Network Working Group                                          P. Jokela
Request for Comments: 5202                  Ericsson Research NomadicLab
Category: Experimental                                      R. Moskowitz
                                                               ICSAlabs
                                                            P. Nikander
                                           Ericsson Research NomadicLab
                                                             April 2008


Using the Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) Transport Format with the
                     Host Identity Protocol (HIP)

Status of This Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.
  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

IESG Note

  The following issues describe IESG concerns about this document.  The
  IESG expects that these issues will be addressed when future versions
  of HIP are designed.

  In case of complex Security Policy Databases (SPDs) and the co-
  existence of HIP and security-related protocols such as IKE,
  implementors may encounter conditions that are unspecified in these
  documents.  For example, when the SPD defines an IP address subnet to
  be protected and a HIP host is residing in that IP address area,
  there is a possibility that the communication is encrypted multiple
  times.  Readers are advised to pay special attention when running HIP
  with complex SPD settings.  Future specifications should clearly
  define when multiple encryption is intended, and when it should be
  avoided.

Abstract

  This memo specifies an Encapsulated Security Payload (ESP) based
  mechanism for transmission of user data packets, to be used with the
  Host Identity Protocol (HIP).










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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
  2.  Conventions Used in This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
  3.  Using ESP with HIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    3.1.  ESP Packet Format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    3.2.  Conceptual ESP Packet Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
      3.2.1.  Semantics of the Security Parameter Index (SPI)  . . .  5
    3.3.  Security Association Establishment and Maintenance . . . .  6
      3.3.1.  ESP Security Associations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
      3.3.2.  Rekeying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
      3.3.3.  Security Association Management  . . . . . . . . . . .  7
      3.3.4.  Security Parameter Index (SPI) . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
      3.3.5.  Supported Transforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
      3.3.6.  Sequence Number  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
      3.3.7.  Lifetimes and Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    3.4.  IPsec and HIP ESP Implementation Considerations  . . . . .  8
  4.  The Protocol  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
    4.1.  ESP in HIP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
      4.1.1.  Setting Up an ESP Security Association  . . . . . . . . 9
      4.1.2.  Updating an Existing ESP SA  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
  5.  Parameter and Packet Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    5.1.  New Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
      5.1.1.  ESP_INFO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
      5.1.2.  ESP_TRANSFORM  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
      5.1.3.  NOTIFY Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    5.2.  HIP ESP Security Association Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
      5.2.1.  Setup During Base Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    5.3.  HIP ESP Rekeying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
      5.3.1.  Initializing Rekeying  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
      5.3.2.  Responding to the Rekeying Initialization  . . . . . . 17
    5.4.  ICMP Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
      5.4.1.  Unknown SPI  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
  6.  Packet Processing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    6.1.  Processing Outgoing Application Data . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    6.2.  Processing Incoming Application Data . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    6.3.  HMAC and SIGNATURE Calculation and Verification  . . . . . 19
    6.4.  Processing Incoming ESP SA Initialization (R1) . . . . . . 19
    6.5.  Processing Incoming Initialization Reply (I2)  . . . . . . 20
    6.6.  Processing Incoming ESP SA Setup Finalization (R2) . . . . 20
    6.7.  Dropping HIP Associations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    6.8.  Initiating ESP SA Rekeying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    6.9.  Processing Incoming UPDATE Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
      6.9.1.  Processing UPDATE Packet: No Outstanding Rekeying
              Request  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
    6.10. Finalizing Rekeying  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
    6.11. Processing NOTIFY Packets  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
  7.  Keying Material  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24



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  8.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
  9.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
  10. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
  11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
    11.1. Normative references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
    11.2. Informative references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
  Appendix A.  A Note on Implementation Options  . . . . . . . . . . 28

1.  Introduction

  In the Host Identity Protocol Architecture [RFC4423], hosts are
  identified with public keys.  The Host Identity Protocol [RFC5201]
  base exchange allows any two HIP-supporting hosts to authenticate
  each other and to create a HIP association between themselves.
  During the base exchange, the hosts generate a piece of shared keying
  material using an authenticated Diffie-Hellman exchange.

