Network Working Group                                        R. Graveman
Request for Comments: 4891                             RFG Security, LLC
Category: Informational                                 M. Parthasarathy
                                                                  Nokia
                                                              P. Savola
                                                              CSC/FUNET
                                                          H. Tschofenig
                                                 Nokia Siemens Networks
                                                               May 2007


              Using IPsec to Secure IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels

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 gives guidance on securing manually configured IPv6-in-
  IPv4 tunnels using IPsec in transport mode.  No additional protocol
  extensions are described beyond those available with the IPsec
  framework.






















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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
  2.  Threats and the Use of IPsec . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
    2.1.  IPsec in Transport Mode  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    2.2.  IPsec in Tunnel Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
  3.  Scenarios and Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
    3.1.  Router-to-Router Tunnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    3.2.  Site-to-Router/Router-to-Site Tunnels  . . . . . . . . . .  6
    3.3.  Host-to-Host Tunnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
  4.  IKE and IPsec Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
  5.  IPsec Configuration Details  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    5.1.  IPsec Transport Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
    5.2.  Peer Authorization Database and Identities . . . . . . . . 12
  6.  Recommendations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  7.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  8.  Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  9.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
    10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
    10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
  Appendix A.  Using Tunnel Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    A.1.  Tunnel Mode Implementation Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    A.2.  Specific SPD for Host-to-Host Scenario . . . . . . . . . . 18
    A.3.  Specific SPD for Host-to-Router Scenario . . . . . . . . . 19
  Appendix B.  Optional Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    B.1.  Dynamic Address Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    B.2.  NAT Traversal and Mobility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    B.3.  Tunnel Endpoint Discovery  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21






















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1.  Introduction

  The IPv6 Operations (v6ops) working group has selected (manually
  configured) IPv6-in-IPv4 tunneling [RFC4213] as one of the IPv6
  transition mechanisms for IPv6 deployment.

  [RFC4213] identified a number of threats that had not been adequately
  analyzed or addressed in its predecessor [RFC2893].  The most
  complete solution is to use IPsec to protect IPv6-in-IPv4 tunneling.
  The document was intentionally not expanded to include the details on
  how to set up an IPsec-protected tunnel in an interoperable manner,
  but instead the details were deferred to this memo.

  The first four sections of this document analyze the threats and
  scenarios that can be addressed by IPsec and assumptions made by this
  document for successful IPsec Security Association (SA)
  establishment.  Section 5 gives the details of Internet Key Exchange
  (IKE) and IP security (IPsec) exchange with packet formats and
  Security Policy Database (SPD) entries.  Section 6 gives
  recommendations.  Appendices further discuss tunnel mode usage and
  optional extensions.

  This document does not address the use of IPsec for tunnels that are
  not manually configured (e.g., 6to4 tunnels [RFC3056]).  Presumably,
  some form of opportunistic encryption or "better-than-nothing
  security" might or might not be applicable.  Similarly, propagating
  quality-of-service attributes (apart from Explicit Congestion
  Notification bits [RFC4213]) from the encapsulated packets to the
  tunnel path is out of scope.

  The use of the word "interface" or the phrase "IP interface" refers
  to the IPv6 interface that must be present on any IPv6 node to send
  or receive IPv6 packets.  The use of the phrase "tunnel interface"
  refers to the interface that receives the IPv6-in-IPv4 tunneled
  packets over IPv4.

2.  Threats and the Use of IPsec

  [RFC4213] is mostly concerned about address spoofing threats:

  1.  The IPv4 source address of the encapsulating ("outer") packet can
      be spoofed.

  2.  The IPv6 source address of the encapsulated ("inner") packet can
      be spoofed.






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  The reason threat (1) exists is the lack of universal deployment of
  IPv4 ingress filtering [RFC3704].  The reason threat (2) exists is
  that the IPv6 packet is encapsulated in IPv4 and hence may escape
  IPv6 ingress filtering.  [RFC4213] specifies the following strict
  address checks as mitigating measures:

  o  To mitigate threat (1), the decapsulator verifies that the IPv4
     source address of the packet is the same as the address of the
     configured tunnel endpoint.  The decapsulator may also implement
     IPv4 ingress filtering, i.e., check whether the packet is received
     on a legitimate interface.

  o  To mitigate threat (2), the decapsulator verifies whether the
     inner IPv6 address is a valid IPv6 address and also applies IPv6
     ingress filtering before accepting the IPv6 packet.

  This memo proposes using IPsec for providing stronger security in
  preventing these threats and additionally providing integrity,
  confidentiality, replay protection, and origin protection between
  tunnel endpoints.

