Network Working Group                                  G. Waters, Editor
Request for Comments: 1910                   Bell-Northern Research Ltd.
Category: Experimental                                     February 1996


                 User-based Security Model for SNMPv2

Status of this Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any
  kind.  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ................................................    2
  1.1 Threats ....................................................    3
  1.2 Goals and Constraints ......................................    4
  1.3 Security Services ..........................................    5
  1.4 Mechanisms .................................................    5
  1.4.1 Digest Authentication Protocol ...........................    7
  1.4.2 Symmetric Encryption Protocol ............................    8
  2. Elements of the Model .......................................   10
  2.1 SNMPv2 Users ...............................................   10
  2.2 Contexts and Context Selectors .............................   11
  2.3 Quality of Service (qoS) ...................................   13
  2.4 Access Policy ..............................................   13
  2.5 Replay Protection ..........................................   13
  2.5.1 agentID ..................................................   14
  2.5.2 agentBoots and agentTime .................................   14
  2.5.3 Time Window ..............................................   15
  2.6 Error Reporting ............................................   15
  2.7 Time Synchronization .......................................   16
  2.8 Proxy Error Propagation ....................................   16
  2.9 SNMPv2 Messages Using this Model ...........................   16
  2.10 Local Configuration Datastore (LCD) .......................   18
  3. Elements of Procedure .......................................   19
  3.1 Generating a Request or Notification .......................   19
  3.2 Processing a Received Communication ........................   20
  3.2.1 Additional Details .......................................   28
  3.2.1.1 ASN.1 Parsing Errors ...................................   28
  3.2.1.2 Incorrectly Encoded Parameters .........................   29
  3.2.1.3 Generation of a Report PDU .............................   29
  3.2.1.4 Cache Timeout ..........................................   29
  3.3 Generating a Response ......................................   30
  4. Discovery ...................................................   30
  5. Definitions .................................................   31



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  4.1 The USEC Basic Group .......................................   32
  4.2 Conformance Information ....................................   35
  4.2.1 Compliance Statements ....................................   35
  4.2.2 Units of Conformance .....................................   35
  6. Security Considerations .....................................   36
  6.1 Recommended Practices ......................................   36
  6.2 Defining Users .............................................   37
  6.3 Conformance ................................................   38
  7. Editor's Address ............................................   38
  8. Acknowledgements ............................................   39
  9. References ..................................................   39
  Appendix A Installation ........................................   41
  Appendix A.1 Agent Installation Parameters .....................   41
  Appendix A.2 Password to Key Algorithm .........................   43
  Appendix A.3 Password to Key Sample ............................   44

1.  Introduction

  A management system contains:  several (potentially many) nodes, each
  with a processing entity, termed an agent, which has access to
  management instrumentation; at least one management station; and, a
  management protocol, used to convey management information between
  the agents and management stations.  Operations of the protocol are
  carried out under an administrative framework which defines
  authentication, authorization, access control, and privacy policies.

  Management stations execute management applications which monitor and
  control managed elements.  Managed elements are devices such as
  hosts, routers, terminal servers, etc., which are monitored and
  controlled via access to their management information.

  The Administrative Infrastructure for SNMPv2 document [1] defines an
  administrative framework which realizes effective management in a
  variety of configurations and environments.

  In this administrative framework, a security model defines the
  mechanisms used to achieve an administratively-defined level of
  security for protocol interactions.  Although many such security
  models might be defined, it is the purpose of this document, User-
  based Security Model for SNMPv2, to define the first, and, as of this
  writing, only, security model for this administrative framework.

  This administrative framework includes the provision of an access
  control model.  The enforcement of access rights requires the means
  to identify the entity on whose behalf a request is generated.  This
  SNMPv2 security model identifies an entity on whose behalf an SNMPv2
  message is generated as a "user".




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1.1.  Threats

  Several of the classical threats to network protocols are applicable
  to the network management problem and therefore would be applicable
  to any SNMPv2 security model.  Other threats are not applicable to
  the network management problem.  This section discusses principal
  threats, secondary threats, and threats which are of lesser
  importance.

  The principal threats against which this SNMPv2 security model should
  provide protection are:

Modification of Information
    The modification threat is the danger that some unauthorized entity
    may alter in-transit SNMPv2 messages generated on behalf of an
    authorized user in such a way as to effect unauthorized management
    operations, including falsifying the value of an object.

Masquerade
    The masquerade threat is the danger that management operations not
    authorized for some user may be attempted by assuming the identity
    of another user that has the appropriate authorizations.

  Two secondary threats are also identified.  The security protocols
  defined in this memo do provide protection against:

Message Stream Modification
    The SNMPv2 protocol is typically based upon a connectionless
    transport service which may operate over any subnetwork service.
    The re-ordering, delay or replay of messages can and does occur
    through the natural operation of many such subnetwork services.
    The message stream modification threat is the danger that messages
    may be maliciously re-ordered, delayed or replayed to an extent
    which is greater than can occur through the natural operation of a
    subnetwork service, in order to effect unauthorized management
    operations.

Disclosure
    The disclosure threat is the danger of eavesdropping on the
    exchanges between managed agents and a management station.
    Protecting against this threat may be required as a matter of local
    policy.

  There are at least two threats that an SNMPv2 security protocol need
  not protect against.  The security protocols defined in this memo do
  not provide protection against:





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Denial of Service
    An SNMPv2 security protocol need not attempt to address the broad
    range of attacks by which service on behalf of authorized users is
    denied.  Indeed, such denial-of-service attacks are in many cases
    indistinguishable from the type of network failures with which any
    viable network management protocol must cope as a matter of course.

Traffic Analysis
    In addition, an SNMPv2 security protocol need not attempt to
    address traffic analysis attacks.  Indeed, many traffic patterns
    are predictable - agents may be managed on a regular basis by a
    relatively small number of management stations - and therefore
    there is no significant advantage afforded by protecting against
    traffic analysis.

1.2.  Goals and Constraints

  Based on the foregoing account of threats in the SNMP network
  management environment, the goals of this SNMPv2 security model are
  as follows.

(1)  The protocol should provide for verification that each received
    SNMPv2 message has not been modified during its transmission
    through the network in such a way that an unauthorized management
    operation might result.

(2)  The protocol should provide for verification of the identity of the
    user on whose behalf a received SNMPv2 message claims to have been
    generated.

(3)  The protocol should provide for detection of received SNMPv2
    messages, which request or contain management information, whose
    time of generation was not recent.

(4)  The protocol should provide, when necessary, that the contents of
    each received SNMPv2 message are protected from disclosure.

  In addition to the principal goal of supporting secure network
  management, the design of this SNMPv2 security model is also
  influenced by the following constraints:

(1)  When the requirements of effective management in times of network
    stress are inconsistent with those of security, the design should
    prefer the former.

(2)  Neither the security protocol nor its underlying security
    mechanisms should depend upon the ready availability of other
    network services (e.g., Network Time Protocol (NTP) or key



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    management protocols).

(3)  A security mechanism should entail no changes to the basic SNMP
    network management philosophy.

1.3.  Security Services

  The security services necessary to support the goals of an SNMPv2
  security model are as follows.

Data Integrity
    is the provision of the property that data has not been altered or
    destroyed in an unauthorized manner, nor have data sequences been
    altered to an extent greater than can occur non-maliciously.

Data Origin Authentication
    is the provision of the property that the claimed identity of the
    user on whose behalf received data was originated is corroborated.

Data Confidentiality
    is the provision of the property that information is not made
    available or disclosed to unauthorized individuals, entities, or
    processes.

  For the protocols specified in this memo, it is not possible to
  assure the specific originator of a received SNMPv2 message; rather,
  it is the user on whose behalf the message was originated that is
  authenticated.

  For these protocols, it not possible to obtain data integrity without
  data origin authentication, nor is it possible to obtain data origin
  authentication without data integrity.  Further, there is no
  provision for data confidentiality without both data integrity and
  data origin authentication.

  The security protocols used in this memo are considered acceptably
  secure at the time of writing.  However, the procedures allow for new
  authentication and privacy methods to be specified at a future time
  if the need arises.

1.4.  Mechanisms

  The security protocols defined in this memo employ several types of
  mechanisms in order to realize the goals and security services
  described above:






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 -  In support of data integrity, a message digest algorithm is
    required.  A digest is calculated over an appropriate portion of an
    SNMPv2 message and included as part of the message sent to the
    recipient.

 -  In support of data origin authentication and data integrity, a
    secret value is both inserted into, and appended to, the SNMPv2
    message prior to computing the digest; the inserted value
    overwritten prior to transmission, and the appended value is not
    transmitted.  The secret value is shared by all SNMPv2 entities
    authorized to originate messages on behalf of the appropriate user.

