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PROPOSED STANDARD
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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         D. McGrewRequest for Comments: 5764                                 Cisco SystemsCategory: Standards Track                                    E. RescorlaISSN: 2070-1721                                               RTFM, Inc.                                                                May 2010Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Extension to Establish Keysfor the Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)Abstract   This document describes a Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)   extension to establish keys for Secure RTP (SRTP) and Secure RTP   Control Protocol (SRTCP) flows.  DTLS keying happens on the media   path, independent of any out-of-band signalling channel present.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5764.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Conventions Used In This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33.  Overview of DTLS-SRTP Operation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44.  DTLS Extensions for SRTP Key Establishment . . . . . . . . . .54.1.  The use_srtp Extension . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.1.1.  use_srtp Extension Definition  . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.2.  SRTP Protection Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84.1.3.  srtp_mki value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.2.  Key Derivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.3.  Key Scope  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.4.  Key Usage Limitations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125.  Use of RTP and RTCP over a DTLS-SRTP Channel . . . . . . . . .135.1.  Data Protection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.1.1.  Transmission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.1.2.  Reception  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .135.2.  Rehandshake and Rekey  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .166.  Multi-Party RTP Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .177.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .177.1.  Security of Negotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .177.2.  Framing Confusion  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .177.3.  Sequence Number Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187.3.1.  Alerts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187.3.2.  Renegotiation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187.4.  Decryption Cost  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .198.  Session Description for RTP/SAVP over DTLS . . . . . . . . . .199.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2010. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2011. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2111.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2111.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21Appendix A.  Overview of DTLS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23Appendix B.  Performance of Multiple DTLS Handshakes . . . . . . .24McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 20101.  Introduction   The Secure RTP (SRTP) profile [RFC3711] can provide confidentiality,   message authentication, and replay protection to RTP data and RTP   Control (RTCP) traffic.  SRTP does not provide key management   functionality, but instead depends on external key management to   exchange secret master keys, and to negotiate the algorithms and   parameters for use with those keys.   Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) [RFC4347] is a channel   security protocol that offers integrated key management, parameter   negotiation, and secure data transfer.  Because DTLS data transfer   protocol is generic, it is less highly optimized for use with RTP   than is SRTP, which has been specifically tuned for that purpose.   This document describes DTLS-SRTP, a SRTP extension for DTLS that   combines the performance and encryption flexibility benefits of SRTP   with the flexibility and convenience of DTLS-integrated key and   association management.  DTLS-SRTP can be viewed in two equivalent   ways: as a new key management method for SRTP, and a new RTP-specific   data format for DTLS.   The key points of DTLS-SRTP are that:   o  application data is protected using SRTP,   o  the DTLS handshake is used to establish keying material,      algorithms, and parameters for SRTP,   o  a DTLS extension is used to negotiate SRTP algorithms, and   o  other DTLS record-layer content types are protected using the      ordinary DTLS record format.   The remainder of this memo is structured as follows.Section 2   describes conventions used to indicate normative requirements.Section 3 provides an overview of DTLS-SRTP operation.Section 4   specifies the DTLS extensions, whileSection 5 discusses how RTP and   RTCP are transported over a DTLS-SRTP channel.Section 6 describes   use with multi-party sessions.Section 7 andSection 9 describe   Security and IANA considerations.2.  Conventions Used In This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 20103.  Overview of DTLS-SRTP Operation   DTLS-SRTP is defined for point-to-point media sessions, in which   there are exactly two participants.  Each DTLS-SRTP session contains   a single DTLS association (called a "connection" in TLS jargon), and   either two SRTP contexts (if media traffic is flowing in both   directions on the same host/port quartet) or one SRTP context (if   media traffic is only flowing in one direction).  All SRTP traffic   flowing over that pair in a given direction uses a single SRTP   context.  A single DTLS-SRTP session only protects data carried over   a single UDP source and destination port pair.   The general pattern of DTLS-SRTP is as follows.  For each RTP or RTCP   flow the peers do a DTLS handshake on the same source and destination   port pair to establish a DTLS association.  Which side is the DTLS   client and which side is the DTLS server must be established via some   out-of-band mechanism such as SDP.  The keying material from that   handshake is fed into the SRTP stack.  Once that association is   established, RTP packets are protected (becoming SRTP) using that   keying material.   RTP and RTCP traffic is usually sent on two separate UDP ports.  When   symmetric RTP [RFC4961] is used, two bidirectional DTLS-SRTP sessions   are needed, one for the RTP port, one for the RTCP port.  When RTP   flows are not symmetric, four unidirectional DTLS-SRTP sessions are   needed (for inbound and outbound RTP, and inbound and outbound RTCP).   