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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:9427Errata Exist
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                           H. ZhouRequest for Comments: 7170                                 N. Cam-WingetCategory: Standards Track                                     J. SaloweyISSN: 2070-1721                                            Cisco Systems                                                                S. Hanna                                                   Infineon Technologies                                                                May 2014Tunnel Extensible Authentication Protocol (TEAP) Version 1Abstract   This document defines the Tunnel Extensible Authentication Protocol   (TEAP) version 1.  TEAP is a tunnel-based EAP method that enables   secure communication between a peer and a server by using the   Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol to establish a mutually   authenticated tunnel.  Within the tunnel, TLV objects are used to   convey authentication-related data between the EAP peer and the EAP   server.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7170.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 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   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.1.  Specification Requirements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.2.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.  Protocol Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.1.  Architectural Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.2.  Protocol-Layering Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83.  TEAP Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.1.  Version Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.2.  TEAP Authentication Phase 1: Tunnel Establishment . . . .103.2.1.  TLS Session Resume Using Server State . . . . . . . .113.2.2.  TLS Session Resume Using a PAC  . . . . . . . . . . .12       3.2.3.  Transition between Abbreviated and Full TLS Handshake  133.3.  TEAP Authentication Phase 2: Tunneled Authentication  . .143.3.1.  EAP Sequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.3.2.  Optional Password Authentication  . . . . . . . . . .15       3.3.3.  Protected Termination and Acknowledged Result               Indication  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.4.  Determining Peer-Id and Server-Id . . . . . . . . . . . .163.5.  TEAP Session Identifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173.6.  Error Handling  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173.6.1.  Outer-Layer Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .183.6.2.  TLS Layer Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .183.6.3.  Phase 2 Errors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .193.7.  Fragmentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .193.8.  Peer Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.8.1.  PAC Provisioning  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.8.2.  Certificate Provisioning within the Tunnel  . . . . .223.8.3.  Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode  . . . . . .233.8.4.  Channel Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20144.  Message Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .244.1.  TEAP Message Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .244.2.  TEAP TLV Format and Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .264.2.1.  General TLV Format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .284.2.2.  Authority-ID TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .294.2.3.  Identity-Type TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .304.2.4.  Result TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .314.2.5.  NAK TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .324.2.6.  Error TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .334.2.7.  Channel-Binding TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .364.2.8.  Vendor-Specific TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .374.2.9.  Request-Action TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .384.2.10. EAP-Payload TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .404.2.11. Intermediate-Result TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .414.2.12. PAC TLV Format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .424.2.12.1.  Formats for PAC Attributes . . . . . . . . . . .434.2.12.2.  PAC-Key  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .444.2.12.3.  PAC-Opaque . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .444.2.12.4.  PAC-Info . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .454.2.12.5.  PAC-Acknowledgement TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . .474.2.12.6.  PAC-Type TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .484.2.13. Crypto-Binding TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .484.2.14. Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . .514.2.15. Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . .524.2.16. PKCS#7 TLV  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .534.2.17. PKCS#10 TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .544.2.18. Trusted-Server-Root TLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .554.3.  TLV Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .564.3.1.  Outer TLVs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .574.3.2.  Inner TLVs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .575.  Cryptographic Calculations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .585.1.  TEAP Authentication Phase 1: Key Derivations  . . . . . .585.2.  Intermediate Compound Key Derivations . . . . . . . . . .595.3.  Computing the Compound MAC  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .615.4.  EAP Master Session Key Generation . . . . . . . . . . . .616.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .627.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .667.1.  Mutual Authentication and Integrity Protection  . . . . .677.2.  Method Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .677.3.  Separation of Phase 1 and Phase 2 Servers . . . . . . . .67     7.4.  Mitigation of Known Vulnerabilities and Protocol           Deficiencies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .687.4.1.  User Identity Protection and Verification . . . . . .697.4.2.  Dictionary Attack Resistance  . . . . . . . . . . . .707.4.3.  Protection against Man-in-the-Middle Attacks  . . . .707.4.4.  PAC Binding to User Identity  . . . . . . . . . . . .71Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20147.5.  Protecting against Forged Cleartext EAP Packets . . . . .717.6.  Server Certificate Validation . . . . . . . . . . . . . .727.7.  Tunnel PAC Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .727.8.  Security Claims . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .738.  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .749.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .759.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .759.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76Appendix A.  Evaluation against Tunnel-Based EAP Method                Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79A.1.  Requirement 4.1.1: RFC Compliance . . . . . . . . . . . .79A.2.  Requirement 4.2.1: TLS Requirements . . . . . . . . . . .79A.3.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.1: Ciphersuite Negotiation  . . . . .79     A.4.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.2: Tunnel Data Protection Algorithms   79     A.5.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.3: Tunnel Authentication and Key           Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79A.6.  Requirement 4.2.1.2: Tunnel Replay Protection . . . . . .79A.7.  Requirement 4.2.1.3: TLS Extensions . . . . . . . . . . .80A.8.  Requirement 4.2.1.4: Peer Identity Privacy  . . . . . . .80A.9.  Requirement 4.2.1.5: Session Resumption . . . . . . . . .80A.10. Requirement 4.2.2: Fragmentation  . . . . . . . . . . . .80     A.11. Requirement 4.2.3: Protection of Data External to Tunnel   80A.12. Requirement 4.3.1: Extensible Attribute Types . . . . . .80     A.13. Requirement 4.3.2: Request/Challenge Response Operation .  80     A.14. Requirement 4.3.3: Indicating Criticality of Attributes .  80A.15. Requirement 4.3.4: Vendor-Specific Support  . . . . . . .81A.16. Requirement 4.3.5: Result Indication  . . . . . . . . . .81     A.17. Requirement 4.3.6: Internationalization of Display           Strings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81A.18. Requirement 4.4: EAP Channel-Binding Requirements . . . .81A.19. Requirement 4.5.1.1: Confidentiality and Integrity  . . .81A.20. Requirement 4.5.1.2: Authentication of Server . . . . . .81     A.21. Requirement 4.5.1.3: Server Certificate Revocation           Checking  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81A.22. Requirement 4.5.2: Internationalization . . . . . . . . .81A.23. Requirement 4.5.3: Metadata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82A.24. Requirement 4.5.4: Password Change  . . . . . . . . . . .82A.25. Requirement 4.6.1: Method Negotiation . . . . . . . . . .82A.26. Requirement 4.6.2: Chained Methods  . . . . . . . . . . .82     A.27. Requirement 4.6.3: Cryptographic Binding with the TLS           Tunnel  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82A.28. Requirement 4.6.4: Peer-Initiated EAP Authentication  . .82A.29. Requirement 4.6.5: Method Metadata  . . . . . . . . . . .82Appendix B.  Major Differences from EAP-FAST  . . . . . . . . . .83Appendix C.  Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83C.1.  Successful Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83C.2.  Failed Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85     C.3.  Full TLS Handshake Using Certificate-Based Ciphersuite  .  86Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014     C.4.  Client Authentication during Phase 1 with Identity           Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88C.5.  Fragmentation and Reassembly  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89C.6.  Sequence of EAP Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91C.7.  Failed Crypto-Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94     C.8.  Sequence of EAP Method with Vendor-Specific TLV Exchange   95     C.9.  Peer Requests Inner Method after Server Sends Result TLV   97C.10. Channel Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .991.  Introduction   A tunnel-based Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) method is an   EAP method that establishes a secure tunnel and executes other EAP   methods under the protection of that secure tunnel.  A tunnel-based   EAP method can be used in any lower-layer protocol that supports EAP   authentication.  There are several existing tunnel-based EAP methods   that use Transport Layer Security (TLS) [RFC5246] to establish the   secure tunnel.  EAP methods supporting this include Protected EAP   (PEAP) [PEAP], EAP Tunneled Transport Layer Security (EAP-TTLS)   [RFC5281], and EAP Flexible Authentication via Secure Tunneling (EAP-   FAST) [RFC4851].  However, they all are either vendor-specific or   informational, and the industry calls for a Standards Track tunnel-   based EAP method.  [RFC6678] outlines the list of requirements for a   standard tunnel-based EAP method.   Since its introduction, EAP-FAST [RFC4851] has been widely adopted in   a variety of devices and platforms.  It has been adopted by the EMU   working group as the basis for the standard tunnel-based EAP method.   This document describes the Tunnel Extensible Authentication Protocol   (TEAP) version 1, based on EAP-FAST [RFC4851] with some minor changes   to meet the requirements outlined in [RFC6678] for a standard tunnel-   based EAP method.1.1.  Specification Requirements   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119].Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20141.2.  Terminology   Much of the terminology in this document comes from [RFC3748].   Additional terms are defined below:   Protected Access Credential (PAC)      Credentials distributed to a peer for future optimized network      authentication.  The PAC consists of a minimum of two components:      a shared secret and an opaque element.  The shared secret      component contains the pre-shared key between the peer and the      authentication server.  The opaque part is provided to the peer      and is presented to the authentication server when the peer wishes      to obtain access to network resources.  The opaque element and      shared secret are used with TLS stateless session resumption      defined in [RFC5077] to establish a protected TLS session.  The      secret key and opaque part may be distributed using [RFC5077]      messages or using TLVs within the TEAP tunnel.  Finally, a PAC may      optionally include other information that may be useful to the      peer.   Type-Length-Value (TLV)      The TEAP protocol utilizes objects in TLV format.  The TLV format      is defined inSection 4.2.2.  Protocol Overview   TEAP authentication occurs in two phases after the initial EAP   Identity request/response exchange.  In the first phase, TEAP employs   the TLS [RFC5246] handshake to provide an authenticated key exchange   and to establish a protected tunnel.  Once the tunnel is established,   the second phase begins with the peer and server engaging in further   conversations to establish the required authentication and   authorization policies.  TEAP makes use of TLV objects to carry out   the inner authentication, results, and other information, such as   channel-binding information.   TEAP makes use of the TLS SessionTicket extension [RFC5077], which   supports TLS session resumption without requiring session-specific   state stored at the server.  In this document, the SessionTicket is   referred to as the Protected Access Credential opaque data (or PAC-   Opaque).  The PAC-Opaque may be distributed through the use of the   NewSessionTicket message or through a mechanism that uses TLVs within   Phase 2 of TEAP.  The secret key used to resume the session in TEAP   is referred to as the Protected Access Credential key (or PAC-Key).   When the NewSessionTicket message is used to distribute the PAC-   Opaque, the PAC-Key is the master secret for the session.  If TEAPZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Phase 2 is used to distribute the PAC-Opaque, then the PAC-Key is   distributed along with the PAC-Opaque.  TEAP implementations MUST   support the [RFC5077] mechanism for distributing a PAC-Opaque, and it   is RECOMMENDED that implementations support the capability to   distribute the ticket and secret key within the TEAP tunnel.   The TEAP conversation is used to establish or resume an existing   session to typically establish network connectivity between a peer   and the network.  Upon successful execution of TEAP, the EAP peer and   EAP server both derive strong session key material that can then be   communicated to the network access server (NAS) for use in   establishing a link-layer security association.2.1.  Architectural Model   The network architectural model for TEAP usage is shown below:    +----------+      +----------+      +----------+      +----------+    |          |      |          |      |          |      |  Inner   |    |   Peer   |<---->|  Authen- |<---->|   TEAP   |<---->|  Method  |    |          |      |  ticator |      |  server  |      |  server  |    |          |      |          |      |          |      |          |    +----------+      +----------+      +----------+      +----------+                         TEAP Architectural Model   The entities depicted above are logical entities and may or may not   correspond to separate network components.  For example, the TEAP   server and inner method server might be a single entity; the   authenticator and TEAP server might be a single entity; or the   functions of the authenticator, TEAP server, and inner method server   might be combined into a single physical device.  For example,   typical IEEE 802.11 deployments place the authenticator in an access   point (AP) while a RADIUS server may provide the TEAP and inner   method server components.  The above diagram illustrates the division   of labor among entities in a general manner and shows how a   distributed system might be constructed; however, actual systems   might be realized more simply.  The security considerations inSection 7.3 provide an additional discussion of the implications of   separating the TEAP server from the inner method server.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20142.2.  Protocol-Layering Model   TEAP packets are encapsulated within EAP; EAP in turn requires a   transport protocol.  TEAP packets encapsulate TLS, which is then used   to encapsulate user authentication information.  Thus, TEAP messaging   can be described using a layered model, where each layer encapsulates   the layer above it.  The following diagram clarifies the relationship   between protocols:    +---------------------------------------------------------------+    |       Inner EAP Method     |     Other TLV information        |    |---------------------------------------------------------------|    |                 TLV Encapsulation (TLVs)                      |    |---------------------------------------------------------------|    |                TLS         |     Optional Outer TLVs          |    |---------------------------------------------------------------|    |                         TEAP                                  |    |---------------------------------------------------------------|    |                         EAP                                   |    |---------------------------------------------------------------|    |    Carrier Protocol (EAP over LAN, RADIUS, Diameter, etc.)    |    +---------------------------------------------------------------+                          Protocol-Layering Model   The TLV layer is a payload with TLV objects as defined inSection 4.2.  The TLV objects are used to carry arbitrary parameters   between an EAP peer and an EAP server.  All conversations in the TEAP   protected tunnel are encapsulated in a TLV layer.   TEAP packets may include TLVs both inside and outside the TLS tunnel.   The term "Outer TLVs" is used to refer to optional TLVs outside the   TLS tunnel, which are only allowed in the first two messages in the   TEAP protocol.  That is the first EAP-server-to-peer message and   first peer-to-EAP-server message.  If the message is fragmented, the   whole set of messages is counted as one message.  The term "Inner   TLVs" is used to refer to TLVs sent within the TLS tunnel.  In TEAP   Phase 1, Outer TLVs are used to help establish the TLS tunnel, but no   Inner TLVs are used.  In Phase 2 of the TEAP conversation, TLS   records may encapsulate zero or more Inner TLVs, but no Outer TLVs.   Methods for encapsulating EAP within carrier protocols are already   defined.  For example, IEEE 802.1X [IEEE.802-1X.2013] may be used to   transport EAP between the peer and the authenticator; RADIUS   [RFC3579] or Diameter [RFC4072] may be used to transport EAP between   the authenticator and the EAP server.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20143.  TEAP Protocol   The operation of the protocol, including Phase 1 and Phase 2, is the   topic of this section.  The format of TEAP messages is given inSection 4, and the cryptographic calculations are given inSection 5.3.1.  Version Negotiation   TEAP packets contain a 3-bit Version field, following the TLS Flags   field, which enables future TEAP implementations to be backward   compatible with previous versions of the protocol.  This   specification documents the TEAP version 1 protocol; implementations   of this specification MUST use a Version field set to 1.   Version negotiation proceeds as follows:   1.   In the first EAP-Request sent with EAP type=TEAP, the EAP server        MUST set the Version field to the highest version it supports.   2a.  If the EAP peer supports this version of the protocol, it        responds with an EAP-Response of EAP type=TEAP, including the        version number proposed by the TEAP server.   2b.  If the TEAP peer does not support the proposed version but        supports a lower version, it responds with an EAP-Response of        EAP type=TEAP and sets the Version field to its highest        supported version.   2c.  If the TEAP peer only supports versions higher than the version        proposed by the TEAP server, then use of TEAP will not be        possible.  In this case, the TEAP peer sends back an EAP-Nak        either to negotiate a different EAP type or to indicate no other        EAP types are available.   3a.  If the TEAP server does not support the version number proposed        by the TEAP peer, it MUST either terminate the conversation with        an EAP Failure or negotiate a new EAP type.   3b.  If the TEAP server does support the version proposed by the TEAP        peer, then the conversation continues using the version proposed        by the TEAP peer.   The version negotiation procedure guarantees that the TEAP peer and   server will agree to the latest version supported by both parties.   If version negotiation fails, then use of TEAP will not be possible,   and another mutually acceptable EAP method will need to be negotiated   if authentication is to proceed.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   The TEAP version is not protected by TLS and hence can be modified in   transit.  In order to detect a modification of the TEAP version, the   peers MUST exchange the TEAP version number received during version   negotiation using the Crypto-Binding TLV described inSection 4.2.13.   The receiver of the Crypto-Binding TLV MUST verify that the version   received in the Crypto-Binding TLV matches the version sent by the   receiver in the TEAP version negotiation.  If the Crypto-Binding TLV   fails to be validated, then it is a fatal error and is handled as   described inSection 3.6.3.3.2.  TEAP Authentication Phase 1: Tunnel Establishment   TEAP relies on the TLS handshake [RFC5246] to establish an   authenticated and protected tunnel.  