Network Working Group                                         J. Heffner
Request for Comments: 4963                                     M. Mathis
Category: Informational                                      B. Chandler
                                                                    PSC
                                                              July 2007


              IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates

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

  IPv4 fragmentation is not sufficiently robust for use under some
  conditions in today's Internet.  At high data rates, the 16-bit IP
  identification field is not large enough to prevent frequent
  incorrectly assembled IP fragments, and the TCP and UDP checksums are
  insufficient to prevent the resulting corrupted datagrams from being
  delivered to higher protocol layers.  This note describes some easily
  reproduced experiments demonstrating the problem, and discusses some
  of the operational implications of these observations.






















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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


1.  Introduction

  The IPv4 header was designed at a time when data rates were several
  orders of magnitude lower than those achievable today.  This document
  describes a consequent scale-related failure in the IP identification
  (ID) field, where fragments may be incorrectly assembled at a rate
  high enough that it is likely to invalidate assumptions about data
  integrity failure rates.

  That IP fragmentation results in inefficient use of the network has
  been well documented [Kent87].  This note presents a different kind
  of problem, which can result not only in significant performance
  degradation, but also frequent data corruption.  This is especially
  pertinent due to the recent proliferation of UDP bulk transport tools
  that sometimes fragment every datagram.

  Additionally, there is some network equipment that ignores the Don't
  Fragment (DF) bit in the IP header to work around MTU discovery
  problems [RFC2923].  This equipment indirectly exposes properly
  implemented protocols and applications to corrupt data.

2.  Wrapping the IP ID Field

  The Internet Protocol standard [RFC0791] specifies:

     "The choice of the Identifier for a datagram is based on the need
     to provide a way to uniquely identify the fragments of a
     particular datagram.  The protocol module assembling fragments
     judges fragments to belong to the same datagram if they have the
     same source, destination, protocol, and Identifier.  Thus, the
     sender must choose the Identifier to be unique for this source,
     destination pair and protocol for the time the datagram (or any
     fragment of it) could be alive in the Internet."

  Strict conformance to this standard limits transmissions in one
  direction between any address pair to no more than 65536 packets per
  protocol (e.g., TCP, UDP, or ICMP) per maximum packet lifetime.

  Clearly, not all hosts follow this standard because it implies an
  unreasonably low maximum data rate.  For example, a host sending
  1500-byte packets with a 30-second maximum packet lifetime could send
  at only about 26 Mbps before exceeding 65535 packets per packet
  lifetime.  Or, filling a 1 Gbps interface with 1500-byte packets
  requires sending 65536 packets in less than 1 second, an unreasonably
  short maximum packet lifetime, being less than the round-trip time on
  some paths.  This requirement is widely ignored.





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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


  Additionally, it is worth noting that reusing values in the IP ID
  field once per 65536 datagrams is the best case.  Some
  implementations randomize the IP ID to prevent leaking information
  out of the kernel [Bellovin02], which causes reuse of the IP ID field
  to occur probabilistically at all sending rates.

  IP receivers store fragments in a reassembly buffer until all
  fragments in a datagram arrive, or until the reassembly timeout
  expires (15 seconds is suggested in [RFC0791]).  Fragments in a
  datagram are associated with each other by their protocol number, the
  value in their ID field, and by the source/destination address pair.
  If a sender wraps the ID field in less than the reassembly timeout,
  it becomes possible for fragments from different datagrams to be
  incorrectly spliced together ("mis-associated"), and delivered to the
  upper layer protocol.

  A case of particular concern is when mis-association is self-
  propagating.  This occurs, for example, when there is reliable
  ordering of packets and the first fragment of a datagram is lost in
  the network.  The rest of the fragments are stored in the fragment
  reassembly buffer, and when the sender wraps the ID field, the first
  fragment of the new datagram will be mis-associated with the rest of
  the old datagram.  The new datagram will be now be incomplete (since
  it is missing its first fragment), so the rest of it will be saved in
  the fragment reassembly buffer, forming a cycle that repeats every
  65536 datagrams.  It is possible to have a number of simultaneous
  cycles, bounded by the size of the fragment reassembly buffer.

