Network Working Group                                       A. Okmianski
Request for Comments: 5426                           Cisco Systems, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                     March 2009


               Transmission of Syslog Messages over UDP

Status of This Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

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  document authors.  All rights reserved.

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  than English.

Abstract

  This document describes the transport for syslog messages over UDP/
  IPv4 or UDP/IPv6.  The syslog protocol layered architecture provides
  for support of any number of transport mappings.  However, for
  interoperability purposes, syslog protocol implementers are required
  to support this transport mapping.






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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................3
  3. Transport Protocol ..............................................3
     3.1. One Message Per Datagram ...................................3
     3.2. Message Size ...............................................3
     3.3. Source and Target Ports ....................................4
     3.4. Source IP Address ..........................................4
     3.5. UDP/IP Structure ...........................................4
     3.6. UDP Checksums ..............................................4
  4. Reliability Considerations ......................................5
     4.1. Lost Datagrams .............................................5
     4.2. Message Corruption .........................................5
     4.3. Congestion Control .........................................5
     4.4. Sequenced Delivery .........................................5
  5. Security Considerations .........................................6
     5.1. Sender Authentication and Message Forgery ..................6
     5.2. Message Observation ........................................7
     5.3. Replaying ..................................................7
     5.4. Unreliable Delivery ........................................7
     5.5. Message Prioritization and Differentiation .................7
     5.6. Denial of Service ..........................................8
  6. IANA Considerations .............................................8
  7. Acknowledgements ................................................8
  8. References ......................................................8
     8.1. Normative References .......................................8
     8.2. Informative References .....................................9

1.  Introduction

  Informational RFC 3164 [8] describes the syslog protocol as it was
  observed in existing implementations.  It describes both the format
  of syslog messages and a UDP [1] transport.  Subsequently, a
  Standards-Track syslog protocol has been defined in RFC 5424 [2].

  RFC 5424 specifies a layered architecture that provides for support
  of any number of transport layer mappings for transmitting syslog
  messages.  This document describes the UDP transport mapping for the
  syslog protocol.

  The transport described in this document can be used for transmitting
  syslog messages over both IPv4 [3] and IPv6 [4].








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  Network administrators and architects should be aware of the
  significant reliability and security issues of this transport, which
  stem from the use of UDP.  They are documented in this specification.
  However, this transport is lightweight and is built upon the existing
  popular use of UDP for syslog.

2.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [5].

3.  Transport Protocol

3.1.  One Message Per Datagram

  Each syslog UDP datagram MUST contain only one syslog message, which
  MAY be complete or truncated.  The message MUST be formatted and
  truncated according to RFC 5424 [2].  Additional data MUST NOT be
  present in the datagram payload.

3.2.  Message Size

  This transport mapping supports transmission of syslog messages up to
  65535 octets minus the UDP header length.  This limit stems from the
  maximum supported UDP size of 65535 octets specified in RFC 768 [1].
  For IPv4, the maximum payload size is 65535 octets minus the UDP
  header and minus the IP header because IPv4 has a 16-bit length field
  that also includes the header length.

  IPv4 syslog receivers MUST be able to receive datagrams with message
  sizes up to and including 480 octets.  IPv6 syslog receivers MUST be
  able to receive datagrams with message sizes up to and including 1180
  octets.  All syslog receivers SHOULD be able to receive datagrams
  with message sizes of up to and including 2048 octets.  The ability
  to receive larger messages is encouraged.

  The above restrictions and recommendations establish a baseline for
  interoperability.  The minimum required message size support was
  determined based on the minimum MTU size that Internet hosts are
  required to support: 576 octets for IPv4 [3] and 1280 octets for IPv6
  [4].  Datagrams that conform to these limits have the greatest chance
  of being delivered because they do not require fragmentation.

  It is RECOMMENDED that syslog senders restrict message sizes such
  that IP datagrams do not exceed the smallest MTU of the network in
  use.  This avoids datagram fragmentation and possible issues
  surrounding fragmentation such as incorrect MTU discovery.



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  Fragmentation can be undesirable because it increases the risk of the
  message being lost due to loss of just one datagram fragment.  Syslog
  has no acknowledgement facility, and therefore there is no effective
  way to handle retransmission.  This makes it impossible for syslog to
  utilize packetization layer path MTU discovery [9].  When network MTU
  is not known in advance, the safest assumption is to restrict
  messages to 480 octets for IPv4 and 1180 octets for IPv6.