Symmetric RTP [RFC4961] is the case in which there are two RTP   sessions that have their source and destination ports and addresses   reversed, in a manner similar to the way that a TCP connection uses   its ports.  Each participant has an inbound RTP session and an   outbound RTP session.  When symmetric RTP is used, a single DTLS-SRTP   session can protect both of the RTP sessions.  It is RECOMMENDED that   symmetric RTP be used with DTLS-SRTP.   RTP and RTCP traffic MAY be multiplexed on a single UDP port   [RFC5761].  In this case, both RTP and RTCP packets may be sent over   the same DTLS-SRTP session, halving the number of DTLS-SRTP sessions   needed.  This improves the cryptographic performance of DTLS, but may   cause problems when RTCP and RTP are subject to different network   treatment (e.g., for bandwidth reservation or scheduling reasons).   Between a single pair of participants, there may be multiple media   sessions.  There MUST be a separate DTLS-SRTP session for each   distinct pair of source and destination ports used by a media session   (though the sessions can share a single DTLS session and hence   amortize the initial public key handshake!).McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   A DTLS-SRTP session may be indicated by an external signaling   protocol like SIP.  When the signaling exchange is integrity-   protected (e.g., when SIP Identity protection via digital signatures   is used), DTLS-SRTP can leverage this integrity guarantee to provide   complete security of the media stream.  A description of how to   indicate DTLS-SRTP sessions in SIP and SDP [RFC4566], and how to   authenticate the endpoints using fingerprints can be found in   [RFC5763].   In a naive implementation, when there are multiple media sessions,   there is a new DTLS session establishment (complete with public key   cryptography) for each media channel.  For example, a videophone may   be sending both an audio stream and a video stream, each of which   would use a separate DTLS session establishment exchange, which would   proceed in parallel.  As an optimization, the DTLS-SRTP   implementation SHOULD use the following strategy: a single DTLS   association is established, and all other DTLS associations wait   until that connection is established before proceeding with their   handshakes.  This strategy allows the later sessions to use DTLS   session resumption, which allows the amortization of the expensive   public key cryptography operations over multiple DTLS handshakes.   The SRTP keys used to protect packets originated by the client are   distinct from the SRTP keys used to protect packets originated by the   server.  All of the RTP sources originating on the client for the   same channel use the same SRTP keys, and similarly, all of the RTP   sources originating on the server for the same channel use the same   SRTP keys.  The SRTP implementation MUST ensure that all of the   synchronization source (SSRC) values for all of the RTP sources   originating from the same device over the same channel are distinct,   in order to avoid the "two-time pad" problem (as described inSection9.1 of RFC 3711).  Note that this is not an issue for separate media   streams (on different host/port quartets) that use independent keying   material even if an SSRC collision occurs.4.  DTLS Extensions for SRTP Key Establishment4.1.  The use_srtp Extension   In order to negotiate the use of SRTP data protection, clients   include an extension of type "use_srtp" in the DTLS extended client   hello.  This extension MUST only be used when the data being   transported is RTP or RTCP [RFC3550].  The "extension_data" field of   this extension contains the list of acceptable SRTP protection   profiles, as indicated below.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   Servers that receive an extended hello containing a "use_srtp"   extension can agree to use SRTP by including an extension of type   "use_srtp", with the chosen protection profile in the extended server   hello.  This process is shown below.         Client                                               Server         ClientHello + use_srtp       -------->                                              ServerHello + use_srtp                                                        Certificate*                                                  ServerKeyExchange*                                                 CertificateRequest*                                      <--------      ServerHelloDone         Certificate*         ClientKeyExchange         CertificateVerify*         [ChangeCipherSpec]         Finished                     -------->                                                  [ChangeCipherSpec]                                      <--------             Finished         SRTP packets                 <------->      SRTP packets   Note that '*' indicates messages that are not always sent in DTLS.   The CertificateRequest, client and server Certificates, and   CertificateVerify will be sent in DTLS-SRTP.   Once the "use_srtp" extension is negotiated, the RTP or RTCP   application data is protected solely using SRTP.  Application data is   never sent in DTLS record-layer "application_data" packets.  Rather,   complete RTP or RTCP packets are passed to the DTLS stack, which   passes them to the SRTP stack, which protects them appropriately.   Note that if RTP/RTCP multiplexing [RFC5761] is in use, this means   that RTP and RTCP packets may both be passed to the DTLS stack.   Because the DTLS layer does not process the packets, it does not need   to distinguish them.  The SRTP stack can use the procedures of   [RFC5761] to distinguish RTP from RTCP.   When the "use_srtp" extension is in effect, implementations must not   place more than one application data "record" per datagram.  (This is   only meaningful from the perspective of DTLS because SRTP is   inherently oriented towards one payload per packet, but this is   stated purely for clarification.)   Data other than RTP/RTCP (i.e., TLS control messages) MUST use   ordinary DTLS framing and MUST be placed in separate datagrams from   SRTP data.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   A DTLS-SRTP handshake establishes one or more SRTP crypto contexts;   however, they all have the same SRTP Protection Profile and Master   Key Identifier (MKI), if any.  MKIs are used solely to distinguish   the keying material and protection profiles between distinct   handshakes, for instance, due to rekeying.  When an MKI is   established in a DTLS-SRTP session, it MUST apply for all of the   SSRCs within that session -- though a single endpoint may negotiate   multiple DTLS-SRTP sessions due, for instance, to forking.  (Note   thatRFC 3711 allows packets within the same session but with   different SSRCs to use MKIs differently; in contrast, DTLS-SRTP   requires that MKIs and the keys that they are associated with have   the same meaning and are uniform across the entire SRTP session.)4.1.1.  