Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        U. Herberg
Request for Comments: 6622               Fujitsu Laboratories of America
Category: Standards Track                                     T. Clausen
ISSN: 2070-1721                                 LIX, Ecole Polytechnique
                                                               May 2012


         Integrity Check Value and Timestamp TLV Definitions
                 for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANETs)

Abstract

  This document describes general and flexible TLVs for representing
  cryptographic Integrity Check Values (ICVs) (i.e., digital signatures
  or Message Authentication Codes (MACs)) as well as timestamps, using
  the generalized Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET) packet/message format
  defined in RFC 5444.  It defines two Packet TLVs, two Message TLVs,
  and two Address Block TLVs for affixing ICVs and timestamps to a
  packet, a message, and an address, respectively.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6622.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2012 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.



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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Terminology .....................................................3
  3. Applicability Statement .........................................3
  4. Security Architecture ...........................................4
  5. Overview and Functioning ........................................5
  6. General ICV TLV Structure .......................................6
  7. General Timestamp TLV Structure .................................6
  8. Packet TLVs .....................................................7
     8.1. Packet ICV TLV .............................................7
     8.2. Packet TIMESTAMP TLV .......................................7
  9. Message TLVs ....................................................8
     9.1. Message ICV TLV ............................................8
     9.2. Message TIMESTAMP TLV ......................................8
  10. Address Block TLVs .............................................8
     10.1. Address Block ICV TLV .....................................8
     10.2. Address Block TIMESTAMP TLV ...............................9
  11. ICV: Basic .....................................................9
  12. ICV: Cryptographic Function over a Hash Value ..................9
     12.1. General ICV TLV Structure ................................10
          12.1.1. Rationale .........................................11
     12.2. Considerations for Calculating the ICV ...................11
          12.2.1. Packet ICV TLV ....................................11
          12.2.2. Message ICV TLV ...................................11
          12.2.3. Address Block ICV TLV .............................11
     12.3. Example of a Message Including an ICV ....................12
  13. IANA Considerations ...........................................13
     13.1. Expert Review: Evaluation Guidelines .....................13
     13.2. Packet TLV Type Registrations ............................14
     13.3. Message TLV Type Registrations ...........................15
     13.4. Address Block TLV Type Registrations .....................16
     13.5. Hash Functions ...........................................17
     13.6. Cryptographic Functions ..................................18
  14. Security Considerations .......................................18
  15. Acknowledgements ..............................................19
  16. References ....................................................19
     16.1. Normative References .....................................19
     16.2. Informative References ...................................21












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1.  Introduction

  This document specifies

  o  Two TLVs for carrying Integrity Check Values (ICVs) and timestamps
     in packets, messages, and address blocks as defined by [RFC5444].

  o  A generic framework for ICVs, accounting (for Message TLVs) for
     mutable message header fields (<msg-hop-limit> and
     <msg-hop-count>), where these fields are present in messages.

  This document sets up IANA registries for recording code points for
  hash-function and ICV calculation, respectively.

  Moreover, in Section 12, this document defines the following:

  o  One common method for generating ICVs as a cryptographic function,
     calculated over the hash value of the content.

2.  Terminology

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
  [RFC2119].

  This document uses the terminology and notation defined in [RFC5444].
  In particular, the following TLV fields from [RFC5444] are used in
  this specification:

  <msg-hop-limit>  is the hop limit of a message, as specified in
     Section 5.2 of [RFC5444].

  <msg-hop-count>  is the hop count of a message, as specified in
     Section 5.2 of [RFC5444].

  <length>  is the length of a TLV in octets, as specified in
     Section 5.4.1 of [RFC5444].

3.  Applicability Statement

  MANET routing protocols using the format defined in [RFC5444] are
  accorded the ability to carry additional information in control
  messages and packets, through the inclusion of TLVs.  Information so
  included MAY be used by a MANET routing protocol, or by an extension
  of a MANET routing protocol, according to its specification.





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  This document specifies how to include an ICV for a packet, a
  message, and addresses in address blocks within a message, by way of
  such TLVs.  This document also specifies a) how to treat "mutable"
  fields, specifically the <msg-hop-count> and <msg-hop-limit> fields,
  if present in the message header when calculating ICVs, such that the
  resulting ICV can be correctly verified by any recipient, and b) how
  to include this ICV.

