Network Working Group                                            C. Vogt
Request for Comments: 4832                   Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH)
Category: Informational                                         J. Kempf
                                                        DoCoMo USA Labs
                                                             April 2007


             Security Threats to Network-Based Localized
                     Mobility Management (NETLMM)

Status of This Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

Abstract

  This document discusses security threats to network-based localized
  mobility management.  Threats may occur on two interfaces: the
  interface between a localized mobility anchor and a mobile access
  gateway, as well as the interface between a mobile access gateway and
  a mobile node.  Threats to the former interface impact the localized
  mobility management protocol itself.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
    1.1.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
  2.  Threats to Interface between LMA and MAG . . . . . . . . . . .  3
    2.1.  LMA Compromise or Impersonation  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
    2.2.  MAG Compromise or Impersonation  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    2.3.  Man-in-the-Middle Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  3.  Threats to Interface between MAG and Mobile Node . . . . . . .  6
    3.1.  Mobile Node Compromise or Impersonation  . . . . . . . . .  7
    3.2.  Man-in-the-Middle Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
  4.  Threats from the Internet  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
  5.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
  6.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
  7.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    7.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    7.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10





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1.  Introduction

  The network-based localized mobility management (NETLMM) architecture
  [1] supports movement of IPv6 mobile nodes locally within a domain
  without requiring mobility support in the mobile nodes' network
  stacks.  A mobile node can keep its IP address constant as it moves
  from link to link, avoiding the signaling overhead and latency
  associated with changing the IP address.  Software specifically for
  localized mobility management is not required on the mobile node,
  whereas IP-layer movement detection software may be necessary, and
  driver software for link-layer mobility is prerequisite.

  The IP addresses of mobile nodes have a prefix that routes to a
  localized mobility anchor (LMA) [3].  The LMA maintains an individual
  route for each registered mobile node.  Any particular mobile node's
  route terminates at a mobile access gateway (MAG) [3], to which the
  mobile node attaches at its current access link.  MAGs are
  responsible for updating the mobile node's route on the LMA as the
  mobile node moves.  A MAG detects the arrival of a mobile node on its
  local access link based on handoff signaling that the mobile node
  pursues.  The MAG may additionally monitor connectivity of the mobile
  node in order to recognize when the mobile node has left the local
  access link.  The localized mobility management architecture
  therefore has two interfaces:

  1.  The interface between a MAG and an LMA where route update
      signaling occurs.

  2.  The interface between a mobile node and its current MAG where
      handoff signaling and other link maintenance signaling occur.

  The localized mobility management architecture demands no specific
  protocol for a MAG to detect the arrival or departure of mobile nodes
  to and from its local access link and accordingly initiate route
  update signaling with an LMA.  An appropriate mechanism may be
  entirely implemented at the link layer, such as is common for
  cellular networks.  In that case, the IP layer never detects any
  movement, even when a mobile node moves from one link to another
  handled by a different MAG.  If the link layer does not provide the
  necessary functionality, the mobile node must perform IP-layer
  movement detection and auto-configuration signaling, thereby
  providing the trigger for the MAG to update its route on the LMA.  A
  mobile node identity, established by the localized mobility
  management domain when the mobile node initially connects and
  authenticates, enables the MAG to ascribe the decisive link- or IP-
  layer signaling to the correct mobile node.  Some wireless access
  technologies may require the mobile node identity to be reestablished
  on every link-layer handoff.



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  Vulnerabilities in either interface of the localized mobility
  management architecture may entail new security threats that go
  beyond those that already exist in IPv6.  Potential attack objectives
  may be to consume network services at the cost of a legitimate mobile
  node, interpose in a mobile node's communications and possibly
  impersonate the mobile node from a position off-link, operate under
  the disguise of a false or non-existing identity, or cause denial of
  service to a mobile node or to the localized mobility management
  domain as a whole.  This document identifies and discusses security
  threats on both interfaces of the localized mobility management
  architecture.  It is limited to threats that are peculiar to
  localized mobility management; threats to IPv6 in general are
  documented in [4].

1.1.  Terminology

  The terminology in this document follows the definitions in [2], with
  those revisions and additions from [1].  In addition, the following
  definition is used:

  Mobile Node Identity

     An identity established for the mobile node when initially
     connecting to the localized mobility management domain.  It allows
     the localized mobility management domain to definitively and
     unambiguously identify the mobile node upon handoff for route
     update signaling purposes.  The mobile node identity is
     conceptually independent of the mobile node's IP or link-layer
     addresses, but it must be securely bound to the mobile node's
     handoff signaling.

