Network Working Group                                            S. Kent
Request for Comments: 4301                                        K. Seo
Obsoletes: 2401                                         BBN Technologies
Category: Standards Track                                  December 2005


           Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol

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.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

  This document describes an updated version of the "Security
  Architecture for IP", which is designed to provide security services
  for traffic at the IP layer.  This document obsoletes RFC 2401
  (November 1998).

Dedication

  This document is dedicated to the memory of Charlie Lynn, a long-time
  senior colleague at BBN, who made very significant contributions to
  the IPsec documents.



















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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................4
     1.1. Summary of Contents of Document ............................4
     1.2. Audience ...................................................4
     1.3. Related Documents ..........................................5
  2. Design Objectives ...............................................5
     2.1. Goals/Objectives/Requirements/Problem Description ..........5
     2.2. Caveats and Assumptions ....................................6
  3. System Overview .................................................7
     3.1. What IPsec Does ............................................7
     3.2. How IPsec Works ............................................9
     3.3. Where IPsec Can Be Implemented ............................10
  4. Security Associations ..........................................11
     4.1. Definition and Scope ......................................12
     4.2. SA Functionality ..........................................16
     4.3. Combining SAs .............................................17
     4.4. Major IPsec Databases .....................................18
          4.4.1. The Security Policy Database (SPD) .................19
                 4.4.1.1. Selectors .................................26
                 4.4.1.2. Structure of an SPD Entry .................30
                 4.4.1.3. More Regarding Fields Associated
                          with Next Layer Protocols .................32
          4.4.2. Security Association Database (SAD) ................34
                 4.4.2.1. Data Items in the SAD .....................36
                 4.4.2.2. Relationship between SPD, PFP
                          flag, packet, and SAD .....................38
          4.4.3. Peer Authorization Database (PAD) ..................43
                 4.4.3.1. PAD Entry IDs and Matching Rules ..........44
                 4.4.3.2. IKE Peer Authentication Data ..............45
                 4.4.3.3. Child SA Authorization Data ...............46
                 4.4.3.4. How the PAD Is Used .......................46
     4.5. SA and Key Management .....................................47
          4.5.1. Manual Techniques ..................................48
          4.5.2. Automated SA and Key Management ....................48
          4.5.3. Locating a Security Gateway ........................49
     4.6. SAs and Multicast .........................................50
  5. IP Traffic Processing ..........................................50
     5.1. Outbound IP Traffic Processing
          (protected-to-unprotected) ................................52
          5.1.1. Handling an Outbound Packet That Must Be
                 Discarded ..........................................54
          5.1.2. Header Construction for Tunnel Mode ................55
                 5.1.2.1. IPv4: Header Construction for
                          Tunnel Mode ...............................57
                 5.1.2.2. IPv6: Header Construction for
                          Tunnel Mode ...............................59
     5.2. Processing Inbound IP Traffic (unprotected-to-protected) ..59



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  6. ICMP Processing ................................................63
     6.1. Processing ICMP Error Messages Directed to an
          IPsec Implementation ......................................63
          6.1.1. ICMP Error Messages Received on the
                 Unprotected Side of the Boundary ...................63
          6.1.2. ICMP Error Messages Received on the
                 Protected Side of the Boundary .....................64
     6.2. Processing Protected, Transit ICMP Error Messages .........64
  7. Handling Fragments (on the protected side of the IPsec
     boundary) ......................................................66
     7.1. Tunnel Mode SAs that Carry Initial and Non-Initial
          Fragments .................................................67
     7.2. Separate Tunnel Mode SAs for Non-Initial Fragments ........67
     7.3. Stateful Fragment Checking ................................68
     7.4. BYPASS/DISCARD Traffic ....................................69
  8. Path MTU/DF Processing .........................................69
     8.1. DF Bit ....................................................69
     8.2. Path MTU (PMTU) Discovery .................................70
          8.2.1. Propagation of PMTU ................................70
          8.2.2. PMTU Aging .........................................71
  9. Auditing .......................................................71
  10. Conformance Requirements ......................................71
  11. Security Considerations .......................................72
  12. IANA Considerations ...........................................72
  13. Differences from RFC 2401 .....................................72
  14. Acknowledgements ..............................................75
  Appendix A: Glossary ..............................................76
  Appendix B: Decorrelation .........................................79
     B.1. Decorrelation Algorithm ...................................79
  Appendix C: ASN.1 for an SPD Entry ................................82
  Appendix D: Fragment Handling Rationale ...........................88
     D.1. Transport Mode and Fragments ..............................88
     D.2. Tunnel Mode and Fragments .................................89
     D.3. The Problem of Non-Initial Fragments ......................90
     D.4. BYPASS/DISCARD Traffic ....................................93
     D.5. Just say no to ports? .....................................94
     D.6. Other Suggested Solutions..................................94
     D.7. Consistency................................................95
     D.8. Conclusions................................................95
  Appendix E: Example of Supporting Nested SAs via SPD and
              Forwarding Table Entries...............................96
  References.........................................................98
     Normative References............................................98
     Informative References..........................................99







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1.  Introduction

1.1.  Summary of Contents of Document

  This document specifies the base architecture for IPsec-compliant
  systems.  It describes how to provide a set of security services for
  traffic at the IP layer, in both the IPv4 [Pos81a] and IPv6 [DH98]
  environments.  This document describes the requirements for systems
  that implement IPsec, the fundamental elements of such systems, and
  how the elements fit together and fit into the IP environment.  It
  also describes the security services offered by the IPsec protocols,
  and how these services can be employed in the IP environment.  This
  document does not address all aspects of the IPsec architecture.
  Other documents address additional architectural details in
  specialized environments, e.g., use of IPsec in Network Address
  Translation (NAT) environments and more comprehensive support for IP
  multicast.  The fundamental components of the IPsec security
  architecture are discussed in terms of their underlying, required
  functionality.  Additional RFCs (see Section 1.3 for pointers to
  other documents) define the protocols in (a), (c), and (d).

       a. Security Protocols -- Authentication Header (AH) and
          Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)
       b. Security Associations -- what they are and how they work,
          how they are managed, associated processing
       c. Key Management -- manual and automated (The Internet Key
          Exchange (IKE))
       d. Cryptographic algorithms for authentication and encryption

  This document is not a Security Architecture for the Internet; it
  addresses security only at the IP layer, provided through the use of
  a combination of cryptographic and protocol security mechanisms.

  The spelling "IPsec" is preferred and used throughout this and all
  related IPsec standards.  All other capitalizations of IPsec (e.g.,
  IPSEC, IPSec, ipsec) are deprecated.  However, any capitalization of
  the sequence of letters "IPsec" should be understood to refer to the
  IPsec protocols.

  The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD,
  SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL, when they appear in this
  document, are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [Bra97].

1.2.  Audience

  The target audience for this document is primarily individuals who
  implement this IP security technology or who architect systems that
  will use this technology.  Technically adept users of this technology



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  (end users or system administrators) also are part of the target
  audience.  A glossary is provided in Appendix A to help fill in gaps
  in background/vocabulary.  This document assumes that the reader is
  familiar with the Internet Protocol (IP), related networking
  technology, and general information system security terms and
  concepts.

1.3.  Related Documents

  As mentioned above, other documents provide detailed definitions of
  some of the components of IPsec and of their interrelationship.  They
  include RFCs on the following topics:

       a. security protocols -- RFCs describing the Authentication
          Header (AH) [Ken05b] and Encapsulating Security Payload
          (ESP) [Ken05a] protocols.
       b. cryptographic algorithms for integrity and encryption -- one
          RFC that defines the mandatory, default algorithms for use
          with AH and ESP [Eas05], a similar RFC that defines the
          mandatory algorithms for use with IKEv2 [Sch05] plus a
          separate RFC for each cryptographic algorithm.
       c. automatic key management -- RFCs on "The Internet Key
          Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol" [Kau05] and "Cryptographic
          Algorithms for Use in the Internet Key Exchange Version 2
          (IKEv2)" [Sch05].

2.  Design Objectives

2.1.  Goals/Objectives/Requirements/Problem Description

  IPsec is designed to provide interoperable, high quality,
  cryptographically-based security for IPv4 and IPv6.  The set of
  security services offered includes access control, connectionless
  integrity, data origin authentication, detection and rejection of
  replays (a form of partial sequence integrity), confidentiality (via
  encryption), and limited traffic flow confidentiality.  These
  services are provided at the IP layer, offering protection in a
  standard fashion for all protocols that may be carried over IP
  (including IP itself).

  IPsec includes a specification for minimal firewall functionality,
  since that is an essential aspect of access control at the IP layer.
  Implementations are free to provide more sophisticated firewall
  mechanisms, and to implement the IPsec-mandated functionality using
  those more sophisticated mechanisms. (Note that interoperability may
  suffer if additional firewall constraints on traffic flows are
  imposed by an IPsec implementation but cannot be negotiated based on
  the traffic selector features defined in this document and negotiated



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  via IKEv2.)  The IPsec firewall function makes use of the
  cryptographically-enforced authentication and integrity provided for
  all IPsec traffic to offer better access control than could be
  obtained through use of a firewall (one not privy to IPsec internal
  parameters) plus separate cryptographic protection.

  Most of the security services are provided through use of two traffic
  security protocols, the Authentication Header (AH) and the
  Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP), and through the use of
  cryptographic key management procedures and protocols.  The set of
  IPsec protocols employed in a context, and the ways in which they are
  employed, will be determined by the users/administrators in that
  context.  It is the goal of the IPsec architecture to ensure that
  compliant implementations include the services and management
  interfaces needed to meet the security requirements of a broad user
  population.

  When IPsec is correctly implemented and deployed, it ought not
  adversely affect users, hosts, and other Internet components that do
  not employ IPsec for traffic protection.  IPsec security protocols
  (AH and ESP, and to a lesser extent, IKE) are designed to be
  cryptographic algorithm independent.  This modularity permits
  selection of different sets of cryptographic algorithms as
  appropriate, without affecting the other parts of the implementation.
  For example, different user communities may select different sets of
  cryptographic algorithms (creating cryptographically-enforced
  cliques) if required.

  To facilitate interoperability in the global Internet, a set of
  default cryptographic algorithms for use with AH and ESP is specified
  in [Eas05] and a set of mandatory-to-implement algorithms for IKEv2
  is specified in [Sch05].  [Eas05] and [Sch05] will be periodically
  updated to keep pace with computational and cryptologic advances.  By
  specifying these algorithms in documents that are separate from the
  AH, ESP, and IKEv2 specifications, these algorithms can be updated or
  replaced without affecting the standardization progress of the rest
  of the IPsec document suite.  The use of these cryptographic
  algorithms, in conjunction with IPsec traffic protection and key
  management protocols, is intended to permit system and application
  developers to deploy high quality, Internet-layer, cryptographic
  security technology.

2.2.  Caveats and Assumptions

  The suite of IPsec protocols and associated default cryptographic
  algorithms are designed to provide high quality security for Internet
  traffic.  However, the security offered by use of these protocols
  ultimately depends on the quality of their implementation, which is



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  outside the scope of this set of standards.  Moreover, the security
  of a computer system or network is a function of many factors,
  including personnel, physical, procedural, compromising emanations,
  and computer security practices.  Thus, IPsec is only one part of an
  overall system security architecture.

  Finally, the security afforded by the use of IPsec is critically
  dependent on many aspects of the operating environment in which the
  IPsec implementation executes.  For example, defects in OS security,
  poor quality of random number sources, sloppy system management
  protocols and practices, etc., can all degrade the security provided
  by IPsec.  As above, none of these environmental attributes are
  within the scope of this or other IPsec standards.

3.  System Overview

  This section provides a high level description of how IPsec works,
  the components of the system, and how they fit together to provide
  the security services noted above.  The goal of this description is
  to enable the reader to "picture" the overall process/system, see how
  it fits into the IP environment, and to provide context for later
  sections of this document, which describe each of the components in
  more detail.

  An IPsec implementation operates in a host, as a security gateway
  (SG), or as an independent device, affording protection to IP
  traffic. (A security gateway is an intermediate system implementing
  IPsec, e.g., a firewall or router that has been IPsec-enabled.) More
  detail on these classes of implementations is provided later, in
  Section 3.3. The protection offered by IPsec is based on requirements
  defined by a Security Policy Database (SPD) established and
  maintained by a user or system administrator, or by an application
  operating within constraints established by either of the above.  In
  general, packets are selected for one of three processing actions
  based on IP and next layer header information ("Selectors", Section
  4.4.1.1) matched against entries in the SPD.  Each packet is either
  PROTECTed using IPsec security services, DISCARDed, or allowed to
  BYPASS IPsec protection, based on the applicable SPD policies
  identified by the Selectors.

3.1.  What IPsec Does

  IPsec creates a boundary between unprotected and protected
  interfaces, for a host or a network (see Figure 1 below).  Traffic
  traversing the boundary is subject to the access controls specified
  by the user or administrator responsible for the IPsec configuration.
  These controls indicate whether packets cross the boundary unimpeded,
  are afforded security services via AH or ESP, or are discarded.



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  IPsec security services are offered at the IP layer through selection
  of appropriate security protocols, cryptographic algorithms, and
  cryptographic keys.  IPsec can be used to protect one or more "paths"
  (a) between a pair of hosts, (b) between a pair of security gateways,
  or (c) between a security gateway and a host.  A compliant host
  implementation MUST support (a) and (c) and a compliant security
  gateway must support all three of these forms of connectivity, since
  under certain circumstances a security gateway acts as a host.

                       Unprotected
                        ^       ^
                        |       |
          +-------------|-------|-------+
          | +-------+   |       |       |
          | |Discard|<--|       V       |
          | +-------+   |B  +--------+  |
        ................|y..| AH/ESP |..... IPsec Boundary
          |   +---+     |p  +--------+  |
          |   |IKE|<----|a      ^       |
          |   +---+     |s      |       |
          | +-------+   |s      |       |
          | |Discard|<--|       |       |
          | +-------+   |       |       |
          +-------------|-------|-------+
                        |       |
                        V       V
                        Protected

           Figure 1.  Top Level IPsec Processing Model

  In this diagram, "unprotected" refers to an interface that might also
  be described as "black" or "ciphertext".  Here, "protected" refers to
  an interface that might also be described as "red" or "plaintext".
  The protected interface noted above may be internal, e.g., in a host
  implementation of IPsec, the protected interface may link to a socket
  layer interface presented by the OS.  In this document, the term
  "inbound" refers to traffic entering an IPsec implementation via the
  unprotected interface or emitted by the implementation on the
  unprotected side of the boundary and directed towards the protected
  interface.  The term "outbound" refers to traffic entering the
  implementation via the protected interface, or emitted by the
  implementation on the protected side of the boundary and directed
  toward the unprotected interface.  An IPsec implementation may
  support more than one interface on either or both sides of the
  boundary.






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  Note the facilities for discarding traffic on either side of the
  IPsec boundary, the BYPASS facility that allows traffic to transit
  the boundary without cryptographic protection, and the reference to
  IKE as a protected-side key and security management function.

  IPsec optionally supports negotiation of IP compression [SMPT01],
  motivated in part by the observation that when encryption is employed
  within IPsec, it prevents effective compression by lower protocol
  layers.

3.2.  How IPsec Works

  IPsec uses two protocols to provide traffic security services --
  Authentication Header (AH) and Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP).
  Both protocols are described in detail in their respective RFCs
  [Ken05b, Ken05a].  IPsec implementations MUST support ESP and MAY
  support AH. (Support for AH has been downgraded to MAY because
  experience has shown that there are very few contexts in which ESP
  cannot provide the requisite security services.  Note that ESP can be
  used to provide only integrity, without confidentiality, making it
  comparable to AH in most contexts.)

   o The IP Authentication Header (AH) [Ken05b] offers integrity and
     data origin authentication, with optional (at the discretion of
     the receiver) anti-replay features.

   o The Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) protocol [Ken05a] offers
     the same set of services, and also offers confidentiality.  Use of
     ESP to provide confidentiality without integrity is NOT
     RECOMMENDED.  When ESP is used with confidentiality enabled, there
     are provisions for limited traffic flow confidentiality, i.e.,
     provisions for concealing packet length, and for facilitating
     efficient generation and discard of dummy packets.  This
     capability is likely to be effective primarily in virtual private
     network (VPN) and overlay network contexts.

   o Both AH and ESP offer access control, enforced through the
     distribution of cryptographic keys and the management of traffic
     flows as dictated by the Security Policy Database (SPD, Section
     4.4.1).

  These protocols may be applied individually or in combination with
  each other to provide IPv4 and IPv6 security services.  However, most
  security requirements can be met through the use of ESP by itself.
  Each protocol supports two modes of use: transport mode and tunnel
  mode.  In transport mode, AH and ESP provide protection primarily for





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  next layer protocols; in tunnel mode, AH and ESP are applied to
  tunneled IP packets.  The differences between the two modes are
  discussed in Section 4.1.

  IPsec allows the user (or system administrator) to control the
  granularity at which a security service is offered.  For example, one
  can create a single encrypted tunnel to carry all the traffic between
  two security gateways, or a separate encrypted tunnel can be created
  for each TCP connection between each pair of hosts communicating
  across these gateways.  IPsec, through the SPD management paradigm,
  incorporates facilities for specifying:

   o which security protocol (AH or ESP) to employ, the mode (transport
     or tunnel), security service options, what cryptographic
     algorithms to use, and in what combinations to use the specified
     protocols and services, and

   o the granularity at which protection should be applied.

  Because most of the security services provided by IPsec require the
  use of cryptographic keys, IPsec relies on a separate set of
  mechanisms for putting these keys in place.  This document requires
  support for both manual and automated distribution of keys.  It
  specifies a specific public-key based approach (IKEv2 [Kau05]) for
  automated key management, but other automated key distribution
  techniques MAY be used.

  Note: This document mandates support for several features for which
  support is available in IKEv2 but not in IKEv1, e.g., negotiation of
  an SA representing ranges of local and remote ports or negotiation of
  multiple SAs with the same selectors.  Therefore, this document
  assumes use of IKEv2 or a key and security association management
  system with comparable features.

3.3.  Where IPsec Can Be Implemented

  There are many ways in which IPsec may be implemented in a host, or
  in conjunction with a router or firewall to create a security
  gateway, or as an independent security device.

  a. IPsec may be integrated into the native IP stack.  This requires
     access to the IP source code and is applicable to both hosts and
     security gateways, although native host implementations benefit
     the most from this strategy, as explained later (Section 4.4.1,
     paragraph 6; Section 4.4.1.1, last paragraph).






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  b. In a "bump-in-the-stack" (BITS) implementation, IPsec is
     implemented "underneath" an existing implementation of an IP
     protocol stack, between the native IP and the local network
     drivers.  Source code access for the IP stack is not required in
     this context, making this implementation approach appropriate for
     use with legacy systems.  This approach, when it is adopted, is
     usually employed in hosts.

  c. The use of a dedicated, inline security protocol processor is a
     common design feature of systems used by the military, and of some
     commercial systems as well.  It is sometimes referred to as a
     "bump-in-the-wire" (BITW) implementation.  Such implementations
     may be designed to serve either a host or a gateway.  Usually, the
     BITW device is itself IP addressable.  When supporting a single
     host, it may be quite analogous to a BITS implementation, but in
     supporting a router or firewall, it must operate like a security
     gateway.

  This document often talks in terms of use of IPsec by a host or a
  security gateway, without regard to whether the implementation is
  native, BITS, or BITW.  When the distinctions among these
  implementation options are significant, the document makes reference
  to specific implementation approaches.

  A host implementation of IPsec may appear in devices that might not
  be viewed as "hosts".  For example, a router might employ IPsec to
  protect routing protocols (e.g., BGP) and management functions (e.g.,
  Telnet), without affecting subscriber traffic traversing the router.
  A security gateway might employ separate IPsec implementations to
  protect its management traffic and subscriber traffic.  The
  architecture described in this document is very flexible.  For
  example, a computer with a full-featured, compliant, native OS IPsec
  implementation should be capable of being configured to protect
  resident (host) applications and to provide security gateway
  protection for traffic traversing the computer.  Such configuration
  would make use of the forwarding tables and the SPD selection
  function described in Sections 5.1 and 5.2.

4.  Security Associations

  This section defines Security Association management requirements for
  all IPv6 implementations and for those IPv4 implementations that
  implement AH, ESP, or both AH and ESP.  The concept of a "Security
  Association" (SA) is fundamental to IPsec.  Both AH and ESP make use
  of SAs, and a major function of IKE is the establishment and
  maintenance of SAs.  All implementations of AH or ESP MUST support
  the concept of an SA as described below.  The remainder of this




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  section describes various aspects of SA management, defining required
  characteristics for SA policy management and SA management
  techniques.

4.1.  Definition and Scope

  An SA is a simplex "connection" that affords security services to the
  traffic carried by it.  Security services are afforded to an SA by
  the use of AH, or ESP, but not both.  If both AH and ESP protection
  are applied to a traffic stream, then two SAs must be created and
  coordinated to effect protection through iterated application of the
  security protocols.  To secure typical, bi-directional communication
  between two IPsec-enabled systems, a pair of SAs (one in each
  direction) is required.  IKE explicitly creates SA pairs in
  recognition of this common usage requirement.

  For an SA used to carry unicast traffic, the Security Parameters
  Index (SPI) by itself suffices to specify an SA.  (For information on
  the SPI, see Appendix A and the AH and ESP specifications [Ken05b,
  Ken05a].)  However, as a local matter, an implementation may choose
  to use the SPI in conjunction with the IPsec protocol type (AH or
  ESP) for SA identification.  If an IPsec implementation supports
  multicast, then it MUST support multicast SAs using the algorithm
  below for mapping inbound IPsec datagrams to SAs.  Implementations
  that support only unicast traffic need not implement this de-
  multiplexing algorithm.

  In many secure multicast architectures, e.g., [RFC3740], a central
  Group Controller/Key Server unilaterally assigns the Group Security
  Association's (GSA's) SPI.  This SPI assignment is not negotiated or
  coordinated with the key management (e.g., IKE) subsystems that
  reside in the individual end systems that constitute the group.
  Consequently, it is possible that a GSA and a unicast SA can
  simultaneously use the same SPI.  A multicast-capable IPsec
  implementation MUST correctly de-multiplex inbound traffic even in
  the context of SPI collisions.

  Each entry in the SA Database (SAD) (Section 4.4.2) must indicate
  whether the SA lookup makes use of the destination IP address, or the
  destination and source IP addresses, in addition to the SPI.  For
  multicast SAs, the protocol field is not employed for SA lookups.
  For each inbound, IPsec-protected packet, an implementation must
  conduct its search of the SAD such that it finds the entry that
  matches the "longest" SA identifier.  In this context, if two or more
  SAD entries match based on the SPI value, then the entry that also
  matches based on destination address, or destination and source
  address (as indicated in the SAD entry) is the "longest" match.  This
  implies a logical ordering of the SAD search as follows:



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     1. Search the SAD for a match on the combination of SPI,
        destination address, and source address.  If an SAD entry
        matches, then process the inbound packet with that
        matching SAD entry.  Otherwise, proceed to step 2.

     2. Search the SAD for a match on both SPI and destination address.
        If the SAD entry matches, then process the inbound packet
        with that matching SAD entry.  Otherwise, proceed to step 3.

     3. Search the SAD for a match on only SPI if the receiver has
        chosen to maintain a single SPI space for AH and ESP, and on
        both SPI and protocol, otherwise.  If an SAD entry matches,
        then process the inbound packet with that matching SAD entry.
        Otherwise, discard the packet and log an auditable event.

  In practice, an implementation may choose any method (or none at all)
  to accelerate this search, although its externally visible behavior
  MUST be functionally equivalent to having searched the SAD in the
  above order.  For example, a software-based implementation could
  index into a hash table by the SPI.  The SAD entries in each hash
  table bucket's linked list could be kept sorted to have those SAD
  entries with the longest SA identifiers first in that linked list.
  Those SAD entries having the shortest SA identifiers could be sorted
  so that they are the last entries in the linked list.  A
  hardware-based implementation may be able to effect the longest match
  search intrinsically, using commonly available Ternary
  Content-Addressable Memory (TCAM) features.