 -  To protect against the threat of message delay or replay (to an
    extent greater than can occur through normal operation), a set of
    time (at the agent) indicators and a request-id are included in
    each message generated.  An SNMPv2 agent evaluates the time
    indicators to determine if a received message is recent.  An SNMPv2
    manager evaluates the time indicators to ensure that a received
    message is at least as recent as the last message it received from
    the same source.  An SNMPv2 manager uses received authentic
    messages to advance its notion of time (at the agent).  An  SNMPv2
    manager also evaluates the request-id in received Response messages
    and discards messages which do not correspond to outstanding
    requests.

    These mechanisms provide for the detection of messages whose time
    of generation was not recent in all but one circumstance; this
    circumstance is the delay or replay of a Report  message (sent to a
    manager) when the manager has has not recently communicated with
    the source of the Report message.  In this circumstance, the
    detection guarantees only that the Report message is more recent
    than the last communication between source and destination of the
    Report message.  However, Report messages do not request or contain
    management information, and thus, goal #3 in Section 1.2 above is
    met; further, Report messages can at most cause the manager to
    advance its notion of time (at the agent) by less than the proper
    amount.

    This protection against the threat of message delay or replay does
    not imply nor provide any protection against unauthorized deletion
    or suppression of messages.  Other mechanisms defined independently
    of the security protocol can also be used to detect the re-
    ordering, replay, deletion, or suppression of messages containing
    set operations (e.g., the MIB variable snmpSetSerialNo [15]).

 -  In support of data confidentiality, an encryption algorithm is
    required.  An appropriate portion of the message is encrypted prior
    to being transmitted.



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1.4.1.  Digest Authentication Protocol

  The Digest Authentication Protocol defined in this memo provides for:

 -  verifying the integrity of a received message (i.e., the message
    received is the message sent).

    The integrity of the message is protected by computing a digest
    over an appropriate portion of a message.  The digest is computed
    by the originator of the message, transmitted with the message, and
    verified by the recipient of the message.

 -  verifying the user on whose behalf the message was generated.

    A secret value known only to SNMPv2 entities authorized to generate
    messages on behalf of this user is both inserted into, and appended
    to, the message prior to the digest computation.  Thus, the
    verification of the user is implicit with the verification of the
    digest.  (Note that the use of two copies of the secret, one near
    the start and one at the end, is recommended by [14].)

 -  verifying that a message sent to/from one SNMPv2 entity cannot be
    replayed to/as-if-from another SNMPv2 entity.

    Included in each message is an identifier unique to the SNMPv2
    agent associated with the sender or intended recipient of the
    message.  Also, each message containing a Response PDU contains a
    request-id which associates the message to a recently generated
    request.

    A Report message sent by one SNMPv2 agent to one SNMPv2 manager can
    potentially be replayed to another SNMPv2 manager.  However, Report
    messages do not request or contain management information, and
    thus, goal #3 in Section 1.2 above is met; further, Report messages
    can at most cause the manager to advance its notion of time (at the
    agent) by less than the correct amount.

 -  detecting messages which were not recently generated.

    A set of time indicators are included in the message, indicating
    the time of generation.  Messages (other than those containing
    Report PDUs) without recent time indicators are not considered
    authentic.  In addition, messages containing Response PDUs have a
    request-id; if the request-id does not match that of a recently
    generated request, then the message is not considered to be
    authentic.





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    A Report message sent by an SNMPv2 agent can potentially be
    replayed at a later time to an SNMPv2 manager which has not
    recently communicated with that agent.  However, Report messages do
    not request or contain management information, and thus, goal #3 in
    Section 1.2 above is met; further, Report messages can at most
    cause the manager to advance its notion of time (at the agent) by
    less than the correct amount.

  This protocol uses the MD5 [3] message digest algorithm.  A 128-bit
  digest is calculated over the designated portion of an SNMPv2 message
  and included as part of the message sent to the recipient.  The size
  of both the digest carried in a message and the private
  authentication key is 16 octets.

  This memo allows the same user to be defined on multiple SNMPv2
  agents and managers.  Each SNMPv2 agent maintains a value, agentID,
  which uniquely identifies the agent. This value is included in each
  message sent to/from that agent.  Messages sent from a SNMPv2 dual-
  role entity [1] to a SNMPv2 manager include the agentID value
  maintained by the dual-role entity's agent.  On receipt of a message,
  an agent checks the value to ensure it is the intended recipient, and
  a manager uses the value to ensure that the message is processed
  using the correct state information.

  Each SNMPv2 agent maintains two values, agentBoots and agentTime,
  which taken together provide an indication of time at that agent.
  Both of these values are included in an authenticated message sent
  to/received from that agent.  Authenticated messages sent from a
  SNMPv2 dual-role entity to a SNMPv2 manager include the agentBoots
  and agentTime values maintained by the dual-role entity's agent.  On
  receipt, the values are checked to ensure that the indicated time is
  within a time window of the current time.  The time window represents
  an administrative upper bound on acceptable delivery delay for
  protocol messages.

  For an SNMPv2 manager to generate a message which an agent will
  accept as authentic, and to verify that a message received from that
  agent is authentic, that manager must first achieve time
  synchronization with that agent.  Similarly, for a manger to verify
  that a message received from an SNMPv2 dual-role entity is authentic,
  that manager must first achieve time synchronization with the dual-
  role entity's agent.

1.4.2.  Symmetric Encryption Protocol

  The Symmetric Encryption Protocol defined in this memo provides
  support for data confidentiality through the use of the Data
  Encryption Standard (DES) in the Cipher Block Chaining mode of



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  operation.  The designated portion of an SNMPv2 message is encrypted
  and included as part of the message sent to the recipient.

  Two organizations have published specifications defining the DES: the
  National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) [5] and the
  American National Standards Institute [6].  There is a companion
  Modes of Operation specification for each definition (see [7] and
  [8], respectively).

  The NIST has published three additional documents that implementors
  may find useful.

 -  There is a document with guidelines for implementing and using the
    DES, including functional specifications for the DES and its modes
    of operation [9].

 -  There is a specification of a validation test suite for the DES
    [10].  The suite is designed to test all aspects of the DES and is
    useful for pinpointing specific problems.

 -  There is a specification of a maintenance test for the DES [11].
    The test utilizes a minimal amount of data and processing to test
    all components of the DES.  It provides a simple yes-or-no
    indication of correct operation and is useful to run as part of an
    initialization step, e.g., when a computer reboots.

  This Symmetric Encryption Protocol specifies that the size of the
  privacy key is 16 octets, of which the first 8 octets are a DES key
  and the second 8 octets are a DES Initialization Vector.  The 64-bit
  DES key in the first 8 octets of the private key is a 56 bit quantity
  used directly by the algorithm plus 8 parity bits - arranged so that
  one parity bit is the least significant bit of each octet.  The
  setting of the parity bits is ignored by this protocol.

  The length of an octet sequence to be encrypted by the DES must be an
  integral multiple of 8.  When encrypting, the data is padded at the
  end as necessary; the actual pad value is irrelevant.

  If the length of the octet sequence to be decrypted is not an
  integral multiple of 8 octets, the processing of the octet sequence
  is halted and an appropriate exception noted.  When decrypting, the
  padding is ignored.









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2.  Elements of the Model

  This section contains definitions required to realize the security
  model defined by this memo.

2.1.  SNMPv2 Users

  Management operations using this security model make use of a defined
  set of user identities.  For any SNMPv2 user on whose behalf
  management operations are authorized at a particular SNMPv2 agent,
  that agent must have knowledge of that user.  A SNMPv2 manager that
  wishes to communicate with a particular agent must also have
  knowledge of a user known to that agent, including knowledge of the
  applicable attributes of that user.  Similarly, a SNMPv2 manager that
  wishes to receive messages from a SNMPv2 dual-role entity must have
  knowledge of the user on whose behalf the dual-role entity sends the
  message.

  A user and its attributes are defined as follows:

<userName>
    An octet string representing the name of the user.

<authProtocol>
    An indication of whether messages sent on behalf of this user can
    be authenticated, and if so, the type of authentication protocol
    which is used.  One such protocol is defined in this memo: the
    Digest Authentication Protocol.

<authPrivateKey>
    If messages sent on behalf of this user can be authenticated, the
    (private) authentication key for use with the authentication
    protocol.  Note that a user's authentication key will normally be
    different at different agents.

<privProtocol>
    An indication of whether messages sent on behalf of this user can
    be protected from disclosure, and if so, the type of privacy
    protocol which is used.  One such protocol is defined in this memo:
    the Symmetric Encryption Protocol.