  The HIP base exchange specification [RFC5201] does not describe any
  transport formats or methods for user data to be used during the
  actual communication; it only defines that it is mandatory to
  implement the Encapsulated Security Payload (ESP) [RFC4303] based
  transport format and method.  This document specifies how ESP is used
  with HIP to carry actual user data.

  To be more specific, this document specifies a set of HIP protocol
  extensions and their handling.  Using these extensions, a pair of ESP
  Security Associations (SAs) is created between the hosts during the
  base exchange.  The resulting ESP Security Associations use keys
  drawn from the keying material (KEYMAT) generated during the base
  exchange.  After the HIP association and required ESP SAs have been
  established between the hosts, the user data communication is
  protected using ESP.  In addition, this document specifies methods to
  update an existing ESP Security Association.

  It should be noted that representations of Host Identity are not
  carried explicitly in the headers of user data packets.  Instead, the
  ESP Security Parameter Index (SPI) is used to indicate the right host
  context.  The SPIs are selected during the HIP ESP setup exchange.
  For user data packets, ESP SPIs (in possible combination with IP
  addresses) are used indirectly to identify the host context, thereby
  avoiding any additional explicit protocol headers.

2.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].




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3.  Using ESP with HIP

  The HIP base exchange is used to set up a HIP association between two
  hosts.  The base exchange provides two-way host authentication and
  key material generation, but it does not provide any means for
  protecting data communication between the hosts.  In this document,
  we specify the use of ESP for protecting user data traffic after the
  HIP base exchange.  Note that this use of ESP is intended only for
  host-to-host traffic; security gateways are not supported.

  To support ESP use, the HIP base exchange messages require some minor
  additions to the parameters transported.  In the R1 packet, the
  Responder adds the possible ESP transforms in a new ESP_TRANSFORM
  parameter before sending it to the Initiator.  The Initiator gets the
  proposed transforms, selects one of those proposed transforms, and
  adds it to the I2 packet in an ESP_TRANSFORM parameter.  In this I2
  packet, the Initiator also sends the SPI value that it wants to be
  used for ESP traffic flowing from the Responder to the Initiator.
  This information is carried using the new ESP_INFO parameter.  When
  finalizing the ESP SA setup, the Responder sends its SPI value to the
  Initiator in the R2 packet, again using ESP_INFO.

3.1.  ESP Packet Format

  The ESP specification [RFC4303] defines the ESP packet format for
  IPsec.  The HIP ESP packet looks exactly the same as the IPsec ESP
  transport format packet.  The semantics, however, are a bit different
  and are described in more detail in the next subsection.

3.2.  Conceptual ESP Packet Processing

  ESP packet processing can be implemented in different ways in HIP.
  It is possible to implement it in a way that a standards compliant,
  unmodified IPsec implementation [RFC4303] can be used.

  When a standards compliant IPsec implementation that uses IP
  addresses in the SPD and Security Association Database (SAD) is used,
  the packet processing may take the following steps.  For outgoing
  packets, assuming that the upper-layer pseudoheader has been built
  using IP addresses, the implementation recalculates upper-layer
  checksums using Host Identity Tags (HITs) and, after that, changes
  the packet source and destination addresses back to corresponding IP
  addresses.  The packet is sent to the IPsec ESP for transport mode
  handling and from there the encrypted packet is sent to the network.
  When an ESP packet is received, the packet is first put to the IPsec
  ESP transport mode handling, and after decryption, the source and





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  destination IP addresses are replaced with HITs and finally, upper-
  layer checksums are verified before passing the packet to the upper
  layer.

  An alternative way to implement packet processing is the BEET (Bound
  End-to-End Tunnel) [ESP-BEET] mode.  In BEET mode, the ESP packet is
  formatted as a transport mode packet, but the semantics of the
  connection are the same as for tunnel mode.  The "outer" addresses of
  the packet are the IP addresses and the "inner" addresses are the
  HITs.  For outgoing traffic, after the packet has been encrypted, the
  packet's IP header is changed to a new one that contains IP addresses
  instead of HITs, and the packet is sent to the network.  When the ESP
  packet is received, the SPI value, together with the integrity
  protection, allow the packet to be securely associated with the right
  HIT pair.  The packet header is replaced with a new header containing
  HITs, and the packet is decrypted.

