                                                             M. Williams                                                        Juniper Networks                                                               June 2008A Source Address Validation Architecture (SAVA) Testbedand Deployment ExperienceStatus of This Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.   Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   Because the Internet forwards packets according to the IP destination   address, packet forwarding typically takes place without inspection   of the source address and malicious attacks have been launched using   spoofed source addresses.  In an effort to enhance the Internet with   IP source address validation, a prototype implementation of the IP   Source Address Validation Architecture (SAVA) was created and an   evaluation was conducted on an IPv6 network.  This document reports   on the prototype implementation and the test results, as well as the   lessons and insights gained from experimentation.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  A Prototype SAVA Implementation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.1.  Solution Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.2.  IP Source Address Validation in the Access Network . . . .62.3.  IP Source Address Validation at Intra-AS/Ingress Point . .9     2.4.  IP Source Address Validation in the Inter-AS Case           (Neighboring AS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9     2.5.  IP Source Address Validation in the Inter-AS Case           (Non-Neighboring AS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.  SAVA Testbed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.1.  CNGI-CERNET2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.2.  SAVA Testbed on CNGI-CERNET2 Infrastructure  . . . . . . .164.  Test Experience and Results  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174.1.  Test Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174.2.  Test Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.  Limitations and Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.1.  General Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .185.2.  Security Issues  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .205.3.  Protocol Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .206.  Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .217.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .228.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .229.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .239.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .239.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 20081.  Introduction   By design, the Internet forwards data packets solely based on the   destination IP address.  The source IP address is not checked during   the forwarding process in most cases.  This makes it easy for   malicious hosts to spoof the source address of the IP packet.  We   believe that it would be useful to enforce the validity of the source   IP address for all the packets being forwarded.   Enforcing the source IP address validity would help us achieve the   following goals:   o  Since packets which carry spoofed source addresses would not be      forwarded, it would be impossible to launch network attacks that      are enabled by using spoofed source addresses and more difficult      to successfully carry out attacks enhanced or strengthened by the      use of spoofed source addresses.   o  Being able to assume that all packet source addresses are correct      would allow traceback to be accomplished accurately and with      confidence.  This would benefit network diagnosis, management,      accounting, and applications.   As part of the effort in developing a Source Address Validation   Architecture (SAVA), we implemented a SAVA prototype and deployed the   prototype in 12 ASes in an operational network as part of China Next   Generation Internet (CNGI) Project [Wu07].  We conducted evaluation   experiments.  In this document, we first describe the prototype   solutions and then report experimental results.  We hope that this   document can provide useful insights to those interested in the   subject, and can serve as an initial input to future IETF effort in   this area.   In recent years, there have been a number of research and engineering   efforts to design IP source address validation mechanisms, such as   [RFC2827], [Park01], [Li02], [Brem05], and [Snoe01].  Our SAVA   prototype implementation was inspired by some of the schemes from the   proposed or existing solutions.   The prototype implementation and experimental results presented in   this report serve only as an input, and by no means preempt any   solution development that may be carried out by future IETF effort.   Indeed, the presented solutions are experimental approaches and have   a number of limitations as discussed in Sections5 and6.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 20082.  A Prototype SAVA Implementation2.1.  Solution Overview   A multiple-fence solution is proposed in this document.  That is,   there are multiple points in the network at which the validity of a   packet's source address can be checked.  This is because in the   current single-fence model where source address validity is   essentially checked only at ingress to the network, deployment has   been inadequate to the point that there is always sufficient   opportunity to mount attacks based on spoofed source addresses, and   it seems likely that this condition will continue in the foreseeable   future.  A multiple-fence solution will allow "holes" in deployment   to be covered and validity of the source address to be evaluated with   increased confidence across the whole Internet.  The assumption here   is that when validity checking is not universal, it is still   worthwhile to increase the confidence in the validity of source   addresses and to reduce the opportunities to mount a source address   spoofing attack.   Furthermore, the architecture allows for multiple independent and   loosely-coupled checking mechanisms.  The motivation for this is that   in the Internet at large, it is unrealistic to expect any single IP   source address validation mechanism to be universally supported.   Different operators and vendors may choose to deploy/develop   different mechanisms to achieve the same end, and there need to be   different mechanisms to solve the problem at different places in the   network.  