The TLS version offered by the   peer and server MUST be TLS version 1.2 [RFC5246] or later.  This   version of the TEAP implementation MUST support the following TLS   ciphersuites:      TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA [RFC5246]      TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA [RFC5246]   This version of the TEAP implementation SHOULD support the following   TLS ciphersuite:      TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA [RFC5246]   Other ciphersuites MAY be supported.  It is REQUIRED that anonymous   ciphersuites such as TLS_DH_anon_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA [RFC5246] only   be used in the case when the inner authentication method provides   mutual authentication, key generation, and resistance to man-in-the-   middle and dictionary attacks.  TLS ciphersuites that do not provide   confidentiality MUST NOT be used.  During the TEAP Phase 1   conversation, the TEAP endpoints MAY negotiate TLS compression.   During TLS tunnel establishment, TLS extensions MAY be used.  For   instance, the Certificate Status Request extension [RFC6066] and the   Multiple Certificate Status Request extension [RFC6961] can be used   to leverage a certificate-status protocol such as Online Certificate   Status Protocol (OCSP) [RFC6960] to check the validity of server   certificates.  TLS renegotiation indications defined inRFC 5746   [RFC5746] MUST be supported.   The EAP server initiates the TEAP conversation with an EAP request   containing a TEAP/Start packet.  This packet includes a set Start (S)   bit, the TEAP version as specified inSection 3.1, and an authority   identity TLV.  The TLS payload in the initial packet is empty.  The   authority identity TLV (Authority-ID TLV) is used to provide the peer   a hint of the server's identity that may be useful in helping theZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   peer select the appropriate credential to use.  Assuming that the   peer supports TEAP, the conversation continues with the peer sending   an EAP-Response packet with EAP type of TEAP with the Start (S) bit   clear and the version as specified inSection 3.1.  This message   encapsulates one or more TLS handshake messages.  If the TEAP version   negotiation is successful, then the TEAP conversation continues until   the EAP server and EAP peer are ready to enter Phase 2.  When the   full TLS handshake is performed, then the first payload of TEAP Phase   2 MAY be sent along with a server-finished handshake message to   reduce the number of round trips.   TEAP implementations MUST support mutual peer authentication during   tunnel establishment using the TLS ciphersuites specified in this   section.  The TEAP peer does not need to authenticate as part of the   TLS exchange but can alternatively be authenticated through   additional exchanges carried out in Phase 2.   The TEAP tunnel protects peer identity information exchanged during   Phase 2 from disclosure outside the tunnel.  Implementations that   wish to provide identity privacy for the peer identity need to   carefully consider what information is disclosed outside the tunnel   prior to Phase 2.  TEAP implementations SHOULD support the immediate   renegotiation of a TLS session to initiate a new handshake message   exchange under the protection of the current ciphersuite.  This   allows support for protection of the peer's identity when using TLS   client authentication.  An example of the exchanges using TLS   renegotiation to protect privacy is shown inAppendix C.   The following sections describe resuming a TLS session based on   server-side or client-side state.3.2.1.  TLS Session Resume Using Server State   TEAP session resumption is achieved in the same manner TLS achieves   session resume.  To support session resumption, the server and peer   minimally cache the Session ID, master secret, and ciphersuite.  The   peer attempts to resume a session by including a valid Session ID   from a previous TLS handshake in its ClientHello message.  If the   server finds a match for the Session ID and is willing to establish a   new connection using the specified session state, the server will   respond with the same Session ID and proceed with the TEAP Phase 1   tunnel establishment based on a TLS abbreviated handshake.  After a   successful conclusion of the TEAP Phase 1 conversation, the   conversation then continues on to Phase 2.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20143.2.2.  TLS Session Resume Using a PAC   TEAP supports the resumption of sessions based on server state being   stored on the client side using the TLS SessionTicket extension   techniques described in [RFC5077].  This version of TEAP supports the   provisioning of a ticket called a Protected Access Credential (PAC)   through the use of the NewSessionTicket handshake described in   [RFC5077], as well as provisioning of a PAC inside the protected   tunnel.  Implementations MUST support the TLS Ticket extension   [RFC5077] mechanism for distributing a PAC and may provide additional   ways to provision the PAC, such as manual configuration.  Since the   PAC mentioned here is used for establishing the TLS tunnel, it is   more specifically referred to as the Tunnel PAC.  The Tunnel PAC is a   security credential provided by the EAP server to a peer and   comprised of:   1.  PAC-Key: this is the key used by the peer as the TLS master       secret to establish the TEAP Phase 1 tunnel.  The PAC-Key is a       strong, high-entropy, at minimum 48-octet key and is typically       the master secret from a previous TLS session.  The PAC-Key is a       secret and MUST be treated accordingly.  Otherwise, if leaked, it       could lead to user credentials being compromised if sent within       the tunnel established using the PAC-Key.  In the case that a       PAC-Key is provisioned to the peer through another means, it MUST       have its confidentiality and integrity protected by a mechanism,       such as the TEAP Phase 2 tunnel.  The PAC-Key MUST be stored       securely by the peer.   2.  PAC-Opaque: this is a variable-length field containing the ticket       that is sent to the EAP server during the TEAP Phase 1 tunnel       establishment based on [RFC5077].  The PAC-Opaque can only be       interpreted by the EAP server to recover the required information       for the server to validate the peer's identity and       authentication.  The PAC-Opaque includes the PAC-Key and other       TLS session parameters.  It may contain the PAC's peer identity.       The PAC-Opaque format and contents are specific to the PAC       issuing server.  The PAC-Opaque may be presented in the clear, so       an attacker MUST NOT be able to gain useful information from the       PAC-Opaque itself.  The server issuing the PAC-Opaque needs to       ensure it is protected with strong cryptographic keys and       algorithms.  The PAC-Opaque may be distributed using the       NewSessionTicket message defined in [RFC5077], or it may be       distributed through another mechanism such as the Phase 2 TLVs       defined in this document.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   3.  PAC-Info: this is an optional variable-length field used to       provide, at a minimum, the authority identity of the PAC issuer.       Other useful but not mandatory information, such as the PAC-Key       lifetime, may also be conveyed by the PAC-issuing server to the       peer during PAC provisioning or refreshment.  PAC-Info is not       included if the NewSessionTicket message is used to provision the       PAC.   The use of the PAC is based on the SessionTicket extension defined in   [RFC5077].  The EAP server initiates the TEAP conversation as normal.   Upon receiving the Authority-ID TLV from the server, the peer checks   to see if it has an existing valid PAC-Key and PAC-Opaque for the   server.  If it does, then it obtains the PAC-Opaque and puts it in   the SessionTicket extension in the ClientHello.  It is RECOMMENDED in   TEAP that the peer include an empty Session ID in a ClientHello   containing a PAC-Opaque.  This version of TEAP supports the   NewSessionTicket Handshake message as described in [RFC5077] for   distribution of a new PAC, as well as the provisioning of PAC inside   the protected tunnel.  If the PAC-Opaque included in the   SessionTicket extension is valid and the EAP server permits the   abbreviated TLS handshake, it will select the ciphersuite from   information within the PAC-Opaque and finish with the abbreviated TLS   handshake.  If the server receives a Session ID and a PAC-Opaque in   the SessionTicket extension in a ClientHello, it should place the   same Session ID in the ServerHello if it is resuming a session based   on the PAC-Opaque.  The conversation then proceeds as described in   [RFC5077] until the handshake completes or a fatal error occurs.   After the abbreviated handshake completes, the peer and the server   are ready to commence Phase 2.3.2.3.  Transition between Abbreviated and Full TLS Handshake   If session resumption based on server-side or client-side state   fails, the server can gracefully fall back to a full TLS handshake.   If the ServerHello received by the peer contains an empty Session ID   or a Session ID that is different than in the ClientHello, the server   may fall back to a full handshake.  The peer can distinguish the   server's intent to negotiate a full or abbreviated TLS handshake by   checking the next TLS handshake messages in the server response to   the ClientHello.  If ChangeCipherSpec follows the ServerHello in   response to the ClientHello, then the server has accepted the session   resumption and intends to negotiate the abbreviated handshake.   Otherwise, the server intends to negotiate the full TLS handshake.  A   peer can request that a new PAC be provisioned after the full TLS   handshake and mutual authentication of the peer and the server.  A   peer SHOULD NOT request that a new PAC be provisioned after the   abbreviated handshake, as requesting a new session ticket based on   resumed session is not permitted.  In order to facilitate theZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   fallback to a full handshake, the peer SHOULD include ciphersuites   that allow for a full handshake and possibly PAC provisioning so the   server can select one of these in case session resumption fails.  An   example of the transition is shown inAppendix C.3.3.  TEAP Authentication Phase 2: Tunneled Authentication   The second portion of the TEAP authentication occurs immediately   after successful completion of Phase 1.  Phase 2 occurs even if both   peer and authenticator are authenticated in the Phase 1 TLS   negotiation.  Phase 2 MUST NOT occur if the Phase 1 TLS handshake   fails, as that will compromise the security as the tunnel has not   been established successfully.  Phase 2 consists of a series of   requests and responses encapsulated in TLV objects defined inSection 4.2.  Phase 2 MUST always end with a Crypto-Binding TLV   exchange described inSection 4.2.13 and a protected termination   exchange described inSection 3.3.3.  The TLV exchange may include   the execution of zero or more EAP methods within the protected tunnel   as described inSection 3.3.1.  A server MAY proceed directly to the   protected termination exchange if it does not wish to request further   authentication from the peer.  However, the peer and server MUST NOT   assume that either will skip inner EAP methods or other TLV   exchanges, as the other peer might have a different security policy.   The peer may have roamed to a network that requires conformance with   a different authentication policy, or the peer may request the server   take additional action (e.g., channel binding) through the use of the   Request-Action TLV as defined inSection 4.2.9.3.3.1.  EAP Sequences   EAP [RFC3748] prohibits use of multiple authentication methods within   a single EAP conversation in order to limit vulnerabilities to man-   in-the-middle attacks.  TEAP addresses man-in-the-middle attacks   through support for cryptographic protection of the inner EAP   exchange and cryptographic binding of the inner authentication   method(s) to the protected tunnel.  EAP methods are executed serially   in a sequence.  This version of TEAP does not support initiating   multiple EAP methods simultaneously in parallel.  The methods need   not be distinct.  For example, EAP-TLS could be run twice as an inner   method, first using machine credentials followed by a second instance   using user credentials.   EAP method messages are carried within EAP-Payload TLVs defined inSection 4.2.10.  If more than one method is going to be executed in   the tunnel, then upon method completion, the server MUST send an   Intermediate-Result TLV indicating the result.  The peer MUST respond   to the Intermediate-Result TLV indicating its result.  If the result   indicates success, the Intermediate-Result TLV MUST be accompanied byZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   a Crypto-Binding TLV.  The Crypto-Binding TLV is further discussed in   Sections4.2.13 and5.3.  The Intermediate-Result TLVs can be   included with other TLVs such as EAP-Payload TLVs starting a new EAP   conversation or with the Result TLV used in the protected termination   exchange.   If both peer and server indicate success, then the method is   considered complete.  If either indicates failure, then the method is   considered failed.  The result of failure of an EAP method does not   always imply a failure of the overall authentication.  If one   authentication method fails, the server may attempt to authenticate   the peer with a different method.3.3.2.  Optional Password Authentication   The use of EAP-FAST-GTC as defined inRFC 5421 [RFC5421] is NOT   RECOMMENDED with TEAPv1 because EAP-FAST-GTC is not compliant with   EAP-GTC defined in [RFC3748].  Implementations should instead make   use of the password authentication TLVs defined in this   specification.  The authentication server initiates password   authentication by sending a Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV defined inSection 4.2.14.  If the peer wishes to participate in password   authentication, then it responds with a Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV   as defined inSection 4.2.15 that contains the username and password.   If it does not wish to perform password authentication, then it   responds with a NAK TLV indicating the rejection of the Basic-   Password-Auth-Req TLV.  Upon receiving the response, the server   indicates the success or failure of the exchange using an   Intermediate-Result TLV.  Multiple round trips of password   authentication requests and responses MAY be used to support some   "housecleaning" functions such as a password or pin change before a   user is authenticated.3.3.3.  Protected Termination and Acknowledged Result Indication   A successful TEAP Phase 2 conversation MUST always end in a   successful Crypto-Binding TLV and Result TLV exchange.  A TEAP server   may initiate the Crypto-Binding TLV and Result TLV exchange without   initiating any EAP conversation in TEAP Phase 2.  After the final   Result TLV exchange, the TLS tunnel is terminated, and a cleartext   EAP Success or EAP Failure is sent by the server.  Peers implementing   TEAP MUST NOT accept a cleartext EAP Success or failure packet prior   to the peer and server reaching synchronized protected result   indication.   The Crypto-Binding TLV exchange is used to prove that both the peer   and server participated in the tunnel establishment and sequence of   authentications.  It also provides verification of the TEAP type,Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   version negotiated, and Outer TLVs exchanged before the TLS tunnel   establishment.  The Crypto-Binding TLV MUST be exchanged and verified   before the final Result TLV exchange, regardless of whether or not   there is an inner EAP method authentication.  The Crypto-Binding TLV   and Intermediate-Result TLV MUST be included to perform cryptographic   binding after each successful EAP method in a sequence of one or more   EAP methods.  The server may send the final Result TLV along with an   Intermediate-Result TLV and a Crypto-Binding TLV to indicate its   intention to end the conversation.  If the peer requires nothing more   from the server, it will respond with a Result TLV indicating success   accompanied by a Crypto-Binding TLV and Intermediate-Result TLV if   necessary.  The server then tears down the tunnel and sends a   cleartext EAP Success or EAP Failure.   If the peer receives a Result TLV indicating success from the server,   but its authentication policies are not satisfied (for example, it   requires a particular authentication mechanism be run or it wants to   request a PAC), it may request further action from the server using   the Request-Action TLV.  The Request-Action TLV is sent with a Status   field indicating what EAP Success/Failure result the peer would   expect if the requested action is not granted.  The value of the   Action field indicates what the peer would like to do next.  The   format and values for the Request-Action TLV are defined inSection 4.2.9.   Upon receiving the Request-Action TLV, the server may process the   request or ignore it, based on its policy.  If the server ignores the   request, it proceeds with termination of the tunnel and sends the   cleartext EAP Success or Failure message based on the Status field of   the peer's Request-Action TLV.  If the server honors and processes   the request, it continues with the requested action.  The   conversation completes with a Result TLV exchange.  The Result TLV   may be included with the TLV that completes the requested action.   Error handling for Phase 2 is discussed inSection 3.6.3.3.4.  Determining Peer-Id and Server-Id   The Peer-Id and Server-Id [RFC5247] may be determined based on the   types of credentials used during either the TEAP tunnel creation or   authentication.  In the case of multiple peer authentications, all   authenticated peer identities and their corresponding identity types   (Section 4.2.3) need to be exported.  In the case of multiple server   authentications, all authenticated server identities need to be   exported.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   When X.509 certificates are used for peer authentication, the Peer-Id   is determined by the subject and subjectAltName fields in the peer   certificate.  As noted in [RFC5280]:     The subject field identifies the entity associated with the public     key stored in the subject public key field.  The subject name MAY     be carried in the subject field and/or the subjectAltName     extension. . . . If subject naming information is present only in     the subjectAltName extension (e.g., a key bound only to an email     address or URI), then the subject name MUST be an empty sequence     and the subjectAltName extension MUST be critical.     Where it is non-empty, the subject field MUST contain an X.500     distinguished name (DN).   If an inner EAP method is run, then the Peer-Id is obtained from the   inner method.   When the server uses an X.509 certificate to establish the TLS   tunnel, the Server-Id is determined in a similar fashion as stated   above for the Peer-Id, e.g., the subject and subjectAltName fields in   the server certificate define the Server-Id.3.5.  TEAP Session Identifier   The EAP session identifier [RFC5247] is constructed using the tls-   unique from the Phase 1 outer tunnel at the beginning of Phase 2 as   defined bySection 3.1 of [RFC5929].  The Session-Id is defined as   follows:     Session-Id = teap_type || tls-unique     where teap_type is the EAP Type assigned to TEAP     tls-unique = tls-unique from the Phase 1 outer tunnel at the     beginning of Phase 2 as defined bySection 3.1 of [RFC5929]     || means concatenation3.6.  Error Handling   TEAP uses the error-handling rules summarized below:   1.  Errors in the outer EAP packet layer are handled as defined inSection 3.6.1.   2.  Errors in the TLS layer are communicated via TLS alert messages       in all phases of TEAP.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   3.  The Intermediate-Result TLVs carry success or failure indications       of the individual EAP methods in TEAP Phase 2.  Errors within the       EAP conversation in Phase 2 are expected to be handled by       individual EAP methods.   4.  Violations of the Inner TLV rules are handled using Result TLVs       together with Error TLVs.   5.  Tunnel-compromised errors (errors caused by a failed or missing       Crypto-Binding) are handled using Result TLVs and Error TLVs.3.6.1.  Outer-Layer Errors   Errors on the TEAP outer-packet layer are handled in the following   ways:   1.  If Outer TLVs are invalid or contain unknown values, they will be       ignored.   2.  The entire TEAP packet will be ignored if other fields (version,       length, flags, etc.) are inconsistent with this specification.3.6.2.  TLS Layer Errors   If the TEAP server detects an error at any point in the TLS handshake   or the TLS layer, the server SHOULD send a TEAP request encapsulating   a TLS record containing the appropriate TLS alert message rather than   immediately terminating the conversation so as to allow the peer to   inform the user of the cause of the failure and possibly allow for a   restart of the conversation.  The peer MUST send a TEAP response to   an alert message.  The EAP-Response packet sent by the peer may   encapsulate a TLS ClientHello handshake message, in which case the   TEAP server MAY allow the TEAP conversation to be restarted, or it   MAY contain a TEAP response with a zero-length message, in which case   the server MUST terminate the conversation with an EAP Failure   packet.  It is up to the TEAP server whether or not to allow   restarts, and, if allowed, how many times the conversation can be   restarted.  Per TLS [RFC5246], TLS restart is only allowed for non-   fatal alerts.  A TEAP server implementing restart capability SHOULD   impose a limit on the number of restarts, so as to protect against   denial-of-service attacks.  If the TEAP server does not allow   restarts, it MUST terminate the conversation with an EAP Failure   packet.   If the TEAP peer detects an error at any point in the TLS layer, the   TEAP peer SHOULD send a TEAP response encapsulating a TLS record   containing the appropriate TLS alert message.  