  The indication of whether source and destination address matching is
  required to map inbound IPsec traffic to SAs MUST be set either as a
  side effect of manual SA configuration or via negotiation using an SA
  management protocol, e.g., IKE or Group Domain of Interpretation
  (GDOI) [RFC3547].  Typically, Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) [HC03]
  groups use a 3-tuple SA identifier composed of an SPI, a destination
  multicast address, and source address.  An Any-Source Multicast group
  SA requires only an SPI and a destination multicast address as an
  identifier.

  If different classes of traffic (distinguished by Differentiated
  Services Code Point (DSCP) bits [NiBlBaBL98], [Gro02]) are sent on
  the same SA, and if the receiver is employing the optional
  anti-replay feature available in both AH and ESP, this could result
  in inappropriate discarding of lower priority packets due to the
  windowing mechanism used by this feature.  Therefore, a sender SHOULD
  put traffic of different classes, but with the same selector values,
  on different SAs to support Quality of Service (QoS) appropriately.
  To permit this, the IPsec implementation MUST permit establishment
  and maintenance of multiple SAs between a given sender and receiver,



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  with the same selectors.  Distribution of traffic among these
  parallel SAs to support QoS is locally determined by the sender and
  is not negotiated by IKE.  The receiver MUST process the packets from
  the different SAs without prejudice.  These requirements apply to
  both transport and tunnel mode SAs.  In the case of tunnel mode SAs,
  the DSCP values in question appear in the inner IP header.  In
  transport mode, the DSCP value might change en route, but this should
  not cause problems with respect to IPsec processing since the value
  is not employed for SA selection and MUST NOT be checked as part of
  SA/packet validation.  However, if significant re-ordering of packets
  occurs in an SA, e.g., as a result of changes to DSCP values en
  route, this may trigger packet discarding by a receiver due to
  application of the anti-replay mechanism.

  DISCUSSION: Although the DSCP [NiBlBaBL98, Gro02] and Explicit
  Congestion Notification (ECN) [RaFlBl01] fields are not "selectors",
  as that term in used in this architecture, the sender will need a
  mechanism to direct packets with a given (set of) DSCP values to the
  appropriate SA.  This mechanism might be termed a "classifier".

  As noted above, two types of SAs are defined: transport mode and
  tunnel mode.  IKE creates pairs of SAs, so for simplicity, we choose
  to require that both SAs in a pair be of the same mode, transport or
  tunnel.

  A transport mode SA is an SA typically employed between a pair of
  hosts to provide end-to-end security services.  When security is
  desired between two intermediate systems along a path (vs. end-to-end
  use of IPsec), transport mode MAY be used between security gateways
  or between a security gateway and a host.  In the case where
  transport mode is used between security gateways or between a
  security gateway and a host, transport mode may be used to support
  in-IP tunneling (e.g., IP-in-IP [Per96] or Generic Routing
  Encapsulation (GRE) tunneling [FaLiHaMeTr00] or dynamic routing
  [ToEgWa04]) over transport mode SAs.  To clarify, the use of
  transport mode by an intermediate system (e.g., a security gateway)
  is permitted only when applied to packets whose source address (for
  outbound packets) or destination address (for inbound packets) is an
  address belonging to the intermediate system itself.  The access
  control functions that are an important part of IPsec are
  significantly limited in this context, as they cannot be applied to
  the end-to-end headers of the packets that traverse a transport mode
  SA used in this fashion.  Thus, this way of using transport mode
  should be evaluated carefully before being employed in a specific
  context.






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  In IPv4, a transport mode security protocol header appears
  immediately after the IP header and any options, and before any next
  layer protocols (e.g., TCP or UDP).  In IPv6, the security protocol
  header appears after the base IP header and selected extension
  headers, but may appear before or after destination options; it MUST
  appear before next layer protocols (e.g., TCP, UDP, Stream Control
  Transmission Protocol (SCTP)).  In the case of ESP, a transport mode
  SA provides security services only for these next layer protocols,
  not for the IP header or any extension headers preceding the ESP
  header.  In the case of AH, the protection is also extended to
  selected portions of the IP header preceding it, selected portions of
  extension headers, and selected options (contained in the IPv4
  header, IPv6 Hop-by-Hop extension header, or IPv6 Destination
  extension headers).  For more details on the coverage afforded by AH,
  see the AH specification [Ken05b].

  A tunnel mode SA is essentially an SA applied to an IP tunnel, with
  the access controls applied to the headers of the traffic inside the
  tunnel.  Two hosts MAY establish a tunnel mode SA between themselves.
  Aside from the two exceptions below, whenever either end of a
  security association is a security gateway, the SA MUST be tunnel
  mode.  Thus, an SA between two security gateways is typically a
  tunnel mode SA, as is an SA between a host and a security gateway.
  The two exceptions are as follows.

   o Where traffic is destined for a security gateway, e.g., Simple
     Network Management Protocol (SNMP) commands, the security gateway
     is acting as a host and transport mode is allowed.  In this case,
     the SA terminates at a host (management) function within a
     security gateway and thus merits different treatment.

   o As noted above, security gateways MAY support a transport mode SA
     to provide security for IP traffic between two intermediate
     systems along a path, e.g., between a host and a security gateway
     or between two security gateways.

  Several concerns motivate the use of tunnel mode for an SA involving
  a security gateway.  For example, if there are multiple paths (e.g.,
  via different security gateways) to the same destination behind a
  security gateway, it is important that an IPsec packet be sent to the
  security gateway with which the SA was negotiated.  Similarly, a
  packet that might be fragmented en route must have all the fragments
  delivered to the same IPsec instance for reassembly prior to
  cryptographic processing.  Also, when a fragment is processed by
  IPsec and transmitted, then fragmented en route, it is critical that
  there be inner and outer headers to retain the fragmentation state
  data for the pre- and post-IPsec packet formats.  Hence there are
  several reasons for employing tunnel mode when either end of an SA is



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  a security gateway. (Use of an IP-in-IP tunnel in conjunction with
  transport mode can also address these fragmentation issues.  However,
  this configuration limits the ability of IPsec to enforce access
  control policies on traffic.)

  Note: AH and ESP cannot be applied using transport mode to IPv4
  packets that are fragments.  Only tunnel mode can be employed in such
  cases.  For IPv6, it would be feasible to carry a plaintext fragment
  on a transport mode SA; however, for simplicity, this restriction
  also applies to IPv6 packets.  See Section 7 for more details on
  handling plaintext fragments on the protected side of the IPsec
  barrier.

  For a tunnel mode SA, there is an "outer" IP header that specifies
  the IPsec processing source and destination, plus an "inner" IP
  header that specifies the (apparently) ultimate source and
  destination for the packet.  The security protocol header appears
  after the outer IP header, and before the inner IP header.  If AH is
  employed in tunnel mode, portions of the outer IP header are afforded
  protection (as above), as well as all of the tunneled IP packet
  (i.e., all of the inner IP header is protected, as well as next layer
  protocols).  If ESP is employed, the protection is afforded only to
  the tunneled packet, not to the outer header.

  In summary,

  a) A host implementation of IPsec MUST support both transport and
     tunnel mode.  This is true for native, BITS, and BITW
     implementations for hosts.

  b) A security gateway MUST support tunnel mode and MAY support
     transport mode.  If it supports transport mode, that should be
     used only when the security gateway is acting as a host, e.g., for
     network management, or to provide security between two
     intermediate systems along a path.

4.2.  SA Functionality

  The set of security services offered by an SA depends on the security
  protocol selected, the SA mode, the endpoints of the SA, and the
  election of optional services within the protocol.

  For example, both AH and ESP offer integrity and authentication
  services, but the coverage differs for each protocol and differs for
  transport vs. tunnel mode.  If the integrity of an IPv4 option or
  IPv6 extension header must be protected en route between sender and
  receiver, AH can provide this service, except for IP or extension
  headers that may change in a fashion not predictable by the sender.



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  However, the same security may be achieved in some contexts by
  applying ESP to a tunnel carrying a packet.

  The granularity of access control provided is determined by the
  choice of the selectors that define each SA.  Moreover, the
  authentication means employed by IPsec peers, e.g., during creation
  of an IKE (vs. child) SA also affects the granularity of the access
  control afforded.

  If confidentiality is selected, then an ESP (tunnel mode) SA between
  two security gateways can offer partial traffic flow confidentiality.
  The use of tunnel mode allows the inner IP headers to be encrypted,
  concealing the identities of the (ultimate) traffic source and
  destination.  Moreover, ESP payload padding also can be invoked to
  hide the size of the packets, further concealing the external
  characteristics of the traffic.  Similar traffic flow confidentiality
  services may be offered when a mobile user is assigned a dynamic IP
  address in a dialup context, and establishes a (tunnel mode) ESP SA
  to a corporate firewall (acting as a security gateway).  Note that
  fine-granularity SAs generally are more vulnerable to traffic
  analysis than coarse-granularity ones that are carrying traffic from
  many subscribers.

  Note: A compliant implementation MUST NOT allow instantiation of an
  ESP SA that employs both NULL encryption and no integrity algorithm.
  An attempt to negotiate such an SA is an auditable event by both
  initiator and responder.  The audit log entry for this event SHOULD
  include the current date/time, local IKE IP address, and remote IKE
  IP address.  The initiator SHOULD record the relevant SPD entry.

4.3.  Combining SAs

  This document does not require support for nested security
  associations or for what RFC 2401 [RFC2401] called "SA bundles".
  These features still can be effected by appropriate configuration of
  both the SPD and the local forwarding functions (for inbound and
  outbound traffic), but this capability is outside of the IPsec module
  and thus the scope of this specification.  As a result, management of
  nested/bundled SAs is potentially more complex and less assured than
  under the model implied by RFC 2401 [RFC2401].  An implementation
  that provides support for nested SAs SHOULD provide a management
  interface that enables a user or administrator to express the nesting
  requirement, and then create the appropriate SPD entries and
  forwarding table entries to effect the requisite processing. (See
  Appendix E for an example of how to configure nested SAs.)






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4.4.  Major IPsec Databases

  Many of the details associated with processing IP traffic in an IPsec
  implementation are largely a local matter, not subject to
  standardization.  However, some external aspects of the processing
  must be standardized to ensure interoperability and to provide a
  minimum management capability that is essential for productive use of
  IPsec.  This section describes a general model for processing IP
  traffic relative to IPsec functionality, in support of these
  interoperability and functionality goals.  The model described below
  is nominal; implementations need not match details of this model as
  presented, but the external behavior of implementations MUST
  correspond to the externally observable characteristics of this model
  in order to be compliant.

  There are three nominal databases in this model: the Security Policy
  Database (SPD), the Security Association Database (SAD), and the Peer
  Authorization Database (PAD).  The first specifies the policies that
  determine the disposition of all IP traffic inbound or outbound from
  a host or security gateway (Section 4.4.1).  The second database
  contains parameters that are associated with each established (keyed)
  SA (Section 4.4.2).  The third database, the PAD, provides a link
  between an SA management protocol (such as IKE) and the SPD (Section
  4.4.3).

  Multiple Separate IPsec Contexts

     If an IPsec implementation acts as a security gateway for multiple
     subscribers, it MAY implement multiple separate IPsec contexts.
     Each context MAY have and MAY use completely independent
     identities, policies, key management SAs, and/or IPsec SAs.  This
     is for the most part a local implementation matter.  However, a
     means for associating inbound (SA) proposals with local contexts
     is required.  To this end, if supported by the key management
     protocol in use, context identifiers MAY be conveyed from
     initiator to responder in the signaling messages, with the result
     that IPsec SAs are created with a binding to a particular context.
     For example, a security gateway that provides VPN service to
     multiple customers will be able to associate each customer's
     traffic with the correct VPN.

  Forwarding vs Security Decisions

     The IPsec model described here embodies a clear separation between
     forwarding (routing) and security decisions, to accommodate a wide
     range of contexts where IPsec may be employed.  Forwarding may be
     trivial, in the case where there are only two interfaces, or it
     may be complex, e.g., if the context in which IPsec is implemented



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     employs a sophisticated forwarding function.  IPsec assumes only
     that outbound and inbound traffic that has passed through IPsec
     processing is forwarded in a fashion consistent with the context
     in which IPsec is implemented.  Support for nested SAs is
     optional; if required, it requires coordination between forwarding
     tables and SPD entries to cause a packet to traverse the IPsec
     boundary more than once.

  "Local" vs "Remote"

     In this document, with respect to IP addresses and ports, the
     terms "Local" and "Remote" are used for policy rules.  "Local"
     refers to the entity being protected by an IPsec implementation,
     i.e., the "source" address/port of outbound packets or the
     "destination" address/port of inbound packets. "Remote" refers to
     a peer entity or peer entities.  The terms "source" and
     "destination" are used for packet header fields.

  "Non-initial" vs "Initial" Fragments

     Throughout this document, the phrase "non-initial fragments" is
     used to mean fragments that do not contain all of the selector
     values that may be needed for access control (e.g., they might not
     contain Next Layer Protocol, source and destination ports, ICMP
     message type/code, Mobility Header type).  And the phrase "initial
     fragment" is used to mean a fragment that contains all the
     selector values needed for access control.  However, it should be
     noted that for IPv6, which fragment contains the Next Layer
     Protocol and ports (or ICMP message type/code or Mobility Header
     type [Mobip]) will depend on the kind and number of extension
     headers present.  The "initial fragment" might not be the first
     fragment, in this context.

4.4.1.  The Security Policy Database (SPD)

  An SA is a management construct used to enforce security policy for
  traffic crossing the IPsec boundary.  Thus, an essential element of
  SA processing is an underlying Security Policy Database (SPD) that
  specifies what services are to be offered to IP datagrams and in what
  fashion.  The form of the database and its interface are outside the
  scope of this specification.  However, this section specifies minimum
  management functionality that must be provided, to allow a user or
  system administrator to control whether and how IPsec is applied to
  traffic transmitted or received by a host or transiting a security
  gateway.  The SPD, or relevant caches, must be consulted during the
  processing of all traffic (inbound and outbound), including traffic
  not protected by IPsec, that traverses the IPsec boundary.  This
  includes IPsec management traffic such as IKE.  An IPsec



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  implementation MUST have at least one SPD, and it MAY support
  multiple SPDs, if appropriate for the context in which the IPsec
  implementation operates.  There is no requirement to maintain SPDs on
  a per-interface basis, as was specified in RFC 2401 [RFC2401].
  However, if an implementation supports multiple SPDs, then it MUST
  include an explicit SPD selection function that is invoked to select
  the appropriate SPD for outbound traffic processing.  The inputs to
  this function are the outbound packet and any local metadata (e.g.,
  the interface via which the packet arrived) required to effect the
  SPD selection function.  The output of the function is an SPD
  identifier (SPD-ID).

  The SPD is an ordered database, consistent with the use of Access
  Control Lists (ACLs) or packet filters in firewalls, routers, etc.
  The ordering requirement arises because entries often will overlap
  due to the presence of (non-trivial) ranges as values for selectors.
  Thus, a user or administrator MUST be able to order the entries to
  express a desired access control policy.  There is no way to impose a
  general, canonical order on SPD entries, because of the allowed use
  of wildcards for selector values and because the different types of
  selectors are not hierarchically related.

  Processing Choices:  DISCARD, BYPASS, PROTECT

     An SPD must discriminate among traffic that is afforded IPsec
     protection and traffic that is allowed to bypass IPsec.  This
     applies to the IPsec protection to be applied by a sender and to
     the IPsec protection that must be present at the receiver.  For
     any outbound or inbound datagram, three processing choices are
     possible: DISCARD, BYPASS IPsec, or PROTECT using IPsec.  The
     first choice refers to traffic that is not allowed to traverse the
     IPsec boundary (in the specified direction).  The second choice
     refers to traffic that is allowed to cross the IPsec boundary
     without IPsec protection.  The third choice refers to traffic that
     is afforded IPsec protection, and for such traffic the SPD must
     specify the security protocols to be employed, their mode,
     security service options, and the cryptographic algorithms to be
     used.

  SPD-S, SPD-I, SPD-O

     An SPD is logically divided into three pieces.  The SPD-S (secure
     traffic) contains entries for all traffic subject to IPsec
     protection.  SPD-O (outbound) contains entries for all outbound
     traffic that is to be bypassed or discarded.  SPD-I (inbound) is
     applied to inbound traffic that will be bypassed or discarded.
     All three of these can be decorrelated (with the exception noted
     above for native host implementations) to facilitate caching.  If



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     an IPsec implementation supports only one SPD, then the SPD
     consists of all three parts.  If multiple SPDs are supported, some
     of them may be partial, e.g., some SPDs might contain only SPD-I
     entries, to control inbound bypassed traffic on a per-interface
     basis.  The split allows SPD-I to be consulted without having to
     consult SPD-S, for such traffic.  Since the SPD-I is just a part
     of the SPD, if a packet that is looked up in the SPD-I cannot be
     matched to an entry there, then the packet MUST be discarded.
     Note that for outbound traffic, if a match is not found in SPD-S,
     then SPD-O must be checked to see if the traffic should be
     bypassed.  Similarly, if SPD-O is checked first and no match is
     found, then SPD-S must be checked.  In an ordered,
     non-decorrelated SPD, the entries for the SPD-S, SPD-I, and SPD-O
     are interleaved.  So there is one lookup in the SPD.

  SPD Entries

     Each SPD entry specifies packet disposition as BYPASS, DISCARD, or
     PROTECT.  The entry is keyed by a list of one or more selectors.
     The SPD contains an ordered list of these entries.  The required
     selector types are defined in Section 4.4.1.1. These selectors are
     used to define the granularity of the SAs that are created in
     response to an outbound packet or in response to a proposal from a
     peer.  The detailed structure of an SPD entry is described in
     Section 4.4.1.2. Every SPD SHOULD have a nominal, final entry that
     matches anything that is otherwise unmatched, and discards it.

     The SPD MUST permit a user or administrator to specify policy
     entries as follows:

      - SPD-I: For inbound traffic that is to be bypassed or discarded,
        the entry consists of the values of the selectors that apply to
        the traffic to be bypassed or discarded.

      - SPD-O: For outbound traffic that is to be bypassed or
        discarded, the entry consists of the values of the selectors
        that apply to the traffic to be bypassed or discarded.

      - SPD-S: For traffic that is to be protected using IPsec, the
        entry consists of the values of the selectors that apply to the
        traffic to be protected via AH or ESP, controls on how to
        create SAs based on these selectors, and the parameters needed
        to effect this protection (e.g., algorithms, modes, etc.). Note
        that an SPD-S entry also contains information such as "populate
        from packet" (PFP) flag (see paragraphs below on "How To Derive
        the Values for an SAD entry") and bits indicating whether the





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        SA lookup makes use of the local and remote IP addresses in
        addition to the SPI (see AH [Ken05b] or ESP [Ken05a]
        specifications).

  Representing Directionality in an SPD Entry

     For traffic protected by IPsec, the Local and Remote address and
     ports in an SPD entry are swapped to represent directionality,
     consistent with IKE conventions.  In general, the protocols that
     IPsec deals with have the property of requiring symmetric SAs with
     flipped Local/Remote IP addresses.  However, for ICMP, there is
     often no such bi-directional authorization requirement.
     Nonetheless, for the sake of uniformity and simplicity, SPD
     entries for ICMP are specified in the same way as for other
     protocols.  Note also that for ICMP, Mobility Header, and
     non-initial fragments, there are no port fields in these packets.
     ICMP has message type and code and Mobility Header has mobility
     header type.  Thus, SPD entries have provisions for expressing
     access controls appropriate for these protocols, in lieu of the
     normal port field controls.  For bypassed or discarded traffic,
     separate inbound and outbound entries are supported, e.g., to
     permit unidirectional flows if required.

  OPAQUE and ANY

     For each selector in an SPD entry, in addition to the literal
     values that define a match, there are two special values: ANY and
     OPAQUE.  ANY is a wildcard that matches any value in the
     corresponding field of the packet, or that matches packets where
     that field is not present or is obscured.  OPAQUE indicates that
     the corresponding selector field is not available for examination
     because it may not be present in a fragment, it does not exist for
     the given Next Layer Protocol, or prior application of IPsec may
     have encrypted the value.  The ANY value encompasses the OPAQUE
     value.  Thus, OPAQUE need be used only when it is necessary to
     distinguish between the case of any allowed value for a field, vs.
     the absence or unavailability (e.g., due to encryption) of the
     field.

  How to Derive the Values for an SAD Entry

     For each selector in an SPD entry, the entry specifies how to
     derive the corresponding values for a new SA Database (SAD, see
     Section 4.4.2) entry from those in the SPD and the packet.  The
     goal is to allow an SAD entry and an SPD cache entry to be created
     based on specific selector values from the packet, or from the
     matching SPD entry.  For outbound traffic, there are SPD-S cache
     entries and SPD-O cache entries.  For inbound traffic not



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     protected by IPsec, there are SPD-I cache entries and there is the
     SAD, which represents the cache for inbound IPsec-protected
     traffic (see Section 4.4.2).  If IPsec processing is specified for
     an entry, a "populate from packet" (PFP) flag may be asserted for
     one or more of the selectors in the SPD entry (Local IP address;
     Remote IP address; Next Layer Protocol; and, depending on Next
     Layer Protocol, Local port and Remote port, or ICMP type/code, or
     Mobility Header type).  If asserted for a given selector X, the
     flag indicates that the SA to be created should take its value for
     X from the value in the packet.  Otherwise, the SA should take its
     value(s) for X from the value(s) in the SPD entry.  Note: In the
     non-PFP case, the selector values negotiated by the SA management
     protocol (e.g., IKEv2) may be a subset of those in the SPD entry,
     depending on the SPD policy of the peer.  Also, whether a single
     flag is used for, e.g., source port, ICMP type/code, and Mobility
     Header (MH) type, or a separate flag is used for each, is a local
     matter.

     The following example illustrates the use of the PFP flag in the
     context of a security gateway or a BITS/BITW implementation.
     Consider an SPD entry where the allowed value for Remote address
     is a range of IPv4 addresses: 192.0.2.1 to 192.0.2.10.  Suppose an
     outbound packet arrives with a destination address of 192.0.2.3,
     and there is no extant SA to carry this packet.  The value used
     for the SA created to transmit this packet could be either of the
     two values shown below, depending on what the SPD entry for this
     selector says is the source of the selector value:

         PFP flag value  example of new
         for the Remote  SAD dest. address
         addr. selector  selector value
         --------------- ------------
         a. PFP TRUE     192.0.2.3 (one host)
         b. PFP FALSE    192.0.2.1 to 192.0.2.10 (range of hosts)

     Note that if the SPD entry above had a value of ANY for the Remote
     address, then the SAD selector value would have to be ANY for case
     (b), but would still be as illustrated for case (a).  Thus, the
     PFP flag can be used to prohibit sharing of an SA, even among
     packets that match the same SPD entry.

  Management Interface

     For every IPsec implementation, there MUST be a management
     interface that allows a user or system administrator to manage the
     SPD.  The interface must allow the user (or administrator) to
     specify the security processing to be applied to every packet that
     traverses the IPsec boundary. (In a native host IPsec



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     implementation making use of a socket interface, the SPD may not
     need to be consulted on a per-packet basis, as noted at the end of
     Section 4.4.1.1 and in Section 5.)  The management interface for
     the SPD MUST allow creation of entries consistent with the
     selectors defined in Section 4.4.1.1, and MUST support (total)
     ordering of these entries, as seen via this interface.  The SPD
     entries' selectors are analogous to the ACL or packet filters
     commonly found in a stateless firewall or packet filtering router
     and which are currently managed this way.

     In host systems, applications MAY be allowed to create SPD
     entries.  (The means of signaling such requests to the IPsec
     implementation are outside the scope of this standard.)  However,
     the system administrator MUST be able to specify whether or not a
     user or application can override (default) system policies.  The
     form of the management interface is not specified by this document
     and may differ for hosts vs. security gateways, and within hosts
     the interface may differ for socket-based vs. BITS
     implementations.  However, this document does specify a standard
     set of SPD elements that all IPsec implementations MUST support.

  Decorrelation

     The processing model described in this document assumes the
     ability to decorrelate overlapping SPD entries to permit caching,
     which enables more efficient processing of outbound traffic in
     security gateways and BITS/BITW implementations.  Decorrelation
     [CoSa04] is only a means of improving performance and simplifying
     the processing description.  This RFC does not require a compliant
     implementation to make use of decorrelation.  For example, native
     host implementations typically make use of caching implicitly
     because they bind SAs to socket interfaces, and thus there is no
     requirement to be able to decorrelate SPD entries in these
     implementations.