  IPsec can be used in two ways, in transport and tunnel mode; detailed
  discussion about applicability in this context is provided in
  Section 5.

2.1.  IPsec in Transport Mode

  In transport mode, the IPsec Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) or
  Authentication Header (AH) security association (SA) is established
  to protect the traffic defined by (IPv4-source, IPv4-dest, protocol =
  41).  On receiving such an IPsec packet, the receiver first applies
  the IPsec transform (e.g., ESP) and then matches the packet against
  the Security Parameter Index (SPI) and the inbound selectors
  associated with the SA to verify that the packet is appropriate for
  the SA via which it was received.  A successful verification implies
  that the packet came from the right IPv4 endpoint, because the SA is
  bound to the IPv4 source address.

  This prevents threat (1) but not threat (2).  IPsec in transport mode
  does not verify the contents of the payload itself where the IPv6
  addresses are carried.  That is, two nodes using IPsec transport mode
  to secure the tunnel can spoof the inner payload.  The packet will be
  decapsulated successfully and accepted.

  This shortcoming can be partially mitigated by IPv6 ingress
  filtering, i.e., check that the packet is arriving from the interface
  in the direction of the route towards the tunnel endpoint, similar to
  a Strict Reverse Path Forwarding (RPF) check [RFC3704].



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  In most implementations, a transport mode SA is applied to a normal
  IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnel.  Therefore, ingress filtering can be applied in
  the tunnel interface.  (Transport mode is often also used in other
  kinds of tunnels such as Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)
  [RFC4023] and Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) [RFC3193].)

2.2.  IPsec in Tunnel Mode

  In tunnel mode, the IPsec SA is established to protect the traffic
  defined by (IPv6-source, IPv6-destination).  On receiving such an
  IPsec packet, the receiver first applies the IPsec transform (e.g.,
  ESP) and then matches the packet against the SPI and the inbound
  selectors associated with the SA to verify that the packet is
  appropriate for the SA via which it was received.  The successful
  verification implies that the packet came from the right endpoint.

  The outer IPv4 addresses may be spoofed, and IPsec cannot detect this
  in tunnel mode; the packets will be demultiplexed based on the SPI
  and possibly the IPv6 address bound to the SA.  Thus, the outer
  address spoofing is irrelevant as long as the decryption succeeds and
  the inner IPv6 packet can be verified to have come from the right
  tunnel endpoint.

  As described in Section 5, using tunnel mode is more difficult than
  applying transport mode to a tunnel interface, and as a result this
  document recommends transport mode.  Note that even though transport
  rather than tunnel mode is recommended, an IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnel
  specified by protocol 41 still exists [RFC4213].

3.  Scenarios and Overview

  There are roughly three scenarios:

  1.  (Generic) router-to-router tunnels.

  2.  Site-to-router or router-to-site tunnels.  These refer to tunnels
      between a site's IPv6 (border) device and an IPv6 upstream
      provider's router.  A degenerate case of a site is a single host.

  3.  Host-to-host tunnels.











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3.1.  Router-to-Router Tunnels

  IPv6/IPv4 hosts and routers can tunnel IPv6 datagrams over regions of
  IPv4 forwarding topology by encapsulating them within IPv4 packets.
  Tunneling can be used in a variety of ways.

  .--------.           _----_          .--------.
  |v6-in-v4|         _( IPv4 )_        |v6-in-v4|
  | Router | <======( Internet )=====> | Router |
  |   A    |         (_      _)        |   B    |
  '--------'           '----'          '--------'
      ^        IPsec tunnel between        ^
      |        Router A and Router B       |
      V                                    V

                  Figure 1: Router-to-Router Scenario.

  IPv6/IPv4 routers interconnected by an IPv4 infrastructure can tunnel
  IPv6 packets between themselves.  In this case, the tunnel spans one
  segment of the end-to-end path that the IPv6 packet takes.

  The source and destination addresses of the IPv6 packets traversing
  the tunnel could come from a wide range of IPv6 prefixes, so binding
  IPv6 addresses to be used to the SA is not generally feasible.  IPv6
  ingress filtering must be performed to mitigate the IPv6 address
  spoofing threat.

  A specific case of router-to-router tunnels, when one router resides
  at an end site, is described in the next section.

3.2.  Site-to-Router/Router-to-Site Tunnels

  This is a generalization of host-to-router and router-to-host
  tunneling, because the issues when connecting a whole site (using a
  router) and connecting a single host are roughly equal.
