use_srtp Extension Definition   The client MUST fill the extension_data field of the "use_srtp"   extension with an UseSRTPData value (seeSection 9 for the   registration):      uint8 SRTPProtectionProfile[2];      struct {         SRTPProtectionProfiles SRTPProtectionProfiles;         opaque srtp_mki<0..255>;      } UseSRTPData;      SRTPProtectionProfile SRTPProtectionProfiles<2..2^16-1>;   The SRTPProtectionProfiles list indicates the SRTP protection   profiles that the client is willing to support, listed in descending   order of preference.  The srtp_mki value contains the SRTP Master Key   Identifier (MKI) value (if any) that the client will use for his SRTP   packets.  If this field is of zero length, then no MKI will be used.   Note: for those unfamiliar with TLS syntax, "srtp_mki<0..255>"   indicates a variable-length value with a length between 0 and 255   (inclusive).  Thus, the MKI may be up to 255 bytes long.   If the server is willing to accept the use_srtp extension, it MUST   respond with its own "use_srtp" extension in the ExtendedServerHello.   The extension_data field MUST contain a UseSRTPData value with a   single SRTPProtectionProfile value that the server has chosen for use   with this connection.  The server MUST NOT select a value that the   client has not offered.  If there is no shared profile, the server   SHOULD NOT return the use_srtp extension at which point the   connection falls back to the negotiated DTLS cipher suite.  If that   is not acceptable, the server SHOULD return an appropriate DTLS   alert.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 20104.1.2.  SRTP Protection Profiles   A DTLS-SRTP SRTP Protection Profile defines the parameters and   options that are in effect for the SRTP processing.  This document   defines the following SRTP protection profiles.      SRTPProtectionProfile SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_80 = {0x00, 0x01};      SRTPProtectionProfile SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_32 = {0x00, 0x02};      SRTPProtectionProfile SRTP_NULL_HMAC_SHA1_80      = {0x00, 0x05};      SRTPProtectionProfile SRTP_NULL_HMAC_SHA1_32      = {0x00, 0x06};   The following list indicates the SRTP transform parameters for each   protection profile.  The parameters cipher_key_length,   cipher_salt_length, auth_key_length, and auth_tag_length express the   number of bits in the values to which they refer.  The   maximum_lifetime parameter indicates the maximum number of packets   that can be protected with each single set of keys when the parameter   profile is in use.  All of these parameters apply to both RTP and   RTCP, unless the RTCP parameters are separately specified.   All of the crypto algorithms in these profiles are from [RFC3711].   SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_80         cipher: AES_128_CM         cipher_key_length: 128         cipher_salt_length: 112         maximum_lifetime: 2^31         auth_function: HMAC-SHA1         auth_key_length: 160         auth_tag_length: 80   SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_32         cipher: AES_128_CM         cipher_key_length: 128         cipher_salt_length: 112         maximum_lifetime: 2^31         auth_function: HMAC-SHA1         auth_key_length: 160         auth_tag_length: 32         RTCP auth_tag_length: 80   SRTP_NULL_HMAC_SHA1_80         cipher: NULL         cipher_key_length: 0         cipher_salt_length: 0         maximum_lifetime: 2^31         auth_function: HMAC-SHA1         auth_key_length: 160         auth_tag_length: 80McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   SRTP_NULL_HMAC_SHA1_32         cipher: NULL         cipher_key_length: 0         cipher_salt_length: 0         maximum_lifetime: 2^31         auth_function: HMAC-SHA1         auth_key_length: 160         auth_tag_length: 32         RTCP auth_tag_length: 80   With all of these SRTP Parameter profiles, the following SRTP options   are in effect:   o  The TLS PseudoRandom Function (PRF) is used to generate keys to      feed into the SRTP Key Derivation Function (KDF).  When DTLS 1.2      [DTLS1.2] is in use, the PRF is the one associated with the cipher      suite.  Note that this specification is compatible with DTLS 1.0      or DTLS 1.2   o  The Key Derivation Rate (KDR) is equal to zero.  Thus, keys are      not re-derived based on the SRTP sequence number.   o  The key derivation procedures fromSection 4.3 with the AES-CM PRF      fromRFC 3711 are used.   o  For all other parameters (in particular, SRTP replay window size      and FEC order), the default values are used.   If values other than the defaults for these parameters are required,   they can be enabled by writing a separate specification specifying   SDP syntax to signal them.   Applications using DTLS-SRTP SHOULD coordinate the SRTP Protection   Profiles between the DTLS-SRTP session that protects an RTP flow and   the DTLS-SRTP session that protects the associated RTCP flow (in   those cases in which the RTP and RTCP are not multiplexed over a   common port).  In particular, identical ciphers SHOULD be used.   New SRTPProtectionProfile values must be defined according to the   "Specification Required" policy as defined byRFC 5226 [RFC5226].   SeeSection 9 for IANA Considerations.4.1.3.  srtp_mki value   The srtp_mki value MAY be used to indicate the capability and desire   to use the SRTP Master Key Identifier (MKI) field in the SRTP and   SRTCP packets.  The MKI field indicates to an SRTP receiver which key   was used to protect the packet that contains that field.  TheMcGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   srtp_mki field contains the value of the SRTP MKI which is associated   with the SRTP master keys derived from this handshake.  Each SRTP   session MUST have exactly one master key that is used to protect   packets at any given time.  The client MUST choose the MKI value so   that it is distinct from the last MKI value that was used, and it   SHOULD make these values unique for the duration of the TLS session.   Upon receipt of a "use_srtp" extension containing a "srtp_mki" field,   the server MUST either (assuming it accepts the extension at all):   1.  include a matching "srtp_mki" value in its "use_srtp" extension       to indicate that it will make use of the MKI, or   2.  return an empty "srtp_mki" value to indicate that it cannot make       use of the MKI.   If the client detects a nonzero-length MKI in the server's response   that is different than the one the client offered, then the client   MUST abort the handshake and SHOULD send an invalid_parameter alert.   If the client and server agree on an MKI, all SRTP packets protected   under the new security parameters MUST contain that MKI.   Note that any given DTLS-SRTP session only has a single active MKI   (if any).  