Network Working Group                                         R. Housley
Request for Comments: 4705                                Vigil Security
Category: Informational                                         A. Corry
                                                               GigaBeam
                                                           October 2006


              GigaBeam High-Speed Radio Link Encryption

Status of This Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).

Abstract

  This document describes the encryption and key management used by
  GigaBeam as part of the WiFiber(tm) family of radio link products.
  The security solution is documented in the hope that other wireless
  product development efforts will include comparable capabilities.


























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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


1.  Introduction

  The GigaBeam WiFiber(tm) product family provides a high-speed point-
  to-point radio link.  Data rates exceed 1 gigabit/second at a
  distance of about a mile.  The transmission beam width is less than
  one degree, which means that attempts to intercept the signal are
  most successful when the attacker is either between the transmitter
  and receiver or the attacker is directly behind the receiver.  Since
  interception is possible, some customers require confidentiality and
  integrity protection for the data on the radio link.  This document
  describes the security solution designed and deployed by GigaBeam to
  provide these security services.

  The GigaBeam security solution employs:

     o  AES-GCM [GCM] with a custom security protocol specified in this
        document to provide confidentiality and integrity protection of
        subscriber traffic on the radio link;

     o  AES-CBC [CBC] and HMAC-SHA-1 [HMAC] with IPsec ESP [ESP] to
        provide confidentiality and integrity protection of management
        traffic between the radio control modules;

     o  AES-CBC [CBC] and HMAC-SHA-1 [HMAC] with the IKE protocol [IKE]
        to provide confidentiality and integrity protection of key
        management traffic between the radio control modules; and

     o  OAKLEY key agreement [OAKLEY] and RSA digital signatures
        [PKCS1] are used with IKE to establish keying material and to
        provide authentication.

  AES-GCM is used with the custom security protocol in a manner that is
  very similar to its use in ESP [ESP-GCM].


















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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


2.  GigaBeam High-Speed Radio Link Overview

  The GigaBeam high-speed radio link appears to be a fiber interface
  between two network devices.  Figure 1 illustrates the connection of
  two devices that normally communicate using Gigabit Ethernet over a
  fiber optic cable.

    +---------+     +----------+        +----------+     +---------+
    |         |     |          +----/   |          |     |         |
    | Network |     | GigaBeam |   /    | GigaBeam |     | Network |
    | Device  +=====+  Radio   |  /---- +  Radio   +=====+ Device  |
    |         |     |          |        |          |     |         |
    +---------+  ^  +----------+   ^    +----------+  ^  +---------+
                 |                 |                  |
                 |                 |                  |
         Gigabit Ethernet          |          Gigabit Ethernet
                          GigaBeam Radio Link

                    Figure 1.  GigaBeam Radio Link Example.

  Gigabit Ethernet traffic is encoded in 8B/10B format.  The GigaBeam
  Radio Control Module (RCM) removes this coding to recover the 8-bit
  characters plus an indication of whether the character is a control
  code.  The radio link frame is constructed from 224 10-bit input
  words, and a 4-way interleaved (56,50,10) Reed-Solomon Forward Error
  Correction (FEC) block is employed.  Conversion of the Gigabit
  Ethernet data from 8B/10B format creates 224 bits of additional
  capacity in each frame, and another 196 bits is gained by recoding
  the 9-bit data using 64B/65B block codes.  This additional 420 bits
  of capacity is used for the framing overhead required for FEC and
  link control.




















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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


2.1.  GigaBeam Radio Link Frame Format

  The GigaBeam radio link frame fields are summarized in Figure 2,
  which also provides the length of each field in bits.

     Field   Length   Description
     -----   ------   -----------
     SYNC       11    Frame Synchronization Pattern ('10110111000'b)
     KEYSEL      1    Indicates which AES key was used for this frame
     PN         40    AES-GCM Packet Number
     FLAGS      28    Control bits, one bit for each 64B/65B data block
     DCC         8    Data Communications Channel
     DATA     1792    Data (28 encrypted 64B/65B code blocks)
     TAG        96    Authentication Tag
     SPARE      24    Reserved for alternative FEC algorithms
     CHECK     240    Reed-Solomon Check Words for 4 10-bit
                      symbol (56,50) code

             Figure 2.  GigaBeam Radio Link Frame Structure.

  Each of the fields in the GigaBeam 2240-bit radio link frame is
  described below.

     SYNC     Synchronization field, an 11-bit Barker code.  Always set
              to '10110111000'b.

     KEYSEL   Key Selector -- select the appropriate key register for
              this frame.  Two key registers are maintained to allow
              seamless rollover between encryption keys.