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     _----_        .---------. IPsec     _----_    IPsec  .-------.
   _( IPv6 )_      |v6-in-v4 | Tunnel  _( IPv4 )_  Tunnel | V4/V6  |
  ( Internet )<--->| Router  |<=======( Internet )=======>| Site B |
   (_      _)      |   A     |         (_      _)         '--------'
     '----'        '---------'           '----'
       ^
       |
       V
   .--------.
   | Native |
   | IPv6   |
   | node   |
   '--------'

                   Figure 2: Router-to-Site Scenario.

  IPv6/IPv4 routers can tunnel IPv6 packets to their final destination
  IPv6/IPv4 site.  This tunnel spans only the last segment of the end-
  to-end path.

                                  +---------------------+
                                  |      IPv6 Network   |
                                  |                     |
  .--------.        _----_        |     .--------.      |
  | V6/V4  |      _( IPv4 )_      |     |v6-in-v4|      |
  | Site B |<====( Internet )==========>| Router |      |
  '--------'      (_      _)      |     |   A    |      |
                    '----'        |     '--------'      |
          IPsec tunnel between    |         ^           |
          IPv6 Site and Router A  |         |           |
                                  |         V           |
                                  |     .-------.       |
                                  |     |  V6    |      |
                                  |     |  Hosts |      |
                                  |     '--------'      |
                                  +---------------------+

                   Figure 3: Site-to-Router Scenario.

  In the other direction, IPv6/IPv4 hosts can tunnel IPv6 packets to an
  intermediary IPv6/IPv4 router that is reachable via an IPv4
  infrastructure.  This type of tunnel spans the first segment of the
  packet's end-to-end path.

  The hosts in the site originate the packets with IPv6 source
  addresses coming from a well-known prefix, whereas the destination
  addresses could be any nodes on the Internet.




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  In this case, an IPsec tunnel mode SA could be bound to the prefix
  that was allocated to the router at Site B, and Router A could verify
  that the source address of the packet matches the prefix.  Site B
  will not be able to do a similar verification for the packets it
  receives.  This may be quite reasonable for most of the deployment
  cases, for example, an Internet Service Provider (ISP) allocating a
  /48 to a customer.  The Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) where the
  tunnel is terminated "trusts" (in a weak sense) the ISP's router, and
  the ISP's router can verify that Site B is the only one that can
  originate packets within the /48.

  IPv6 spoofing must be prevented, and setting up ingress filtering may
  require some amount of manual configuration; see more of these
  options in Section 5.

3.3.  Host-to-Host Tunnels

    .--------.           _----_          .--------.
    | V6/V4  |         _( IPv4 )_        | V6/V4  |
    | Host   | <======( Internet )=====> | Host   |
    |   A    |         (_      _)        |   B    |
    '--------'           '----'          '--------'
                 IPsec tunnel between
                 Host A and Host B

                    Figure 4: Host-to-Host Scenario.

  IPv6/IPv4 hosts interconnected by an IPv4 infrastructure can tunnel
  IPv6 packets between themselves.  In this case, the tunnel spans the
  entire end-to-end path.

  In this case, the source and the destination IPv6 addresses are known
  a priori.  A tunnel mode SA could be bound to these specific
  addresses.  Address verification prevents IPv6 source address
  spoofing completely.

  As noted in the Introduction, automatic host-to-host tunneling
  methods (e.g., 6to4) are out of scope for this memo.













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4.  IKE and IPsec Versions

  This section discusses the different versions of the IKE and IPsec
  security architecture and their applicability to this document.

  The IPsec security architecture was previously defined in [RFC2401]
  and is now superseded by [RFC4301].  IKE was originally defined in
  [RFC2409] (which is called IKEv1 in this document) and is now
  superseded by [RFC4306] (called IKEv2; see also [RFC4718]).  There
  are several differences between them.  The differences relevant to
  this document are discussed below.

  1.  [RFC2401] does not require allowing IP as the next layer protocol
      in traffic selectors when an IPsec SA is negotiated.  In
      contrast, [RFC4301] requires supporting IP as the next layer
      protocol (like TCP or UDP) in traffic selectors.

  2.  [RFC4301] assumes IKEv2, as some of the new features cannot be
      negotiated using IKEv1.  It is valid to negotiate multiple
      traffic selectors for a given IPsec SA in [RFC4301].  This is
      possible only with IKEv2.  If IKEv1 is used, then multiple SAs
      need to be set up, one for each traffic selector.