  This document describes a generic framework for creating ICVs, and
  how to include these ICVs in TLVs.  In Section 12, an example method
  for calculating such ICVs is given, using a cryptographic function
  over the hash value of the content.

4.  Security Architecture

  Basic MANET routing protocol specifications are often "oblivious to
  security"; however, they have a clause allowing a control message to
  be rejected as "badly formed" or "insecure" prior to the message
  being processed or forwarded.  MANET routing protocols such as the
  Neighborhood Discovery Protocol (NHDP) [RFC6130] and the Optimized
  Link State Routing Protocol version 2 [OLSRv2] recognize external
  reasons (such as failure to verify an ICV) for rejecting a message
  that would be considered "invalid for processing".  This architecture
  is a result of the observation that with respect to security in
  MANETs, "one size rarely fits all" and that MANET routing protocol
  deployment domains have varying security requirements ranging from
  "unbreakable" to "virtually none".  The virtue of this approach is
  that MANET routing protocol specifications (and implementations) can
  remain "generic", with extensions providing proper security
  mechanisms specific to a deployment domain.

  The MANET routing protocol "security architecture", in which this
  specification situates itself, can therefore be summarized as
  follows:

  o  Security-oblivious MANET routing protocol specifications, with a
     clause allowing an extension to reject a message (prior to
     processing/forwarding) as "badly formed" or "insecure".

  o  MANET routing protocol security extensions, rejecting messages as
     "badly formed" or "insecure", as appropriate for a given security
     requirement specific to a deployment domain.

  o  Code points and an exchange format for information, necessary for
     specification of such MANET routing protocol security extensions.






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  This document addresses the last of the issues listed above by
  specifying a common exchange format for cryptographic ICVs, making
  reservations from within the Packet TLV, Message TLV, and Address
  Block TLV registries of [RFC5444], to be used (and shared) among
  MANET routing protocol security extensions.

  For the specific decomposition of an ICV into a cryptographic
  function over a hash value (specified in Section 12), this document
  establishes two IANA registries for code points for hash functions
  and cryptographic functions adhering to [RFC5444].

  With respect to [RFC5444], this document is

  o  Intended to be used in the non-normative, but intended, mode of
     use described in Appendix B of [RFC5444].

  o  A specific example of the Security Considerations section of
     [RFC5444] (the authentication part).

5.  Overview and Functioning

  This document specifies a syntactical representation of security-
  related information for use with [RFC5444] addresses, messages, and
  packets, and also establishes IANA registrations of TLV types and
  type extension registries for these TLV types.

  Moreover, this document provides guidelines for how MANET routing
  protocols and MANET routing protocol extensions using this
  specification should treat ICV and Timestamp TLVs, and mutable fields
  in messages.  This specification does not represent a stand-alone
  protocol; MANET routing protocols and MANET routing protocol
  extensions, using this specification, MUST provide instructions as to
  how to handle packets, messages, and addresses with security
  information, associated as specified in this document.

  This document assigns TLV types from the registries defined for
  Packet, Message, and Address Block TLVs in [RFC5444].  When a TLV
  type is assigned from one of these registries, a registry for type
  extensions for that TLV type is created by IANA.  This document
  utilizes these type extension registries so created, in order to
  specify internal structure (and accompanying processing) of the
  <value> field of a TLV.

  For example, and as defined in this document, an ICV TLV with type
  extension = 0 specifies that the <value> field has no pre-defined
  internal structure but is simply a sequence of octets.  An ICV TLV
  with type extension = 1 specifies that the <value> field has a
  pre-defined internal structure and defines its interpretation.



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  (Specifically, the <value> field consists of a cryptographic
  operation over a hash value, with fields indicating which hash
  function and cryptographic operation have been used; this is
  specified in Section 12.)

  Other documents can request assignments for other type extensions; if
  they do so, they MUST specify their internal structure (if any) and
  interpretation.

6.  General ICV TLV Structure

  The value of the ICV TLV is

     <value> := <ICV-value>

  where

  <ICV-value>  is a field, of <length> octets, which contains the
     information to be interpreted by the ICV verification process, as
     specified by the type extension.

  Note that this does not stipulate how to calculate the <ICV-value>
  nor the internal structure thereof, if any; such information MUST be
  specified by way of the type extension for the ICV TLV type.  See
  Section 13.  This document specifies two such type extensions -- one
  for ICVs without pre-defined structures, and one for ICVs constructed
  by way of a cryptographic operation over a hash value.