<privPrivateKey>
    If messages sent on behalf of this user can be protected from
    disclosure, the (private) privacy key for use with the privacy
    protocol.  Note that a user's privacy key will normally be
    different at different agents.





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2.2.  Contexts and Context Selectors

  An SNMPv2 context is a collection of management information
  accessible (locally or via proxy) by an SNMPv2 agent.  An item of
  management information may exist in more than one context.  An SNMPv2
  agent potentially has access to many contexts.  Each SNMPv2 message
  contains a context selector which unambiguously identifies an SNMPv2
  context accessible by the SNMPv2 agent to which the message is
  directed or by the SNMPv2 agent associated with the sender of the
  message.

  For a local SNMPv2 context which is realized by an SNMPv2 entity,
  that SNMPv2 entity uses locally-defined mechanisms to access the
  management information identified by the SNMPv2 context.

  For a proxy SNMPv2 context, the SNMPv2 entity acts as a proxy SNMPv2
  agent to access the management information identified by the SNMPv2
  context.

  The term remote SNMPv2 context is used at an SNMPv2 manager to
  indicate a SNMPv2 context (either local or proxy) which is not
  realized by the local SNMPv2 entity (i.e., the local SNMPv2 entity
  uses neither locally-defined mechanisms, nor acts as a proxy SNMPv2
  agent to access the management information identified by the SNMPv2
  context).

  Proxy SNMPv2 contexts are further categorized as either local-proxy
  contexts or remote-proxy contexts.  A proxy SNMPv2 agent receives
  Get/GetNext/GetBulk/Set operations for a local-proxy context, and
  forwards them with a remote-proxy context; it receives SNMPv2-Trap
  and Inform operations for a remote-proxy context, and forwards them
  with a local-proxy context; for Response operations, a proxy SNMPv2
  agent receives them with either a local-proxy or remote-proxy
  context, and forwards them with a remote-proxy or local-proxy
  context, respectively.
















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    For the non-proxy situation:

                     context-A
        Manager <----------------> Agent

    the type of context is:

                          +-----------------+
                          |   context-A     |
        +-----------------+-----------------+
        | Manager         |    remote       |
        +-----------------+-----------------+
        | Agent           |    local        |
        +-----------------+-----------------+
        | agentID         |   of Agent      |
        +-----------------+-----------------+
        | contextSelector | locally unique  |
        +-----------------+-----------------+

    For proxy:

                     context-B               context-C
        Manager <----------------> Proxy <----------------> Agent
                                   Agent

    the type and identity of the contexts are:

                          +-----------------+-----------------+
                          |   context-B     |    context-C    |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
        | Manager         |    remote       |       --        |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
        | Proxy-Agent     |  local-proxy    |   remote-proxy  |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
        | Agent           |      --         |      local      |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
        | agentID         | of Proxy agent  |     of Agent    |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
        | contextSelector | locally unique  |  locally unique |
        +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+

  The combination of an agentID value and a context selector provides a
  globally-unique identification of a context.  When a context is
  accessible by multiple agents (e.g., including by proxy SNMPv2
  agents), it has multiple such globally-unique identifications, one
  associated with each agent which can access it. In the example above,
  "context-B" and "context-C" are different names for the same context.




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2.3.  Quality of Service (qoS)

  Messages are generated with a particular Quality of Service (qoS),
  either:

 -  without authentication and privacy,

 -  with authentication but not privacy,

 -  with authentication and privacy.

  All users are capable of having messages without authentication and
  privacy generated on their behalf.  Users having an authentication
  protocol and an authentication key can have messages with
  authentication but not privacy generated on their behalf. Users
  having an authentication protocol, an authentication key, a privacy
  protocol and a privacy key can have messages with authentication and
  privacy generated on their behalf.

  In addition to its indications of authentication and privacy, the qoS
  may also indicate that the message contains an operation that may
  result in a report PDU being generated (see Section 2.6 below).

2.4.  Access Policy

  An administration's access policy determines the access rights of
  users.  For a particular SNMPv2 context to which a user has access
  using a particular qoS, that user's access rights are given by a list
  of authorized operations, and for a local context, a read-view and a
  write-view.  The read-view is the set of object instances authorized
  for the user when reading objects.  Reading objects occurs when
  processing a retrieval (get, get-next, get-bulk) operation and when
  sending a notification.  The write-view is the set of object
  instances authorized for the user when writing objects.  Writing
  objects occurs when processing a set operation.  A user's access
  rights may be different at different agents.

2.5.  Replay Protection

  Each SNMPv2 agent (or dual-role entity) maintains three objects:

 -  agentID, which is an identifier unique among all agents in (at
    least) an administrative domain;

 -  agentBoots, which is a count of the number of times the agent has
    rebooted/re-initialized since agentID was last configured; and,





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 -  agentTime, which is the number of seconds since agentBoots was last
    incremented.

  An SNMPv2 agent is always authoritative with respect to these
  variables.  It is the responsibility of an SNMPv2 manager to
  synchronize with the agent, as appropriate.  In the case of an SNMPv2
  dual-role entity sending an Inform-Request, it is that entity acting
  in an agent role which is authoritative with respect to these
  variables for the Inform-Request.

  An agent is required to maintain the values of agentID and agentBoots
  in non-volatile storage.

2.5.1.  agentID

  The agentID value contained in an authenticated message is used to
  defeat attacks in which messages from a manager are replayed to a
  different agent and/or messages from one agent (or dual-role entity)
  are replayed as if from a different agent (or dual-role entity).

  When an agent (or dual-role entity) is first installed, it sets its
  local value of agentID according to a enterprise-specific algorithm
  (see the definition of agentID in Section 4.1).

2.5.2.  agentBoots and agentTime

  The agentBoots and agentTime values contained in an authenticated
  message are used to defeat attacks in which messages are replayed
  when they are no longer valid.  Through use of agentBoots and
  agentTime, there is no requirement for an SNMPv2 agent to have a
  non-volatile clock which ticks (i.e., increases with the passage of
  time) even when the agent is powered off.  Rather, each time an
  SNMPv2 agent reboots, it retrieves, increments, and then stores
  agentBoots in non-volatile storage, and resets agentTime to zero.

  When an agent (or dual-role entity) is first installed, it sets its
  local values of agentBoots and agentTime to zero.  If agentTime ever
  reaches its maximum value (2147483647), then agentBoots is
  incremented as if the agent has rebooted and agentTime is reset to
  zero and starts incrementing again.

  Each time an agent (or dual-role entity) reboots, any SNMPv2 managers
  holding that agent's values of agentBoots and agentTime need to re-
  synchronize prior to sending correctly authenticated messages to that
  agent (see Section 2.7 for re-synchronization procedures).  Note,
  however, that the procedures do provide for a notification to be
  accepted as authentic by a manager, when sent by an agent which has
  rebooted since the manager last re-synchronized.



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  If an agent (or dual-role entity) is ever unable to determine its
  latest agentBoots value, then it must set its agentBoots value to
  0xffffffff.

  Whenever the local value of agentBoots has the value 0xffffffff, it
  latches at that value and an authenticated message always causes an
  usecStatsNotInWindows authentication failure.

  In order to reset an agent whose agentBoots value has reached the
  value 0xffffffff, manual intervention is required.  The agent must be
  physically visited and re-configured, either with a new agentID
  value, or with new secret values for the authentication and privacy
  keys of all users known to that agent.

2.5.3.  Time Window

  The Time Window is a value that specifies the window of time in which
  a message generated on behalf of any user is valid.  This memo
  specifies that the same value of the Time Window, 150 seconds, is
  used for all users.

2.6.  Error Reporting

  While processing a received communication, an SNMPv2 entity may
  determine that the message is unacceptable (see Section 3.2).  In
  this case, the appropriate counter from the snmpGroup [15] or
  usecStatsGroup object groups is incremented and the received message
  is discarded without further processing.

  If an SNMPv2 entity acting in the agent role makes such a
  determination and the qoS indicates that a report may be generated,
  then after incrementing the appropriate counter, it is required to
  generate a message containing a report PDU, with the same user and
  context as the received message, and to send it to the transport
  address which originated the received message.  For all report PDUs,
  except those generated due to incrementing the usecStatsNotInWindows
  counter, the report PDU is unauthenticated.  For those generated due
  to incrementing usecStatsNotInWindows, the report PDU is
  authenticated only if the received message was authenticated.

  The report flag in the qoS may only be set if the message contains a
  Get, GetNext, GetBulk, Set operation.  The report flag should never
  be set for a message that contains a Response, Inform, SNMPv2-Trap or
  Report operation.  Furthermore, a report PDU is never sent by an
  SNMPv2 entity acting in a manager role.