  Note that the existing implementations based on IKEv1 may already be
  able to support the [RFC4301] features described in (1) and (2).  If
  appropriate, the deployment may choose to use either version of the
  security architecture.

  IKEv2 supports features useful for configuring and securing tunnels
  not present with IKEv1.

  1.  IKEv2 supports legacy authentication methods by carrying them in
      Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) payloads.  This can be
      used to authenticate hosts or sites to an ISP using EAP methods
      that support username and password.

  2.  IKEv2 supports dynamic address configuration, which may be used
      to configure the IPv6 address of the host.

  Network Address Translation (NAT) traversal works with both the old
  and revised IPsec architectures, but the negotiation is integrated
  with IKEv2.

  For the purposes of this document, where the confidentiality of ESP
  [RFC4303] is not required, AH [RFC4302] can be used as an alternative
  to ESP.  The main difference is that AH is able to provide integrity
  protection for certain fields in the outer IPv4 header and IPv4
  options.  However, as the outer IPv4 header will be discarded in any



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  case, and those particular fields are not believed to be relevant in
  this particular application, there is no particular reason to use AH.

5.  IPsec Configuration Details

  This section describes the SPD entries for setting up the IPsec
  transport mode SA to protect the IPv6 traffic.

  Several requirements arise when IPsec is used to protect the IPv6
  traffic (inner header) for the scenarios listed in Section 3.

  1.  All of IPv6 traffic should be protected, including link-local
      (e.g., Neighbor Discovery) and multicast traffic.  Without this,
      an attacker can pollute the IPv6 neighbor cache causing
      disruption in communication between the two routers.

  2.  In router-to-router tunnels, the source and destination addresses
      of the traffic could come from a wide range of prefixes that are
      normally learned through routing.  As routing can always learn a
      new prefix, one cannot assume that all the prefixes are known a
      priori [RFC3884].  This mainly affects scenario (1).

  3.  Source address selection depends on the notions of routes and
      interfaces.  This implies that the reachability to the various
      IPv6 destinations appear as routes in the routing table.  This
      affects scenarios (2) and (3).

  The IPv6 traffic can be protected using transport or tunnel mode.
  There are many problems when using tunnel mode as implementations may
  or may not model the IPsec tunnel mode SA as an interface as
  described in Appendix A.1.

  If IPsec tunnel mode SA is not modeled as an interface (e.g., as of
  this writing, popular in many open source implementations), the SPD
  entries for protecting all traffic between the two endpoints must be
  described.  Evaluating against the requirements above, all link-local
  traffic multicast traffic would need to be identified, possibly
  resulting in a long list of SPD entries.  The second requirement is
  difficult to satisfy, because the traffic needing protection is not
  necessarily (e.g., router-to-router tunnel) known a priori [RFC3884].
  The third requirement is also problematic, because almost all
  implementations assume addresses are assigned on interfaces (rather
  than configured in SPDs) for proper source address selection.

  If the IPsec tunnel mode SA is modeled as interface, the traffic that
  needs protection can be modeled as routes pointing to the interface.
  But the second requirement is difficult to satisfy, because the
  traffic needing protection is not necessarily known a priori.  The



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  third requirement is easily solved, because IPsec is modeled as an
  interface.

  In practice, (2) has been solved by protecting all the traffic
  (::/0), but no interoperable implementations support this feature.
  For a detailed list of issues pertaining to this, see [VLINK].

  Because applying transport mode to protect a tunnel is a much simpler
  solution and also easily protects link-local and multicast traffic,
  we do not recommend using tunnel mode in this context.  Tunnel mode
  is, however, discussed further in Appendix A.

  This document assumes that tunnels are manually configured on both
  sides and the ingress filtering is manually set up to discard spoofed
  packets.

5.1.  IPsec Transport Mode

  Transport mode has typically been applied to L2TP, GRE, and other
  tunneling methods, especially when the user wants to tunnel non-IP
  traffic.  [RFC3884], [RFC3193], and [RFC4023] provide examples of
  applying transport mode to protect tunnel traffic that spans only a
  part of an end-to-end path.

  IPv6 ingress filtering must be applied on the tunnel interface on all
  the packets that pass the inbound IPsec processing.

  The following SPD entries assume that there are two routers, Router1
  and Router2, with tunnel endpoint IPv4 addresses denoted IPV4-TEP1
  and IPV4-TEP2, respectively.  (In other scenarios, the SPDs are set
  up similarly.)