7.  General Timestamp TLV Structure

  The value of the Timestamp TLV is

     <value> := <time-value>

  where

  <time-value>  is an unsigned integer field, of length <length>, which
     contains the timestamp.

     Note that this does not stipulate how to calculate the
     <time-value> nor the internal structure thereof, if any; such
     information MUST be specified by way of the type extension for the
     TIMESTAMP TLV type.  See Section 13.








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  A timestamp is essentially "freshness information".  As such, its
  setting and interpretation are to be determined by the MANET routing
  protocol, or MANET routing protocol extension, that uses the
  timestamp and can, for example, correspond to a UNIX timestamp, GPS
  timestamp, or a simple sequence number.

8.  Packet TLVs

  Two Packet TLVs are defined: one for including the cryptographic ICV
  of a packet and one for including the timestamp indicating the time
  at which the cryptographic ICV was calculated.

8.1.  Packet ICV TLV

  A Packet ICV TLV is an example of an ICV TLV as described in
  Section 6.

  The following considerations apply:

  o  Because packets as defined in [RFC5444] are never forwarded by
     routers, no special considerations are required regarding mutable
     fields (e.g., <msg-hop-count> and <msg-hop-limit>), if present,
     when calculating the ICV.

  o  Any Packet ICV TLVs already present in the Packet TLV block MUST
     be removed before calculating the ICV, and the Packet TLV block
     size MUST be recalculated accordingly.  Removed ICV TLVs MUST be
     restored after having calculated the ICV value.

  The rationale for removing any Packet ICV TLV already present prior
  to calculating the ICV is that several ICVs may be added to the same
  packet, e.g., using different ICV functions.

8.2.  Packet TIMESTAMP TLV

  A Packet TIMESTAMP TLV is an example of a Timestamp TLV as described
  in Section 7.  If a packet contains a TIMESTAMP TLV and an ICV TLV,
  the TIMESTAMP TLV SHOULD be added to the packet before any ICV TLV,
  in order that it be included in the calculation of the ICV.












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9.  Message TLVs

  Two Message TLVs are defined: one for including the cryptographic ICV
  of a message and one for including the timestamp indicating the time
  at which the cryptographic ICV was calculated.

9.1.  Message ICV TLV

  A Message ICV TLV is an example of an ICV TLV as described in
  Section 6.  When determining the <ICV-value> for a message, the
  following considerations MUST be applied:

  o  The fields <msg-hop-limit> and <msg-hop-count>, if present, MUST
     both be assumed to have the value 0 (zero) when calculating
     the ICV.

  o  Any Message ICV TLVs already present in the Message TLV block MUST
     be removed before calculating the ICV, and the message size as
     well as the Message TLV block size MUST be recalculated
     accordingly.  Removed ICV TLVs MUST be restored after having
     calculated the ICV value.

  The rationale for removing any Message ICV TLV already present prior
  to calculating the ICV is that several ICVs may be added to the same
  message, e.g., using different ICV functions.

9.2.  Message TIMESTAMP TLV

  A Message TIMESTAMP TLV is an example of a Timestamp TLV as described
  in Section 7.  If a message contains a TIMESTAMP TLV and an ICV TLV,
  the TIMESTAMP TLV SHOULD be added to the message before the ICV TLV,
  in order that it be included in the calculation of the ICV.

10.  Address Block TLVs

  Two Address Block TLVs are defined: one for associating a
  cryptographic ICV to an address and one for including the timestamp
  indicating the time at which the cryptographic ICV was calculated.

10.1.  Address Block ICV TLV

  An Address Block ICV TLV is an example of an ICV TLV as described in
  Section 6.  The ICV is calculated over the address, concatenated with
  any other values -- for example, any other Address Block TLV <value>
  fields -- associated with that address.  A MANET routing protocol or
  MANET routing protocol extension using Address Block ICV TLVs MUST
  specify how to include any such concatenated attribute of the address




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  in the verification process of the ICV.  When determining the
  <ICV-value> for an address, the following consideration MUST be
  applied:

  o  If other TLV values are concatenated with the address for
     calculating the ICV, these TLVs MUST NOT be Address Block ICV TLVs
     already associated with the address.

  The rationale for not concatenating the address with any ICV TLV
  values already associated with the address when calculating the ICV
  is that several ICVs may be added to the same address, e.g., using
  different ICV functions.