     Note:  Unless otherwise qualified, the use of "SPD" refers to the
     body of policy information in both ordered or decorrelated
     (unordered) state.  Appendix B provides an algorithm that can be
     used to decorrelate SPD entries, but any algorithm that produces
     equivalent output may be used.  Note that when an SPD entry is
     decorrelated all the resulting entries MUST be linked together, so
     that all members of the group derived from an individual, SPD
     entry (prior to decorrelation) can all be placed into caches and
     into the SAD at the same time.  For example, suppose one starts
     with an entry A (from an ordered SPD) that when decorrelated,
     yields entries A1, A2, and A3.  When a packet comes along that
     matches, say A2, and triggers the creation of an SA, the SA
     management protocol (e.g., IKEv2) negotiates A.  And all 3



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     decorrelated entries, A1, A2, and A3, are placed in the
     appropriate SPD-S cache and linked to the SA.  The intent is that
     use of a decorrelated SPD ought not to create more SAs than would
     have resulted from use of a not-decorrelated SPD.

     If a decorrelated SPD is employed, there are three options for
     what an initiator sends to a peer via an SA management protocol
     (e.g., IKE).  By sending the complete set of linked, decorrelated
     entries that were selected from the SPD, a peer is given the best
     possible information to enable selection of the appropriate SPD
     entry at its end, especially if the peer has also decorrelated its
     SPD.  However, if a large number of decorrelated entries are
     linked, this may create large packets for SA negotiation, and
     hence fragmentation problems for the SA management protocol.

     Alternatively, the original entry from the (correlated) SPD may be
     retained and passed to the SA management protocol.  Passing the
     correlated SPD entry keeps the use of a decorrelated SPD a local
     matter, not visible to peers, and avoids possible fragmentation
     concerns, although it provides less precise information to a
     responder for matching against the responder's SPD.

     An intermediate approach is to send a subset of the complete set
     of linked, decorrelated SPD entries.  This approach can avoid the
     fragmentation problems cited above yet provide better information
     than the original, correlated entry.  The major shortcoming of
     this approach is that it may cause additional SAs to be created
     later, since only a subset of the linked, decorrelated entries are
     sent to a peer.  Implementers are free to employ any of the
     approaches cited above.

     A responder uses the traffic selector proposals it receives via an
     SA management protocol to select an appropriate entry in its SPD.
     The intent of the matching is to select an SPD entry and create an
     SA that most closely matches the intent of the initiator, so that
     traffic traversing the resulting SA will be accepted at both ends.
     If the responder employs a decorrelated SPD, it SHOULD use the
     decorrelated SPD entries for matching, as this will generally
     result in creation of SAs that are more likely to match the intent
     of both peers.  If the responder has a correlated SPD, then it
     SHOULD match the proposals against the correlated entries.  For
     IKEv2, use of a decorrelated SPD offers the best opportunity for a
     responder to generate a "narrowed" response.

     In all cases, when a decorrelated SPD is available, the
     decorrelated entries are used to populate the SPD-S cache.  If the
     SPD is not decorrelated, caching is not allowed and an ordered




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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     search of SPD MUST be performed to verify that inbound traffic
     arriving on an SA is consistent with the access control policy
     expressed in the SPD.

  Handling Changes to the SPD While the System Is Running

     If a change is made to the SPD while the system is running, a
     check SHOULD be made of the effect of this change on extant SAs.
     An implementation SHOULD check the impact of an SPD change on
     extant SAs and SHOULD provide a user/administrator with a
     mechanism for configuring what actions to take, e.g., delete an
     affected SA, allow an affected SA to continue unchanged, etc.

4.4.1.1.   Selectors

  An SA may be fine-grained or coarse-grained, depending on the
  selectors used to define the set of traffic for the SA.  For example,
  all traffic between two hosts may be carried via a single SA, and
  afforded a uniform set of security services.  Alternatively, traffic
  between a pair of hosts might be spread over multiple SAs, depending
  on the applications being used (as defined by the Next Layer Protocol
  and related fields, e.g., ports), with different security services
  offered by different SAs.  Similarly, all traffic between a pair of
  security gateways could be carried on a single SA, or one SA could be
  assigned for each communicating host pair.  The following selector
  parameters MUST be supported by all IPsec implementations to
  facilitate control of SA granularity.  Note that both Local and
  Remote addresses should either be IPv4 or IPv6, but not a mix of
  address types.  Also, note that the Local/Remote port selectors (and
  ICMP message type and code, and Mobility Header type) may be labeled
  as OPAQUE to accommodate situations where these fields are
  inaccessible due to packet fragmentation.

     - Remote IP Address(es) (IPv4 or IPv6): This is a list of ranges
       of IP addresses (unicast, broadcast (IPv4 only)).  This
       structure allows expression of a single IP address (via a
       trivial range), or a list of addresses (each a trivial range),
       or a range of addresses (low and high values, inclusive), as
       well as the most generic form of a list of ranges.  Address
       ranges are used to support more than one remote system sharing
       the same SA, e.g., behind a security gateway.

     - Local IP Address(es) (IPv4 or IPv6): This is a list of ranges of
       IP addresses (unicast, broadcast (IPv4 only)).  This structure
       allows expression of a single IP address (via a trivial range),
       or a list of addresses (each a trivial range), or a range of
       addresses (low and high values, inclusive), as well as the most
       generic form of a list of ranges.  Address ranges are used to



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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


       support more than one source system sharing the same SA, e.g.,
       behind a security gateway.  Local refers to the address(es)
       being protected by this implementation (or policy entry).

       Note: The SPD does not include support for multicast address
       entries.  To support multicast SAs, an implementation should
       make use of a Group SPD (GSPD) as defined in [RFC3740].  GSPD
       entries require a different structure, i.e., one cannot use the
       symmetric relationship associated with local and remote address
       values for unicast SAs in a multicast context.  Specifically,
       outbound traffic directed to a multicast address on an SA would
       not be received on a companion, inbound SA with the multicast
       address as the source.

     - Next Layer Protocol: Obtained from the IPv4 "Protocol" or the
       IPv6 "Next Header" fields.  This is an individual protocol
       number, ANY, or for IPv6 only, OPAQUE.  The Next Layer Protocol
       is whatever comes after any IP extension headers that are
       present.  To simplify locating the Next Layer Protocol, there
       SHOULD be a mechanism for configuring which IPv6 extension
       headers to skip.  The default configuration for which protocols
       to skip SHOULD include the following protocols: 0 (Hop-by-hop
       options), 43 (Routing Header), 44 (Fragmentation Header), and 60
       (Destination Options).  Note: The default list does NOT include
       51 (AH) or 50 (ESP).  From a selector lookup point of view,
       IPsec treats AH and ESP as Next Layer Protocols.

       Several additional selectors depend on the Next Layer Protocol
       value:

        * If the Next Layer Protocol uses two ports (as do TCP, UDP,
          SCTP, and others), then there are selectors for Local and
          Remote Ports.  Each of these selectors has a list of ranges
          of values.  Note that the Local and Remote ports may not be
          available in the case of receipt of a fragmented packet or if
          the port fields have been protected by IPsec (encrypted);
          thus, a value of OPAQUE also MUST be supported.  Note: In a
          non-initial fragment, port values will not be available.  If
          a port selector specifies a value other than ANY or OPAQUE,
          it cannot match packets that are non-initial fragments.  If
          the SA requires a port value other than ANY or OPAQUE, an
          arriving fragment without ports MUST be discarded. (See
          Section 7, "Handling Fragments".)

        * If the Next Layer Protocol is a Mobility Header, then there
          is a selector for IPv6 Mobility Header message type (MH type)
          [Mobip].  This is an 8-bit value that identifies a particular
          mobility message.  Note that the MH type may not be available



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          in the case of receipt of a fragmented packet. (See Section
          7, "Handling Fragments".) For IKE, the IPv6 Mobility Header
          message type (MH type) is placed in the most significant
          eight bits of the 16-bit local "port" selector.

        * If the Next Layer Protocol value is ICMP, then there is a
          16-bit selector for the ICMP message type and code.  The
          message type is a single 8-bit value, which defines the type
          of an ICMP message, or ANY.  The ICMP code is a single 8-bit
          value that defines a specific subtype for an ICMP message.
          For IKE, the message type is placed in the most significant 8
          bits of the 16-bit selector and the code is placed in the
          least significant 8 bits.  This 16-bit selector can contain a
          single type and a range of codes, a single type and ANY code,
          and ANY type and ANY code.  Given a policy entry with a range
          of Types (T-start to T-end) and a range of Codes (C-start to
          C-end), and an ICMP packet with Type t and Code c, an
          implementation MUST test for a match using

              (T-start*256) + C-start <= (t*256) + c <= (T-end*256) +
              C-end

          Note that the ICMP message type and code may not be available
          in the case of receipt of a fragmented packet. (See Section
          7, "Handling Fragments".)

     - Name:  This is not a selector like the others above.  It is not
       acquired from a packet.  A name may be used as a symbolic
       identifier for an IPsec Local or Remote address.  Named SPD
       entries are used in two ways:

        1. A named SPD entry is used by a responder (not an initiator)
           in support of access control when an IP address would not be
           appropriate for the Remote IP address selector, e.g., for
           "road warriors".  The name used to match this field is
           communicated during the IKE negotiation in the ID payload.
           In this context, the initiator's Source IP address (inner IP
           header in tunnel mode) is bound to the Remote IP address in
           the SAD entry created by the IKE negotiation.  This address
           overrides the Remote IP address value in the SPD, when the
           SPD entry is selected in this fashion.  All IPsec
           implementations MUST support this use of names.

        2. A named SPD entry may be used by an initiator to identify a
           user for whom an IPsec SA will be created (or for whom
           traffic may be bypassed).  The initiator's IP source address
           (from inner IP header in tunnel mode) is used to replace the
           following if and when they are created:



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                   - local address in the SPD cache entry
                   - local address in the outbound SAD entry
                   - remote address in the inbound SAD entry

           Support for this use is optional for multi-user, native host
           implementations and not applicable to other implementations.
           Note that this name is used only locally; it is not
           communicated by the key management protocol.  Also, name
           forms other than those used for case 1 above (responder) are
           applicable in the initiator context (see below).

        An SPD entry can contain both a name (or a list of names) and
        also values for the Local or Remote IP address.

        For case 1, responder, the identifiers employed in named SPD
        entries are one of the following four types:

                a. a fully qualified user name string (email), e.g.,
                   [email protected]
                   (this corresponds to ID_RFC822_ADDR in IKEv2)

                b. a fully qualified DNS name, e.g.,
                   foo.example.com
                   (this corresponds to ID_FQDN in IKEv2)

                c. X.500 distinguished name, e.g., [WaKiHo97],
                   CN = Stephen T. Kent, O = BBN Technologies,
                   SP = MA, C = US
                   (this corresponds to ID_DER_ASN1_DN in IKEv2, after
                   decoding)

                d. a byte string
                   (this corresponds to Key_ID in IKEv2)

        For case 2, initiator, the identifiers employed in named SPD
        entries are of type byte string.  They are likely to be Unix
        UIDs, Windows security IDs, or something similar, but could
        also be a user name or account name.  In all cases, this
        identifier is only of local concern and is not transmitted.

  The IPsec implementation context determines how selectors are used.
  For example, a native host implementation typically makes use of a
  socket interface.  When a new connection is established, the SPD can
  be consulted and an SA bound to the socket.  Thus, traffic sent via
  that socket need not result in additional lookups to the SPD (SPD-O
  and SPD-S) cache.  In contrast, a BITS, BITW, or security gateway
  implementation needs to look at each packet and perform an
  SPD-O/SPD-S cache lookup based on the selectors.



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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


4.4.1.2.  Structure of an SPD Entry

  This section contains a prose description of an SPD entry.  Also,
  Appendix C provides an example of an ASN.1 definition of an SPD
  entry.

  This text describes the SPD in a fashion that is intended to map
  directly into IKE payloads to ensure that the policy required by SPD
  entries can be negotiated through IKE.  Unfortunately, the semantics
  of the version of IKEv2 published concurrently with this document
  [Kau05] do not align precisely with those defined for the SPD.
  Specifically, IKEv2 does not enable negotiation of a single SA that
  binds multiple pairs of local and remote addresses and ports to a
  single SA.  Instead, when multiple local and remote addresses and
  ports are negotiated for an SA, IKEv2 treats these not as pairs, but
  as (unordered) sets of local and remote values that can be
  arbitrarily paired.  Until IKE provides a facility that conveys the
  semantics that are expressed in the SPD via selector sets (as
  described below), users MUST NOT include multiple selector sets in a
  single SPD entry unless the access control intent aligns with the IKE
  "mix and match" semantics.  An implementation MAY warn users, to
  alert them to this problem if users create SPD entries with multiple
  selector sets, the syntax of which indicates possible conflicts with
  current IKE semantics.

  The management GUI can offer the user other forms of data entry and
  display, e.g., the option of using address prefixes as well as
  ranges, and symbolic names for protocols, ports, etc. (Do not confuse
  the use of symbolic names in a management interface with the SPD
  selector "Name".) Note that Remote/Local apply only to IP addresses
  and ports, not to ICMP message type/code or Mobility Header type.
  Also, if the reserved, symbolic selector value OPAQUE or ANY is
  employed for a given selector type, only that value may appear in the
  list for that selector, and it must appear only once in the list for
  that selector.  Note that ANY and OPAQUE are local syntax conventions
  -- IKEv2 negotiates these values via the ranges indicated below:

         ANY:     start = 0        end = <max>
         OPAQUE:  start = <max>    end = 0

  An SPD is an ordered list of entries each of which contains the
  following fields.

          o Name -- a list of IDs.  This quasi-selector is optional.
            The forms that MUST be supported are described above in
            Section 4.4.1.1 under "Name".





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          o PFP flags -- one per traffic selector.  A given flag, e.g.,
            for Next Layer Protocol, applies to the relevant selector
            across all "selector sets" (see below) contained in an SPD
            entry.  When creating an SA, each flag specifies for the
            corresponding traffic selector whether to instantiate the
            selector from the corresponding field in the packet that
            triggered the creation of the SA or from the value(s) in
            the corresponding SPD entry (see Section 4.4.1, "How to
            Derive the Values for an SAD Entry").  Whether a single
            flag is used for, e.g., source port, ICMP type/code, and
            MH type, or a separate flag is used for each, is a local
            matter.  There are PFP flags for:
               - Local Address
               - Remote Address
               - Next Layer Protocol
               - Local Port, or ICMP message type/code or Mobility
                 Header type (depending on the next layer protocol)
               - Remote Port, or ICMP message type/code or Mobility
                 Header type (depending on the next layer protocol)

          o One to N selector sets that correspond to the "condition"
            for applying a particular IPsec action.  Each selector set
            contains:
               - Local Address
               - Remote Address
               - Next Layer Protocol
               - Local Port, or ICMP message type/code or Mobility
                 Header type (depending on the next layer protocol)
               - Remote Port, or ICMP message type/code or Mobility
                 Header type (depending on the next layer protocol)

            Note: The "next protocol" selector is an individual value
            (unlike the local and remote IP addresses) in a selector
            set entry.  This is consistent with how IKEv2 negotiates
            the Traffic Selector (TS) values for an SA.  It also makes
            sense because one may need to associate different port
            fields with different protocols.  It is possible to
            associate multiple protocols (and ports) with a single SA
            by specifying multiple selector sets for that SA.

          o Processing info -- which action is required -- PROTECT,
            BYPASS, or DISCARD.  There is just one action that goes
            with all the selector sets, not a separate action for each
            set.  If the required processing is PROTECT, the entry
            contains the following information.
               - IPsec mode -- tunnel or transport





Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


               - (if tunnel mode) local tunnel address -- For a
                 non-mobile host, if there is just one interface, this
                 is straightforward; if there are multiple
                 interfaces, this must be statically configured.  For a
                 mobile host, the specification of the local address
                 is handled externally to IPsec.
               - (if tunnel mode) remote tunnel address -- There is no
                 standard way to determine this.  See 4.5.3, "Locating
                 a Security Gateway".
               - Extended Sequence Number -- Is this SA using extended
                 sequence numbers?
               - stateful fragment checking -- Is this SA using
                 stateful fragment checking?  (See Section 7 for more
                 details.)
               - Bypass DF bit (T/F) -- applicable to tunnel mode SAs
               - Bypass DSCP (T/F) or map to unprotected DSCP values
                 (array) if needed to restrict bypass of DSCP values --
                 applicable to tunnel mode SAs
               - IPsec protocol -- AH or ESP
               - algorithms -- which ones to use for AH, which ones to
                 use for ESP, which ones to use for combined mode,
                 ordered by decreasing priority

  It is a local matter as to what information is kept with regard to
  handling extant SAs when the SPD is changed.

4.4.1.3.  More Regarding Fields Associated with Next Layer Protocols

  Additional selectors are often associated with fields in the Next
  Layer Protocol header.  A particular Next Layer Protocol can have
  zero, one, or two selectors.  There may be situations where there
  aren't both local and remote selectors for the fields that are
  dependent on the Next Layer Protocol.  The IPv6 Mobility Header has
  only a Mobility Header message type.  AH and ESP have no further
  selector fields.  A system may be willing to send an ICMP message
  type and code that it does not want to receive.  In the descriptions
  below, "port" is used to mean a field that is dependent on the Next
  Layer Protocol.

       A. If a Next Layer Protocol has no "port" selectors, then
          the Local and Remote "port" selectors are set to OPAQUE in
          the relevant SPD entry, e.g.,

          Local's
            next layer protocol = AH
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE





Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


          Remote's
            next layer protocol = AH
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

       B. Even if a Next Layer Protocol has only one selector, e.g.,
          Mobility Header type, then the Local and Remote "port"
          selectors are used to indicate whether a system is
          willing to send and/or receive traffic with the specified
         "port" values. For example, if Mobility Headers of a
          specified type are allowed to be sent and received via an
          SA, then the relevant SPD entry would be set as follows:

          Local's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = Mobility Header message type

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = Mobility Header message type

          If Mobility Headers of a specified type are allowed to be
          sent but NOT received via an SA, then the relevant SPD
          entry would be set as follows:

          Local's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = Mobility Header message type

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

          If Mobility Headers of a specified type are allowed to be
          received but NOT sent via an SA, then the relevant SPD
          entry would be set as follows:

          Local's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = Mobility Header
            "port" selector     = Mobility Header message type

       C. If a system is willing to send traffic with a particular
          "port" value but NOT receive traffic with that kind of
          port value, the system's traffic selectors are set as
          follows in the relevant SPD entry:



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


          Local's
            next layer protocol = ICMP
            "port" selector     = <specific ICMP type & code>

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = ICMP
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

       D. To indicate that a system is willing to receive traffic
          with a particular "port" value but NOT send that kind of
          traffic, the system's traffic selectors are set as follows
          in the relevant SPD entry:

          Local's
            next layer protocol = ICMP
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = ICMP
            "port" selector     = <specific ICMP type & code>

          For example, if a security gateway is willing to allow
          systems behind it to send ICMP traceroutes, but is not
          willing to let outside systems run ICMP traceroutes to
          systems behind it, then the security gateway's traffic
          selectors are set as follows in the relevant SPD entry:

          Local's
            next layer protocol = 1 (ICMPv4)
            "port" selector     = 30 (traceroute)

          Remote's
            next layer protocol = 1 (ICMPv4)
            "port" selector     = OPAQUE

4.4.2.  Security Association Database (SAD)

  In each IPsec implementation, there is a nominal Security Association
  Database (SAD), in which each entry defines the parameters associated
  with one SA.  Each SA has an entry in the SAD.  For outbound
  processing, each SAD entry is pointed to by entries in the SPD-S part
  of the SPD cache.  For inbound processing, for unicast SAs, the SPI
  is used either alone to look up an SA or in conjunction with the
  IPsec protocol type.  If an IPsec implementation supports multicast,
  the SPI plus destination address, or SPI plus destination and source
  addresses are used to look up the SA. (See Section 4.1 for details on
  the algorithm that MUST be used for mapping inbound IPsec datagrams
  to SAs.) The following parameters are associated with each entry in



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  the SAD.  They should all be present except where otherwise noted,
  e.g., AH Authentication algorithm.  This description does not purport
  to be a MIB, only a specification of the minimal data items required
  to support an SA in an IPsec implementation.

  For each of the selectors defined in Section 4.4.1.1, the entry for
  an inbound SA in the SAD MUST be initially populated with the value
  or values negotiated at the time the SA was created. (See the
  paragraph in Section 4.4.1 under "Handling Changes to the SPD while
  the System is Running" for guidance on the effect of SPD changes on
  extant SAs.) For a receiver, these values are used to check that the
  header fields of an inbound packet (after IPsec processing) match the
  selector values negotiated for the SA.  Thus, the SAD acts as a cache
  for checking the selectors of inbound traffic arriving on SAs.  For
  the receiver, this is part of verifying that a packet arriving on an
  SA is consistent with the policy for the SA. (See Section 6 for rules
  for ICMP messages.)  These fields can have the form of specific
  values, ranges, ANY, or OPAQUE, as described in Section 4.4.1.1,
  "Selectors".  Note also that there are a couple of situations in
  which the SAD can have entries for SAs that do not have corresponding
  entries in the SPD.  Since this document does not mandate that the
  SAD be selectively cleared when the SPD is changed, SAD entries can
  remain when the SPD entries that created them are changed or deleted.
  Also, if a manually keyed SA is created, there could be an SAD entry
  for this SA that does not correspond to any SPD entry.

  Note: The SAD can support multicast SAs, if manually configured.  An
  outbound multicast SA has the same structure as a unicast SA.  The
  source address is that of the sender, and the destination address is
  the multicast group address.  An inbound, multicast SA must be
  configured with the source addresses of each peer authorized to
  transmit to the multicast SA in question.  The SPI value for a
  multicast SA is provided by a multicast group controller, not by the
  receiver, as for a unicast SA.  Because an SAD entry may be required
  to accommodate multiple, individual IP source addresses that were
  part of an SPD entry (for unicast SAs), the required facility for
  inbound, multicast SAs is a feature already present in an IPsec
  implementation.  However, because the SPD has no provisions for
  accommodating multicast entries, this document does not specify an
  automated way to create an SAD entry for a multicast, inbound SA.
  Only manually configured SAD entries can be created to accommodate
  inbound, multicast traffic.

  Implementation Guidance: This document does not specify how an SPD-S
  entry refers to the corresponding SAD entry, as this is an
  implementation-specific detail.  However, some implementations (based
  on experience from RFC 2401) are known to have problems in this
  regard.  In particular, simply storing the (remote tunnel header IP



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  address, remote SPI) pair in the SPD cache is not sufficient, since
  the pair does not always uniquely identify a single SAD entry.  For
  instance, two hosts behind the same NAT could choose the same SPI
  value.  The situation also may arise if a host is assigned an IP
  address (e.g., via DHCP) previously used by some other host, and the
  SAs associated with the old host have not yet been deleted via dead
  peer detection mechanisms.  This may lead to packets being sent over
  the wrong SA or, if key management ensures the pair is unique,
  denying the creation of otherwise valid SAs.  Thus, implementors
  should implement links between the SPD cache and the SAD in a way
  that does not engender such problems.

4.4.2.1.  Data Items in the SAD

  The following data items MUST be in the SAD:

   o Security Parameter Index (SPI): a 32-bit value selected by the
     receiving end of an SA to uniquely identify the SA.  In an SAD
     entry for an outbound SA, the SPI is used to construct the
     packet's AH or ESP header.  In an SAD entry for an inbound SA, the
     SPI is used to map traffic to the appropriate SA (see text on
     unicast/multicast in Section 4.1).

   o Sequence Number Counter: a 64-bit counter used to generate the
     Sequence Number field in AH or ESP headers. 64-bit sequence
     numbers are the default, but 32-bit sequence numbers are also
     supported if negotiated.

   o Sequence Counter Overflow: a flag indicating whether overflow of
     the sequence number counter should generate an auditable event and
     prevent transmission of additional packets on the SA, or whether
     rollover is permitted.  The audit log entry for this event SHOULD
     include the SPI value, current date/time, Local Address, Remote
     Address, and the selectors from the relevant SAD entry.

   o Anti-Replay Window: a 64-bit counter and a bit-map (or equivalent)
     used to determine whether an inbound AH or ESP packet is a replay.