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2.7.  Time Synchronization

  Time synchronization, required by a management entity in order to
  proceed with authentic communications, has occurred when the
  management entity has obtained local values of agentBoots and
  agentTime from the agent that are within the agent's time window.  To
  remain synchronized, the local values must remain within the agent's
  time window and thus must be kept loosely synchronized with the
  values stored at the agent.  In addition to keeping a local version
  of agentBoots and agentTime, a manager must also keep one other local
  variable, latestReceivedAgentTime.  This value records the highest
  value of agentTime that was received by the manager from the agent
  and is used to eliminate the possibility of replaying messages that
  would prevent the manager's notion of the agentTime from advancing.

  Time synchronization occurs as part of the procedures of receiving a
  message (Section 3.2, step 9d). As such, no explicit time
  synchronization procedure is required by a management entity.  Note,
  that whenever the local value of agentID is changed (e.g., through
  discovery) or when a new secret is configured, the local values of
  agentBoots and latestReceivedAgentTime should be set to zero. This
  will cause the time synchronization to occur when the next authentic
  message is received.

2.8.  Proxy Error Propagation

  When a proxy SNMPv2 agent receives a report PDU from a proxied agent
  and it is determined that a proxy-forwarded request cannot be
  delivered to the proxied agent, then the snmpProxyDrops counter [15]
  is incremented and a report PDU is generated and transmitted to the
  transport address from which the original request was received.
  (Note that the receipt of a report PDU containing snmpProxyDrops as a
  VarBind, is included among the reasons why a proxy-forwarded request
  cannot be delivered.)

2.9.  SNMPv2 Messages Using this Model

  The syntax of an SNMPv2 message using this security model differs
  from that of an SNMPv1 [2] message as follows:

 -  The version component is changed to 2.

 -  The data component contains either a PDU or an OCTET STRING
    containing an encrypted PDU.

  The SNMPv1 community string is now termed the "parameters" component
  and contains a set of administrative information for the message.




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  Only the PDU is protected from disclosure by the privacy protocol.
  This exposes the administrative information to eavesdroppers.
  However, malicious use of this information is considered to be a
  Traffic Analysis attack against which protection is not provided.

  For an authenticated SNMPv2 message, the message digest is applied to
  the entire message given to the transport service.  As such, message
  generation first privatizes the PDU, then adds the message wrapper,
  and then authenticates the message.

  An SNMPv2 message is an ASN.1 value with the following syntax:

    Message ::=
        SEQUENCE {
            version
                INTEGER { v2 (2) },

            parameters
                OCTET STRING,
            -- <model=1>
            --      <qoS><agentID><agentBoots><agentTime><maxSize>
            --      <userLen><userName><authLen><authDigest>
            --      <contextSelector>

            data
                CHOICE {
                    plaintext
                        PDUs,
                    encrypted
                        OCTET STRING
                }
        }

where:

 parameters
    a concatenation of the following values in network-byte order.  If
    the first octet (<model>) is one, then

    <qoS>    = 8-bits of quality-of-service

             bitnumber
             7654 3210     meaning
             ---- ----     --------------------------------
             .... ..00     no authentication nor privacy
             .... ..01     authentication, no privacy
             .... ..1.     authentication and privacy
             .... .1..     generation of report PDU allowed



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             where bit 7 is the most significant bit.

    <agentID>    = 12 octets
         a unique identifier for the agent (or dual-role entity).

    <agentBoots> = 32-bits
         an unsigned quantity (0..4294967295) in network-byte order.

    <agentTime>  = 32-bits
         an unsigned quantity (0..2147483647) in network-byte order.

    <maxSize>    = 16-bits
         an unsigned quantity (484..65507) in network-byte order, which
         identifies the maximum message size which the sender of this
         message can receive using the same transport domain as used
         for this message.

    <userLen>    = 1 octet
         the length of following <userName> field.

    <userName>   = 1..16 arbitrary octets
         the user on whose behalf this message is sent.

    <authLen>    = 1 octet
         the length of following <authDigest> field.

    <authDigest> = 0..255 octets
         for authenticated messages, the authentication digest.
         Otherwise, the value has zero-length on transmission and is
         ignored on receipt.

    <contextSelector> = 0..40 arbitrary octets
         the context selector which in combination with agentID
         identifies the SNMPv2 context containing the management
         information referenced by the SNMPv2 message.

 plaintext
    an SNMPv2 PDU as defined in [12].

 encrypted
    the encrypted form of an SNMPv2 PDU.

2.10.  Local Configuration Datastore (LCD)

  Each SNMPv2 entity maintains a local conceptually database, called
  the Local Configuration Datastore (LCD), which holds its known set of
  information about SNMPv2 users and other associated (e.g., access
  control) information.  An LCD may potentially be required to hold



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  information about multiple SNMPv2 agent entities. As such, the
  <agentID> should be used to identify a particular agent entity in the
  LCD.

  It is a local implementation issue as to whether information in the
  LCD is stored information or whether it is obtained dynamically
  (e.g., as a part of an SNMPv2 manager's API) on an as-needed basis.

3.  Elements of Procedure

  This section describes the procedures followed by an SNMPv2 entity in
  processing SNMPv2 messages.

3.1.  Generating a Request or Notification

  This section describes the procedure followed by an SNMPv2 entity
  whenever it generates a message containing a management operation
  (either a request or a notification) on behalf of a user, for a
  particular context and with a particular qoS value.

(1)  Information concerning the user is extracted from the LCD.  The
    transport domain and transport address to which the operation is to
    be sent is determined.  The context is resolved into an agentID
    value and a contextSelector value.

(2)  If the qoS specifies that the message is to be protected from
    disclosure, but the user does not support both an authentication
    and a privacy protocol, or does not have configured authentication
    and privacy keys, then the operation cannot be sent.

(3)  If the qoS specifies that the message is to be authenticated, but
    the user does not support an authentication protocol, or does not
    have a configured authentication key, then the operation cannot be
    sent.

(4)  The operation is serialized (i.e., encoded) according to the
    conventions of [13] and [12] into a PDUs value.

(5)  If the operation is a Get, GetNext, GetBulk, or Set then the report
    flag in the qoS is set to the value 1.

(6)  An SNMPv2 message is constructed using the ASN.1 Message syntax:

    - the version component is set to the value 2.

    - if the qoS specifies that the message is to be protected from
      disclosure, then the octet sequence representing the serialized
      PDUs value is encrypted according to the user's privacy protocol



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      and privacy key, and the encrypted data is encoded as an octet
      string and is used as the data component of the message.

    - if the qoS specifies that the message is not to be protected from
      disclosure, then the serialized PDUs value is used directly as
      the value of the data component.

    - the parameters component is constructed using:

      - the requested qoS, userName, agentID and context selector,

      - if the qoS specifies that the message is to be authenticated or
        the management operation is a notification, then the current
        values of agentBoots, and agentTime corresponding to agentID
        from the LCD are used.  Otherwise, the <agentBoots> and
        <agentTime> fields are set to zero-filled octets.

      - the <maxSize> field is set to the maximum message size which
        the local SNMPv2 entity can receive using the transport domain
        which will be used to send this message.

      - if the qoS specifies that the message is to be authenticated,
        then the <authDigest> field is temporarily set to the user's
        authentication key.  Otherwise, the <authDigest> field is set
        to the zero-length string.

(7)  The constructed Message value is serialized (i.e., encoded)
    according to the conventions of [13] and [12].

(8)  If the qoS specifies that the message is to be authenticated, then
    an MD5 digest value is computed over the octet sequence
    representing the concatenation of the serialized Message value and
    the user's authentication key.  The <authDigest> field is then set
    to the computed digest value.

(9)  The serialized Message value is transmitted to the determined
    transport address.

3.2.  Processing a Received Communication

  This section describes the procedure followed by an SNMPv2 entity
  whenever it receives an SNMPv2 message.  This procedure is
  independent of the transport service address at which the message was
  received.  For clarity, some of the details of this procedure are
  left out and are described in Section 3.2.1 and its sub-sections.

(1)  The snmpInPkts counter [15] is incremented.  If the received
    message is not the serialization (according to the conventions of



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    [13]) of a Message value, then the snmpInASNParseErrs counter [15]
    is incremented, and the message is discarded without further
    processing.

(2)  If the value of the version component has a value other than 2,
    then the message is either processed according to some other
    version of this protocol, or the snmpInBadVersions counter [15] is
    incremented, and the message is discarded without further
    processing.

