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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                           J. TouchRequest for Comments: 3884                                           ISICategory: Informational                                        L. Eggert                                                                     NEC                                                                 Y. Wang                                                                     ISI                                                          September 2004Use of IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic RoutingStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).IESG Note   This document is not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard.   The IETF disclaims any knowledge of the fitness of this document for   any purpose, and in particular notes that it has not had IETF review   for such things as security, congestion control or inappropriate   interaction with deployed protocols.  The RFC Editor has chosen to   publish this document at its discretion.  Readers of this document   should exercise caution in evaluating its value for implementation   and deployment.Abstract   IPsec can secure the links of a multihop network to protect   communication between trusted components, e.g., for a secure virtual   network (VN), overlay, or virtual private network (VPN). Virtual   links established by IPsec tunnel mode can conflict with routing and   forwarding inside VNs because IP routing depends on references to   interfaces and next-hop IP addresses. The IPsec tunnel mode   specification is ambiguous on this issue, so even compliant   implementations cannot be trusted to avoid conflicts.  An alternative   to tunnel mode uses non-IPsec IPIP encapsulation together with IPsec   transport mode, which we call IIPtran.  IPIP encapsulation occurs as   a separate initial step, as the result of a forwarding lookup of the   VN packet. IPsec transport mode processes the resulting (tunneled) IP   packet with an SA determined through a security association database   (SAD) match on the tunnel header.  IIPtran supports dynamic routingTouch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   inside the VN without changes to the current IPsec architecture.   IIPtran demonstrates how to configure any compliant IPsec   implementation to avoid the aforementioned conflicts.  IIPtran is   also compared to several alternative mechanisms for VN routing and   their respective impact on IPsec, routing, policy enforcement, and   interactions with the Internet Key Exchange (IKE).Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.2.  Document History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Problem Description. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.1.  IPsec Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.2.  Forwarding Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.3.  Problem 1: Forwarding Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.4.  Problem 2: Source Address Selection  . . . . . . . . . .83.  IIPtran: IPIP Tunnel Devices + IPsec Transport Mode  . . . . .93.1.  IIPtran Details  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103.2.  Solving Problem 1: Forwarding Issues . . . . . . . . . .113.3.  Solving Problem 2: Source Address Selection  . . . . . .124.  Comparison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.1.  Other Proposed Solutions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.1.1.  Alternative 1: IPsec with Interface SAs. . . . .13             4.1.2.  Alternative 2: IPsec with Initial                     Forwarding Lookup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13             4.1.3.  Alternative 3: IPsec with Integrated                     Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.2.  Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.2.1.  VN Routing Support and Complexity  . . . . . . .144.2.2.  Impact on the IPsec Architecture . . . . . . . .154.2.3.  Policy Enforcement and Selectors . . . . . . . .164.2.4.  IKE Impact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .195.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .196.  Summary and Recommendations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .207.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .208.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21A.  Encapsulation/Decapsulation Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22A.1.  Encapsulation Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22A.2.  Decapsulation Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23A.3.Appendix Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23       Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24       Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20041.  Introduction   The IP security architecture (IPsec) consists of two modes, transport   mode and tunnel mode [1].  Transport mode is allowed between two end   hosts only; tunnel mode is required when at least one of the   endpoints is a "security gateway" (intermediate system that   implements IPsec functionality, e.g., a router.)   IPsec can be used to secure the links of a virtual network (VN),   creating a secure VN.  In a secure VN, trusted routers inside the   network dynamically forward packets in the clear (internally), and   exchange the packets on secure tunnels, where paths may traverse   multiple tunnels.  Contrast this to the conventional 'virtual private   network' (VPN), which often assumes that paths tend to traverse one   secure tunnel to resources in a secure core.  A general secure VN   allows this secure core to be distributed, composed of trusted or   privately-managed resources anywhere in the network.   This document addresses the use of IPsec to secure the links of a   multihop, distributed VN.  It describes how virtual links established   by IPsec tunnel mode can conflict with routing and forwarding inside   the VN, due to the IP routing dependence on references to interfaces   and next-hop IP addresses.   This document proposes a solution called IIPtran that separates the   step of IP tunnel encapsulation from IPsec processing.  The solution   combines a subset of the current IPsec architecture with other   Internet standards to arrive at an interoperable equivalent that is   both simpler and has a modular specification.   Later sections of this document compare IIPtran to other proposals   for dynamic routing inside VPNs, focusing on the impact the different   proposals have on the overall IPsec architecture, routing protocols,   security policy enforcement, and the Internet Key Exchange (IKE)   [9][10].  