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Network Working Group                                         J. VinocurRequest for Comments: 4643                            Cornell UniversityUpdates:2980                                               K. MurchisonCategory: Standards Track                     Carnegie Mellon University                                                            October 2006Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)Extension for AuthenticationStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   This document defines an extension to the Network News Transfer   Protocol (NNTP) that allows a client to indicate an authentication   mechanism to the server, to perform an authentication protocol   exchange, and optionally to negotiate a security layer for subsequent   protocol interactions during the remainder of an NNTP session.   This document updates and formalizes the AUTHINFO USER/PASS   authentication method specified inRFC 2980 and deprecates the   AUTHINFO SIMPLE and AUTHINFO GENERIC authentication methods.   Additionally, this document defines a profile of the Simple   Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) for NNTP.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction .............................................31.1. Conventions Used in This Document ...................32. The AUTHINFO Extension ...................................42.1. Advertising the AUTHINFO Extension ..................42.2. Authenticating with the AUTHINFO Extension ..........52.3. AUTHINFO USER/PASS Command ..........................62.3.1. Usage ........................................72.3.2. Description ..................................72.3.3. Examples .....................................92.4. AUTHINFO SASL Command ...............................92.4.1. Usage ........................................102.4.2. Description ..................................112.4.3. Examples .....................................143. Augmented BNF Syntax for the AUTHINFO Extension ..........163.1. Commands ............................................163.2. Command Continuation ................................173.3. Responses ...........................................173.4. Capability Entries ..................................173.5. General Non-terminals ...............................184. Summary of Response Codes ................................185. Authentication Tracking/Logging ..........................186. Security Considerations ..................................197. IANA Considerations ......................................207.1. IANA Considerations for SASL/GSSAPI Services ........207.2. IANA Considerations for NNTP Extensions .............208. Acknowledgements .........................................219. References ...............................................229.1. Normative References ................................229.2. Informative References ..............................22Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20061.  Introduction   Although NNTP [NNTP] has traditionally been used to provide public   access to newsgroups, authentication is often useful for several   purposes; for example, to control resource consumption, to allow   abusers of the POST command to be identified, and to restrict access   to "local" newsgroups.   The ad-hoc AUTHINFO USER and AUTHINFO PASS commands, documented in   [NNTP-COMMON], provide a very weak authentication mechanism in   widespread use by the installed base.  Due to their ubiquity, they   are formalized in this specification but (because of their   insecurity) only for use in combination with appropriate security   layers.   The ad hoc AUTHINFO GENERIC command, also documented in [NNTP-COMMON]   but much less ubiquitous, provided an NNTP-specific equivalent of the   generic SASL [SASL] facility.  This document deprecates AUTHINFO   GENERIC in favor of an AUTHINFO SASL replacement so that NNTP can   benefit from authentication mechanisms developed for other SASL-   enabled application protocols, including Simple Mail Transfer   Protocol (SMTP) [SMTP-AUTH], Post Office Protocol (POP) [POP-AUTH],   Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) [IMAP], Lightweight Directory   Access Protocol (LDAP) [LDAP-AUTH], and Blocks Extensive Exchange   Protocol (BEEP) [BEEP].   This specification is to be read in conjunction with the NNTP base   specification [NNTP].  Except where specifically stated otherwise, in   the case of a conflict between these two documents, [NNTP] takes   precedence over this one.   It is also recommended that this specification be read in conjunction   with the SASL base specification [SASL].1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   The notational conventions used in this document are the same as   those in [NNTP], and any term not defined in this document has the   same meaning as it does in that one.   The key words "REQUIRED", "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",   "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as   described in "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement   Levels" [KEYWORDS].   Terms related to authentication are defined in "On Internet   Authentication" [AUTH].Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   In the examples, commands from the client are indicated with [C], and   responses from the server are indicated with [S].2.  The AUTHINFO Extension   The AUTHINFO extension is used to authenticate a user.  Note that   authorization is a matter of site policy, not network protocol, and   therefore it is not discussed in this document.  