     PN       Packet Number -- needed by AES-GCM; it carries the unique
              counter value for this frame.  The value is incremented
              for each frame.

     FLAGS    Control bits, one for each 64B/65B data block carried in
              the DATA field.  If the bit is set, then the
              corresponding 64B/65B block in the DATA field contains a
              control code.  This field is integrity protected by AES-
              GCM.

     DCC      Data Communications Channel -- each frame carries one
              octet of the point-to-point data communications channel
              between the two radio control modules.  See Section 2.2
              for more information on the DCC.

     DATA     Subscriber data carried as 28 64B/65B code blocks.  This
              field is encrypted and integrity protected by AES-GCM.




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     TAG      The authentication tag generated by AES-GCM, truncated to
              96 bits.

     SPARE    24 bits, set to zero.

     CHECK    Forward error correction check value -- 24 check symbols
              are generated by a 4-way interleaved Reed-Solomon
              (56,50,10) algorithm.  FEC is always active, but
              correction can be selectively enabled.  For each frame,
              FEC processing also returns the number of bit errors, the
              number of symbols in error, and whether the FEC
              processing failed for the frame.  This information allows
              an estimation of the bit error rate for the link.

2.2.  Data Communications Channel

  The Data Communications Channel (DCC) field reserves eight bits in
  each 2240-bit radio link frame for use in constructing a dedicated
  point-to-point link between the two RCMs.  The DCC content is
  connected to a Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART)
  controller that processes the DCC bit stream to provide an
  asynchronous serial channel that is visible to the RCM operating
  system.  The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) [PPP] is used on the
  serial channel to create a simple two-node Internet Protocol (IP)
  network.  Each IP datagram is spread over a large number of radio
  link frames.  This two-node IP network carries management protocols
  between the GigaBeam RCMs.

  IKE [IKE] runs on this two-node IP network to manage all
  cryptographic keying material.  IPsec ESP [ESP] is used in the usual
  fashion to protect all non-IKE traffic on the data control channel.
  IPsec ESP employs AES-CBC as described in [ESP-CBC] and HMAC-SHA-1 as
  described in [ESP-HMAC].

3.  Radio Link Processing

  The fiber interface constantly provides a stream of data encoded in
  8B/10B format.  A radio link frame is constructed from 224 10-bit
  input words.  Conversion of the data from 8B/10B format creates 224
  bits of additional capacity in each frame, and then recoding using
  64B/65B block codes creates another 196 bits of additional capacity.
  After encryption, the 64B/65B blocks are carried in the DATA field,
  and the control code indicator bits are carried in the FLAGS field.
  The additional capacity is used for the framing overhead.







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  Processing proceeds as follows:

  o  encryption and integrity protection as described in Section 3.1;

  o  forward error correction (FEC) processing as described in Section
     3.2;

  o  scrambling as described in Section 3.3; and

  o  differential encoding as described in Section 3.4.

3.1.  Encryption and Integrity Protection

  The GigaBeam RCM contains two key registers.  The single-bit KEYSEL
  field indicates which of the two registers was used for the frame.

  AES-GCM [GCM] employs counter mode for encryption.  Therefore, a
  unique value for each frame is needed to construct the counter.  The
  counter includes a 32-bit salt value provided by IKE and a 40-bit
  packet number from the PN field in the radio link frame.  The same
  counter value must not be used for more than one frame encrypted with
  the same key.  The 128-bit counter block is constructed as shown in
  Figure 3.  The first 96 bits of the AES counter block are called the
  Nonce in the AES-GCM algorithm description.  Note that AES-GCM uses
  BLOCK values of zero and one for its own use.  The values beginning
  with two are used for encrypting the radio link frame payload.

     Field   Length   Description
     -----   ------   -----------
     SALT       32    Salt value generated during the IKE exchange
     MBZ1       24    These bits must be zero
     PN         40    AES-GCM Packet Number carried in PN field
     MBZ2       28    These bits must be zero
     BLOCK       4    Block counter used in AES-GCM

               Figure 3.  AES Counter Block Construction.

  AES-GCM is used to protect the FLAGS and DATA fields.  The FLAGS
  field is treated as authenticated header data, and it is integrity
  protected, but it is not encrypted.  The DATA field is encrypted and
  authenticated.  The TAG field contains the authentication tag
  generated by AES-GCM, truncated to 96 bits.