3.2.1.  Semantics of the Security Parameter Index (SPI)

  SPIs are used in ESP to find the right Security Association for
  received packets.  The ESP SPIs have added significance when used
  with HIP; they are a compressed representation of a pair of HITs.
  Thus, SPIs MAY be used by intermediary systems in providing services
  like address mapping.  Note that since the SPI has significance at
  the receiver, only the < DST, SPI >, where DST is a destination IP
  address, uniquely identifies the receiver HIT at any given point of
  time.  The same SPI value may be used by several hosts.  A single
  < DST, SPI > value may denote different hosts and contexts at
  different points of time, depending on the host that is currently
  reachable at the DST.

  Each host selects for itself the SPI it wants to see in packets
  received from its peer.  This allows it to select different SPIs for
  different peers.  The SPI selection SHOULD be random; the rules of
  Section 2.1 of the ESP specification [RFC4303] must be followed.  A
  different SPI SHOULD be used for each HIP exchange with a particular
  host; this is to avoid a replay attack.  Additionally, when a host
  rekeys, the SPI MUST be changed.  Furthermore, if a host changes over
  to use a different IP address, it MAY change the SPI.

  One method for SPI creation that meets the above criteria would be to
  concatenate the HIT with a 32-bit random or sequential number, hash
  this (using SHA1), and then use the high-order 32 bits as the SPI.

  The selected SPI is communicated to the peer in the third (I2) and
  fourth (R2) packets of the base HIP exchange.  Changes in SPI are
  signaled with ESP_INFO parameters.




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3.3.  Security Association Establishment and Maintenance

3.3.1.  ESP Security Associations

  In HIP, ESP Security Associations are setup between the HIP nodes
  during the base exchange [RFC5201].  Existing ESP SAs can be updated
  later using UPDATE messages.  The reason for updating the ESP SA
  later can be, for example, a need for rekeying the SA because of
  sequence number rollover.

  Upon setting up a HIP association, each association is linked to two
  ESP SAs, one for incoming packets and one for outgoing packets.  The
  Initiator's incoming SA corresponds with the Responder's outgoing
  one, and vice versa.  The Initiator defines the SPI for its incoming
  association, as defined in Section 3.2.1.  This SA is herein called
  SA-RI, and the corresponding SPI is called SPI-RI.  Respectively, the
  Responder's incoming SA corresponds with the Initiator's outgoing SA
  and is called SA-IR, with the SPI being called SPI-IR.

  The Initiator creates SA-RI as a part of R1 processing, before
  sending out the I2, as explained in Section 6.4.  The keys are
  derived from KEYMAT, as defined in Section 7.  The Responder creates
  SA-RI as a part of I2 processing; see Section 6.5.

  The Responder creates SA-IR as a part of I2 processing, before
  sending out R2; see Section 6.5.  The Initiator creates SA-IR when
  processing R2; see Section 6.6.

  The initial session keys are drawn from the generated keying
  material, KEYMAT, after the HIP keys have been drawn as specified in
  [RFC5201].

  When the HIP association is removed, the related ESP SAs MUST also be
  removed.

3.3.2.  Rekeying

  After the initial HIP base exchange and SA establishment, both hosts
  are in the ESTABLISHED state.  There are no longer Initiator and
  Responder roles and the association is symmetric.  In this
  subsection, the party that initiates the rekey procedure is denoted
  with I' and the peer with R'.

  An existing HIP-created ESP SA may need updating during the lifetime
  of the HIP association.  This document specifies the rekeying of an
  existing HIP-created ESP SA, using the UPDATE message.  The ESP_INFO
  parameter introduced above is used for this purpose.




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  I' initiates the ESP SA updating process when needed (see
  Section 6.8).  It creates an UPDATE packet with required information
  and sends it to the peer node.  The old SAs are still in use, local
  policy permitting.