The server   determines authorization in whatever manner is defined by its   implementation as configured by the site administrator.   This extension provides three new commands: AUTHINFO USER, AUTHINFO   PASS, and AUTHINFO SASL.  The capability label for this extension is   AUTHINFO.2.1.  Advertising the AUTHINFO Extension   A server MUST implement at least one of the AUTHINFO USER or AUTHINFO   SASL commands in order to advertise the "AUTHINFO" capability label   in response to the CAPABILITIES command ([NNTP]Section 5.2).   However, this capability MUST NOT be advertised after successful   authentication (seeSection 2.2).  This capability MAY be advertised   both before and after any use of the MODE READER command ([NNTP]Section 5.3), with the same semantics.   The AUTHINFO capability label contains an argument list detailing   which authentication commands are available.   The "USER" argument indicates that AUTHINFO USER/PASS is supported as   defined bySection 2.3 of this document.  The "USER" argument MUST   NOT be advertised, and the AUTHINFO USER/PASS commands SHOULD NOT be   provided, unless a strong encryption layer (e.g., Transport Layer   Security (TLS) [NNTP-TLS]) is in use or backward compatibility   dictates otherwise.   The "SASL" argument indicates that AUTHINFO SASL is supported as   defined bySection 2.4 of this document.  If the server advertises   the "SASL" argument, then it MUST also advertise the "SASL"   capability in response to the CAPABILITIES command.  The SASL   capability is followed by a whitespace-separated list of available   SASL mechanism names.   The server MAY list the AUTHINFO capability with no arguments, which   indicates that it complies with this specification and does not   permit any authentication commands in its current state.  In this   case, the client MUST NOT attempt to utilize any AUTHINFO commands,   even if it contains logic that might otherwise cause it to do soVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   (e.g., for backward compatibility with servers that are not compliant   with this specification).   Future extensions may add additional arguments to this capability.   Unrecognized arguments MUST be ignored by the client.   As the AUTHINFO command is related to security, cached results of   CAPABILITIES from a previous session MUST NOT be relied on, as per   Section 12.6 of [NNTP].  However, a client MAY use such cached   results in order to detect active down-negotiation attacks.   Example of AUTHINFO capabilities before and after the use of the   STARTTLS [NNTP-TLS] extension:      [C] CAPABILITIES      [S] 101 Capability list:      [S] VERSION 2      [S] READER      [S] IHAVE      [S] STARTTLS      [S] AUTHINFO SASL      [S] SASL CRAM-MD5 DIGEST-MD5 GSSAPI      [S] LIST ACTIVE NEWSGROUPS      [S] .      [C] STARTTLS      [S] 382 Continue with TLS negotiation      [TLS negotiation proceeds, further commands protected by TLS]      [C] CAPABILITIES      [S] 101 Capability list:      [S] VERSION 2      [S] READER      [S] IHAVE      [S] AUTHINFO USER SASL      [S] SASL CRAM-MD5 DIGEST-MD5 GSSAPI PLAIN EXTERNAL      [S] LIST ACTIVE NEWSGROUPS      [S] .2.2.  Authenticating with the AUTHINFO Extension   An NNTP server responds to a client command with a 480 response to   indicate that the client MUST authenticate and/or authorize in order   to use that command or access the indicated resource.  Use of the   AUTHINFO command as described below is one such way that a client can   authenticate/authorize to the server.  The client MAY therefore use   an AUTHINFO command after receiving a 480 response.  A client   intending to use an AUTHINFO command SHOULD issue the CAPABILITIES   command to obtain the available authentication commands and   mechanisms before attempting authentication.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   If a server advertises the AUTHINFO capability, a client MAY attempt   the first step of authentication at any time during a session to   acquire additional privileges without having received a 480 response.   Servers SHOULD accept such unsolicited authentication requests.  A   server MUST NOT under any circumstances reply to an AUTHINFO command   with a 480 response.   A client MUST NOT under any circumstances continue with any steps of   authentication beyond the first, unless the response code from the   server indicates that the authentication exchange is welcomed.  In   particular, anything other than a 38x response code indicates that   the client MUST NOT continue the authentication exchange.   After a successful authentication, the client MUST NOT issue another   AUTHINFO command in the same session.  A server MUST NOT return the   AUTHINFO capability in response to a CAPABILITIES command, and a   server MUST reject any subsequent AUTHINFO commands with a 502   response.  Additionally, the client MUST NOT issue a MODE READER   command after authentication, and a server MUST NOT advertise the   MODE-READER capability.   In agreement with [SASL], the server MUST continue to advertise the   SASL capability in response to a CAPABILITIES command with the same   list of SASL mechanisms that it did before authentication (thereby   enabling the client to detect a possible active down-negotiation   attack).  Other capabilities returned in response to a CAPABILITIES   command received after authentication MAY be different from those   returned before authentication.  For example, an NNTP server may not   want to advertise support for a specific extension unless a client   has been authenticated.   