An appendix addresses IP tunnel processing issues in IPsec   related to IPIP encapsulation and decapsulation.   This document assumes familiarity with other Internet standards   [1][2], notably with terminology and numerous acronyms therein.1.2.  Document History   This document was first issued as an Internet Draft on March 10,   2000, entitled "Use of IPSEC Transport Mode for Virtual Networks,"   and was first presented in the IPsec WG at the 47th IETF in Adelaide   in March 2000.  It was subsequently revised and presented to the   PPVPN WG at the 51st IETF in London in August 2001, to the IPsec WG   at the 52nd IETF in Salt Lake City in December 2001, and to both theTouch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   IPsec and PPVPN WGs at the 53rd IETF in Minneapolis in March 2002.   Version 04 of this draft was submitted for publication as an   Informational RFC based on suggestions by the IPsec WG in June 2002,   and was under IESG review from then until version 07 was approved for   publication in June 2004.  During that time, it was substantively   revised according to feedback from the IESG regarding interactions   with the IPsec specification (RFC 2401 [1]) and other protocols, with   regard to security and compatibility issues.2.  Problem Description   Virtual networks connect subsets of resources of an underlying base   network, and present the result as a virtual network layer to upper-   layer protocols.  Similar to a real network, virtual networks consist   of virtual hosts (packet sources and sinks) and virtual routers   (packet transits), both of which can have a number of network   interfaces, and links, which connect multiple network interfaces   together.  Virtual links (also called tunnels, especially when   point-to-point) are one-hop links in the VN topology, but are either   direct links or paths (sequences of connected links) in the   underlying base network.   Base network hosts and routers can be part of multiple virtual   networks at the same time, and their role in the base network does   not need to coincide with their role in a virtual network (i.e., base   network hosts may act as VN routers or hosts, as may base network   routers).   It is important to note that this definition of a VN is more general   than some other definitions, where the VN participation of end   systems is limited.  Some proposals only allow end systems to be part   of a single VN, or even only allow them to be part of the VN and not   the base network, substituting the VN for the Internet.  The   definition above explicitly allows hosts and routers to participate   in multiple, parallel VNs, and allows layered VNs (VN inside VN).   It can be useful for a VN to secure its virtual links [3][4],   resulting in a VPN.  This is not equivalent to end-to-end security,   but can be useful when end hosts do not support secure communication   themselves.  It can provide an additional level of hop-by-hop network   security to secure routing in the VPN and isolate the traffic of   different VPNs.   The topology of an IPsec VPN commonly consists of IPsec tunnel mode   virtual links, as required by the IPsec architecture when the   communicating peers are gateway pairs, or a host and a gateway [1].   However, this current required use of IPsec tunnel mode can be   incompatible with dynamic routing [3].Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   The next section provides a short overview on IPsec transport and   tunnel mode processing, as far as it is relevant for the   understanding of the problem scenarios that follow.  The following   sections discuss routing problems in detail, based on a common   example.2.1.  IPsec Overview   There are two modes of IPsec, transport mode and tunnel mode [1].   Transport mode secures portions of the existing IP header and the   payload data of the packet, and inserts an IPsec header between the   IP header and the payload; tunnel mode adds an additional IP header   before performing similar operations.  This section gives a short   overview of the relevant processing steps for both modes.   In transport mode, IPsec inserts a security protocol header into   outgoing IP packets between the original IP header and the packet   payload (Figure 1) [5][6][11][12].  The contents of the IPsec header   are based on the result of a "security association" (SA) lookup that   uses the contents of the original packet header (Figure 1, arrow) as   well as its payload (especially transport layer headers) to locate an   SA in the security association database (SAD).   Original Outbound Packet       Outbound Packet (IPsec Transport Mode)   +-----------+---------+        +-----------+==============+---------+   | IP Header | Payload |        | IP Header | IPsec Header | Payload |   +-----------+---------+        +-----------+==============+---------+                                        |             ^                                        |             |                                        +-------------+                                           SA Lookup   Figure 1: Outbound Packet Construction under IPsec Transport Mode   When receiving packets secured with IPsec transport mode, a similar   SA lookup occurs based on the IP and IPsec headers, followed by a   verification step after IPsec processing that checks the contents of   the packet and its payload against the respective SA.  The   verification step is similar to firewall processing.   When using tunnel mode, IPsec prepends an IPsec header and an   additional IP header to the outgoing IP packet (Figure 2).  In   essence, the original packet becomes the payload of another IP   packet, which IPsec then secures.  This has been described [1] as "a   tunnel mode SA is essentially a [transport mode] SA applied to an IP   tunnel." However, there are significant differences between the two,   as described in the remainder of this section.Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   In IPsec tunnel mode, the IP header of the original outbound packet   together with its payload (especially transport headers) determines   the IPsec SA, as for transport mode.  However, a tunnel mode SA also   contains encapsulation information, including the source and   destination IP addresses for the outer tunnel IP header, which is   also based on the original outbound packet header and its payload   (Figure 2, arrows).                    