  Reception processing performs decryption and integrity checking.  If
  the integrity checks fail, to maintain a continuous stream of
  traffic, the frame is replaced with K30.7 control characters.  These





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  control characters are normally used to mark errors in the data
  stream.  Without encryption and integrity checking, these control
  characters usually indicate 8B/10B running disparity or code errors.

3.2.  Forward Error Correction (FEC)

  The 224 10-bit data symbols that make up each radio link frame are
  grouped into 4 subframes each consisting of 56 symbols.  The
  subframes are formed by symbol interleaving.  A Reed-Solomon Code,
  RS(56,50), designed for 10-bit symbols is applied to each subframe.

  This Reed Solomon Code detects 6 errors and corrects 3 errors within
  each subframe.  The FEC function is always active; however, it is
  possible to disable correction of the received data to support
  debugging.

3.3.  Scrambler

  The scrambler ensures that long series of one bits and long series of
  zero bits do not occur.  When encryption is enabled, long series of
  common bit values is very unlikely; however, during the initial IKE
  exchange, the radio link frame payload is all zero bits.

  The scrambling polynomial is (1 + x^14 + x^15).  All words of a frame
  except the SYNC pattern are scrambled prior to transmission using
  this linear feedback shift register (LFSR).  The LFSR is initialized
  to all ones at the start of each frame, prior to the first processed
  bit.  Each processed input bit is added modulo 2 (i.e., an XOR) to
  the output of the x15 tap to form the output bit.

  On reception, an identical process is performed after frame
  synchronization and prior to subsequent processing to recover the
  original bit pattern.

3.4.  Differential Encoding

  The data stream is differentially encoded to avoid symbol ambiguity
  at the receiver.  Since the demodulator could produce true or
  inverted data depending on the details of the radio frequency (RF)
  and intermediate frequency (IF) processing chains, differential
  encoding is used to ensure proper reception of the intended bit
  value.  A zero bit is encoded as no change from the previous output
  bit, and a one bit is encoded as a change from the previous output
  bit.  Thus, an output bit is the result of XORing the unencoded bit
  with the previously transmitted encoded bit.






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  On reception, a complementary operation will be performed to produce
  the decoded datastream.  The bitstream is formed by XORing the
  received encoded bit and the previously received encoded bit.

4.  Key Management

  The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) is used for key management [IKE].
  IKE has two phases.  In Phase 1, two Internet Security Association
  and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP) peers establish a secure,
  authenticated channel with which to communicate.  This is called the
  ISAKMP Security Association (SA).  In the GigaBeam environment, the
  Phase 1 exchange is IKE Aggressive Mode with signatures and
  certificates.  The RSA signature algorithm is used.

  Phase 2 negotiates the Security Associations for the GigaBeam custom
  security protocol that protects subscriber traffic and IPsec ESP that
  protects management traffic between the GigaBeam RCMs.  In the
  GigaBeam environment, the Phase 2 exchange is IKE Quick Mode, without
  perfect forward secrecy (PFS).  The information exchanged along with
  Quick Mode is protected by the ISAKMP SA.  That is, all payloads
  except the ISAKMP header are encrypted.  A detailed description of
  Quick Mode can be found in Section 5.5 of [IKE].

  When the Security Association is no longer needed, the ISAKMP Delete
  Payload is used to tell the peer GigaBeam device that it is being
  discarded.

4.1.  Certificates

  Each GigaBeam device generates its own public/private key pair.  This
  generation is performed at the factory, and the public key is
  certified by a Certification Authority (CA) in the factory.  The
  certificate includes a name of the following format:

  C=US O=GigaBeam Corporation OU=GigaBeam WiFiber(tm)
  SerialNumber=<device-model-identifier>/<device-serial-number>

  The ISAKMP Certificate Payload is used to transport certificates, and
  in the GigaBeam environment, the "X.509 Certificate - Signature"
  certificate encoding type (indicated by a value of 4) is always used.

  GigaBeam devices are always installed in pairs.  At installation
  time, each one is configured with the device model identifier and
  device serial number of its peer.  The device model identifier and
  device serial number of a backup device can also be provided.  An
  access control check is performed when certificates are exchanged.
  The certificate subject name must match one of these configured




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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


  values, and the certification path must validate to a configured
  trust anchor, such as the GigaBeam Root CA, using the validation
  rules in [PKIX1].

4.2.  Oakley Groups

  With IKE, several possible Diffie-Hellman groups are supported.
  These groups originated with the Oakley protocol and are therefore
  called "Oakley Groups".

  GigaBeam devices use group 14, which is described in Section 3 of
  [MODP].