    Router1's SPD:
                                 Next Layer
    Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
    ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
      1     IPV4-TEP1  IPV4-TEP2    ESP       BYPASS
      2     IPV4-TEP1  IPV4-TEP2    IKE       BYPASS
      3     IPv4-TEP1  IPV4-TEP2     41       PROTECT(ESP,transport)












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    Router2's SPD:
                                 Next Layer
    Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
    ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
      1     IPV4-TEP2  IPV4-TEP1    ESP       BYPASS
      2     IPV4-TEP2  IPV4-TEP1    IKE       BYPASS
      3     IPv4-TEP2  IPV4-TEP1     41       PROTECT(ESP,transport)

    In both SPD entries, "IKE" refers to UDP destination port 500
    and possibly also port 4500 if NAT traversal is used.

  The packet format is as shown in Table 1.

   +----------------------------+------------------------------------+
   | Components (first to last) |              Contains              |
   +----------------------------+------------------------------------+
   |         IPv4 header        | (src = IPV4-TEP1, dst = IPV4-TEP2) |
   |         ESP header         |                                    |
   |         IPv6 header        |  (src = IPV6-EP1, dst = IPV6-EP2)  |
   |          (payload)         |                                    |
   +----------------------------+------------------------------------+

              Table 1: Packet Format for IPv6/IPv4 Tunnels.

  The IDci and IDcr payloads of IKEv1 carry the IPv4-TEP1, IPV4-TEP2,
  and protocol value 41 as phase 2 identities.  With IKEv2, the traffic
  selectors are used to carry the same information.

5.2.  Peer Authorization Database and Identities

  The Peer Authorization Database (PAD) provides the link between SPD
  and the key management daemon [RFC4306].  This is defined in
  [RFC4301] and hence relevant only when used with IKEv2.

  As there is currently no defined way to discover the PAD-related
  parameters dynamically, it is assumed that these are manually
  configured:

  o  The Identity of the peer asserted in the IKEv2 exchange: Many
     different types of identities can be used.  At least, the IPv4
     address of the peer should be supported.

  o  IKEv2 can authenticate the peer by several methods.  Pre-shared
     key and X.509 certificate-based authentication is required by
     [RFC4301].  At least, pre-shared key should be supported, because
     it interoperates with a larger number of implementations.





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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


  o  The child SA authorization data should contain the IPv4 address of
     the peer.

  IPv4 address should be supported as Identity during the key exchange.
  As this does not provide Identity protection, main mode or aggressive
  mode can be used with IKEv1.

6.  Recommendations

  In Section 5, we examined the differences between setting up an IPsec
  IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnel using either transport or tunnel mode.  We
  observe that applying transport mode to a tunnel interface is the
  simplest and therefore recommended solution.

  In Appendix A, we also explore what it would take to use so-called
  Specific SPD (SSPD) tunnel mode.  Such usage is more complicated
  because IPv6 prefixes need to be known a priori, and multicast and
  link-local traffic do not work over such a tunnel.  Fragment handling
  in tunnel mode is also more difficult.  However, because the Mobility
  and Multihoming Protocol (MOBIKE) [RFC4555] supports only tunnel
  mode, when the IPv4 endpoints of a tunnel are dynamic and the other
  constraints are not applicable, using tunnel mode may be an
  acceptable solution.

  Therefore, our primary recommendation is to use transport mode
  applied to a tunnel interface.  Source address spoofing can be
  limited by enabling ingress filtering on the tunnel interface.

  Manual keying must not be used as large amounts of IPv6 traffic may
  be carried over the tunnels and doing so would make it easier for an
  attacker to recover the keys.  IKEv1 or IKEv2 must be used for
  establishing the IPsec SAs.  IKEv2 should be used where supported and
  available; if not, IKEv1 may be used instead.

7.  Security Considerations

  When running IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnels (unsecured) over the Internet, it
  is possible to "inject" packets into the tunnel by spoofing the
  source address (data plane security), or if the tunnel is signaled
  somehow (e.g., using authentication protocol and obtaining a static
  v6 prefix), someone might be able to spoof the signaling (control
  plane security).

  The IPsec framework plays an important role in adding security to
  both the protocol for tunnel setup and data traffic.

  Either IKEv1 or IKEv2 provides a secure signaling protocol for
  establishing, maintaining, and deleting an IPsec tunnel.



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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


  IPsec, with ESP, offers integrity and data origin authentication,
  confidentiality, and optional (at the discretion of the receiver)
  anti-replay features.  Using confidentiality without integrity is
  discouraged.  ESP furthermore provides limited traffic flow
  confidentiality.

