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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          W. KumariRequest for Comments: 5635                                        GoogleCategory: Informational                                     D. McPherson                                                          Arbor Networks                                                             August 2009Remote Triggered Black Hole Filteringwith Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF)Abstract   Remote Triggered Black Hole (RTBH) filtering is a popular and   effective technique for the mitigation of denial-of-service attacks.   This document expands upon destination-based RTBH filtering by   outlining a method to enable filtering by source address as well.Status 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) 2009 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents in effect on the date of   publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights   and restrictions with respect to this document.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Terminology .....................................................33. Destination Address RTBH Filtering ..............................33.1. Overview ...................................................33.2. Detail .....................................................44. Source Address RTBH Filtering ...................................7      4.1. Steps to Deploy RTBH Filtering with uRPF for Source           Filtering ..................................................85. Security Considerations .........................................96. Acknowledgments .................................................97. References ......................................................97.1. Normative References .......................................97.2. Informative References ....................................10Appendix A. Cisco Router Configuration Sample .....................11Appendix B. Juniper Configuration Sample ..........................12Appendix C. A Brief History of RTBH ...............................141.  Introduction   This document expands upon the technique outlined in "Configuring BGP   to Block Denial-of-Service Attacks" [RFC3882] to demonstrate a method   that allows for filtering by source address(es).   Network operators have developed a variety of techniques for   mitigating denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.  While different   techniques have varying strengths and weaknesses, from an   implementation perspective, the selection of which method to use for   each type of attack involves evaluating the tradeoffs associated with   each method.   A common DoS attack directed against a customer of a service provider   involves generating a greater volume of attack traffic destined for   the target than will fit down the links from the service provider(s)   to the victim (customer).  This traffic "starves out" legitimate   traffic and often results in collateral damage or negative effects to   other customers or the network infrastructure as well.  Rather than   having all destinations on their network be affected by the attack,   the customer may ask their service provider to filter traffic   destined to the target destination IP address(es), or the service   provider may determine that this is necessary themselves, in order to   preserve network availability.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   One method that the service provider can use to implement this   filtering is to deploy access control lists on the edge of their   network.  While this technique provides a large amount of flexibility   in the filtering, it runs into scalability issues, both in terms of   the number of entries in the filter and the packet rate.   Most routers are able to forward traffic at a much higher rate than   they are able to filter, and they are able to hold many more   forwarding table entries and routes than filter entries.  RTBH   filtering leverages the forwarding performance of modern routers to   filter more entries and at a higher rate than access control lists   would otherwise allow.   However, with destination-based RTBH filtering, the impact of the   attack on the target is complete.  That is, destination-based RTBH   filtering injects a discard route into the forwarding table for the   target prefix.  All packets towards that destination, attack traffic   AND legitimate traffic, are then dropped by the participating   routers,thereby taking the target completely offline.  The benefit is   that collateral damage to other systems or network availability at   the customer location or in the ISP network is limited, but the   negative impact to the target itself is arguably increased.   By coupling unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF) [RFC3704]   techniques with RTBH filtering, BGP can be used to distribute discard   routes that are based not on destination or target addresses, but on   source addresses of unwanted traffic.  Note that this will drop all   traffic to/from the address, and not just the traffic to the victim.   This document is broken up into three logical parts: the first   outlines how to configure destination-based RTBH, the second covers   source-based RTBH, and the third part has examples and a history of   the technique.2.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED",  "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].3.  Destination Address RTBH Filtering3.1.  