Outbound Packet (IPsec Tunnel Mode)      +==================+==============+-----------------+---------+      | Tunnel IP Header | IPsec Header | Orig. IP Header | Payload |      +==================+==============+-----------------+---------+               ^                ^              | |               |                |              | |               |                +--------------+ |               |                    SA Lookup    |               |                                 |               +---------------------------------+                        IP Encapsulation     Figure 2: Outbound Packet Construction under IPsec Tunnel Mode   When receiving packets secured with tunnel mode IPsec, an SA lookup   occurs based on the contents of the IPsec header and the outer IP   header.  Next, the packet is decrypted or authenticated based on its   IPsec header and the SA, followed by a verification step that checks   the contents of the original packet and its payload (especially the   inner IP header and transport headers) against the respective SA.2.2.  Forwarding Example   Consider a VPN topology with virtual links established by IPsec   tunnel mode SAs, as would be required for compliance with [1].  Such   hop-by-hop security can be useful, for example, to secure VN routing,   and when legacy end systems do not support end-to-end IPsec   themselves.   Virtual routers in a VN need to forward packets the same way regular   Internet routers do: based on the destination IP address and the   forwarding table.  These two determine the next hop IP address the   packet should be forwarded to (additional header fields and inner   headers can be used, e.g., in policy routing.)   In Figure 3, traffic arrives at gateway A on virtual link 1, having   come from any of the virtual hosts upstream of that virtual link.   There are two outgoing virtual links for this incoming traffic: out   link 3 going to the VPN next-hop gateway B, and out link 4 going to   the VPN next-hop gateway C.Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   For this example, assume the incoming traffic is from a single VPN   source X, going to a single VPN destination Y. Ellipses (...)   represent multiple virtual links in Figure 3.                                B ---...---                               /           \                              / 3           \                             /               \                X ---...--- A                 D ---...--- Y                   1     2   \                /                              \ 4            /                               \            /                                C ---...---                Figure 3: Topology of a Virtual Network   Two problems arise; one is forwarding of VN traffic over IPsec tunnel   mode links, the other is source address selection on VN end systems.2.3.  Problem 1: Forwarding Issues   Assume a packet from source X to destination Y arrives on link 2 at   gateway A. Gateway A now needs to both forward and encrypt the packet   to make progress to the next hop gateway inside the VPN.   Dynamically routed gateways forward packets based on a forwarding   table managed by a routing daemon that exchanges connectivity   information with directly connected peers by communicating on its   local interfaces.  Entries in the forwarding table map destination IP   addresses to the IP address of a next-hop gateway and an associated   outbound interface.   The problem is that an intermediate router needs to pick a next hop   gateway for a transit packet based on its destination IP address and   the contents of the forwarding table.  However, the IPsec   architecture does not define if and how tunnel mode SAs are   represented in the forwarding table.   The problem occurs when A tries to decide how to forward the packet   X->Y.  In a regular IP network, this decision depends on a forwarding   lookup on destination address Y, which indicates the IP address of   the next-hop gateway and an associated outbound interface.  In the   case of a VN, forwarding lookups occur on virtual destination   addresses.  For the forwarding lookup on such a virtual destination   address to succeed, routes through virtual interfaces (tunnels) must   exist in the forwarding table.Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   There are two common implementation scenarios for tunnel mode SAs:   One is based on firewall-like packet matching operations where tunnel   mode SAs are not virtual interfaces, another is tunnel-based, and   treats a tunnel mode SA as a virtual interface.  The current IPsec   architecture does not mandate one or the other.   Under the first approach, the presence of IPsec tunnel mode SAs is   invisible to the IP forwarding mechanism.  The lookup uses matching   rules in the SA lookup process, closer to firewall matching than   traditional IP forwarding lookups, and independent from existing IP   forwarding tables.  The SA lookup determines which virtual link the   packet will be forwarded over, because the tunnel mode SA includes   encapsulation information.  This lookup and the subsequent tunnel   mode processing both ignore the contents of the existing IP   forwarding table, whether static or dynamic routing are used.  This   type of tunnel mode processing is thus incompatible with dynamically   routed VPNs.   The second approach - requiring tunnel mode SAs to be interfaces -   can be compatible with dynamically routed VPNs (seeSection 4)   depending on how it is implemented; however, IIPtran (seeSection 3)   has the additional benefit of greatly simplifying the IPsec   architecture and related specifications, and of being compatible with   all IPsec specification compliant implementations.2.4.  Problem 2: Source Address Selection   A second issue is source address selection at the source host.  When   an application sends traffic to another host, the host must choose an   IP source address for the IP packets before transmission.   When an end system is connected to multiple networks, it must set the   source address properly to receive return traffic over the correct   network.  When a node participates in a virtual network, it is always   connected to two networks, the base network and the VN (more if it   connects to at least two VNs.) The IPsec specification currently does   not define how tunnel mode SAs integrate with source address   selection.   For example, when communication occurs over a virtual network, the   source address must lie inside the VN.  When X sends to Y (Figure 3),   the source address must be the IP address of X's local end of tunnel   1. If host A, which has multiple interfaces inside the VN, sends to   Y, the source address must be the IP address of the local end of   either tunnel 3 or 4.Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   Most applications do not bind to a specific source IP address, and   instead let the host pick one for their traffic [7].  Rules for   source address selection that depend heavily on the notions of   interfaces and routes.   