Thus, at any given time, a set of endpoints will generally   only be using one MKI (the major exception is during rehandshakes).4.2.  Key Derivation   When SRTP mode is in effect, different keys are used for ordinary   DTLS record protection and SRTP packet protection.  These keys are   generated using a TLS exporter [RFC5705] to generate   2 * (SRTPSecurityParams.master_key_len +        SRTPSecurityParams.master_salt_len) bytes of data   which are assigned as shown below.  The per-association context value   is empty.   client_write_SRTP_master_key[SRTPSecurityParams.master_key_len];   server_write_SRTP_master_key[SRTPSecurityParams.master_key_len];   client_write_SRTP_master_salt[SRTPSecurityParams.master_salt_len];   server_write_SRTP_master_salt[SRTPSecurityParams.master_salt_len];   The exporter label for this usage is "EXTRACTOR-dtls_srtp".  (The   "EXTRACTOR" prefix is for historical compatibility.)   The four keying material values (the master key and master salt for   each direction) are provided as inputs to the SRTP key derivation   mechanism, as shown in Figure 1 and detailed below.  By default, theMcGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   mechanism defined inSection 4.3 of [RFC3711] is used, unless another   key derivation mechanism is specified as part of an SRTP Protection   Profile.   The client_write_SRTP_master_key and client_write_SRTP_master_salt   are provided to one invocation of the SRTP key derivation function,   to generate the SRTP keys used to encrypt and authenticate packets   sent by the client.  The server MUST only use these keys to decrypt   and to check the authenticity of inbound packets.   The server_write_SRTP_master_key and server_write_SRTP_master_salt   are provided to one invocation of the SRTP key derivation function,   to generate the SRTP keys used to encrypt and authenticate packets   sent by the server.  The client MUST only use these keys to decrypt   and to check the authenticity of inbound packets.   TLS master     secret   label      |         |      v         v   +---------------+   | TLS extractor |   +---------------+          |                                         +------+   SRTP          +-> client_write_SRTP_master_key ----+--->| SRTP |-> client          |                                    | +->| KDF  |   write          |                                    | |  +------+   keys          |                                    | |          +-> server_write_SRTP_master_key --  | |  +------+   SRTCP          |                                  \ \--->|SRTCP |-> client          |                                   \  +->| KDF  |   write          |                                    | |  +------+   keys          +-> client_write_SRTP_master_salt ---|-+          |                                    |          |                                    |    +------+   SRTP          |                                    +--->| SRTP |-> server          +-> server_write_SRTP_master_salt -+-|--->| KDF  |   write                                             | |    +------+   keys                                             | |                                             | |    +------+   SRTCP                                             | +--->|SRTCP |-> server                                             +----->| KDF  |   write                                                    +------+   keys                Figure 1: The derivation of the SRTP keys.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   When both RTCP and RTP use the same source and destination ports,   then both the SRTP and SRTCP keys are needed.  Otherwise, there are   two DTLS-SRTP sessions, one of which protects the RTP packets and one   of which protects the RTCP packets; each DTLS-SRTP session protects   the part of an SRTP session that passes over a single source/   destination transport address pair, as shown in Figure 2, independent   of which SSRCs are used on that pair.  When a DTLS-SRTP session is   protecting RTP, the SRTCP keys derived from the DTLS handshake are   not needed and are discarded.  When a DTLS-SRTP session is protecting   RTCP, the SRTP keys derived from the DTLS handshake are not needed   and are discarded.      Client            Server     (Sender)         (Receiver)   (1)   <----- DTLS ------>    src/dst = a/b and b/a         ------ SRTP ------>    src/dst = a/b, uses client write keys   (2)   <----- DTLS ------>    src/dst = c/d and d/c         ------ SRTCP ----->    src/dst = c/d, uses client write keys         <----- SRTCP ------    src/dst = d/c, uses server write keys     Figure 2: A DTLS-SRTP session protecting RTP (1) and another one    protecting RTCP (2), showing the transport addresses and keys used.4.3.  Key Scope   Because of the possibility of packet reordering, DTLS-SRTP   implementations SHOULD store multiple SRTP keys sets during a rekey   in order to avoid the need for receivers to drop packets for which   they lack a key.4.4.  Key Usage Limitations   The maximum_lifetime parameter in the SRTP protection profile   indicates the maximum number of packets that can be protected with   each single encryption and authentication key.  (Note that, since RTP   and RTCP are protected with independent keys, those protocols are   counted separately for the purposes of determining when a key has   reached the end of its lifetime.)  Each profile defines its own   limit.  When this limit is reached, a new DTLS session SHOULD be used   to establish replacement keys, and SRTP implementations MUST NOT use   the existing keys for the processing of either outbound or inbound   traffic.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 20105.  Use of RTP and RTCP over a DTLS-SRTP Channel5.1.  Data Protection   Once the DTLS handshake has completed, the peers can send RTP or RTCP   over the newly created channel.  We describe the transmission process   first followed by the reception process.   Within each RTP session, SRTP processing MUST NOT take place before   the DTLS handshake completes.5.1.1.  Transmission   DTLS and TLS define a number of record content types.  In ordinary   TLS/DTLS, all data is protected using the same record encoding and   mechanisms.  When the mechanism described in this document is in   effect, this is modified so that data written by upper-level protocol   clients of DTLS is assumed to be RTP/RTP and is encrypted using SRTP   rather than the standard TLS record encoding.   When a user of DTLS wishes to send an RTP packet in SRTP mode, it   delivers it to the DTLS implementation as an ordinary application   data write (e.g., SSL_write()).  The DTLS implementation then invokes   the processing described inRFC 3711, Sections3 and4.  The   resulting SRTP packet is then sent directly on the wire as a single   datagram with no DTLS framing.  This provides an encapsulation of the   data that conforms to and interoperates with SRTP.  