Furthermore, implementation bugs or configuration errors   could potentially render an implementation ineffective.  Therefore,   our prototype SAVA implementation is a combination of multiple   coexisting and cooperating mechanisms.  More specifically, we   implement source IP address validation at three levels: access   network source address validation; intra-AS source address   validation; and inter-AS source address validation, as shown in   Figure 1.  The system details can be found in [Wu07].Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008                     __ ____                          __ ____                 .-''       `':                   .-''       `':                 |             |                  |             |                 |   +-+----+  |   Inter-AS SAV   |   +-+----+  |                 |   |Router+--+------------------+---|Router+  +                 |   +--.---+  |                  |   +--.---+  |      Intra-AS   |      |       \      Intra-AS   |      |      |         SAV     |   +--+---+    \        SAV     |   +--+---+  |                 |   |Router|     \               |   |Router|  |                 |   +--.---+      \               '_  +-----+  _                 |      |           \               `'-------'''                /       |            \               /        |             \              | +---------------------+\          ----+---------. Router      | \              | ++-------\------------+  \              |  |     |  \    |     |    |              |  | +------+|+------++----+|Intra-AS              |  | |Switch|||Switch||Host||SAV              |  | +------+|+------++----+|              |  |     |   |  |    \      |              |+-+--++----+|+----++----+  |              ||Host||Host|||Host||Host|  |              `+----++----+|+----++----+ /                `--.       |         _.-'                    `------|------+''                 Access    |                 Network   |                  SAV       Key:  SAV - Source Address Validation                        Figure 1: Solution Overview   This document divides source address validation into three different   classes of solutions:   1.  Access network.  This prevents a host in a network from spoofing       the address of another host in the same network segment.  This       enables host-granularity of protection compared to Intra-AS       prevention.  SeeSection 2.2 for details.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   2.  Intra-AS.  When the edge router of an access network performs       source address validation (e.g., using [RFC2827] and [RFC3704]),       hosts are prevented from spoofing an arbitrary address, but       unless access network SAV is employed, they may be able to spoof       an address of a host in the same network segment.  In a       degenerate case, when a router connects a single host, the host       can't spoof any address.   3.  Inter-AS.  Mechanisms that enforce packet source address       correctness at AS boundaries.  Because the global Internet has a       mesh topology, and because different networks belong to different       administrative authorities, IP source address validation at the       Inter-AS level is more challenging.  Nevertheless, we believe       this third level of protection is necessary to detect packets       with spoofed source addresses, when the first two levels of       source address validation are missing or ineffective.   In the following sections, we describe the specific mechanisms   implemented at each of the three levels in detail.2.2.  IP Source Address Validation in the Access Network   At the access network level, the solution ensures the host inside the   access network cannot use the source address of another host.  The   host address should be a valid address assigned to the host   statically or dynamically.  The solution implemented in the   experiment provides such a function for Ethernet networks.  A layer-3   source address validation architecture device (SAVA Device) for the   access network (the device can be a function inside the Customer   Premises Equipment (CPE) router or a separate device) is deployed at   the exit of the access network.  Source address validation   architecture agents (SAVA Agents) are deployed inside the access   network.  (In fact, these agents could be a function inside the first   hop router/switch connected to the hosts.)  A set of protocols was   designed for communication between the host, SAVA Agent, and SAVA   Device.  Only a packet originating from the host that was assigned   that particular source address may pass through the SAVA Agent and   SAVA Device.   Two possible deployment variants exist; we will call them Variant A   and Variant B.  In Variant A, an agent is mandatory and each host is   attached to the agent on a dedicated physical port.  In Variant B,   hosts are required to perform network access authentication and   generate key material needed to protect each packet.  In this   variant, the agent is optional.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   The key function of Variant A is to create a dynamic binding between   a switch port and valid source IP address, or a binding between Media   Access Control (MAC) address, source IP address, and switch port.  In   the prototype, this is established by having hosts employ a new   address configuration protocol that the switch is capable of   tracking.   Note:  In a production environment, the approach in the prototype      would not be sufficient due to reasons discussed inSection 5.   In Variant A, there are three main participants: Source Address   Request Client (SARC) on the host, Source Address Validation Proxy   (SAVP) on the switch, and Source Address Management Server (SAMS). as   shown in Figure 2.  The solution follows the basic steps below:   1.  The SARC on the end host sends an IP address request.  The SAVP       on the switch relays this request to the SAMS and records the MAC       address and incoming port.  If the address has already been       predetermined by the end host, the end host still needs to put       that address in the request message for verification by SAMS.   2.  After the SAMS receives the IP address request, it then allocates       a source address for that SARC based on the address allocation       and management policy of the access network, it stores the       allocation of the IP address in the SAMS history database for       traceback, then sends response message containing the allocated       address to the SARC.   3.  