The server may restart   the conversation by sending a TEAP request packet encapsulating theZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   TLS HelloRequest handshake message.  The peer may allow the TEAP   conversation to be restarted, or it may terminate the conversation by   sending a TEAP response with a zero-length message.3.6.3.  Phase 2 Errors   Any time the peer or the server finds a fatal error outside of the   TLS layer during Phase 2 TLV processing, it MUST send a Result TLV of   failure and an Error TLV with the appropriate error code.  For errors   involving the processing of the sequence of exchanges, such as a   violation of TLV rules (e.g., multiple EAP-Payload TLVs), the error   code is Unexpected TLVs Exchanged.  For errors involving a tunnel   compromise, the error code is Tunnel Compromise Error.  Upon sending   a Result TLV with a fatal Error TLV, the sender terminates the TLS   tunnel.  Note that a server will still wait for a message from the   peer after it sends a failure; however, the server does not need to   process the contents of the response message.   For the inner method, retransmission is not needed and SHOULD NOT be   attempted, as the Outer TLS tunnel can be considered a reliable   transport.  If there is a non-fatal error handling the inner method,   instead of silently dropping the inner method request or response and   not responding, the receiving side SHOULD use an Error TLV with error   code Inner Method Error to indicate an error processing the current   inner method.  The side receiving the Error TLV MAY decide to start a   new inner method instead or send back a Result TLV to terminate the   TEAP authentication session.   If a server receives a Result TLV of failure with a fatal Error TLV,   it MUST send a cleartext EAP Failure.  If a peer receives a Result   TLV of failure, it MUST respond with a Result TLV indicating failure.   If the server has sent a Result TLV of failure, it ignores the peer   response, and it MUST send a cleartext EAP Failure.3.7.  Fragmentation   A single TLS record may be up to 16384 octets in length, but a TLS   message may span multiple TLS records, and a TLS certificate message   may, in principle, be as long as 16 MB.  This is larger than the   maximum size for a message on most media types; therefore, it is   desirable to support fragmentation.  Note that in order to protect   against reassembly lockup and denial-of-service attacks, it may be   desirable for an implementation to set a maximum size for one such   group of TLS messages.  Since a typical certificate chain is rarely   longer than a few thousand octets, and no other field is likely to be   anywhere near as long, a reasonable choice of maximum acceptable   message length might be 64 KB.  This is still a fairly large message   packet size so a TEAP implementation MUST provide its own support forZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   fragmentation and reassembly.Section 3.1 of [RFC3748] discusses   determining the MTU usable by EAP, andSection 4.3 discusses   retransmissions in EAP.   Since EAP is a lock-step protocol, fragmentation support can be added   in a simple manner.  In EAP, fragments that are lost or damaged in   transit will be retransmitted, and since sequencing information is   provided by the Identifier field in EAP, there is no need for a   fragment offset field.   TEAP fragmentation support is provided through the addition of flag   bits within the EAP-Response and EAP-Request packets, as well as a   Message Length field of four octets.  Flags include the Length   included (L), More fragments (M), and TEAP Start (S) bits.  The L   flag is set to indicate the presence of the four-octet Message Length   field and MUST be set for the first fragment of a fragmented TLS   message or set of messages.  It MUST NOT be present for any other   message.  The M flag is set on all but the last fragment.  The S flag   is set only within the TEAP start message sent from the EAP server to   the peer.  The Message Length field is four octets and provides the   total length of the message that may be fragmented over the data   fields of multiple packets; this simplifies buffer allocation.   When a TEAP peer receives an EAP-Request packet with the M bit set,   it MUST respond with an EAP-Response with EAP Type of TEAP and no   data.  This serves as a fragment ACK.  The EAP server MUST wait until   it receives the EAP-Response before sending another fragment.  In   order to prevent errors in processing of fragments, the EAP server   MUST increment the Identifier field for each fragment contained   within an EAP-Request, and the peer MUST include this Identifier   value in the fragment ACK contained within the EAP-Response.   Retransmitted fragments will contain the same Identifier value.   Similarly, when the TEAP server receives an EAP-Response with the M   bit set, it responds with an EAP-Request with EAP Type of TEAP and no   data.  This serves as a fragment ACK.  The EAP peer MUST wait until   it receives the EAP-Request before sending another fragment.  In   order to prevent errors in the processing of fragments, the EAP   server MUST increment the Identifier value for each fragment ACK   contained within an EAP-Request, and the peer MUST include this   Identifier value in the subsequent fragment contained within an EAP-   Response.3.8.  Peer Services   Several TEAP services, including server unauthenticated provisioning,   PAC provisioning, certificate provisioning, and channel binding,   depend on the peer trusting the TEAP server.  Peers MUST authenticateZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   the server before these peer services are used.  TEAP peer   implementations MUST have a configuration where authentication fails   if server authentication cannot be achieved.  In many cases, the   server will want to authenticate the peer before providing these   services as well.   TEAP peers MUST track whether or not server authentication has taken   place.  Server authentication results if the peer trusts the provided   server certificate.  Typically, this involves both validating the   certificate to a trust anchor and confirming the entity named by the   certificate is the intended server.  Server authentication also   results when the procedures inSection 3.2 are used to resume a   session in which the peer and server were previously mutually   authenticated.  Alternatively, peer services can be used if an inner   EAP method providing mutual authentication and an Extended Master   Session Key (EMSK) is executed and cryptographic binding with the   EMSK Compound Message Authentication Code (MAC) is correctly   validated (Section 4.2.13).  This is further described inSection 3.8.3.   An additional complication arises when a tunnel method authenticates   multiple parties such as authenticating both the peer machine and the   peer user to the EAP server.  Depending on how authentication is   achieved, only some of these parties may have confidence in it.  For   example, if a strong shared secret is used to mutually authenticate   the user and the EAP server, the machine may not have confidence that   the EAP server is the authenticated party if the machine cannot trust   the user not to disclose the shared secret to an attacker.  In these   cases, the parties who participate in the authentication need to be   considered when evaluating whether to use peer services.3.8.1.  PAC Provisioning   To request provisioning of a PAC, a peer sends a PAC TLV as defined   inSection 4.2.12 containing a PAC Attribute as defined inSection 4.2.12.1 of PAC-Type set to the appropriate value.  The peer   MUST successfully authenticate the EAP server and validate the   Crypto-Binding TLV as defined inSection 4.2.13 before issuing the   request.  The peer MUST send separate PAC TLVs for each type of PAC   it wants to be provisioned.  Multiple PAC TLVs can be sent in the   same packet or in different packets.  The EAP server will send the   PACs after its internal policy has been satisfied, or it MAY ignore   the request or request additional authentications if its policy   dictates.  The server MAY cache the request and provision the PACs   requested after all of its internal policies have been satisfied.  If   a peer receives a PAC with an unknown type, it MUST ignore it.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   A PAC TLV containing a PAC-Acknowledge attribute MUST be sent by the   peer to acknowledge the receipt of the Tunnel PAC.  A PAC TLV   containing a PAC-Acknowledge attribute MUST NOT be used by the peer   to acknowledge the receipt of other types of PACs.  If the peer   receives a PAC TLV with an unknown attribute, it SHOULD ignore the   unknown attribute.3.8.2.  Certificate Provisioning within the Tunnel   Provisioning of a peer's certificate is supported in TEAP by   performing the Simple PKI Request/Response from [RFC5272] using   PKCS#10 and PKCS#7 TLVs, respectively.  A peer sends the Simple PKI   Request using a PKCS#10 CertificateRequest [RFC2986] encoded into the   body of a PKCS#10 TLV (seeSection 4.2.17).  The TEAP server issues a   Simple PKI Response using a PKCS#7 [RFC2315] degenerate "Certificates   Only" message encoded into the body of a PKCS#7 TLV (seeSection 4.2.16), only after an authentication method has run and   provided an identity proof on the peer prior to a certificate is   being issued.   In order to provide linking identity and proof-of-possession by   including information specific to the current authenticated TLS   session within the signed certification request, the peer generating   the request SHOULD obtain the tls-unique value from the TLS subsystem   as defined in "Channel Bindings for TLS" [RFC5929].  The TEAP peer   operations between obtaining the tls_unique value through generation   of the Certification Signing Request (CSR) that contains the current   tls_unique value and the subsequent verification of this value by the   TEAP server are the "phases of the application protocol during which   application-layer authentication occurs" that are protected by the   synchronization interoperability mechanism described in the   interoperability note in "Channel Bindings for TLS" ([RFC5929],   Section 3.1).  When performing renegotiation, TLS   "secure_renegotiation" [RFC5746] MUST be used.   The tls-unique value is base-64-encoded as specified inSection 4 of   [RFC4648], and the resulting string is placed in the certification   request challengePassword field ([RFC2985], Section 5.4.1).  The   challengePassword field is limited to 255 octets (Section 7.4.9 of   [RFC5246] indicates that no existing ciphersuite would result in an   issue with this limitation).  If tls-unique information is not   embedded within the certification request, the challengePassword   field MUST be empty to indicate that the peer did not include the   optional channel-binding information (any value submitted is verified   by the server as tls-unique information).Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   The server SHOULD verify the tls-unique information.  This ensures   that the authenticated TEAP peer is in possession of the private key   used to sign the certification request.   The Simple PKI Request/Response generation and processing rules of   [RFC5272] SHALL apply to TEAP, with the exception of error   conditions.  In the event of an error, the TEAP server SHOULD respond   with an Error TLV using the most descriptive error code possible; it   MAY ignore the PKCS#10 request that generated the error.3.8.3.  Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode   In Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode, an unauthenticated   tunnel is established in Phase 1, and the peer and server negotiate   an EAP method in Phase 2 that supports mutual authentication and key   derivation that is resistant to attacks such as man-in-the-middle and   dictionary attacks.  This provisioning mode enables the bootstrapping   of peers when the peer lacks the ability to authenticate the server   during Phase 1.  This includes both cases in which the ciphersuite   negotiated does not provide authentication and in which the   ciphersuite negotiated provides the authentication but the peer is   unable to validate the identity of the server for some reason.   Upon successful completion of the EAP method in Phase 2, the peer and   server exchange a Crypto-Binding TLV to bind the inner method with   the outer tunnel and ensure that a man-in-the-middle attack has not   been attempted.   Support for the Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode is optional.   The ciphersuite TLS_DH_anon_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA is RECOMMENDED when   using Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode, but other anonymous   ciphersuites MAY be supported as long as the TLS pre-master secret is   generated from contribution from both peers.  Phase 2 EAP methods   used in Server Unauthenticated Provisioning Mode MUST provide mutual   authentication, provide key generation, and be resistant to   dictionary attack.  Example inner methods include EAP-pwd [RFC5931]   and EAP-EKE [RFC6124].3.8.4.  Channel Binding   [RFC6677] defines EAP channel bindings to solve the "lying NAS" and   the "lying provider" problems, using a process in which the EAP peer   gives information about the characteristics of the service provided   by the authenticator to the Authentication, Authorization, and   Accounting (AAA) server protected within the EAP method.  This allows   the server to verify the authenticator is providing information toZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   the peer that is consistent with the information received from this   authenticator as well as the information stored about this   authenticator.   TEAP supports EAP channel binding using the Channel-Binding TLV   defined inSection 4.2.7.  If the TEAP server wants to request the   channel-binding information from the peer, it sends an empty Channel-   Binding TLV to indicate the request.  The peer responds to the   request by sending a Channel-Binding TLV containing a channel-binding   message as defined in [RFC6677].  The server validates the channel-   binding message and sends back a Channel-Binding TLV with a result   code.  If the server didn't initiate the channel-binding request and   the peer still wants to send the channel-binding information to the   server, it can do that by using the Request-Action TLV along with the   Channel-Binding TLV.  The peer MUST only send channel-binding   information after it has successfully authenticated the server and   established the protected tunnel.4.  Message Formats   The following sections describe the message formats used in TEAP.   The fields are transmitted from left to right in network byte order.4.1.  TEAP Message Format   A summary of the TEAP Request/Response packet format is shown below.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Type      |   Flags | Ver |        Message Length         :   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   :         Message Length        |         Outer TLV Length   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   :     Outer TLV Length          |         TLS Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |       Outer TLVs...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Code      The Code field is one octet in length and is defined as follows:         1 Request         2 ResponseZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Identifier      The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses      with requests.  The Identifier field MUST be changed on each      Request packet.  The Identifier field in the Response packet MUST      match the Identifier field from the corresponding request.   Length      The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the EAP      packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, Flags, Ver,      Message Length, TLS Data, and Outer TLVs fields.  Octets outside      the range of the Length field should be treated as Data Link Layer      padding and should be ignored on reception.   Type      55 for TEAP   Flags          0 1 2 3 4         +-+-+-+-+-+         |L M S O R|         +-+-+-+-+-+      L  Length included; set to indicate the presence of the four-octet         Message Length field.  It MUST be present for the first         fragment of a fragmented message.  It MUST NOT be present for         any other message.      M  More fragments; set on all but the last fragment.      S  TEAP start; set in a TEAP Start message sent from the server to         the peer.      O  Outer TLV length included; set to indicate the presence of the         four-octet Outer TLV Length field.  It MUST be present only in         the initial request and response messages.  If the initial         message is fragmented, then it MUST be present only on the         first fragment.      R  Reserved (MUST be zero and ignored upon receipt)   Ver      This field contains the version of the protocol.  This document      describes version 1 (001 in binary) of TEAP.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Message Length      The Message Length field is four octets and is present only if the      L bit is set.  This field provides the total length of the message      that may be fragmented over the data fields of multiple packets.   Outer TLV Length      The Outer TLV Length field is four octets and is present only if      the O bit is set.  This field provides the total length of the      Outer TLVs if present.   TLS Data      When the TLS Data field is present, it consists of an encapsulated      TLS packet in TLS record format.  A TEAP packet with Flags and      Version fields, but with zero length TLS Data field, is used to      indicate TEAP acknowledgement for either a fragmented message, a      TLS Alert message, or a TLS Finished message.   Outer TLVs      The Outer TLVs consist of the optional data used to help establish      the TLS tunnel in TLV format.  They are only allowed in the first      two messages in the TEAP protocol.  That is the first EAP-server-      to-peer message and first peer-to-EAP-server message.  The start      of the Outer TLVs can be derived from the EAP Length field and      Outer TLV Length field.4.2.  TEAP TLV Format and Support   The TLVs defined here are TLV objects.  The TLV objects could be used   to carry arbitrary parameters between an EAP peer and EAP server   within the protected TLS tunnel.   The EAP peer may not necessarily implement all the TLVs supported by   the EAP server.  To allow for interoperability, TLVs are designed to   allow an EAP server to discover if a TLV is supported by the EAP peer   using the NAK TLV.  The mandatory bit in a TLV indicates whether   support of the TLV is required.  If the peer or server does not   support a TLV marked mandatory, then it MUST send a NAK TLV in the   response, and all the other TLVs in the message MUST be ignored.  If   an EAP peer or server finds an unsupported TLV that is marked as   optional, it can ignore the unsupported TLV.  It MUST NOT send a NAK   TLV for a TLV that is not marked mandatory.  If all TLVs in a message   are marked optional and none are understood by the peer, then a NAK   TLV or Result TLV could be sent to the other side in order to   continue the conversation.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Note that a peer or server may support a TLV with the mandatory bit   set but may not understand the contents.  The appropriate response to   a supported TLV with content that is not understood is defined by the   individual TLV specification.   EAP implementations compliant with this specification MUST support   TLV exchanges as well as the processing of mandatory/optional   settings on the TLV.  Implementations conforming to this   specification MUST support the following TLVs:      Authority-ID TLV      Identity-Type TLV      Result TLV      NAK TLV      Error TLV      Request-Action TLV      EAP-Payload TLV      Intermediate-Result TLV      Crypto-Binding TLV      Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV      Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLVZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20144.2.1.  General TLV Format   TLVs are defined as described below.  The fields are transmitted from   left to right.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|            TLV Type       |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                              Value...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0  Optional TLV      1  Mandatory TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      A 14-bit field, denoting the TLV type.  Allocated types include:      0  Unassigned      1  Authority-ID TLV (Section 4.2.2)      2  Identity-Type TLV (Section 4.2.3)      3  Result TLV (Section 4.2.4)      4  NAK TLV (Section 4.2.5)      5  Error TLV (Section 4.2.6)      6  Channel-Binding TLV (Section 4.2.7)      7  Vendor-Specific TLV (Section 4.2.8)      8  Request-Action TLV (Section 4.2.9)      9  EAP-Payload TLV (Section 4.2.10)      10 Intermediate-Result TLV (Section 4.2.11)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      11 PAC TLV (Section 4.2.12)      12 Crypto-Binding TLV (Section 4.2.13)      13 Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV (Section 4.2.14)      14 Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV (Section 4.2.15)      15 PKCS#7 TLV (Section 4.2.16)      16 PKCS#10 TLV (Section 4.2.17)      17 Trusted-Server-Root TLV (Section 4.2.18)   Length      The length of the Value field in octets.   Value      The value of the TLV.4.2.2.  Authority-ID TLV    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                              ID...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      1 - Authority-ID   Length      The Length field is two octets and contains the length of the ID      field in octets.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   ID      Hint of the identity of the server to help the peer to match the      credentials available for the server.  It should be unique across      the deployment.4.2.3.  Identity-Type TLV   The Identity-Type TLV allows an EAP server to send a hint to help the   EAP peer select the right type of identity, for example, user or   machine.  