Note that the RTP   sequence number rather than the DTLS sequence number is used for   these packets.5.1.2.  Reception   When DTLS-SRTP is used to protect an RTP session, the RTP receiver   needs to demultiplex packets that are arriving on the RTP port.   Arriving packets may be of types RTP, DTLS, or STUN [RFC5389].  If   these are the only types of packets present, the type of a packet can   be determined by looking at its first byte.   The process for demultiplexing a packet is as follows.  The receiver   looks at the first byte of the packet.  If the value of this byte is   0 or 1, then the packet is STUN.  If the value is in between 128 and   191 (inclusive), then the packet is RTP (or RTCP, if both RTCP and   RTP are being multiplexed over the same destination port).  If the   value is between 20 and 63 (inclusive), the packet is DTLS.  This   process is summarized in Figure 3.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010                   +----------------+                   | 127 < B < 192 -+--> forward to RTP                   |                |       packet -->  |  19 < B < 64  -+--> forward to DTLS                   |                |                   |       B < 2   -+--> forward to STUN                   +----------------+    Figure 3: The DTLS-SRTP receiver's packet demultiplexing algorithm.         Here the field B denotes the leading byte of the packet.   If other packet types are to be multiplexed as well, implementors   and/or designers SHOULD ensure that they can be demultiplexed from   these three packet types.   In some cases, there will be multiple DTLS-SRTP associations for a   given SRTP endpoint.  For instance, if Alice makes a call that is SIP   forked to both Bob and Charlie, she will use the same local host/port   pair for both of them, as shown in Figure 4, where XXX and YYY   represent different DTLS-SRTP associations.  (The SSRCs shown are the   ones for data flowing to Alice.)                                          Bob (192.0.2.1:6666)                                         /                                        /                                       / SSRC=1                                      /  DTLS-SRTP=XXX                                     /                                    v               Alice (192.0.2.0:5555)                                    ^                                     \                                      \  SSRC=2                                       \ DTLS-SRTP=YYY                                        \                                         \                                          Charlie (192.0.2.2:6666)                 Figure 4: RTP sessions with SIP forking.   Because DTLS operates on the host/port quartet, the DTLS association   will still complete correctly, with the foreign host/port pair being   used, to distinguish the associations.  However, in RTP the source   host/port is not used and sessions are identified by the destination   host/port and the SSRC.  Thus, some mechanism is needed to determine   which SSRCs correspond to which DTLS associations.  The following   method SHOULD be used.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   For each local host/port pair, the DTLS-SRTP implementation maintains   a table listing all the SSRCs it knows about and the DTLS-SRTP   associations they correspond to.  Initially, this table is empty.   When an SRTP packet is received for a given RTP endpoint (destination   IP/port pair), the following procedure is used:   1.  If the SSRC is already known for that endpoint, then the       corresponding DTLS-SRTP association and its keying material is       used to decrypt and verify the packet.   2.  If the SSRC is not known, then the receiver tries to decrypt it       with the keying material corresponding to each DTLS-SRTP       association for that endpoint.   3.  If the decryption and verification succeeds (the authentication       tag verifies), then an entry is placed in the table mapping the       SSRC to that association.   4.  If the decryption and verification fails, then the packet is       silently discarded.   5.  When a DTLS-SRTP association is closed (for instance, because the       fork is abandoned), its entries MUST be removed from the mapping       table.   The average cost of this algorithm for a single SSRC is the   decryption and verification time of a single packet times the number   of valid DTLS-SRTP associations corresponding to a single receiving   port on the host.  In practice, this means the number of forks; so in   the case shown in Figure 4, that would be two.  This cost is only   incurred once for any given SSRC, since afterwards that SSRC is   placed in the map table and looked up immediately.  As with normal   RTP, this algorithm allows new SSRCs to be introduced by the source   at any time.  They will automatically be mapped to the correct DTLS   association.   Note that this algorithm explicitly allows multiple SSRCs to be sent   from the same address/port pair.  One way in which this can happen is   an RTP translator.  This algorithm will automatically assign the   SSRCs to the correct associations.  Note that because the SRTP   packets are cryptographically protected, such a translator must   either share keying material with one endpoint or refrain from   modifying the packets in a way which would cause the integrity check   to fail.  This is a general property of SRTP and is not specific to   DTLS-SRTP.   There are two error cases that should be considered.  First, if an   SSRC collision occurs, then only the packets from the first source   will be processed.  When the packets from the second source arrive,   the DTLS association with the first source will be used for   decryption and verification, which will fail, and the packet will be   discarded.  This is consistent with [RFC3550], which permits theMcGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   receiver to keep the packets from one source and discard those from   the other.  Of course theRFC 3550 SSRC collision detection and   handling procedures MUST also be followed.   Second, there may be cases where a malfunctioning source is sending   corrupt packets that cannot be decrypted and verified.  In this case,   the SSRC will never be entered into the mapping table because the   decryption and verification always fails.  Receivers MAY keep records   of unmapped SSRCs that consistently fail decryption and verification   and abandon attempts to process them once they reach some limit.   That limit MUST be large enough to account for the effects of   transmission errors.  Entries MUST be pruned from this table when the   relevant SRTP endpoint is deleted (e.g., the call ends) and SHOULD   time out faster than that (we do not offer a hard recommendation but   10 to 30 seconds seems appropriate) in order to allow for the   possibility that the peer implementation has been corrected.5.2.  