After the SAVP on the access switch receives the response, it       binds the IP address and the former stored MAC address of the       request message with the switch port on the binding table.  Then,       it forwards the issued address to SARC on the end host.   4.  The access switch begins to filter packets sent from the end       host.  Packets which do not conform to the tuple (IP address,       Switch Port) are discarded.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008                         ----------------                         | SERVER        |                         |    -------    |                         |    | SAMS |   |                         |    --------   |                         -----------------                                 |                                 |                         ----------------                         | SWITCH        |                         |    -------    |                         |    | SAVP |   |                         |    --------   |                         -----------------                                 |                                 |                         ----------------                         | END HOST      |                         |    -------    |                         |    | SARC |   |                         |    --------   |                         -----------------         Key:     SARC - Source Address Request Client                  SAVP - Source Address Validation Proxy                  SAMS - Source Address Management Sever           Figure 2: Binding-Based IP Source Address Validation                           in the Access Network   The main idea of Variant B is to employ key material from network   access authentication for some additional validation process.  A   session key is derived for each host connecting to the network, and   each packet sent by the host has cryptographic protection that   employs this session key.  After establishing which host the packet   comes from, it again becomes possible to track whether the addresses   allocated to the host match those used by the host.  The mechanism   details can be found in [XBW07], but the process follows these basic   steps:   1.  When a host wants to establish connectivity, it needs to perform       network access authentication.   2.  The network access devices provide the SAVA Agent (often co-       located) a session key S.  This key is further distributed to the       SAVA Device.  The SAVA Device binds the session key and the       host's IP address.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   3.  When the host sends packet M to somewhere outside the access       network, either the host or the SAVA Agent needs to generate a       message authentication code for each using key S and packet M.        In the prototype, the message authentication code is carried in       an experimental IPv6 extension header.   4.  The SAVA Device uses the session key to authenticate the       signature carried in the packet so that it can validate the       source address.   In our testbed, we implemented and tested both solutions.  The   switch-based solution has better performance, but the switches in the   access network would need to be upgraded (usually the number of   switches in an access network is large).  The signature-based   solution could be deployed between the host and the exit router, but   it has some extra cost in inserting and validating the signature.2.3.  IP Source Address Validation at Intra-AS/Ingress Point   We adopted the solution of the source address validation of IP   packets at ingress points described in [RFC2827] and [RFC3704]; the   latter describes source address validation at the ingress points of   multi-homed access networks.2.4.  IP Source Address Validation in the Inter-AS Case (Neighboring AS)   Our design for the Inter-AS Source Address Validation included the   following characteristics: It should cooperate among different ASes   with different administrative authorities and different interests.   It should be lightweight enough to support high throughput and not to   influence forwarding efficiency.   The inter-AS level of SAVA can be classified into two sub-cases:   o  Two SAVA-compliant ASes exchanging traffic are directly connected;   o  Two SAVA-compliant ASes are separated by one or more intervening,      non-SAVA-compliant providers.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008                                        ---------                                        | AIMS   |                                         ------|-                                               |   --------------                   -----------|-----   |  AS-4       |--------  --------|    AS-1  |    |-------     Global   | ------      |ASBR,VE|->|ASBR,VE|    ------|-   |ASBR,VE|--->IPv6   | |VRGE|      |--------  --------|    | VRGE |   |-------     Network   | ------      |                  |    --------   |   ---------------            ----- -----------------                              |ASBR,VE|    |ASBR,VE|                              ---------    ---------                               /             |                              /              |                             /               |                            /                |                        ----------        --------                        |ASBR, VE|        |ASBR,VE|                   ---------------      -------------                   |   AS-2      |      |  AS-3     |                   |  -----      |      |   -----   |                   |  |VRGE|     |      |  |VRGE|   |                   |  -----      |      |  ------   |                   ---------------      -------------          Key:     AIMS - AS-IPv6 prefix Mapping Server                   ASBR - AS Border Router                   VE   - Validating Engine                   VR   - Validation Rule                   VRGE - Validation Rule Generating Engine               Figure 3: Inter-ISP (Neighboring AS) Solution   Two ASes that exchange traffic have a customer-to-provider, provider-   to-customer, peer-to-peer, or sibling-to-sibling relationship.  In a   customer-to-provider or provider-to-customer relationship, the   customer typically belongs to a smaller administrative domain that   pays a larger administrative domain for access to the rest of   Internet.  The provider is an AS that belongs to the larger   administrative domain.  