     Note: If anti-replay has been disabled by the receiver for an SA,
     e.g., in the case of a manually keyed SA, then the Anti-Replay
     Window is ignored for the SA in question. 64-bit sequence numbers
     are the default, but this counter size accommodates 32-bit
     sequence numbers as well.

   o AH Authentication algorithm, key, etc.  This is required only if
     AH is supported.





Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


   o ESP Encryption algorithm, key, mode, IV, etc.  If a combined mode
     algorithm is used, these fields will not be applicable.

   o ESP integrity algorithm, keys, etc.  If the integrity service is
     not selected, these fields will not be applicable.  If a combined
     mode algorithm is used, these fields will not be applicable.

   o ESP combined mode algorithms, key(s), etc.  This data is used when
     a combined mode (encryption and integrity) algorithm is used with
     ESP.  If a combined mode algorithm is not used, these fields are
     not applicable.

   o Lifetime of this SA: a time interval after which an SA must be
     replaced with a new SA (and new SPI) or terminated, plus an
     indication of which of these actions should occur.  This may be
     expressed as a time or byte count, or a simultaneous use of both
     with the first lifetime to expire taking precedence.  A compliant
     implementation MUST support both types of lifetimes, and MUST
     support a simultaneous use of both.  If time is employed, and if
     IKE employs X.509 certificates for SA establishment, the SA
     lifetime must be constrained by the validity intervals of the
     certificates, and the NextIssueDate of the Certificate Revocation
     Lists (CRLs) used in the IKE exchange for the SA.  Both initiator
     and responder are responsible for constraining the SA lifetime in
     this fashion.  Note: The details of how to handle the refreshing
     of keys when SAs expire is a local matter.  However, one
     reasonable approach is:

    (a) If byte count is used, then the implementation SHOULD count the
        number of bytes to which the IPsec cryptographic algorithm is
        applied.  For ESP, this is the encryption algorithm (including
        Null encryption) and for AH, this is the authentication
        algorithm.  This includes pad bytes, etc.  Note that
        implementations MUST be able to handle having the counters at
        the ends of an SA get out of synch, e.g., because of packet
        loss or because the implementations at each end of the SA
        aren't doing things the same way.

    (b) There SHOULD be two kinds of lifetime -- a soft lifetime that
        warns the implementation to initiate action such as setting up
        a replacement SA, and a hard lifetime when the current SA ends
        and is destroyed.

    (c) If the entire packet does not get delivered during the SA's
        lifetime, the packet SHOULD be discarded.

   o IPsec protocol mode: tunnel or transport.  Indicates which mode of
     AH or ESP is applied to traffic on this SA.



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


   o Stateful fragment checking flag.  Indicates whether or not
     stateful fragment checking applies to this SA.

   o Bypass DF bit (T/F) -- applicable to tunnel mode SAs where both
     inner and outer headers are IPv4.

   o DSCP values -- the set of DSCP values allowed for packets carried
     over this SA.  If no values are specified, no DSCP-specific
     filtering is applied.  If one or more values are specified, these
     are used to select one SA among several that match the traffic
     selectors for an outbound packet.  Note that these values are NOT
     checked against inbound traffic arriving on the SA.

   o Bypass DSCP (T/F) or map to unprotected DSCP values (array) if
     needed to restrict bypass of DSCP values -- applicable to tunnel
     mode SAs.  This feature maps DSCP values from an inner header to
     values in an outer header, e.g., to address covert channel
     signaling concerns.

   o Path MTU: any observed path MTU and aging variables.

   o Tunnel header IP source and destination address -- both addresses
     must be either IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.  The version implies the
     type of IP header to be used.  Only used when the IPsec protocol
     mode is tunnel.

4.4.2.2.  Relationship between SPD, PFP flag, packet, and SAD

     For each selector, the following tables show the relationship
     between the value in the SPD, the PFP flag, the value in the
     triggering packet, and the resulting value in the SAD.  Note that
     the administrative interface for IPsec can use various syntactic
     options to make it easier for the administrator to enter rules.
     For example, although a list of ranges is what IKEv2 sends, it
     might be clearer and less error prone for the user to enter a
     single IP address or IP address prefix.















Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


                                       Value in
                                       Triggering   Resulting SAD
        Selector  SPD Entry        PFP Packet       Entry
        --------  ---------------- --- ------------ --------------
        loc addr  list of ranges    0  IP addr "S"  list of ranges
                  ANY               0  IP addr "S"  ANY
                  list of ranges    1  IP addr "S"  "S"
                  ANY               1  IP addr "S"  "S"

        rem addr  list of ranges    0  IP addr "D"  list of ranges
                  ANY               0  IP addr "D"  ANY
                  list of ranges    1  IP addr "D"  "D"
                  ANY               1  IP addr "D"  "D"

        protocol  list of prot's*   0  prot. "P"    list of prot's*
                  ANY**             0  prot. "P"    ANY
                  OPAQUE****        0  prot. "P"    OPAQUE

                  list of prot's*   0  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY**             0  not avail.   ANY
                  OPAQUE****        0  not avail.   OPAQUE

                  list of prot's*   1  prot. "P"    "P"
                  ANY**             1  prot. "P"    "P"
                  OPAQUE****        1  prot. "P"    ***

                  list of prot's*   1  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY**             1  not avail.   discard packet
                  OPAQUE****        1  not avail.   ***






















Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     If the protocol is one that has two ports, then there will be
     selectors for both Local and Remote ports.

                                       Value in
                                       Triggering   Resulting SAD
        Selector  SPD Entry        PFP Packet       Entry
        --------  ---------------- --- ------------ --------------
        loc port  list of ranges    0  src port "s" list of ranges
                  ANY               0  src port "s" ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  src port "s" OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    0  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               0  not avail.   ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  not avail.   OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    1  src port "s" "s"
                  ANY               1  src port "s" "s"
                  OPAQUE            1  src port "s" ***

                  list of ranges    1  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               1  not avail.   discard packet
                  OPAQUE            1  not avail.   ***


        rem port  list of ranges    0  dst port "d" list of ranges
                  ANY               0  dst port "d" ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  dst port "d" OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    0  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               0  not avail.   ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  not avail.   OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    1  dst port "d" "d"
                  ANY               1  dst port "d" "d"
                  OPAQUE            1  dst port "d" ***

                  list of ranges    1  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               1  not avail.   discard packet
                  OPAQUE            1  not avail.   ***












Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     If the protocol is mobility header, then there will be a selector
     for mh type.

                                       Value in
                                       Triggering   Resulting SAD
        Selector  SPD Entry        PFP Packet       Entry
        --------  ---------------- --- ------------ --------------
        mh type   list of ranges    0  mh type "T"  list of ranges
                  ANY               0  mh type "T"  ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  mh type "T"  OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    0  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               0  not avail.   ANY
                  OPAQUE            0  not avail.   OPAQUE

                  list of ranges    1  mh type "T"  "T"
                  ANY               1  mh type "T"  "T"
                  OPAQUE            1  mh type "T"  ***

                  list of ranges    1  not avail.   discard packet
                  ANY               1  not avail.   discard packet
                  OPAQUE            1  not avail.   ***





























Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     If the protocol is ICMP, then there will be a 16-bit selector for
     ICMP type and ICMP code.  Note that the type and code are bound to
     each other, i.e., the codes apply to the particular type.  This
     16-bit selector can contain a single type and a range of codes, a
     single type and ANY code, and ANY type and ANY code.

                                        Value in
                                        Triggering   Resulting SAD
        Selector   SPD Entry        PFP Packet       Entry
        ---------  ---------------- --- ------------ --------------
        ICMP type  a single type &   0  type "t" &   single type &
        and code    range of codes        code "c"    range of codes
                   a single type &   0  type "t" &   single type &
                    ANY code              code "c"    ANY code
                   ANY type & ANY    0  type "t" &   ANY type &
                    code                  code "c"    ANY code
                   OPAQUE            0  type "t" &   OPAQUE
                                          code "c"

                   a single type &   0  not avail.   discard packet
                    range of codes
                   a single type &   0  not avail.   discard packet
                    ANY code
                   ANY type &        0  not avail.   ANY type &
                    ANY code                          ANY code
                   OPAQUE            0  not avail.   OPAQUE

                   a single type &   1  type "t" &   "t" and "c"
                    range of codes        code "c"
                   a single type &   1  type "t" &   "t" and "c"
                    ANY code              code "c"
                   ANY type &        1  type "t" &   "t" and "c"
                    ANY code              code "c"
                   OPAQUE            1  type "t" &   ***
                                          code "c"

                   a single type &   1  not avail.   discard packet
                    range of codes
                   a single type &   1  not avail.   discard packet
                    ANY code
                   ANY type &        1  not avail.   discard packet
                    ANY code
                   OPAQUE            1  not avail.   ***








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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     If the name selector is used:

                                        Value in
                                        Triggering   Resulting SAD
        Selector   SPD Entry        PFP Packet       Entry
        ---------  ---------------- --- ------------ --------------
        name       list of user or  N/A     N/A           N/A
                   system names

           * "List of protocols" is the information, not the way
             that the SPD or SAD or IKEv2 have to represent this
             information.
          ** 0 (zero) is used by IKE to indicate ANY for
             protocol.
         *** Use of PFP=1 with an OPAQUE value is an error and
             SHOULD be prohibited by an IPsec implementation.
        **** The protocol field cannot be OPAQUE in IPv4.  This
             table entry applies only to IPv6.

4.4.3.  Peer Authorization Database (PAD)

  The Peer Authorization Database (PAD) provides the link between the
  SPD and a security association management protocol such as IKE.  It
  embodies several critical functions:

       o identifies the peers or groups of peers that are authorized
         to communicate with this IPsec entity
       o specifies the protocol and method used to authenticate each
         peer
       o provides the authentication data for each peer
       o constrains the types and values of IDs that can be asserted
         by a peer with regard to child SA creation, to ensure that the
         peer does not assert identities for lookup in the SPD that it
         is not authorized to represent, when child SAs are created
       o peer gateway location info, e.g., IP address(es) or DNS names,
         MAY be included for peers that are known to be "behind" a
         security gateway

  The PAD provides these functions for an IKE peer when the peer acts
  as either the initiator or the responder.

  To perform these functions, the PAD contains an entry for each peer
  or group of peers with which the IPsec entity will communicate.  An
  entry names an individual peer (a user, end system or security
  gateway) or specifies a group of peers (using ID matching rules
  defined below).  The entry specifies the authentication protocol
  (e.g., IKEv1, IKEv2, KINK) method used (e.g., certificates or pre-
  shared secrets) and the authentication data (e.g., the pre-shared



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  secret or the trust anchor relative to which the peer's certificate
  will be validated).  For certificate-based authentication, the entry
  also may provide information to assist in verifying the revocation
  status of the peer, e.g., a pointer to a CRL repository or the name
  of an Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) server associated
  with the peer or with the trust anchor associated with the peer.

  Each entry also specifies whether the IKE ID payload will be used as
  a symbolic name for SPD lookup, or whether the remote IP address
  provided in traffic selector payloads will be used for SPD lookups
  when child SAs are created.

  Note that the PAD information MAY be used to support creation of more
  than one tunnel mode SA at a time between two peers, e.g., two
  tunnels to protect the same addresses/hosts, but with different
  tunnel endpoints.

4.4.3.1.  PAD Entry IDs and Matching Rules

  The PAD is an ordered database, where the order is defined by an
  administrator (or a user in the case of a single-user end system).
  Usually, the same administrator will be responsible for both the PAD
  and SPD, since the two databases must be coordinated.  The ordering
  requirement for the PAD arises for the same reason as for the SPD,
  i.e., because use of "star name" entries allows for overlaps in the
  set of IKE IDs that could match a specific entry.

  Six types of IDs are supported for entries in the PAD, consistent
  with the symbolic name types and IP addresses used to identify SPD
  entries.  The ID for each entry acts as the index for the PAD, i.e.,
  it is the value used to select an entry.  All of these ID types can
  be used to match IKE ID payload types.  The six types are:

          o DNS name (specific or partial)
          o Distinguished Name (complete or sub-tree constrained)
          o RFC 822 email address (complete or partially qualified)
          o IPv4 address (range)
          o IPv6 address (range)
          o Key ID (exact match only)

  The first three name types can accommodate sub-tree matching as well
  as exact matches.  A DNS name may be fully qualified and thus match
  exactly one name, e.g., foo.example.com.  Alternatively, the name may
  encompass a group of peers by being partially specified, e.g., the
  string ".example.com" could be used to match any DNS name ending in
  these two domain name components.





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  Similarly, a Distinguished Name may specify a complete Distinguished
  Name to match exactly one entry, e.g., CN = Stephen, O = BBN
  Technologies, SP = MA, C = US.  Alternatively, an entry may encompass
  a group of peers by specifying a sub-tree, e.g., an entry of the form
  "C = US, SP = MA" might be used to match all DNs that contain these
  two attributes as the top two Relative Distinguished Names (RDNs).

  For an RFC 822 e-mail addresses, the same options exist.  A complete
  address such as [email protected] matches one entity, but a sub-tree
  name such as "@example.com" could be used to match all the entities
  with names ending in those two domain names to the right of the @.

  The specific syntax used by an implementation to accommodate sub-tree
  matching for distinguished names, domain names or RFC 822 e-mail
  addresses is a local matter.  But, at a minimum, sub-tree matching of
  the sort described above MUST be supported. (Substring matching
  within a DN, DNS name, or RFC 822 address MAY be supported, but is
  not required.)

  For IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, the same address range syntax used for
  SPD entries MUST be supported.  This allows specification of an
  individual address (via a trivial range), an address prefix (by
  choosing a range that adheres to Classless Inter-Domain Routing
  (CIDR)-style prefixes), or an arbitrary address range.

  The Key ID field is defined as an OCTET string in IKE.  For this name
  type, only exact-match syntax MUST be supported (since there is no
  explicit structure for this ID type).  Additional matching functions
  MAY be supported for this ID type.

4.4.3.2.  IKE Peer Authentication Data

  Once an entry is located based on an ordered search of the PAD based
  on ID field matching, it is necessary to verify the asserted
  identity, i.e., to authenticate the asserted ID.  For each PAD entry,
  there is an indication of the type of authentication to be performed.
  This document requires support for two required authentication data
  types:

       - X.509 certificate
       - pre-shared secret

  For authentication based on an X.509 certificate, the PAD entry
  contains a trust anchor via which the end entity (EE) certificate for
  the peer must be verifiable, either directly or via a certificate
  path.  See RFC 3280 for the definition of a trust anchor.  An entry
  used with certificate-based authentication MAY include additional
  data to facilitate certificate revocation status, e.g., a list of



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  appropriate OCSP responders or CRL repositories, and associated
  authentication data.  For authentication based on a pre-shared
  secret, the PAD contains the pre-shared secret to be used by IKE.

  This document does not require that the IKE ID asserted by a peer be
  syntactically related to a specific field in an end entity
  certificate that is employed to authenticate the identity of that
  peer.  However, it often will be appropriate to impose such a
  requirement, e.g., when a single entry represents a set of peers each
  of whom may have a distinct SPD entry.  Thus, implementations MUST
  provide a means for an administrator to require a match between an
  asserted IKE ID and the subject name or subject alt name in a
  certificate.  The former is applicable to IKE IDs expressed as
  distinguished names; the latter is appropriate for DNS names, RFC 822
  e-mail addresses, and IP addresses.  Since KEY ID is intended for
  identifying a peer authenticated via a pre-shared secret, there is no
  requirement to match this ID type to a certificate field.

  See IKEv1 [HarCar98] and IKEv2 [Kau05] for details of how IKE
  performs peer authentication using certificates or pre-shared
  secrets.

  This document does not mandate support for any other authentication
  methods, although such methods MAY be employed.

4.4.3.3.  Child SA Authorization Data

  Once an IKE peer is authenticated, child SAs may be created.  Each
  PAD entry contains data to constrain the set of IDs that can be
  asserted by an IKE peer, for matching against the SPD.  Each PAD
  entry indicates whether the IKE ID is to be used as a symbolic name
  for SPD matching, or whether an IP address asserted in a traffic
  selector payload is to be used.

  If the entry indicates that the IKE ID is to be used, then the PAD
  entry ID field defines the authorized set of IDs.  If the entry
  indicates that child SAs traffic selectors are to be used, then an
  additional data element is required, in the form of IPv4 and/or IPv6
  address ranges. (A peer may be authorized for both address types, so
  there MUST be provision for both a v4 and a v6 address range.)

4.4.3.4.  How the PAD Is Used

  During the initial IKE exchange, the initiator and responder each
  assert their identity via the IKE ID payload and send an AUTH payload
  to verify the asserted identity.  One or more CERT payloads may be
  transmitted to facilitate the verification of each asserted identity.




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  When an IKE entity receives an IKE ID payload, it uses the asserted
  ID to locate an entry in the PAD, using the matching rules described
  above.  The PAD entry specifies the authentication method to be
  employed for the identified peer.  This ensures that the right method
  is used for each peer and that different methods can be used for
  different peers.  The entry also specifies the authentication data
  that will be used to verify the asserted identity.  This data is
  employed in conjunction with the specified method to authenticate the
  peer, before any CHILD SAs are created.

  Child SAs are created based on the exchange of traffic selector
  payloads, either at the end of the initial IKE exchange or in
  subsequent CREATE_CHILD_SA exchanges.  The PAD entry for the (now
  authenticated) IKE peer is used to constrain creation of child SAs;
  specifically, the PAD entry specifies how the SPD is searched using a
  traffic selector proposal from a peer.  There are two choices: either
  the IKE ID asserted by the peer is used to find an SPD entry via its
  symbolic name, or peer IP addresses asserted in traffic selector
  payloads are used for SPD lookups based on the remote IP address
  field portion of an SPD entry.  It is necessary to impose these
  constraints on creation of child SAs to prevent an authenticated peer
  from spoofing IDs associated with other, legitimate peers.

  Note that because the PAD is checked before searching for an SPD
  entry, this safeguard protects an initiator against spoofing attacks.
  For example, assume that IKE A receives an outbound packet destined
  for IP address X, a host served by a security gateway.  RFC 2401
  [RFC2401] and this document do not specify how A determines the
  address of the IKE peer serving X.  However, any peer contacted by A
  as the presumed representative for X must be registered in the PAD in
  order to allow the IKE exchange to be authenticated.  Moreover, when
  the authenticated peer asserts that it represents X in its traffic
  selector exchange, the PAD will be consulted to determine if the peer
  in question is authorized to represent X.  Thus, the PAD provides a
  binding of address ranges (or name sub-spaces) to peers, to counter
  such attacks.

4.5.  SA and Key Management

  All IPsec implementations MUST support both manual and automated SA
  and cryptographic key management.  The IPsec protocols, AH and ESP,
  are largely independent of the associated SA management techniques,
  although the techniques involved do affect some of the security
  services offered by the protocols.  For example, the optional
  anti-replay service available for AH and ESP requires automated SA
  management.  Moreover, the granularity of key distribution employed
  with IPsec determines the granularity of authentication provided.  In
  general, data origin authentication in AH and ESP is limited by the



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  extent to which secrets used with the integrity algorithm (or with a
  key management protocol that creates such secrets) are shared among
  multiple possible sources.

  The following text describes the minimum requirements for both types
  of SA management.

4.5.1.  Manual Techniques

  The simplest form of management is manual management, in which a
  person manually configures each system with keying material and SA
  management data relevant to secure communication with other systems.
  Manual techniques are practical in small, static environments but
  they do not scale well.  For example, a company could create a
  virtual private network (VPN) using IPsec in security gateways at
  several sites.  If the number of sites is small, and since all the
  sites come under the purview of a single administrative domain, this
  might be a feasible context for manual management techniques.  In
  this case, the security gateway might selectively protect traffic to
  and from other sites within the organization using a manually
  configured key, while not protecting traffic for other destinations.
  It also might be appropriate when only selected communications need
  to be secured.  A similar argument might apply to use of IPsec
  entirely within an organization for a small number of hosts and/or
  gateways.  Manual management techniques often employ statically
  configured, symmetric keys, though other options also exist.

4.5.2.  Automated SA and Key Management

  Widespread deployment and use of IPsec requires an Internet-standard,
  scalable, automated, SA management protocol.  Such support is
  required to facilitate use of the anti-replay features of AH and ESP,
  and to accommodate on-demand creation of SAs, e.g., for user- and
  session-oriented keying.  (Note that the notion of "rekeying" an SA
  actually implies creation of a new SA with a new SPI, a process that
  generally implies use of an automated SA/key management protocol.)

  The default automated key management protocol selected for use with
  IPsec is IKEv2 [Kau05].  This document assumes the availability of
  certain functions from the key management protocol that are not
  supported by IKEv1.  Other automated SA management protocols MAY be
  employed.

  When an automated SA/key management protocol is employed, the output
  from this protocol is used to generate multiple keys for a single SA.
  This also occurs because distinct keys are used for each of the two





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  SAs created by IKE.  If both integrity and confidentiality are
  employed, then a minimum of four keys are required.  Additionally,
  some cryptographic algorithms may require multiple keys, e.g., 3DES.

  The Key Management System may provide a separate string of bits for
  each key or it may generate one string of bits from which all keys
  are extracted.  If a single string of bits is provided, care needs to
  be taken to ensure that the parts of the system that map the string
  of bits to the required keys do so in the same fashion at both ends
  of the SA.  To ensure that the IPsec implementations at each end of
  the SA use the same bits for the same keys, and irrespective of which
  part of the system divides the string of bits into individual keys,
  the encryption keys MUST be taken from the first (left-most,
  high-order) bits and the integrity keys MUST be taken from the
  remaining bits.  The number of bits for each key is defined in the
  relevant cryptographic algorithm specification RFC.  In the case of
  multiple encryption keys or multiple integrity keys, the
  specification for the cryptographic algorithm must specify the order
  in which they are to be selected from a single string of bits
  provided to the cryptographic algorithm.

4.5.3.  Locating a Security Gateway

  This section discusses issues relating to how a host learns about the
  existence of relevant security gateways and, once a host has
  contacted these security gateways, how it knows that these are the
  correct security gateways.  The details of where the required
  information is stored is a local matter, but the Peer Authorization
  Database (PAD) described in Section 4.4 is the most likely candidate.
  (Note: S* indicates a system that is running IPsec, e.g., SH1 and SG2
  below.)

  Consider a situation in which a remote host (SH1) is using the
  Internet to gain access to a server or other machine (H2) and there
  is a security gateway (SG2), e.g., a firewall, through which H1's
  traffic must pass.  An example of this situation would be a mobile
  host crossing the Internet to his home organization's firewall (SG2).
  This situation raises several issues:

  1. How does SH1 know/learn about the existence of the security
     gateway SG2?

  2. How does it authenticate SG2, and once it has authenticated SG2,
     how does it confirm that SG2 has been authorized to represent H2?

  3. How does SG2 authenticate SH1 and verify that SH1 is authorized to
     contact H2?




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  4. How does SH1 know/learn about any additional gateways that provide
     alternate paths to H2?

  To address these problems, an IPsec-supporting host or security
  gateway MUST have an administrative interface that allows the
  user/administrator to configure the address of one or more security
  gateways for ranges of destination addresses that require its use.
  This includes the ability to configure information for locating and
  authenticating one or more security gateways and verifying the
  authorization of these gateways to represent the destination host.
  (The authorization function is implied in the PAD.) This document
  does not address the issue of how to automate the
  discovery/verification of security gateways.

4.6.  SAs and Multicast

  The receiver-orientation of the SA implies that, in the case of
  unicast traffic, the destination system will select the SPI value.
  By having the destination select the SPI value, there is no potential
  for manually configured SAs to conflict with automatically configured
  (e.g., via a key management protocol) SAs or for SAs from multiple
  sources to conflict with each other.  For multicast traffic, there
  are multiple destination systems associated with a single SA.  So
  some system or person will need to coordinate among all multicast
  groups to select an SPI or SPIs on behalf of each multicast group and
  then communicate the group's IPsec information to all of the
  legitimate members of that multicast group via mechanisms not defined
  here.