4.3.  Security Protocol Identifier

  The ISAKMP proposal syntax was specifically designed to allow for the
  simultaneous negotiation of multiple Phase 2 security protocol
  suites.  The identifiers for the IPsec Domain of Interpretation (DOI)
  are given in [IPDOI].

  The GigaBeam custom security protocol has been assigned the
  PROTO_GIGABEAM_RADIO protocol identifier, with a value of 5.

  The PROTO_GIGABEAM_RADIO specifies the use of the GigaBeam radio link
  frame structure, which uses a single algorithm for both
  confidentiality and authentication.  The following table indicates
  the algorithm values that are currently defined.

     Transform ID                      Value
     ------------                      -----
     RESERVED                            0
     GIGABEAM_AES128_GCM                 1

4.4.  Keying Material

  GIGABEAM_AES128_GCM requires 20 octets of keying material (called
  KEYMAT in [IKE]).  The first 16 octets are the 128-bit AES key, and
  the remaining four octets are used as the salt value in the AES
  counter block.

  Presently, AES with a 128-bit key is the only encryption algorithm
  that is supported.  Other encryption algorithms could be registered
  in the future.








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4.5.  Identification Type Values

  The following table lists the assigned values for the Identification
  Type field found in the ISAKMP Identification Payload.

     ID Type                           Value
     -------                           -----
     RESERVED                            0
     ID_IPV4_ADDR                        1
     ID_FQDN                             2
     ID_USER_FQDN                        3
     ID_IPV4_ADDR_SUBNET                 4
     ID_IPV6_ADDR                        5
     ID_IPV6_ADDR_SUBNET                 6
     ID_IPV4_ADDR_RANGE                  7
     ID_IPV6_ADDR_RANGE                  8
     ID_DER_ASN1_DN                      9
     ID_DER_ASN1_GN                     10
     ID_KEY_ID                          11

  The ID_DER_ASN1_DN will be used when negotiating security
  associations for use with the GigaBeam custom security protocol.  The
  provided distinguished name must match the peer's subject name
  provided in the X.509 certificate.

4.6.  Security Parameter Index

  The least significant bit of the Security Parameter Index (SPI) is
  used in the GigaBeam custom security protocol.  When two GigaBeam
  custom security protocol security associations are active at the same
  time for communications in the same direction, the least significant
  bit of the SPI must be different to ensure that these active security
  associations can be distinguished by the single bit in the GigaBeam
  custom security protocol.

4.7.  Key Management Latency

  The IKE exchange over the DCC must complete before subscriber data
  can be exchanged in the GigaBeam radio link frame payload.  Since
  each radio link frame carries a small portion of an IP datagram, many
  radio link frames carrying all zero bits must be sent and received to
  complete the IKE exchange.

  Once the initial keying material is in place, the IKE exchanges to
  establish subsequent keying material can be performed concurrent with
  the transfer of subscriber data in the radio link frame payload.  The
  KEYSEL field in the radio link frame is used to indicate which keying
  material is being used.



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  The PN field in radio link frame provides a continuous indication of
  the number of frames that have been encrypted with a particular key.
  Once a threshold is exceeded, the IKE exchanges begin to establish
  the replacement keying material.  Currently, the exchanges begin when
  half of the packet numbers have been used, but any threshold can be
  employed, as long as the replacement keying material is available
  before the packet counters are exhausted.

5.  Security Considerations

  The security considerations in [IKE], [OAKLEY], [PKCS1], and [ESP]
  apply to the security system defined in this document.

  Confidentiality and integrity are provided by the use of negotiated
  algorithms.  AES-GCM [GCM] is used with the GigaBeam custom security
  protocol to provide confidentiality and integrity protection of
  subscriber traffic on the radio link.  AES-CBC [CBC] and HMAC-SHA-1
  [HMAC] are used with IPsec ESP [ESP] to provide confidentiality and
  integrity protection of management traffic between the radio control
  modules.

  AES-GCM makes use of AES Counter mode to provide confidentiality.
  Unfortunately, it is very easy to misuse counter mode.  If counter
  block values are ever used for more than one frame with the same key,
  then the same key stream will be used to encrypt both frames, and the
  confidentiality guarantees are voided.  Using AES Counter mode with
  the same counter values to encrypt two plaintexts under the same key
  leaks the plaintext.  The automated key management described here is
  intended to prevent this from ever happening.

  Since AES has a 128-bit block size, regardless of the mode employed,
  the ciphertext generated by AES encryption becomes distinguishable
  from random values after 2^64 blocks are encrypted with a single key.
  Since the GigaBeam radio link frame allows for up to 2^40 fixed-
  length frames in a single security association, there is no
  possibility for more than 2^64 blocks to be encrypted with one key.