In a peer-to-peer relationship, the two peers   typically belong to administrative domains of comparable size and   find it mutually advantageous to exchange traffic between their   respective customers.  Two ASes have a sibling-to-sibling   relationship if they belong to the same administrative domain or to   administrative domains that have a mutual-transit agreement.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   An AS-relation-based mechanism is used for neighboring SAVA-compliant   ASes.  The basic ideas of this AS-relation-based mechanism are as   follows.  It builds a VR table that associates each incoming   interface of a router with a set of valid source address blocks, and   then uses it to filter spoofed packets.   In the solution implemented on the testbed, the solution for the   validation of IPv6 prefixes is separated into three functional   modules: The Validation Rule Generating Engine (VRGE), the Validation   Engine (VE), and the AS-IPv6 prefix Mapping Server (AIMS).   Validation rules that are generated by the VRGE are expressed as IPv6   address prefixes.   The VRGE generates validation rules that are derived according to   Table 1, and each AS has a VRGE.  The VE loads validation rules   generated by VRGE to filter packets passed between ASes (in the case   of Figure 3, from neighboring ASes into AS-1).  In the SAVA testbed,   the VE is implemented as a simulated layer-2 device on a Linux-based   machine inserted into the data path just outside each ASBR interface   that faces a neighboring AS.  In a real-world implementation, it   would probably be implemented as a packet-filtering set on the ASBR.   The AS-IPv6 prefix mapping server is also implemented on a Linux   machine and derives a mapping between an IPv6 prefix and the AS   number of that prefix.  ----------------------------------------------------------------------  |   \Export| Own     | Customer's| Sibling's | Provider's | Peer's   |  |To  \     | Address | Address   | Address   | Address    | Address  |  |-----\--------------------------------------------------------------|  | Provider |    Y    |     Y     |     Y     |            |          |  |--------------------------------------------------------------------|  | Customer |    Y    |     Y     |     Y     |     Y      |    Y     |  |--------------------------------------------------------------------|  | Peer     |    Y    |     Y     |     Y     |            |          |  |--------------------------------------------------------------------|  | Sibling  |    Y    |     Y     |     Y     |     Y      |    Y     |  ----------------------------------------------------------------------           Table 1: AS-Relation-Based Inter-AS Filtering   Different ASes exchange and transmit VR information using the AS-   Relation-Based Export Rules in the VRGE.  As per Table 1, an AS   exports the address prefixes of itself, its customers, its providers,   its siblings, and its peers to its customers and siblings as valid   prefixes, while it only exports the address prefixes of itself, its   customers, and its siblings to its providers and peers as valid   prefixes.  With the support of the AS-IPv6 prefix mapping server,   only AS numbers of valid address prefixes are transferred between   ASes, and the AS number is mapped to address prefixes at the VRGE.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   Only changes of AS relation and changes of IP address prefixes   belonging to an AS require the generation of VR updates.   The procedure's principal steps are as follows (starting from AS-1 in   Figure 3):   1.  When the VRGE has initialized, it reads its neighboring SAVA-       compliant AS table and establishes connections to all the VEs in       its own AS.   2.  The VRGE initiates a VR renewal.  According to its export table,       it sends its own originated VR to VRGEs of neighboring ASes.  In       this process, VRs are expressed as AS numbers.   3.  When a VRGE receives a new VR from its neighbor, it uses its own       export table to decide whether it should accept the VR and, if it       accepts a VR, whether or not it should re-export the VR to other       neighboring ASes.   4.  If the VRGE accepts a VR, it uses the AIMS to transform the AS-       expressed VR into an IPv6 prefix-expressed VR.   5.  The VRGE pushes the VR to all the VEs in its AS.   The VEs use these prefix-based VRs to validate the source IP   addresses of incoming packets.2.5.  IP Source Address Validation in the Inter-AS Case      (Non-Neighboring AS)   In the case where two ASes do not exchange packets directly, it is   not possible to deploy a solution like that described in the previous   section.  However, it is highly desirable for non-neighboring ISPs to   be able to form a trust alliance such that packets leaving one AS   will be recognized by the other and inherit the validation status   they possessed on leaving the first AS.  There is more than one way   to do this.  For the SAVA experiments to date, an authentication tag   method has been used.  This solution is inspired by the work of   [Brem05].   The key elements of this lightweight authentication tag based   mechanism are as follows: For each pair of SAVA-compliant ASes, there   is a pair of unique temporary authentication tags.  All SAVA-   compliant ASes together form a SAVA AS Alliance.  When a packet is   leaving its own AS, if the destination IP address belongs to an AS in   the SAVA AS Alliance, the edge router of this AS looks up the   authentication tag using the destination AS number as the key, and   adds an authentication tag to the packet.  When a packet arrives atWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   the destination AS, if the source address of the packet belongs to an   AS in the SAVA AS Alliance, the edge router of the destination AS   searches its table for the authentication tag using the source AS   number as the key, and the authentication tag carried in the packet   is verified and removed.  As suggested by its name, this particular   method uses a lightweight authentication tag.  For every packet   forwarded, the authentication tag can be put in an IPv6 hop-by-hop   extension header.  It is reasonable to use a 128-bit shared random   number as the authentication tag to save the processing overhead   brought by using a cryptographic method to generate the   authentication tag.   The benefit of this scheme compared to merely turning on local   address validation (such asRFC 2827) is as follows: when local   address validation is employed within a group of networks, it is   assured that their networks do not send spoofed packets.  