  Multiple senders to a multicast group SHOULD use a single Security
  Association (and hence SPI) for all traffic to that group when a
  symmetric key encryption or integrity algorithm is employed.  In such
  circumstances, the receiver knows only that the message came from a
  system possessing the key for that multicast group.  In such
  circumstances, a receiver generally will not be able to authenticate
  which system sent the multicast traffic.  Specifications for other,
  more general multicast approaches are deferred to the IETF Multicast
  Security Working Group.

5.  IP Traffic Processing

  As mentioned in Section 4.4.1, "The Security Policy Database (SPD)",
  the SPD (or associated caches) MUST be consulted during the
  processing of all traffic that crosses the IPsec protection boundary,
  including IPsec management traffic.  If no policy is found in the SPD
  that matches a packet (for either inbound or outbound traffic), the
  packet MUST be discarded.  To simplify processing, and to allow for
  very fast SA lookups (for SG/BITS/BITW), this document introduces the



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  notion of an SPD cache for all outbound traffic (SPD-O plus SPD-S),
  and a cache for inbound, non-IPsec-protected traffic (SPD-I).  (As
  mentioned earlier, the SAD acts as a cache for checking the selectors
  of inbound IPsec-protected traffic arriving on SAs.) There is
  nominally one cache per SPD.  For the purposes of this specification,
  it is assumed that each cached entry will map to exactly one SA.
  Note, however, exceptions arise when one uses multiple SAs to carry
  traffic of different priorities (e.g., as indicated by distinct DSCP
  values) but the same selectors.  Note also, that there are a couple
  of situations in which the SAD can have entries for SAs that do not
  have corresponding entries in the SPD.  Since this document does not
  mandate that the SAD be selectively cleared when the SPD is changed,
  SAD entries can remain when the SPD entries that created them are
  changed or deleted.  Also, if a manually keyed SA is created, there
  could be an SAD entry for this SA that does not correspond to any SPD
  entry.

  Since SPD entries may overlap, one cannot safely cache these entries
  in general.  Simple caching might result in a match against a cache
  entry, whereas an ordered search of the SPD would have resulted in a
  match against a different entry.  But, if the SPD entries are first
  decorrelated, then the resulting entries can safely be cached.  Each
  cached entry will indicate that matching traffic should be bypassed
  or discarded, appropriately. (Note: The original SPD entry might
  result in multiple SAs, e.g., because of PFP.) Unless otherwise
  noted, all references below to the "SPD" or "SPD cache" or "cache"
  are to a decorrelated SPD (SPD-I, SPD-O, SPD-S) or the SPD cache
  containing entries from the decorrelated SPD.

  Note: In a host IPsec implementation based on sockets, the SPD will
  be consulted whenever a new socket is created to determine what, if
  any, IPsec processing will be applied to the traffic that will flow
  on that socket.  This provides an implicit caching mechanism, and the
  portions of the preceding discussion that address caching can be
  ignored in such implementations.

  Note: It is assumed that one starts with a correlated SPD because
  that is how users and administrators are accustomed to managing these
  sorts of access control lists or firewall filter rules.  Then the
  decorrelation algorithm is applied to build a list of cache-able SPD
  entries.  The decorrelation is invisible at the management interface.

  For inbound IPsec traffic, the SAD entry selected by the SPI serves
  as the cache for the selectors to be matched against arriving IPsec
  packets, after AH or ESP processing has been performed.






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5.1.  Outbound IP Traffic Processing (protected-to-unprotected)

  First consider the path for traffic entering the implementation via a
  protected interface and exiting via an unprotected interface.

                         Unprotected Interface
                                  ^
                                  |
           (nested SAs)      +----------+
          -------------------|Forwarding|<-----+
          |                  +----------+      |
          |                        ^           |
          |                        | BYPASS    |
          V                     +-----+        |
      +-------+                 | SPD |     +--------+
   ...| SPD-I |.................|Cache|.....|PROCESS |...IPsec
      |  (*)  |                 | (*) |---->|(AH/ESP)|   boundary
      +-------+                 +-----+     +--------+
          |        +-------+     /  ^
          |        |DISCARD| <--/   |
          |        +-------+        |
          |                         |
          |                 +-------------+
          |---------------->|SPD Selection|
                            +-------------+
                                   ^
                                   |     +------+
                                   |  -->| ICMP |
                                   | /   +------+
                                   |/
                                   |
                                   |
                           Protected Interface


        Figure 2.  Processing Model for Outbound Traffic
                   (*) = The SPD caches are shown here.  If there
                         is a cache miss, then the SPD is checked.
                         There is no requirement that an
                         implementation buffer the packet if
                         there is a cache miss.










Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  IPsec MUST perform the following steps when processing outbound
  packets:

  1.  When a packet arrives from the subscriber (protected) interface,
      invoke the SPD selection function to obtain the SPD-ID needed to
      choose the appropriate SPD. (If the implementation uses only one
      SPD, this step is a no-op.)

  2.  Match the packet headers against the cache for the SPD specified
      by the SPD-ID from step 1.  Note that this cache contains entries
      from SPD-O and SPD-S.

  3a. If there is a match, then process the packet as specified by the
      matching cache entry, i.e., BYPASS, DISCARD, or PROTECT using AH
      or ESP.  If IPsec processing is applied, there is a link from the
      SPD cache entry to the relevant SAD entry (specifying the mode,
      cryptographic algorithms, keys, SPI, PMTU, etc.).  IPsec
      processing is as previously defined, for tunnel or transport
      modes and for AH or ESP, as specified in their respective RFCs
      [Ken05b, Ken05a].  Note that the SA PMTU value, plus the value of
      the stateful fragment checking flag (and the DF bit in the IP
      header of the outbound packet) determine whether the packet can
      (must) be fragmented prior to or after IPsec processing, or if it
      must be discarded and an ICMP PMTU message is sent.

  3b. If no match is found in the cache, search the SPD (SPD-S and
      SPD-O parts) specified by SPD-ID.  If the SPD entry calls for
      BYPASS or DISCARD, create one or more new outbound SPD cache
      entries and if BYPASS, create one or more new inbound SPD cache
      entries. (More than one cache entry may be created since a
      decorrelated SPD entry may be linked to other such entries that
      were created as a side effect of the decorrelation process.) If
      the SPD entry calls for PROTECT, i.e., creation of an SA, the key
      management mechanism (e.g., IKEv2) is invoked to create the SA.
      If SA creation succeeds, a new outbound (SPD-S) cache entry is
      created, along with outbound and inbound SAD entries, otherwise
      the packet is discarded. (A packet that triggers an SPD lookup
      MAY be discarded by the implementation, or it MAY be processed
      against the newly created cache entry, if one is created.)  Since
      SAs are created in pairs, an SAD entry for the corresponding
      inbound SA also is created, and it contains the selector values
      derived from the SPD entry (and packet, if any PFP flags were
      "true") used to create the inbound SA, for use in checking
      inbound traffic delivered via the SA.

  4.  The packet is passed to the outbound forwarding function
      (operating outside of the IPsec implementation), to select the
      interface to which the packet will be directed.  This function



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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


      may cause the packet to be passed back across the IPsec boundary,
      for additional IPsec processing, e.g., in support of nested SAs.
      If so, there MUST be an entry in SPD-I database that permits
      inbound bypassing of the packet, otherwise the packet will be
      discarded.  If necessary, i.e., if there is more than one SPD-I,
      the traffic being looped back MAY be tagged as coming from this
      internal interface.  This would allow the use of a different
      SPD-I for "real" external traffic vs. looped traffic, if needed.

  Note: With the exception of IPv4 and IPv6 transport mode, an SG,
  BITS, or BITW implementation MAY fragment packets before applying
  IPsec. (This applies only to IPv4.  For IPv6 packets, only the
  originator is allowed to fragment them.) The device SHOULD have a
  configuration setting to disable this.  The resulting fragments are
  evaluated against the SPD in the normal manner.  Thus, fragments not
  containing port numbers (or ICMP message type and code, or Mobility
  Header type) will only match rules having port (or ICMP message type
  and code, or MH type) selectors of OPAQUE or ANY. (See Section 7 for
  more details.)

  Note: With regard to determining and enforcing the PMTU of an SA, the
  IPsec system MUST follow the steps described in Section 8.2.

5.1.1.  Handling an Outbound Packet That Must Be Discarded

  If an IPsec system receives an outbound packet that it finds it must
  discard, it SHOULD be capable of generating and sending an ICMP
  message to indicate to the sender of the outbound packet that the
  packet was discarded.  The type and code of the ICMP message will
  depend on the reason for discarding the packet, as specified below.
  The reason SHOULD be recorded in the audit log.  The audit log entry
  for this event SHOULD include the reason, current date/time, and the
  selector values from the packet.

  a.  The selectors of the packet matched an SPD entry requiring the
      packet to be discarded.

          IPv4 Type = 3 (destination unreachable) Code = 13
               (Communication Administratively Prohibited)

          IPv6 Type = 1 (destination unreachable) Code = 1
               (Communication with destination administratively
               prohibited)

  b1. The IPsec system successfully reached the remote peer but was
      unable to negotiate the SA required by the SPD entry matching the
      packet because, for example, the remote peer is administratively
      prohibited from communicating with the initiator, the initiating



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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


      peer was unable to authenticate itself to the remote peer, the
      remote peer was unable to authenticate itself to the initiating
      peer, or the SPD at the remote peer did not have a suitable
      entry.

          IPv4 Type = 3 (destination unreachable) Code = 13
               (Communication Administratively Prohibited)

          IPv6 Type = 1 (destination unreachable) Code = 1
               (Communication with destination administratively
               prohibited)

  b2. The IPsec system was unable to set up the SA required by the SPD
      entry matching the packet because the IPsec peer at the other end
      of the exchange could not be contacted.

          IPv4 Type = 3 (destination unreachable) Code = 1 (host
               unreachable)

          IPv6 Type = 1 (destination unreachable) Code = 3 (address
               unreachable)

  Note that an attacker behind a security gateway could send packets
  with a spoofed source address, W.X.Y.Z, to an IPsec entity causing it
  to send ICMP messages to W.X.Y.Z.  This creates an opportunity for a
  denial of service (DoS) attack among hosts behind a security gateway.
  To address this, a security gateway SHOULD include a management
  control to allow an administrator to configure an IPsec
  implementation to send or not send the ICMP messages under these
  circumstances, and if this facility is selected, to rate limit the
  transmission of such ICMP responses.

5.1.2.  Header Construction for Tunnel Mode

  This section describes the handling of the inner and outer IP
  headers, extension headers, and options for AH and ESP tunnels, with
  regard to outbound traffic processing.  This includes how to
  construct the encapsulating (outer) IP header, how to process fields
  in the inner IP header, and what other actions should be taken for
  outbound, tunnel mode traffic.  The general processing described here
  is modeled after RFC 2003, "IP Encapsulation within IP" [Per96]:

   o The outer IP header Source Address and Destination Address
     identify the "endpoints" of the tunnel (the encapsulator and
     decapsulator).  The inner IP header Source Address and Destination
     Addresses identify the original sender and recipient of the
     datagram (from the perspective of this tunnel), respectively.




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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     (See footnote 3 after the table in 5.1.2.1 for more details on the
     encapsulating source IP address.)

   o The inner IP header is not changed except as noted below for TTL
     (or Hop Limit) and the DS/ECN Fields.  The inner IP header
     otherwise remains unchanged during its delivery to the tunnel exit
     point.

   o No change to IP options or extension headers in the inner header
     occurs during delivery of the encapsulated datagram through the
     tunnel.

  Note: IPsec tunnel mode is different from IP-in-IP tunneling (RFC
  2003 [Per96]) in several ways:

   o IPsec offers certain controls to a security administrator to
     manage covert channels (which would not normally be a concern for
     tunneling) and to ensure that the receiver examines the right
     portions of the received packet with respect to application of
     access controls.  An IPsec implementation MAY be configurable with
     regard to how it processes the outer DS field for tunnel mode for
     transmitted packets.  For outbound traffic, one configuration
     setting for the outer DS field will operate as described in the
     following sections on IPv4 and IPv6 header processing for IPsec
     tunnels.  Another will allow the outer DS field to be mapped to a
     fixed value, which MAY be configured on a per-SA basis. (The value
     might really be fixed for all traffic outbound from a device, but
     per-SA granularity allows that as well.) This configuration option
     allows a local administrator to decide whether the covert channel
     provided by copying these bits outweighs the benefits of copying.

   o IPsec describes how to handle ECN or DS and provides the ability
     to control propagation of changes in these fields between
     unprotected and protected domains.  In general, propagation from a
     protected to an unprotected domain is a covert channel and thus
     controls are provided to manage the bandwidth of this channel.
     Propagation of ECN values in the other direction are controlled so
     that only legitimate ECN changes (indicating occurrence of
     congestion between the tunnel endpoints) are propagated.  By
     default, DS propagation from an unprotected domain to a protected
     domain is not permitted.  However, if the sender and receiver do
     not share the same DS code space, and the receiver has no way of
     learning how to map between the two spaces, then it may be
     appropriate to deviate from the default.  Specifically, an IPsec
     implementation MAY be configurable in terms of how it processes
     the outer DS field for tunnel mode for received packets.  It may
     be configured to either discard the outer DS value (the default)
     OR to overwrite the inner DS field with the outer DS field.  If



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     offered, the discard vs. overwrite behavior MAY be configured on a
     per-SA basis.  This configuration option allows a local
     administrator to decide whether the vulnerabilities created by
     copying these bits outweigh the benefits of copying.  See
     [RFC2983] for further information on when each of these behaviors
     may be useful, and also for the possible need for diffserv traffic
     conditioning prior or subsequent to IPsec processing (including
     tunnel decapsulation).

   o IPsec allows the IP version of the encapsulating header to be
     different from that of the inner header.

  The tables in the following sub-sections show the handling for the
  different header/option fields ("constructed" means that the value in
  the outer field is constructed independently of the value in the
  inner).

5.1.2.1.  IPv4: Header Construction for Tunnel Mode

                        <-- How Outer Hdr Relates to Inner Hdr -->
                        Outer Hdr at                 Inner Hdr at
   IPv4                 Encapsulator                 Decapsulator
     Header fields:     --------------------         ------------
       version          4 (1)                        no change
       header length    constructed                  no change
       DS Field         copied from inner hdr (5)    no change
       ECN Field        copied from inner hdr        constructed (6)
       total length     constructed                  no change
       ID               constructed                  no change
       flags (DF,MF)    constructed, DF (4)          no change
       fragment offset  constructed                  no change
       TTL              constructed (2)              decrement (2)
       protocol         AH, ESP                      no change
       checksum         constructed                  constructed (2)(6)
       src address      constructed (3)              no change
       dest address     constructed (3)              no change
     Options            never copied                 no change

   Notes:

     (1) The IP version in the encapsulating header can be different
         from the value in the inner header.

     (2) The TTL in the inner header is decremented by the encapsulator
         prior to forwarding and by the decapsulator if it forwards the
         packet.  (The IPv4 checksum changes when the TTL changes.)





Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


         Note: Decrementing the TTL value is a normal part of
         forwarding a packet.  Thus, a packet originating from the same
         node as the encapsulator does not have its TTL decremented,
         since the sending node is originating the packet rather than
         forwarding it.  This applies to BITS and native IPsec
         implementations in hosts and routers.  However, the IPsec
         processing model includes an external forwarding capability.
         TTL processing can be used to prevent looping of packets,
         e.g., due to configuration errors, within the context of this
         processing model.

     (3) Local and Remote addresses depend on the SA, which is used to
         determine the Remote address, which in turn determines which
         Local address (net interface) is used to forward the packet.

         Note: For multicast traffic, the destination address, or
         source and destination addresses, may be required for
         demuxing.  In that case, it is important to ensure consistency
         over the lifetime of the SA by ensuring that the source
         address that appears in the encapsulating tunnel header is the
         same as the one that was negotiated during the SA
         establishment process.  There is an exception to this general
         rule, i.e., a mobile IPsec implementation will update its
         source address as it moves.

     (4) Configuration determines whether to copy from the inner header
         (IPv4 only), clear, or set the DF.

     (5) If the packet will immediately enter a domain for which the
         DSCP value in the outer header is not appropriate, that value
         MUST be mapped to an appropriate value for the domain
         [NiBlBaBL98].  See RFC 2475 [BBCDWW98] for further
         information.

     (6) If the ECN field in the inner header is set to ECT(0) or
         ECT(1), where ECT is ECN-Capable Transport (ECT), and if the
         ECN field in the outer header is set to Congestion Experienced
         (CE), then set the ECN field in the inner header to CE;
         otherwise, make no change to the ECN field in the inner
         header.  (The IPv4 checksum changes when the ECN changes.)

  Note: IPsec does not copy the options from the inner header into the
  outer header, nor does IPsec construct the options in the outer
  header.  However, post-IPsec code MAY insert/construct options for
  the outer header.






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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


5.1.2.2.  IPv6: Header Construction for Tunnel Mode

                        <-- How Outer Hdr  Relates Inner Hdr --->
                        Outer Hdr at                 Inner Hdr at
   IPv6                 Encapsulator                 Decapsulator
     Header fields:     --------------------         ------------
       version          6 (1)                        no change
       DS Field         copied from inner hdr (5)    no change (9)
       ECN Field        copied from inner hdr        constructed (6)
       flow label       copied or configured (8)     no change
       payload length   constructed                  no change
       next header      AH,ESP,routing hdr           no change
       hop limit        constructed (2)              decrement (2)
       src address      constructed (3)              no change
       dest address     constructed (3)              no change
     Extension headers  never copied (7)             no change

   Notes:

     (1) - (6) See Section 5.1.2.1.

     (7) IPsec does not copy the extension headers from the inner
         packet into outer headers, nor does IPsec construct extension
         headers in the outer header.  However, post-IPsec code MAY
         insert/construct extension headers for the outer header.

     (8) See [RaCoCaDe04].  Copying is acceptable only for end systems,
         not SGs.  If an SG copied flow labels from the inner header to
         the outer header, collisions might result.

     (9) An implementation MAY choose to provide a facility to pass the
         DS value from the outer header to the inner header, on a per-
         SA basis, for received tunnel mode packets.  The motivation
         for providing this feature is to accommodate situations in
         which the DS code space at the receiver is different from that
         of the sender and the receiver has no way of knowing how to
         translate from the sender's space.  There is a danger in
         copying this value from the outer header to the inner header,
         since it enables an attacker to modify the outer DSCP value in
         a fashion that may adversely affect other traffic at the
         receiver.  Hence the default behavior for IPsec
         implementations is NOT to permit such copying.

5.2.  Processing Inbound IP Traffic (unprotected-to-protected)

  Inbound processing is somewhat different from outbound processing,
  because of the use of SPIs to map IPsec-protected traffic to SAs.
  The inbound SPD cache (SPD-I) is applied only to bypassed or



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  discarded traffic.  If an arriving packet appears to be an IPsec
  fragment from an unprotected interface, reassembly is performed prior
  to IPsec processing.  The intent for any SPD cache is that a packet
  that fails to match any entry is then referred to the corresponding
  SPD.  Every SPD SHOULD have a nominal, final entry that catches
  anything that is otherwise unmatched, and discards it.  This ensures
  that non-IPsec-protected traffic that arrives and does not match any
  SPD-I entry will be discarded.

                     Unprotected Interface
                               |
                               V
                            +-----+   IPsec protected
        ------------------->|Demux|-------------------+
        |                   +-----+                   |
        |                      |                      |
        |            Not IPsec |                      |
        |                      |                      |
        |                      V                      |
        |     +-------+    +---------+                |
        |     |DISCARD|<---|SPD-I (*)|                |
        |     +-------+    +---------+                |
        |                   |                         |
        |                   |-----+                   |
        |                   |     |                   |
        |                   |     V                   |
        |                   |  +------+               |
        |                   |  | ICMP |               |
        |                   |  +------+               |
        |                   |                         V
     +---------+            |                   +-----------+
 ....|SPD-O (*)|............|...................|PROCESS(**)|...IPsec
     +---------+            |                   | (AH/ESP)  | Boundary
        ^                   |                   +-----------+
        |                   |       +---+             |
        |            BYPASS |   +-->|IKE|             |
        |                   |   |   +---+             |
        |                   V   |                     V
        |               +----------+          +---------+   +----+
        |--------<------|Forwarding|<---------|SAD Check|-->|ICMP|
          nested SAs    +----------+          | (***)   |   +----+
                              |               +---------+
                              V
                      Protected Interface

           Figure 3.  Processing Model for Inbound Traffic





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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


                      (*) = The caches are shown here.  If there is
                            a cache miss, then the SPD is checked.
                            There is no requirement that an
                            implementation buffer the packet if
                            there is a cache miss.
                     (**) = This processing includes using the
                            packet's SPI, etc., to look up the SA
                            in the SAD, which forms a cache of the
                            SPD for inbound packets (except for
                            cases noted in Sections 4.4.2 and 5).
                            See step 3a below.
                    (***) = This SAD check refers to step 4 below.

  Prior to performing AH or ESP processing, any IP fragments that
  arrive via the unprotected interface are reassembled (by IP).  Each
  inbound IP datagram to which IPsec processing will be applied is
  identified by the appearance of the AH or ESP values in the IP Next
  Protocol field (or of AH or ESP as a next layer protocol in the IPv6
  context).

  IPsec MUST perform the following steps:

  1.  When a packet arrives, it may be tagged with the ID of the
      interface (physical or virtual) via which it arrived, if
      necessary, to support multiple SPDs and associated SPD-I caches.
      (The interface ID is mapped to a corresponding SPD-ID.)

  2.  The packet is examined and demuxed into one of two categories:
      - If the packet appears to be IPsec protected and it is addressed
        to this device, an attempt is made to map it to an active SA
        via the SAD.  Note that the device may have multiple IP
        addresses that may be used in the SAD lookup, e.g., in the case
        of protocols such as SCTP.
      - Traffic not addressed to this device, or addressed to this
        device and not AH or ESP, is directed to SPD-I lookup. (This
        implies that IKE traffic MUST have an explicit BYPASS entry in
        the SPD.) If multiple SPDs are employed, the tag assigned to
        the packet in step 1 is used to select the appropriate SPD-I
        (and cache) to search.  SPD-I lookup determines whether the
        action is DISCARD or BYPASS.

  3a. If the packet is addressed to the IPsec device and AH or ESP is
      specified as the protocol, the packet is looked up in the SAD.
      For unicast traffic, use only the SPI (or SPI plus protocol).
      For multicast traffic, use the SPI plus the destination or SPI
      plus destination and source addresses, as specified in Section
      4.1. In either case (unicast or multicast), if there is no match,
      discard the traffic.  This is an auditable event.  The audit log



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      entry for this event SHOULD include the current date/time, SPI,
      source and destination of the packet, IPsec protocol, and any
      other selector values of the packet that are available.  If the
      packet is found in the SAD, process it accordingly (see step 4).

  3b. If the packet is not addressed to the device or is addressed to
      this device and is not AH or ESP, look up the packet header in
      the (appropriate) SPD-I cache.  If there is a match and the
      packet is to be discarded or bypassed, do so.  If there is no
      cache match, look up the packet in the corresponding SPD-I and
      create a cache entry as appropriate. (No SAs are created in
      response to receipt of a packet that requires IPsec protection;
      only BYPASS or DISCARD cache entries can be created this way.) If
      there is no match, discard the traffic.  This is an auditable
      event.  The audit log entry for this event SHOULD include the
      current date/time, SPI if available, IPsec protocol if available,
      source and destination of the packet, and any other selector
      values of the packet that are available.

  3c. Processing of ICMP messages is assumed to take place on the
      unprotected side of the IPsec boundary.  Unprotected ICMP
      messages are examined and local policy is applied to determine
      whether to accept or reject these messages and, if accepted, what
      action to take as a result.  For example, if an ICMP unreachable
      message is received, the implementation must decide whether to
      act on it, reject it, or act on it with constraints. (See Section
      6.)

  4.  Apply AH or ESP processing as specified, using the SAD entry
      selected in step 3a above.  Then match the packet against the
      inbound selectors identified by the SAD entry to verify that the
      received packet is appropriate for the SA via which it was
      received.

  5.  If an IPsec system receives an inbound packet on an SA and the
      packet's header fields are not consistent with the selectors for
      the SA, it MUST discard the packet.  This is an auditable event.
      The audit log entry for this event SHOULD include the current
      date/time, SPI, IPsec protocol(s), source and destination of the
      packet, any other selector values of the packet that are
      available, and the selector values from the relevant SAD entry.
      The system SHOULD also be capable of generating and sending an
      IKE notification of INVALID_SELECTORS to the sender (IPsec peer),
      indicating that the received packet was discarded because of
      failure to pass selector checks.