  The lifetime of a particular AES key can be shorter than 2^40 frames.
  A smaller threshold can be used as a trigger to transition to the
  next key.  This capability allows straightforward implementation of
  policies that require the key to be changed after a particular volume
  of traffic or a particular amount of time.

  There are fairly generic precomputation attacks against all block
  cipher modes that allow a meet-in-the-middle attack against the key.
  These attacks require the creation and searching of huge tables of
  ciphertext associated with known plaintext and known keys.  Assuming
  that the memory and processor resources are available for a



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  precomputation attack, then the theoretical strength of AES Counter
  mode (and any other block cipher mode) is limited to 2^(n/2) bits,
  where n is the number of bits in the key.  The use of long keys is
  the best countermeasure to precomputation attacks.  The unpredictable
  nonce value in the counter block significantly increases the size of
  the table that the attacker must compute to mount a successful
  precomputation attack.

  Rekeying with Quick Mode results in new keys to protect GigaBeam
  radio link frames; however, these keys are generated from the same
  Diffie-Hellman shared secret.  In order to limit the amount of data
  that would be exposed by the disclosure of this Diffie-Hellman shared
  secret or the associated Diffie-Hellman private key, implementations
  should periodically rekey using a new Phase 1 exchange.

  Diffie-Hellman exponents used in IKE Phase 1 should be erased from
  memory immediately after use.  Likewise, AES and HMAC-SHA-1 keying
  material should be erased from memory when it is no longer needed.

  This security solution makes use of IKEv1 [IKE].  IKEv1 was selected
  over IKEv2 [IKEv2] primarily due to the availability of an
  implementation for the processing environment.  The use of IKEv2
  would provide some useful capabilities, such as Diffie-Hellman group
  negotiation.  These additional capabilities would not significantly
  improve the security of the overall key management solution that runs
  on the two-node IP network.

6.  IANA Considerations

  IANA has assigned one IPsec Security Protocol Identifier in
  http://www.iana.org/assignments/isakmp-registry for
  PROTO_GIGABEAM_RADIO.  It was assigned the value 5.

7.  Informative References

  [CBC]      Dworkin, M., "Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of
             Operation: Methods and Techniques," NIST Special
             Publication 800-38A, December 2001.

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

  [ESP-CBC]  Frankel, S., Glenn, R., and S. Kelly, "The AES-CBC Cipher
             Algorithm and Its Use with IPsec", RFC 3602, September
             2003.






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  [ESP-GCM]  Viega, J. and D. McGrew, "The Use of Galois/Counter Mode
             (GCM) in IPsec Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)", RFC
             4106, June 2005.

  [ESP-HMAC] Madson, C. and R. Glenn, "The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 within
             ESP and AH", RFC 2404, November 1998.

  [GCM]      McGrew, D. and J. Viega, "The Galois/Counter Mode of
             Operation (GCM)", Submission to NIST.
             http://csrc.nist.gov/CryptoToolkit/modes/proposedmodes/
             gcm/gcm-spec.pdf, January 2004.  [Soon: NIST SP 800-38D.]

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

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

  [IKEv2]    Kaufman, C., "The Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",
             RFC 2306, December 2005.

  [IPDOI]    Piper, D., "The Internet IP Security Domain of
             Interpretation for ISAKMP", RFC 2407, November 1998.

  [MODP]     Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo. "More Modular Exponential (MODP)
             Diffie-Hellman groups for Internet Key Exchange (IKE)",
             RFC 3526, May 2003.

  [OAKLEY]   Orman, H., "The Oakley Key Determination Protocol", RFC
             2412, November 1998.

  [PKCS1]    Kaliski, B., "PKCS #1: RSA Encryption Version 1.5", RFC
             2313, March 1998.

  [PKIX1]    Housley, R., Polk, W., Ford, W., and D. Solo, "Internet
             X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and
             Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile", RFC 3280,
             April 2002.

  [PPP]      Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD 51,
             RFC 1661, July 1994.

8.  Acknowledgements

  The authors thank Bob Sutherland and Dave Marcellas for their
  contributions and review.




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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


Authors' Addresses

  Russell Housley
  Vigil Security, LLC
  918 Spring Knoll Drive
  Herndon, VA 20170
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Alan Corry
  GigaBeam Corporation
  470 Springpark Place, Suite 900
  Herndon, VA 20170
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]

































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RFC 4705             GigaBeam Radio Link Encryption         October 2006


Full Copyright Statement

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