  R', after receiving and processing the UPDATE (see Section 6.9),
  generates new SAs: SA-I'R' and SA-R'I'.  It does not take the new
  outgoing SA into use, but still uses the old one, so there
  temporarily exists two SA pairs towards the same peer host.  The SPI
  for the new outgoing SA, SPI-R'I', is specified in the received
  ESP_INFO parameter in the UPDATE packet.  For the new incoming SA, R'
  generates the new SPI value, SPI-I'R', and includes it in the
  response UPDATE packet.

  When I' receives a response UPDATE from R', it generates new SAs, as
  described in Section 6.9: SA-I'R' and SA-R'I'.  It starts using the
  new outgoing SA immediately.

  R' starts using the new outgoing SA when it receives traffic on the
  new incoming SA or when it receives the UPDATE ACK confirming
  completion of rekeying.  After this, R' can remove the old SAs.
  Similarly, when the I' receives traffic from the new incoming SA, it
  can safely remove the old SAs.

3.3.3.  Security Association Management

  An SA pair is indexed by the 2 SPIs and 2 HITs (both local and remote
  HITs since a system can have more than one HIT).  An inactivity timer
  is RECOMMENDED for all SAs.  If the state dictates the deletion of an
  SA, a timer is set to allow for any late arriving packets.

3.3.4.  Security Parameter Index (SPI)

  The SPIs in ESP provide a simple compression of the HIP data from all
  packets after the HIP exchange.  This does require a per HIT-pair
  Security Association (and SPI), and a decrease of policy granularity
  over other Key Management Protocols like IKE.

  When a host updates the ESP SA, it provides a new inbound SPI to and
  gets a new outbound SPI from its partner.

3.3.5.  Supported Transforms

  All HIP implementations MUST support AES-CBC [RFC3602] and HMAC-SHA-
  1-96 [RFC2404].  If the Initiator does not support any of the
  transforms offered by the Responder, it should abandon the
  negotiation and inform the peer with a NOTIFY message about a non-
  supported transform.



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  In addition to AES-CBC, all implementations MUST implement the ESP
  NULL encryption algorithm.  When the ESP NULL encryption is used, it
  MUST be used together with SHA1 or MD5 authentication as specified in
  Section 5.1.2

3.3.6.  Sequence Number

  The Sequence Number field is MANDATORY when ESP is used with HIP.
  Anti-replay protection MUST be used in an ESP SA established with
  HIP.  When ESP is used with HIP, a 64-bit sequence number MUST be
  used.  This means that each host MUST rekey before its sequence
  number reaches 2^64.

  When using a 64-bit sequence number, the higher 32 bits are NOT
  included in the ESP header, but are simply kept local to both peers.
  See [RFC4301].

3.3.7.  Lifetimes and Timers

  HIP does not negotiate any lifetimes.  All ESP lifetimes are local
  policy.  The only lifetimes a HIP implementation MUST support are
  sequence number rollover (for replay protection), and SHOULD support
  timing out inactive ESP SAs.  An SA times out if no packets are
  received using that SA.  The default timeout value is 15 minutes.
  Implementations MAY support lifetimes for the various ESP transforms.
  Each implementation SHOULD implement per-HIT configuration of the
  inactivity timeout, allowing statically configured HIP associations
  to stay alive for days, even when inactive.

3.4.  IPsec and HIP ESP Implementation Considerations

  When HIP is run on a node where a standards compliant IPsec is used,
  some issues have to be considered.

  The HIP implementation must be able to co-exist with other IPsec
  keying protocols.  When the HIP implementation selects the SPI value,
  it may lead to a collision if not implemented properly.  To avoid the
  possibility for a collision, the HIP implementation MUST ensure that
  the SPI values used for HIP SAs are not used for IPsec or other SAs,
  and vice versa.

  For outbound traffic, the SPD or (coordinated) SPDs if there are two
  (one for HIP and one for IPsec) MUST ensure that packets intended for
  HIP processing are given a HIP-enabled SA and that packets intended
  for IPsec processing are given an IPsec-enabled SA.  The SP then MUST
  be bound to the matching SA and non-HIP packets will not be processed
  by this SA.  Data originating from a socket that is not using HIP
  MUST NOT have checksum recalculated (as described in Section 3.2,



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  paragraph 2) and data MUST NOT be passed to the SP or SA created by
  the HIP.