Rehandshake and Rekey   Rekeying in DTLS is accomplished by performing a new handshake over   the existing DTLS channel.  That is, the handshake messages are   protected by the existing DTLS cipher suite.  This handshake can be   performed in parallel with data transport, so no interruption of the   data flow is required.  Once the handshake is finished, the newly   derived set of keys is used to protect all outbound packets, both   DTLS and SRTP.   Because of packet reordering, packets protected by the previous set   of keys can appear on the wire after the handshake has completed.  To   compensate for this fact, receivers SHOULD maintain both sets of keys   for some time in order to be able to decrypt and verify older   packets.  The keys should be maintained for the duration of the   maximum segment lifetime (MSL).   If an MKI is used, then the receiver should use the corresponding set   of keys to process an incoming packet.  If no matching MKI is   present, the packet MUST be rejected.  Otherwise, when a packet   arrives after the handshake completed, a receiver SHOULD use the   newly derived set of keys to process that packet unless there is an   MKI.  (If the packet was protected with the older set of keys, this   fact will become apparent to the receiver as an authentication   failure will occur.)  If the authentication check on the packet fails   and no MKI is being used, then the receiver MAY process the packet   with the older set of keys.  If that authentication check indicates   that the packet is valid, the packet should be accepted; otherwise,   the packet MUST be discarded and rejected.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   Receivers MAY use the SRTP packet sequence number to aid in the   selection of keys.  After a packet has been received and   authenticated with the new key set, any packets with sequence numbers   that are greater will also have been protected with the new key set.6.  Multi-Party RTP Sessions   Since DTLS is a point-to-point protocol, DTLS-SRTP is intended only   to protect unicast RTP sessions.  This does not preclude its use with   RTP mixers.  For example, a conference bridge may use DTLS-SRTP to   secure the communication to and from each of the participants in a   conference.  However, because each flow between an endpoint and a   mixer has its own key, the mixer has to decrypt and then reencrypt   the traffic for each recipient.   A future specification may describe methods for sharing a single key   between multiple DTLS-SRTP associations thus allowing conferencing   systems to avoid the decrypt/reencrypt stage.  However, any system in   which the media is modified (e.g., for level balancing or   transcoding) will generally need to be performed on the plaintext and   will certainly break the authentication tag, and therefore will   require a decrypt/reencrypt stage.7.  Security Considerations   The use of multiple data protection framings negotiated in the same   handshake creates some complexities, which are discussed here.7.1.  Security of Negotiation   One concern here is that attackers might be able to implement a bid-   down attack forcing the peers to use ordinary DTLS rather than SRTP.   However, because the negotiation of this extension is performed in   the DTLS handshake, it is protected by the Finished messages.   Therefore, any bid-down attack is automatically detected, which   reduces this to a denial-of-service attack -- which can be mounted by   any attacker who can control the channel.7.2.  Framing Confusion   Because two different framing formats are used, there is concern that   an attacker could convince the receiver to treat an SRTP-framed RTP   packet as a DTLS record (e.g., a handshake message) or vice versa.   This attack is prevented by using different keys for Message   Authentication Code (MAC) verification for each type of data.   Therefore, this type of attack reduces to being able to forge a   packet with a valid MAC, which violates a basic security invariant of   both DTLS and SRTP.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   As an additional defense against injection into the DTLS handshake   channel, the DTLS record type is included in the MAC.  Therefore, an   SRTP record would be treated as an unknown type and ignored.  (SeeSection 6 of [RFC5246].)7.3.  Sequence Number Interactions   As described inSection 5.1.1, the SRTP and DTLS sequence number   spaces are distinct.  This means that it is not possible to   unambiguously order a given DTLS control record with respect to an   SRTP packet.  In general, this is relevant in two situations: alerts   and rehandshake.7.3.1.  Alerts   Because DTLS handshake and change_cipher_spec messages share the same   sequence number space as alerts, they can be ordered correctly.   Because DTLS alerts are inherently unreliable and SHOULD NOT be   generated as a response to data packets, reliable sequencing between   SRTP packets and DTLS alerts is not an important feature.  However,   implementations that wish to use DTLS alerts to signal problems with   the SRTP encoding SHOULD simply act on alerts as soon as they are   received and assume that they refer to the temporally contiguous   stream.  Such implementations MUST check for alert retransmission and   discard retransmitted alerts to avoid overreacting to replay attacks.7.3.2.  Renegotiation   Because the rehandshake transition algorithm specified inSection 5.2   requires trying multiple sets of keys if no MKI is used, it slightly   weakens the authentication.  For instance, if an n-bit MAC is used   and k different sets of keys are present, then the MAC is weakened by   log_2(k) bits to n - log_2(k).  In practice, since the number of keys   used will be very small and the MACs in use are typically strong (the   default for SRTP is 80 bits), the decrease in security involved here   is minimal.   Another concern here is that this algorithm slightly increases the   work factor on the receiver because it needs to attempt multiple   validations.  However, again, the number of potential keys will be   very small (and the attacker cannot force it to be larger) and this   technique is already used for rollover counter management, so the   authors do not consider this to be a serious flaw.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 20107.4.  Decryption Cost   An attacker can impose computational costs on the receiver by sending   superficially valid SRTP packets that do not decrypt correctly.  In   general, encryption algorithms are so fast that this cost is   extremely small compared to the bandwidth consumed.  The SSRC-DTLS   mapping algorithm described inSection 5.1.2 gives the attacker a   slight advantage here because he can force the receiver to do more   then one decryption per packet.  However, this advantage is modest   because the number of decryptions that the receiver does is limited   by the number of associations he has corresponding to a given   destination host/port, which is typically quite small.  