Overview   A discard route is installed on each edge router in the network with   the destination set to the discard (or null) interface.  In order to   use RTBH filtering for a single IP address (or prefix), a BGP route   for the address to be filtered is announced, with the next-hop set asKumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   the discard route.  This causes traffic to the announced network   prefix to be forwarded to the discard interface so that it does not   transit the network wasting resources or triggering collateral damage   to other resources along the path towards the target.   While this does "complete" the attack in that the target address(es)   are made unreachable, collateral damage is minimized.  It may also be   possible to move the host or service on the target IP address(es) to   another address and keep the service up, for example, by updating   associated DNS resource records.3.2.  Detail   Before deploying RTBH filtering, there is some preparation and   planning that needs to occur and decisions that need to be made.   These include:   -  What are the discard addresses?   -  What are the discard BGP communities?   -  What is the largest prefix that can be black-holed?   -  What is the smallest advertisement that your provider will accept?   Steps to configure destination-based RTBH filtering:   Step 1. Select Your Discard Address Schema   An address is chosen to become the "discard address".  This is often   chosen from 192.0.2.0/24 (TEST-NET [RFC3330]), or fromRFC 1918   [RFC1918] space.  Multiple addresses allow an operator to configure   multiple static routes, one for each incident:      192.0.2.1 = Incident #1      192.0.2.2 = Incident #2      192.0.2.3 = Incident #3      192.0.2.4 = Incident #4      192.0.2.5 = Incident #5   Customer #1, who has a DDoS (Distributed DoS) attack can be pointed   to discard route 192.0.2.1.  Customer #2 can be pointed to discard   route 192.0.2.2.  If capable, the router can then count the drops for   each, providing some level of telemetry on the volume of drops as   well as status of an ongoing attack.  A consistent address schema   facilitates operations.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   Step 2. Configure the Discard Route(s) on Each Router   A route for the "discard address" is installed on the routers that   form the edge/perimeter of the network in all routers in the network   or some subset (e.g., peering, but not customer, etc.).  The   destination of the route is set to the "discard" or "null" interface.   This route is called the "discard route".  Implementation experience   demonstrates the value of configuring each ingress router with a   capability for dropping traffic via RTBH filtering.   Step 3. Configure the RTBH BGP Policy on Each Router   A BGP policy is configured on all routers that have the discard route   so that routes announced with a chosen community will have their   next-hop set to the discard address.  The BGP policy should be made   restrictive so that only BGP routes covering a defined number of   hosts addresses will be accepted.  That is, typically, only specific   /32s are necessary.  Shorter prefix blocks may also be required or   desirable, for example, if larger numbers of attack targets are   located within a single prefix, or the employment of this mechanism   is to drop traffic bound for specific networks.  When filtering based   on shorter prefixes, extreme caution should be used as to avoid   collateral damage to other hosts that reside within those address   blocks.  Full implementations will have multiple communities, with   each community used for different parts of a provider's network and   for different security incidents.   Step 4. Configure the Safety Egress Prefix Filters   There is always a chance that the triggering BGP update could leak   from the network and so egress prefix filters are strongly   recommended.  These egress prefix filter details may vary, but   experience has demonstrated that the following works:   -  Deny all prefixes longer than the longest prefix that you expect      to announce.  For example, if the longest prefix that you expect      to announce is /24, deny all prefixes of length /25 though /32.      If your triggering BGP update is only /32s, then this egress      prefix filter will add a safe measure in case the NO_EXPORT      community does not work.   -  Deny all communities used for triggering RTBH filtering.  This is      also a "safety" measure in case the NO_EXPORT community does not      work.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   Step 5: Configure the Trigger Router   Configure the trigger router, workstation, or other device so that   adding and removing the triggers can be done easily and quickly.  The   BGP update should have the NO_EXPORT community as a mandatory   attribute.  An egress prefix filter or policy that prevents RTBH   filtering prefixes in the /8 to /24 range is also recommended as a   safety tool.  The trigger router can be set up as an iBGP (Internal   BGP) route reflector client that does not receive any prefixes from   its BGP peer.  This allows a low-cost router/workstation to be used   as the trigger router.   Using the RTBH filtering:   1: When RTBH filtering is desired for a specific address, that      address is announced from a trigger router (or route server),      tagged with the chosen "RTBH" community and with the NO_EXPORT      community, and passed via iBGP.  