  Incoming data packets using an SA that is not negotiated by HIP MUST
  NOT be processed as described in Section 3.2, paragraph 2.  The SPI
  will identify the correct SA for packet decryption and MUST be used
  to identify that the packet has an upper-layer checksum that is
  calculated as specified in [RFC5201].

4.  The Protocol

  In this section, the protocol for setting up an ESP association to be
  used with HIP association is described.

4.1.  ESP in HIP

4.1.1.  Setting Up an ESP Security Association

  Setting up an ESP Security Association between hosts using HIP
  consists of three messages passed between the hosts.  The parameters
  are included in R1, I2, and R2 messages during base exchange.

                Initiator                             Responder

                                  I1
                  ---------------------------------->

                            R1: ESP_TRANSFORM
                  <----------------------------------

                      I2: ESP_TRANSFORM, ESP_INFO
                  ---------------------------------->

                              R2: ESP_INFO
                  <----------------------------------

  Setting up an ESP Security Association between HIP hosts requires
  three messages to exchange the information that is required during an
  ESP communication.

  The R1 message contains the ESP_TRANSFORM parameter, in which the
  sending host defines the possible ESP transforms it is willing to use
  for the ESP SA.

  The I2 message contains the response to an ESP_TRANSFORM received in
  the R1 message.  The sender must select one of the proposed ESP
  transforms from the ESP_TRANSFORM parameter in the R1 message and
  include the selected one in the ESP_TRANSFORM parameter in the I2



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  packet.  In addition to the transform, the host includes the ESP_INFO
  parameter containing the SPI value to be used by the peer host.

  In the R2 message, the ESP SA setup is finalized.  The packet
  contains the SPI information required by the Initiator for the ESP
  SA.

4.1.2.  Updating an Existing ESP SA

  The update process is accomplished using two messages.  The HIP
  UPDATE message is used to update the parameters of an existing ESP
  SA.  The UPDATE mechanism and message is defined in [RFC5201], and
  the additional parameters for updating an existing ESP SA are
  described here.

  The following picture shows a typical exchange when an existing ESP
  SA is updated.  Messages include SEQ and ACK parameters required by
  the UPDATE mechanism.

      H1                                                          H2
           UPDATE: SEQ, ESP_INFO [, DIFFIE_HELLMAN]
         ----------------------------------------------------->

           UPDATE: SEQ, ACK, ESP_INFO [, DIFFIE_HELLMAN]
         <-----------------------------------------------------

           UPDATE: ACK
         ----------------------------------------------------->

  The host willing to update the ESP SA creates and sends an UPDATE
  message.  The message contains the ESP_INFO parameter containing the
  old SPI value that was used, the new SPI value to be used, and the
  index value for the keying material, giving the point from where the
  next keys will be drawn.  If new keying material must be generated,
  the UPDATE message will also contain the DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter
  defined in [RFC5201].

  The host receiving the UPDATE message requesting update of an
  existing ESP SA MUST reply with an UPDATE message.  In the reply
  message, the host sends the ESP_INFO parameter containing the
  corresponding values: old SPI, new SPI, and the keying material
  index.  If the incoming UPDATE contained a DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter,
  the reply packet MUST also contain a DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter.

5.  Parameter and Packet Formats

  In this section, new and modified HIP parameters are presented, as
  well as modified HIP packets.



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5.1.  New Parameters

  Two new HIP parameters are defined for setting up ESP transport
  format associations in HIP communication and for rekeying existing
  ones.  Also, the NOTIFY parameter, described in [RFC5201], has two
  new error parameters.

     Parameter         Type  Length     Data

     ESP_INFO          65    12         Remote's old SPI,
                                        new SPI, and other info
     ESP_TRANSFORM     4095  variable   ESP Encryption and
                                        Authentication Transform(s)

5.1.1.  ESP_INFO

  During the establishment and update of an ESP SA, the SPI value of
  both hosts must be transmitted between the hosts.  During the
  establishment and update of an ESP SA, the SPI value of both hosts
  must be transmitted between the hosts.  In addition, hosts need the
  index value to the KEYMAT when they are drawing keys from the
  generated keying material.  The ESP_INFO parameter is used to
  transmit the SPI values and the KEYMAT index information between the
  hosts.