TEAPv1 implementations MUST support this TLV.  Only one   Identity-Type TLV SHOULD be present in the TEAP request or response   packet.  The Identity-Type TLV request MUST come with an EAP-Payload   TLV or Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV.  If the EAP peer does have an   identity corresponding to the identity type requested, then the peer   SHOULD respond with an Identity-Type TLV with the requested type.  If   the Identity-Type field does not contain one of the known values or   if the EAP peer does not have an identity corresponding to the   identity type requested, then the peer SHOULD respond with an   Identity-Type TLV with the one of available identity types.  If the   server receives an identity type in the response that does not match   the requested type, then the peer does not possess the requested   credential type, and the server SHOULD proceed with authentication   for the credential type proposed by the peer, proceed with requesting   another credential type, or simply apply the network policy based on   the configured policy, e.g., sending Result TLV with Failure.   The Identity-Type TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |         Identity-Type         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 (Optional)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      2 - Identity-Type TLVZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Length      2   Identity-Type      The Identity-Type field is two octets.  Values include:      1  User      2  Machine4.2.4.  Result TLV   The Result TLV provides support for acknowledged success and failure   messages for protected termination within TEAP.  If the Status field   does not contain one of the known values, then the peer or EAP server   MUST treat this as a fatal error of Unexpected TLVs Exchanged.  The   behavior of the Result TLV is further discussed in Sections3.3.3 and   3.6.3.  A Result TLV indicating failure MUST NOT be accompanied by   the following TLVs: NAK, EAP-Payload TLV, or Crypto-Binding TLV.  The   Result TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             Status            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      3 - Result TLV   Length      2Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Status      The Status field is two octets.  Values include:      1  Success      2  Failure4.2.5.  NAK TLV   The NAK TLV allows a peer to detect TLVs that are not supported by   the other peer.  A TEAP packet can contain 0 or more NAK TLVs.  A NAK   TLV should not be accompanied by other TLVs.  A NAK TLV MUST NOT be   sent in response to a message containing a Result TLV, instead a   Result TLV of failure should be sent indicating failure and an Error   TLV of Unexpected TLVs Exchanged.  The NAK TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                          Vendor-Id                            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            NAK-Type           |           TLVs...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      4 - NAK TLV   Length      >=6   Vendor-Id      The Vendor-Id field is four octets and contains the Vendor-Id of      the TLV that was not supported.  The high-order octet is 0, and      the low-order three octets are the Structure of ManagementZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      Information (SMI) Network Management Private Enterprise Number of      the Vendor in network byte order.  The Vendor-Id field MUST be      zero for TLVs that are not Vendor-Specific TLVs.   NAK-Type      The NAK-Type field is two octets.  The field contains the type of      the TLV that was not supported.  A TLV of this type MUST have been      included in the previous packet.   TLVs      This field contains a list of zero or more TLVs, each of which      MUST NOT have the mandatory bit set.  These optional TLVs are for      future extensibility to communicate why the offending TLV was      determined to be unsupported.4.2.6.  Error TLV   The Error TLV allows an EAP peer or server to indicate errors to the   other party.  A TEAP packet can contain 0 or more Error TLVs.  The   Error-Code field describes the type of error.  Error codes 1-999   represent successful outcomes (informative messages), 1000-1999   represent warnings, and 2000-2999 represent fatal errors.  A fatal   Error TLV MUST be accompanied by a Result TLV indicating failure, and   the conversation is terminated as described inSection 3.6.3.   Many of the error codes below refer to errors in inner method   processing that may be retrieved if made available by the inner   method.  Implementations MUST take care that error messages do not   reveal too much information to an attacker.  For example, the usage   of error message 1031 (User account credentials incorrect) is NOT   RECOMMENDED, because it allows an attacker to determine valid   usernames by differentiating this response from other responses.  It   should only be used for troubleshooting purposes.   The Error TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                           Error-Code                          |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      5 - Error TLV   Length      4   Error-Code      The Error-Code field is four octets.  Currently defined values for      Error-Code include:      1     User account expires soon      2     User account credential expires soon      3     User account authorizations change soon      4     Clock skew detected      5     Contact administrator      6     User account credentials change required      1001  Inner Method Error      1002  Unspecified authentication infrastructure problem      1003  Unspecified authentication failure      1004  Unspecified authorization failure      1005  User account credentials unavailable      1006  User account expired      1007  User account locked: try again later      1008  User account locked: admin intervention requiredZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      1009  Authentication infrastructure unavailable      1010  Authentication infrastructure not trusted      1011  Clock skew too great      1012  Invalid inner realm      1013  Token out of sync: administrator intervention required      1014  Token out of sync: PIN change required      1015  Token revoked      1016  Tokens exhausted      1017  Challenge expired      1018  Challenge algorithm mismatch      1019  Client certificate not supplied      1020  Client certificate rejected      1021  Realm mismatch between inner and outer identity      1022  Unsupported Algorithm In Certificate Signing Request      1023  Unsupported Extension In Certificate Signing Request      1024  Bad Identity In Certificate Signing Request      1025  Bad Certificate Signing Request      1026  Internal CA Error      1027  General PKI Error      1028  Inner method's channel-binding data required but not            supplied      1029  Inner method's channel-binding data did not include required            information      1030  Inner method's channel binding failed      1031  User account credentials incorrect [USAGE NOT RECOMMENDED]Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      2001  Tunnel Compromise Error      2002  Unexpected TLVs Exchanged4.2.7.  Channel-Binding TLV   The Channel-Binding TLV provides a mechanism for carrying channel-   binding data from the peer to the EAP server and a channel-binding   response from the EAP server to the peer as described in [RFC6677].   TEAPv1 implementations MAY support this TLV, which cannot be   responded to with a NAK TLV.  If the Channel-Binding data field does   not contain one of the known values or if the EAP server does not   support this TLV, then the server MUST ignore the value.  The   Channel-Binding TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Data ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 (Optional)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      6 - Channel-Binding TLV   Length      variable   Data      The data field contains a channel-binding message as defined inSection 5.3 of [RFC6677].Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20144.2.8.  Vendor-Specific TLV   The Vendor-Specific TLV is available to allow vendors to support   their own extended attributes not suitable for general usage.  A   Vendor-Specific TLV attribute can contain one or more TLVs, referred   to as Vendor TLVs.  The TLV type of a Vendor-TLV is defined by the   vendor.  All the Vendor TLVs inside a single Vendor-Specific TLV   belong to the same vendor.  There can be multiple Vendor-Specific   TLVs from different vendors in the same message.  Error handling in   the Vendor TLV could use the vendor's own specific error-handling   mechanism or use the standard TEAP error codes defined.   Vendor TLVs may be optional or mandatory.  Vendor TLVs sent with   Result TLVs MUST be marked as optional.  If the Vendor-Specific TLV   is marked as mandatory, then it is expected that the receiving side   needs to recognize the vendor ID, parse all Vendor TLVs within, and   deal with error handling within the Vendor-Specific TLV as defined by   the vendor.   The Vendor-Specific TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                          Vendor-Id                            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                         Vendor TLVs....   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 or 1   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      7 - Vendor-Specific TLV   Length      4 + cumulative length of all included Vendor TLVs   Vendor-IdZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      The Vendor-Id field is four octets and contains the Vendor-Id of      the TLV.  The high-order octet is 0, and the low-order 3 octets      are the SMI Network Management Private Enterprise Number of the      Vendor in network byte order.   Vendor TLVs      This field is of indefinite length.  It contains Vendor-Specific      TLVs, in a format defined by the vendor.4.2.9.  Request-Action TLV   The Request-Action TLV MAY be sent by both the peer and the server in   response to a successful or failed Result TLV.  It allows the peer or   server to request the other side to negotiate additional EAP methods   or process TLVs specified in the response packet.  The receiving side   MUST process this TLV.  The processing for the TLV is as follows:      The receiving entity MAY choose to process any of the TLVs that      are included in the message.      If the receiving entity chooses NOT to process any TLV in the      list, then it sends back a Result TLV with the same code in the      Status field of the Request-Action TLV.      If multiple Request-Action TLVs are in the request, the session      can continue if any of the TLVs in any Request-Action TLV are      processed.      If multiple Request-Action TLVs are in the request and none of      them is processed, then the most fatal status should be used in      the Result TLV returned.  If a status code in the Request-Action      TLV is not understood by the receiving entity, then it should be      treated as a fatal error.      After processing the TLVs or EAP method in the request, another      round of Result TLV exchange would occur to synchronize the final      status on both sides.   The peer or the server MAY send multiple Request-Action TLVs to the   other side.  Two Request-Action TLVs MUST NOT occur in the same TEAP   packet if they have the same Status value.  The order of processing   multiple Request-Action TLVs is implementation dependent.  If the   receiving side processes the optional (non-fatal) items first, it is   possible that the fatal items will disappear at a later time.  If the   receiving side processes the fatal items first, the communication   time will be shorter.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   The peer or the server MAY return a new set of Request-Action TLVs   after one or more of the requested items has been processed and the   other side has signaled it wants to end the EAP conversation.   The Request-Action TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     Status   |      Action    |                TLVs....   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+--+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      8 - Request-Action TLV   Length      2 + cumulative length of all included TLVs   Status      The Status field is one octet.  This indicates the result if the      server does not process the action requested by the peer.  Values      include:      1  Success      2  Failure   Action      The Action field is one octet.  Values include:      1  Process-TLV      2  Negotiate-EAPZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   TLVs      This field is of indefinite length.  It contains TLVs that the      peer wants the server to process.4.2.10.  EAP-Payload TLV   To allow piggybacking an EAP request or response with other TLVs, the   EAP-Payload TLV is defined, which includes an encapsulated EAP packet   and a list of optional TLVs.  The optional TLVs are provided for   future extensibility to provide hints about the current EAP   authentication.  Only one EAP-Payload TLV is allowed in a message.   The EAP-Payload TLV is defined as follows:   0                   1                   2                   3   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                          EAP packet...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                             TLVs...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      9 - EAP-Payload TLV   Length      length of embedded EAP packet + cumulative length of additional      TLVs   EAP packet      This field contains a complete EAP packet, including the EAP      header (Code, Identifier, Length, Type) fields.  The length of      this field is determined by the Length field of the encapsulated      EAP packet.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   TLVs      This (optional) field contains a list of TLVs associated with the      EAP packet field.  The TLVs MUST NOT have the mandatory bit set.      The total length of this field is equal to the Length field of the      EAP-Payload TLV, minus the Length field in the EAP header of the      EAP packet field.4.2.11.  Intermediate-Result TLV   The Intermediate-Result TLV provides support for acknowledged   intermediate Success and Failure messages between multiple inner EAP   methods within EAP.  An Intermediate-Result TLV indicating success   MUST be accompanied by a Crypto-Binding TLV.  The optional TLVs   associated with this TLV are provided for future extensibility to   provide hints about the current result.  The Intermediate-Result TLV   is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             Status            |        TLVs...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      10 - Intermediate-Result TLV   Length      2 + cumulative length of the embedded associated TLVs   Status      The Status field is two octets.  Values include:      1  SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      2  Failure   TLVs      This field is of indeterminate length and contains zero or more of      the TLVs associated with the Intermediate Result TLV.  The TLVs in      this field MUST NOT have the mandatory bit set.4.2.12.  PAC TLV Format   The PAC TLV provides support for provisioning the Protected Access   Credential (PAC).  The PAC TLV carries the PAC and related   information within PAC attribute fields.  Additionally, the PAC TLV   MAY be used by the peer to request provisioning of a PAC of the type   specified in the PAC-Type PAC attribute.  The PAC TLV MUST only be   used in a protected tunnel providing encryption and integrity   protection.  A general PAC TLV format is defined as follows:   0                   1                   2                   3   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                        PAC Attributes...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 or 1   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      11 - PAC TLV   Length      Two octets containing the length of the PAC Attributes field in      octets.   PAC Attributes      A list of PAC attributes in the TLV format.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20144.2.12.1.  Formats for PAC Attributes   Each PAC attribute in a PAC TLV is formatted as a TLV defined as   follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                              Value...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Type      The Type field is two octets, denoting the attribute type.      Allocated types include:         1 - PAC-Key         2 - PAC-Opaque         3 - PAC-Lifetime         4 - A-ID         5 - I-ID         6 - Reserved         7 - A-ID-Info         8 - PAC-Acknowledgement         9 - PAC-Info         10 - PAC-Type   Length      Two octets containing the length of the Value field in octets.   Value      The value of the PAC attribute.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20144.2.12.2.  PAC-Key   The PAC-Key is a secret key distributed in a PAC attribute of type   PAC-Key.  The PAC-Key attribute is included within the PAC TLV   whenever the server wishes to issue or renew a PAC that is bound to a   key such as a Tunnel PAC.  The key is a randomly generated octet   string that is 48 octets in length.  The generator of this key is the   issuer of the credential, which is identified by the Authority   Identifier (A-ID).    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   ~                              Key                              ~   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Type      1 - PAC-Key   Length      2-octet length indicating the length of the key.   Key      The value of the PAC-Key.4.2.12.3.  PAC-Opaque   The PAC-Opaque attribute is included within the PAC TLV whenever the   server wishes to issue or renew a PAC.   The PAC-Opaque is opaque to the peer, and thus the peer MUST NOT   attempt to interpret it.  A peer that has been issued a PAC-Opaque by   a server stores that data and presents it back to the server   according to its PAC-Type.  The Tunnel PAC is used in the ClientHello   SessionTicket extension field defined in [RFC5077].  If a peer has   opaque data issued to it by multiple servers, then it stores the data   issued by each server separately according to the A-ID.  This   requirement allows the peer to maintain and use each opaque datum as   an independent PAC pairing, with a PAC-Key mapping to a PAC-Opaque   identified by the A-ID.  As there is a one-to-one correspondence   between the PAC-Key and PAC-Opaque, the peer determines the PAC-KeyZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   and corresponding PAC-Opaque based on the A-ID provided in the   TEAP/Start message and the A-ID provided in the PAC-Info when it was   provisioned with a PAC-Opaque.   The PAC-Opaque attribute format is summarized as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                              Value ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Type      2 - PAC-Opaque   Length      The Length field is two octets, which contains the length of the      Value field in octets.   Value      The Value field contains the actual data for the PAC-Opaque.  It      is specific to the server implementation.4.2.12.4.  PAC-Info   The PAC-Info is comprised of a set of PAC attributes as defined inSection 4.2.12.1.  The PAC-Info attribute MUST contain the A-ID,   A-ID-Info, and PAC-Type attributes.  Other attributes MAY be included   in the PAC-Info to provide more information to the peer.  The   PAC-Info attribute MUST NOT contain the PAC-Key, PAC-Acknowledgement,   PAC-Info, or PAC-Opaque attributes.  The PAC-Info attribute is   included within the PAC TLV whenever the server wishes to issue or   renew a PAC.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                           Attributes...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Type      9 - PAC-Info   Length      2-octet field containing the length of the Attributes field in      octets.   Attributes      The Attributes field contains a list of PAC attributes.  Each      mandatory and optional field type is defined as follows:      3 - PAC-Lifetime         This is a 4-octet quantity representing the expiration time of         the credential expressed as the number of seconds, excluding         leap seconds, after midnight UTC, January 1, 1970.  This         attribute MAY be provided to the peer as part of the PAC-Info.      4 - A-ID         The A-ID is the identity of the authority that issued the PAC.         The A-ID is intended to be unique across all issuing servers to         avoid namespace collisions.  The A-ID is used by the peer to         determine which PAC to employ.  The A-ID is treated as an         opaque octet string.  This attribute MUST be included in the         PAC-Info attribute.  The A-ID MUST match the Authority-ID the         server used to establish the tunnel.  One method for generating         the A-ID is to use a high-quality random number generator to         generate a random number.  An alternate method would be to take         the hash of the public key or public key certificate belonging         to a server represented by the A-ID.      5 - I-ID         Initiator Identifier (I-ID) is the peer identity associated         with the credential.  This identity is derived from the inner         authentication or from the client-side authentication during         tunnel establishment if inner authentication is not used.  The         server employs the I-ID in the TEAP Phase 2 conversation to         validate that the same peer identity used to execute TEAP Phase         1 is also used in at minimum one inner authentication in TEAP         Phase 2.  If the server is enforcing the I-ID validation on the         inner authentication, then the I-ID MUST be included in the         PAC-Info, to enable the peer to also enforce a unique PAC for         each unique user.  If the I-ID is missing from the PAC-Info, itZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014         is assumed that the Tunnel PAC can be used for multiple users         and the peer will not enforce the unique-Tunnel-PAC-per-user         policy.      7 - A-ID-Info         Authority Identifier Information is intended to provide a user-         friendly name for the A-ID.  