  IPv6 is considerably less vulnerable to this type of problem, since
  its fragment header contains a 32-bit identification field [RFC2460].
  Mis-association will only be a problem at packet rates 65536 times
  higher than for IPv4.

3.  Effects of Mis-Associated Fragments

  When the mis-associated fragments are delivered, transport-layer
  checksumming should detect these datagrams as incorrect and discard
  them.  When the datagrams are discarded, it could create a
  performance problem for loss-feedback congestion control algorithms,
  particularly when a large congestion window is required, since it
  will introduce a certain amount of non-congestive loss.

  Transport checksums, however, may not be designed to handle such high
  error rates.  The TCP/UDP checksum is only 16 bits in length.  If
  these checksums follow a uniform random distribution, we expect mis-
  associated datagrams to be accepted by the checksum at a rate of one
  per 65536.  With only one mis-association cycle, we expect corrupt
  data delivered to the application layer once per 2^32 datagrams.



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  This number can be significantly higher with multiple concurrent
  cycles.

  With non-random data, the TCP/UDP checksum may be even weaker still.
  It is possible to construct datasets where mis-associated fragments
  will always have the same checksum.  Such a case may be considered
  unlikely, but is worth considering.  "Real" data may be more likely
  than random data to cause checksum hot spots and increase the
  probability of false checksum match [Stone98].  Also, some
  applications or higher-level protocols may turn off checksumming to
  increase speed, though this practice has been found to be dangerous
  for other reasons when data reliability is important [Stone00].

4.  Experimental Observations

  To test the practical impact of fragmentation on UDP, we ran a series
  of experiments using a UDP bulk data transport protocol that was
  designed to be used as an alternative to TCP for transporting large
  data sets over specialized networks.  The tool, Reliable Blast UDP
  (RBUDP), part of the QUANTA networking toolkit [QUANTA], was selected
  because it has a clean interface which facilitated automated
  experiments.  The decision to use RBUDP had little to do with the
  details of the transport protocol itself.  Any UDP transport protocol
  that does not have additional means to detect corruption, and that
  could be configured to use IP fragmentation, would have the same
  results.

  In order to diagnose corruption on files transferred with the UDP
  bulk transfer tool, we used a file format that included embedded
  sequence numbers and MD5 checksums in each fragment of each datagram.
  Thus, it was possible to distinguish random corruption from that
  caused by mis-associated fragments.  We used two different types of
  files.  One was constructed so that all the UDP checksums were
  constant -- we will call this the "constant" dataset.  The other was
  constructed so that UDP checksums were uniformly random -- the
  "random" dataset.  All tests were done using 400 MB files, sent in
  1524-byte datagrams so that they were fragmented on standard Fast
  Ethernet with a 1500-byte MTU.

  The UDP bulk file transport tool was used to send the datasets
  between a pair of hosts at slightly less than the available data rate
  (100 Mbps).  Near the beginning of each flow, a brief secondary flow
  was started to induce packet loss in the primary flow.  Throughout
  the life of the primary flow, we typically observed mis-association
  rates on the order of a few hundredths of a percent.






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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


  Tests run with the "constant" dataset resulted in corruption on all
  mis-associated fragments, that is, corruption on the order of a few
  hundredths of a percent.  In sending approximately 10 TB of "random"
  datasets, we observed 8847668 UDP checksum errors and 121 corruptions
  of the data due to mis-associated fragments.