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  To minimize the impact of a DoS attack, or a mis-configured peer, the
  IPsec system SHOULD include a management control to allow an
  administrator to configure the IPsec implementation to send or not
  send this IKE notification, and if this facility is selected, to rate
  limit the transmission of such notifications.

  After traffic is bypassed or processed through IPsec, it is handed to
  the inbound forwarding function for disposition.  This function may
  cause the packet to be sent (outbound) across the IPsec boundary for
  additional inbound IPsec processing, e.g., in support of nested SAs.
  If so, then as with ALL outbound traffic that is to be bypassed, the
  packet MUST be matched against an SPD-O entry.  Ultimately, the
  packet should be forwarded to the destination host or process for
  disposition.

6.  ICMP Processing

  This section describes IPsec handling of ICMP traffic.  There are two
  categories of ICMP traffic: error messages (e.g., type = destination
  unreachable) and non-error messages (e.g., type = echo).  This
  section applies exclusively to error messages.  Disposition of
  non-error, ICMP messages (that are not addressed to the IPsec
  implementation itself) MUST be explicitly accounted for using SPD
  entries.

  The discussion in this section applies to ICMPv6 as well as to
  ICMPv4.  Also, a mechanism SHOULD be provided to allow an
  administrator to cause ICMP error messages (selected, all, or none)
  to be logged as an aid to problem diagnosis.

6.1.  Processing ICMP Error Messages Directed to an IPsec Implementation

6.1.1.  ICMP Error Messages Received on the Unprotected Side of the
       Boundary

  Figure 3 in Section 5.2 shows a distinct ICMP processing module on
  the unprotected side of the IPsec boundary, for processing ICMP
  messages (error or otherwise) that are addressed to the IPsec device
  and that are not protected via AH or ESP.  An ICMP message of this
  sort is unauthenticated, and its processing may result in denial or
  degradation of service.  This suggests that, in general, it would be
  desirable to ignore such messages.  However, many ICMP messages will
  be received by hosts or security gateways from unauthenticated
  sources, e.g., routers in the public Internet.  Ignoring these ICMP
  messages can degrade service, e.g., because of a failure to process
  PMTU message and redirection messages.  Thus, there is also a
  motivation for accepting and acting upon unauthenticated ICMP
  messages.



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  To accommodate both ends of this spectrum, a compliant IPsec
  implementation MUST permit a local administrator to configure an
  IPsec implementation to accept or reject unauthenticated ICMP
  traffic.  This control MUST be at the granularity of ICMP type and
  MAY be at the granularity of ICMP type and code.  Additionally, an
  implementation SHOULD incorporate mechanisms and parameters for
  dealing with such traffic.  For example, there could be the ability
  to establish a minimum PMTU for traffic (on a per destination basis),
  to prevent receipt of an unauthenticated ICMP from setting the PMTU
  to a trivial size.

  If an ICMP PMTU message passes the checks above and the system is
  configured to accept it, then there are two possibilities.  If the
  implementation applies fragmentation on the ciphertext side of the
  boundary, then the accepted PMTU information is passed to the
  forwarding module (outside of the IPsec implementation), which uses
  it to manage outbound packet fragmentation.  If the implementation is
  configured to effect plaintext side fragmentation, then the PMTU
  information is passed to the plaintext side and processed as
  described in Section 8.2.

6.1.2.  ICMP Error Messages Received on the Protected Side of the
       Boundary

  These ICMP messages are not authenticated, but they do come from
  sources on the protected side of the IPsec boundary.  Thus, these
  messages generally are viewed as more "trustworthy" than their
  counterparts arriving from sources on the unprotected side of the
  boundary.  The major security concern here is that a compromised host
  or router might emit erroneous ICMP error messages that could degrade
  service for other devices "behind" the security gateway, or that
  could even result in violations of confidentiality.  For example, if
  a bogus ICMP redirect were consumed by a security gateway, it could
  cause the forwarding table on the protected side of the boundary to
  be modified so as to deliver traffic to an inappropriate destination
  "behind" the gateway.  Thus, implementers MUST provide controls to
  allow local administrators to constrain the processing of ICMP error
  messages received on the protected side of the boundary, and directed
  to the IPsec implementation.  These controls are of the same type as
  those employed on the unprotected side, described above in Section
  6.1.1.

6.2.  Processing Protected, Transit ICMP Error Messages

  When an ICMP error message is transmitted via an SA to a device
  "behind" an IPsec implementation, both the payload and the header of
  the ICMP message require checking from an access control perspective.
  If one of these messages is forwarded to a host behind a security



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  gateway, the receiving host IP implementation will make decisions
  based on the payload, i.e., the header of the packet that purportedly
  triggered the error response.  Thus, an IPsec implementation MUST be
  configurable to check that this payload header information is
  consistent with the SA via which it arrives. (This means that the
  payload header, with source and destination address and port fields
  reversed, matches the traffic selectors for the SA.) If this sort of
  check is not performed, then, for example, anyone with whom the
  receiving IPsec system (A) has an active SA could send an ICMP
  Destination Unreachable message that refers to any host/net with
  which A is currently communicating, and thus effect a highly
  efficient DoS attack regarding communication with other peers of A.
  Normal IPsec receiver processing of traffic is not sufficient to
  protect against such attacks.  However, not all contexts may require
  such checks, so it is also necessary to allow a local administrator
  to configure an implementation to NOT perform such checks.

  To accommodate both policies, the following convention is adopted.
  If an administrator wants to allow ICMP error messages to be carried
  by an SA without inspection of the payload, then configure an SPD
  entry that explicitly allows for carriage of such traffic.  If an
  administrator wants IPsec to check the payload of ICMP error messages
  for consistency, then do not create any SPD entries that accommodate
  carriage of such traffic based on the ICMP packet header.  This
  convention motivates the following processing description.

  IPsec senders and receivers MUST support the following processing for
  ICMP error messages that are sent and received via SAs.

  If an SA exists that accommodates an outbound ICMP error message,
  then the message is mapped to the SA and only the IP and ICMP headers
  are checked upon receipt, just as would be the case for other
  traffic.  If no SA exists that matches the traffic selectors
  associated with an ICMP error message, then the SPD is searched to
  determine if such an SA can be created.  If so, the SA is created and
  the ICMP error message is transmitted via that SA.  Upon receipt,
  this message is subject to the usual traffic selector checks at the
  receiver.  This processing is exactly what would happen for traffic
  in general, and thus does not represent any special processing for
  ICMP error messages.

  If no SA exists that would carry the outbound ICMP message in
  question, and if no SPD entry would allow carriage of this outbound
  ICMP error message, then an IPsec implementation MUST map the message
  to the SA that would carry the return traffic associated with the
  packet that triggered the ICMP error message.  This requires an IPsec
  implementation to detect outbound ICMP error messages that map to no
  extant SA or SPD entry, and treat them specially with regard to SA



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  creation and lookup.  The implementation extracts the header for the
  packet that triggered the error (from the ICMP message payload),
  reverses the source and destination IP address fields, extracts the
  protocol field, and reverses the port fields (if accessible).  It
  then uses this extracted information to locate an appropriate, active
  outbound SA, and transmits the error message via this SA.  If no such
  SA exists, no SA will be created, and this is an auditable event.

  If an IPsec implementation receives an inbound ICMP error message on
  an SA, and the IP and ICMP headers of the message do not match the
  traffic selectors for the SA, the receiver MUST process the received
  message in a special fashion.  Specifically, the receiver must
  extract the header of the triggering packet from the ICMP payload,
  and reverse fields as described above to determine if the packet is
  consistent with the selectors for the SA via which the ICMP error
  message was received.  If the packet fails this check, the IPsec
  implementation MUST NOT forwarded the ICMP message to the
  destination.  This is an auditable event.

7.  Handling Fragments (on the protected side of the IPsec boundary)

  Earlier sections of this document describe mechanisms for (a)
  fragmenting an outbound packet after IPsec processing has been
  applied and reassembling it at the receiver before IPsec processing
  and (b) handling inbound fragments received from the unprotected side
  of the IPsec boundary.  This section describes how an implementation
  should handle the processing of outbound plaintext fragments on the
  protected side of the IPsec boundary. (See Appendix D, "Fragment
  Handling Rationale".) In particular, it addresses:

       o mapping an outbound non-initial fragment to the right SA
         (or finding the right SPD entry)
       o verifying that a received non-initial fragment is
         authorized for the SA via which it was received
       o mapping outbound and inbound non-initial fragments to the
         right SPD-O/SPD-I entry or the relevant cache entry, for
         BYPASS/DISCARD traffic

  Note: In Section 4.1, transport mode SAs have been defined to not
  carry fragments (IPv4 or IPv6).  Note also that in Section 4.4.1, two
  special values, ANY and OPAQUE, were defined for selectors and that
  ANY includes OPAQUE.  The term "non-trivial" is used to mean that the
  selector has a value other than OPAQUE or ANY.

  Note: The term "non-initial fragment" is used here to indicate a
  fragment that does not contain all the selector values that may be
  needed for access control.  As observed in Section 4.4.1, depending
  on the Next Layer Protocol, in addition to Ports, the ICMP message



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  type/code or Mobility Header type could be missing from non-initial
  fragments.  Also, for IPv6, even the first fragment might NOT contain
  the Next Layer Protocol or Ports (or ICMP message type/code, or
  Mobility Header type) depending on the kind and number of extension
  headers present.  If a non-initial fragment contains the Port (or
  ICMP type and code or Mobility Header type) but not the Next Layer
  Protocol, then unless there is an SPD entry for the relevant
  Local/Remote addresses with ANY for Next Layer Protocol and Port (or
  ICMP type and code or Mobility Header type), the fragment would not
  contain all the selector information needed for access control.

  To address the above issues, three approaches have been defined:

      o Tunnel mode SAs that carry initial and non-initial fragments
        (See Section 7.1.)
      o Separate tunnel mode SAs for non-initial fragments (See
        Section 7.2.)
      o Stateful fragment checking (See Section 7.3.)

7.1.  Tunnel Mode SAs that Carry Initial and Non-Initial Fragments

  All implementations MUST support tunnel mode SAs that are configured
  to pass traffic without regard to port field (or ICMP type/code or
  Mobility Header type) values.  If the SA will carry traffic for
  specified protocols, the selector set for the SA MUST specify the
  port fields (or ICMP type/code or Mobility Header type) as ANY.  An
  SA defined in this fashion will carry all traffic including initial
  and non-initial fragments for the indicated Local/Remote addresses
  and specified Next Layer protocol(s).  If the SA will carry traffic
  without regard to a specific protocol value (i.e., ANY is specified
  as the (Next Layer) protocol selector value), then the port field
  values are undefined and MUST be set to ANY as well. (As noted in
  4.4.1, ANY includes OPAQUE as well as all specific values.)

7.2.  Separate Tunnel Mode SAs for Non-Initial Fragments

  An implementation MAY support tunnel mode SAs that will carry only
  non-initial fragments, separate from non-fragmented packets and
  initial fragments.  The OPAQUE value will be used to specify port (or
  ICMP type/code or Mobility Header type) field selectors for an SA to
  carry such fragments.  Receivers MUST perform a minimum offset check
  on IPv4 (non-initial) fragments to protect against overlapping
  fragment attacks when SAs of this type are employed.  Because such
  checks cannot be performed on IPv6 non-initial fragments, users and
  administrators are advised that carriage of such fragments may be
  dangerous, and implementers may choose to NOT support such SAs for
  IPv6 traffic.  Also, an SA of this sort will carry all non-initial
  fragments that match a specified Local/Remote address pair and



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  protocol value, i.e., the fragments carried on this SA belong to
  packets that if not fragmented, might have gone on separate SAs of
  differing security.  Therefore, users and administrators are advised
  to protect such traffic using ESP (with integrity) and the
  "strongest" integrity and encryption algorithms in use between both
  peers.  (Determination of the "strongest" algorithms requires
  imposing an ordering of the available algorithms, a local
  determination at the discretion of the initiator of the SA.)

  Specific port (or ICMP type/code or Mobility Header type) selector
  values will be used to define SAs to carry initial fragments and
  non-fragmented packets.  This approach can be used if a user or
  administrator wants to create one or more tunnel mode SAs between the
  same Local/Remote addresses that discriminate based on port (or ICMP
  type/code or Mobility Header type) fields.  These SAs MUST have
  non-trivial protocol selector values, otherwise approach #1 above
  MUST be used.

  Note: In general, for the approach described in this section, one
  needs only a single SA between two implementations to carry all
  non-initial fragments.  However, if one chooses to have multiple SAs
  between the two implementations for QoS differentiation, then one
  might also want multiple SAs to carry fragments-without-ports, one
  for each supported QoS class.  Since support for QoS via distinct SAs
  is a local matter, not mandated by this document, the choice to have
  multiple SAs to carry non-initial fragments should also be local.

7.3.  Stateful Fragment Checking

  An implementation MAY support some form of stateful fragment checking
  for a tunnel mode SA with non-trivial port (or ICMP type/code or MH
  type) field values (not ANY or OPAQUE).  Implementations that will
  transmit non-initial fragments on a tunnel mode SA that makes use of
  non-trivial port (or ICMP type/code or MH type) selectors MUST notify
  a peer via the IKE NOTIFY NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO payload.

  The peer MUST reject this proposal if it will not accept non-initial
  fragments in this context.  If an implementation does not
  successfully negotiate transmission of non-initial fragments for such
  an SA, it MUST NOT send such fragments over the SA.  This standard
  does not specify how peers will deal with such fragments, e.g., via
  reassembly or other means, at either sender or receiver.  However, a
  receiver MUST discard non-initial fragments that arrive on an SA with
  non-trivial port (or ICMP type/code or MH type) selector values
  unless this feature has been negotiated.  Also, the receiver MUST
  discard non-initial fragments that do not comply with the security
  policy applied to the overall packet.  Discarding such packets is an
  auditable event.  Note that in network configurations where fragments



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  of a packet might be sent or received via different security gateways
  or BITW implementations, stateful strategies for tracking fragments
  may fail.

7.4.  BYPASS/DISCARD Traffic

  All implementations MUST support DISCARDing of fragments using the
  normal SPD packet classification mechanisms.  All implementations
  MUST support stateful fragment checking to accommodate BYPASS traffic
  for which a non-trivial port range is specified.  The concern is that
  BYPASS of a cleartext, non-initial fragment arriving at an IPsec
  implementation could undermine the security afforded IPsec-protected
  traffic directed to the same destination.  For example, consider an
  IPsec implementation configured with an SPD entry that calls for
  IPsec protection of traffic between a specific source/destination
  address pair, and for a specific protocol and destination port, e.g.,
  TCP traffic on port 23 (Telnet).  Assume that the implementation also
  allows BYPASS of traffic from the same source/destination address
  pair and protocol, but for a different destination port, e.g., port
  119 (NNTP).  An attacker could send a non-initial fragment (with a
  forged source address) that, if bypassed, could overlap with
  IPsec-protected traffic from the same source and thus violate the
  integrity of the IPsec-protected traffic.  Requiring stateful
  fragment checking for BYPASS entries with non-trivial port ranges
  prevents attacks of this sort.  As noted above, in network
  configurations where fragments of a packet might be sent or received
  via different security gateways or BITW implementations, stateful
  strategies for tracking fragments may fail.

8.  Path MTU/DF Processing

  The application of AH or ESP to an outbound packet increases the size
  of a packet and thus may cause a packet to exceed the PMTU for the SA
  via which the packet will travel.  An IPsec implementation also may
  receive an unprotected ICMP PMTU message and, if it chooses to act
  upon the message, the result will affect outbound traffic processing.
  This section describes the processing required of an IPsec
  implementation to deal with these two PMTU issues.

8.1.  DF Bit

  All IPsec implementations MUST support the option of copying the DF
  bit from an outbound packet to the tunnel mode header that it emits,
  when traffic is carried via a tunnel mode SA.  This means that it
  MUST be possible to configure the implementation's treatment of the
  DF bit (set, clear, copy from inner header) for each SA.  This
  applies to SAs where both inner and outer headers are IPv4.




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8.2.  Path MTU (PMTU) Discovery

  This section discusses IPsec handling for unprotected Path MTU
  Discovery messages.  ICMP PMTU is used here to refer to an ICMP
  message for:

          IPv4 (RFC 792 [Pos81b]):
                  - Type = 3 (Destination Unreachable)
                  - Code = 4 (Fragmentation needed and DF set)
                  - Next-Hop MTU in the low-order 16 bits of the
                    second word of the ICMP header (labeled "unused"
                    in RFC 792), with high-order 16 bits set to zero)

          IPv6 (RFC 2463 [CD98]):
                  - Type = 2 (Packet Too Big)
                  - Code = 0 (Fragmentation needed)
                  - Next-Hop MTU in the 32-bit MTU field of the ICMP6
                    message

8.2.1.  Propagation of PMTU

  When an IPsec implementation receives an unauthenticated PMTU
  message, and it is configured to process (vs. ignore) such messages,
  it maps the message to the SA to which it corresponds.  This mapping
  is effected by extracting the header information from the payload of
  the PMTU message and applying the procedure described in Section 5.2.
  The PMTU determined by this message is used to update the SAD PMTU
  field, taking into account the size of the AH or ESP header that will
  be applied, any crypto synchronization data, and the overhead imposed
  by an additional IP header, in the case of a tunnel mode SA.

  In a native host implementation, it is possible to maintain PMTU data
  at the same granularity as for unprotected communication, so there is
  no loss of functionality.  Signaling of the PMTU information is
  internal to the host.  For all other IPsec implementation options,
  the PMTU data must be propagated via a synthesized ICMP PMTU.  In
  these cases, the IPsec implementation SHOULD wait for outbound
  traffic to be mapped to the SAD entry.  When such traffic arrives, if
  the traffic would exceed the updated PMTU value the traffic MUST be
  handled as follows:

      Case 1: Original (cleartext) packet is IPv4 and has the DF
              bit set.  The implementation SHOULD discard the packet
              and send a PMTU ICMP message.







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      Case 2: Original (cleartext) packet is IPv4 and has the DF
              bit clear.  The implementation SHOULD fragment (before or
              after encryption per its configuration) and then forward
              the fragments.  It SHOULD NOT send a PMTU ICMP message.

      Case 3: Original (cleartext) packet is IPv6.  The implementation
              SHOULD discard the packet and send a PMTU ICMP message.

8.2.2.  PMTU Aging

  In all IPsec implementations, the PMTU associated with an SA MUST be
  "aged" and some mechanism is required to update the PMTU in a timely
  manner, especially for discovering if the PMTU is smaller than
  required by current network conditions.  A given PMTU has to remain
  in place long enough for a packet to get from the source of the SA to
  the peer, and to propagate an ICMP error message if the current PMTU
  is too big.

  Implementations SHOULD use the approach described in the Path MTU
  Discovery document (RFC 1191 [MD90], Section 6.3), which suggests
  periodically resetting the PMTU to the first-hop data-link MTU and
  then letting the normal PMTU Discovery processes update the PMTU as
  necessary.  The period SHOULD be configurable.

9.  Auditing

  IPsec implementations are not required to support auditing.  For the
  most part, the granularity of auditing is a local matter.  However,
  several auditable events are identified in this document, and for
  each of these events a minimum set of information that SHOULD be
  included in an audit log is defined.  Additional information also MAY
  be included in the audit log for each of these events, and additional
  events, not explicitly called out in this specification, also MAY
  result in audit log entries.  There is no requirement for the
  receiver to transmit any message to the purported transmitter in
  response to the detection of an auditable event, because of the
  potential to induce denial of service via such action.

10.  Conformance Requirements

  All IPv4 IPsec implementations MUST comply with all requirements of
  this document.  All IPv6 implementations MUST comply with all
  requirements of this document.








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11.  Security Considerations

  The focus of this document is security; hence security considerations
  permeate this specification.

  IPsec imposes stringent constraints on bypass of IP header data in
  both directions, across the IPsec barrier, especially when tunnel
  mode SAs are employed.  Some constraints are absolute, while others
  are subject to local administrative controls, often on a per-SA
  basis.  For outbound traffic, these constraints are designed to limit
  covert channel bandwidth.  For inbound traffic, the constraints are
  designed to prevent an adversary who has the ability to tamper with
  one data stream (on the unprotected side of the IPsec barrier) from
  adversely affecting other data streams (on the protected side of the
  barrier).  The discussion in Section 5 dealing with processing DSCP
  values for tunnel mode SAs illustrates this concern.

  If an IPsec implementation is configured to pass ICMP error messages
  over SAs based on the ICMP header values, without checking the header
  information from the ICMP message payload, serious vulnerabilities
  may arise.  Consider a scenario in which several sites (A, B, and C)
  are connected to one another via ESP-protected tunnels: A-B, A-C, and
  B-C.  Also assume that the traffic selectors for each tunnel specify
  ANY for protocol and port fields and IP source/destination address
  ranges that encompass the address range for the systems behind the
  security gateways serving each site.  This would allow a host at site
  B to send an ICMP Destination Unreachable message to any host at site
  A, that declares all hosts on the net at site C to be unreachable.
  This is a very efficient DoS attack that could have been prevented if
  the ICMP error messages were subjected to the checks that IPsec
  provides, if the SPD is suitably configured, as described in Section
  6.2.

12.  IANA Considerations

  The IANA has assigned the value (3) for the asn1-modules registry and
  has assigned the object identifier 1.3.6.1.5.8.3.1 for the SPD
  module.  See Appendix C, "ASN.1 for an SPD Entry".

13.  Differences from RFC 2401

  This architecture document differs substantially from RFC 2401
  [RFC2401] in detail and in organization, but the fundamental notions
  are unchanged.

  o The processing model has been revised to address new IPsec
    scenarios, improve performance, and simplify implementation.  This
    includes a separation between forwarding (routing) and SPD



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    selection, several SPD changes, and the addition of an outbound SPD
    cache and an inbound SPD cache for bypassed or discarded traffic.
    There is also a new database, the Peer Authorization Database
    (PAD).  This provides a link between an SA management protocol
    (such as IKE) and the SPD.

  o There is no longer a requirement to support nested SAs or "SA
    bundles".  Instead this functionality can be achieved through SPD
    and forwarding table configuration.  An example of a configuration
    has been added in Appendix E.

  o SPD entries were redefined to provide more flexibility.  Each SPD
    entry now consists of 1 to N sets of selectors, where each selector
    set contains one protocol and a "list of ranges" can now be
    specified for the Local IP address, Remote IP address, and whatever
    fields (if any) are associated with the Next Layer Protocol (Local
    Port, Remote Port, ICMP message type and code, and Mobility Header
    type).  An individual value for a selector is represented via a
    trivial range and ANY is represented via a range than spans all
    values for the selector.  An example of an ASN.1 description is
    included in Appendix C.

  o TOS (IPv4) and Traffic Class (IPv6) have been replaced by DSCP and
    ECN.  The tunnel section has been updated to explain how to handle
    DSCP and ECN bits.

  o For tunnel mode SAs, an SG, BITS, or BITW implementation is now
    allowed to fragment packets before applying IPsec.  This applies
    only to IPv4.  For IPv6 packets, only the originator is allowed to
    fragment them.

  o When security is desired between two intermediate systems along a
    path or between an intermediate system and an end system, transport
    mode may now be used between security gateways and between a
    security gateway and a host.

  o This document clarifies that for all traffic that crosses the IPsec
    boundary, including IPsec management traffic, the SPD or associated
    caches must be consulted.

  o This document defines how to handle the situation of a security
    gateway with multiple subscribers requiring separate IPsec
    contexts.

  o A definition of reserved SPIs has been added.