  IPsec provides access control mechanisms through the distribution of
  keys and also through the application of policies dictated by the
  Security Policy Database (SPD).

  The NAT traversal mechanism provided by IKEv2 introduces some
  weaknesses into IKE and IPsec.  These issues are discussed in more
  detail in [RFC4306].

  Please note that using IPsec for the scenarios described in Figures
  1, 2, and 3 does not aim to protect the end-to-end communication.  It
  protects just the tunnel part.  It is still possible for an IPv6
  endpoint not attached to the IPsec tunnel to spoof packets.

8.  Contributors

  The authors are listed in alphabetical order.

  Suresh Satapati also participated in the initial discussions on this
  topic.

9.  Acknowledgments

  The authors would like to thank Stephen Kent, Michael Richardson,
  Florian Weimer, Elwyn Davies, Eric Vyncke, Merike Kaeo, Alfred
  Hoenes, Francis Dupont, and David Black for their substantive
  feedback.

  We would like to thank Pasi Eronen for his text contributions and
  suggestions for improvement.
















Graveman, et al.             Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2401]  Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the
             Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [RFC2409]  Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange
             (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998.

  [RFC3704]  Baker, F. and P. Savola, "Ingress Filtering for Multihomed
             Networks", BCP 84, RFC 3704, March 2004.

  [RFC3948]  Huttunen, A., Swander, B., Volpe, V., DiBurro, L., and M.
             Stenberg, "UDP Encapsulation of IPsec ESP Packets",
             RFC 3948, January 2005.

  [RFC4213]  Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition Mechanisms
             for IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 4213, October 2005.

  [RFC4301]  Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
             Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.

  [RFC4303]  Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
             RFC 4303, December 2005.

  [RFC4306]  Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",
             RFC 4306, December 2005.

10.2.  Informative References

  [RFC2893]  Gilligan, R. and E. Nordmark, "Transition Mechanisms for
             IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 2893, August 2000.

  [RFC3056]  Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains
             via IPv4 Clouds", RFC 3056, February 2001.

  [RFC3193]  Patel, B., Aboba, B., Dixon, W., Zorn, G., and S. Booth,
             "Securing L2TP using IPsec", RFC 3193, November 2001.

  [RFC3715]  Aboba, B. and W. Dixon, "IPsec-Network Address Translation
             (NAT) Compatibility Requirements", RFC 3715, March 2004.

  [RFC3884]  Touch, J., Eggert, L., and Y. Wang, "Use of IPsec
             Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing", RFC 3884,
             September 2004.





Graveman, et al.             Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


  [RFC4023]  Worster, T., Rekhter, Y., and E. Rosen, "Encapsulating
             MPLS in IP or Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)",
             RFC 4023, March 2005.

  [RFC4302]  Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 4302,
             December 2005.

  [RFC4555]  Eronen, P., "IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming Protocol
             (MOBIKE)", RFC 4555, June 2006.

  [RFC4718]  Eronen, P. and P. Hoffman, "IKEv2 Clarifications and
             Implementation Guidelines", RFC 4718, October 2006.

  [TUNN-AD]  Palet, J. and M. Diaz, "Analysis of IPv6 Tunnel End-point
             Discovery Mechanisms", Work in Progress, January 2005.

  [VLINK]    Duffy, M., "Framework for IPsec Protected Virtual Links
             for PPVPNs", Work in Progress, October 2002.

































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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


Appendix A.  Using Tunnel Mode

  First, we describe the different tunnel mode implementation methods.
  We note that, in this context, only the so-called Specific SPD (SSPD)
  model (without a tunnel interface) can be made to work, but it has
  reduced applicability, and the use of a transport mode tunnel is
  recommended instead.  However, we will describe how the SSPD tunnel
  mode might look if one would like to use it in any case.

A.1.  Tunnel Mode Implementation Methods

  Tunnel mode could (in theory) be deployed in two very different ways
  depending on the implementation:

  1.  "Generic SPDs": some implementations model the tunnel mode SA as
      an IP interface.  In this case, an IPsec tunnel interface is
      created and used with "any" addresses ("::/0 <-> ::/0" ) as IPsec
      traffic selectors while setting up the SA.  Though this allows
      all traffic between the two nodes to be protected by IPsec, the
      routing table would decide what traffic gets sent over the
      tunnel.  Ingress filtering must be separately applied on the
      tunnel interface as the IPsec policy checks do not check the IPv6
      addresses at all.  Routing protocols, multicast, etc. will work
      through this tunnel.  This mode is similar to transport mode.
      The SPDs must be interface-specific.  However, because IKE uses
      IPv4 but the tunnel is IPv6, there is no standard solution to map
      the IPv4 interface to IPv6 interface [VLINK] and this approach is
      not feasible.