  During the initial ESP SA setup, the hosts send the SPI value that
  they want the peer to use when sending ESP data to them.  The value
  is set in the NEW SPI field of the ESP_INFO parameter.  In the
  initial setup, an old value for the SPI does not exist, thus the OLD
  SPI value field is set to zero.  The OLD SPI field value may also be
  zero when additional SAs are set up between HIP hosts, e.g., in case
  of multihomed HIP hosts [RFC5206].  However, such use is beyond the
  scope of this specification.

  RFC 4301 [RFC4301] describes how to establish multiple SAs to
  properly support QoS.  If different classes of traffic (distinguished
  by Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) bits [RFC3474],
  [RFC3260]) are sent on the same SA, and if the receiver is employing
  the optional anti-replay feature available in 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 implementation MUST permit establishment and
  maintenance of multiple SAs between a given sender and receiver 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 HIP.  The receiver MUST process the packets from the



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  different SAs without prejudice.  It is possible that the DSCP value
  changes 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.

  The KEYMAT index value points to the place in the KEYMAT from where
  the keying material for the ESP SAs is drawn.  The KEYMAT index value
  is zero only when the ESP_INFO is sent during a rekeying process and
  new keying material is generated.

  During the life of an SA established by HIP, one of the hosts may
  need to reset the Sequence Number to one and rekey.  The reason for
  rekeying might be an approaching sequence number wrap in ESP, or a
  local policy on use of a key.  Rekeying ends the current SAs and
  starts new ones on both peers.

  During the rekeying process, the ESP_INFO parameter is used to
  transmit the changed SPI values and the keying material index.

     0                   1                   2                   3
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |             Type              |             Length            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |           Reserved            |         KEYMAT Index          |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                            OLD SPI                            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    |                            NEW SPI                            |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

    Type           65
    Length         12
    KEYMAT Index   Index, in bytes, where to continue to draw ESP keys
                   from KEYMAT.  If the packet includes a new
                   Diffie-Hellman key and the ESP_INFO is sent in an
                   UPDATE packet, the field MUST be zero.  If the
                   ESP_INFO is included in base exchange messages, the
                   KEYMAT Index must have the index value of the point
                   from where the ESP SA keys are drawn.  Note that the
                   length of this field limits the amount of
                   keying material that can be drawn from KEYMAT.  If
                   that amount is exceeded, the packet MUST contain
                   a new Diffie-Hellman key.
    OLD SPI        old SPI for data sent to address(es) associated
                   with this SA.  If this is an initial SA setup, the
                   OLD SPI value is zero.




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    NEW SPI        new SPI for data sent to address(es) associated
                   with this SA.

5.1.2.  ESP_TRANSFORM

  The ESP_TRANSFORM parameter is used during ESP SA establishment.  The
  first party sends a selection of transform families in the
  ESP_TRANSFORM parameter, and the peer must select one of the proposed
  values and include it in the response ESP_TRANSFORM parameter.

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |             Type              |             Length            |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |          Reserved             |           Suite ID #1         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |          Suite ID #2          |           Suite ID #3         |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
     |          Suite ID #n          |             Padding           |
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

        Type           4095
        Length         length in octets, excluding Type, Length, and
                       padding
        Reserved       zero when sent, ignored when received
        Suite ID       defines the ESP Suite to be used

  The following Suite IDs are defined in RFC 5201 [RFC5201]:

           Suite ID                          Value

           RESERVED                          0
           AES-CBC with HMAC-SHA1            1
           3DES-CBC with HMAC-SHA1           2
           3DES-CBC with HMAC-MD5            3
           BLOWFISH-CBC with HMAC-SHA1       4
           NULL with HMAC-SHA1               5
           NULL with HMAC-MD5                6

  The sender of an ESP transform parameter MUST make sure that there
  are no more than six (6) Suite IDs in one ESP transform parameter.
  Conversely, a recipient MUST be prepared to handle received transport
  parameters that contain more than six Suite IDs.  The limited number
  of Suite IDs sets the maximum size of the ESP_TRANSFORM parameter.
  As the default configuration, the ESP_TRANSFORM parameter MUST





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  contain at least one of the mandatory Suite IDs.  There MAY be a
  configuration option that allows the administrator to override this
  default.