Note that a server may perform a successful authentication exchange   with a client and yet still deny access to some or all resources; the   permanent 502 response indicates that a resource is unavailable even   though authentication has been performed (this is in contrast to the   temporary 480 error, which indicates that a resource is unavailable   now but may become available after authentication).2.3.  AUTHINFO USER/PASS Command   This section supersedes the definition of the AUTHINFO USER and   AUTHINFO PASS commands as documented in Section 3.1.1 of   [NNTP-COMMON].Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20062.3.1.  Usage   These commands MUST NOT be pipelined.   Syntax     AUTHINFO USER username     AUTHINFO PASS password   Responses     281 Authentication accepted     381 Password required [1]     481 Authentication failed/rejected     482 Authentication commands issued out of sequence     502 Command unavailable [2]     [1] Only valid for AUTHINFO USER.  Note that unlike traditional 3xx         codes, which indicate that the client may continue the current         command, the legacy 381 code means that the AUTHINFO PASS         command must be used to complete the authentication exchange.     [2] If authentication has already occurred, AUTHINFO USER/PASS are         not valid commands (seeSection 2.2).         NOTE: Notwithstanding Section 3.2.1 of [NNTP], the server MUST         NOT return 480 in response to AUTHINFO USER/PASS.   Parameters     username = string identifying the user/client     password = string representing the user's password2.3.2.  Description   The AUTHINFO USER and AUTHINFO PASS commands are used to present   clear text credentials to the server.  These credentials consist of a   username or a username plus a password (the distinction is that a   password is expected to be kept secret, whereas a username is not;   this does not directly affect the protocol but may have an impact on   user interfaces).  The username is supplied through the AUTHINFO USER   command, and the password through the AUTHINFO PASS command.   If the server requires only a username, it MUST NOT give a 381   response to AUTHINFO USER and MUST give a 482 response to AUTHINFO   PASS.   If the server requires both username and password, the former MUST be   sent before the latter.  The server will need to cache the username   until the password is received; it MAY require that the password beVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   sent in the immediately next command (in other words, only caching   the username until the next command is sent).  The server:   -  MUST return a 381 response to AUTHINFO USER;   -  MUST return a 482 response to AUTHINFO PASS if there is no cached      username;   -  MUST use the argument of the most recent AUTHINFO USER for      authentication; and   -  MUST NOT return a 381 response to AUTHINFO PASS.   The server MAY determine whether a password is needed for a given   username.  Thus the same server can respond with both 381 and other   response codes to AUTHINFO USER.   Should the client successfully present proper credentials, the server   issues a 281 reply.  If the server is unable to authenticate the   client, it MUST reject the AUTHINFO USER/PASS command with a 481   reply.  If an AUTHINFO USER/PASS command fails, the client MAY   proceed without authentication.  Alternatively, the client MAY try   another authentication mechanism or present different credentials by   issuing another AUTHINFO command.   The AUTHINFO PASS command permits the client to use a clear-text   password to authenticate.  A compliant implementation MUST NOT   implement this command without also implementing support for TLS   [NNTP-TLS].  Use of this command without an active strong encryption   layer is deprecated, as it exposes the user's password to all parties   on the network between the client and the server.  Any implementation   of this command SHOULD be configurable to disable it whenever a   strong encryption layer (such as that provided by [NNTP-TLS]) is not   active, and this configuration SHOULD be the default.  The server   will use the 483 response code to indicate that the datastream is   insufficiently secure for the command being attempted (seeSection3.2.1 of [NNTP]).   Note that a server MAY (but is not required to) allow white space   characters in usernames and passwords.  A server implementation MAY   blindly split command arguments at white space and therefore may not   preserve the exact sequence of white space characters in the username   or password.  Therefore, a client SHOULD scan the username and   password for white space and, if any is detected, warn the user of   the likelihood of problems.  The SASL PLAIN [PLAIN] mechanism is   recommended as an alternative, as it does not suffer from these   issues.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   Also note that historically the username is not canonicalized in any   way.  Servers MAY use the [SASLprep] profile of the [StringPrep]   algorithm to prepare usernames for comparison, but doing so may cause   interoperability problems with legacy implementations.  If   canonicalization is desired, the SASL PLAIN [PLAIN] mechanism is   recommended as an alternative.2.3.3.  Examples   Example of successful AUTHINFO USER:      [C] AUTHINFO USER wilma      [S] 281 Authentication accepted   Example of successful AUTHINFO USER/PASS:      [C] AUTHINFO USER fred      [S] 381 Enter passphrase      [C] AUTHINFO PASS flintstone      [S] 281 Authentication accepted   Example of AUTHINFO USER/PASS requiring a security layer:      [C] AUTHINFO USER fred@stonecanyon.example.com      [S] 483 Encryption or stronger authentication required   Example of failed AUTHINFO USER/PASS:      [C] AUTHINFO USER barney      [S] 381 Enter passphrase      [C] AUTHINFO PASS flintstone      [S] 481 Authentication failed   Example of AUTHINFO PASS before AUTHINFO USER:      [C] AUTHINFO PASS flintstone      [S] 482 Authentication commands issued out of sequence2.4.  