For   comparison, a single 1024-bit RSA private key operation (the typical   minimum cost to establish a DTLS-SRTP association) is hundreds of   times as expensive as decrypting an SRTP packet.   Implementations can detect this form of attack by keeping track of   the number of SRTP packets that are observed with unknown SSRCs and   that fail the authentication tag check.  If under such attack,   implementations SHOULD prioritize decryption and verification of   packets that either have known SSRCs or come from source addresses   that match those of peers with which it has DTLS-SRTP associations.8.  Session Description for RTP/SAVP over DTLS   This specification defines new tokens to describe the protocol used   in SDP media descriptions ("m=" lines and their associated   parameters).  The new values defined for the proto field are:   o  When a RTP/SAVP or RTP/SAVPF [RFC5124] stream is transported over      DTLS with the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP), then      the token SHALL be DCCP/TLS/RTP/SAVP or DCCP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF      respectively.   o  When a RTP/SAVP or RTP/SAVPF stream is transported over DTLS with      UDP, the token SHALL be UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVP or UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF      respectively.   The "fmt" parameter SHALL be as defined for RTP/SAVP.   See [RFC5763] for how to use offer/answer with DTLS-SRTP.   This document does not specify how to protect RTP data transported   over TCP.  Potential approaches include carrying the RTP over TLS   over TCP (see [SRTP-NOT-MAND]) or using a mechanism similar to that   in this document over TCP, either via TLS or DTLS, with DTLS being   used for consistency between reliable and unreliable transports.  InMcGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   the latter case, it would be necessary to profile DTLS so that   fragmentation and retransmissions no longer occurred.  In either   case, a new document would be required.9.  IANA Considerations   This document adds a new extension for DTLS, in accordance with   [RFC5246]:        enum { use_srtp (14) } ExtensionType;   This extension MUST only be used with DTLS, and not with TLS   [RFC4572], which specifies that TLS can be used over TCP but does not   address TCP for RTP/SAVP.Section 4.1.2 requires that all SRTPProtectionProfile values be   defined byRFC 5226 "Specification Required".  IANA has created a   DTLS SRTPProtectionProfile registry initially populated with values   fromSection 4.1.2 of this document.  Future values MUST be allocated   via the "Specification Required" profile of [RFC5226].   This specification updates the "Session Description Protocol (SDP)   Parameters" registry as defined inSection 8.2.2 of [RFC4566].   Specifically, it adds the following values to the table for the   "proto" field.           Type            SDP Name                     Reference           ----            ------------------           ---------           proto           UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVP             [RFC5764]           proto           DCCP/TLS/RTP/SAVP            [RFC5764]           proto           UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF            [RFC5764]           proto           DCCP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF           [RFC5764]   IANA has registered the "EXTRACTOR-dtls_srtp" value in the TLS   Extractor Label Registry to correspond to this specification.10.  Acknowledgments   Special thanks to Flemming Andreasen, Francois Audet, Pasi Eronen,   Roni Even, Jason Fischl, Cullen Jennings, Colin Perkins, Dan Wing,   and Ben Campbell for input, discussions, and guidance.  Pasi Eronen   provided Figure 1.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 201011.  References11.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                    Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3711]        Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E.,                    and K. Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport                    Protocol (SRTP)",RFC 3711, March 2004.   [RFC4347]        Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport                    Layer Security",RFC 4347, April 2006.   [RFC4961]        Wing, D., "Symmetric RTP / RTP Control Protocol                    (RTCP)",BCP 131,RFC 4961, July 2007.   [RFC5246]        Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer                    Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246,                    August 2008.   [RFC5705]        Rescorla, E., "Keying Material Exporters for                    Transport Layer Security (TLS)",RFC 5705,                    March 2010.   [RFC5761]        Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Multiplexing RTP                    Data and Control Packets on a Single Port",RFC 5761, April 2010.11.2.  Informative References   [DTLS1.2]        Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport                    Layer Security version 1.2", Work in Progress,                    October 2009.   [RFC3550]        Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.                    Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time                    Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.   [RFC4566]        Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP:                    Session Description Protocol",RFC 4566, July 2006.   [RFC4572]        Lennox, J., "Connection-Oriented Media Transport                    over the Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol in                    the Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 4572,                    July 2006.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   [RFC5124]        Ott, J. and E. Carrara, "Extended Secure RTP Profile                    for Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-                    Based Feedback (RTP/SAVPF)",RFC 5124,                    February 2008.   [RFC5226]        Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for                    Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226, May 2008.   [RFC5389]        Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,                    "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389, October 2008.   [RFC5763]        Fischl, J., Tschofenig, H., and E. Rescorla,                    "Framework for Establishing a Secure Real-time                    Transport Protocol (SRTP) Security Context Using                    Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)",RFC 5763,                    May 2010.   [SRTP-NOT-MAND]  Perkins, C. and M. Westerlund, "Why RTP Does Not                    Mandate a Single Security Mechanism", Work in                    Progress, January 2010.McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010Appendix A.  Overview of DTLS   This section provides a brief overview of Datagram TLS (DTLS) for   those who are not familiar with it.  DTLS is a channel security   protocol based on the well-known Transport Layer Security (TLS)   [RFC5246] protocol.  Where TLS depends on a reliable transport   channel (typically TCP), DTLS has been adapted to support unreliable   transports such as UDP.  Otherwise, DTLS is nearly identical to TLS   and generally supports the same cryptographic mechanisms.   Each DTLS association begins with a handshake exchange (shown below)   during which the peers authenticate each other and negotiate   algorithms, modes, and other parameters and establish shared keying   material, as shown below.  In order to support unreliable transport,   each side maintains retransmission timers to provide reliable   delivery of these messages.  Once the handshake is completed,   encrypted data may be sent.         Client                                               Server         ClientHello                  -------->                                                         ServerHello                                                        Certificate*                                                  ServerKeyExchange*                                                 CertificateRequest*                                      <--------      ServerHelloDone         Certificate*         ClientKeyExchange         CertificateVerify*         [ChangeCipherSpec]         Finished                     -------->                                                  [ChangeCipherSpec]                                      <--------             Finished         Application Data             <------->     Application Data               '*' indicates messages that are not always sent.        Figure 5: Basic DTLS Handshake Exchange (after [RFC4347]).   Application data is protected by being sent as a series of DTLS   "records".  These records are independent and can be processed   correctly even in the face of loss or reordering.  In DTLS-SRTP, this   record protocol is replaced with SRTP [RFC3711]McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010Appendix B.  Performance of Multiple DTLS Handshakes   Standard practice for security protocols such as TLS, DTLS, and SSH,   which do inline key management, is to create a separate security   association for each underlying network channel (TCP connection, UDP   host/port quartet, etc.).  This has dual advantages of simplicity and   independence of the security contexts for each channel.   Three concerns have been raised about the overhead of this strategy   in the context of RTP security.  The first concern is the additional   performance overhead of doing a separate public key operation for   each channel.  The conventional procedure here (used in TLS and DTLS)   is to establish a master context that can then be used to derive   fresh traffic keys for new associations.  In TLS/DTLS, this is called   "session resumption" and can be transparently negotiated between the   peers.   The second concern is network bandwidth overhead for the   establishment of subsequent connections and for rehandshake (for   rekeying) for existing connections.  In particular, there is a   concern that the channels will have very narrow capacity requirements   allocated entirely to media that will be overflowed by the   rehandshake.  Measurements of the size of the rehandshake (with   resumption) in TLS indicate that it is about 300-400 bytes if a full   selection of cipher suites is offered.  (The size of a full handshake   is approximately 1-2 kilobytes larger because of the certificate and   keying material exchange.)   The third concern is the additional round-trips associated with   establishing the second, third, ... channels.  In TLS/DTLS, these can   all be done in parallel, but in order to take advantage of session   resumption they should be done after the first channel is   established.  For two channels, this provides a ladder diagram   something like this (parenthetical numbers are media channel numbers)McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   Alice                                   Bob   -------------------------------------------                      <-       ClientHello (1)   ServerHello (1)    ->   Certificate (1)   ServerHelloDone (1)                      <- ClientKeyExchange (1)                          ChangeCipherSpec (1)                                  Finished (1)   ChangeCipherSpec (1)->   Finished         (1)->                                                <--- Channel 1 ready                      <-       ClientHello (2)   ServerHello (2)    ->   ChangeCipherSpec(2)->   Finished(2)        ->                      <-  ChangeCipherSpec (2)                                  Finished (2)                                                <--- Channel 2 ready                Figure 6: Parallel DTLS-SRTP negotiations.   So, there is an additional 1 RTT (round-trip time) after Channel 1 is   ready before Channel 2 is ready.  If the peers are potentially   willing to forego resumption, they can interlace the handshakes, like   so:McGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5764                 SRTP Extension for DTLS                May 2010   Alice                                   Bob   -------------------------------------------                      <-       ClientHello (1)   ServerHello (1)    ->   Certificate (1)   ServerHelloDone (1)                      <- ClientKeyExchange (1)                          ChangeCipherSpec (1)                                  Finished (1)                      <-       ClientHello (2)   ChangeCipherSpec (1)->   Finished         (1)->                                                <--- Channel 1 ready   ServerHello (2)    ->   ChangeCipherSpec(2)->   Finished(2)        ->                      <-  ChangeCipherSpec (2)                                  Finished (2)                                                <--- Channel 2 ready               Figure 7: Interlaced DTLS-SRTP negotiations.   In this case, the channels are ready contemporaneously, but if a   message in handshake (1) is lost, then handshake (2) requires either   a full rehandshake or that Alice be clever and queue the resumption   attempt until the first handshake completes.  Note that just dropping   the packet works as well, since Bob will retransmit.Authors' Addresses   David McGrew   Cisco Systems   510 McCarthy Blvd.   Milpitas, CA  95305   USA   EMail: mcgrew@cisco.com   Eric Rescorla   RTFM, Inc.   2064 Edgewood Drive   Palo Alto, CA  94303   USA   EMail: ekr@rtfm.comMcGrew & Rescorla            Standards Track                   [Page 26]

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