3.3.  Source and Target Ports

  Syslog receivers MUST support accepting syslog datagrams on the well-
  known UDP port 514, but MAY be configurable to listen on a different
  port.  Syslog senders MUST support sending syslog message datagrams
  to the UDP port 514, but MAY be configurable to send messages to a
  different port.  Syslog senders MAY use any source UDP port for
  transmitting messages.

3.4.  Source IP Address

  The source IP address of the UDP datagrams SHOULD NOT be interpreted
  as the identifier for the host that originated the syslog message.
  The entity sending the syslog message could be merely a relay.  The
  syslog message itself contains the identifier of the originator of
  the message.

3.5.  UDP/IP Structure

  Each UDP/IP datagram sent by the transport layer MUST completely
  adhere to the structure specified in the UDP RFC 768 [1] and either
  the IPv4 RFC 791 [3] or IPv6 RFC 2460 [4], depending on which
  protocol is used.

3.6.  UDP Checksums

  Syslog senders MUST NOT disable UDP checksums.  IPv4 syslog senders
  SHOULD use UDP checksums when sending messages.  Note that RFC 2460
  [4] mandates the use of UDP checksums when sending UDP datagrams over
  IPv6.

  Syslog receivers MUST NOT disable UDP checksum checks.  IPv4 syslog
  receivers SHOULD check UDP checksums and SHOULD accept a syslog
  message with a zero checksum.  Note that RFC 2460 [4] mandates the
  use of checksums for UDP over IPv6.








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4.  Reliability Considerations

  The UDP is an unreliable, low-overhead protocol.  This section
  discusses reliability issues inherent in UDP that implementers and
  users should be aware of.

4.1.  Lost Datagrams

  This transport mapping does not provide any mechanism to detect and
  correct loss of datagrams.  Datagrams can be lost in transit due to
  congestion, corruption, or any other intermittent network problem.
  IP fragmentation exacerbates this problem because loss of a single
  fragment will result in the entire message being discarded.

4.2.  Message Corruption

  The UDP/IP datagrams can get corrupted in transit due to software,
  hardware, or network errors.  This transport mapping specifies use of
  UDP checksums to enable corruption detection in addition to checksums
  used in IP and Layer 2 protocols.  However, checksums do not
  guarantee corruption detection, and this transport mapping does not
  provide for message acknowledgement or retransmission mechanism.

4.3.  Congestion Control

  Because syslog can generate unlimited amounts of data, transferring
  this data over UDP is generally problematic, because UDP lacks
  congestion control mechanisms.  Congestion control mechanisms that
  respond to congestion by reducing traffic rates and establish a
  degree of fairness between flows that share the same path are vital
  to the stable operation of the Internet [6].  This is why the syslog
  TLS transport [7] is REQUIRED to implement and RECOMMENDED for
  general use.

  The only environments where the syslog UDP transport MAY be used as
  an alternative to the TLS transport are managed networks, where the
  network path has been explicitly provisioned for UDP syslog traffic
  through traffic engineering mechanisms, such as rate limiting or
  capacity reservations.  In all other environments, the TLS transport
  [7] SHOULD be used.

4.4.  Sequenced Delivery

  The IP transport used by the UDP does not guarantee that the sequence
  of datagram delivery will match the order in which the datagrams were
  sent.  The time stamp contained within each syslog message can serve
  as a rough guide in establishing sequence order.  However, it will
  not help in cases where multiple messages were generated during the



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  same time slot, the sender could not generate a time stamp, or
  messages originated from different hosts whose clocks were not
  synchronized.  The order of syslog message arrival via this transport
  SHOULD NOT be used as an authoritative guide in establishing an
  absolute or relative sequence of events on the syslog sender hosts.

5.  Security Considerations

  Using this specification on an unsecured network is NOT RECOMMENDED.
  Several syslog security considerations are discussed in RFC 5424 [2].
  This section focuses on security considerations specific to the
  syslog transport over UDP.  Some of the security issues raised in
  this section can be mitigated through the use of IPsec as defined in
  RFC 4301 [10].