It may contain the enterprise name         and server name in a human-readable format.  This TLV serves as         an aid to the peer to better inform the end user about the         A-ID.  The name is encoded in UTF-8 [RFC3629] format.  This         attribute MUST be included in the PAC-Info.      10 - PAC-Type         The PAC-Type is intended to provide the type of PAC.  This         attribute SHOULD be included in the PAC-Info.  If the PAC-Type         is not present, then it defaults to a Tunnel PAC (Type 1).4.2.12.5.  PAC-Acknowledgement TLV   The PAC-Acknowledgement is used to acknowledge the receipt of the   Tunnel PAC by the peer.  The peer includes the PAC-Acknowledgement   TLV in a PAC TLV sent to the server to indicate the result of the   processing and storing of a newly provisioned Tunnel PAC.  This TLV   is only used when Tunnel PAC is provisioned.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Result             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Type      8 - PAC-Acknowledgement   Length      The length of this field is two octets containing a value of 2.   Result      The resulting value MUST be one of the following:         1 - SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014         2 - Failure4.2.12.6.  PAC-Type TLV   The PAC-Type TLV is a TLV intended to specify the PAC-Type.  It is   included in a PAC TLV sent by the peer to request PAC provisioning   from the server.  Its format is described below:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |            Type               |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |         PAC-Type              |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Type      10 - PAC-Type   Length      2-octet field with a value of 2.   PAC-Type      This 2-octet field defines the type of PAC being requested or      provisioned.  The following values are defined:               1 - Tunnel PAC4.2.13.  Crypto-Binding TLV   The Crypto-Binding TLV is used to prove that both the peer and server   participated in the tunnel establishment and sequence of   authentications.  It also provides verification of the TEAP type,   version negotiated, and Outer TLVs exchanged before the TLS tunnel   establishment.   The Crypto-Binding TLV MUST be exchanged and verified before the   final Result TLV exchange, regardless of whether there is an inner   EAP method authentication or not.  It MUST be included with the   Intermediate-Result TLV to perform cryptographic binding after each   successful EAP method in a sequence of EAP methods, before proceeding   with another inner EAP method.  The Crypto-Binding TLV is valid only   if the following checks pass:   o  The Crypto-Binding TLV version is supported.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   o  The MAC verifies correctly.   o  The received version in the Crypto-Binding TLV matches the version      sent by the receiver during the EAP version negotiation.   o  The subtype is set to the correct value.   If any of the above checks fails, then the TLV is invalid.  An   invalid Crypto-Binding TLV is a fatal error and is handled as   described inSection 3.6.3   The Crypto-Binding TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    Reserved   |    Version    |  Received Ver.| Flags|Sub-Type|   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   ~                             Nonce                             ~   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   ~                   EMSK Compound MAC                           ~   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   ~                    MSK Compound MAC                           ~   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      Mandatory, set to one (1)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      12 - Crypto-Binding TLV   Length      76Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Reserved      Reserved, set to zero (0)   Version      The Version field is a single octet, which is set to the version      of Crypto-Binding TLV the TEAP method is using.  For an      implementation compliant with this version of TEAP, the version      number MUST be set to one (1).   Received Ver      The Received Ver field is a single octet and MUST be set to the      TEAP version number received during version negotiation.  Note      that this field only provides protection against downgrade      attacks, where a version of EAP requiring support for this TLV is      required on both sides.   Flags      The Flags field is four bits.  Defined values include      1  EMSK Compound MAC is present      2  MSK Compound MAC is present      3  Both EMSK and MSK Compound MAC are present   Sub-Type      The Sub-Type field is four bits.  Defined values include      0  Binding Request      1  Binding Response   Nonce      The Nonce field is 32 octets.  It contains a 256-bit nonce that is      temporally unique, used for Compound MAC key derivation at each      end.  The nonce in a request MUST have its least significant bit      set to zero (0), and the nonce in a response MUST have the same      value as the request nonce except the least significant bit MUST      be set to one (1).Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   EMSK Compound MAC      The EMSK Compound MAC field is 20 octets.  This can be the Server      MAC (B1_MAC) or the Client MAC (B2_MAC).  The computation of the      MAC is described inSection 5.3.   MSK Compound MAC      The MSK Compound MAC field is 20 octets.  This can be the Server      MAC (B1_MAC) or the Client MAC (B2_MAC).  The computation of the      MAC is described inSection 5.3.4.2.14.  Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV   The Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV is used by the authentication server   to request a username and password from the peer.  It contains an   optional user prompt message for the request.  The peer is expected   to obtain the username and password and send them in a Basic-   Password-Auth-Resp TLV.   The Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   Prompt ....   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 (Optional)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      13 - Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV   Length      variableZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Prompt      optional user prompt message in UTF-8 [RFC3629] format4.2.15.  Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV   The Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV is used by the peer to respond to a   Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV with a username and password.  The TLV   contains a username and password.  The username and password are in   UTF-8 [RFC3629] format.   The Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   Userlen     |             Username   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+         ...     Username    ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   Passlen     |             Password   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+         ...     Password    ...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   M      0 (Optional)   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      14 - Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV   Length      variable   Userlen      Length of Username field in octetsZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Username      Username in UTF-8 [RFC3629] format   Passlen      Length of Password field in octets   Password      Password in UTF-8 [RFC3629] format4.2.16.  PKCS#7 TLV   The PKCS#7 TLV is used by the EAP server to deliver certificate(s) to   the peer.  The format consists of a certificate or certificate chain   in binary DER encoding [X.690] in a degenerate Certificates Only   PKCS#7 SignedData Content as defined in [RFC5652].   When used in response to a Trusted-Server-Root TLV request from the   peer, the EAP server MUST send the PKCS#7 TLV inside a Trusted-   Server-Root TLV.  When used in response to a PKCS#10 certificate   enrollment request from the peer, the EAP server MUST send the PKCS#7   TLV without a Trusted-Server-Root TLV.  The PKCS#7 TLV is always   marked as optional, which cannot be responded to with a NAK TLV.   TEAP implementations that support the Trusted-Server-Root TLV or the   PKCS#10 TLV MUST support this TLV.  Peers MUST NOT assume that the   certificates in a PKCS#7 TLV are in any order.   TEAP servers MAY return self-signed certificates.  Peers that handle   self-signed certificates or trust anchors MUST NOT implicitly trust   these certificates merely due to their presence in the certificate   bag.  Note: Peers are advised to take great care in deciding whether   to use a received certificate as a trust anchor.  The authenticated   nature of the tunnel in which a PKCS#7 bag is received can provide a   level of authenticity to the certificates contained therein.  Peers   are advised to take into account the implied authority of the EAP   server and to constrain the trust it can achieve through the trust   anchor received in a PKCS#7 TLV.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   The PKCS#7 TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |           PKCS#7 Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-   M      0 - Optional TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      15 - PKCS#7 TLV   Length      The length of the PKCS#7 Data field.   PKCS#7 Data      This field contains the DER-encoded X.509 certificate or      certificate chain in a Certificates-Only PKCS#7 SignedData      message.4.2.17.  PKCS#10 TLV   The PKCS#10 TLV is used by the peer to initiate the "simple PKI"   Request/Response from [RFC5272].  The format of the request is as   specified inSection 6.4 of [RFC4945].  The PKCS#10 TLV is always   marked as optional, which cannot be responded to with a NAK TLV.   The PKCS#10 TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |           PKCS#10 Data...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 54]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   M      0 - Optional TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      16 - PKCS#10 TLV   Length      The length of the PKCS#10 Data field.   PKCS#10 Data      This field contains the DER-encoded PKCS#10 certificate request.4.2.18.  Trusted-Server-Root TLV   Trusted-Server-Root TLV facilitates the request and delivery of a   trusted server root certificate.  The Trusted-Server-Root TLV can be   exchanged in regular TEAP authentication mode or provisioning mode.   The Trusted-Server-Root TLV is always marked as optional and cannot   be responded to with a Negative Acknowledgement (NAK) TLV.  The   Trusted-Server-Root TLV MUST only be sent as an Inner TLV (inside the   protection of the tunnel).   After the peer has determined that it has successfully authenticated   the EAP server and validated the Crypto-Binding TLV, it MAY send one   or more Trusted-Server-Root TLVs (marked as optional) to request the   trusted server root certificates from the EAP server.  The EAP server   MAY send one or more root certificates with a Public Key   Cryptographic System #7 (PKCS#7) TLV inside the Trusted-Server-Root   TLV.  The EAP server MAY also choose not to honor the request.   The Trusted-Server-Root TLV allows the peer to send a request to the   EAP server for a list of trusted roots.  The server may respond with   one or more root certificates in PKCS#7 [RFC2315] format.   If the EAP server sets the credential format to PKCS#7-Server-   Certificate-Root, then the Trusted-Server-Root TLV should contain the   root of the certificate chain of the certificate issued to the EAP   server packaged in a PKCS#7 TLV.  If the server certificate is a   self-signed certificate, then the root is the self-signed   certificate.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 55]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   If the Trusted-Server-Root TLV credential format contains a value   unknown to the peer, then the EAP peer should ignore the TLV.   The Trusted-Server-Root TLV is defined as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |M|R|         TLV Type          |            Length             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |           Credential-Format   |     Cred TLVs...   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-   M      0 - Optional TLV   R      Reserved, set to zero (0)   TLV Type      17 - Trusted-Server-Root TLV   Length      >=2 octets   Credential-Format      The Credential-Format field is two octets.  Values include:      1 - PKCS#7-Server-Certificate-Root   Cred TLVs      This field is of indefinite length.  It contains TLVs associated      with the credential format.  The peer may leave this field empty      when using this TLV to request server trust roots.4.3.  TLV Rules   To save round trips, multiple TLVs can be sent in a single TEAP   packet.  However, multiple EAP Payload TLVs, multiple Basic Password   Authentication TLVs, or an EAP Payload TLV with a Basic Password   Authentication TLV within one single TEAP packet is not supported in   this version and MUST NOT be sent.  If the peer or EAP serverZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 56]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   receives multiple EAP Payload TLVs, then it MUST terminate the   connection with the Result TLV.  The order of TLVs in TEAP does not   matter, except one should always process the Identity-Type TLV before   processing the EAP TLV or Basic Password Authentication TLV as the   Identity-Type TLV is a hint to the type of identity that is to be   authenticated.   The following define the meaning of the table entries in the sections   below:   0     This TLV MUST NOT be present in the message.   0+    Zero or more instances of this TLV MAY be present in the         message.   0-1   Zero or one instance of this TLV MAY be present in the message.   1     Exactly one instance of this TLV MUST be present in the         message.4.3.1.  Outer TLVs   The following table provides a guide to which TLVs may be included in   the TEAP packet outside the TLS channel, which kind of packets, and   in what quantity:   Request  Response    Success   Failure   TLVs   0-1      0           0         0         Authority-ID   0-1      0-1         0         0         Identity-Type   0+       0+          0         0         Vendor-Specific   Outer TLVs MUST be marked as optional.  Vendor-TLVs inside Vendor-   Specific TLV MUST be marked as optional when included in Outer TLVs.   Outer TLVs MUST NOT be included in messages after the first two TEAP   messages sent by peer and EAP-server respectively.  That is the first   EAP-server-to-peer message and first peer-to-EAP-server message.  If   the message is fragmented, the whole set of messages is counted as   one message.  If Outer TLVs are included in messages after the first   two TEAP messages, they MUST be ignored.4.3.2.  Inner TLVs   The following table provides a guide to which Inner TLVs may be   encapsulated in TLS in TEAP Phase 2, in which kind of packets, and in   what quantity.  The messages are as follows: Request is a TEAP   Request, Response is a TEAP Response, Success is a message containing   a successful Result TLV, and Failure is a message containing a failed   Result TLV.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 57]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Request  Response    Success   Failure   TLVs   0-1      0-1         0         0         Identity-Type   0-1      0-1         1         1         Result   0+       0+          0         0         NAK   0+       0+          0+        0+        Error   0-1      0-1         0         0         Channel-Binding   0+       0+          0+        0+        Vendor-Specific   0+       0+          0+        0+        Request-Action   0-1      0-1         0         0         EAP-Payload   0-1      0-1         0-1       0-1       Intermediate-Result   0+       0+          0+        0         PAC TLV   0-1      0-1         0-1       0-1       Crypto-Binding   0-1      0           0         0         Basic-Password-Auth-Req   0        0-1         0         0         Basic-Password-Auth-Resp   0-1      0           0-1       0         PKCS#7   0        0-1         0         0         PKCS#10   0-1      0-1         0-1       0         Trusted-Server-Root   NOTE: Vendor TLVs (included in Vendor-Specific TLVs) sent with a   Result TLV MUST be marked as optional.5.  Cryptographic Calculations   For key derivation and crypto-binding, TEAP uses the Pseudorandom   Function (PRF) and MAC algorithms negotiated in the underlying TLS   session.  Since these algorithms depend on the TLS version and   ciphersuite, TEAP implementations need a mechanism to determine the   version and ciphersuite in use for a particular session.  The   implementation can then use this information to determine which PRF   and MAC algorithm to use.5.1.  TEAP Authentication Phase 1: Key Derivations   With TEAPv1, the TLS master secret is generated as specified in TLS.   If a PAC is used, then the master secret is obtained as described in   [RFC5077].   TEAPv1 makes use of the TLS Keying Material Exporters defined in   [RFC5705] to derive the session_key_seed.  The label used in the   derivation is "EXPORTER: teap session key seed".  The length of the   session key seed material is 40 octets.  No context data is used in   the export process.   The session_key_seed is used by the TEAP authentication Phase 2   conversation to both cryptographically bind the inner method(s) to   the tunnel as well as generate the resulting TEAP session keys.  The   other TLS keying materials are derived and used as defined in   [RFC5246].Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 58]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20145.2.  Intermediate Compound Key Derivations   The session_key_seed derived as part of TEAP Phase 2 is used in TEAP   Phase 2 to generate an Intermediate Compound Key (IMCK) used to   verify the integrity of the TLS tunnel after each successful inner   authentication and in the generation of Master Session Key (MSK) and   Extended Master Session Key (EMSK) defined in [RFC3748].  Note that   the IMCK MUST be recalculated after each successful inner EAP method.   The first step in these calculations is the generation of the base   compound key, IMCK[n] from the session_key_seed, and any session keys   derived from the successful execution of nth inner EAP methods.  The   inner EAP method(s) may provide Inner Method Session Keys (IMSKs),   IMSK1..IMSKn, corresponding to inner method 1 through n.   If an inner method supports export of an Extended Master Session Key   (EMSK), then the IMSK SHOULD be derived from the EMSK as defined in   [RFC5295].  The usage label used is "TEAPbindkey@ietf.org", and the   length is 64 octets.  Optional data parameter is not used in the   derivation.     IMSK = First 32 octets of TLS-PRF(EMSK, "TEAPbindkey@ietf.org" |     "\0" | 64)     where "|" denotes concatenation, EMSK is the EMSK from the inner     method, "TEAPbindkey@ietf.org" consists the ASCII value for the     label "TEAPbindkey@ietf.org" (without quotes), "\0" = is a NULL     octet (0x00 in hex), length is the 2-octet unsigned integer in     network byte order, and TLS-PRF is the PRF negotiated as part of     TLS handshake [RFC5246].   If an inner method does not support export of an Extended Master   Session Key (EMSK), then IMSK is the MSK of the inner method.  The   MSK is truncated at 32 octets if it is longer than 32 octets or   padded to a length of 32 octets with zeros if it is less than 32   octets.   However, it's possible that the peer and server sides might not have   the same capability to export EMSK.  In order to maintain maximum   flexibility while prevent downgrading attack, the following mechanism   is in place.   On the sender of the Crypto-Binding TLV side:     If the EMSK is not available, then the sender computes the Compound     MAC using the MSK of the inner method.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 59]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014     If the EMSK is available and the sender's policy accepts MSK-based     MAC, then the sender computes two Compound MAC values.  The first     is computed with the EMSK.  The second one is computed using the     MSK.  Both MACs are then sent to the other side.     If the EMSK is available but the sender's policy does not allow     downgrading to MSK-generated MAC, then the sender SHOULD only send     EMSK-based MAC.   On the receiver of the Crypto-Binding TLV side:     If the EMSK is not available and an MSK-based Compound MAC was     sent, then the receiver validates the Compound MAC and sends back     an MSK-based Compound MAC response.     If the EMSK is not available and no MSK-based Compound MAC was     sent, then the receiver handles like an invalid Crypto-Binding TLV     with a fatal error.     If the EMSK is available and an EMSK-based Compound MAC was sent,     then the receiver validates it and creates a response Compound MAC     using the EMSK.     If the EMSK is available but no EMSK-based Compound MAC was sent     and its policy accepts MSK-based MAC, then the receiver validates     it using the MSK and, if successful, generates and returns an MSK-     based Compound MAC.     If the EMSK is available but no EMSK Compound MAC was sent and its     policy does not accept MSK-based MAC, then the receiver handles     like an invalid Crypto-Binding TLV with a fatal error.   If the ith inner method does not generate an EMSK or MSK, then IMSKi   is set to zero (e.g., MSKi = 32 octets of 0x00s).  If an inner method   fails, then it is not included in this calculation.  The derivation   of S-IMCK is as follows:      S-IMCK[0] = session_key_seed      For j = 1 to n-1 do           IMCK[j] = TLS-PRF(S-IMCK[j-1], "Inner Methods Compound Keys",                IMSK[j], 60)           S-IMCK[j] = first 40 octets of IMCK[j]           CMK[j] = last 20 octets of IMCK[j]   where TLS-PRF is the PRF negotiated as part of TLS handshake   [RFC5246].Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 60]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20145.3.  Computing the Compound MAC   For authentication methods that generate keying material, further   protection against man-in-the-middle attacks is provided through   cryptographically binding keying material established by both TEAP   Phase 1 and TEAP Phase 2 conversations.  