2.  Threats to Interface between LMA and MAG

  The localized mobility management protocol executed on the interface
  between an LMA and a MAG serves to establish, update, and tear down
  routes for data plane traffic of mobile nodes.  Threats to this
  interface can be separated into compromise or impersonation of a
  legitimate LMA, compromise or impersonation of a legitimate MAG, and
  man-in-the-middle attacks.

2.1.  LMA Compromise or Impersonation

  A compromised LMA can ignore route updates from a legitimate MAG in
  order to deny service to a mobile node.  It may also be able to trick
  a legitimate MAG into creating a new, incorrect route, thereby
  preparing the MAG to receive redirected traffic of a mobile node; it
  may cause the traffic forwarded by a MAG to be redirected to a
  different LMA; or it may simply have the MAG drop an existing route



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  in order to deny the mobile node service.  Since data plane traffic
  for mobile nodes routes through the LMA, a compromised LMA can also
  intercept, inspect, modify, or drop such traffic, or redirect it to a
  destination in collusion with the attacker.  The attack can be
  conducted transiently to selectively disable traffic for any
  particular mobile node or MAG at particular times.

  Moreover, a compromised LMA may manipulate its routing table such
  that all packets are directed towards a single MAG.  This may result
  in a denial-of-service attack against that MAG and its attached
  access link.

  These threats also emanate from an attacker which tricks a MAG into
  believing that it is a legitimate LMA.  This attacker can cause the
  MAG to conduct route update signaling with the attacker instead of
  with the legitimate LMA, enabling it to ignore route updates from the
  MAG, or induce incorrect route changes at the MAG as described above,
  in order to redirect or deny a mobile node's traffic.  The attacker
  does not necessarily have to be on the original control plane path
  between the legitimate LMA and the MAG, provided that it can somehow
  make its presence known to the MAG.  Failure to mutually authenticate
  when establishing an association between an LMA and a MAG would allow
  an attacker to establish itself as a rogue LMA.

  The attacker may further be able to intercept, inspect, modify, drop,
  or redirect data plane traffic to and from a mobile node.  This is
  obvious if the attacker is on the original data plane path between
  the legitimate LMA and the mobile node's current MAG, which may
  happen independently of whether the attacker is on the original
  control plane path.  If the attacker is not on this path, it may be
  able to leverage the localized mobility management protocol to
  redefine the prefix that the mobile node uses in IP address
  configuration.  The attacker can then specify a prefix that routes to
  itself.  Whether or not outgoing data plane packets sourced by the
  mobile node can be interfered with by an attacker off the original
  data plane path depends on the specific data plane forwarding
  mechanism within the localized mobility management domain.  For
  example, if IP-in-IP encapsulation or an equivalent approach is used
  for outbound data plane packets, the packets can be forced to be
  routed through the attacker.  On the other hand, standard IP routing
  may cause the packets to be relayed via a legitimate LMA and hence to
  circumvent the attacker.

2.2.  MAG Compromise or Impersonation

  A compromised MAG can redirect a mobile node's traffic onto its local
  access link arbitrarily, without authorization from the mobile node.
  This threat is similar to an attack on a typical routing protocol



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  where a malicious stub router injects a bogus host route for the
  mobile node.  In general, forgery of a subnet prefix in link state or
  distance vector routing protocols requires support of multiple
  routers in order to obtain a meaningful change in forwarding
  behavior.  But a bogus host route is likely to take precedence over
  the routing information advertised by legitimate routers, which is
  usually less specific; hence, the attack should succeed even if the
  attacker is not supported by other routers.  A difference between
  redirection in a routing protocol and redirection in localized
  mobility management is that the former impacts the routing tables of
  multiple routers, whereas the latter involves only the compromised
  MAG and an LMA.

  Moreover, a compromised MAG can ignore the presence of a mobile node
  on its local access link and refrain from registering the mobile node
  at an LMA.  The mobile node then loses its traffic.  The compromised
  MAG may further be able to cause interruption to a mobile node by
  deregistering the mobile node at the serving LMA, pretending that the
  mobile node has powered down.  The mobile node then needs to
  reinitiate the network access authentication procedure, which the
  compromised MAG may prevent repeatedly until the mobile node moves to
  a different MAG.  The mobile node should be able to handle this
  situation, but the recovery process may be lengthy and hence impair
  ongoing communication sessions to a significant extent.