  Mandatory implementations: AES-CBC with HMAC-SHA1 and NULL with HMAC-
  SHA1.

  Under some conditions, it is possible to use Traffic Flow
  Confidentiality (TFC) [RFC4303] with ESP in BEET mode.  However, the
  definition of such operation is future work and must be done in a
  separate specification.

5.1.3.  NOTIFY Parameter

  The HIP base specification defines a set of NOTIFY error types.  The
  following error types are required for describing errors in ESP
  Transform crypto suites during negotiation.

        NOTIFY PARAMETER - ERROR TYPES           Value
        ------------------------------           -----

        NO_ESP_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN                    18

           None of the proposed ESP Transform crypto suites was
           acceptable.

        INVALID_ESP_TRANSFORM_CHOSEN              19

           The ESP Transform crypto suite does not correspond to
           one offered by the Responder.


5.2.  HIP ESP Security Association Setup

  The ESP Security Association is set up during the base exchange.  The
  following subsections define the ESP SA setup procedure using both
  base exchange messages (R1, I2, R2) and UPDATE messages.

5.2.1.  Setup During Base Exchange

5.2.1.1.  Modifications in R1

  The ESP_TRANSFORM contains the ESP modes supported by the sender, in
  the order of preference.  All implementations MUST support AES-CBC
  [RFC3602] with HMAC-SHA-1-96 [RFC2404].






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  The following figure shows the resulting R1 packet layout.

     The HIP parameters for the R1 packet:

     IP ( HIP ( [ R1_COUNTER, ]
                PUZZLE,
                DIFFIE_HELLMAN,
                HIP_TRANSFORM,
                ESP_TRANSFORM,
                HOST_ID,
                [ ECHO_REQUEST, ]
                HIP_SIGNATURE_2 )
                [, ECHO_REQUEST ])

5.2.1.2.  Modifications in I2

  The ESP_INFO contains the sender's SPI for this association as well
  as the KEYMAT index from where the ESP SA keys will be drawn.  The
  old SPI value is set to zero.

  The ESP_TRANSFORM contains the ESP mode selected by the sender of R1.
  All implementations MUST support AES-CBC [RFC3602] with HMAC-SHA-1-96
  [RFC2404].

  The following figure shows the resulting I2 packet layout.

     The HIP parameters for the I2 packet:

     IP ( HIP ( ESP_INFO,
                [R1_COUNTER,]
                SOLUTION,
                DIFFIE_HELLMAN,
                HIP_TRANSFORM,
                ESP_TRANSFORM,
                ENCRYPTED { HOST_ID },
                [ ECHO_RESPONSE ,]
                HMAC,
                HIP_SIGNATURE
                [, ECHO_RESPONSE] ) )

5.2.1.3.  Modifications in R2

  The R2 contains an ESP_INFO parameter, which has the SPI value of the
  sender of the R2 for this association.  The ESP_INFO also has the
  KEYMAT index value specifying where the ESP SA keys are drawn.






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  The following figure shows the resulting R2 packet layout.

     The HIP parameters for the R2 packet:

     IP ( HIP ( ESP_INFO, HMAC_2, HIP_SIGNATURE ) )

5.3.  HIP ESP Rekeying

  In this section, the procedure for rekeying an existing ESP SA is
  presented.

  Conceptually, the process can be represented by the following message
  sequence using the host names I' and R' defined in Section 3.3.2.
  For simplicity, HMAC and HIP_SIGNATURE are not depicted, and
  DIFFIE_HELLMAN keys are optional.  The UPDATE with ACK_I need not be
  piggybacked with the UPDATE with SEQ_R; it may be ACKed separately
  (in which case the sequence would include four packets).

          I'                                  R'

                UPDATE(ESP_INFO, SEQ_I, [DIFFIE_HELLMAN])
           ----------------------------------->
                UPDATE(ESP_INFO, SEQ_R, ACK_I, [DIFFIE_HELLMAN])
           <-----------------------------------
                UPDATE(ACK_R)
           ----------------------------------->

  Below, the first two packets in this figure are explained.