The receiving routers check the      BGP policy, set the next-hop to be the discard route, resulting in      a Forwarding Information Base (FIB) entry pointing to a discard      address.   2: Traffic entering the network will now be forwarded to the discard      interface on all edge routers and will therefore be dropped at the      edge of the network, saving resources.      2.1: Multiple Discard Addresses for Incident Granularity.  This           technique can be expanded by having multiple discard           addresses, routes, and communities to allow for monitoring of           the discarded traffic volume on devices that support multiple           discard interfaces.  As mentioned earlier, each router can           have a discard address schema to allow the operator to           distinguish multiple incidents from each other -- making it           easier to monitor the life-cycle of the incidents.      2.2: Multiple "Trigger Communities" for Network-Wide Granularity.           The network can be sectioned into multiple communities,           providing the operator with an ability to drop in discrete           parts of their network.  For example, the network can be           divided into the following communities (where XXX represents           the operator's AS number):               XXX:600 RTBH filtering on all routers               XXX:601 RTBH filtering on only peering routers               XXX:602 RTBH filtering on only customers who peer BGP               XXX:603 RTBH filtering on data centers (to see if the                       data center is the source of attack)Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009               XXX:604 RTBH filtering on all customers (to see how many                       customers are being used by the attacker)           Some diligent thinking is required to develop a community           schema that provides flexibility while reflecting topological           considerations.      2.3: "Customer-Triggered" RTBH filtering.  The technique can also           be expanded by relaxing the Autonomous System (AS) path rule           to allow customers of a service provider to enable RTBH           filtering without interacting with the service provider's           trigger routers.  If this is configured, an operator MUST           only accept announcements from the customer for prefixes that           the customer is authorized to advertise, in order to prevent           the customer from accidentally (or intentionally) black-           holing space that they are not allowed to advertise.           A common policy for this type of setup would first permit any           longer prefix within an authorized prefix only if the black           hole communities are attached, append NO_EXPORT,           NO_ADVERTISE, or similar communities, and then also accept           from the customer the original aggregate prefix that will be           advertised as standard policy permits.           Extreme caution should be used in order to avoid leaking any           more specifics beyond the local routing domain, unless policy           explicitly aims at doing just that.4.  Source Address RTBH Filtering   In many instances, denial-of-service attacks sourced from botnets are   being configured to "follow DNS".  (The attacking machines are   instructed to attack www.example.com, and re-resolve this   periodically.  Historically, the attacks were aimed simply at an IP   address and so renumbering www.example.com to a new address was an   effective mitigation.)  This makes it desirable to employ a technique   that allows black-holing to be based on source address.   By combining traditional RTBH filtering with unicast Reverse Path   Forwarding (uRPF), a network operator can filter based upon the   source address.  uRPF performs a route lookup of the source address   of the packet and checks to see if the ingress interface of the   packet is a valid egress interface for the packet source address   (strict mode) or if any route to the source address of the packet   exists (loose mode).  If the check fails, the packet is typically   dropped.  In loose mode, some vendors also verify that the   destination route does not point to an invalid next-hop -- this   allows source-based RTBH filtering to be deployed in networks thatKumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   cannot implement strict (or feasible path) mode uRPF.  Before   enabling uRPF (in any mode), it is vital that you fully understand   the implications of doing so:   -  Strict mode will cause the router to drop all ingress traffic if      the best path back to the source address of the traffic is not the      interface from which the traffic was received.  Asymmetric routing      will cause strict mode uRPF to drop legitimate traffic.   -  Loose mode causes the router to check if a route for the source      address of the traffic exists.  This may also cause legitimate      traffic to be discarded.   It is hoped that in the future, vendors will implement a "DoS-   mitigation" mode in addition to the loose and strict modes -- in this   mode, the uRPF check will only fail if the next-hop for the source of   the packet is a discard interface.   By enabling the uRPF feature on interfaces at predetermined points in   their network and announcing the source address(es) of attack   traffic, a network operator can effectively drop the identified   attack traffic at specified devices (ideally ingress edge) of their   network based on source address.   