AUTHINFO SASL Command   This section defines a formal profile of the Simple Authentication   and Security Layer [SASL].  The use of the AUTHINFO GENERIC command   as documented in Section 3.1.3 of [NNTP-COMMON], as a way to perform   SASL authentication, is deprecated in favor of the AUTHINFO SASL   command.  A server SHOULD NOT advertise AUTHINFO GENERIC in the list   of capabilities returned by CAPABILITIES.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20062.4.1.  Usage   This command MUST NOT be pipelined.   Syntax      AUTHINFO SASL mechanism [initial-response]   This command MAY exceed 512 octets.  The maximum length of this   command is increased to that which can accommodate the largest   encoded initial response possible for any of the SASL mechanisms   supported by the implementation.   Responses     281             Authentication accepted     283 challenge   Authentication accepted (with success data) [1]     383 challenge   Continue with SASL exchange [1]     481             Authentication failed/rejected     482             SASL protocol error     502             Command unavailable [2]     [1] These responses MAY exceed 512 octets.  The maximum length of         these responses is increased to that which can accommodate the         largest encoded challenge possible for any of the SASL         mechanisms supported by the implementation.     [2] If authentication has already occurred, AUTHINFO SASL is not a         valid command (seeSection 2.2).         NOTE: Notwithstanding Section 3.2.1 of [NNTP], the server MUST         NOT return 480 in response to AUTHINFO SASL.   Parameters     mechanism         = String identifying a [SASL] authentication                         mechanism.     initial-response  = Optional initial client response.                         If present, the response MUST be encoded as                         specified in Section 4 of [BASE64]. [3]     challenge         = Server challenge.                         The challenge MUST be encoded as specified                         in Section 4 of [BASE64].     [3] This argument MAY exceed 497 octets.  The maximum length of         this argument is increased to that which can accommodate the         largest encoded initial response possible for any of the SASL         mechanisms supported by the implementation.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20062.4.2.  Description   The AUTHINFO SASL command initiates a [SASL] exchange between the   client and the server.  The client identifies the SASL mechanism to   be used with the first parameter of the AUTHINFO SASL command.  If   the server supports the requested authentication mechanism, it   performs the SASL exchange to authenticate the user.  Optionally, it   also negotiates a security layer for subsequent protocol interactions   during this session.  If the requested authentication mechanism is   invalid (e.g., is not supported), the server rejects the AUTHINFO   SASL command with a 503 reply (see Section 3.2.1 of [NNTP]).  If the   requested authentication mechanism requires an encryption layer, the   server rejects the AUTHINFO SASL command with a 483 reply (see   Section 3.2.1 of [NNTP]).   The service name specified by this protocol's profile of SASL is   "nntp".   The SASL exchange consists of a series of server challenges and   client responses that are specific to the chosen [SASL] mechanism.   A server challenge is sent as a 383 reply with a single argument   containing the [BASE64]-encoded string supplied by the SASL   mechanism.  A server challenge that has zero length MUST be sent as a   single equals sign ("=") and MUST be included (in order to comply   with the [NNTP] requirement that responses always have the same   number of arguments).   A client response consists of a line containing a [BASE64]-encoded   string.  A client response that has zero length MUST be sent as a   single equals sign ("=") and MUST be included (for consistency with   the server challenge format).  If the client wishes to cancel the   authentication exchange, it issues a line with a single "*".  If the   server receives such a response, it MUST reject the AUTHINFO SASL   command by sending a 481 reply.   Note that these [BASE64]-encoded strings can be much longer than   normal NNTP responses.  Clients and servers MUST be able to handle   the maximum encoded size of challenges and responses generated by   their supported authentication mechanisms.  This requirement is   independent of any line length limitations the client or server may   have in other parts of its protocol implementation.   The optional initial response argument to the AUTHINFO SASL command   is used to save a round trip when using authentication mechanisms   that support an initial client response.  If the initial response   argument is omitted and the chosen mechanism requires an initial   client response, the server MUST proceed as defined insection 5.1 ofVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   [SASL].  In NNTP, a server challenge that contains no data is   equivalent to a zero-length challenge and is encoded as a single   equals sign ("=").   Note that the [BASE64]-encoded initial response argument can exceed   497 octets, and therefore that the AUTHINFO SASL command can exceed   512 octets.  Clients SHOULD and servers MUST be able to handle the   maximum encoded size of initial responses possible for their   supported authentication mechanisms.  