(3)  The value of the <model> field is extracted from the parameters
    component of the Message value.  If the value of the <model> field
    is not 1, then either the message is processed according to some
    other security model, or the usecStatsBadParameters counter is
    incremented, and the message is discarded without further
    processing.

(4)  The values of the rest of the fields are extracted from the
    parameters component of the Message value.

(5)  If the <agentID> field contained in the parameters is unknown then:

    - a manager that performs discovery may optionally create a new LCD
      entry and continue processing; or

    - the usecStatsUnknownContexts counter is incremented, a report PDU
      is generated, and the received message is discarded without
      further processing.

(6)  The LCD is consulted for information about the SNMPv2 context
    identified by the combination of the <agentID> and
    <contextSelector> fields.  If information about this SNMPv2 context
    is absent from the LCD, then the usecStatsUnknownContexts counter
    is incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the received message
    is discarded without further processing.

(7)  Information about the value of the <userName> field is extracted
    from the LCD.  If no information is available, then the
    usecStatsUnknownUserNames counter is incremented, a report PDU [1]
    is generated, and the received message is discarded without further
    processing.

(8)  If the information about the user indicates that it does not
    support the quality of service indicated by the <qoS> field, then
    the usecStatsUnsupportedQoS counter is incremented, a report PDU is
    generated, and the received message is discarded without further
    processing.




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(9)  If the <qoS> field indicates an authenticated message and the
    user's authentication protocol is the Digest Authentication
    Protocol described in this memo, then:

    a) the local values of agentBoots and agentTime corresponding to
       the value of the <agentID> field are extracted from the LCD.

    b) the value of <authDigest> field is temporarily saved.  A new
       serialized Message is constructed which differs from that
       received in exactly one respect: that the <authDigest> field
       within it has the value of the user's authentication key.  An
       MD5 digest value is computed over the octet sequence
       representing the concatenation of the new serialized Message and
       the user's authentication key.

    c) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local (i.e., an agent), then:

       - if the computed digest differs from the saved authDigest
         value, then the usecStatsWrongDigestValues counter is
         incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the received
         message is discarded without further processing. However, if
         the snmpEnableAuthenTraps object [15] is enabled, then the
         SNMPv2 entity sends authenticationFailure traps [15] according
         to its configuration.

       - if any of the following conditions is true, then the message
         is considered to be outside of the Time Window:

         - the local value of agentBoots is 0xffffffff;

         - the <agentBoots> field differs from the local value of
           agentBoots; or,

         - the value of the <agentTime> field differs from the local
           notion of agentTime by more than +/- 150 seconds.

       - if the message is considered to be outside of the Time Window
         then the usecStatsNotInWindows counter is incremented, an
         authenticated report PDU is generated (see section 2.7), and
         the received message is discarded without further processing.

    d) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is not
       realized by the local SNMPv2 entity (i.e., a manager), then:

       - if the computed digest differs from the saved authDigest
         value, then the usecStatsWrongDigestValues counter is
         incremented and the received message is discarded without



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         further processing.

       - if all of the following conditions are true:

            - if the <qoS> field indicates that privacy is not in use;

            - the SNMPv2 operation type determined from the ASN.1 tag
              value associated with the PDU's component is a Report;

            - the Report was generated due to a usecStatsNotInWindows
              error condition; and,

            - the <agentBoots> field is greater than the local value of
              agentBoots, or the <agentBoots> field is equal to the
              local value of agentBoots and the <agentTime> field is
              greater than the value of latestReceivedAgentTime,

         then the LCD entry corresponding to the value of the <agentID>
         field is updated, by setting the local value of agentBoots
         from the <agentBoots> field, the value latestReceivedAgentTime
         from the <agentTime> field, and the local value of agentTime
         from the <agentTime> field.

       - if any of the following conditions is true, then the message
         is considered to be outside of the Time Window:

         - the local value of agentBoots is 0xffffffff;

         - the <agentBoots> field is less than the local value of
           agentBoots; or,

         - the <agentBoots> field is equal to the local value of
           agentBoots and the <agentTime> field is more than 150
           seconds less than the local notion of agentTime.

       - if the message is considered to be outside of the Time Window
         then the usecStatsNotInWindows counter is incremented, and the
         received message is discarded without further processing;
         however, time synchronization procedures may be invoked.  Note
         that this procedure allows for <agentBoots> to be greater than
         the local value of agentBoots to allow for received messages
         to be accepted as authentic when received from an agent that
         has rebooted since the manager last re-synchronized.

       - if at least one of the following conditions is true:

            - the <agentBoots> field is greater than the local value of
              agentBoots; or,



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            - the <agentBoots> field is equal to the local value of
              agentBoots and the <agentTime> field is greater than the
              value of latestReceivedAgentTime,

         then the LCD entry corresponding to the value of the <agentID>
         field is updated, by setting the local value of agentBoots
         from the <agentBoots> field, the local value
         latestReceivedAgentTime from the <agentTime> field, and the
         local value of agentTime from the <agentTime> field.

(10) If the <qoS> field indicates use of a privacy protocol, then the
    octet sequence representing the data component is decrypted
    according to the user's privacy protocol to obtain a serialized
    PDUs value.  Otherwise the data component is assumed to directly
    contain the PDUs value.

(11) The SNMPv2 operation type is determined from the ASN.1 tag value
    associated with the PDUs component.

(12) If the SNMPv2 operation type is a Report, then the request-id in
    the PDU is correlated to an outstanding request, and if the
    correlation is successful, the appropriate action is taken (e.g.,
    time synchronization, proxy error propagation, etc.); in
    particular, if the report PDU indicates a usecStatsNotInWindows
    condition, then the outstanding request may be retransmitted (since
    the procedure in Step 9d above should have resulted in time
    synchronization).

(13) If the SNMPv2 operation type is either a Get, GetNext, GetBulk, or
    Set operation, then:

    a) if the LCD information indicates that the SNMPv2 context is of
       type remote or remote-proxy, then the
       usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations counter is incremented, a report
       PDU is generated, and the received message is discarded without
       further processing.

    b) the LCD is consulted for access rights authorized for
       communications using the indicated qoS, on behalf of the
       indicated user, and concerning management information in the
       indicated SNMPv2 context for the particular SNMPv2 operation
       type.

    c) if the SNMPv2 operation type is not among the authorized access
       rights, then the usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations counter is
       incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the received message
       is discarded without further processing.




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    d) The information extracted from the LCD concerning the user and
       the SNMPv2 context, together with the sending transport address
       of the received message is cached for later use in generating a
       response message.

    e) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local, then the management operation represented by the PDUs
       value is performed by the receiving SNMPv2 entity with respect
       to the relevant MIB view within the SNMPv2 context according to
       the procedures set forth in [12], where the relevant MIB view is
       determined according to the user, the agentID, the
       contextSelector, the qoS values and the type of operation
       requested.

    f) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local-proxy, then:

       i. the user, qoS, agentID, contextSelector and transport address
          to be used to forward the request are extracted from the LCD.
          If insufficient information concerning the user is currently
          available, then snmpProxyDrops counter [15] is incremented, a
          report PDU is generated, and the received message is
          discarded.

       ii. if an administrative flag in the LCD indicates that the
          message is to be forwarded using the SNMPv1 administrative
          framework, then the procedures described in [4] are invoked.
          Otherwise, a new SNMPv2 message is constructed: its PDUs
          component is copied from that in the received message except
          that the contained request-id is replaced by a unique value
          (this value will enable a subsequent response message to be
          correlated with this request); the <userName>, <qoS>,
          <agentID> and <contextSelector> fields are set to the values
          extracted from the LCD; the <maxSize> field is set to the
          minimum of the value in the received message and the local
          system's maximum message size for the transport domain which
          will be used to forward the message; and finally, the message
          is authenticated and/or protected from disclosure according
          to the qoS value.

       iii. the information cached in Step 13d above is augmented with
          the request-id of the received message as well as the
          request-id, agentID and contextSelector of the constructed
          message.

       iv. the constructed message is forwarded to the extracted
          transport address.