But other   networks may still do this.  With the above scheme, however, this   capability is eliminated.  If someone outside the alliance spoofs a   packet using a source address from someone within the alliance, the   members of the alliance refuse to accept such a packet.                                +-----+              .-----------------+ REG |-----------------.              |                 +-----+                 |              |                                         |        ,-----+--------                          ,------+-------      ,'     `|        `.                      ,'     ` |       `.     /        |         \                     /         |         \    /         |          \                   /          |          \   ;       +--'--+      +----+             +----+     +-----+       ;   |       | ASC +------+ASBR|             |ASBR+-----+ ASC |       |   :       +--.--+      +----+`            +----+     +--+--+       :    \         |__________________________________________|         /     \                   /                    \                   /      `.               ,'                      `.               ,'        '-------------'                          '-------------'             AS-1                                     AS-2                 Key:   REG  - Registration Server                        ASC  - AS Control Server                        ASBR - AS Border Router             Figure 4: Inter-AS (Non-Neighboring AS) Solution   There are three major components in the system: the Registration   Server (REG), the AS Control Server (ASC), and the AS Border Router   (ASBR).Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   The Registration Server is the "center" of the trust alliance (TA).   It maintains a member list for the TA.  It performs two major   functions:   o  Processes requests from the AS Control Server, to get the member      list for the TA.   o  Notifies each AS Control Server when the member list is changed.   Each AS deploying the method has an AS Control Server.  The AS   Control Server has three major functions:   o  Communicates with the Registration Server, to get the up-to-date      member list of TA.   o  Communicates with the AS Control Server in other member ASes in      the TA, to exchange updates of prefix ownership information and to      exchange authentication tags.   o  Communicates with all AS Border Routers of the local AS, to      configure the processing component on the AS Border Routers.   The AS Border Router does the work of adding the authentication tag   to the packet at the sending AS, and the work of verifying and   removing the authentication tag at the destination AS.   In the design of this system, in order to decrease the burden on the   REG, most of the control traffic happens between ASCs.   The authentication tag needs to be changed periodically.  Although   the overhead of maintaining and exchanging authentication tags   between AS pairs is O(N) from the point of view of one AS, rather   than O(N^2), the traffic and processing overhead do increase as the   number of ASes increases.  Therefore, an automatic authentication tag   refresh mechanism is utilized in this solution.  In this mechanism,   each peer runs the same algorithm to automatically generate an   authentication tag sequence.  Then the authentication tag in packets   can be changed automatically with high frequency.  To enhance the   security, a seed is used for the algorithm to generate an   authentication tag sequence robust against guessing.  Thus, the peers   need only to negotiate and change the seed at very low frequency.   This lowers the overhead associated with frequently negotiating and   changing the authentication tag while maintaining acceptable   security.   Since the authentication tag is put in an IPv6 hop-by-hop extension   header, the MTU issues should be considered.  Currently we have two   solutions to this problem.  Neither of the solutions is perfect, butWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   they are both feasible.  One possible way is to set the MTU at the   ASBR to be 1280 bytes, which is the minimum MTU for the IPv6.  Thus,   there should be no ICMP "Packet Too Big" message received from the   downstream gateways.  The disadvantage of this solution is that it   doesn't make good use of the available MTU.  The other possible way   is to let the ASBR catch all incoming ICMP "Packet Too Big" messages,   and decrease the value in the MTU field before forwarding it into the   AS.  The advantage of this solution is that it can make good use of   the available MTU.  But such processing of ICMP packets at the ASBR   may create a target for a denial-of-service (DoS) attack.   Because the authentication tag is validated at the border router of   the destination AS, not the destination host, the destination options   header is not chosen to carry the authentication tag.   Authentication tag management is a critical issue.  Our work focused   on two points: tag negotiation and tag refresh.  The tag negotiation   happens between the ASCs of a pair of ASes in the SAVA AS Alliance.   Considering the issue of synchronization and the incentive of   enabling SAVA, receiver-driven tag negotiation is suggested.  It   gives more decision power to the receiver AS rather than the sender   AS.  With a receiver-driven scheme, the receiver AS can decide the   policies of tag management.  The packets tagged with old   authentication tags should not be allowed indefinitely.  Rather,   after having negotiated a new tag, the old tag should be set to be   invalid after a period of time.  The length of this period is a   parameter that will control how long the old tag will be valid after   the new tag has been assigned.  In the experiment, we used five   seconds.   The trust alliance is intended to be established dynamically (join   and quit), but in this testbed we needed to confirm off-line the   initial trust among alliance members.3.  SAVA Testbed3.1.  CNGI-CERNET2   The prototypes of our solutions for SAVA are implemented and tested   on CNGI-CERNET2.  CNGI-CERNET2 is one of the China Next Generation   Internet (CNGI) backbones, operated by the China Education and   Research Network (CERNET).  CNGI-CERNET2 connects 25 core nodes   distributed in 20 cities in China at speeds of 2.5-10 Gb/s.  