This requirement is independent   of any command or argument length limitations the client or server   may have in other parts of its protocol implementation.   If use of the initial response argument would cause the AUTHINFO SASL   command to exceed 512 octets, the client MAY choose to omit the   initial response parameter (and instead proceed as defined inSection5.1 of [SASL]).   If the client is transmitting an initial response of zero length, it   MUST instead transmit the response as a single equals sign ("=").   This indicates that the response is present, but that it contains no   data.   If the client uses an initial-response argument to the AUTHINFO SASL   command with a SASL mechanism that does not support an initial client   response, the server MUST reject the AUTHINFO SASL command with a 482   reply.   If the server cannot [BASE64] decode any client response, it MUST   reject the AUTHINFO SASL command with a 504 reply (see Section 3.2.1   of [NNTP]).  If the client cannot BASE64 decode any of the server's   challenges, it MUST cancel the authentication using the "*" response.   In particular, servers and clients MUST reject (and not ignore) any   character not explicitly allowed by the BASE64 alphabet, and they   MUST reject any sequence of BASE64 characters that contains the pad   character ('=') anywhere other than the end of the string (e.g.,   "=AAA" and "AAA=BBB" are not allowed).   The authorization identity generated by this [SASL] exchange is a   simple username, and both client and server MUST use the [SASLprep]   profile of the [StringPrep] algorithm to prepare these names for   transmission or comparison.  If preparation of the authorization   identity fails or results in an empty string (unless it was   transmitted as the empty string), the server MUST fail the   authentication with a 481 reply.   Should the client successfully complete the exchange, the server   issues either a 281 or a 283 reply.  If the server is unable to   authenticate the client, it MUST reject the AUTHINFO SASL commandVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   with a 481 reply.  If an AUTHINFO SASL command fails, the client MAY   proceed without authentication.  Alternatively, the client MAY try   another authentication mechanism, or present different credentials by   issuing another AUTHINFO command.   If the SASL mechanism returns additional data on success (e.g.,   server authentication), the NNTP server issues a 283 reply with a   single argument containing the [BASE64]-encoded string supplied by   the SASL mechanism.  If no additional data is returned on success,   the server issues a 281 reply.   If a security layer is negotiated during the SASL exchange, it takes   effect for the client on the octet immediately following the CRLF   that concludes the last response generated by the client.  For the   server, it takes effect immediately following the CRLF of its success   reply.   When a security layer takes effect, the NNTP protocol is reset to the   state immediately after the initial greeting response (see 5.1 of   [NNTP]) has been sent, with the exception that if a MODE READER   command has been issued, the effects of it (if any) are not reversed.   The server MUST discard any knowledge obtained from the client, such   as the current newsgroup and article number, that was not obtained   from the SASL negotiation itself.  Likewise, the client SHOULD   discard and MUST NOT rely on any knowledge obtained from the server,   such as the capability list, that was not obtained from the SASL   negotiation itself.  (Note that a client MAY compare the advertised   SASL mechanisms before and after authentication in order to detect an   active down-negotiation attack.)   When both TLS [NNTP-TLS] and SASL security layers are in effect, the   TLS encoding MUST be applied after the SASL encoding (the cleartext   data is always SASL encoded first, and then the resultant data is TLS   encoded).   To ensure interoperability, client and server implementations of this   extension MUST implement the [DIGEST-MD5] SASL mechanism.   If AUTHINFO USER/PASS and AUTHINFO SASL are both implemented, the   SASL [PLAIN] mechanism SHOULD also be implemented, as the   functionality of DIGEST-MD5 is insufficient for some environments   (e.g., the server may need to pass off the plaintext password to an   external authentication service).  The SASL PLAIN mechanism is   preferred over AUTHINFO USER, even if there is not a strong   encryption layer active, because it eliminates limitations that   AUTHINFO USER/PASS has with regards to the use of white space   characters being used in usernames and passwords.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20062.4.3.  Examples   Example of the [PLAIN] SASL mechanism under a TLS layer, using an   initial client response:      [C] CAPABILITIES      [S] 101 Capability list:      [S] VERSION 2      [S] READER      [S] STARTTLS      [S] AUTHINFO SASL      [S] SASL CRAM-MD5 DIGEST-MD5 GSSAPI      [S] LIST ACTIVE NEWSGROUPS      [S] .      [C] STARTTLS      [S] 382 Continue with TLS negotiation      [TLS negotiation proceeds, further commands protected by TLS]      [C] CAPABILITIES      [S] 101 Capability list:      [S] VERSION 2      [S] READER      [S] AUTHINFO USER SASL      [S] SASL CRAM-MD5 DIGEST-MD5 GSSAPI PLAIN EXTERNAL      [S] LIST ACTIVE NEWSGROUPS      [S] .      [C] AUTHINFO SASL PLAIN AHRlc3QAMTIzNA==      [S] 281 Authentication accepted   Example of the EXTERNAL SASL mechanism under a TLS layer, using the   authorization identity derived from the client TLS certificate, and   thus a zero-length initial client response (commands prior to   AUTHINFO SASL are the same as the previous example and have been   omitted):      [C] AUTHINFO SASL EXTERNAL =      [S] 281 Authentication accepted   Example of the [DIGEST-MD5] SASL mechanism, which includes a server   challenge and server success data (white space has been inserted for   clarity; base64-encoded data is actually sent as a single line with   no embedded white space):      [C] AUTHINFO SASL DIGEST-MD5      [S] 383 bm9uY2U9InNheUFPaENFS0dJZFBNSEMwd3RsZUxxT0ljT0kyd1FZSWU0          enplQXR1aVE9IixyZWFsbT0iZWFnbGUub2NlYW5hLmNvbSIscW9wPSJhdXRo          LGF1dGgtaW50LGF1dGgtY29uZiIsY2lwaGVyPSJyYzQtNDAscmM0LTU2LHJj          NCxkZXMsM2RlcyIsbWF4YnVmPTQwOTYsY2hhcnNldD11dGYtOCxhbGdvcml0          aG09bWQ1LXNlc3M=Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006      [C] dXNlcm5hbWU9InRlc3QiLHJlYWxtPSJlYWdsZS5vY2VhbmEuY29tIixub25j          ZT0ic2F5QU9oQ0VLR0lkUE1IQzB3dGxlTHFPSWNPSTJ3UVlJZTR6emVBdHVp          UT0iLGNub25jZT0iMFkzSlFWMlRnOVNjRGlwK08xU1ZDMHJoVmcvLytkbk9J          aUd6LzdDZU5KOD0iLG5jPTAwMDAwMDAxLHFvcD1hdXRoLWNvbmYsY2lwaGVy          PXJjNCxtYXhidWY9MTAyNCxkaWdlc3QtdXJpPSJubnRwL2xvY2FsaG9zdCIs          cmVzcG9uc2U9ZDQzY2Y2NmNmZmE5MDNmOWViMDM1NmMwOGEzZGIwZjI=      [S] 283 cnNwYXV0aD1kZTJlMTI3ZTVhODFjZGE1M2Q5N2FjZGEzNWNkZTgzYQ==   Example of a failed authentication due to bad [GSSAPI] credentials.   Note that although the mechanism can utilize the initial response,   the client chooses not to use it because of its length, resulting in   a zero-length server challenge (here, white space has been inserted   for clarity; base64-encoded data is actually sent as a single line   with no embedded white space):      [C] AUTHINFO SASL GSSAPI      [S] 383 =      [C] YIICOAYJKoZIhvcSAQICAQBuggInMIICI6ADAgEFoQMCAQ6iBwMFACAAAACj          ggE/YYIBOzCCATegAwIBBaEYGxZURVNULk5FVC5JU0MuVVBFTk4uRURVoiQw          IqADAgEDoRswGRsEbmV3cxsRbmV0bmV3cy51cGVubi5lZHWjge8wgeygAwIB          EKEDAgECooHfBIHcSQfLKC8vm2i17EXmomwk6hHvjBY/BnKnvvDTrbno3198          vlX2RSUt+CjuAKhcDcj4DW0gvZEqH7t5v9yWedzztlpaThebBat6hQNr9NJP          ozh1/+74HUwhGWb50KtjuftO/ftQ8q0nTuYKgIq6PM4tp2ddo1IfpjfdNR9E          95GFi3y1uBT7lQOwtQbRJUjPSO3ijdue9V7cNNVmYsBsqNsaHhvlBJEXf4WJ          djH8yG+Dw/gX8fUTtC5fDpB5zLt01mkSXh6Wc4UhqQtwZBI2t/+TpX1okbg6          Hr1ZZupeH6SByjCBx6ADAgEQooG/BIG8GnCmcXWtqhXh48dGTLHQgJ04K5Fj          RMMq2qPSbiha9lq0osqR2KAnQA6LioWYxU+6yPKpBDSC5WOT441fUfkM8iAL          kW3uNc+luFCGcnDsacrmoVU7Y6Akcp9m7Fm7orRc+TWSWPpBg3OR2oG3ATW0          0NAz8TT06VOLVxIMUTINKdYVI/Ja7f3sy+/N4LGkJqScCQOwlo5tfDWn/UQF          iTWo5Zw435rH8pjy2smQCnqC14v3NMAWTu4j+dzHUNw=      [S] 481 Authentication error   Example of a client aborting in the midst of an exchange:      [C] AUTHINFO SASL GSSAPI      [S] 383 =      [C] *      [S] 481 Authentication aborted as requested   Example of attempting to use a mechanism that is not supported by the   server:      [C] AUTHINFO SASL EXAMPLE      [S] 503 Mechanism not recognizedVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   Example of attempting to use a mechanism that requires a security   layer:      [C] AUTHINFO SASL PLAIN      [S] 483 Encryption or stronger authentication required   Example of using an initial response with a mechanism that doesn't   support it (the server must start the exchange when using   [CRAM-MD5]):      [C] AUTHINFO SASL CRAM-MD5 AHRlc3QAMTIzNA==      [S] 482 SASL protocol error   Example of an authentication that failed due to an incorrectly   encoded response:      [C] AUTHINFO SASL CRAM-MD5      [S] 383 PDE1NDE2NzQ5My4zMjY4MzE3QHRlc3RAZXhhbXBsZS5jb20+      [C] abcd=efg      [S] 504 Base64 encoding error3.  Augmented BNF Syntax for the AUTHINFO Extension   This section describes the formal syntax of the AUTHINFO extension   using ABNF [ABNF].  It extends the syntax in Section 9 of [NNTP], and   non-terminals not defined in this document are defined there.  The   [NNTP] ABNF should be imported first before attempting to validate   these rules.3.1.  Commands   This syntax extends the non-terminal "command", which represents an   NNTP command.   command =/ authinfo-sasl-command /        authinfo-user-command /        authinfo-pass-command   authinfo-sasl-command = "AUTHINFO" WS "SASL" WS mechanism        [WS initial-response]   authinfo-user-command = "AUTHINFO" WS "USER" WS username   authinfo-pass-command = "AUTHINFO" WS "PASS" WS password   initial-response = base64-opt   username = 1*user-pass-char   password = 1*user-pass-char   user-pass-char = B-CHARVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   NOTE: a server implementation MAY parse AUTHINFO USER and AUTHINFO   PASS specially so as to allow white space to be used within the   username or password.  Such implementations accept the additional   syntax (making these two items inconsistent with "token" inSection9.8 of [NNTP]):   user-pass-char =/ SP / TAB   In doing so, the grammar can become ambiguous if the username or   password begins or ends with white space.  To solve this ambiguity,   such implementations typically treat everything after the first white   space character following "USER"/"PASS", up to, but not including,   the CRLF, as the username/password.3.2.  Command Continuation   This syntax extends the non-terminal "command-continuation", which   represents the further material sent by the client in the case of   multi-stage commands.   command-continuation =/ authinfo-sasl-383-continuation   authinfo-sasl-383-continuation = ("*" / base64-opt) CRLF3.3.  Responses   This syntax extends the non-terminal "initial-response-content",   which represents an initial response line sent by the server.   initial-response-content =/ response-283-content /        response-383-content   response-283-content = "283" SP base64   response-383-content = "383" SP base64-opt3.4.  