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(14) If the SNMPv2 operation type is an Inform, then:

    a) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local or local-proxy then the usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations
       counter is incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the
       received message is discarded without further processing.

    b) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       remote, then the Inform operation represented by the PDUs value
       is performed by the receiving SNMPv2 entity according to the
       procedures set forth in [12].

    c) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       remote-proxy, then:

       i. a single unique request-id is selected for use by all
          forwarded copies of this request.  This value will enable the
          first response message to be correlated with this request;
          other responses are not required and should be discarded when
          received, since the agent that originated the Inform only
          requires one response to its Inform.

       ii. information is extracted from the LCD concerning all
          combinations of userName, qoS, agentID, contextSelector and
          transport address with which the received message is to be
          forwarded.

       iii. for each such combination whose access rights permit Inform
          operations to be forwarded, a new SNMPv2 message is
          constructed, as follows: its PDUs component is copied from
          that in the received message except that the contained
          request-id is replaced by the value selected in Step i above;
          its <userName>, <qoS>, <agentID> and <contextSelector> fields
          are set to the values extracted in Step ii above; and its
          <maxSize> field is set to the minimum of the value in the
          received message and the local system's maximum message size
          for the transport domain which will be used to forward this
          message.

       iv. for each constructed SNMPv2 message, information concerning
          the <userName>, <qoS>, <agentID>, <contextSelector>,
          request-id and sending transport address of the received
          message, as well as the request- id, agentID and
          contextSelector of the constructed message, is cached for
          later use in generating a response message.

       v. each constructed message is forwarded to the appropriate
          transport address extracted from the LCD in step ii above.



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(15) If the SNMPv2 operation type is a Response, then:

    a) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local, then the usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations counter is
       incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the received message
       is discarded without further processing.

    b) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       remote, then the Response operation represented by the PDUs
       value is performed by the receiving SNMPv2 entity according to
       the procedures set forth in [12].

    c) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local-proxy or remote-proxy, then:

       i. the request-id is extracted from the PDUs component of the
          received message.  The context's agentID and contextSelector
          values together with the extracted request-id are used to
          correlate this response message to the corresponding values
          for a previously forwarded request by inspecting the cache of
          information as augmented in Substep iii of Step 13f above or
          in Substep iv of 14c above.  If no such correlated
          information is found, then the received message is discarded
          without further processing.

       ii. a new SNMPv2 message is constructed: its PDUs component is
          copied from that in the received message except that the
          contained request-id is replaced by the value saved in the
          correlated information from the original request; its
          <userName>, <qoS>, <agentID> and <contextSelector> fields are
          set to the values saved from the received message. The
          <maxSize> field is set to the minimum of the value in the
          received message and the local system's maximum message size
          for the transport domain which will be used to forward the
          message. The message is authenticated and/or protected from
          disclosure according to the saved qoS value.

       iii. the constructed message is forwarded to the transport
          address saved in the correlated information as the sending
          transport address of the original request.

       iv. the correlated information is deleted from the cache of
          information.

(16) If the SNMPv2 operation type is a SNMPv2-Trap, then:

    a) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       local or local-proxy, then the usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations



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       counter is incremented, a report PDU is generated, and the
       received message is discarded without further processing.

    b) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       remote, then the SNMPv2-Trap operation represented by the PDUs
       value is performed by the receiving SNMPv2 entity according to
       the procedures set forth in [12].

    c) if the LCD information indicates the SNMPv2 context is of type
       remote-proxy, then:

       i. a unique request-id is selected for use in forwarding the
          message.

       ii. information is extracted from the LCD concerning all
          combinations of userName, qoS, agentID, contextSelector and
          transport address with which the received message is to be
          forwarded.

       iii. for each such combination whose access rights permit
          SNMPv2-Trap operations to be forwarded, a new SNMPv2 message
          is constructed, as follows: its PDUs component is copied from
          that in the received message except that the contained
          request-id is replaced by the value selected in Step i above;
          its <userName>, <qoS>, <agentID> and <contextSelector> fields
          are set to the values extracted in Step ii above.

       iv. each constructed message is forwarded to the appropriate
          transport address extracted from the LCD in step ii above.

3.2.1.  Additional Details

  For the sake of clarity and to prevent the above procedure from being
  even longer, the following details were omitted from the above
  procedure.

3.2.1.1.  ASN.1 Parsing Errors

  For ASN.1 parsing errors, the snmpInASNParseErrs counter [15] is
  incremented and a report PDU is generated whenever such an ASN.1
  parsing error is discovered.  However, if the parsing error causes
  the information able to be extracted from the message to be
  insufficient for generating a report PDU, then the report PDU is not
  sent.







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3.2.1.2.  Incorrectly Encoded Parameters

  For an incorrectly encoded parameters component of the Message value
  (e.g., incorrect or inconsistent value of the <userLen> or <authLen>
  fields), the usecStatsBadParameters counter is incremented. Since the
  encoded parameters are in error, the report flag in the qoS cannot be
  reliably determined. Thus, no report PDU is generated for the
  incorrectly encoded parameters error condition.

3.2.1.3.  Generation of a Report PDU

  Some steps specify that the received message is discarded without
  further processing whenever a report PDU is generated.  However:

 -  An SNMPv2 manager never generates a report PDU.

 -  If the operation type can reliably be determined and it is
    determined to be a Report, SNMPv2-Trap, Inform, or a Response then
    a report PDU is not generated.

 -  A report PDU is only generated when the report flag in the qoS is
    set to the value 1.

  A generated report PDU must always use the current values of agentID,
  agentBoots, and agentTime from the LCD.  In addition, a generated
  report PDU must whenever possible contain the same request-id value
  as in the PDU contained in the received message.  Meeting this
  constraint normally requires the message to be further processed just
  enough so as to extract its request-id. There are two situations in
  which the SNMPv2 request-id cannot be determined. The first situation
  occurs when the userName is unknown and the qoS indicates that the
  message is encrypted.  The other situation is when there is an ASN.1
  parsing error.  In cases where the the request-id cannot be
  determined, the default request-id value 2147483647 is used.

3.2.1.4.  Cache Timeout

  Some steps specify that information is cached so that a Response
  operation may be correlated to the appropriate Request operation.
  However, a number of situations could cause the cache to grow without
  bound. One such situation is when the Response operation does not
  arrive or arrives "late" at the entity. In order to ensure that the
  cache does not grow without bound, it is recommended that cache
  entries be deleted when they are determined to be no longer valid. It
  is an implementation dependent decision as to how long cache entries
  remain valid, however, caching entries more than 150 seconds is not
  useful since any use of the cache entry after that time would
  generate a usecStatsNotInWindows error condition.



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3.3.  Generating a Response

  The procedure for generating a response to an SNMPv2 management
  request is identical to the procedure for transmitting a request (see
  Section 3.1), with these exceptions:

 -  The response is sent on behalf of the same user and with the same
    value of the agentID and contextSelector as the request.

 -  The PDUs value of the responding Message value is the response
    which results from performing the operation specified in the
    original PDUs value.

 -  The authentication protocol and other relevant information for the
    user is obtained, not from the LCD, but rather from information
    cached (in Step 13d) when processing the original message.

 -  The serialized Message value is transmitted using any transport
    address belonging to the agent for the transport domain from which
    the corresponding request originated - even if that is different
    from any transport information obtained from the LCD.

 -  If the qoS specifies that the message is to be authenticated or the
    response is being generated by a SNMPv2 entity acting in an agent
    role, then the current values of agentBoots and agentTime from the
    LCD are used.  Otherwise, the <agentBoots> and <agentTime> fields
    are set to zero-filled octets.

 -  The report flag in the qoS is set to the value 0.

4.  Discovery

  This security model requires that a discovery process obtain
  sufficient information about an SNMPv2 entity's agent in order to
  communicate with it.  Discovery requires the SNMPv2 manager to learn
  the agent's agentID value before communication may proceed.  This may
  be accomplished by formulating a get-request communication with the
  qoS set to noAuth/noPriv, the userName set to "public", the agentID
  set to all zeros (binary), the contextSelector set to "", and the
  VarBindList left empty.  The response to this message will be an
  reportPDU that contains the agentID within the <parameters> field
  (and containing the usecStatsUnknownContexts counter in the
  VarBindList). If authenticated communication is required then the
  discovery process may invoke the procedure described in Section 2.7
  to synchronize the clocks.






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5.  Definitions

SNMPv2-USEC-MIB DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS
   MODULE-IDENTITY, OBJECT-TYPE, Counter32, Unsigned32,
   snmpModules
       FROM SNMPv2-SMI
   TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
       FROM SNMPv2-TC
   MODULE-COMPLIANCE, OBJECT-GROUP
       FROM SNMPv2-CONF;


usecMIB MODULE-IDENTITY
   LAST-UPDATED "9601120000Z"
   ORGANIZATION "IETF SNMPv2 Working Group"
   CONTACT-INFO
           "        Glenn W. Waters

            Postal: Bell-Northern Research, Ltd.
                    P.O. Box 3511, Station C
                    Ottawa, ON, K1Y 4H7
                    Canada

               Tel: +1 613 763 3933

            E-mail: [email protected]"
   DESCRIPTION
           "The MIB module for SNMPv2 entities implementing the user-
           based security model."
   ::= { snmpModules 6 }


usecMIBObjects OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIB 1 }


-- Textual Conventions

AgentID ::= TEXTUAL-CONVENTION
   STATUS       current
   DESCRIPTION
           "An agent's administratively-unique identifier.