After each successful inner   EAP authentication, EAP EMSK and/or MSKs are cryptographically   combined with key material from TEAP Phase 1 to generate a Compound   Session Key (CMK).  The CMK is used to calculate the Compound MAC as   part of the Crypto-Binding TLV described inSection 4.2.13, which   helps provide assurance that the same entities are involved in all   communications in TEAP.  During the calculation of the Compound MAC,   the MAC field is filled with zeros.   The Compound MAC computation is as follows:      CMK = CMK[j]      Compound-MAC = MAC( CMK, BUFFER )   where j is the number of the last successfully executed inner EAP   method, MAC is the MAC function negotiated in TLS 1.2 [RFC5246], and   BUFFER is created after concatenating these fields in the following   order:   1  The entire Crypto-Binding TLV attribute with both the EMSK and MSK      Compound MAC fields zeroed out.   2  The EAP Type sent by the other party in the first TEAP message.   3  All the Outer TLVs from the first TEAP message sent by EAP server      to peer.  If a single TEAP message is fragmented into multiple      TEAP packets, then the Outer TLVs in all the fragments of that      message MUST be included.   4  All the Outer TLVs from the first TEAP message sent by the peer to      the EAP server.  If a single TEAP message is fragmented into      multiple TEAP packets, then the Outer TLVs in all the fragments of      that message MUST be included.5.4.  EAP Master Session Key Generation   TEAP authentication assures the Master Session Key (MSK) and Extended   Master Session Key (EMSK) output from the EAP method are the result   of all authentication conversations by generating an Intermediate   Compound Key (IMCK).  The IMCK is mutually derived by the peer and   the server as described inSection 5.2 by combining the MSKs fromZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 61]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   inner EAP methods with key material from TEAP Phase 1.  The resulting   MSK and EMSK are generated as part of the IMCKn key hierarchy as   follows:      MSK  = TLS-PRF(S-IMCK[j], "Session Key Generating Function", 64)      EMSK = TLS-PRF(S-IMCK[j],           "Extended Session Key Generating Function", 64)   where j is the number of the last successfully executed inner EAP   method.   The EMSK is typically only known to the TEAP peer and server and is   not provided to a third party.  The derivation of additional keys and   transportation of these keys to a third party are outside the scope   of this document.   If no EAP methods have been negotiated inside the tunnel or no EAP   methods have been successfully completed inside the tunnel, the MSK   and EMSK will be generated directly from the session_key_seed meaning   S-IMCK = session_key_seed.6.  IANA Considerations   This section provides guidance to the Internet Assigned Numbers   Authority (IANA) regarding registration of values related to the TEAP   protocol, in accordance withBCP 26 [RFC5226].   The EAP Method Type number 55 has been assigned for TEAP.   The document defines a registry for TEAP TLV types, which may be   assigned by Specification Required as defined in [RFC5226].Section 4.2 defines the TLV types that initially populate the   registry.  A summary of the TEAP TLV types is given below:   0  Unassigned   1  Authority-ID TLV   2  Identity-Type TLV   3  Result TLV   4  NAK TLV   5  Error TLV   6  Channel-Binding TLVZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 62]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   7  Vendor-Specific TLV   8  Request-Action TLV   9  EAP-Payload TLV   10 Intermediate-Result TLV   11 PAC TLV   12 Crypto-Binding TLV   13 Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV   14 Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV   15 PKCS#7 TLV   16 PKCS#10 TLV   17 Trusted-Server-Root TLV   The Identity-Type defined inSection 4.2.3 contains an identity type   code that is assigned on a Specification Required basis as defined in   [RFC5226].  The initial types defined are:   1  User   2  Machine   The Result TLV defined inSection 4.2.4, Request-Action TLV defined   inSection 4.2.9, and Intermediate-Result TLV defined inSection 4.2.11 contain a Status code that is assigned on a   Specification Required basis as defined in [RFC5226].  The initial   types defined are:   1  Success   2  Failure   The Error-TLV defined inSection 4.2.6 requires an error code.  TEAP   Error-TLV error codes are assigned based on a Specification Required   basis as defined in [RFC5226].  The initial list of error codes is as   follows:   1     User account expires soon   2     User account credential expires soonZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 63]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   3     User account authorizations change soon   4     Clock skew detected   5     Contact administrator   6     User account credentials change required   1001  Inner Method Error   1002  Unspecified authentication infrastructure problem   1003  Unspecified authentication failure   1004  Unspecified authorization failure   1005  User account credentials unavailable   1006  User account expired   1007  User account locked: try again later   1008  User account locked: admin intervention required   1009  Authentication infrastructure unavailable   1010  Authentication infrastructure not trusted   1011  Clock skew too great   1012  Invalid inner realm   1013  Token out of sync: administrator intervention required   1014  Token out of sync: PIN change required   1015  Token revoked   1016  Tokens exhausted   1017  Challenge expired   1018  Challenge algorithm mismatch   1019  Client certificate not supplied   1020  Client certificate rejectedZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 64]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   1021  Realm mismatch between inner and outer identity   1022  Unsupported Algorithm In Certificate Signing Request   1023  Unsupported Extension In Certificate Signing Request   1024  Bad Identity In Certificate Signing Request   1025  Bad Certificate Signing Request   1026  Internal CA Error   1027  General PKI Error   1028  Inner method's channel-binding data required but not supplied   1029  Inner method's channel-binding data did not include required         information   1030  Inner method's channel binding failed   1031  User account credentials incorrect [USAGE NOT RECOMMENDED]   2001  Tunnel Compromise Error   2002  Unexpected TLVs Exchanged   The Request-Action TLV defined inSection 4.2.9 contains an action   code that is assigned on a Specification Required basis as defined in   [RFC5226].  The initial actions defined are:   1  Process-TLV   2  Negotiate-EAP   The PAC Attribute defined inSection 4.2.12.1 contains a Type code   that is assigned on a Specification Required basis as defined in   [RFC5226].  The initial types defined are:   1  PAC-Key   2  PAC-Opaque   3  PAC-Lifetime   4  A-ID   5  I-IDZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 65]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   6  Reserved   7  A-ID-Info   8  PAC-Acknowledgement   9  PAC-Info   10 PAC-Type   The PAC-Type defined inSection 4.2.12.6 contains a type code that is   assigned on a Specification Required basis as defined in [RFC5226].   The initial type defined is:   1  Tunnel PAC   The Trusted-Server-Root TLV defined inSection 4.2.18 contains a   Credential-Format code that is assigned on a Specification Required   basis as defined in [RFC5226].  The initial type defined is:   1  PKCS#7-Server-Certificate-Root   The various values under the Vendor-Specific TLV are assigned by   Private Use and do not need to be assigned by IANA.   TEAP registers the label "EXPORTER: teap session key seed" in the TLS   Exporter Label Registry [RFC5705].  This label is used in derivation   as defined inSection 5.1.   TEAP registers a TEAP binding usage label from the "User Specific   Root Keys (USRK) Key Labels" name space defined in [RFC5295] with a   value "TEAPbindkey@ietf.org".7.  Security Considerations   TEAP is designed with a focus on wireless media, where the medium   itself is inherent to eavesdropping.  Whereas in wired media an   attacker would have to gain physical access to the wired medium,   wireless media enables anyone to capture information as it is   transmitted over the air, enabling passive attacks.  Thus, physical   security can not be assumed, and security vulnerabilities are far   greater.  The threat model used for the security evaluation of TEAP   is defined in EAP [RFC3748].Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 66]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20147.1.  Mutual Authentication and Integrity Protection   As a whole, TEAP provides message and integrity protection by   establishing a secure tunnel for protecting the authentication   method(s).  The confidentiality and integrity protection is defined   by TLS and provides the same security strengths afforded by TLS   employing a strong entropy shared master secret.  The integrity of   the key generating authentication methods executed within the TEAP   tunnel is verified through the calculation of the Crypto-Binding TLV.   This ensures that the tunnel endpoints are the same as the inner   method endpoints.   The Result TLV is protected and conveys the true Success or Failure   of TEAP, and it should be used as the indicator of its success or   failure respectively.  However, as EAP terminates with either a   cleartext EAP Success or Failure, a peer will also receive a   cleartext EAP Success or Failure.  The received cleartext EAP Success   or Failure MUST match that received in the Result TLV; the peer   SHOULD silently discard those cleartext EAP Success or Failure   messages that do not coincide with the status sent in the protected   Result TLV.7.2.  Method Negotiation   As is true for any negotiated EAP protocol, NAK packets used to   suggest an alternate authentication method are sent unprotected and,   as such, are subject to spoofing.  During unprotected EAP method   negotiation, NAK packets may be interjected as active attacks to   negotiate down to a weaker form of authentication, such as EAP-MD5   (which only provides one-way authentication and does not derive a   key).  Both the peer and server should have a method selection policy   that prevents them from negotiating down to weaker methods.  Inner   method negotiation resists attacks because it is protected by the   mutually authenticated TLS tunnel established.  Selection of TEAP as   an authentication method does not limit the potential inner   authentication methods, so TEAP should be selected when available.   An attacker cannot readily determine the inner EAP method used,   except perhaps by traffic analysis.  It is also important that peer   implementations limit the use of credentials with an unauthenticated   or unauthorized server.7.3.  Separation of Phase 1 and Phase 2 Servers   Separation of the TEAP Phase 1 from the Phase 2 conversation is NOT   RECOMMENDED.  Allowing the Phase 1 conversation to be terminated at a   different server than the Phase 2 conversation can introduce   vulnerabilities if there is not a proper trust relationship andZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 67]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   protection for the protocol between the two servers.  Some   vulnerabilities include:   o  Loss of identity protection   o  Offline dictionary attacks   o  Lack of policy enforcement   o  Man-in-the-middle attacks (as described in [RFC7029])   There may be cases where a trust relationship exists between the   Phase 1 and Phase 2 servers, such as on a campus or between two   offices within the same company, where there is no danger in   revealing the inner identity and credentials of the peer to entities   between the two servers.  In these cases, using a proxy solution   without end-to-end protection of TEAP MAY be used.  The TEAP   encrypting/decrypting gateway MUST, at a minimum, provide support for   IPsec, TLS, or similar protection in order to provide confidentiality   for the portion of the conversation between the gateway and the EAP   server.  In addition, separation of the inner and outer method   servers allows for crypto-binding based on the inner method MSK to be   thwarted as described in [RFC7029].  Implementation and deployment   SHOULD adopt various mitigation strategies described in [RFC7029].   If the inner method is deriving EMSK, then this threat is mitigated   as TEAP utilizes the mutual crypto-binding based on EMSK as described   in [RFC7029].7.4.  Mitigation of Known Vulnerabilities and Protocol Deficiencies   TEAP addresses the known deficiencies and weaknesses in the EAP   method.  By employing a shared secret between the peer and server to   establish a secured tunnel, TEAP enables:   o  Per-packet confidentiality and integrity protection   o  User identity protection   o  Better support for notification messages   o  Protected EAP inner method negotiation   o  Sequencing of EAP methods   o  Strong mutually derived MSKs   o  Acknowledged success/failure indicationZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 68]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   o  Faster re-authentications through session resumption   o  Mitigation of dictionary attacks   o  Mitigation of man-in-the-middle attacks   o  Mitigation of some denial-of-service attacks   It should be noted that in TEAP, as in many other authentication   protocols, a denial-of-service attack can be mounted by adversaries   sending erroneous traffic to disrupt the protocol.  This is a problem   in many authentication or key agreement protocols and is therefore   noted for TEAP as well.   TEAP was designed with a focus on protected authentication methods   that typically rely on weak credentials, such as password-based   secrets.  To that extent, the TEAP authentication mitigates several   vulnerabilities, such as dictionary attacks, by protecting the weak   credential-based authentication method.  The protection is based on   strong cryptographic algorithms in TLS to provide message   confidentiality and integrity.  The keys derived for the protection   relies on strong random challenges provided by both peer and server   as well as an established key with strong entropy.  Implementations   should follow the recommendation in [RFC4086] when generating random   numbers.7.4.1.  User Identity Protection and Verification   The initial identity request response exchange is sent in cleartext   outside the protection of TEAP.  Typically, the Network Access   Identifier (NAI) [RFC4282] in the identity response is useful only   for the realm of information that is used to route the authentication   requests to the right EAP server.  This means that the identity   response may contain an anonymous identity and just contain realm   information.  In other cases, the identity exchange may be eliminated   altogether if there are other means for establishing the destination   realm of the request.  In no case should an intermediary place any   trust in the identity information in the identity response since it   is unauthenticated and may not have any relevance to the   authenticated identity.  TEAP implementations should not attempt to   compare any identity disclosed in the initial cleartext EAP Identity   response packet with those Identities authenticated in Phase 2.   Identity request/response exchanges sent after the TEAP tunnel is   established are protected from modification and eavesdropping by   attackers.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 69]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Note that since TLS client certificates are sent in the clear, if   identity protection is required, then it is possible for the TLS   authentication to be renegotiated after the first server   authentication.  To accomplish this, the server will typically not   request a certificate in the server_hello; then, after the   server_finished message is sent and before TEAP Phase 2, the server   MAY send a TLS hello_request.  This allows the peer to perform client   authentication by sending a client_hello if it wants to or send a   no_renegotiation alert to the server indicating that it wants to   continue with TEAP Phase 2 instead.  Assuming that the peer permits   renegotiation by sending a client_hello, then the server will respond   with server_hello, certificate, and certificate_request messages.   The peer replies with certificate, client_key_exchange, and   certificate_verify messages.  Since this renegotiation occurs within   the encrypted TLS channel, it does not reveal client certificate   details.  It is possible to perform certificate authentication using   an EAP method (for example, EAP-TLS) within the TLS session in TEAP   Phase 2 instead of using TLS handshake renegotiation.7.4.2.  Dictionary Attack Resistance   TEAP was designed with a focus on protected authentication methods   that typically rely on weak credentials, such as password-based   secrets.  TEAP mitigates dictionary attacks by allowing the   establishment of a mutually authenticated encrypted TLS tunnel   providing confidentiality and integrity to protect the weak   credential-based authentication method.7.4.3.  Protection against Man-in-the-Middle Attacks   Allowing methods to be executed both with and without the protection   of a secure tunnel opens up a possibility of a man-in-the-middle   attack.  To avoid man-in-the-middle attacks it is recommended to   always deploy authentication methods with the protection of TEAP.   TEAP provides protection from man-in-the-middle attacks even if a   deployment chooses to execute inner EAP methods both with and without   TEAP protection.  TEAP prevents this attack in two ways:   1.  By using the PAC-Key to mutually authenticate the peer and server       during TEAP authentication Phase 1 establishment of a secure       tunnel.   2.  By using the keys generated by the inner authentication method       (if the inner methods are key generating) in the crypto-binding       exchange and in the generation of the key material exported by       the EAP method described inSection 5.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 70]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   TEAP crypto binding does not guarantee man-in-the-middle protection   if the client allows a connection to an untrusted server, such as in   the case where the client does not properly validate the server's   certificate.  If the TLS ciphersuite derives the master secret solely   from the contribution of secret data from one side of the   conversation (such as ciphersuites based on RSA key transport), then   an attacker who can convince the client to connect and engage in   authentication can impersonate the client to another server even if a   strong inner method is executed within the tunnel.  If the TLS   ciphersuite derives the master secret from the contribution of   secrets from both sides of the conversation (such as in ciphersuites   based on Diffie-Hellman), then crypto binding can detect an attacker   in the conversation if a strong inner method is used.7.4.4.  PAC Binding to User Identity   A PAC may be bound to a user identity.  A compliant implementation of   TEAP MUST validate that an identity obtained in the PAC-Opaque field   matches at minimum one of the identities provided in the TEAP Phase 2   authentication method.  This validation provides another binding to   ensure that the intended peer (based on identity) has successfully   completed the TEAP Phase 1 and proved identity in the Phase 2   conversations.7.5.  Protecting against Forged Cleartext EAP Packets   EAP Success and EAP Failure packets are, in general, sent in   cleartext and may be forged by an attacker without detection.  Forged   EAP Failure packets can be used to attempt to convince an EAP peer to   disconnect.  Forged EAP Success packets may be used to attempt to   convince a peer that authentication has succeeded, even though the   authenticator has not authenticated itself to the peer.   By providing message confidentiality and integrity, TEAP provides   protection against these attacks.  Once the peer and authentication   server (AS) initiate the TEAP authentication Phase 2, compliant TEAP   implementations MUST silently discard all cleartext EAP messages,   unless both the TEAP peer and server have indicated success or   failure using a protected mechanism.  Protected mechanisms include   the TLS alert mechanism and the protected termination mechanism   described inSection 3.3.3.   The success/failure decisions within the TEAP tunnel indicate the   final decision of the TEAP authentication conversation.  After a   success/failure result has been indicated by a protected mechanism,   the TEAP peer can process unprotected EAP Success and EAP Failure   messages; however, the peer MUST ignore any unprotected EAP SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 71]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   or Failure messages where the result does not match the result of the   protected mechanism.   To abide by [RFC3748], the server sends a cleartext EAP Success or   EAP Failure packet to terminate the EAP conversation.  However, since   EAP Success and EAP Failure packets are not retransmitted, the final   packet may be lost.  While a TEAP-protected EAP Success or EAP   Failure packet should not be a final packet in a TEAP conversation,   it may occur based on the conditions stated above, so an EAP peer   should not rely upon the unprotected EAP Success and Failure   messages.7.6.  Server Certificate Validation   As part of the TLS negotiation, the server presents a certificate to   the peer.  The peer SHOULD verify the validity of the EAP server   certificate and SHOULD also examine the EAP server name presented in   the certificate in order to determine whether the EAP server can be   trusted.  When performing server certificate validation,   implementations MUST provide support for the rules in [RFC5280] for   validating certificates against a known trust anchor.  In addition,   implementations MUST support matching the realm portion of the peer's   NAI against a SubjectAltName of type dNSName within the server   certificate.  