5.  Preventing Mis-Association

  The most straightforward way to avoid mis-association is to avoid
  fragmentation altogether by implementing Path MTU Discovery [RFC1191]
  [RFC4821].  However, this is not always feasible for all
  applications.  Further, as a work-around for MTU discovery problems
  [RFC2923], some TCP implementations and communications gear provide
  mechanisms to disable path MTU discovery by clearing or ignoring the
  DF bit.  Doing so will expose all protocols using IPv4, even those
  that participate in MTU discovery, to mis-association errors.

  If IP fragmentation is in use, it may be possible to reduce the
  timeout sufficiently so that mis-association will not occur.
  However, there are a number of difficulties with such an approach.
  Since the sender controls the rate of packets sent and the selection
  of IP ID, while the receiver controls the reassembly timeout, there
  would need to be some mutual assurance between each party as to
  participation in the scheme.  Further, it is not generally possible
  to set the timeout low enough so that a fast sender's fragments will
  not be mis-associated, yet high enough so that a slow sender's
  fragments will not be unconditionally discarded before it is possible
  to reassemble them.  Therefore, the timeout and IP ID selection would
  need to be done on a per-peer basis.  Also, it is likely NAT will
  break any per-peer tables keyed by IP address.  It is not within the
  scope of this document to recommend solutions to these problems,
  though we believe a per-peer adaptive timeout is likely to prevent
  mis-association under circumstances where it would most commonly
  occur.

  A case particularly worth noting is that of tunnels encapsulating
  payload in IPv4.  To deal with difficulties in MTU Discovery
  [RFC4459], tunnels may rely on fragmentation between the two
  endpoints, even if the payload is marked with a DF bit [RFC4301].  In
  such a mode, the two tunnel endpoints behave as IP end hosts, with
  all tunneled traffic having the same protocol type.  Thus, the
  aggregate rate of tunneled packets may not exceed 65536 per maximum
  packet lifetime, or tunneled data becomes exposed to possible mis-
  association.  Even protocols doing MTU discovery such as TCP will be
  affected.  Operators of tunnels should ensure that the receiving
  end's reassembly timeout is short enough that mis-association cannot
  occur given the tunnel's maximum rate.




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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


6.  Mitigating Mis-Association

  It is difficult to concisely describe all possible situations under
  which fragments might be mis-associated.  Even if an end host
  carefully follows the specification, ensuring unique IP IDs, the
  presence of NATs or tunnels may expose applications to IP ID space
  conflicts.  Further, devices in the network that the end hosts cannot
  see or control, such as tunnels, may cause mis-association.  Even a
  fragmenting application that sends at a low rate might possibly be
  exposed when running simultaneously with a non-fragmenting
  application that sends at a high rate.  As described above, the
  receiver might implement to reduce or eliminate the possibility of
  conflict, but there is no mechanism in place for a sender to know
  what the receiver is doing in this respect.  As a consequence, there
  is no general mechanism for an application that is using IPv4
  fragmentation to know if it is deterministically or statistically
  protected from mis-associated fragments.

  Under circumstances when it is impossible or impractical to prevent
  mis-association, its effects may be mitigated by use of stronger
  integrity checking at any layer above IP.  This is a natural side
  effect of using cryptographic authentication.  For example, IPsec AH
  [RFC4302] will discard any corrupted datagrams, preventing their
  deliver to upper layers.  A stronger transport layer checksum such as
  SCTP's, which is 32 bits in length [RFC2960], may help significantly.
  At the application layer, SSH message authentication codes [RFC4251]
  will prevent delivery of corrupted data, though since the TCP
  connection underneath is not protected, it is considered invalid and
  the session is immediately terminated.  While stronger integrity
  checking may prevent data corruption, it will not prevent the
  potential performance impact described above of non-congestive loss
  on congestion control at high congestion windows.

  It should also be noted that mis-association is not the only possible
  source of data corruption above the network layer [Stone00].  Most
  applications for which data integrity is critically important should
  implement strong integrity checking regardless of exposure to mis-
  association.