           The value for this object may not be all zeros or all 'ff'H.

           The initial value for this object may be configured via an
           operator console entry or via an algorithmic function.  In



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           the later case, the following guidelines are recommended:

             1) The first four octets are set to the binary equivalent
                of the agent's SNMP network management private
                enterprise number as assigned by the Internet Assigned
                Numbers Authority (IANA).  For example, if Acme
                Networks has been assigned { enterprises 696 }, the
                first four octets would be assigned '000002b8'H.

             2) The remaining eight octets are the cookie whose
                contents are determined via one or more enterprise-
                specific methods.  Such methods must be designed so as
                to maximize the possibility that the value of this
                object will be unique in the agent's administrative
                domain.  For example, the cookie may be the IP address
                of the agent, or the MAC address of one of the
                interfaces, with each address suitably padded with
                random octets.  If multiple methods are defined, then
                it is recommended that the cookie be further divided
                into one octet that indicates the method being used and
                seven octets which are a function of the method."
   SYNTAX     OCTET STRING (SIZE (12))


-- the USEC Basic group
--
-- a collection of objects providing basic instrumentation of
-- the SNMPv2 entity implementing the user-based security model


usecAgent       OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIBObjects 1 }

agentID OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     AgentID
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The agent's administratively-unique identifier."
   ::= { usecAgent 1 }

agentBoots OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Unsigned32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The number of times that the agent has re-initialized
           itself since its initial configuration."
   ::= { usecAgent 2 }



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agentTime OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Unsigned32 (0..2147483647)
   UNITS      "seconds"
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The number of seconds since the agent last incremented the
           agentBoots object."
   ::= { usecAgent 3 }

agentSize OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     INTEGER (484..65507)
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The maximum length in octets of an SNMPv2 message which
           this agent will accept using any transport mapping."
   ::= { usecAgent 4 }


-- USEC statistics
--
-- a collection of objects providing basic instrumentation of
-- the SNMPv2 entity implementing the user-based security model

usecStats      OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIBObjects 2 }


usecStatsUnsupportedQoS OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because they requested a quality-of-
           service that was unknown to the agent or otherwise
           unavailable."
   ::= { usecStats 1 }

usecStatsNotInWindows OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because they appeared outside of the
           agent's window."
   ::= { usecStats 2 }



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usecStatsUnknownUserNames OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because they referenced a user that was
           not known to the agent."
   ::= { usecStats 3 }

usecStatsWrongDigestValues OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because they didn't contain the expected
           digest value."
   ::= { usecStats 4 }

usecStatsUnknownContexts OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because they referenced a context that
           was not known to the agent."
   ::= { usecStats 5 }

usecStatsBadParameters OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because the <parameters> field was
           improperly encoded or had invalid syntax."
   ::= { usecStats 6 }

usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations OBJECT-TYPE
   SYNTAX     Counter32
   MAX-ACCESS read-only
   STATUS     current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The total number of packets received by the SNMPv2 entity
           which were dropped because the PDU type referred to an
           operation that is invalid or not authorized."



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   ::= { usecStats 7 }


-- conformance information

usecMIBConformance
              OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIB 2 }

usecMIBCompliances
              OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIBConformance 1 }
usecMIBGroups  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { usecMIBConformance 2 }


-- compliance statements

usecMIBCompliance MODULE-COMPLIANCE
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
           "The compliance statement for SNMPv2 entities which
           implement the SNMPv2 USEC model."
   MODULE  -- this module
       MANDATORY-GROUPS { usecBasicGroup,
                         usecStatsGroup }
   ::= { usecMIBCompliances 1 }


-- units of conformance

usecBasicGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS { agentID,
             agentBoots,
             agentTime,
             agentSize }
   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
           "A collection of objects providing identification, clocks,
           and capabilities of an SNMPv2 entity which implements the
           SNMPv2 USEC model."
   ::= { usecMIBGroups 1 }

usecStatsGroup OBJECT-GROUP
   OBJECTS { usecStatsUnsupportedQoS,
             usecStatsNotInWindows,
             usecStatsUnknownUserNames,
             usecStatsWrongDigestValues,
             usecStatsUnknownContexts,
             usecStatsBadParameters,
             usecStatsUnauthorizedOperations }



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   STATUS  current
   DESCRIPTION
           "A collection of objects providing basic error statistics of
           an SNMPv2 entity which implements the SNMPv2 USEC model."
   ::= { usecMIBGroups 2 }

END

6.  Security Considerations

6.1.  Recommended Practices

  This section describes practices that contribute to the secure,
  effective operation of the mechanisms defined in this memo.

 -  A management station must discard SNMPv2 responses for which
    neither the request-id component nor the represented management
    information corresponds to any currently outstanding request.

    Although it would be typical for a management station to do this as
    a matter of course, when using these security protocols it is
    significant due to the possibility of message duplication
    (malicious or otherwise).

 -  A management station must generate unpredictable request-ids in
    authenticated messages in order to protect against the possibility
    of message duplication (malicious or otherwise).

 -  A management station should perform time synchronization using
    authenticated messages in order to protect against the possibility
    of message duplication (malicious or otherwise).

 -  When sending state altering messages to a managed agent, a
    management station should delay sending successive messages to the
    managed agent until a positive acknowledgement is received for the
    previous message or until the previous message expires.

    No message ordering is imposed by the SNMPv2. Messages may be
    received in any order relative to their time of generation and each
    will be processed in the ordered received. Note that when an
    authenticated message is sent to a managed agent, it will be valid
    for a period of time of approximately 150 seconds under normal
    circumstances, and is subject to replay during this period.
    Indeed, a management station must cope with the loss and re-
    ordering of messages resulting from anomalies in the network as a
    matter of course.





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    However, a managed object, snmpSetSerialNo [15], is specifically
    defined for use with SNMPv2 set operations in order to provide a
    mechanism to ensure the processing of SNMPv2 messages occurs in a
    specific order.

 -  The frequency with which the secrets of an SNMPv2 user should be
    changed is indirectly related to the frequency of their use.

    Protecting the secrets from disclosure is critical to the overall
    security of the protocols. Frequent use of a secret provides a
    continued source of data that may be useful to a cryptanalyst in
    exploiting known or perceived weaknesses in an algorithm.  Frequent
    changes to the secret avoid this vulnerability.

    Changing a secret after each use is generally regarded as the most
    secure practice, but a significant amount of overhead may be
    associated with that approach.

    Note, too, in a local environment the threat of disclosure may be
    less significant, and as such the changing of secrets may be less
    frequent.  However, when public data networks are the communication
    paths, more caution is prudent.

6.2.  Defining Users

  The mechanisms defined in this document employ the notion of "users"
  having access rights.  How "users" are defined is subject to the
  security policy of the network administration. For example, users
  could be individuals (e.g., "joe" or "jane"), or a particular role
  (e.g., "operator" or "administrator"), or a combination (e.g., "joe-
  operator", "jane-operator" or "joe-admin").  Furthermore, a "user"
  may be a logical entity, such as a manager station application or set
  of manager station applications, acting on behalf of a individual or
  role, or set of individuals, or set of roles, including combinations.

  Appendix A describes an algorithm for mapping a user "password" to a
  16 octet value for use as either a user's authentication key or
  privacy key (or both).  Passwords are often generated, remembered,
  and input by a human.  Human-generated passwords may be less than the
  16 octets required by the authentication and privacy protocols, and
  brute force attacks can be quite easy on a relatively short ASCII
  character set.  Therefore, the algorithm is Appendix A performs a
  transformation on the password.  If the Appendix A algorithm is used,
  agent implementations (and agent configuration applications) must
  ensure that passwords are at least 8 characters in length.

  Because the Appendix A algorithm uses such passwords (nearly)
  directly, it is very important that they not be easily guessed.  It



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  is suggested that they be composed of mixed-case alphanumeric and
  punctuation characters that don't form words or phrases that might be
  found in a dictionary.  Longer passwords improve the security of the
  system.  Users may wish to input multiword phrases to make their
  password string longer while ensuring that it is memorable.

  Note that there is security risk in configuring the same "user" on
  multiple systems where the same password is used on each system,
  since the compromise of that user's secrets on one system results in
  the compromise of that user on all other systems having the same
  password.

  The algorithm in Appendix A avoids this problem by including the
  agent's agentID value as well as the user's password in the
  calculation of a user's secrets; this results in the user's secrets
  being different at different agents; however, if the password is
  compromised the algorithm in Appendix A is not effective.