The   CNGI-CERNET2 backbones are IPv6-only networks rather than being a   mixed IPv4/IPv6 infrastructure.  Only some Customer Premises Networks   (CPNs) are dual-stacked.  The CNGI-CERNET2 backbones, CNGI-CERNET2   CPNs, and CNGI-6IX all have globally unique AS numbers.  Thus a   multi-AS testbed environment is provided.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 20083.2.  SAVA Testbed on CNGI-CERNET2 Infrastructure   It is intended that eventually the SAVA testbed will be implemented   directly on the CNGI-CERNET2 backbone, but in the early stages the   testbed has been implemented across 12 universities connected to   CNGI-CERNET2.  First, this is because some of the algorithms need to   be implemented in the testbed routers themselves, and to date they   have not been implemented on any of the commercial routers forming   the CNGI-CERNET2 backbone.  Second, since CNGI-CERNET2 is an   operational backbone, any new protocols and networking techniques   need to be tested in a non-disruptive way.                               __                             ,'  \                            _,...._                            ,'    \____---------------+     ,'Beijing`.                            /      \  | Inter-AS SAV  |-----| Univ    |    +---------------+     |         | +---------------+     `-._____,'    | Inter-AS SAV  +-----|         |    +------.--------+     |  CNGI-  |                         _,...._           |              | CERNET2 |__---------------+     ,Northeast`.           |              |         | |Inter-AS SAV   |-----| Univ    |   Tsinghua|University    | Backbone| +---------------+     `-._____,'        ,,-|-._           |         |      ,'   |   `.         |         |    ,'+---------+\        |         |   |  |Intra-AS | |       |         |      ...   |  |   SAV   | |       |         |   |  +---------+ |       |         |   |       |      |       |         |                         _,...._   |  +---------+ |       |         |__---------------+     ,Chongqing`.   |  | Access  | |       |         | |Inter-AS SAV   |-----|Univ     |   |  | Network | |       |         | +---------------+     `-._____,'   |  |  SAV    | |       |         |    \ +---------+.'        \       .'     \          ,'          \      |      `.      ,'             \    /        ``---'                -_,'                  Key:  SAV - Source Address Validation                    Figure 5: CNGI-CERNET2 SAVA Testbed   In any case, the testbed is fully capable of functional testing of   solutions for all parts of SAVA.  This includes testing procedures   for ensuring the validity of IPv6 source addresses in the access   network, in packets sent from the access network to an IPv6 service   provider, in packets sent within one service provider's network, inWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   packets sent between neighboring service providers, and in packets   sent between service providers separated by an intervening transit   network.   The testbed is distributed across 12 universities connected to CNGI-   CERNET2.   Each of the university installations is connected to the CNGI-CERNET2   backbone through a set of inter-AS Source Address Validation   prototype equipment and traffic monitoring equipment for test result   display.   Each university deployed one AS.  Six universities deployed all parts   of the solution and are hence fully-featured, with validation at the   inter-AS, intra-AS, and access network levels all able to be tested.   In addition, a suite of applications that could be subject to   spoofing attacks or that can be subverted to carry out spoofing   attacks were installed on a variety of servers.  Two solutions for   the access network were deployed.4.  Test Experience and Results   The solutions outlined insection 2 were implemented on the testbed   described insection 3.  Successful testing of all solutions was been   carried out, as detailed in the following sections.4.1.  Test Scenarios   For each of the test scenarios, we tested many cases.  Taking the   Inter-AS (non-neighboring AS) SAVA solution test as an example, we   classified the test cases into three classes: normal class, dynamic   class, and anti-spoofing class.   1.  For normal class, there are three cases: Adding authentication       tag Test, Removing authentication tag Test, and Forwarding       packets with valid source address.   2.  For dynamic class, there are four cases: Updating the       authentication tag between ASes, The protection for a newly       joined member AS, Adding address space, and Deleting address       space.   3.  For anti-spoofing class, there is one case: Filtering of packets       with forged IP addresses.   As is shown in Figure 5, we have "multiple-fence" design for our SAVA   testbed.  If source address validation is deployed in the access   network, we can get a host granularity validation.  If source addressWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   validation is deployed at the intra-AS level, we can guarantee that   the packets sent from this point have a correct IP prefix.  If source   address validation is deployed at the inter-AS level, we can   guarantee that the packets sent from this point are from the correct   AS.4.2.  Test Results   1.  The test results are consistent with the expected ones.  For an       AS that has fully-featured SAVA deployment with validation at the       inter-AS, intra-AS, and access network levels, packets that do       not hold an authenticated source address will not be forwarded in       the network.  As a result, it is not possible to launch network       attacks with spoofed source addresses.  Moreover, the traffic in       the network can be traced back accurately.   2.  For the Inter-AS (non-neighboring AS) SAVA solution, during the       period of authentication tag update, the old and the new       authentication tags are both valid for source address validation;       thus, there is no packet loss.   3.  For the Inter-AS (non-neighboring AS) SAVA solution, the       validation function is implemented in software on a device       running Linux, which simulates the source address validation       functions of a router interface.  It is a layer-2 device because       it needs to be transparent to the router interface.  During the       test, when the devices were connected directly, normal line-rate       forwarding was achieved.  When the devices were connected with       routers from another vendor, only a very limited forwarding speed       was achieved.  