According to [7], the IP source address of an outbound packet should:   (1) for directly connected networks derive from the corresponding   interface, or (2) derive from existing dynamic or static route   entries to the destination, or finally (3) derive from the interface   attached to a default gateway.   Because IPsec tunnel mode SAs are not required to be interfaces,   rules (1) and (2) may not return a usable source address for a given   packet.  Consequently, VN packets will use the IP address of the   local interface connecting to a default gateway as their source   address.  Often, a default gateway for a host provides connectivity   in the base network underlying the VN.  The outgoing packet will thus   have a source address in the base network, and a destination address   in the VN.   This can result in numerous problems, including applications that   fail to operate at all, firewalls and admission control failures, and   may even lead to compromised security.  Consider two cases, one with   IPsec tunnels configured with no wildcard tunnel addresses, the other   using certain wildcards.  In both cases, an application whose source   address is set byRFC 1122 [7] rules may send packets (e.g.) with the   source address of that host's base network (via the default route)   and a destination address of the remote tunnel endpoint.3.  IIPtran: IPIP Tunnel Devices + IPsec Transport Mode   This section introduces a solution - called IIPtran - for the two   issues identified above.  IIPtran replaces IPsec tunnel mode with a   combination of IPIP tunnel interfaces that support forwarding and   source address selection (as perRFC 2003 [2]), followed by IPsec   transport mode on the encapsulated packet.   The IPsec architecture [1] defines the appropriate use of IPsec   transport mode and IPsec tunnel mode (host-to-host communication for   the former, and all transit communication for the latter).  IIPtran   appears to violate this requirement, because it uses IPsec transport   mode for transit communication.   However, for an IPIP tunnel between security gateways, the gateways   themselves source or sink base network traffic when tunneling - they   act as hosts in the base network.  Thus, IPsec transport mode is also   appropriate, if not required, for encapsulated traffic, according to   [1].Touch, et al.                Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   As a result, replacing IPsec tunnel mode with IPIP tunnel devices and   IPsec transport mode is consistent with the existing architecture.   Furthermore, this does not compromise the end-to-end use of IPsec,   either inside a VPN or in the base network; it only adds IPsec   protection to secure virtual links.   The next sections will give a short overview of IPIP encapsulation,   and show it combines with IPsec transport mode processing.  This   section will then discuss how IIPtran addresses each of the problems   identified above.3.1.  IIPtran Details   IIPtran uses IPIP tunnels (as defined inRFC 2003 [2]), followed by   IPsec transport mode on the encapsulated packet.RFC 2003 [2] uniquely specifies IPIP encapsulation (placing an IP   packet as payload inside another IP packet.) Originally developed for   MobileIP, it has often been adopted when virtual topologies were   required.  Examples include virtual (overlay) networks to support   emerging protocols such as IP Multicast, IPv6, and Mobile IP itself,   as well as systems that provide private networks over the Internet   (X-Bone [3] and PPVPN).   IPIP outbound packet processing, as specified byRFC 2003 [2],   tunnels an existing IP packet by prepending it with another IP header   (Figure 4.)                       Outbound Packet (IPIP Tunnel)              +==================+-----------------+---------+              | Tunnel IP Header | Orig. IP Header | Payload |              +==================+-----------------+---------+                       ^                  |                       |                  |                       +------------------+                        IPIP Encapsulation         Figure 4: Outbound Packet Construction for IPIP Tunnel   IIPtran performs this IPIP processing as a first step, followed by   IPsec transport mode processing on the resulting IPIP packet (Figure   5.)Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004            Outbound Packet (IPIP Tunnel + IPsec Transport Mode)      +==================+==============+-----------------+---------+      | Tunnel IP Header | IPsec Header | Orig. IP Header | Payload |      +==================+==============+-----------------+---------+              ^  |               ^               |              |  |               |               |              |  +---------------+               |              |      SA Lookup                   |              |                                  |              +----------------------------------+                       IPIP Encapsulation   Figure 5: Outbound Packet Construction for IPIP Tunnel with IPsec                             Transport Mode   A key difference between Figure 2 and Figure 5 is that in the   proposed solution, the IPsec header is based on the outer IP header,   whereas under IPsec tunnel mode processing, the IPsec header depends   on the contents of the inner IP header and payload (seeSection 2.1).   However, the resulting VPN packet (Figure 5) on the wire cannot be   distinguished from a VPN packet generated by IPsec tunnel mode   processing (Figure 2); and the two methods inter-operate, given   appropriate configurations on both ends [3].   A detailed discussion of the differences between IIPtran, IPsec   tunnel mode, and other proposed mechanisms follows inSection 4.  The   remainder of this section will describe how IIPtran combines IPIP   tunnel devices with IPsec transport mode to solve the problems   identified inSection 2.3.2.  Solving Problem 1: Forwarding IssuesSection 2.3 described how IP forwarding over IPsec tunnel mode SAs   breaks, because tunnel mode SAs are not required to be network   interfaces.  IIPtran usesRFC 2003 IPIP tunnels [2] to establish the   topology of the virtual network.RFC 2003 [2] requires that IPIP   tunnels can be routed to, and have configurable addresses.  Thus,   they can be references in node's routing table (supporting static   routing), as well as used by dynamic routing daemons for local   communication of reachability information.RFC 2003 [2] addressed the issue of inserting an IPsec header between   the two IP headers that are a result of IPIP encapsulation.  IIPtran   provides further details on this configuration, and demonstrates how   it enables dynamic routing in a virtual network.