  2.  "Specific SPDs": some implementations do not model the tunnel
      mode SA as an IP interface.  Traffic selection is based on
      specific SPD entries, e.g., "2001:db8:1::/48 <-> 2001:db8:
      2::/48".  As the IPsec session between two endpoints does not
      have an interface (though an implementation may have a common
      pseudo-interface for all IPsec traffic), there is no Duplicate
      Address Detection (DAD), Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD), or
      link-local traffic to protect; multicast is not possible over
      such a tunnel.  Ingress filtering is performed automatically by
      the IPsec traffic selectors.

  Ingress filtering is guaranteed by IPsec processing when option (2)
  is chosen, whereas the operator has to enable it explicitly when
  transport mode or option (1) is chosen.

  In summary, there does not appear to be a standard solution in this
  context for the first implementation approach.





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  The second approach can be made to work, but is only applicable in
  host-to-host or site-to-router/router-to-site scenarios (i.e., when
  the IPv6 prefixes can be known a priori), and it offers only a
  limited set of features (e.g., no multicast) compared with a
  transport mode tunnel.

  When tunnel mode is used, fragment handling [RFC4301] may also be
  more difficult compared with transport mode and, depending on
  implementation, may need to be reflected in SPDs.

A.2.  Specific SPD for Host-to-Host Scenario

  The following SPD entries assume that there are two hosts, Host1 and
  Host2, whose IPv6 addresses are denoted IPV6-EP1 and IPV6-EP2 (global
  addresses), and the IPV4 addresses of the tunnel endpoints are
  denoted IPV4-TEP1 and IPV4-TEP2, respectively.


  Host1's SPD:
                               Next Layer
  Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
  ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
    1     IPV6-EP1  IPV6-EP2      ESP      BYPASS
    2     IPV6-EP1  IPV6-EP2      IKE      BYPASS
    3     IPv6-EP1  IPV6-EP2       41      PROTECT(ESP,
                                           tunnel{IPV4-TEP1,IPV4-TEP2})

  Host2's SPD:
                               Next Layer
  Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
  ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
    1     IPV6-EP2  IPV6-EP1      ESP      BYPASS
    2     IPV6-EP2  IPV6-EP1      IKE      BYPASS
    3     IPv6-EP2  IPV6-EP1       41      PROTECT(ESP,
                                           tunnel{IPV4-TEP2,IPV4-TEP1})

  "IKE" refers to UDP destination port 500 and possibly also
  port 4500 if NAT traversal is used.

  The IDci and IDcr payloads of IKEv1 carry the IPV6-EP1 and IPV6-TEP2
  as phase 2 identities.  With IKEv2, the traffic selectors are used to
  carry the same information.









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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


A.3.  Specific SPD for Host-to-Router Scenario

  The following SPD entries assume that the host has the IPv6 address
  IPV6-EP1 and the tunnel endpoints of the host and router are IPV4-
  TEP1 and IPV4-TEP2, respectively.  If the tunnel is between a router
  and a host where the router has allocated an IPV6-PREF/48 to the
  host, the corresponding SPD entries can be derived by replacing IPV6-
  EP1 with IPV6-PREF/48.

  Please note the bypass entry for host's SPD, absent in router's SPD.
  While this might be an implementation matter for host-to-router
  tunneling, having a similar entry, "Local=IPV6-PREF/48 & Remote=IPV6-
  PREF/48", is critical for site-to-router tunneling.


  Host's SPD:
                               Next Layer
  Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
  ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
    1     IPV6-EP1  IPV6-EP2      ESP      BYPASS
    2     IPV6-EP1  IPV6-EP2      IKE      BYPASS
    3     IPV6-EP1  IPV6-EP1      ANY      BYPASS
    4     IPV6-EP1    ANY         ANY      PROTECT(ESP,
                                           tunnel{IPV4-TEP1,IPV4-TEP2})

  Router's SPD:
                               Next Layer
  Rule     Local     Remote     Protocol   Action
  ----     -----     ------    ---------- --------
    1     IPV6-EP2  IPV6-EP1      ESP      BYPASS
    2     IPV6-EP2  IPV6-EP1      IKE      BYPASS
    3       ANY     IPV6-EP1      ANY      PROTECT(ESP,
                                           tunnel{IPV4-TEP1,IPV4-TEP2})

  The IDci and IDcr payloads of IKEv1 carry the IPV6-EP1 and
  ID_IPV6_ADDR_RANGE or ID_IPV6_ADDR_SUBNET as their phase 2
  identities.  The starting address is zero and the end address is all
  ones for ID_IPV6_ADDR_RANGE.  The starting address is zero IP address
  and the end address is all zeroes for ID_IPV6_ADDR_SUBNET.  With
  IKEv2, the traffic selectors are used to carry the same information.