While administrators may choose to drop traffic from any prefix they   wish, it is recommended when employing source-based RTBH filtering   inter-domain that explicit policy be defined that enables peers to   only announce source-based RTBH routes for prefixes that they   originate.4.1.  Steps to Deploy RTBH Filtering with uRPF for Source Filtering   The same steps that are required to implement destination address   RTBH filtering are taken with the additional step of enabling unicast   Reverse Path Forwarding on predetermined interfaces.  When a source   address (or network) needs to be blocked, that address (or network)   is announced using BGP tagged with a community.  This will cause the   route to be installed with a next-hop of the discard interface,   causing the uRPF check to fail and the packets to be discarded.  The   destination-based RTBH filtering community should not be used for   source-based RTBH filtering, and the routes tagged with the selected   community should be carefully filtered.   The BGP policy will need to be relaxed to accept announcements tagged   with this community to be accepted even though they contain addresses   not controlled by the network announcing them.  These announcements   must NOT be propagated outside the local AS and should carry the   NO_EXPORT community.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   As a matter of policy, operators SHOULD NOT accept source-based RTBH   announcements from their peers or customers, they should only be   installed by local or attack management systems within their   administrative domain.5.  Security Considerations   The techniques presented here provide enough power to cause   significant traffic forwarding loss if incorrectly deployed.  It is   imperative that the announcements that trigger the black-holing are   carefully checked and that the BGP policy that accepts these   announcements is implemented in such a manner that the announcements:   -  Are not propagated outside the AS (NO_EXPORT).   -  Are not accepted from outside the AS (except from customers).   -  Except where source-based filtering is deployed, that the network      contained in the announcement falls within the address ranges      controlled by the announcing AS (i.e., for customers that the      address falls within their space).6.  Acknowledgments   I would like to thank Joe Abley, Ron Bonica, Rodney Dunn, Alfred   Hoenes, Donald Smith, Joel Jaeggli, and Steve Williams for their   assistance, feedback and not laughing *too* much at the quality of   the initial versions.   I would also like to thank all of the regular contributors to the   OPSEC Working Group and Google for 20% time :-)   The authors would also like to thank Steven L Johnson and Barry   Greene for getting this implemented and Chris Morrow for publicizing   the technique in multiple talks.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC1918]    Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot,                G., and E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private                Internets",BCP 5,RFC 1918, February 1996.   [RFC2119]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   [RFC3330]    IANA, "Special-Use IPv4 Addresses",RFC 3330, September                2002.   [RFC3704]    Baker, F. and P. Savola, "Ingress Filtering for                Multihomed Networks",BCP 84,RFC 3704, March 2004.   [RFC3882]    Turk, D., "Configuring BGP to Block Denial-of-Service                Attacks",RFC 3882, September 2004.7.2.  Informative References   [Greene2001] Greene Barry Raveendran and Jarvis Neil, "Unicast                Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF) Enhancements for the                ISP-ISP Edge",ftp://ftp-eng.cisco.com/cons/isp/documents/uRPF_Enhancement.pdf, 2001.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009Appendix A.  Cisco Router Configuration Sample   This section provides a partial configuration for configuring RTBH   filtering on a Cisco router.  This is not a complete configuration   and should be customized before being used.Announcing router:   ! The discard route   ip route 192.0.2.1 255.255.255.255 Null0   !   ! Matches and empty AS-PATH only.   ip as-path access-list 10 permit ^$   !   ! This route-map matches routes with tag 666 and sets the next-hop   ! to be the discard route.   route-map remote-trigger-black-hole permit 10    match tag 666    set ip next-hop 192.0.2.1    set local-preference 200    set community no-export    ! The community used internally to tag RTBH announcements.    set community 65505:666    set origin igp   !   route-map remote-trigger-black-hole permit 20   !   router bgp 65505    no synchronization    bgp log-neighbor-changes    redistribute static route-map remote-trigger-black-hole    no auto-summary   !   ! An example IP that we are applying RTBH filtering to.   ! All traffic destined to 10.0.0.1 will now be dropped!   ip route 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.255 null0 tag 666   !Filtering router:   !   ! The discard route   ip route 192.0.2.1 255.255.255.255 Null0   !   ! Matches and empty AS-PATH only.   ip as-path access-list 10 permit ^$   !   route-map black-hole-filter permit 10    match ip address prefix-list only-host-routes    match as-path 10Kumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009    match community 65505:666 no-export   !   ! Don't accept any other announcements with the RTBH community.   route-map black-hole-filter deny 20    match community 65505:666   !   