6.3.  Conformance

  To be termed a "Secure SNMPv2 implementation", an SNMPv2
  implementation:

- must implement the Digest Authentication Protocol.

- must, to the maximal extent possible, prohibit access to the
  secret(s) of each user about which it maintains information in a LCD,
  under all circumstances except as required to generate and/or
  validate SNMPv2 messages with respect to that user.

- must implement the SNMPv2 USEC MIB.

  In addition, an SNMPv2 agent must provide initial configuration in
  accordance with Appendix A.1.

  Implementation of the Symmetric Encryption Protocol is optional.

7.  Editor's Address

  Glenn W. Waters
  Bell-Northern Research Ltd.
  P.O. Box 3511, Station C
  Ottawa, Ontario  K1Y 4H7
  CA

  Phone: +1 613 763 3933
  EMail: [email protected]




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8.  Acknowledgements

  This document is the result of significant work by three major
  contributors:

    Keith McCloghrie (Cisco Systems, [email protected])
    Marshall T. Rose (Dover Beach Consulting, [email protected])
    Glenn W. Waters (Bell-Northern Research Ltd., [email protected])

  The authors wish to acknowledge James M. Galvin of Trusted
  Information Systems who contributed significantly to earlier work on
  which this memo is based, and the general contributions of members of
  the SNMPv2 Working Group, and, in particular, Aleksey Y. Romanov and
  Steven L. Waldbusser.

  A special thanks is extended for the contributions of:

    Uri Blumenthal (IBM)
    Shawn Routhier (Epilogue)
    Barry Sheehan (IBM)
    Bert Wijnen (IBM)

9.  References

[1]  McCloghrie, K., Editor, "An Administrative Infrastructure for
    SNMPv2", RFC 1909, Cisco Systems, January 1996.

[2]  Case, J., Fedor, M., Schoffstall, M., and J. Davin, "Simple
    Network Management Protocol", STD 15, RFC 1157, SNMP Research,
    Performance Systems International, MIT Laboratory for Computer
    Science, May 1990.

[3]  Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321, MIT
    Laboratory for Computer Science, April 1992.

[4]  The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
    S. Waldbusser, "Coexistence between Version 1 and Version 2 of
    the Internet-standard Network Management Framework", RFC 1908,
    January 1996.

[5]  Data Encryption Standard, National Institute of Standards and
    Technology.  Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS)
    Publication 46-1.  Supersedes FIPS Publication 46, (January, 1977;
    reaffirmed January, 1988).

[6]  Data Encryption Algorithm, American National Standards Institute.
    ANSI X3.92-1981, (December, 1980).




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[7]  DES Modes of Operation, National Institute of Standards and
    Technology.  Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS)
    Publication 81, (December, 1980).

[8]  Data Encryption Algorithm - Modes of Operation, American National
    Standards Institute.  ANSI X3.106-1983, (May 1983).

[9]  Guidelines for Implementing and Using the NBS Data Encryption
    Standard, National Institute of Standards and Technology.  Federal
    Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 74, (April,
    1981).

[10] Validating the Correctness of Hardware Implementations of the NBS
    Data Encryption Standard, National Institute of Standards and
    Technology.  Special Publication 500-20.

[11] Maintenance Testing for the Data Encryption Standard, National
    Institute of Standards and Technology.  Special Publication 500-61,
    (August, 1980).

[12] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
    S., Waldbusser, "Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple
    Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1905, January 1996.

[13] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
    S. Waldbusser, "Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple
    Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1906, January 1996.

[14] Krawczyk, H., "Keyed-MD5 for Message Authentication", Work in
    Progress, IBM, June 1995.

[15] The SNMPv2 Working Group, Case, J., McCloghrie, K., Rose, M., and
    S. Waldbusser, "Management Information Base for Version 2 of the
    Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMPv2)", RFC 1907
    January 1996.
















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APPENDIX A - Installation

A.1.   Agent Installation Parameters

During installation, an agent is configured with several parameters.
These include:

(1)  a security posture

    The choice of security posture determines the extent of the view
    configured for unauthenticated access.  One of three possible
    choices is selected:

         minimum-secure,
         semi-secure, or
         very-secure.

(2)  one or more transport service addresses

    These parameters may be specified explicitly, or they may be
    specified implicitly as the same set of network-layer addresses
    configured for other uses by the device together with the well-
    known transport-layer "port" information for the appropriate
    transport domain [13].  The agent listens on each of these
    transport service addresses for messages sent on behalf of any user
    it knows about.

(3)  one or more secrets

    These are the authentication/privacy secrets for the first user to
    be configured.

    One way to accomplish this is to have the installer enter a
    "password" for each required secret. The password is then
    algorithmically converted into the required secret by:

    - forming a string of length 1,048,576 octets by repeating the
      value of the password as often as necessary, truncating
      accordingly, and using the resulting string as the input to the
      MD5 algorithm. The resulting digest, termed "digest1", is used in
      the next step.

    - a second string of length 44 octets is formed by concatenating
      digest1, the agent's agentID value, and digest1. This string is
      used as input to the MD5 algorithm. The resulting digest is the
      required secret (see Appendix A.2).





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  With these configured parameters, the agent instantiates the
  following user, context, views and access rights.  This configuration
  information should be readOnly (persistent).

 -  One user:

                        privacy not supported   privacy supported
                        ---------------------   -----------------
      <userName>        "public"                "public"
      <authProtocol>    Digest Auth. Protocol   Digest Auth. Protocol
      <authPrivateKey>  authentication key      authentication key
      <privProtocol>    none                    Symmetric Privacy Protocol
      <privPrivateKey>  --                      privacy key

 -  One local context with its <contextSelector> as the empty-string.

 -  One view for authenticated access:

         - the <all> MIB view is the "internet" subtree.

 -  A second view for unauthenticated access.  This view is configured
    according to the selected security posture.  For the "very-secure"
    posture:

         - the <restricted> MIB view is the union of the "snmp" [15],
         "usecAgent" and "usecStats" subtrees.

    For the "semi-secure" posture:

         - the <restricted> MIB view is the union of the "snmp" [15],
         "usecAgent", "usecStats" and "system" subtrees.

    For the "minimum-secure" posture:

         - the <restricted> MIB view is the "internet" subtree.

 -  Access rights to allow:

       - read-only access for unauthenticated messages on behalf of the
         user "public" to the <restricted> MIB view of contextSelector
         "".

       - read-write access for authenticated but not private messages
         on behalf of the user "public" to the <all> MIB view of
         contextSelector "".

       - if privacy is supported, read-write access for authenticated
         and private messages on behalf of the user "public" to the



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         <all> MIB view of contextSelector "".

A.2.   Password to Key Algorithm

  The following code fragment demonstrates the password to key
  algorithm which can be used when mapping a password to an
  authentication or privacy key. (The calls to MD5 are as documented in
  RFC 1321.)

void password_to_key(password, passwordlen, agentID, key)
   u_char *password;       /* IN */
   u_int   passwordlen;    /* IN */
   u_char *agentID;        /* IN - pointer to 12 octet long agentID */
   u_char *key;            /* OUT - caller supplies pointer to 16
                              octet buffer */ {
   MD5_CTX     MD;
   u_char      *cp, password_buf[64];
   u_long      password_index = 0;
   u_long      count = 0, i;

   MD5Init (&MD);   /* initialize MD5 */

   /* loop until we've done 1 Megabyte */
   while (count < 1048576) {
       cp = password_buf;
       for(i = 0; i < 64; i++) {
           *cp++ = password[ password_index++ % passwordlen ];
           /*
            * Take the next byte of the password, wrapping to the
            * beginning of the password as necessary.
            */
       }
       MDupdate (&MD, password_buf, 64);
       count += 64;
   }
   MD5Final (key, &MD);              /* tell MD5 we're done */

   /* localize the key with the agentID and pass through MD5
     to produce final key */
   memcpy (password_buf, key, 16);
   memcpy (password_buf+16, agentID, 12);
   memcpy (password_buf+28, key, 16);

   MD5Init (&MD);
   MDupdate (&MD, password_buf, 44);
   MD5Final (key, &MD);

   return; }



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A.3.   Password to Key Sample

  The following shows a sample output of the password to key algorithm.

  With a password of "maplesyrup" the output of the password to key
  algorithm before the key is localized with the agent's agentID is:

   '9f af 32 83 88 4e 92 83 4e bc 98 47 d8 ed d9 63'H

  After the intermediate key (shown above) is localized with the
  agentID value of:

   '00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 02'H

  the final output of the password to key algorithm is:

   '52 6f 5e ed 9f cc e2 6f 89 64 c2 93 07 87 d8 2b'H


































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