5.1.  Sender Authentication and Message Forgery

  This transport mapping does not provide for strong sender
  authentication.  The receiver of the syslog message will not be able
  to ascertain that the message was indeed sent from the reported
  sender, or whether the packet was sent from another device.  This can
  also lead to a case of mistaken identity if an inappropriately
  configured machine sends syslog messages to a receiver representing
  itself as another machine.

  This transport mapping does not provide protection against syslog
  message forgery.  An attacker can transmit syslog messages (either
  from the machine from which the messages are purportedly sent or from
  any other machine) to a receiver.

  In one case, an attacker can hide the true nature of an attack amidst
  many other messages.  As an example, an attacker can start generating
  forged messages indicating a problem on some machine.  This can get
  the attention of the system administrators, who will spend their time
  investigating the alleged problem.  During this time, the attacker
  could be able to compromise a different machine or a different
  process on the same machine.

  Additionally, an attacker can generate false syslog messages to give
  untrue indications of the status of systems.  As an example, an
  attacker can stop a critical process on a machine, which could
  generate a notification of exit.  The attacker can subsequently
  generate a forged notification that the process had been restarted.
  The system administrators could accept that misinformation and not
  verify that the process had indeed not been restarted.






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5.2.  Message Observation

  This transport mapping does not provide confidentiality of the
  messages in transit.  If syslog messages are in clear text, this is
  how they will be transferred.  In most cases, passing clear-text,
  human-readable messages is a benefit to the administrators.
  Unfortunately, an attacker could also be able to observe the human-
  readable contents of syslog messages.  The attacker could then use
  the knowledge gained from these messages to compromise a machine.  It
  is RECOMMENDED that no sensitive information be transmitted via this
  transport mapping or that transmission of such information be
  restricted to properly secured networks.

5.3.  Replaying

  Message forgery and observation can be combined into a replay attack.
  An attacker could record a set of messages that indicate normal
  activity of a machine.  At a later time, an attacker could remove
  that machine from the network and replay the syslog messages with new
  time stamps.  The administrators could find nothing unusual in the
  received messages, and their receipt would falsely indicate normal
  activity of the machine.

5.4.  Unreliable Delivery

  As was previously discussed in Section 4, Reliability Considerations,
  the UDP transport is not reliable, and packets containing syslog
  message datagrams can be lost in transit without any notice.  There
  can be security consequences to the loss of one or more syslog
  messages.  Administrators could be unaware of a developing and
  potentially serious problem.  Messages could also be intercepted and
  discarded by an attacker as a way to hide unauthorized activities.

5.5.  Message Prioritization and Differentiation

  This transport mapping does not mandate prioritization of syslog
  messages either on the wire or when processed on the receiving host
  based on their severity.  Unless some prioritization is implemented
  by sender, receiver, and/or network, the security implication of such
  behavior is that the syslog receiver or network devices could get
  overwhelmed with low-severity messages and be forced to discard
  potentially high-severity messages.









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5.6.  Denial of Service

  An attacker could overwhelm a receiver by sending more messages to it
  than could be handled by the infrastructure or the device itself.
  Implementers SHOULD attempt to provide features that minimize this
  threat, such as optionally restricting reception of messages to a set
  of known source IP addresses.

6.  IANA Considerations

  This transport uses UDP port 514 for syslog, as recorded in the IANA
  port-numbers registry.

7.  Acknowledgements

  The author gratefully acknowledges the contributions of: Chris
  Lonvick, Rainer Gerhards, David Harrington, Andrew Ross, Albert
  Mietus, Bernie Volz, Mickael Graham, Greg Morris, Alexandra Fedorova,
  Devin Kowatch, Richard Graveman, and all others who have commented on
  the various versions of this proposal.

8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

  [1]   Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6, RFC 768, August
        1980.

  [2]   Gerhards, R., "The Syslog Protocol", RFC 5424, March 2009.

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

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

  [5]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
        Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [6]   Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", BCP 41, RFC 2914,
        September 2000.

  [7]   Miao, F. and Y. Ma, "TLS Transport Mapping for Syslog", RFC
        5425, March 2009.







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RFC 5426                  Syslog UDP Transport                March 2009


8.2.  Informative References

  [8]   Lonvick, C., "The BSD Syslog Protocol", RFC 3164, August 2001.

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

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

Author's Address

  Anton Okmianski
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  595 Burrard St., Suite 2123
  Vancouver, BC V7X 1J1
  Canada

  Phone: +1-978-936-1612
  EMail: [email protected]































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