10.2.  Address Block TIMESTAMP TLV

  An Address Block TIMESTAMP TLV is an example of a Timestamp TLV as
  described in Section 7.  If both a TIMESTAMP TLV and an ICV TLV are
  associated with an address, the TIMESTAMP TLV <value> MUST be covered
  when calculating the value of the ICV to be contained in the ICV TLV
  value (i.e., concatenated with the associated address and any other
  values as described in Section 10.1).

11.  ICV: Basic

  The basic ICV, represented by way of an ICV TLV with type
  extension = 0, is a simple bit-field containing the cryptographic
  ICV.  This assumes that the mechanism stipulating how ICVs are
  calculated and verified is established outside of this specification,
  e.g., by way of administrative configuration or external out-of-band
  signaling.  Thus, the <ICV-value>, when using type extension = 0, is

     <ICV-value> := <ICV-data>

  where

  <ICV-data>  is an unsigned integer field, of length <length>, which
     contains the cryptographic ICV.

12.  ICV: Cryptographic Function over a Hash Value

  One common way of calculating an ICV is applying a cryptographic
  function over a hash value of the content.  This decomposition is
  specified in this section, using a type extension = 1 in the
  ICV TLVs.







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12.1.  General ICV TLV Structure

  The following data structure allows representation of a cryptographic
  ICV, including specification of the appropriate hash function and
  cryptographic function used for calculating the ICV:

                  <ICV-value> := <hash-function>
                                 <cryptographic-function>
                                 <key-id-length>
                                 <key-id>
                                 <ICV-data>

  where

  <hash-function>  is an 8-bit unsigned integer field specifying the
     hash function.

  <cryptographic-function>  is an 8-bit unsigned integer field
     specifying the cryptographic function.

  <key-id-length>  is an 8-bit unsigned integer field specifying the
     length of the <key-id> field in number of octets.  The value 0x00
     is reserved for using a pre-installed, shared key.

  <key-id>  is a field specifying the key identifier of the key that
     was used to calculate the ICV of the message, which allows unique
     identification of different keys with the same originator.  It is
     the responsibility of each key originator to make sure that
     actively used keys that it issues have distinct key identifiers.
     If <key-id-length> equals 0x00, the <key-id> field is not
     contained in the TLV, and a pre-installed, shared key is used.

  <ICV-data>  is an unsigned integer field, whose length is
     <length> - 3 - <key-id-length>, and which contains the
     cryptographic ICV.

  The version of this TLV, specified in this section, assumes that
  calculating the ICV can be decomposed into

     ICV-value = cryptographic-function(hash-function(content))

  The hash function and the cryptographic function correspond to the
  entries in two IANA registries, which are set up by this
  specification and are described in Section 13.







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12.1.1.  Rationale

  The rationale for separating the hash function and the cryptographic
  function into two octets instead of having all combinations in a
  single octet -- possibly as a TLV type extension -- is that adding
  further hash functions or cryptographic functions in the future may
  lead to a non-contiguous number space.

  The rationale for not including a field that lists parameters of the
  cryptographic ICV in the TLV is that, before being able to validate a
  cryptographic ICV, routers have to exchange or acquire keys (e.g.,
  public keys).  Any additional parameters can be provided together
  with the keys in that bootstrap process.  It is therefore not
  necessary, and would even entail an extra overhead, to transmit the
  parameters within every message.  One implicitly available parameter
  is the length of the ICV, which is <length> - 3 - <key-id-length>,
  and which depends on the choice of the cryptographic function.

12.2.  Considerations for Calculating the ICV

  The considerations listed in the following subsections MUST be
  applied when calculating the ICV for Packet, Message, and Address ICV
  TLVs, respectively.

12.2.1.  Packet ICV TLV

  When determining the <ICV-value> for a packet, the ICV is calculated
  over the fields <hash-function>, <cryptographic-function>,
  <key-id-length>, and -- if present -- <key-id> (in that order),
  concatenated with the entire packet, including the packet header, all
  Packet TLVs (other than Packet ICV TLVs), and all included Messages
  and their message headers, in accordance with Section 8.1.

12.2.2.  Message ICV TLV

  When determining the <ICV-value> for a message, the ICV is calculated
  over the fields <hash-function>, <cryptographic-function>,
  <key-id-length>, and -- if present -- <key-id> (in that order),
  concatenated with the entire message.  The considerations in
  Section 9.1 MUST be applied.