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  o Text has been added explaining why ALL IP packets must be checked
    -- IPsec includes minimal firewall functionality to support access
    control at the IP layer.

  o The tunnel section has been updated to clarify how to handle the IP
    options field and IPv6 extension headers when constructing the
    outer header.

  o SA mapping for inbound traffic has been updated to be consistent
    with the changes made in AH and ESP for support of unicast and
    multicast SAs.

  o Guidance has been added regarding how to handle the covert channel
    created in tunnel mode by copying the DSCP value to outer header.

  o Support for AH in both IPv4 and IPv6 is no longer required.

  o PMTU handling has been updated.  The appendix on
    PMTU/DF/Fragmentation has been deleted.

  o Three approaches have been added for handling plaintext fragments
    on the protected side of the IPsec boundary.  Appendix D documents
    the rationale behind them.

  o Added revised text describing how to derive selector values for SAs
    (from the SPD entry or from the packet, etc.)

  o Added a new table describing the relationship between selector
    values in an SPD entry, the PFP flag, and resulting selector values
    in the corresponding SAD entry.

  o Added Appendix B to describe decorrelation.

  o Added text describing how to handle an outbound packet that must be
    discarded.

  o Added text describing how to handle a DISCARDED inbound packet,
    i.e., one that does not match the SA upon which it arrived.

  o IPv6 mobility header has been added as a possible Next Layer
    Protocol.  IPv6 Mobility Header message type has been added as a
    selector.

  o ICMP message type and code have been added as selectors.

  o The selector "data sensitivity level" has been removed to simplify
    things.




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  o Updated text describing handling ICMP error messages.  The appendix
    on "Categorization of ICMP Messages" has been deleted.

  o The text for the selector name has been updated and clarified.

  o The "Next Layer Protocol" has been further explained and a default
    list of protocols to skip when looking for the Next Layer Protocol
    has been added.

  o The text has been amended to say that this document assumes use of
    IKEv2 or an SA management protocol with comparable features.

  o Text has been added clarifying the algorithm for mapping inbound
    IPsec datagrams to SAs in the presence of multicast SAs.

  o The appendix "Sequence Space Window Code Example" has been removed.

  o With respect to IP addresses and ports, the terms "Local" and
    "Remote" are used for policy rules (replacing source and
    destination).  "Local" refers to the entity being protected by an
    IPsec implementation, i.e., the "source" address/port of outbound
    packets or the "destination" address/port of inbound packets.
    "Remote" refers to a peer entity or peer entities.  The terms
    "source" and "destination" are still used for packet header fields.

14.  Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Ran
  Atkinson, who played a critical role in initial IPsec activities, and
  who authored the first series of IPsec standards: RFCs 1825-1827; and
  Charlie Lynn, who made significant contributions to the second series
  of IPsec standards (RFCs 2401, 2402, and 2406) and to the current
  versions, especially with regard to IPv6 issues.  The authors also
  would like to thank the members of the IPsec and MSEC working groups
  who have contributed to the development of this protocol
  specification.















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Appendix A: Glossary

  This section provides definitions for several key terms that are
  employed in this document.  Other documents provide additional
  definitions and background information relevant to this technology,
  e.g., [Shi00], [VK83], and [HA94].  Included in this glossary are
  generic security service and security mechanism terms, plus
  IPsec-specific terms.

  Access Control
     A security service that prevents unauthorized use of a resource,
     including the prevention of use of a resource in an unauthorized
     manner.  In the IPsec context, the resource to which access is
     being controlled is often:

              o for a host, computing cycles or data
              o for a security gateway, a network behind the gateway
                or bandwidth on that network.

  Anti-replay
     See "Integrity" below.

  Authentication
     Used informally to refer to the combination of two nominally
     distinct security services, data origin authentication and
     connectionless integrity.  See the definitions below for each of
     these services.

  Availability
     When viewed as a security service, addresses the security concerns
     engendered by attacks against networks that deny or degrade
     service.  For example, in the IPsec context, the use of
     anti-replay mechanisms in AH and ESP support availability.

  Confidentiality
     The security service that protects data from unauthorized
     disclosure.  The primary confidentiality concern in most instances
     is unauthorized disclosure of application-level data, but
     disclosure of the external characteristics of communication also
     can be a concern in some circumstances.  Traffic flow
     confidentiality is the service that addresses this latter concern
     by concealing source and destination addresses, message length, or
     frequency of communication.  In the IPsec context, using ESP in
     tunnel mode, especially at a security gateway, can provide some
     level of traffic flow confidentiality. (See also "Traffic
     Analysis" below.)





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  Data Origin Authentication
     A security service that verifies the identity of the claimed
     source of data.  This service is usually bundled with
     connectionless integrity service.

  Encryption
     A security mechanism used to transform data from an intelligible
     form (plaintext) into an unintelligible form (ciphertext), to
     provide confidentiality.  The inverse transformation process is
     designated "decryption".  Often the term "encryption" is used to
     generically refer to both processes.

  Integrity
     A security service that ensures that modifications to data are
     detectable.  Integrity comes in various flavors to match
     application requirements.  IPsec supports two forms of integrity:
     connectionless and a form of partial sequence integrity.
     Connectionless integrity is a service that detects modification of
     an individual IP datagram, without regard to the ordering of the
     datagram in a stream of traffic.  The form of partial sequence
     integrity offered in IPsec is referred to as anti-replay
     integrity, and it detects arrival of duplicate IP datagrams
     (within a constrained window).  This is in contrast to
     connection-oriented integrity, which imposes more stringent
     sequencing requirements on traffic, e.g., to be able to detect
     lost or re-ordered messages.  Although authentication and
     integrity services often are cited separately, in practice they
     are intimately connected and almost always offered in tandem.

  Protected vs. Unprotected
     "Protected" refers to the systems or interfaces that are inside
     the IPsec protection boundary, and "unprotected" refers to the
     systems or interfaces that are outside the IPsec protection
     boundary.  IPsec provides a boundary through which traffic passes.
     There is an asymmetry to this barrier, which is reflected in the
     processing model.  Outbound data, if not discarded or bypassed, is
     protected via the application of AH or ESP and the addition of the
     corresponding headers.  Inbound data, if not discarded or
     bypassed, is processed via the removal of AH or ESP headers.  In
     this document, inbound traffic enters an IPsec implementation from
     the "unprotected" interface.  Outbound traffic enters the
     implementation via the "protected" interface, or is internally
     generated by the implementation on the "protected" side of the
     boundary and directed toward the "unprotected" interface.  An
     IPsec implementation may support more than one interface on either
     or both sides of the boundary.  The protected interface may be





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     internal, e.g., in a host implementation of IPsec.  The protected
     interface may link to a socket layer interface presented by the
     OS.

  Security Association (SA)
     A simplex (uni-directional) logical connection, created for
     security purposes.  All traffic traversing an SA is provided the
     same security processing.  In IPsec, an SA is an Internet-layer
     abstraction implemented through the use of AH or ESP.  State data
     associated with an SA is represented in the SA Database (SAD).

  Security Gateway
     An intermediate system that acts as the communications interface
     between two networks.  The set of hosts (and networks) on the
     external side of the security gateway is termed unprotected (they
     are generally at least less protected than those "behind" the SG),
     while the networks and hosts on the internal side are viewed as
     protected.  The internal subnets and hosts served by a security
     gateway are presumed to be trusted by virtue of sharing a common,
     local, security administration.  In the IPsec context, a security
     gateway is a point at which AH and/or ESP is implemented in order
     to serve a set of internal hosts, providing security services for
     these hosts when they communicate with external hosts also
     employing IPsec (either directly or via another security gateway).

  Security Parameters Index (SPI)
     An arbitrary 32-bit value that is used by a receiver to identify
     the SA to which an incoming packet should be bound.  For a unicast
     SA, the SPI can be used by itself to specify an SA, or it may be
     used in conjunction with the IPsec protocol type.  Additional IP
     address information is used to identify multicast SAs.  The SPI is
     carried in AH and ESP protocols to enable the receiving system to
     select the SA under which a received packet will be processed.  An
     SPI has only local significance, as defined by the creator of the
     SA (usually the receiver of the packet carrying the SPI); thus an
     SPI is generally viewed as an opaque bit string.  However, the
     creator of an SA may choose to interpret the bits in an SPI to
     facilitate local processing.

  Traffic Analysis
     The analysis of network traffic flow for the purpose of deducing
     information that is useful to an adversary.  Examples of such
     information are frequency of transmission, the identities of the
     conversing parties, sizes of packets, and flow identifiers
     [Sch94].






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Appendix B: Decorrelation

  This appendix is based on work done for caching of policies in the IP
  Security Policy Working Group by Luis Sanchez, Matt Condell, and John
  Zao.

  Two SPD entries are correlated if there is a non-null intersection
  between the values of corresponding selectors in each entry.  Caching
  correlated SPD entries can lead to incorrect policy enforcement.  A
  solution to this problem, which still allows for caching, is to
  remove the ambiguities by decorrelating the entries.  That is, the
  SPD entries must be rewritten so that for every pair of entries there
  exists a selector for which there is a null intersection between the
  values in both of the entries.  Once the entries are decorrelated,
  there is no longer any ordering requirement on them, since only one
  entry will match any lookup.  The next section describes
  decorrelation in more detail and presents an algorithm that may be
  used to implement decorrelation.

B.1.  Decorrelation Algorithm

  The basic decorrelation algorithm takes each entry in a correlated
  SPD and divides it into a set of entries using a tree structure.
  The nodes of the tree are the selectors that may overlap between the
  policies.  At each node, the algorithm creates a branch for each of
  the values of the selector.  It also creates one branch for the
  complement of the union of all selector values.  Policies are then
  formed by traversing the tree from the root to each leaf.  The
  policies at the leaves are compared to the set of already
  decorrelated policy rules.  Each policy at a leaf is either
  completely overridden by a policy in the already decorrelated set and
  is discarded or is decorrelated with all the policies in the
  decorrelated set and is added to it.

  The basic algorithm does not guarantee an optimal set of decorrelated
  entries.  That is, the entries may be broken up into smaller sets
  than is necessary, though they will still provide all the necessary
  policy information.  Some extensions to the basic algorithm are
  described later to improve this and improve the performance of the
  algorithm.

          C   A set of ordered, correlated entries (a correlated SPD).
          Ci  The ith entry in C.
          U   The set of decorrelated entries being built from C.
          Ui  The ith entry in U.
          Sik The kth selection for policy Ci.
          Ai  The action for policy Ci.




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  A policy (SPD entry) P may be expressed as a sequence of selector
  values and an action (BYPASS, DISCARD, or PROTECT):

          Ci = Si1 x Si2 x ... x Sik -> Ai

  1) Put C1 in set U as U1

  For each policy Cj (j > 1) in C

  2) If Cj is decorrelated with every entry in U, then add it to U.

  3) If Cj is correlated with one or more entries in U, create a tree
  rooted at the policy Cj that partitions Cj into a set of decorrelated
  entries.  The algorithm starts with a root node where no selectors
  have yet been chosen.

    A) Choose a selector in Cj, Sjn, that has not yet been chosen when
       traversing the tree from the root to this node.  If there are no
       selectors not yet used, continue to the next unfinished branch
       until all branches have been completed.  When the tree is
       completed, go to step D.

       T is the set of entries in U that are correlated with the entry
       at this node.

       The entry at this node is the entry formed by the selector
       values of each of the branches between the root and this node.
       Any selector values that are not yet represented by branches
       assume the corresponding selector value in Cj, since the values
       in Cj represent the maximum value for each selector.

    B) Add a branch to the tree for each value of the selector Sjn that
       appears in any of the entries in T.  (If the value is a superset
       of the value of Sjn in Cj, then use the value in Cj, since that
       value represents the universal set.)  Also add a branch for the
       complement of the union of all the values of the selector Sjn
       in T.  When taking the complement, remember that the universal
       set is the value of Sjn in Cj.  A branch need not be created
       for the null set.

    C) Repeat A and B until the tree is completed.

    D) The entry to each leaf now represents an entry that is a subset
       of Cj.  The entries at the leaves completely partition Cj in
       such a way that each entry is either completely overridden by
       an entry in U, or is decorrelated with the entries in U.

       Add all the decorrelated entries at the leaves of the tree to U.



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  4) Get next Cj and go to 2.

  5) When all entries in C have been processed, then U will contain an
  decorrelated version of C.

  There are several optimizations that can be made to this algorithm.
  A few of them are presented here.

  It is possible to optimize, or at least improve, the amount of
  branching that occurs by carefully choosing the order of the
  selectors used for the next branch.  For example, if a selector Sjn
  can be chosen so that all the values for that selector in T are equal
  to or a superset of the value of Sjn in Cj, then only a single branch
  needs to be created (since the complement will be null).

  Branches of the tree do not have to proceed with the entire
  decorrelation algorithm.  For example, if a node represents an entry
  that is decorrelated with all the entries in U, then there is no
  reason to continue decorrelating that branch.  Also, if a branch is
  completely overridden by an entry in U, then there is no reason to
  continue decorrelating the branch.

  An additional optimization is to check to see if a branch is
  overridden by one of the CORRELATED entries in set C that has already
  been decorrelated.  That is, if the branch is part of decorrelating
  Cj, then check to see if it was overridden by an entry Cm, m < j.
  This is a valid check, since all the entries Cm are already expressed
  in U.

  Along with checking if an entry is already decorrelated in step 2,
  check if Cj is overridden by any entry in U.  If it is, skip it since
  it is not relevant.  An entry x is overridden by another entry y if
  every selector in x is equal to or a subset of the corresponding
  selector in entry y.

















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Appendix C: ASN.1 for an SPD Entry

  This appendix is included as an additional way to describe SPD
  entries, as defined in Section 4.4.1.  It uses ASN.1 syntax that has
  been successfully compiled.  This syntax is merely illustrative and
  need not be employed in an implementation to achieve compliance.  The
  SPD description in Section 4.4.1 is normative.

  SPDModule

   {iso(1) org (3) dod (6) internet (1) security (5) mechanisms (5)
    ipsec (8) asn1-modules (3) spd-module (1) }

      DEFINITIONS IMPLICIT TAGS ::=

      BEGIN

      IMPORTS
          RDNSequence FROM PKIX1Explicit88
            { iso(1) identified-organization(3)
              dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7)
              id-mod(0) id-pkix1-explicit(18) } ;

      -- An SPD is a list of policies in decreasing order of preference
      SPD ::= SEQUENCE OF SPDEntry

      SPDEntry ::= CHOICE {
          iPsecEntry       IPsecEntry,               -- PROTECT traffic
          bypassOrDiscard  [0] BypassOrDiscardEntry } -- DISCARD/BYPASS

      IPsecEntry ::= SEQUENCE {       -- Each entry consists of
          name        NameSets OPTIONAL,
          pFPs        PacketFlags,    -- Populate from packet flags
                             -- Applies to ALL of the corresponding
                             -- traffic selectors in the SelectorLists
          condition   SelectorLists,  -- Policy "condition"
          processing  Processing      -- Policy "action"
          }

      BypassOrDiscardEntry ::= SEQUENCE {
          bypass      BOOLEAN,        -- TRUE BYPASS, FALSE DISCARD
          condition   InOutBound }

      InOutBound ::= CHOICE {
          outbound    [0] SelectorLists,
          inbound     [1] SelectorLists,
          bothways    [2] BothWays }




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      BothWays ::= SEQUENCE {
          inbound     SelectorLists,
          outbound    SelectorLists }

      NameSets ::= SEQUENCE {
          passed      SET OF Names-R,  -- Matched to IKE ID by
                                       -- responder
          local       SET OF Names-I } -- Used internally by IKE
                                       -- initiator

      Names-R ::= CHOICE {                   -- IKEv2 IDs
          dName       RDNSequence,           -- ID_DER_ASN1_DN
          fqdn        FQDN,                  -- ID_FQDN
          rfc822      [0] RFC822Name,        -- ID_RFC822_ADDR
          keyID       OCTET STRING }         -- KEY_ID

      Names-I ::= OCTET STRING       -- Used internally by IKE
                                     -- initiator

      FQDN ::= IA5String

      RFC822Name ::= IA5String

      PacketFlags ::= BIT STRING {
                  -- if set, take selector value from packet
                  -- establishing SA
                  -- else use value in SPD entry
          localAddr  (0),
          remoteAddr (1),
          protocol   (2),
          localPort  (3),
          remotePort (4)  }

      SelectorLists ::= SET OF SelectorList

      SelectorList ::= SEQUENCE {
          localAddr   AddrList,
          remoteAddr  AddrList,
          protocol    ProtocolChoice }

      Processing ::= SEQUENCE {
          extSeqNum   BOOLEAN, -- TRUE 64 bit counter, FALSE 32 bit
          seqOverflow BOOLEAN, -- TRUE rekey, FALSE terminate & audit
          fragCheck   BOOLEAN, -- TRUE stateful fragment checking,
                               -- FALSE no stateful fragment checking
          lifetime    SALifetime,
          spi         ManualSPI,
          algorithms  ProcessingAlgs,



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          tunnel      TunnelOptions OPTIONAL } -- if absent, use
                                               -- transport mode

      SALifetime ::= SEQUENCE {
          seconds   [0] INTEGER OPTIONAL,
          bytes     [1] INTEGER OPTIONAL }

      ManualSPI ::= SEQUENCE {
          spi     INTEGER,
          keys    KeyIDs }

      KeyIDs ::= SEQUENCE OF OCTET STRING

      ProcessingAlgs ::= CHOICE {
          ah          [0] IntegrityAlgs,  -- AH
          esp         [1] ESPAlgs}        -- ESP

      ESPAlgs ::= CHOICE {
          integrity       [0] IntegrityAlgs,       -- integrity only
          confidentiality [1] ConfidentialityAlgs, -- confidentiality
                                                   -- only
          both            [2] IntegrityConfidentialityAlgs,
          combined        [3] CombinedModeAlgs }

      IntegrityConfidentialityAlgs ::= SEQUENCE {
          integrity       IntegrityAlgs,
          confidentiality ConfidentialityAlgs }

      -- Integrity Algorithms, ordered by decreasing preference
      IntegrityAlgs ::= SEQUENCE OF IntegrityAlg

      -- Confidentiality Algorithms, ordered by decreasing preference
      ConfidentialityAlgs ::= SEQUENCE OF ConfidentialityAlg

      -- Integrity Algorithms
      IntegrityAlg ::= SEQUENCE {
          algorithm   IntegrityAlgType,
          parameters  ANY -- DEFINED BY algorithm -- OPTIONAL }

      IntegrityAlgType ::= INTEGER {
          none              (0),
          auth-HMAC-MD5-96  (1),
          auth-HMAC-SHA1-96 (2),
          auth-DES-MAC      (3),
          auth-KPDK-MD5     (4),
          auth-AES-XCBC-96  (5)
      --  tbd (6..65535)
          }



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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


      -- Confidentiality Algorithms
      ConfidentialityAlg ::= SEQUENCE {
          algorithm   ConfidentialityAlgType,
          parameters  ANY -- DEFINED BY algorithm -- OPTIONAL }

      ConfidentialityAlgType ::= INTEGER {
          encr-DES-IV64   (1),
          encr-DES        (2),
          encr-3DES       (3),
          encr-RC5        (4),
          encr-IDEA       (5),
          encr-CAST       (6),
          encr-BLOWFISH   (7),
          encr-3IDEA      (8),
          encr-DES-IV32   (9),
          encr-RC4       (10),
          encr-NULL      (11),
          encr-AES-CBC   (12),
          encr-AES-CTR   (13)
      --  tbd (14..65535)
          }

      CombinedModeAlgs ::= SEQUENCE OF CombinedModeAlg

      CombinedModeAlg ::= SEQUENCE {
          algorithm   CombinedModeType,
          parameters  ANY -- DEFINED BY algorithm} -- defined outside
                                   -- of this document for AES modes.

      CombinedModeType ::= INTEGER {
          comb-AES-CCM    (1),
          comb-AES-GCM    (2)
      --  tbd (3..65535)
          }

      TunnelOptions ::= SEQUENCE {
          dscp        DSCP,
          ecn         BOOLEAN,    -- TRUE Copy CE to inner header
          df          DF,
          addresses   TunnelAddresses }

      TunnelAddresses ::= CHOICE {
          ipv4        IPv4Pair,
          ipv6        [0] IPv6Pair }

      IPv4Pair ::= SEQUENCE {
          local       OCTET STRING (SIZE(4)),
          remote      OCTET STRING (SIZE(4)) }



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      IPv6Pair ::= SEQUENCE {
          local       OCTET STRING (SIZE(16)),
          remote      OCTET STRING (SIZE(16)) }

      DSCP ::= SEQUENCE {
          copy      BOOLEAN, -- TRUE copy from inner header
                             -- FALSE do not copy
          mapping   OCTET STRING OPTIONAL} -- points to table
                                           -- if no copy

      DF ::= INTEGER {
          clear   (0),
          set     (1),
          copy    (2) }

      ProtocolChoice::= CHOICE {
          anyProt  AnyProtocol,              -- for ANY protocol
          noNext   [0] NoNextLayerProtocol,  -- has no next layer
                                             -- items
          oneNext  [1] OneNextLayerProtocol, -- has one next layer
                                             -- item
          twoNext  [2] TwoNextLayerProtocol, -- has two next layer
                                             -- items
          fragment FragmentNoNext }          -- has no next layer
                                             -- info

      AnyProtocol ::= SEQUENCE {
          id          INTEGER (0),    -- ANY protocol
          nextLayer   AnyNextLayers }

      AnyNextLayers ::= SEQUENCE {      -- with either
          first       AnyNextLayer,     -- ANY next layer selector
          second      AnyNextLayer }    -- ANY next layer selector

      NoNextLayerProtocol ::= INTEGER (2..254)

      FragmentNoNext ::= INTEGER (44)   -- Fragment identifier

      OneNextLayerProtocol ::= SEQUENCE {
          id          INTEGER (1..254),   -- ICMP, MH, ICMPv6
          nextLayer   NextLayerChoice }   -- ICMP Type*256+Code
                                          -- MH   Type*256

      TwoNextLayerProtocol ::= SEQUENCE {
          id          INTEGER (2..254),   -- Protocol
          local       NextLayerChoice,    -- Local and
          remote      NextLayerChoice }   -- Remote ports




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      NextLayerChoice ::= CHOICE {
          any         AnyNextLayer,
          opaque      [0] OpaqueNextLayer,
          range       [1] NextLayerRange }

      -- Representation of ANY in next layer field
      AnyNextLayer ::= SEQUENCE {
          start       INTEGER (0),
          end         INTEGER (65535) }

      -- Representation of OPAQUE in next layer field.
      -- Matches IKE convention
      OpaqueNextLayer ::= SEQUENCE {
          start       INTEGER (65535),
          end         INTEGER (0) }

      -- Range for a next layer field
      NextLayerRange ::= SEQUENCE {
          start       INTEGER (0..65535),
          end         INTEGER (0..65535) }

      -- List of IP addresses
      AddrList ::= SEQUENCE {
          v4List      IPv4List OPTIONAL,
          v6List      [0] IPv6List OPTIONAL }

      -- IPv4 address representations
      IPv4List ::= SEQUENCE OF IPv4Range

      IPv4Range ::= SEQUENCE {    -- close, but not quite right ...
          ipv4Start   OCTET STRING (SIZE (4)),
          ipv4End     OCTET STRING (SIZE (4)) }

      -- IPv6 address representations
      IPv6List ::= SEQUENCE OF IPv6Range

      IPv6Range ::= SEQUENCE {    -- close, but not quite right ...
          ipv6Start   OCTET STRING (SIZE (16)),
          ipv6End     OCTET STRING (SIZE (16)) }

      END










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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


Appendix D: Fragment Handling Rationale

  There are three issues that must be resolved regarding processing of
  (plaintext) fragments in IPsec:

       - mapping a non-initial, outbound fragment to the right SA
         (or finding the right SPD entry)
       - verifying that a received, non-initial fragment is authorized
         for the SA via which it is received
       - mapping outbound and inbound non-initial fragments to the
         right SPD/cache entry, for BYPASS/DISCARD traffic

  The first and third issues arise because we need a deterministic
  algorithm for mapping traffic to SAs (and SPD/cache entries).  All
  three issues are important because we want to make sure that
  non-initial fragments that cross the IPsec boundary do not cause the
  access control policies in place at the receiver (or transmitter) to
  be violated.

D.1.  Transport Mode and Fragments

  First, we note that transport mode SAs have been defined to not carry
  fragments.  This is a carryover from RFC 2401, where transport mode
  SAs always terminated at endpoints.  This is a fundamental
  requirement because, in the worst case, an IPv4 fragment to which
  IPsec was applied might then be fragmented (as a ciphertext packet),
  en route to the destination.  IP fragment reassembly procedures at
  the IPsec receiver would not be able to distinguish between pre-IPsec
  fragments and fragments created after IPsec processing.