  Denial of service against an LMA is another threat of MAG subversion.
  The compromised MAG can trick an LMA into believing that a high
  number of mobile nodes have attached to the MAG.  The LMA will then
  establish a routing table entry for each of the non-existing mobile
  nodes.  The unexpected growth of the routing table may eventually
  cause the LMA to reject legitimate route update requests.  It may
  also decrease the forwarding speed for data plane packets due to
  higher route lookup latencies, and it may, for the same reason, slow
  down the responsiveness to control plane packets.  Another adverse
  side effect of a high number of routing table entries is that the
  LMA, and hence the localized mobility management domain as a whole,
  becomes more susceptible to flooding packets from external attackers
  (see Section 4).  The high number of superfluous routes increase the
  probability that a flooding packet, sent to a random IP address
  within the localized mobility management domain, matches an existing
  routing table entry at the LMA and gets tunneled to a MAG, which in
  turn performs address resolution on the local access link.  At the
  same time, fewer flooding packets can be dropped directly at the LMA
  on the basis of a nonexistent routing table entry.

  All of these threats apply not just to a compromised MAG, but also to
  an attacker that manages to counterfeit the identity of a legitimate
  MAG in interacting with both mobile nodes and an LMA.  Such an



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  attacker can behave towards mobile nodes like an authorized MAG and
  engage an LMA in route update signaling.  In a related attack, the
  perpetrator eavesdrops on signaling packets exchanged between a
  legitimate MAG and an LMA, and replays these packets at a later time.
  These attacks may be conducted transiently, to selectively disable
  traffic for any particular mobile node at particular times.

2.3.  Man-in-the-Middle Attack

  An attacker that manages to interject itself between a legitimate LMA
  and a legitimate MAG can act as a man in the middle with respect to
  both control plane signaling and data plane traffic.  If the attacker
  is on the original control plane path, it can forge, modify, or drop
  route update packets so as to cause the establishment of incorrect
  routes or the removal of routes that are in active use.  Similarly,
  an attacker on the original data plane path can intercept, inspect,
  modify, drop, and redirect data plane packets sourced by or destined
  to a mobile node.

  A compromised switch or router located between an LMA and a MAG can
  cause similar damage.  Any switch or router on the control plane path
  can forge, modify, or drop control plane packets, and thereby
  interfere with route establishment.  Any switch or router on the data
  plane path can intercept, inspect, modify, and drop data plane
  packets, or rewrite IP headers so as to divert the packets from their
  original path.

  An attacker between an LMA and a MAG may further impersonate the MAG
  towards the LMA, and vice versa in route update signaling.  The
  attacker can interfere with a route establishment even if it is not
  on the original control plane path between the LMA and the MAG.  An
  attacker off the original data plane path may undertake the same to
  cause inbound data plane packets destined to the mobile node to be
  routed first from the LMA to the attacker, then to the mobile node's
  MAG, and finally to the mobile node itself.  As explained in
  Section 2.1, here, too, it depends on the specific data plane
  forwarding mechanism within the localized mobility management domain
  whether or not the attacker can influence the route of outgoing data
  plane packets sourced by the mobile node.

3.  Threats to Interface between MAG and Mobile Node

  A MAG monitors the arrival and departure of mobile nodes to and from
  its local access link based on link- or IP-layer mechanisms.
  Whatever signaling on the access link is thereby decisive must be
  securely bound to the mobile node identity.  A MAG uses this binding
  to ascribe the signaling to the mobile node and accordingly initiate
  route update signaling with an LMA.  The binding must be robust to



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  spoofing because it would otherwise facilitate impersonation of the
  mobile node by a third party, denial of service, or man-in-the-middle
  attacks.

3.1.  Mobile Node Compromise or Impersonation

  An attacker that is able to forge the mobile node identity of a
  mobile node can trick a MAG into redirecting data plane packets for
  the mobile node to the attacker.  The attacker can launch such an
  impersonation attack against a mobile node that resides on the same
  link as the attacker, or against a mobile node on a different link.
  If the attack is on-link, the redirection of packets from the mobile
  node to the attacker is internal to the MAG, and it involves no route
  update signaling between the MAG and an LMA.  On-link attacks are
  possible in a regular IPv6 network [4] that does not use Secure
  Neighbor Discovery [5].