12.2.3.  Address Block ICV TLV

  When determining the <ICV-value> for an address, the ICV is
  calculated over the fields <hash-function>, <cryptographic-function>,
  <key-id-length>, and -- if present -- <key-id> (in that order),
  concatenated with the address, and concatenated with any other values
  -- for example, any other address block TLV <value> that is



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  associated with that address.  A MANET routing protocol or MANET
  routing protocol extension using Address Block ICV TLVs MUST specify
  how to include any such concatenated attribute of the address in the
  verification process of the ICV.  The considerations in Section 10.1
  MUST be applied.

12.3.  Example of a Message Including an ICV

  The sample message depicted in Figure 1 is derived from Appendix D of
  [RFC5444].  The message contains an ICV Message TLV, with the value
  representing an ICV that is 16 octets long of the whole message, and
  a key identifier that is 4 octets long.  The type extension of the
  Message TLV is 1, for the specific decomposition of an ICV into a
  cryptographic function over a hash value, as specified in Section 12.

     0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | PV=0 |  PF=8  |    Packet Sequence Number     | Message Type  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | MF=15 | MAL=3 |      Message Length = 44      | Msg. Orig Addr|
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |       Message Originator Address (cont)       |   Hop Limit   |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |   Hop Count   |    Message Sequence Number    | Msg. TLV Block|
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | Length = 27   |     ICV       |  MTLVF = 144  |  MTLVExt = 1  |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |Value Len = 23 |   Hash Func   |  Crypto Func  |Key ID length=4|
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          Key Identifier                       |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          ICV Value                            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          ICV Value (cont)                     |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          ICV Value (cont)                     |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                          ICV Value (cont)                     |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

                   Figure 1: Example Message with ICV









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RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.  IANA Considerations

  This specification defines the following:

  o  Two Packet TLV types, which have been allocated from the 0-223
     range of the "Packet TLV Types" repository of [RFC5444], as
     specified in Table 1.

  o  Two Message TLV types, which have been allocated from the 0-127
     range of the "Message TLV Types" repository of [RFC5444], as
     specified in Table 2.

  o  Two Address Block TLV types, which have been allocated from the
     0-127 range of the "Address Block TLV Types" repository of
     [RFC5444], as specified in Table 3.

  This specification created the following:

  o  A type extension registry for each of these TLV types with initial
     values as listed in Tables 1, 2, and 3.

  IANA has assigned the same numerical value to the Packet TLV, Message
  TLV, and Address Block TLV types with the same name.

  The following terms are used as defined in [BCP26]: "Namespace",
  "Registration", and "Designated Expert".

  The following policy is used as defined in [BCP26]: "Expert Review".

13.1.  Expert Review: Evaluation Guidelines

  For TLV type extensions registries where an Expert Review is
  required, the Designated Expert SHOULD take the same general
  recommendations into consideration as those specified by [RFC5444].

  For the Timestamp TLV, the same type extensions for all Packet,
  Message, and Address Block TLVs SHOULD be numbered identically.














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RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.2.  Packet TLV Type Registrations

  IANA has made allocations from the "Packet TLV Types" namespace of
  [RFC5444] for the Packet TLVs specified in Table 1.

  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    Name   | Type |    Type   |             Description            |
  |           |      | Extension |                                    |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    ICV    |   5  |     0     |           ICV of a packet          |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     | ICV, decomposed into cryptographic |
  |           |      |           |   function over a hash value, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in Section 12 of this  |
  |           |      |           |              document              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   2-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  | TIMESTAMP |   6  |     0     |   Unsigned timestamp of arbitrary  |
  |           |      |           |   length, given by the TLV Length  |
  |           |      |           | field.  The MANET routing protocol |
  |           |      |           |   has to define how to interpret   |
  |           |      |           |           this timestamp           |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     |    Unsigned 32-bit timestamp, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in [IEEE 1003.1-2008   |
  |           |      |           |              (POSIX)]              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     2     |  NTP timestamp format, as defined  |
  |           |      |           |            in [RFC5905]            |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     3     |    Signed timestamp of arbitrary   |
  |           |      |           | length with no constraints such as |
  |           |      |           |  monotonicity.  In particular, it  |
  |           |      |           |   may represent any random value   |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   4-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+

                        Table 1: Packet TLV Types







Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.3.  Message TLV Type Registrations

  IANA has made allocations from the "Message TLV Types" namespace of
  [RFC5444] for the Message TLVs specified in Table 2.