  For IPv6, only the sender is allowed to fragment a packet.  As for
  IPv4, an IPsec implementation is allowed to fragment tunnel mode
  packets after IPsec processing, because it is the sender relative to
  the (outer) tunnel header.  However, unlike IPv4, it would be
  feasible to carry a plaintext fragment on a transport mode SA,
  because the fragment header in IPv6 would appear after the AH or ESP
  header, and thus would not cause confusion at the receiver with
  respect to reassembly.  Specifically, the receiver would not attempt
  reassembly for the fragment until after IPsec processing.  To keep
  things simple, this specification prohibits carriage of fragments on
  transport mode SAs for IPv6 traffic.

  When only end systems used transport mode SAs, the prohibition on
  carriage of fragments was not a problem, since we assumed that the
  end system could be configured to not offer a fragment to IPsec.  For
  a native host implementation, this seems reasonable, and, as someone
  already noted, RFC 2401 warned that a BITS implementation might have
  to reassemble fragments before performing an SA lookup.  (It would



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  then apply AH or ESP and could re-fragment the packet after IPsec
  processing.) Because a BITS implementation is assumed to be able to
  have access to all traffic emanating from its host, even if the host
  has multiple interfaces, this was deemed a reasonable mandate.

  In this specification, it is acceptable to use transport mode in
  cases where the IPsec implementation is not the ultimate destination,
  e.g., between two SGs.  In principle, this creates a new opportunity
  for outbound, plaintext fragments to be mapped to a transport mode SA
  for IPsec processing.  However, in these new contexts in which a
  transport mode SA is now approved for use, it seems likely that we
  can continue to prohibit transmission of fragments, as seen by IPsec,
  i.e., packets that have an "outer header" with a non-zero fragment
  offset field.  For example, in an IP overlay network, packets being
  sent over transport mode SAs are IP-in-IP tunneled and thus have the
  necessary inner header to accommodate fragmentation prior to IPsec
  processing.  When carried via a transport mode SA, IPsec would not
  examine the inner IP header for such traffic, and thus would not
  consider the packet to be a fragment.

D.2.  Tunnel Mode and Fragments

  For tunnel mode SAs, it has always been the case that outbound
  fragments might arrive for processing at an IPsec implementation.
  The need to accommodate fragmented outbound packets can pose a
  problem because a non-initial fragment generally will not contain the
  port fields associated with a next layer protocol such as TCP, UDP,
  or SCTP.  Thus, depending on the SPD configuration for a given IPsec
  implementation, plaintext fragments might or might not pose a
  problem.

  For example, if the SPD requires that all traffic between two address
  ranges is offered IPsec protection (no BYPASS or DISCARD SPD entries
  apply to this address range), then it should be easy to carry
  non-initial fragments on the SA defined for this address range, since
  the SPD entry implies an intent to carry ALL traffic between the
  address ranges.  But, if there are multiple SPD entries that could
  match a fragment, and if these entries reference different subsets of
  port fields (vs. ANY), then it is not possible to map an outbound
  non-initial fragment to the right entry, unambiguously. (If we choose
  to allow carriage of fragments on transport mode SAs for IPv6, the
  problems arises in that context as well.)

  This problem largely, though not exclusively, motivated the
  definition of OPAQUE as a selector value for port fields in RFC 2401.
  The other motivation for OPAQUE is the observation that port fields
  might not be accessible due to the prior application of IPsec.  For
  example, if a host applied IPsec to its traffic and that traffic



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  arrived at an SG, these fields would be encrypted.  The algorithm
  specified for locating the "next layer protocol" described in RFC
  2401 also motivated use of OPAQUE to accommodate an encrypted next
  layer protocol field in such circumstances.  Nonetheless, the primary
  use of the OPAQUE value was to match traffic selector fields in
  packets that did not contain port fields (non-initial fragments), or
  packets in which the port fields were already encrypted (as a result
  of nested application of IPsec).  RFC 2401 was ambiguous in
  discussing the use of OPAQUE vs. ANY, suggesting in some places that
  ANY might be an alternative to OPAQUE.

  We gain additional access control capability by defining both ANY and
  OPAQUE values.  OPAQUE can be defined to match only fields that are
  not accessible.  We could define ANY as the complement of OPAQUE,
  i.e., it would match all values but only for accessible port fields.
  We have therefore simplified the procedure employed to locate the
  next layer protocol in this document, so that we treat ESP and AH as
  next layer protocols.  As a result, the notion of an encrypted next
  layer protocol field has vanished, and there is also no need to worry
  about encrypted port fields either.  And accordingly, OPAQUE will be
  applicable only to non-initial fragments.

  Since we have adopted the definitions above for ANY and OPAQUE, we
  need to clarify how these values work when the specified protocol
  does not have port fields, and when ANY is used for the protocol
  selector.  Accordingly, if a specific protocol value is used as a
  selector, and if that protocol has no port fields, then the port
  field selectors are to be ignored and ANY MUST be specified as the
  value for the port fields. (In this context, ICMP TYPE and CODE
  values are lumped together as a single port field (for IKEv2
  negotiation), as is the IPv6 Mobility Header TYPE value.) If the
  protocol selector is ANY, then this should be treated as equivalent
  to specifying a protocol for which no port fields are defined, and
  thus the port selectors should be ignored, and MUST be set to ANY.

D.3.  The Problem of Non-Initial Fragments

  For an SG implementation, it is obvious that fragments might arrive
  from end systems behind the SG.  A BITW implementation also may
  encounter fragments from a host or gateway behind it. (As noted
  earlier, native host implementations and BITS implementations
  probably can avoid the problems described below.) In the worst case,
  fragments from a packet might arrive at distinct BITW or SG
  instantiations and thus preclude reassembly as a solution option.
  Hence, in RFC 2401 we adopted a general requirement that fragments
  must be accommodated in tunnel mode for all implementations. However,





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  RFC 2401 did not provide a perfect solution.  The use of OPAQUE as a
  selector value for port fields (a SHOULD in RFC 2401) allowed an SA
  to carry non-initial fragments.

  Using the features defined in RFC 2401, if one defined an SA between
  two IPsec (SG or BITW) implementations using the OPAQUE value for
  both port fields, then all non-initial fragments matching the
  source/destination (S/D) address and protocol values for the SA would
  be mapped to that SA.  Initial fragments would NOT map to this SA, if
  we adopt a strict definition of OPAQUE.  However, RFC 2401 did not
  provide detailed guidance on this and thus it may not have been
  apparent that use of this feature would essentially create a
  "non-initial fragment only" SA.

  In the course of discussing the "fragment-only" SA approach, it was
  noted that some subtle problems, problems not considered in RFC 2401,
  would have to be avoided.  For example, an SA of this sort must be
  configured to offer the "highest quality" security services for any
  traffic between the indicated S/D addresses (for the specified
  protocol).  This is necessary to ensure that any traffic captured by
  the fragment-only SA is not offered degraded security relative to
  what it would have been offered if the packet were not fragmented.  A
  possible problem here is that we may not be able to identify the
  "highest quality" security services defined for use between two IPsec
  implementation, since the choice of security protocols, options, and
  algorithms is a lattice, not a totally ordered set. (We might safely
  say that BYPASS < AH < ESP w/integrity, but it gets complicated if we
  have multiple ESP encryption or integrity algorithm options.) So, one
  has to impose a total ordering on these security parameters to make
  this work, but this can be done locally.

  However, this conservative strategy has a possible performance
  downside.  If most traffic traversing an IPsec implementation for a
  given S/D address pair (and specified protocol) is bypassed, then a
  fragment-only SA for that address pair might cause a dramatic
  increase in the volume of traffic afforded crypto processing.  If the
  crypto implementation cannot support high traffic rates, this could
  cause problems. (An IPsec implementation that is capable of line rate
  or near line rate crypto performance would not be adversely affected
  by this SA configuration approach.  Nonetheless, the performance
  impact is a potential concern, specific to implementation
  capabilities.)

  Another concern is that non-initial fragments sent over a dedicated
  SA might be used to effect overlapping reassembly attacks, when
  combined with an apparently acceptable initial fragment. (This sort
  of attack assumes creation of bogus fragments and is not a side
  effect of normal fragmentation.) This concern is easily addressed in



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  IPv4, by checking the fragment offset value to ensure that no
  non-initial fragments have a small enough offset to overlap port
  fields that should be contained in the initial fragment.  Recall that
  the IPv4 MTU minimum is 576 bytes, and the max IP header length is 60
  bytes, so any ports should be present in the initial fragment.  If we
  require all non-initial fragments to have an offset of, say, 128 or
  greater, just to be on the safe side, this should prevent successful
  attacks of this sort.  If the intent is only to protect against this
  sort of reassembly attack, this check need be implemented only by a
  receiver.

  IPv6 also has a fragment offset, carried in the fragmentation
  extension header.  However, IPv6 extension headers are variable in
  length and there is no analogous max header length value that we can
  use to check non-initial fragments, to reject ones that might be used
  for an attack of the sort noted above.  A receiver would need to
  maintain state analogous to reassembly state, to provide equivalent
  protection.  So, only for IPv4 is it feasible to impose a fragment
  offset check that would reject attacks designed to circumvent port
  field checks by IPsec (or firewalls) when passing non-initial
  fragments.

  Another possible concern is that in some topologies and SPD
  configurations this approach might result in an access control
  surprise.  The notion is that if we create an SA to carry ALL
  (non-initial) fragments, then that SA would carry some traffic that
  might otherwise arrive as plaintext via a separate path, e.g., a path
  monitored by a proxy firewall.  But, this concern arises only if the
  other path allows initial fragments to traverse it without requiring
  reassembly, presumably a bad idea for a proxy firewall.  Nonetheless,
  this does represent a potential problem in some topologies and under
  certain assumptions with respect to SPD and (other) firewall rule
  sets, and administrators need to be warned of this possibility.

  A less serious concern is that non-initial fragments sent over a
  non-initial fragment-only SA might represent a DoS opportunity, in
  that they could be sent when no valid, initial fragment will ever
  arrive.  This might be used to attack hosts behind an SG or BITW
  device.  However, the incremental risk posed by this sort of attack,
  which can be mounted only by hosts behind an SG or BITW device, seems
  small.

  If we interpret the ANY selector value as encompassing OPAQUE, then a
  single SA with ANY values for both port fields would be able to
  accommodate all traffic matching the S/D address and protocol traffic
  selectors, an alternative to using the OPAQUE value.  But, using ANY





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  here precludes multiple, distinct SAs between the same IPsec
  implementations for the same address pairs and protocol.  So, it is
  not an exactly equivalent alternative.

  Fundamentally, fragment handling problems arise only when more than
  one SA is defined with the same S/D address and protocol selector
  values, but with different port field selector values.

D.4.  BYPASS/DISCARD Traffic

  We also have to address the non-initial fragment processing issue for
  BYPASS/DISCARD entries, independent of SA processing.  This is
  largely a local matter for two reasons:

          1) We have no means for coordinating SPD entries for such
             traffic between IPsec implementations since IKE is not
             invoked.
          2) Many of these entries refer to traffic that is NOT
             directed to or received from a location that is using
             IPsec.  So there is no peer IPsec implementation with
             which to coordinate via any means.

  However, this document should provide guidance here, consistent with
  our goal of offering a well-defined, access control function for all
  traffic, relative to the IPsec boundary.  To that end, this document
  says that implementations MUST support fragment reassembly for
  BYPASS/DISCARD traffic when port fields are specified.  An
  implementation also MUST permit a user or administrator to accept
  such traffic or reject such traffic using the SPD conventions
  described in Section 4.4.1.  The concern is that BYPASS of a
  cleartext, non-initial fragment arriving at an IPsec implementation
  could undermine the security afforded IPsec-protected traffic
  directed to the same destination.  For example, consider an IPsec
  implementation configured with an SPD entry that calls for
  IPsec-protection of traffic between a specific source/destination
  address pair, and for a specific protocol and destination port, e.g.,
  TCP traffic on port 23 (Telnet).  Assume that the implementation also
  allows BYPASS of traffic from the same source/destination address
  pair and protocol, but for a different destination port, e.g., port
  119 (NNTP).  An attacker could send a non-initial fragment (with a
  forged source address) that, if bypassed, could overlap with
  IPsec-protected traffic from the same source and thus violate the
  integrity of the IPsec-protected traffic.  Requiring stateful
  fragment checking for BYPASS entries with non-trivial port ranges
  prevents attacks of this sort.






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D.5.  Just say no to ports?

  It has been suggested that we could avoid the problems described
  above by not allowing port field selectors to be used in tunnel mode.
  But the discussion above shows this to be an unnecessarily stringent
  approach, i.e., since no problems arise for the native OS and BITS
  implementations.  Moreover, some WG members have described scenarios
  where use of tunnel mode SAs with (non-trivial) port field selectors
  is appropriate.  So the challenge is defining a strategy that can
  deal with this problem in BITW and SG contexts.  Also note that
  BYPASS/DISCARD entries in the SPD that make use of ports pose the
  same problems, irrespective of tunnel vs. transport mode notions.

  Some folks have suggested that a firewall behind an SG or BITW should
  be left to enforce port-level access controls and the effects of
  fragmentation.  However, this seems to be an incongruous suggestion
  in that elsewhere in IPsec (e.g., in IKE payloads) we are concerned
  about firewalls that always discard fragments.  If many firewalls
  don't pass fragments in general, why should we expect them to deal
  with fragments in this case? So, this analysis rejects the suggestion
  of disallowing use of port field selectors with tunnel mode SAs.

D.6.  Other Suggested Solutions

  One suggestion is to reassemble fragments at the sending IPsec
  implementation, and thus avoid the problem entirely.  This approach
  is invisible to a receiver and thus could be adopted as a purely
  local implementation option.

  A more sophisticated version of this suggestion calls for
  establishing and maintaining minimal state from each initial fragment
  encountered, to allow non-initial fragments to be matched to the
  right SAs or SPD/cache entries.  This implies an extension to the
  current processing model (and the old one).  The IPsec implementation
  would intercept all fragments; capture Source/Destination IP
  addresses, protocol, packet ID, and port fields from initial
  fragments; and then use this data to map non-initial fragments to SAs
  that require port fields.  If this approach is employed, the receiver
  needs to employ an equivalent scheme, as it too must verify that
  received fragments are consistent with SA selector values.  A
  non-initial fragment that arrives prior to an initial fragment could
  be cached or discarded, awaiting arrival of the corresponding initial
  fragment.

  A downside of both approaches noted above is that they will not
  always work.  When a BITW device or SG is configured in a topology
  that might allow some fragments for a packet to be processed at
  different SGs or BITW devices, then there is no guarantee that all



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  fragments will ever arrive at the same IPsec device.  This approach
  also raises possible processing problems.  If the sender caches
  non-initial fragments until the corresponding initial fragment
  arrives, buffering problems might arise, especially at high speeds.
  If the non-initial fragments are discarded rather than cached, there
  is no guarantee that traffic will ever pass, e.g., retransmission
  will result in different packet IDs that cannot be matched with prior
  transmissions.  In any case, housekeeping procedures will be needed
  to decide when to delete the fragment state data, adding some
  complexity to the system.  Nonetheless, this is a viable solution in
  some topologies, and these are likely to be common topologies.

  The Working Group rejected an earlier version of the convention of
  creating an SA to carry only non-initial fragments, something that
  was supported implicitly under the RFC 2401 model via use of OPAQUE
  port fields, but never clearly articulated in RFC 2401.  The
  (rejected) text called for each non-initial fragment to be treated as
  protocol 44 (the IPv6 fragment header protocol ID) by the sender and
  receiver.  This approach has the potential to make IPv4 and IPv6
  fragment handling more uniform, but it does not fundamentally change
  the problem, nor does it address the issue of fragment handling for
  BYPASS/DISCARD traffic.  Given the fragment overlap attack problem
  that IPv6 poses, it does not seem that it is worth the effort to
  adopt this strategy.

D.7.  Consistency

  Earlier, the WG agreed to allow an IPsec BITS, BITW, or SG to perform
  fragmentation prior to IPsec processing.  If this fragmentation is
  performed after SA lookup at the sender, there is no "mapping to the
  right SA" problem.  But, the receiver still needs to be able to
  verify that the non-initial fragments are consistent with the SA via
  which they are received.  Since the initial fragment might be lost en
  route, the receiver encounters all of the potential problems noted
  above.  Thus, if we are to be consistent in our decisions, we need to
  say how a receiver will deal with the non-initial fragments that
  arrive.

D.8.  Conclusions

  There is no simple, uniform way to handle fragments in all contexts.
  Different approaches work better in different contexts.  Thus, this
  document offers 3 choices -- one MUST and two MAYs.  At some point in
  the future, if the community gains experience with the two MAYs, they
  may become SHOULDs or MUSTs or other approaches may be proposed.






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Appendix E: Example of Supporting Nested SAs via SPD and Forwarding
           Table Entries

  This appendix provides an example of how to configure the SPD and
  forwarding tables to support a nested pair of SAs, consistent with
  the new processing model.  For simplicity, this example assumes just
  one SPD-I.

  The goal in this example is to support a transport mode SA from A to
  C, carried over a tunnel mode SA from A to B.  For example, A might
  be a laptop connected to the public Internet, B might be a firewall
  that protects a corporate network, and C might be a server on the
  corporate network that demands end-to-end authentication of A's
  traffic.

        +---+     +---+  +---+
        | A |=====| B |  | C |
        |   |------------|   |
        |   |=====|   |  |   |
        +---+     +---+  +---+

  A's SPD contains entries of the form:

                       Next Layer
     Rule Local Remote Protocol   Action
     ---- ----- ------ ---------- -----------------------
      1     C     A     ESP       BYPASS
      2     A     C     ICMP,ESP  PROTECT(ESP,tunnel,integr+conf)
      3     A     C     ANY       PROTECT(ESP,transport,integr-only)
      4     A     B     ICMP,IKE  BYPASS

  A's unprotected-side forwarding table is set so that outbound packets
  destined for C are looped back to the protected side.  A's
  protected-side forwarding table is set so that inbound ESP packets
  are looped back to the unprotected side.  A's forwarding tables
  contain entries of the form:

     Unprotected-side forwarding table

       Rule Local Remote Protocol Action
       ---- ----- ------ -------- ---------------------------
        1     A     C       ANY   loop back to protected side
        2     A     B       ANY   forward to B








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RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


     Protected-side forwarding table

       Rule Local Remote Protocol Action
       ---- ----- ------ -------- -----------------------------
        1     A     C       ESP   loop back to unprotected side

  An outbound TCP packet from A to C would match SPD rule 3 and have
  transport mode ESP applied to it.  The unprotected-side forwarding
  table would then loop back the packet.  The packet is compared
  against SPD-I (see Figure 2), matches SPD rule 1, and so it is
  BYPASSed.  The packet is treated as an outbound packet and compared
  against the SPD for a third time.  This time it matches SPD rule 2,
  so ESP is applied in tunnel mode.  This time the forwarding table
  doesn't loop back the packet, because the outer destination address
  is B, so the packet goes out onto the wire.

  An inbound TCP packet from C to A is wrapped in two ESP headers; the
  outer header (ESP in tunnel mode) shows B as the source, whereas the
  inner header (ESP transport mode) shows C as the source.  Upon
  arrival at A, the packet would be mapped to an SA based on the SPI,
  have the outer header removed, and be decrypted and
  integrity-checked.  Then it would be matched against the SAD
  selectors for this SA, which would specify C as the source and A as
  the destination, derived from SPD rule 2.  The protected-side
  forwarding function would then send it back to the unprotected side
  based on the addresses and the next layer protocol (ESP), indicative
  of nesting.  It is compared against SPD-O (see Figure 3) and found to
  match SPD rule 1, so it is BYPASSed.  The packet is mapped to an SA
  based on the SPI, integrity-checked, and compared against the SAD
  selectors derived from SPD rule 3.  The forwarding function then
  passes it up to the next layer, because it isn't an ESP packet.




















Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 97]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


References

Normative References

  [BBCDWW98]     Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang,
                 Z., and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
                 Service", RFC 2475, December 1998.

  [Bra97]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                 Requirement Level", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [CD98]         Conta, A. and S. Deering, "Internet Control Message
                 Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6
                 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2463, December 1998.

  [DH98]         Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol,
                 Version 6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, December
                 1998.

  [Eas05]        3rd Eastlake, D., "Cryptographic Algorithm
                 Implementation Requirements For Encapsulating Security
                 Payload (ESP) and Authentication Header (AH)", RFC
                 4305, December 2005.

  [HarCar98]     Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange
                 (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998.

  [Kau05]        Kaufman, C., Ed., "The Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2)
                 Protocol", RFC 4306, December 2005.

  [Ken05a]       Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
                 RFC 4303, December 2005.

  [Ken05b]       Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 4302,
                 December 2005.

  [MD90]         Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU discovery", RFC
                 1191, November 1990.

  [Mobip]        Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility
                 Support in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.

  [Pos81a]       Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
                 September 1981.

  [Pos81b]       Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", RFC
                 792, September 1981.




Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 98]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  [Sch05]        Schiller, J., "Cryptographic Algorithms for use in the
                 Internet Key Exchange Version 2 (IKEv2)", RFC 4307,
                 December 2005.

  [WaKiHo97]     Wahl, M., Kille, S., and T. Howes, "Lightweight
                 Directory Access Protocol (v3): UTF-8 String
                 Representation of Distinguished Names", RFC 2253,
                 December 1997.

Informative References

  [CoSa04]       Condell, M., and L. Sanchez, "On the Deterministic
                 Enforcement of Un-ordered Security Policies", BBN
                 Technical Memo 1346, March 2004.

  [FaLiHaMeTr00] Farinacci, D., Li, T., Hanks, S., Meyer, D., and P.
                 Traina, "Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)", RFC
                 2784, March 2000.

  [Gro02]        Grossman, D., "New Terminology and Clarifications for
                 Diffserv", RFC 3260, April 2002.
  [HC03]         Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source Specific Multicast
                 for IP", Work in Progress, November 3, 2002.

  [HA94]         Haller, N. and R. Atkinson, "On Internet
                 Authentication", RFC 1704, October 1994.

  [NiBlBaBL98]   Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black,
                 "Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS
                 Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers", RFC 2474,
                 December 1998.

  [Per96]        Perkins, C., "IP Encapsulation within IP", RFC 2003,
                 October 1996.

  [RaFlBl01]     Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The
                 Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to
                 IP", RFC 3168, September 2001.

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

  [RFC2983]      Black, D., "Differentiated Services and Tunnels", RFC
                 2983, October 2000.

  [RFC3547]      Baugher, M., Weis, B., Hardjono, T., and H. Harney,
                 "The Group Domain of Interpretation", RFC 3547, July
                 2003.



Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                    [Page 99]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


  [RFC3740]      Hardjono, T. and B.  Weis, "The Multicast Group
                 Security Architecture", RFC 3740, March 2004.

  [RaCoCaDe04]   Rajahalme, J., Conta, A., Carpenter, B., and S.
                 Deering, "IPv6 Flow Label Specification", RFC 3697,
                 March 2004.

  [Sch94]        Schneier, B.,  Applied Cryptography, Section 8.6, John
                 Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 1994.

  [Shi00]        Shirey, R., "Internet Security Glossary", RFC 2828,
                 May 2000.

  [SMPT01]       Shacham, A., Monsour, B., Pereira, R., and M. Thomas,
                 "IP Payload Compression Protocol (IPComp)", RFC 3173,
                 September 2001.

  [ToEgWa04]     Touch, J., Eggert, L., and Y. Wang, "Use of IPsec
                 Transport Mode for Dynamic Routing", RFC 3884,
                 September 2004.

  [VK83]         V.L. Voydock & S.T. Kent, "Security Mechanisms in
                 High-level Networks", ACM Computing Surveys, Vol. 15,
                 No. 2, June 1983.

Authors' Addresses

  Stephen Kent
  BBN Technologies
  10 Moulton Street
  Cambridge, MA  02138
  USA

  Phone: +1 (617) 873-3988
  EMail: [email protected]


  Karen Seo
  BBN Technologies
  10 Moulton Street
  Cambridge, MA  02138
  USA

  Phone: +1 (617) 873-3152
  EMail: [email protected]






Kent & Seo                  Standards Track                   [Page 100]

RFC 4301              Security Architecture for IP         December 2005


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