Capability Entries   This syntax extends the non-terminal "capability-entry", which   represents a capability that may be advertised by the server.   capability-entry =/ authinfo-capability /        sasl-capability   authinfo-capability = "AUTHINFO" *(WS authinfo-variant)   authinfo-variant = "USER" / "SASL"   sasl-capability = "SASL" 1*(WS mechanism)Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20063.5.  General Non-terminals   base64-opt = "=" / base64   mechanism = 1*20mech-char   mech-char = UPPER / DIGIT / "-" / "_"4.  Summary of Response Codes   This section contains a list of each new response code defined in   this document and indicates whether it is multi-line, which commands   can generate it, what arguments it has, and what its meaning is.   Response code 281      Generated by: AUTHINFO USER, AUTHINFO PASS, AUTHINFO SASL      Meaning: authentication accepted   Response code 283      Generated by: AUTHINFO SASL      1 argument: challenge      Meaning: authentication accepted (with success data)   Response code 381      Generated by: AUTHINFO USER      Meaning: password required via AUTHINFO PASS command.  Note      that this code is used for backwards compatibility and does      not conform to the traditional use of 3xx codes.   Response code 383      Generated by: AUTHINFO SASL      1 argument: challenge      Meaning: continue with SASL exchange   Response code 481      Generated by: AUTHINFO USER, AUTHINFO PASS, AUTHINFO SASL      Meaning: authentication failed/rejected   Response code 482      Generated by: AUTHINFO USER, AUTHINFO PASS, AUTHINFO SASL      Meaning: authentication commands issued out of sequence or      SASL protocol error5.  Authentication Tracking/Logging   This section contains implementation suggestions and notes of best   current practice; it does not specify further network protocol   requirements.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   Once authenticated, the authorization identity presented in the   AUTHINFO exchange (username when using USER/PASS) SHOULD be included   in an audit trail associating the identity with any articles supplied   during a POST operation, and this configuration SHOULD be the   default.  This may be accomplished, for example, by inserting headers   in the posted articles or by a server logging mechanism.  The server   MAY provide a facility for disabling the procedure described above,   as some users or administrators may consider it a violation of   privacy.6.  Security Considerations   Security issues are discussed throughout this memo.   In general, the security considerations of [SASL] and any implemented   SASL mechanisms are applicable here; only the most important are   highlighted specifically below.  Also, this extension is not intended   to cure the security considerations described in section 12 of   [NNTP]; those considerations remain relevant to any NNTP   implementation.   Before the [SASL] negotiation has begun, any protocol interactions   may have been performed in the clear and may have been modified by an   active attacker.  For this reason, clients and servers MUST discard   any sensitive knowledge obtained prior to the start of the SASL   negotiation upon the establishment of a security layer.  Furthermore,   the CAPABILITIES command SHOULD be re-issued upon the establishment   of a security layer, and other protocol state SHOULD be re-negotiated   as well.   Servers MAY implement a policy whereby the connection is dropped   after a number of failed authentication attempts.  If they do so,   they SHOULD NOT drop the connection until at least 3 attempts at   authentication have failed.   Implementations MUST support a configuration where authentication   mechanisms that are vulnerable to passive eavesdropping attacks (such   as AUTHINFO USER/PASS and SASL [PLAIN]) are not advertised or used   without the presence of an external security layer such as TLS   [NNTP-TLS], and this configuration SHOULD be the default.   When multiple authentication mechanisms are permitted by both client   and server, an active attacker can cause a down-negotiation to the   weakest mechanism.  For this reason, both clients and servers SHOULD   be configurable to forbid use of weak mechanisms.  The minimum   strength acceptable is a policy decision that is outside the scope of   this specification.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20067.  IANA Considerations7.1.  IANA Considerations for SASL/GSSAPI Services   The IANA has registered the SASL/GSSAPI service name "nntp".  This   service name refers to authenticated use of Usenet news service when   it is provided via the [NNTP] protocol.   o  Published Specification: This document.   o  Contact for Further Information: Authors of this document.   o  Change Controller: IESG <iesg@ietf.org>.7.2.  IANA Considerations for NNTP Extensions   This section gives a formal definition of the AUTHINFO extension, as   required by Section 3.3.3 of [NNTP] for the IANA registry.   o  This extension provides an extensible mechanism for NNTP      authentication via a variety of methods.   o  The capability label for this extension is "AUTHINFO".   o  The "AUTHINFO" capability label has two possible optional      arguments, "USER" and "SASL" (as defined inSection 2.1),      indicating which variants of the AUTHINFO command are supported.   o  This extension also provides the "SASL" capability label, whose      arguments list the available SASL mechanisms.   o  This extension defines three new commands, AUTHINFO USER, AUTHINFO      PASS, and AUTHINFO SASL, whose behavior, arguments, and responses      are defined in Sections2.3 and2.4.   