route-map black-hole-filter permit 30   !   ! An interface for source-based RTBH filtering with uRPF loose mode.   interface FastEthernet 0/0   ip verify unicast source reachable-via anyAppendix B.  Juniper Configuration Sample   This section provides a partial configuration for configuring RTBH   filtering on a Juniper router.  This is not a complete configuration   and should be customized before being used.   Announcing router:      routing-options {         static {             /* EXAMPLE ATTACK SOURCE */             route 10.11.12.66/32 {                 next-hop 192.0.2.1;                 resolve;                 tag 666;             }             /* EXAMPLE ATTACK DESTINATION */             route 10.128.0.2/32 {                 next-hop 192.0.2.1;                 resolve;                 tag 666;             }         }         autonomous-system 100;      }      protocols {         bgp {             group ibgp {                 type internal;                 export rtbh;                 neighbor 172.16.0.2;             }         }      }Kumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009      policy-options {         policy-statement rtbh {             term black-hole-filter {                 from {                     tag 666;                     route-filter 0.0.0.0/0 prefix-length-range /32-/32;                 }                 then {                     local-preference 200;                     origin igp;                     community set black-hole;                     community add no-export;                     next-hop 192.0.2.1;                     accept;                 }             }         }         community black-hole members 100:666;         community no-export members no-export;      }   Filtering router:      policy-statement black-hole-filter {         from {             protocol bgp;             as-path LocalOnly;             community black-hole;             route-filter 0.0.0.0/0 prefix-length-range /32-/32;         }         then {             community set no-export;             next-hop 192.0.2.1;         }      }      community black-hole members 100:666;      community no-export members no-export;      routing-options {         forwarding-table {             unicast-reverse-path feasible-paths;         }         static {             route 192.0.2.1/32 discard;         }      }Kumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009      interfaces {         xe-1/0/0 {             vlan-tagging;             mtu 9192;             unit 201 {                 vlan-id 201;                 family inet {                     rpf-check;                     address 10.11.12.1/24;                 }             }         }      }Appendix C.  A Brief History of RTBH Filtering   Understanding the history and motivation behind the development of a   technique often helps with understanding how to best utilize the   technique.  In this spirit, we present a history of unicast RPF and   RTBH filtering.   This section has been provided by Barry Raveendran Greene:   Unicast RPF Loose Check (uRPF Loose Check) was created by Neil Jarvis   and Barry Greene to be used with destination-based RTBH as a rapid   reaction tool to DDoS attacks.  The requirements for this rapid   reaction tool was based on post mortem conversation after the   February 2000 attacks on several big content hosting companies.  The   summary of the requirement became the "Exodus Requirement" which   stated:      We need a tool to drop packets based on source IP address that can      be pushed out to over 60 routers within 60 seconds, be longer than      a thousand lines, be modified on the fly, and work in all your      platforms filtering at line rate.   A variety of options were looked at to meet this requirement, from   reviving Common Open Policy Service (COPS), to pushing out Access   Control Lists (ACLs) with BGP, creating a new protocol.  In 2000, the   quickest way to meet the "Exodus requirement" was to marry two   functions.  First, modify unicast RPF so that the interface check was   no longer required and to make sure that a "null" or discard route   would drop the packet (i.e., loose check).  Second, the technique   where BGP is used to trigger a distributed drop is dusted off and   documented.  Combining these two techniques was deemed a fast way to   put a distributed capability to drop packets out into the industry.Kumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5635                RTBH Filtering with uRPF             August 2009   To clarify and restate, uRPF loose check was created as one part of a   rapid reaction tool to DDoS attacks that "drop packets based on   source IP address that can be pushed out to over 60 routers with in   60 seconds, be longer than a thousand lines, be modified on the fly,   and work in all your platforms filtering at line rate".  The   secondary benefits of using uRPF Loose Check for other functions is a   secondary benefit -- not the primary goal for its creation.   To facilitate the adoption to the industry, uRPF Loose Check was not   patented.  It was publicly published and disclosed in "Unicast   Reverse PathForwarding (uRPF) Enhancements for the ISP-ISP Edge"   [Greene2001].Authors' Addresses   Warren Kumari   Google   1600 Amphitheatre Parkway   Mountain View, CA 94043   EMail: warren@kumari.net   Danny McPherson   Arbor Networks, Inc.   EMail: danny@arbor.netKumari & McPherson           Informational                     [Page 15]

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