The reason is that the authentication tags are       added on the IPv6 hop-by-hop option header, and many current       routers can handle the hop-by-hop options only at a limited rate.5.  Limitations and Issues   There are several issues both within this overall problem area and   with the particular approach taken in the experiment.5.1.  General Issues   There is a long-standing debate about whether the lack of universal   deployment of source address validation is a technical issue that   needs a technical solution, or if mere further deployment of existing   tools (such asRFC 2827) would be a more cost effective way to   improve the situation.  Further deployment efforts of this tool have   proved to be slow, however.  Some of the solutions prototyped in this   experiment allow a group of network operators to have additional   protection for their networks while waiting for universal deploymentWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   of simpler tools in the rest of the Internet.  This allows them to   prevent spoofing attacks that the simple tools alone would not be   able to prevent, even if already deployed within the group.   Similarly, since a large fraction of current denial-of-service   attacks can be launched by employing legitimate IP addresses   belonging to botnet clients, even universal deployment of better   source address validation techniques would be unable to prevent these   attacks.  However, tracing these attacks would be easier given that   there would be more reliance on the validity of source address.   There is also a question about the optimal placement of the source   address validation checks.  The simplest model is placing the checks   on the border of a network.  SuchRFC 2827-style checks are more   widely deployed than full checks ensuring that all addresses within   the network are correct.  It can be argued that it is sufficient to   provide such coarse granularity checks, because this makes it at   least possible to find the responsible network administrators.   However, depending on the type of network in question, those   administrators may or may not find it easy to track the specific   offending machines or users.  It is obviously required that the   administrators have a way to trace offending equipment or users --   even if the network does not block spoofed packets in real-time.   New technology for address validation would also face a number of   deployment barriers.  For instance, all current technology can be   locally and independently applied.  A system that requires global   operation (such as the Inter-AS validation mechanism) would require   significant coordination, deployment synchronization, configuration,   key setup, and other issues, given the number of ASes.   Similarly, deploying host-based access network address validation   mechanisms requires host changes, and can generally be done only when   the network owners are in control of all hosts.  Even then, the   changing availability of the host for all types of products and   platforms would likely prevent universal deployment even within a   single network.   There may be also be significant costs involved in some of these   solutions.  For instance, in an environment where access network   authentication is normally not required, employing an authentication-   based access network address validation would require deployment of   equipment capable of this authentication as well as credentials   distribution for all devices.  Such undertaking is typically only   initiated after careful evaluation of the costs and benefits   involved.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   Finally, all the presented solutions have issues in situations that   go beyond a simple model of a host connecting to a network via the   same single interface at all times.  Multihoming, failover, and some   forms of mobility or wireless solutions may collide with the   requirements of source address validation.  In general, dynamic   changes to the attachment of hosts and topology of the routing   infrastructure are something that would have to be handled in a   production environment.5.2.  Security Issues   The security vs. scalability of the authentication tags in the   Inter-AS (non-neighboring AS) SAVA solution presents a difficult   tradeoff.  Some analysis about the difficulty of guessing the   authentication tag between two AS members was discussed in [Brem05].   It is relatively difficult, even with using a random number as an   "authentication tag".  The difficulty of guessing can be increased by   increasing the length of the authentication tag.   In any case, the random number approach is definitely vulnerable to   attackers who are on the path between the two ASes.   On the other hand, using an actual cryptographic hash in the packets   will cause a significant increase in the amount of effort needed to   forward a packet.  In general, addition of the option and the   calculation of the authentication tag consume valuable resources on   the forwarding path.  This resource usage comes on top of everything   else that modern routers need to do at ever increasing line speeds.   It is far from clear that the costs are worth the benefits.5.3.  Protocol Details   In the current CNGI-CERNET2 SAVA testbed, a 128-bit authentication   tag is placed in an IPv6 hop-by-hop option header.  The size of the   packets increases with the authentication tags.  This by itself is   expected to be acceptable, if the network administrator feels that   the additional protection is needed.  The size increases may result   in an MTU issue, and we found a way to resolve it in the testbed.   Since an IPv6 hop-by-hop option header was chosen, the option header   has to be examined by all intervening routers.  While in theory this   should pose no concern, the test results show that many current   routers handle hop-by-hop options with a much reduced throughput   compared to normal traffic.   The Inter-AS (neighboring AS) SAVA solution is based on the AS   relation; thus, it may not synchronize with the dynamics of route   changes very quickly and it may cause false positives.  Currently,Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   CNGI-CERNET2 is a relatively stable network, and this method works   well in the testbed.  We will further study the impact of false   positives in an unstable network.   The access network address validation solution is merely one option   among many.  