o  This extension does not associate any new responses with pre-      existing NNTP commands.   o  This extension may affect the overall behavior of both server and      client in that the AUTHINFO SASL command may require that      subsequent communication be transmitted via an intermediary      security layer.   o  The length of the AUTHINFO SASL command (as defined in this      document) may exceed 512 octets.  The maximum length of this      command is increased to that which can accommodate the largest      initial response possible for any of the SASL mechanisms supported      by the implementation.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   o  This extension defines two new responses, 283 and 383, whose      lengths may exceed 512 octets.  The maximum length of these      responses is increased to that which can accommodate the largest      challenge possible for any of the SASL mechanisms supported by the      implementation.   o  This extension does not alter pipelining, but AUTHINFO commands      cannot be pipelined.   o  Use of this extension may alter the capabilities list; once the      AUTHINFO command has been used successfully, the AUTHINFO      capability can no longer be advertised by CAPABILITIES.      Additionally, the MODE-READER capability MUST NOT be advertised      after successful authentication.   o  This extension does not cause any pre-existing command to produce      a 401, 480, or 483 response.   o  This extension is unaffected by any use of the MODE READER      command; however, the MODE READER command MUST NOT be used in the      same session following successful authentication.   o  Published Specification: This document.   o  Contact for Further Information: Authors of this document.   o  Change Controller: IESG <iesg@ietf.org>.8.  Acknowledgements   This RFC originated from a document initially written by Chris   Newman.   A significant amount of the authentication text was originally from   the NNTP revision or common authentication specs written by Stan   Barber.  A significant amount of the SASL text was lifted from the   revisions toRFC 1734 andRFC 2554 by Rob Siemborski.   Special acknowledgement also goes to Russ Allbery, Clive Feather, and   others who commented privately on intermediate revisions of this   document, as well as the members of the IETF NNTP Working Group for   continual (yet sporadic) insight in discussion.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 20069.  References9.1.  Normative References   [ABNF]        Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for                 Syntax Specifications: ABNF",RFC 4234, October 2005.   [AUTH]        Haller, N. and R. Atkinson, "On Internet                 Authentication",RFC 1704, October 1994.   [BASE64]      Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data                 Encodings",RFC 4648, October 2006.   [DIGEST-MD5]  Leach, P. and C. Newman, "Using Digest Authentication                 as a SASL Mechanism",RFC 2831, May 2000.   [KEYWORDS]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                 Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [NNTP]        Feather, C., "Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)",RFC 3977, October 2006.   [NNTP-TLS]    Murchison, K., Vinocur, J., and C. Newman, "Using                 Transport Layer Security (TLS) with Network News                 Transfer Protocol (NNTP)",RFC 4642, October 2006.   [SASL]        Melnikov, A. and K. Zeilenga, "Simple Authentication                 and Security Layer (SASL)",RFC 4422, June 2006.   [SASLprep]    Zeilenga, K., "SASLprep: Stringprep Profile for User                 Names and Passwords",RFC 4013, February 2005.   [StringPrep]  Hoffman, P. and M. Blanchet, "Preparation of                 Internationalized Strings ("stringprep")",RFC 3454,                 December 2002.9.2. Informative References   [BEEP]        Rose, M., "The Blocks Extensible Exchange Protocol                 Core",RFC 3080, March 2001.   [CRAM-MD5]    Nerenberg, L.,"The CRAM-MD5 SASL Mechanism", Work in                 Progress.   [GSSAPI]      Melnikov, A.,"SASL GSSAPI mechanisms", Work in                 Progress.Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006   [IMAP]        Crispin, M., "INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL -                 VERSION 4rev1",RFC 3501, March 2003.   [LDAP-AUTH]   Harrison, R., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol                 (LDAP): Authentication Methods and Security                 Mechanisms",RFC 4513, June 2006.   [NNTP-COMMON] Barber, S., "Common NNTP Extensions",RFC 2980, October                 2000.   [PLAIN]       Zeilenga, K., Ed., "The PLAIN Simple Authentication and                 Security Layer (SASL) Mechanism",RFC 4616, August                 2006.   [POP-AUTH]    Myers, J., "POP3 AUTHentication command",RFC 1734,                 December 1994.   [SMTP-AUTH]   Myers, J., "SMTP Service Extension for Authentication",RFC 2554, March 1999.Authors' Addresses   Jeffrey M. Vinocur   Department of Computer Science   Upson Hall   Cornell University   Ithaca, NY 14853 USA   EMail: vinocur@cs.cornell.edu   Kenneth Murchison   Carnegie Mellon University   5000 Forbes Avenue   Cyert Hall 285   Pittsburgh, PA  15213 USA   EMail: murch@andrew.cmu.eduVinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4643                  NNTP Authentication               October 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Vinocur, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 24]

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