  Off-link impersonation requires the attacker to fabricate handoff
  signaling of the mobile node and thus trick the MAG into believing
  that the mobile node has handed over onto the MAG's access link.  The
  attack is conceivable both if the attacker and the mobile node are on
  separate links that connect to different MAGs, as well as if they are
  on separate, possibly virtual per-mobile-node links that connect to
  the same MAG.  In the former case, two MAGs would think they see the
  mobile node and both would independently perform route update
  signaling with the LMA.  In the latter case, route update signaling
  is likely to be performed only once, and the redirection of packets
  from the mobile node to the attacker is internal to the MAG.  The
  mobile node can always recapture its traffic back from the attacker
  through another run of handoff signaling.  But standard mobile nodes
  are generally not prepared to counteract this kind of attack, and
  even where network stacks include suitable functionality, the attack
  may not be noticeable early enough at the link or IP layer to quickly
  institute countermeasures.  The attack is therefore disruptive at a
  minimum, and may potentially persist until the mobile node initiates
  signaling again upon a subsequent handoff.

  Impersonation attacks can be prevented at the link layer,
  particularly with cellular technologies where the handoff signaling
  between the mobile node and the network must be authenticated and is
  completely controlled by the wireless link layer.  Cellular access
  technologies provide a variety of cryptographic and non-cryptographic
  attack barriers at the link layer, which makes mounting an
  impersonation attack, both on-link and off-link, very difficult.
  However, for non-cellular technologies that do not require link-layer
  authentication and authorization during handoff, impersonation
  attacks may be possible.




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  An attacker that can forge handoff signaling may also cause denial of
  service against the localized mobility management domain.  The
  attacker can trick a MAG into believing that a large number of mobile
  nodes have attached to the local access link and thus induce it to
  initiate route update signaling with an LMA for each mobile node
  assumed on link.  The result of such an attack is both superfluous
  signaling overhead on the control plane as well as a high number of
  needless entries in the LMA's and MAG's routing tables.  The
  unexpected growth of the routing tables may eventually cause the LMA
  to reject legitimate route update requests, and it may cause the MAG
  to ignore handoffs of legitimate mobile nodes onto its local access
  link.  It may also decrease the LMA's and MAG's forwarding speed for
  inbound and outbound data plane packets due to higher route lookup
  latencies, and it may for the same reason slow down their
  responsiveness to control plane packets.  An adverse side effect of
  this attack is that the LMA, and hence the localized mobility
  management domain as a whole, becomes more susceptible to flooding
  packets from external attackers (see Section 4).  The high number of
  superfluous routes increases the probability that a flooding packet,
  sent to a random IP address within the localized mobility management
  domain, matches an existing routing table entry at the LMA and gets
  tunneled to a MAG, which in turn performs address resolution on the
  local access link.  At the same time, fewer flooding packets can be
  dropped directly at the LMA on the basis of a nonexistent routing
  table entry.

  A threat related to the ones identified above, but not limited to
  handoff signaling, is IP spoofing [6].  Attackers use IP spoofing
  mostly for reflection attacks or to hide their identities.  The
  threat can be reasonably contained by a wide deployment of network
  ingress filtering [7] in routers, especially within access networks.
  This technique prevents IP spoofing to the extent that it ensures
  topological correctness of IP source address prefixes in to-be-
  forwarded packets.  Where the technique is deployed in an access
  router, packets are forwarded only if the prefix of their IP source
  address is valid on the router's local access link.  An attacker can
  still use a false interface identifier in combination with an on-link
  prefix.  But since reflection attacks typically aim at off-link
  targets, and the enforcement of topologically correct IP address
  prefixes also limits the effectiveness of identity concealment,
  network ingress filtering has proven adequate so far.  On the other
  hand, prefixes are not limited to a specific link in a localized
  mobility management domain, so merely ensuring topological
  correctness through ingress filtering becomes insufficient.  An
  additional mechanism for IP address ownership verification is
  necessary to prevent an attacker from sending packets with an off-
  link IP source address.




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3.2.  Man-in-the-Middle Attack

  An attacker that can interpose between a mobile node and a MAG during
  link- and/or IP-layer handoff signaling may be able to mount a man-
  in-the-middle attack on the mobile node, spoofing the mobile node
  into believing that it has a legitimate connection with the localized
  mobility management domain.  The attacker can thus intercept,
  inspect, modify, or drop data plane packets sourced by or destined to
  the mobile node.