However, in certain deployments, this might not be   turned on.  Please note that in the case where the EAP authentication   is remote, the EAP server will not reside on the same machine as the   authenticator, and therefore, the name in the EAP server's   certificate cannot be expected to match that of the intended   destination.  In this case, a more appropriate test might be whether   the EAP server's certificate is signed by a certification authority   (CA) controlling the intended domain and whether the authenticator   can be authorized by a server in that domain.7.7.  Tunnel PAC Considerations   Since the Tunnel PAC is stored by the peer, special care should be   given to the overall security of the peer.  The Tunnel PAC MUST be   securely stored by the peer to prevent theft or forgery of any of the   Tunnel PAC components.  In particular, the peer MUST securely store   the PAC-Key and protect it from disclosure or modification.   Disclosure of the PAC-Key enables an attacker to establish the TEAP   tunnel; however, disclosure of the PAC-Key does not reveal the peer   or server identity or compromise any other peer's PAC credentials.   Modification of the PAC-Key or PAC-Opaque components of the Tunnel   PAC may also lead to denial of service as the tunnel establishment   will fail.  The PAC-Opaque component is the effective TLS ticket   extension used to establish the tunnel using the techniques of   [RFC5077].  Thus, the security considerations defined by [RFC5077]Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 72]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   also apply to the PAC-Opaque.  The PAC-Info may contain information   about the Tunnel PAC such as the identity of the PAC issuer and the   Tunnel PAC lifetime for use in the management of the Tunnel PAC.  The   PAC-Info should be securely stored by the peer to protect it from   disclosure and modification.7.8.  Security Claims   This section provides the needed security claim requirement for EAP   [RFC3748].   Auth. mechanism:         Certificate-based, shared-secret-based, and                            various tunneled authentication mechanisms.   Ciphersuite negotiation: Yes   Mutual authentication:   Yes   Integrity protection:    Yes.  Any method executed within the TEAP                            tunnel is integrity protected.  The                            cleartext EAP headers outside the tunnel are                            not integrity protected.   Replay protection:       Yes   Confidentiality:         Yes   Key derivation:          Yes   Key strength:            See Note 1 below.   Dictionary attack prot.: Yes   Fast reconnect:          Yes   Cryptographic binding:   Yes   Session independence:    Yes   Fragmentation:           Yes   Key Hierarchy:           Yes   Channel binding:         YesZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 73]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   Notes   1.BCP 86 [RFC3766] offers advice on appropriate key sizes.  The       National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) also       offers advice on appropriate key sizes in [NIST-SP-800-57].[RFC3766], Section 5 advises use of the following required RSA or       DH (Diffie-Hellman) module and DSA (Digital Signature Algorithm)       subgroup size in bits for a given level of attack resistance in       bits.  Based on the table below, a 2048-bit RSA key is required       to provide 112-bit equivalent key strength:       Attack Resistance     RSA or DH Modulus            DSA subgroup        (bits)                  size (bits)                size (bits)       -----------------     -----------------            ------------          70                        947                        129          80                       1228                        148          90                       1553                        167         100                       1926                        186         150                       4575                        284         200                       8719                        383         250                      14596                        4828.  Acknowledgements   This specification is based on EAP-FAST [RFC4851], which included the   ideas and efforts of Nancy Cam-Winget, David McGrew, Joe Salowey, Hao   Zhou, Pad Jakkahalli, Mark Krischer, Doug Smith, and Glen Zorn of   Cisco Systems, Inc.   The TLV processing was inspired from work on the Protected Extensible   Authentication Protocol version 2 (PEAPv2) with Ashwin Palekar, Dan   Smith, Sean Turner, and Simon Josefsson.   The method for linking identity and proof-of-possession by placing   the tls-unique value in the challengePassword field of the CSR as   described inSection 3.8.2 was inspired by the technique described in   "Enrollment over Secure Transport" [RFC7030].   Helpful review comments were provided by Russ Housley, Jari Arkko,   Ilan Frenkel, Jeremy Steiglitz, Dan Harkins, Sam Hartman, Jim Schaad,   Barry Leiba, Stephen Farrell, Chris Lonvick, and Josh Howlett.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 74]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20149.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3748]  Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J., and H.              Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)",RFC3748, June 2004.   [RFC5077]  Salowey, J., Zhou, H., Eronen, P., and H. Tschofenig,              "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Session Resumption without              Server-Side State",RFC 5077, January 2008.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.   [RFC5246]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security              (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246, August 2008.   [RFC5295]  Salowey, J., Dondeti, L., Narayanan, V., and M. Nakhjiri,              "Specification for the Derivation of Root Keys from an              Extended Master Session Key (EMSK)",RFC 5295, August              2008.   [RFC5705]  Rescorla, E., "Keying Material Exporters for Transport              Layer Security (TLS)",RFC 5705, March 2010.   [RFC5746]  Rescorla, E., Ray, M., Dispensa, S., and N. Oskov,              "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Renegotiation Indication              Extension",RFC 5746, February 2010.   [RFC5929]  Altman, J., Williams, N., and L. Zhu, "Channel Bindings              for TLS",RFC 5929, July 2010.   [RFC6677]  Hartman, S., Clancy, T., and K. Hoeper, "Channel-Binding              Support for Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)              Methods",RFC 6677, July 2012.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 75]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 20149.2.  Informative References   [IEEE.802-1X.2013]              IEEE, "Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Port-Based              Network Access Control", IEEE Standard 802.1X, December              2013.   [NIST-SP-800-57]              National Institute of Standards and Technology,              "Recommendation for Key Management", NIST Special              Publication 800-57, July 2012.   [PEAP]     Microsoft Corporation, "[MS-PEAP]: Protected Extensible              Authentication Protocol (PEAP)", February 2014.   [RFC2315]  Kaliski, B., "PKCS #7: Cryptographic Message Syntax              Version 1.5",RFC 2315, March 1998.   [RFC2985]  Nystrom, M. and B. Kaliski, "PKCS #9: Selected Object              Classes and Attribute Types Version 2.0",RFC 2985,              November 2000.   [RFC2986]  Nystrom, M. and B. Kaliski, "PKCS #10: Certification              Request Syntax Specification Version 1.7",RFC 2986,              November 2000.   [RFC3579]  Aboba, B. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS (Remote Authentication              Dial In User Service) Support For Extensible              Authentication Protocol (EAP)",RFC 3579, September 2003.   [RFC3629]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO              10646", STD 63,RFC 3629, November 2003.   [RFC3766]  Orman, H. and P. Hoffman, "Determining Strengths For              Public Keys Used For Exchanging Symmetric Keys",BCP 86,RFC 3766, April 2004.   [RFC4017]  Stanley, D., Walker, J., and B. Aboba, "Extensible              Authentication Protocol (EAP) Method Requirements for              Wireless LANs",RFC 4017, March 2005.   [RFC4072]  Eronen, P., Hiller, T., and G. Zorn, "Diameter Extensible              Authentication Protocol (EAP) Application",RFC 4072,              August 2005.   [RFC4086]  Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness              Requirements for Security",BCP 106,RFC 4086, June 2005.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 76]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   [RFC4282]  Aboba, B., Beadles, M., Arkko, J., and P. Eronen, "The              Network Access Identifier",RFC 4282, December 2005.   [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data              Encodings",RFC 4648, October 2006.   [RFC4851]  Cam-Winget, N., McGrew, D., Salowey, J., and H. Zhou, "The              Flexible Authentication via Secure Tunneling Extensible              Authentication Protocol Method (EAP-FAST)",RFC 4851, May              2007.   [RFC4945]  Korver, B., "The Internet IP Security PKI Profile of IKEv1              /ISAKMP, IKEv2, and PKIX",RFC 4945, August 2007.   [RFC4962]  Housley, R. and B. Aboba, "Guidance for Authentication,              Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) Key Management",BCP132,RFC 4962, July 2007.   [RFC5247]  Aboba, B., Simon, D., and P. Eronen, "Extensible              Authentication Protocol (EAP) Key Management Framework",RFC 5247, August 2008.   [RFC5272]  Schaad, J. and M. Myers, "Certificate Management over CMS              (CMC)",RFC 5272, June 2008.   [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,              Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key              Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List              (CRL) Profile",RFC 5280, May 2008.   [RFC5281]  Funk, P. and S. Blake-Wilson, "Extensible Authentication              Protocol Tunneled Transport Layer Security Authenticated              Protocol Version 0 (EAP-TTLSv0)",RFC 5281, August 2008.   [RFC5421]  Cam-Winget, N. and H. Zhou, "Basic Password Exchange              within the Flexible Authentication via Secure Tunneling              Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP-FAST)",RFC 5421,              March 2009.   [RFC5652]  Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)", STD 70,RFC 5652, September 2009.   [RFC5931]  Harkins, D. and G. Zorn, "Extensible Authentication              Protocol (EAP) Authentication Using Only a Password",RFC5931, August 2010.   [RFC6066]  Eastlake, D., "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Extensions:              Extension Definitions",RFC 6066, January 2011.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 77]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   [RFC6124]  Sheffer, Y., Zorn, G., Tschofenig, H., and S. Fluhrer, "An              EAP Authentication Method Based on the Encrypted Key              Exchange (EKE) Protocol",RFC 6124, February 2011.   [RFC6678]  Hoeper, K., Hanna, S., Zhou, H., and J. Salowey,              "Requirements for a Tunnel-Based Extensible Authentication              Protocol (EAP) Method",RFC 6678, July 2012.   [RFC6960]  Santesson, S., Myers, M., Ankney, R., Malpani, A.,              Galperin, S., and C. Adams, "X.509 Internet Public Key              Infrastructure Online Certificate Status Protocol - OCSP",RFC 6960, June 2013.   [RFC6961]  Pettersen, Y., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS)              Multiple Certificate Status Request Extension",RFC 6961,              June 2013.   [RFC7029]  Hartman, S., Wasserman, M., and D. Zhang, "Extensible              Authentication Protocol (EAP) Mutual Cryptographic              Binding",RFC 7029, October 2013.   [RFC7030]  Pritikin, M., Yee, P., and D. Harkins, "Enrollment over              Secure Transport",RFC 7030, October 2013.   [X.690]    ITU-T, "ASN.1 encoding rules: Specification of Basic              Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical Encoding Rules (CER) and              Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER)", ITU-T Recommendation              X.690, November 2008.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 78]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014Appendix A.  Evaluation against Tunnel-Based EAP Method Requirements   This section evaluates all tunnel-based EAP method requirements   described in [RFC6678] against TEAP version 1.A.1.  Requirement 4.1.1: RFC Compliance   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by being compliant withRFC 3748   [RFC3748],RFC 4017 [RFC4017],RFC 5247 [RFC5247], andRFC 4962   [RFC4962].  It is also compliant with the "cryptographic algorithm   agility" requirement by leveraging TLS 1.2 for all cryptographic   algorithm negotiation.A.2.  Requirement 4.2.1: TLS Requirements   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by mandating TLS version 1.2 support as   defined inSection 3.2.A.3.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.1: Ciphersuite Negotiation   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by using TLS to provide protected   ciphersuite negotiation.A.4.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.2: Tunnel Data Protection Algorithms   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by mandating   TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA as a mandatory-to-implement ciphersuite   as defined inSection 3.2.A.5.  Requirement 4.2.1.1.3: Tunnel Authentication and Key Establishment   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by mandating   TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA as a mandatory-to-implement ciphersuite   that provides certificate-based authentication of the server and is   approved by NIST.  The mandatory-to-implement ciphersuites only   include ciphersuites that use strong cryptographic algorithms.  They   do not include ciphersuites providing mutually anonymous   authentication or static Diffie-Hellman ciphersuites as defined inSection 3.2.A.6.  Requirement 4.2.1.2: Tunnel Replay Protection   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by using TLS to provide sufficient   replay protection.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 79]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014A.7.  Requirement 4.2.1.3: TLS Extensions   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by allowing TLS extensions, such as TLS   Certificate Status Request extension [RFC6066] and SessionTicket   extension [RFC5077], to be used during TLS tunnel establishment.A.8.  Requirement 4.2.1.4: Peer Identity Privacy   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by establishment of the TLS tunnel and   protection identities specific to the inner method.  In addition, the   peer certificate can be sent confidentially (i.e., encrypted).A.9.  Requirement 4.2.1.5: Session Resumption   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by mandating support of TLS session   resumption as defined inSection 3.2.1 and TLS session resume using a   PAC as defined inSection 3.2.2 .A.10.  Requirement 4.2.2: Fragmentation   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by leveraging fragmentation support   provided by TLS as defined inSection 3.7.A.11.  Requirement 4.2.3: Protection of Data External to Tunnel   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by including the TEAP version number   received in the computation of the Crypto-Binding TLV as defined inSection 4.2.13.A.12.  Requirement 4.3.1: Extensible Attribute Types   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by using an extensible TLV data layer   inside the tunnel as defined inSection 4.2.A.13.  Requirement 4.3.2: Request/Challenge Response Operation   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by allowing multiple TLVs to be sent in   a single EAP request or response packet, while maintaining the half-   duplex operation typical of EAP.A.14.  Requirement 4.3.3: Indicating Criticality of Attributes   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by having a mandatory bit in each TLV   to indicate whether it is mandatory to support or not as defined inSection 4.2.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 80]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014A.15.  Requirement 4.3.4: Vendor-Specific Support   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by having a Vendor-Specific TLV to   allow vendors to define their own attributes as defined inSection 4.2.8.A.16.  Requirement 4.3.5: Result Indication   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by having a Result TLV to exchange the   final result of the EAP authentication so both the peer and server   have a synchronized state as defined inSection 4.2.4.A.17.  Requirement 4.3.6: Internationalization of Display Strings   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting UTF-8 format in the   Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV as defined inSection 4.2.14 and the   Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV as defined inSection 4.2.15.A.18.  Requirement 4.4: EAP Channel-Binding Requirements   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by having a Channel-Binding TLV to   exchange the EAP channel-binding data as defined inSection 4.2.7.A.19.  Requirement 4.5.1.1: Confidentiality and Integrity   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by running the password authentication   inside a protected TLS tunnel.A.20.  Requirement 4.5.1.2: Authentication of Server   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by mandating authentication of the   server before establishment of the protected TLS and then running   inner password authentication as defined inSection 3.2.A.21.  Requirement 4.5.1.3: Server Certificate Revocation Checking   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting TLS Certificate Status   Request extension [RFC6066] during tunnel establishment.A.22.  Requirement 4.5.2: Internationalization   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting UTF-8 format in Basic-   Password-Auth-Req TLV as defined inSection 4.2.14 and Basic-   Password-Auth-Resp TLV as defined inSection 4.2.15.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 81]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014A.23.  Requirement 4.5.3: Metadata   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting Identity-Type TLV as   defined inSection 4.2.3 to indicate whether the authentication is   for a user or a machine.A.24.  Requirement 4.5.4: Password Change   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting multiple Basic-Password-   Auth-Req TLV and Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV exchanges within a   single EAP authentication, which allows "housekeeping"" functions   such as password change.A.25.  Requirement 4.6.1: Method Negotiation   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting inner EAP method   negotiation within the protected TLS tunnel.A.26.  Requirement 4.6.2: Chained Methods   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting inner EAP method chaining   within protected TLS tunnels as defined inSection 3.3.1.A.27.  Requirement 4.6.3: Cryptographic Binding with the TLS Tunnel   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting cryptographic binding of   the inner EAP method keys with the keys derived from the TLS tunnel   as defined inSection 4.2.13.A.28.  Requirement 4.6.4: Peer-Initiated EAP Authentication   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting the Request-Action TLV as   defined inSection 4.2.9 to allow a peer to initiate another inner   EAP method.A.29.  Requirement 4.6.5: Method Metadata   TEAPv1 meets this requirement by supporting the Identity-Type TLV as   defined inSection 4.2.3 to indicate whether the authentication is   for a user or a machine.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 82]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014Appendix B.  Major Differences from EAP-FAST   This document is a new standard tunnel EAP method based on revision   of EAP-FAST version 1 [RFC4851] that contains improved flexibility,   particularly for negotiation of cryptographic algorithms.  The major   changes are:   1.  The EAP method name has been changed from EAP-FAST to TEAP; this       change thus requires that a new EAP Type be assigned.   2.  This version of TEAP MUST support TLS 1.2 [RFC5246].   3.  The key derivation now makes use of TLS keying material exporters       [RFC5705] and the PRF and hash function negotiated in TLS.  This       is to simplify implementation and better support cryptographic       algorithm agility.   4.  TEAP is in full conformance with TLS ticket extension [RFC5077]       as described inSection 3.2.2.   5.  Support is provided for passing optional Outer TLVs in the first       two message exchanges, in addition to the Authority-ID TLV data       in EAP-FAST.   6.  Basic password authentication on the TLV level has been added in       addition to the existing inner EAP method.   7.  Additional TLV types have been defined to support EAP channel       binding and metadata.  They are the Identity-Type TLV and       Channel-Binding TLVs, defined inSection 4.2.Appendix C.  ExamplesC.1.  Successful Authentication   The following exchanges show a successful TEAP authentication with   basic password authentication and optional PAC refreshment.  The   conversation will appear as follows:       Authenticating Peer     Authenticator       -------------------     -------------                               <- EAP-Request/                               Identity       EAP-Response/       Identity (MyID1) ->Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 83]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1       (TLS client_hello with        PAC-Opaque in SessionTicket extension)->                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TLS server_hello,                               (TLS change_cipher_spec,                                TLS finished)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->       (TLS change_cipher_spec,        TLS finished)       TLS channel established       (messages sent within the TLS channel)                              <- Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV, Challenge       Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV, Response with both       username and password) ->       optional additional exchanges (new pin mode,       password change, etc.) ...                            <- Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                                Result TLV (Success),                                (Optional PAC TLV)       Crypto-Binding TLV(Response),       Result TLV (Success),       (PAC-Acknowledgement TLV) ->       TLS channel torn down       (messages sent in cleartext)                               <- EAP-SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 84]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014C.2.  Failed Authentication   The following exchanges show a failed TEAP authentication due to   wrong user credentials.  The conversation will appear as follows:       Authenticating Peer     Authenticator       -------------------     -------------                               <- EAP-Request/Identity       EAP-Response/       Identity (MyID1) ->                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1       (TLS client_hello with        PAC-Opaque in SessionTicket extension)->                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TLS server_hello,                               (TLS change_cipher_spec,                                TLS finished)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->       (TLS change_cipher_spec,        TLS finished)       TLS channel established       (messages sent within the TLS channel)                              <- Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV, Challenge       Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV, Response with both       username and password) ->                               <- Result TLV (Failure)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 85]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014       Result TLV (Failure) ->       TLS channel torn down       (messages sent in cleartext)                               <- EAP-FailureC.3.  Full TLS Handshake Using Certificate-Based Ciphersuite   In the case within TEAP Phase 1 where an abbreviated TLS handshake is   tried, fails, and falls back to the certificate-based full TLS   handshake, the conversation will appear as follows:      Authenticating Peer    Authenticator      -------------------    -------------                             <- EAP-Request/Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID1) ->      // Identity sent in the clear.  May be a hint to help route         the authentication request to EAP server, instead of the         full user identity.                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello with      PAC-Opaque in SessionTicket extension)->      // Peer sends PAC-Opaque of Tunnel PAC along with a list of         ciphersuites supported.  If the server rejects the PAC-         Opaque, it falls through to the full TLS handshake.                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                              [TLS server_key_exchange,]                              [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 86]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      ([TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished) ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                               EAP-Payload-TLV[EAP-Request/                               Identity])      // TLS channel established         (messages sent within the TLS channel)      // First EAP Payload TLV is piggybacked to the TLS Finished as         Application Data and protected by the TLS tunnel.      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/Identity (MyID2)]->      // identity protected by TLS.                               <- EAP-Payload-TLV                               [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X] ->      // Method X exchanges followed by Protected Termination                           <- Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Result TLV (Success)      Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Result-TLV (Success) ->      // TLS channel torn down      (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 87]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014C.4.  Client Authentication during Phase 1 with Identity Privacy   In the case where a certificate-based TLS handshake occurs within   TEAP Phase 1 and client certificate authentication and identity   privacy is desired (and therefore TLS renegotiation is being used to   transmit the peer credentials in the protected TLS tunnel), the   conversation will appear as follows:      Authenticating Peer     Authenticator      -------------------     -------------                             <- EAP-Request/Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID1) ->      // Identity sent in the clear.  May be a hint to help route         the authentication request to EAP server, instead of the         full user identity.                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello)->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                              [TLS server_key_exchange,]                              [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_key_exchange,       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished) ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                               EAP-Payload-TLV[EAP-Request/                               Identity])      // TLS channel established         (EAP Payload messages sent within the TLS channel)      // peer sends TLS client_hello to request TLS renegotiationZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 88]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      TLS client_hello ->                              <- TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                               [TLS server_key_exchange,]                               [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done      [TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished ->                              <- TLS change_cipher_spec,                                 TLS finished,                                 Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                                 Result TLV (Success)      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Result-TLV (Success)) ->      //TLS channel torn down      (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessC.5.  Fragmentation and Reassembly   In the case where TEAP fragmentation is required, the conversation   will appear as follows:      Authenticating Peer     Authenticator      -------------------     -------------                              <- EAP-Request/                              Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID) ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello)->Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 89]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                              [TLS server_key_exchange,]                              [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done)                              (Fragment 1: L, M bits set)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->                              <- EAP-Request/                                 EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (Fragment 2: M bit set)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (Fragment 3)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      ([TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished)       (Fragment 1: L, M bits set)->                               <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (Fragment 2)->                             <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                              [EAP-Payload-TLV[                              EAP-Request/Identity]])      // TLS channel established         (messages sent within the TLS channel)      // First EAP Payload TLV is piggybacked to the TLS Finished as         Application Data and protected by the TLS tunnel.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 90]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/Identity (MyID2)]->      // identity protected by TLS.                               <- EAP-Payload-TLV                               [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X] ->      // Method X exchanges followed by Protected Termination                           <- Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Result TLV (Success)      Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Result-TLV (Success) ->      // TLS channel torn down      (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessC.6.  Sequence of EAP Methods   When TEAP is negotiated with a sequence of EAP method X followed by   method Y, the conversation will occur as follows:      Authenticating Peer     Authenticator      -------------------     -------------                              <- EAP-Request/                              Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID1) ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello)->Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 91]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                              [TLS server_key_exchange,]                              [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      ([TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished) ->                             <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                               Identity-Type TLV,                              EAP-Payload-TLV[                              EAP-Request/Identity])      // TLS channel established         (messages sent within the TLS channel)      // First EAP Payload TLV is piggybacked to the TLS Finished as         Application Data and protected by the TLS tunnel      Identity_Type TLV      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/Identity] ->                              <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X] ->             // Optional additional X Method exchanges...                             <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X]->Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 92]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014                              <- Intermediate Result TLV (Success),                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Identity-Type TLV,                               EAP Payload TLV [EAP-Type=Y],      // Next EAP conversation started after successful completion         of previous method X.  The Intermediate-Result and Crypto-         Binding TLVs are sent in next packet to minimize round         trips.  In this example, an identity request is not sent         before negotiating EAP-Type=Y.      // Compound MAC calculated using keys generated from         EAP method X and the TLS tunnel.      Intermediate Result TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      EAP-Payload-TLV [EAP-Type=Y] ->             // Optional additional Y Method exchanges...                             <- EAP Payload TLV [                             EAP-Type=Y]      EAP Payload TLV      [EAP-Type=Y] ->                             <- Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Result TLV (Success)      Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Result-TLV (Success) ->      // Compound MAC calculated using keys generated from EAP         methods X and Y and the TLS tunnel.  Compound keys are         generated using keys generated from EAP methods X and Y         and the TLS tunnel.      // TLS channel torn down (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 93]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014C.7.  Failed Crypto-Binding   The following exchanges show a failed crypto-binding validation.  The   conversation will appear as follows:   Authenticating Peer     Authenticator   -------------------     -------------                           <- EAP-Request/                           Identity   EAP-Response/   Identity (MyID1) ->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                           (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1   (TLS client_hello without   PAC-Opaque in SessionTicket extension)->                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                           (TLS Server Key Exchange                            TLS Server Hello Done)   EAP-Response/   EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->   (TLS Client Key Exchange    TLS change_cipher_spec,    TLS finished)                           <- EAP-Request/                           EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                           (TLS change_cipher_spec                            TLS finished)                            EAP-Payload-TLV[                            EAP-Request/Identity])      // TLS channel established         (messages sent within the TLS channel)      // First EAP Payload TLV is piggybacked to the TLS Finished as         Application Data and protected by the TLS tunnel.   EAP-Payload TLV/   EAP Identity Response ->                          <-  EAP Payload TLV, EAP-Request,                              (EAP-MSCHAPV2, Challenge)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 94]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014   EAP Payload TLV, EAP-Response,   (EAP-MSCHAPV2, Response) ->                          <-  EAP Payload TLV, EAP-Request,                              (EAP-MSCHAPV2, Success Request)   EAP Payload TLV, EAP-Response,   (EAP-MSCHAPV2, Success Response) ->                        <- Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),                            Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Result TLV (Success)      Intermediate-Result-TLV (Success),      Result TLV (Failure)      Error TLV with      (Error Code = 2001) ->   // TLS channel torn down      (messages sent in cleartext)                           <- EAP-FailureC.8.  Sequence of EAP Method with Vendor-Specific TLV Exchange   When TEAP is negotiated with a sequence of EAP methods followed by a   Vendor-Specific TLV exchange, the conversation will occur as follows:      Authenticating Peer     Authenticator      -------------------     -------------                              <- EAP-Request/                              Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID1) ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello)->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                       [TLS server_key_exchange,]                       [TLS certificate_request,]                           TLS server_hello_done)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 95]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      ([TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished) ->                             <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                              EAP-Payload-TLV[                              EAP-Request/Identity])      // TLS channel established         (messages sent within the TLS channel)      // First EAP Payload TLV is piggybacked to the TLS Finished as         Application Data and protected by the TLS tunnel.      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/Identity] ->                            <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X] ->                             <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X]->                              <- Intermediate Result TLV (Success),                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                               Vendor-Specific TLV,      // Vendor-Specific TLV exchange started after successful         completion of previous method X.  The Intermediate-Result         and Crypto-Binding TLVs are sent with Vendor-Specific TLV         in next packet to minimize round trips.      // Compound MAC calculated using keys generated from         EAP method X and the TLS tunnel.Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 96]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      Intermediate Result TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Vendor-Specific TLV ->          // Optional additional Vendor-Specific TLV exchanges...                             <- Vendor-Specific TLV      Vendor-Specific TLV ->                             <- Result TLV (Success)      Result-TLV (Success) ->      // TLS channel torn down (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessC.9.  Peer Requests Inner Method after Server Sends Result TLV   In the case where the peer is authenticated during Phase 1 and the   server sends back a Result TLV but the peer wants to request another   inner method, the conversation will appear as follows:      Authenticating Peer    Authenticator      -------------------    -------------                             <- EAP-Request/Identity      EAP-Response/      Identity (MyID1) ->      // Identity sent in the clear.  May be a hint to help route         the authentication request to EAP server, instead of the         full user identity.                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      (TLS client_hello)->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS server_hello,                               TLS certificate,                              [TLS server_key_exchange,]                              [TLS certificate_request,]                               TLS server_hello_done)Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 97]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      EAP-Response/      EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1      [TLS certificate,]       TLS client_key_exchange,      [TLS certificate_verify,]       TLS change_cipher_spec,       TLS finished ->                              <- EAP-Request/                              EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                              (TLS change_cipher_spec,                               TLS finished,                               Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                                Result TLV (Success))      // TLS channel established         (TLV Payload messages sent within the TLS channel)       Crypto-Binding TLV(Response),       Request-Action TLV       (Status=Failure, Action=Negotiate-EAP)->                            <- EAP-Payload-TLV                                [EAP-Request/Identity]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/Identity] ->                            <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X] ->                             <- EAP-Payload-TLV                            [EAP-Request/EAP-Type=X]      EAP-Payload-TLV      [EAP-Response/EAP-Type=X]->                              <- Intermediate Result TLV (Success),                                 Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                                 Result TLV (Success)      Intermediate Result TLV (Success),      Crypto-Binding TLV (Response),      Result-TLV (Success)) ->Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 98]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014      // TLS channel torn down      (messages sent in cleartext)                              <- EAP-SuccessC.10.  Channel Binding   The following exchanges show a successful TEAP authentication with   basic password authentication and channel binding using a Request-   Action TLV.  The conversation will appear as follows:       Authenticating Peer     Authenticator       -------------------     -------------                               <- EAP-Request/                               Identity       EAP-Response/       Identity (MyID1) ->                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TEAP Start, S bit set, Authority-ID)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1       (TLS client_hello with        PAC-Opaque in SessionTicket extension)->                               <- EAP-Request/                               EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1                               (TLS server_hello,                               (TLS change_cipher_spec,                                TLS finished)       EAP-Response/       EAP-Type=TEAP, V=1 ->       (TLS change_cipher_spec,        TLS finished)       TLS channel established       (messages sent within the TLS channel)                              <- Basic-Password-Auth-Req TLV, Challenge       Basic-Password-Auth-Resp TLV, Response with both       username and password) ->       optional additional exchanges (new pin mode,       password change, etc.) ...Zhou, et al.                 Standards Track                   [Page 99]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014                            <- Crypto-Binding TLV (Request),                                Result TLV (Success),       Crypto-Binding TLV(Response),       Request-Action TLV       (Status=Failure, Action=Process-TLV,       TLV=Channel-Binding TLV)->                                <- Channel-Binding TLV (Response),                                Result TLV (Success),       Result-TLV (Success) ->       TLS channel torn down       (messages sent in cleartext)                               <- EAP-SuccessZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                  [Page 100]

RFC 7170                          TEAP                          May 2014Authors' Addresses   Hao Zhou   Cisco Systems   4125 Highlander Parkway   Richfield, OH  44286   US   EMail: hzhou@cisco.com   Nancy Cam-Winget   Cisco Systems   3625 Cisco Way   San Jose, CA  95134   US   EMail: ncamwing@cisco.com   Joseph Salowey   Cisco Systems   2901 3rd Ave   Seattle, WA  98121   US   EMail: jsalowey@cisco.com   Stephen Hanna   Infineon Technologies   79 Parsons Street   Brighton, MA  02135   US   EMail: steve.hanna@infineon.comZhou, et al.                 Standards Track                  [Page 101]

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