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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


Appendix B.  Optional Features

B.1.  Dynamic Address Configuration

  With the exchange of protected configuration payloads, IKEv2 is able
  to provide the IKEv2 peer with Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
  (DHCP)-like information payloads.  These configuration payloads are
  exchanged between the IKEv2 initiator and responder.

  This could be used (for example) by the host in the host-to-router
  scenario to obtain an IPv6 address from the ISP as part of setting up
  the IPsec tunnel mode SA.  The details of these procedures are out of
  scope for this memo.

B.2.  NAT Traversal and Mobility

  Network address (and port) translation devices are commonly found in
  today's networks.  A detailed description of the problem and
  requirements of IPsec-protected data traffic traversing a NAT is
  provided in [RFC3715].

  IKEv2 can detect the presence of a NAT automatically by sending
  NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP and NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP payloads in
  the initial IKE_SA_INIT exchange.  Once a NAT is detected and both
  endpoints support IPsec NAT traversal extensions, UDP encapsulation
  can be enabled.

  More details about UDP encapsulation of IPsec-protected IP packets
  can be found in [RFC3948].

  For IPv6-in-IPv4 tunneling, NAT traversal is interesting for two
  reasons:

  1.  One of the tunnel endpoints is often behind a NAT, and configured
      tunneling, using protocol 41, is not guaranteed to traverse the
      NAT.  Hence, using IPsec tunnels would enable one to set up both
      a secure tunnel and a tunnel that might not always be possible
      without other tunneling mechanisms.

  2.  Using NAT traversal allows the outer address to change without
      having to renegotiate the SAs.  This could be beneficial for a
      crude form of mobility and in scenarios where the NAT changes the
      IP addresses frequently.  However, as the outer address may
      change, this might introduce new security issues, and using
      tunnel mode would be most appropriate.






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  When NAT is not applied, the second benefit would still be desirable.
  In particular, using manually configured tunneling is an operational
  challenge with dynamic IP addresses, because both ends need to be
  reconfigured if an address changes.  Therefore, an easy and efficient
  way to re-establish the IPsec tunnel if the IP address changes would
  be desirable.  MOBIKE [RFC4555] provides a solution when IKEv2 is
  used, but it only supports tunnel mode.

B.3.  Tunnel Endpoint Discovery

  The IKEv2 initiator needs to know the address of the IKEv2 responder
  to start IKEv2 signaling.  A number of ways can be used to provide
  the initiator with this information, for example:

  o  Using out-of-band mechanisms, e.g., from the ISP's Web page.

  o  Using DNS to look up a service name by appending it to the DNS
     search path provided by DHCPv4 (e.g., "tunnel-
     service.example.com").

  o  Using a DHCP option.

  o  Using a pre-configured or pre-determined IPv4 anycast address.

  o  Using other, unspecified or proprietary methods.

  For the purpose of this document, it is assumed that this address can
  be obtained somehow.  Once the address has been learned, it is
  configured as the tunnel endpoint for the configured IPv6-in-IPv4
  tunnel.

  This problem is also discussed at more length in [TUNN-AD].

  However, simply discovering the tunnel endpoint is not sufficient for
  establishing an IKE session with the peer.  The PAD information (see
  Section 5.2) also needs to be learned dynamically.  Hence, currently,
  automatic endpoint discovery provides benefit only if PAD information
  is chosen in such a manner that it is not IP-address specific.













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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


Authors' Addresses

  Richard Graveman
  RFG Security, LLC
  15 Park Avenue
  Morristown, NJ  07960
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Mohan Parthasarathy
  Nokia
  313 Fairchild Drive
  Mountain View, CA  94043
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Pekka Savola
  CSC/FUNET
  Espoo
  Finland

  EMail: [email protected]


  Hannes Tschofenig
  Nokia Siemens Networks
  Otto-Hahn-Ring 6
  Munich, Bayern  81739
  Germany

  EMail: [email protected]
















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RFC 4891            IPsec with IPv6-in-IPv4 Tunnels             May 2007


Full Copyright Statement

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  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
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