  In general, applications that rely on IPv4 fragmentation should be
  written with these issues in mind, as well as those issues documented
  in [Kent87].  Applications that rely on IPv4 fragmentation while
  sending at high speeds (the order of 100 Mbps or higher) and devices
  that deliberately introduce fragmentation to otherwise unfragmented
  traffic (e.g., tunnels) should be particularly cautious, and
  introduce strong mechanisms to ensure data integrity.





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7.  Security Considerations

  If a malicious entity knows that a pair of hosts are communicating
  using a fragmented stream, it may be presented with an opportunity to
  corrupt the flow.  By sending "high" fragments (those with offset
  greater than zero) with a forged source address, the attacker can
  deliberately cause corruption as described above.  Exploiting this
  vulnerability requires only knowledge of the source and destination
  addresses of the flow, its protocol number, and fragment boundaries.
  It does not require knowledge of port or sequence numbers.

  If the attacker has visibility of packets on the path, the attack
  profile is similar to injecting full segments.  Using this attack
  makes blind disruptions easier and might possibly be used to cause
  degradation of service.  We believe only streams using IPv4
  fragmentation are likely vulnerable.  Because of the nature of the
  problems outlined in this document, the use of IPv4 fragmentation for
  critical applications may not be advisable, regardless of security
  concerns.

8.  Informative References

  [Kent87]     Kent, C. and J. Mogul, "Fragmentation considered
               harmful", Proc. SIGCOMM '87 vol. 17, No. 5, October
               1987.

  [RFC2923]    Lahey, K., "TCP Problems with Path MTU Discovery", RFC
               2923, September 2000.

  [RFC0791]    Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
               September 1981.

  [RFC1191]    Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU discovery", RFC
               1191, November 1990.

  [Stone98]    Stone, J., Greenwald, M., Partridge, C., and J. Hughes,
               "Performance of Checksums and CRC's over Real Data",
               IEEE/ ACM Transactions on Networking vol. 6, No. 5,
               October 1998.

  [Stone00]    Stone, J. and C. Partridge, "When The CRC and TCP
               Checksum Disagree", Proc. SIGCOMM 2000 vol. 30, No. 4,
               October 2000.








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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


  [QUANTA]     He, E., Alimohideen, J., Eliason, J., Krishnaprasad, N.,
               Leigh, J., Yu, O., and T. DeFanti, "Quanta: a toolkit
               for high performance data delivery over photonic
               networks", Future Generation Computer Systems Vol. 19,
               No. 6, August 2003.

  [Bellovin02] Bellovin, S., "A Technique for Counting NATted Hosts",
               Internet Measurement Conference, Proceedings of the 2nd
               ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet Measurement, November
               2002.

  [RFC2460]    Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
               (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, December 1998.

  [RFC2960]    Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,
               Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla, M.,
               Zhang, L., and V. Paxson, "Stream Control Transmission
               Protocol", RFC 2960, October 2000.

  [RFC4251]    Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, "The Secure Shell (SSH)
               Protocol Architecture", RFC 4251, January 2006.

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

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

  [RFC4459]    Savola, P., "MTU and Fragmentation Issues with In-the-
               Network Tunneling", RFC 4459, April 2006.

  [RFC4821]    Mathis, M. and J. Heffner, "Packetization Layer Path MTU
               Discovery", RFC 4821, March 2007.


















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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


Appendix A.  Acknowledgements

  This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under
  Grant No. 0083285.

Authors' Addresses

  John W. Heffner
  Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
  4400 Fifth Avenue
  Pittsburgh, PA  15213
  US

  Phone: 412-268-2329
  EMail: [email protected]


  Matt Mathis
  Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
  4400 Fifth Avenue
  Pittsburgh, PA  15213
  US

  Phone: 412-268-3319
  EMail: [email protected]


  Ben Chandler
  Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
  4400 Fifth Avenue
  Pittsburgh, PA  15213
  US

  Phone: 412-268-9783
  EMail: [email protected]
















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RFC 4963       IPv4 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates       July 2007


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