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   It is important to note that theRFC 2003 IPIP tunnels [2] already   provide a complete virtual network that can support static or dynamic   routing.  The proposed solution of using IPIP tunnel with IPsec   transport mode decouples IPsec processing from routing and   forwarding.  IIPtran's use of IPsec is limited to securing the links   of the VN (creating a VPN), because IPsec (rightly) lacks internal   support for routing and forwarding.3.3.  Solving Problem 2: Source Address SelectionSection 2.4 gave an overview of IP source address selection and its   dependence on interfaces and routes.   UsingRFC 2003 IPIP tunnel devices [2] for VN links, instead of IPsec   tunnel mode SAs, allows existing multihoming solutions for source   address selection [1] to solve source address selection in this   context as well.  As indicated inSection 2.4, according to [1], the   IP source address of an outbound packet is determined by the outbound   interface, which is in turn determined by existing forwarding   mechanism.  Because IPIP tunnels are full-fledged interfaces with   associated routes (as in Section 3.2 of [2]), the routes and address   selection as specified in [1] can also operate as desired in the   context of VN links.4.  Comparison   The previous sections described problems when IPsec tunnel mode   provides VPN links, and proposed a solution.  This section introduces   a number of proposed alternatives, and compares their effect on the   IPsec architecture, routing, and policy enforcement, among others, to   IIPtran.4.1.  Other Proposed Solutions   This section gives a brief overview of a number of alternative   proposals that aim at establishing support for dynamic routing for   IPsec-secured VNs.  The following section then compares these   proposals in detail.   Although some of the alternatives also address the issues identified   above, IIPtran alone also significantly simplifies and modularizes   the IPsec architecture.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20044.1.1.  Alternative 1: IPsec with Interface SAs   In the first alternative, each IPsec tunnel mode SA is required to   act as a full-fledged network interface.  This SA interface acts as   the outbound interface of the virtual destination's forwarding table   entry.  IPsec dynamically updates the SA interface configuration in   response to SAD changes, e.g., caused by IKE negotiation.   This approach supports dynamic routing and existing source address   selection rules, but requires extensions to the IPsec architecture   that define tunnel mode SA interfaces and their associated management   procedures.   It would necessitate recapitulating the definition of the entirety ofRFC 2003 IPIP encapsulation [2], including the association of tunnels   with interfaces, inside IPsec.  This defeats the modular architecture   of the Internet, and violates the specification of type 4 IP in IP   packets as being uniquely defined by a single Internet standard (it   is already standardized by [2]).   This solution also requires augmenting the IPsec specification to   mandate an implementation detail, one that may be difficult to   resolve with other IPsec designs, notably the BITS (bump-in-the-   stack) alternative.  Although the current IPsec specification is   ambiguous and allows this implementation, an implementation-   independent design is preferable.4.1.2.  Alternative 2: IPsec with Initial Forwarding Lookup   A second alternative is the addition of an extra forwarding lookup   before IPsec tunnel mode processing.  This forwarding lookup will   return a "virtual interface" identifier, which indicates how to route   the packet [13].  Due to a lack of concrete documentation of this   alternative at this time, proposed for an update pending toRFC 2401   [1], two variants are presumed possible:   In the first scenario, the extra forwarding lookup indicates the   outbound interface of the final encapsulated tunnel mode packet,   i.e., usually a physical interface in the base network.  The tunnel   mode SA lookup following the forwarding lookup will occur in the   per-interface SAD associated with the respective virtual interface.   In the second scenario, the extra forwarding lookup returns an   outbound tunnel SA interface.  This solution seems to be equivalent   to the one described above (Section 4.1.1), i.e., all tunnel mode SAs   must be interfaces, and is not discussed separately below.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20044.1.3.  Alternative 3: IPsec with Integrated Forwarding   In the third alternative, the routing protocols and forwarding   mechanisms are modified to consult both the routing tables and SADs   to make forwarding decision.  To prevent IPsec processing from   interfering with routing, forwarding table lookup must precede SAD   lookup.   This approach supports dynamic routing, but requires changes to   routing mechanisms such that SAD contents are included in the route   exchanges.  It is unclear how transport-layer selectors would affect   this approach.4.2.  Discussion   This section compares the three different alternatives and IIPtran   according to a number of evaluation criteria, such as support for VN   forwarding, or impact on the IPsec architecture.4.2.1.  VN Routing Support and Complexity   This section investigates whether the three alternatives and IIPtran   support VN routing, especially dynamic routing based on existing IP   routing protocols.   Both IIPtran (IPIP tunnels + transport mode) and alternative 1 (per-   SA interfaces) establish VN links as full-fledged devices that can be   referred to in the routing table, as well as used for local   communication by dynamic routing protocols.  They both support static   and dynamic VN routing.   However, because the current IPsec architecture does not require   tunnel mode SAs to behave similarly to interfaces (some implementers   chose alternative 1, but it is not mandated by the specification),   alternative 1 requires extensions to the current IPsec architecture   that define the exact behavior of tunnel mode SAs.  The proposed   solution does not require any such changes to IPsec, and for tunnelsRFC 2003 already specifies those requirements [2].  Furthermore,   addition of those requirements would be redundant and potentially   conflict withRFC 2003 [2].   Alternative 3 supports dynamic VN routing, but requires modifying   routing protocols and forwarding lookup mechanisms to act or   synchronize based on SAD entries.  This requires substantial changes   to routing software and forwarding mechanisms in all participating   nodes to interface to the internals of IPsec; this would require   revising a large number of current Internet standards.  