4.  Threats from the Internet

  A localized mobility management domain uses individual host routes
  for data plane traffic of different mobile nodes, each between an LMA
  and a MAG.  Creation, maintenance, and deletion of these routes cause
  control traffic within the localized mobility management domain.
  These characteristics are transparent to mobile nodes as well as
  external correspondent nodes, but the functional differences within
  the domain may influence the impact that a denial-of-service attack
  from the outside world can have on the domain.

  A denial-of-service attack on an LMA may be launched by sending
  packets to arbitrary IP addresses that are potentially in use by
  mobile nodes within the localized mobility management domain.  Like a
  border router, the LMA is in a topological position through which a
  substantial amount of data plane traffic goes, so it must process the
  flooding packets and perform a routing table lookup for each of them.
  The LMA can discard packets for which the IP destination address is
  not registered in its routing table.  But other packets must be
  encapsulated and forwarded.  A target MAG as well as any mobile nodes
  attached to that MAG's local access link are also likely to suffer
  damage because the unrequested packets must be decapsulated and
  consume link bandwidth as well as processing capacities on the
  receivers.  This threat is in principle the same as for denial of
  service on a regular IPv6 border router, but because the routing
  table lookups may enable the LMA to drop part of the flooding packets
  early on or, on the contrary, additional tunneling workload is
  required for packets that cannot be dropped, the impact of an attack
  against localized mobility management may be different.

  In a related attack, the attacker manages to obtain a globally
  routable IP address of an LMA or a different network entity within
  the localized mobility management domain and perpetrates a denial-of-
  service attack against that IP address.  Localized mobility
  management is, in general, somewhat resistant to such an attack
  because mobile nodes need never obtain a globally routable IP address
  of any entity within the localized mobility management domain.
  Hence, a compromised mobile node cannot pass such an IP address off



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  to a remote attacker, limiting the feasibility of extracting
  information on the topology of the localized mobility management
  domain.  It is still possible for an attacker to perform IP address
  scanning if MAGs and LMAs have globally routable IP addresses, but
  the much larger IPv6 address space makes scanning considerably more
  time consuming.

5.  Security Considerations

  This document describes threats to network-based localized mobility
  management.  These may either occur on the interface between an LMA
  and a MAG, or on the interface between a MAG and a mobile node.
  Mitigation measures for the threats, as well as the security
  considerations associated with those measures, are described in the
  respective protocol specifications [3][8] for the two interfaces.

6.  Acknowledgments

  The authors would like to thank the NETLMM working group, especially
  Jari Arkko, Charles Clancy, Gregory Daley, Vijay Devarapalli,
  Lakshminath Dondeti, Gerardo Giaretta, Wassim Haddad, Andy Huang,
  Dirk von Hugo, Julien Laganier, Henrik Levkowetz, Vidya Narayanan,
  Phil Roberts, and Pekka Savola (in alphabetical order) for valuable
  comments and suggestions regarding this document.

7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [1]  Kempf, J., Ed., "Problem Statement for Network-Based Localized
       Mobility Management", RFC 4830, April 2007.

  [2]  Manner, J. and M. Kojo, "Mobility Related Terminology",
       RFC 3753, June 2004.

7.2.  Informative References

  [3]  Levkowetz, H., Ed., "The NetLMM Protocol", Work in Progress,
       October 2006.

  [4]  Nikander, P., Kempf, J., and E. Nordmark, "IPv6 Neighbor
       Discovery (ND) Trust Models and Threats", RFC 3756, May 2004.

  [5]  Arkko, J., Kempf, J., Zill, B., and P. Nikander, "SEcure
       Neighbor Discovery (SEND)", RFC 3971, March 2005.

  [6]  CERT Coordination Center, "CERT Advisory CA-1996-21 TCP SYN
       Flooding and IP Spoofing Attacks", September 1996.



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  [7]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering: Defeating
       Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source Address
       Spoofing", BCP 38, RFC 2827, May 2000.

  [8]  Laganier, J., Narayanan, S., and F. Templin, "Network-based
       Localized Mobility Management Interface between Mobile Node and
       Access Router", Work in Progress, June 2006.

Authors' Addresses

  Christian Vogt
  Institute of Telematics
  Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH)
  P.O. Box 6980
  76128 Karlsruhe
  Germany

  EMail: [email protected]


  James Kempf
  DoCoMo USA Labs
  3240 Hillview Avenue
  Palo Alto, CA 94304
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
























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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.







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