  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    Name   | Type |    Type   |             Description            |
  |           |      | Extension |                                    |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    ICV    |   5  |     0     |          ICV of a message          |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     | ICV, decomposed into cryptographic |
  |           |      |           |   function over a hash value, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in Section 12 of this  |
  |           |      |           |              document              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   2-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  | TIMESTAMP |   6  |     0     |   Unsigned timestamp of arbitrary  |
  |           |      |           |   length, given by the TLV Length  |
  |           |      |           |               field                |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     |    Unsigned 32-bit timestamp, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in [IEEE 1003.1-2008   |
  |           |      |           |              (POSIX)]              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     2     |  NTP timestamp format, as defined  |
  |           |      |           |            in [RFC5905]            |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     3     |    Signed timestamp of arbitrary   |
  |           |      |           | length with no constraints such as |
  |           |      |           |  monotonicity.  In particular, it  |
  |           |      |           |   may represent any random value   |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   4-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+

                       Table 2: Message TLV Types









Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.4.  Address Block TLV Type Registrations

  IANA has made allocations from the "Address Block TLV Types"
  namespace of [RFC5444] for the Packet TLVs specified in Table 3.

  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    Name   | Type |    Type   |             Description            |
  |           |      | Extension |                                    |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+
  |    ICV    |   5  |     0     |     ICV of an object (e.g., an     |
  |           |      |           |              address)              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     | ICV, decomposed into cryptographic |
  |           |      |           |   function over a hash value, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in Section 12 of this  |
  |           |      |           |              document              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   2-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  | TIMESTAMP |   6  |     0     |   Unsigned timestamp of arbitrary  |
  |           |      |           |   length, given by the TLV Length  |
  |           |      |           |                field               |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     1     |    Unsigned 32-bit timestamp, as   |
  |           |      |           |   specified in [IEEE 1003.1-2008   |
  |           |      |           |              (POSIX)]              |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     2     |  NTP timestamp format, as defined  |
  |           |      |           |            in [RFC5905]            |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |     3     |    Signed timestamp of arbitrary   |
  |           |      |           | length with no constraints such as |
  |           |      |           |  monotonicity.  In particular, it  |
  |           |      |           |   may represent any random value   |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |   4-251   |      Unassigned; Expert Review     |
  |           |      |           |                                    |
  |           |      |  252-255  |          Experimental Use          |
  +-----------+------+-----------+------------------------------------+

                    Table 3: Address Block TLV Types








Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.5.  Hash Functions

  IANA has created a new registry for hash functions that can be used
  when creating an ICV, as specified in Section 12 of this document.
  The initial assignments and allocation policies are specified in
  Table 4.

  +-------------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
  |     Hash    | Algorithm |               Description               |
  |   Function  |           |                                         |
  |    Value    |           |                                         |
  +-------------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
  |      0      |    none   | The "identity function": The hash value |
  |             |           |    of an object is the object itself    |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |      1      |    SHA1   |            [NIST-FIPS-180-2]            |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |      2      |   SHA224  |         [NIST-FIPS-180-2-change]        |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |      3      |   SHA256  |            [NIST-FIPS-180-2]            |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |      4      |   SHA384  |            [NIST-FIPS-180-2]            |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |      5      |   SHA512  |            [NIST-FIPS-180-2]            |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |    6-251    |           |        Unassigned; Expert Review        |
  |             |           |                                         |
  |   252-255   |           |             Experimental Use            |
  +-------------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+

                     Table 4: Hash-Function Registry




















Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


13.6.  Cryptographic Functions

  IANA has created a new registry for the cryptographic functions, as
  specified in Section 12 of this document.  Initial assignments and
  allocation policies are specified in Table 5.

  +----------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+
  |  Cryptographic | Algorithm |              Description             |
  | Function Value |           |                                      |
  +----------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+
  |        0       |    none   |  The "identity function": The value  |
  |                |           |   of an encrypted hash is the hash   |
  |                |           |                itself                |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        1       |    RSA    |               [RFC3447]              |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        2       |    DSA    |           [NIST-FIPS-186-3]          |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        3       |    HMAC   |               [RFC2104]              |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        4       |    3DES   |           [NIST-SP-800-67]           |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        5       |    AES    |            [NIST-FIPS-197]           |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |        6       |   ECDSA   |           [ANSI-X9-62-2005]          |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |      7-251     |           |       Unassigned; Expert Review      |
  |                |           |                                      |
  |     252-255    |           |           Experimental Use           |
  +----------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+

                Table 5: Cryptographic Function Registry

14.  Security Considerations

  This document does not specify a protocol.  It provides a syntactical
  component for cryptographic ICVs of messages and packets, as defined
  in [RFC5444].  It can be used to address security issues of a MANET
  routing protocol or MANET routing protocol extension.  As such, it
  has the same security considerations as [RFC5444].