It is alsoTouch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   not clear how tunnel mode SAs that specify port selectors would   operate under this scheme, since IP routing has no dependence on   transport-layer fields.   Alternative 2 does not support dynamic VN routing.  The additional   forwarding lookup before IPsec processing is irrelevant, because   IPsec tunnel mode SAs are not represented as interfaces, and thus   invisible to IP routing protocols.   Additionally, the forwarding lookup suggested for alternative 2 is   not compatible with a weak ES model described in [1], which requires   both an outbound interface indicator as well as the IP address of the   next-hop gateway.  For example, multiple tunnels can use the same   outgoing interface and thus same SAD.  The forwarding lookup would   return only the interface; lacking the next-hop gateway, the correct   SAD entry cannot be determined.  Given the next-hop gateway would not   help, because the SAD is not indexed by tunnel mode SA encapsulation   destination IP address.   Because alternative 2 fails to support VN routing, it will not be   discussed in the remainder of this section.4.2.2.  Impact on the IPsec Architecture   IIPtran recognizes that encapsulation is already a property of   interface processing, and thus relies on IPIP tunnel devices to   handle the IPIP encapsulation for VN links.  Tunnel mode IPsec thus   becomes unnecessary and can potentially be removed from the IPsec   architecture, greatly simplifying the specification.   Alternative 1 requires SAs to be represented as full-fledged   interfaces, for the purpose of routing.  SAD changes must furthermore   dynamically update the configuration of these SA interfaces.  The   IPsec architecture thus needs extensions that define the operation of   interfaces and their interactions with the forwarding table and   routes.   Additionally,RFC 2401 [1] describes per-interface SADs as a   component of IPsec.  When tunnel mode SAs themselves act as   interfaces, the function of per-interface SADs needs clarification as   follows:   First, each tunnel interface SAD must contain exactly one IPsec   tunnel mode SA.  Transport mode SAs are prohibited, because they   would not result in IP encapsulation (the encapsulation header is   part of the tunnel mode SA, a transport mode SA would not cause   encapsulation), and thus lead to processing loops.  Multiple tunnel   mode SAs are prohibited, because dynamic routing algorithms constructTouch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   topology information based on per-interface communication.  Merging   different virtual links (tunnels) into a single SA interface can   cause routing events on one virtual link to apply incorrectly to   other links sharing an SA interface.   Second, only the SAD of physical interfaces may contain IPsec   transport mode SAs; otherwise, the current issues with VN routing   remain unsolved.   In summary, these restrictions cause the SADs of SA interfaces to   contain only tunnel mode SAs, and the SADs of regular interfaces to   contain only transport mode SAs.  Thus, tunnel encapsulation   essentially becomes a unique property of the interface, and not   IPsec.   IIPtran already recognizes this property.  Consequently, it uses IPIP   tunnels directly, and combines them with transport mode processing.   By eliminating the use of tunnel mode, it removes the need for   additional constraints on the contents of per-interface SAs.4.2.3.  Policy Enforcement and Selectors   On receiving a packet, both IPsec tunnel mode and IIPtran decrypt   and/or authenticate the packet with the same techniques.  IPsec   tunnel mode decapsulates and decrypts the packet in a single step,   followed by a policy check of the inner packet and its payload   against the respective IPsec tunnel mode SA.  IIPtran uses IPsec   transport mode to decrypt and verify the incoming packet, then passes   the decrypted IPIP packet on toRFC 2003 IPIP processing [2].  At   that point, IIPtran can support selector checks on both the header   and its payload using firewall mechanisms, similar to IPsec tunnel   mode processing.   The primary difference between the two is that IPsec tunnel mode does   not require a separate processing step for validating packets; once   IPsec accepts them during the policy check during decapsulation, they   are accepted.  IIPtran requires additional processing on the   decapsulated packets, to validate whether they conform to their   respective IPsec policy.   As noted inSection 5.2 of the IPsec architecture document [1], IPsec   processing should retain information about what SAs matched a given   packet, for subsequent IPsec or firewall processing.  To allow for   complex accept policies, it should be possible to reconstruct the   format of the original packet at the time it first entered a machine   based on saved processing context at any time during inboundTouch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   processing.  IIPtran accepts incoming VN packets only if they have   arrived over a specific IPIP tunnel that was secured with IPsec   transport mode, but as a separate step following IPIP decapsulation.   Note that IPsec tunnel mode and IIPtran are interoperable [3].   Experiments have verified this interoperability, notably because   there are no differences in the resulting packets on the wire, given   appropriate keys.4.2.3.1.  Selector Expressiveness   When looking up an SA for a given packet, IPsec allows selectors to   match on the contents of the IP header and transport headers.   IIPtran using existing IPsec cannot support transport header matches,   because SA lookup occurs before decapsulation.  A small extension to   IPsec can address this issue in a modular way.RFC 2401 [1] explicitly recognizes that the transport layer header   may be nested several headers deep inside the packet, and allows a   system to (quote) "chain through the packet headers checking the   'Protocol' or 'Next Header' field until it encounters either one it   recognizes as a transport protocol, or until it reaches one that   isn't on its list of extension headers, or until it encounters an ESP   header that renders the transport protocol opaque."   With IIPtran, the SA lookup starts on the outer (tunnel) header, and   selectors including port number information must thus traverse the   inner IP header (and possibly other headers) before they can match on   the transport headers.  IIPtran thus requires that IP be a known   IPsec "extension header." This recognizes that with IPIP   encapsulation, IP VNs use the base IP network as a link layer.   