Solutions appear to depend highly on the chosen link   technology and network architecture.  For instance, source address   validation on point-to-point links is easy and has generally been   supported by implementations for years.  Validation in shared   networks has been more problematic, but is increasing in importance   given the use of Ethernet technology across administrative boundaries   (such as in DSL).  In any case, the prototyped solution has a number   of limitations, including the decision to use a new address   configuration protocol.  In a production environment, a solution that   is suitable for all IPv6 address assignment mechanisms would be   needed.6.  Conclusion   Several conclusions can be drawn from the experiment.   First, the experiment is a proof that a prototype can be built that   is deployable on loosely-coupled domains of test networks in a   limited scale and "multiple-fence" design for source address   validation.  The solution allows different validation granularities,   and also allows different providers to use different solutions.  The   coupling of components at different levels of granularity can be   loose enough to allow component substitution.   Incremental deployment is another design principle that was used in   the experiment.  The tests have demonstrated that benefit is derived   even when deployment is incomplete, thus giving providers an   incentive to be early adopters.   The experiment also provided a proof of concept for the switch-based   local subnet validation, network authentication based validation,   filter-based Inter-AS validation, and authentication tag-based   Inter-AS validation mechanisms.  The client host and network   equipment need to be modified and some new servers should be   deployed.   Nevertheless, as discussed in the previous section, there are a   number of limitations, issues, and questions in the prototype designs   and the overall source address validation space.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008   It is our hope that some of the experiences will help vendors and the   Internet standards community in these efforts.  Future work in this   space should attempt to answer some of the issues raised inSection 5.  Some of the key issues going forward include:   o  Scalability questions and per-packet operations.   o  Protocol design issues, such as integration to existing address      allocation mechanisms, use of hop-by-hop headers, etc.   o  Cost vs. benefit questions.  These may be ultimately answered only      by actually employing some of these technologies in production      networks.   o  Trust establishment issue and study of false positives.   o  Deployability considerations, e.g. modifiability of switches,      hosts, etc.7.  Security Considerations   The purpose of the document is to report experimental results.  Some   security considerations of the solution mechanisms of the testbed are   mentioned in the document, but are not the main problem to be   described in this document.8.  Acknowledgements   This experiment was conducted among 12 universities -- namely,   Tsinghua University, Beijing University, Beijing University of Post   and Telecommunications, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Huazhong   University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, Southeast University   in Nanjing, South China University of Technology in Guangzhou,   Northeast University in Shenyang, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Shandong   University in Jinan, University of Electronic Science and Technology   of China in Chengdu, and Chongqing University.  The authors would   like to thank everyone involved in this effort in these universities.   The authors would like to thank Jari Arkko, Lixia Zhang, and Pekka   Savola for their detailed review comments on this document, and thank   Paul Ferguson and Ron Bonica for their valuable advice on the   solution development and the testbed implementation.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 20089.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2827]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:              Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source              Address Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000.   [RFC3704]  Baker, F. and P. Savola, "Ingress Filtering for Multihomed              Networks",BCP 84,RFC 3704, March 2004.9.2.  Informative References   [Brem05]   Bremler-Barr, A. and H. Levy, "Spoofing Prevention              Method", INFOCOM 2005.   [Li02]     Li,, J., Mirkovic, J., Wang, M., Reiher, P., and L.              Zhang, "SAVE: Source Address Validity Enforcement              Protocol", INFOCOM  2002.   [Park01]   Park, K. and H. Lee, "On the effectiveness of route-based              packet filtering for distributed DoS attack prevention in              power-law internets", SIGCOMM 2001.   [Snoe01]   Snoeren, A., Partridge, C., Sanchez, L., and C. Jones, "A              Hash-based IP traceback", SIGCOMM 2001.   [Wu07]     Wu, J., Ren, G., and X. Li, "Source Address Validation:              Architecture and Protocol Design", ICNP 2007.   [XBW07]    Xie, L., Bi, J., and J. Wu, "An Authentication based              Source Address Spoofing Prevention Method Deployed in IPv6              Edge Network", ICCS 2007.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008Authors' Addresses   Jianping Wu   Tsinghua University   Computer Science, Tsinghua University   Beijing  100084   China   EMail: jianping@cernet.edu.cn   Jun Bi   Tsinghua University   Network Research Center, Tsinghua University   Beijing  100084   China   EMail: junbi@cernet.edu.cn   Xing Li   Tsinghua University   Electronic Engineering, Tsinghua University   Beijing  100084   China   EMail: xing@cernet.edu.cn   Gang Ren   Tsinghua University   Computer Science, Tsinghua University   Beijing  100084   China   EMail: rg03@mails.tsinghua.edu.cn   Ke Xu   Tsinghua University   Computer Science, Tsinghua University   Beijing  100084   China   EMail: xuke@csnet1.cs.tsinghua.edu.cn   Mark I. Williams   Juniper Networks   Suite 1508, W3 Tower, Oriental Plaza, 1 East Chang'An Ave   Dong Cheng District, Beijing  100738   China   EMail: miw@juniper.netWu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 5210                      SAVA Testbed                     June 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Wu, et al.                    Experimental                     [Page 25]

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