  In addition, a MANET routing protocol or MANET routing protocol
  extension that uses this specification MUST specify how to use the
  framework, and the TLVs presented in this document.  In addition, the
  protection that the MANET routing protocol or MANET routing protocol
  extensions attain by using this framework MUST be described.





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RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


  As an example, a MANET routing protocol that uses this component to
  reject "badly formed" or "insecure" messages if a control message
  does not contain a valid ICV SHOULD indicate the security assumption
  that if the ICV is valid, the message is considered valid.  It also
  SHOULD indicate the security issues that are counteracted by this
  measure (e.g., link or identity spoofing) as well as the issues that
  are not counteracted (e.g., compromised keys).

15.  Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to thank Bo Berry (Cisco), Alan Cullen (BAE),
  Justin Dean (NRL), Christopher Dearlove (BAE), Paul Lambert
  (Marvell), Jerome Milan (Ecole Polytechnique), and Henning Rogge
  (FGAN) for their constructive comments on the document.

  The authors also appreciate the detailed reviews from the Area
  Directors, in particular Stewart Bryant (Cisco), Stephen Farrell
  (Trinity College Dublin), and Robert Sparks (Tekelec), as well as
  Donald Eastlake (Huawei) from the Security Directorate.

16.  References

16.1.  Normative References

  [ANSI-X9-62-2005]
              American National Standards Institute, "Public Key
              Cryptography for the Financial Services Industry: The
              Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA)",
              ANSI X9.62-2005, November 2005.

  [BCP26]     Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226,
              May 2008.

  [IEEE 1003.1-2008 (POSIX)]
              IEEE Computer Society, "1003.1-2008 Standard for
              Information Technology-Portable Operating System
              Interface (POSIX) Base Specifications, Issue 7",
              December 2008.

  [NIST-FIPS-180-2]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology,
              "Specifications for the Secure Hash Standard",
              FIPS 180-2, August 2002.







Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


  [NIST-FIPS-180-2-change]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Federal
              Information Processing Standards Publication 180-2
              (+ Change Notice to include SHA-224)", FIPS 180-2,
              August 2002, <http:// csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/
              fips180-2/fips180-2withchangenotice.pdf>.

  [NIST-FIPS-186-3]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Digital
              Signature Standard (DSS)", FIPS 186-3, June 2009.

  [NIST-FIPS-197]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology,
              "Specification for the Advanced Encryption Standard
              (AES)", FIPS 197, November 2001.

  [NIST-SP-800-67]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology,
              "Recommendation for the Triple Data Encryption Algorithm
              (TDEA) Block Cipher", Special Publication 800-67,
              May 2004.

  [RFC2104]   Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC:
              Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,
              February 1997.

  [RFC2119]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC3447]   Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography
              Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications
              Version 2.1", RFC 3447, February 2003.

  [RFC5444]   Clausen, T., Dearlove, C., Dean, J., and C. Adjih,
              "Generalized Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET) Packet/Message
              Format", RFC 5444, February 2009.

  [RFC5905]   Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,
              "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms
              Specification", RFC 5905, June 2010.











Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6622            ICV and Timestamp TLVs for MANETs           May 2012


16.2.  Informative References

  [OLSRv2]    Clausen, T., Dearlove, C., Jacquet, P., and U. Herberg,
              "The Optimized Link State Routing Protocol version 2",
              Work in Progress, March 2012.

  [RFC6130]   Clausen, T., Dearlove, C., and J. Dean, "Mobile Ad Hoc
              Network (MANET) Neighborhood Discovery Protocol (NHDP)",
              RFC 6130, April 2011.

Authors' Addresses

  Ulrich Herberg
  Fujitsu Laboratories of America
  1240 E. Arques Ave.
  Sunnyvale, CA  94085
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.herberg.name/


  Thomas Heide Clausen
  LIX, Ecole Polytechnique
  91128 Palaiseau Cedex
  France

  Phone: +33 6 6058 9349
  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.thomasclausen.org/





















Herberg & Clausen            Standards Track                   [Page 21]