Although this small extension to IPsec is not explicitly required, it   is already implied.   Recognizing IP as a valid transport layer over IP also allows   selectors to match on the contents of the inner ("transport") IP   header.  Thus, IPsec selectors under IIPtran can express the same set   of policies as conventional IPsec tunnel mode.   Note that in both cases, these policy enforcement rules violate   layering by looking at information other than the outermost header.   This is consistent with IPsec's current use of port-based selectors.   The next section discusses that selectors may not be useful for   virtual networks.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20044.2.3.2.  Role of Selectors for VPNs   For secure VN links established via IPsec tunnel mode SAs, the   selectors for the inner (VN) source and destination IP addresses   often need to be wildcarded to support dynamic routing in a VN.   Thus, the limitation described in 4.2.3.1 (without the proposed   extension) may not be important in a VN scenario.   Consider a four-node VN with nodes A, B, C, and N (Figure 6).   Consider the case where N is either a new node joining an existing   VPN, or an existing node that had been disconnected and was just   rediscovered via dynamic routing.   In this example, A has IPsec tunnel mode SAs to B and C. If the   selectors for the virtual source and destination IP addresses for   those SAs are not wildcards, the SA needs to be dynamically modified   to permit packets from N to pass over the tunnels to B and C. This   becomes quickly impractical as VPN sizes grow.                                        B                                       /                                      /                                     /                           N ------ A                                     \                                      \                                       \                                        C                Figure 6: Topology of a Virtual Network   Thus, IPsec selectors appear much less useful in a VPN scenario than   expected.  A consequence might be that IIPtran - even without   extensions to support the full expressiveness of tunnel mode SA   selectors as described above - can still support the majority of VPN   scenarios.   One purpose of selectors matching on transport header content is   policy routing.  Different SAs can apply to different applications,   resulting in different apparent virtual topologies.  IIPtran supports   policy routing in a more modular way, by having existing policy   routing implementations forward traffic over multiple, parallel VNs.   IIPtran supports arbitrary IP-based policy routing schemes, while   policies are limited by the expressiveness of IPsec's selectors in   the former case.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20044.2.4.  IKE Impact   The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) [9][10] is a protocol to negotiate   IPsec keys between end systems dynamically and securely.  It is not a   strictly required component of IPsec in the sense that two hosts can   communicate using IPsec without having used IKE to negotiate keys   (through manually keyed SAs, for example).  Despite its name, IKE   also acts as a tunnel management protocol (when IPsec tunnel mode SAs   are configured), and negotiates security policies between the peers.   Alternatives 1 and 3 use existing IKE without changes.   One possible approach to use IKE with IIPtran is to negotiate a   tunnel mode SA, and then treat it as a transport mode SA against an   IPIP tunnel when communicating with conventional peers.  For policies   that do not specify selectors based on transport-layer information,   this establishes interoperability.   However, since IIPtran eliminates IPsec tunnel mode, it could also   simplify IKE, by limiting it to its original purpose of key exchange.   A new tunnel management protocol (e.g., ATMP [8]) would set up IPIP   tunnels, use an as of yet unspecified second protocol to negotiate   security policy, and then use IKE to exchange keys for use with the   policy.   Current IKE operation would become a modular composition of separate   protocols, similar to how IIPtran modularizes IPsec by combining   existing Internet standards.  For example, a VPN link creation could   follow these steps: (1) IKE negotiation in the base network to secure   (2) a subsequent tunnel management exchange [8] in the base network,   followed by (3) IKE exchanges over the established tunnel to create a   secure VPN link.5.  Security Considerations   This document addresses security considerations throughout, as they   are a primary concern of proposed uses of IPsec.   The primary purpose of this document is to extend the use of IPsec to   dynamically routed VPNs, which will extend the use of IPsec and, it   is hoped, increase the security of VPN infrastructures using existing   protocols.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 20046.  Summary and Recommendations   This document presents a mechanism consistent with the current use of   IPsec which supports dynamic routing inside a virtual network that   uses IPsec to secure its links.  It illustrates how current use of   IPsec tunnel mode can fail to support dynamic VN routing (depending   on the implementation), and compares IIPtran with several different   alternatives.  It finds that IIPtran, a composite of a subset of   IPsec (i.e., transport mode) together with existing standard IPIP   encapsulation, results in an interoperable, standards-conforming   equivalent that is both simpler and modular.7.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank the members of the X-Bone and   DynaBone projects at USC/ISI for their contributions to the ideas   behind this document, notably (current) Greg Finn and (past) Amy   Hughes, Steve Hotz and Anindo Banerjea.   The authors would also like to thank Jun-ichiro (itojun) Hagino and   the KAME project for bringing IKE implications of this proposal to   our attention, as well as implementing the mechanisms in this   document in the KAME IPv6/IPsec network stack.  Members of several   IETF WGs (especially IPsec: Stephen Kent, PPVPN: Eric Vyncke, Paul   Knight, various members of MobileIP) provided valuable input on the   details of IPsec processing in earlier revisions of this document.   Effort sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency   (DARPA) and Air Force Research Laboratory, Air Force Materiel   Command, USAF, under agreements number F30602-98-1-0200 entitled "X-   Bone" and number F30602-01-2-0529 entitled "DynaBone".8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]   Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the         Internet Protocol",RFC 2401, November 1998.   [2]   Perkins, C., "IP Encapsulation within IP",RFC 2003, October         1996.   [3]   Touch, J., "Dynamic Internet overlay deployment and management         using the X-Bone", Computer Networks Vol. 36, No. 2-3, July         2001.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004   [4]   Touch, J., Wang, Y., Eggert, L. and G. Finn, "A Virtual         Internet Architecture", ISI Technical Report ISI-TR-570,         Workshop on Future Directions in Network Architecture (FDNA)         2003, March 2003.   [5]   Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Authentication Header",RFC 2402,         November 1998.   [6]   Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Encapsulating Security Payload         (ESP)",RFC 2406, November 1998.   [7]   Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts - Communication         Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122, October 1989.   [8]   Hamzeh, K., "Ascend Tunnel Management Protocol - ATMP",RFC2107, February 1997.8.2.  Informative References   [9]   Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [10]  Kaufman, C.,"Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol", Work in         Progress, January 2004.   [11]  Kent, S.,"IP Authentication Header", Work in Progress,         February 2004.   [12]  Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)", Work in         progress, February 2004.   [13]  Kent, S., "Personal Communication", November 2002.   [14]  Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU discovery",RFC 1191,         November 1990.   [15]  Lahey, K., "TCP Problems with Path MTU Discovery",RFC 2923,         September 2000.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004Appendix A.  Encapsulation/Decapsulation Issues   There are inconsistencies between the IPIP encapsulation rules   specified by IPsec [1] and those specified by MobileIP [2].  The   latter specification is standards track, and the IP protocol number   of 4 (payload of an IP packet of type 4) is uniquely specified byRFC2003 according to IANA [2].  The use of IPIP inside an IPsec   transport packet can be confused with IPsec tunnel mode, because   IPsec does not specify any limits on the types of IP packets that   transport mode can secure.A.1.  Encapsulation Issues   When an IP packet is encapsulated as payload inside another IP   packet, some of the outer header fields can be newly written (and the   inner header determines some others [2].) Among these fields is the   IP DF (do not fragment) flag.  When the inner packet DF flag is   clear, the outer packet may copy it or set it; however, when the   inner DF flag is set, the outer header must copy it [2].  IPsec   defines conflicting rules, where that flag and other similar fields   (TOS, etc.) may be copied, cleared, or set as specified by an SA.   The IPsec specification indicates that such fields must be   controlled, to achieve security.  Otherwise, such fields could   provide a covert channel between the inner packet header and outer   packet header.  However,RFC 2003 [2] requires that the outer fields   not be cleared when the inner ones are set, to prevent MTU discovery   "black holes" [14][15].   To avoid a conflict between these rules, and to avoid security   weaknesses associated with solely copying the fields, it is   recommended that IPsec IPIP encapsulation not permit the clearing of   the outer DF flag.  When the SA requires clearing the DF flag, and   the inner packet DF is set, it is proposed that IPsec drop that   packet, rather than violateRFC 2003 processing rules [2].  Similar   rules are being developed for TOS and other similar IP header fields,   to be included in an update ofRFC 2003 [2].   Another approach to closing the covert channel is always to set the   DF flag in the outer header (whether or not it is set in the inner   header).  Setting the DF flag allows PMTU discovery to operate   normally.  The details of this approach are discussed in [2].Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004A.2.  Decapsulation Issues   Given identical keys, a packet created by IPIP tunnel encapsulation   combined with IPsec transport mode and an IPsec tunnel mode packet   look identical on the wire.  Thus, when an IPsec'ed packet arrives   that contains an IPIP inner packet, it is not possible to distinguish   whether the packet was created using IPsec tunnel mode or IPsec   transport mode of an IPIP encapsulated packet.  In both cases, the   protocol field of the outer header is IPsec (AH or ESP), and the   "next header" field for the inner data is 4 (IP).  IPsec requires the   SA matching a received packet to indicate whether to apply tunnel   mode or transport mode.   Incoming packet processing must check the SAD before determining   whether to decapsulate IPsec packets with inner payload of protocol   type 4.  If the SAD indicates that a tunnel mode association applies,   IPsec must decapsulate the packet.  If the SAD indicates that a   transport mode association applies, IPsec must not decapsulate the   packet.  This requires that the SAD indicate one of these two   options; wildcard SAD entries ("ANY", or "TUNNEL or TRANSPORT")   cannot be supported.A.3.Appendix Summary   IPsec's use of IPIP encapsulation conflicts with the IPIP standard   [2].  This issue is already being resolved in an update toRFC 2003,   instead of specifying a non-standard conforming variant of IPIP   encapsulation inside IPsec.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004Authors' Addresses   Joe Touch   USC Information Sciences Institute   4676 Admiralty Way   Marina del Rey, CA  90292   US   Phone: +1 310 822 1511   Fax:   +1 310 823 6714   EMail: touch@isi.edu   URI:http://www.isi.edu/touch   Lars Eggert   NEC Network Laboratories   Kurfuersten-Anlage 36   Heidelberg  69115   DE   Phone: +49 6221 90511 43   Fax:   +49 6221 90511 55   EMail: lars.eggert@netlab.nec.de   URI:http://www.netlab.nec.de/   Yu-Shun Wang   USC Information Sciences Institute   4676 Admiralty Way   Marina del Rey, CA  90292   US   Phone: +1 310 822 1511   Fax:   +1 310 823 6714   EMail: yushunwa@isi.edu   URI:http://www.isi.edu/yushunwaTouch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 3884        IPsec Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing  September 2004Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  This document is subject   to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained inBCP 78, and   except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Touch, et al.                Informational                     [Page 25]

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