5.3.1.  Initializing Rekeying

  When HIP is used with ESP, the UPDATE packet is used to initiate
  rekeying.  The UPDATE packet MUST carry an ESP_INFO and MAY carry a
  DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter.

  Intermediate systems that use the SPI will have to inspect HIP
  packets for those that carry rekeying information.  The packet is
  signed for the benefit of the intermediate systems.  Since
  intermediate systems may need the new SPI values, the contents cannot
  be encrypted.











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  The following figure shows the contents of a rekeying initialization
  UPDATE packet.

     The HIP parameters for the UPDATE packet initiating rekeying:

     IP ( HIP ( ESP_INFO,
                SEQ,
                [DIFFIE_HELLMAN, ]
                HMAC,
                HIP_SIGNATURE ) )

5.3.2.  Responding to the Rekeying Initialization

  The UPDATE ACK is used to acknowledge the received UPDATE rekeying
  initialization.  The acknowledgment UPDATE packet MUST carry an
  ESP_INFO and MAY carry a DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter.

  Intermediate systems that use the SPI will have to inspect HIP
  packets for packets carrying rekeying information.  The packet is
  signed for the benefit of the intermediate systems.  Since
  intermediate systems may need the new SPI values, the contents cannot
  be encrypted.

  The following figure shows the contents of a rekeying acknowledgment
  UPDATE packet.

     The HIP parameters for the UPDATE packet:

     IP ( HIP ( ESP_INFO,
                SEQ,
                ACK,
                [ DIFFIE_HELLMAN, ]
                HMAC,
                HIP_SIGNATURE ) )

5.4.  ICMP Messages

  ICMP message handling is mainly described in the HIP base
  specification [RFC5201].  In this section, we describe the actions
  related to ESP security associations.

5.4.1.  Unknown SPI

  If a HIP implementation receives an ESP packet that has an
  unrecognized SPI number, it MAY respond (subject to rate limiting the
  responses) with an ICMP packet with type "Parameter Problem", with
  the pointer pointing to the beginning of SPI field in the ESP header.




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6.  Packet Processing

  Packet processing is mainly defined in the HIP base specification
  [RFC5201].  This section describes the changes and new requirements
  for packet handling when the ESP transport format is used.  Note that
  all HIP packets (currently protocol 253) MUST bypass ESP processing.

6.1.  Processing Outgoing Application Data

  Outgoing application data handling is specified in the HIP base
  specification [RFC5201].  When the ESP transport format is used, and
  there is an active HIP session for the given < source, destination >
  HIT pair, the outgoing datagram is protected using the ESP security
  association.  In a typical implementation, this will result in a
  BEET-mode ESP packet being sent.  BEET-mode [ESP-BEET] was introduced
  above in Section 3.2.  The following additional steps define the
  conceptual processing rules for outgoing ESP protected datagrams.

  1.  Detect the proper ESP SA using the HITs in the packet header or
      other information associated with the packet

  2.  Process the packet normally, as if the SA was a transport mode
      SA.

  3.  Ensure that the outgoing ESP protected packet has proper IP
      header format depending on the used IP address family, and proper
      IP addresses in its IP header, e.g., by replacing HITs left by
      the ESP processing.  Note that this placement of proper IP
      addresses MAY also be performed at some other point in the stack,
      e.g., before ESP processing.

6.2.  Processing Incoming Application Data

  Incoming HIP user data packets arrive as ESP protected packets.  In
  the usual case, the receiving host has a corresponding ESP security
  association, identified by the SPI and destination IP address in the
  packet.  However, if the host has crashed or otherwise lost its HIP
  state, it may not have such an SA.

  The basic incoming data handling is specified in the HIP base
  specification.  Additional steps are required when ESP is used for
  protecting the data traffic.  The following steps define the
  conceptual processing rules for incoming ESP protected datagrams
  targeted to an ESP security association created with HIP.

  1.  Detect the proper ESP SA using the SPI.  If the resulting SA is a
      non-HIP ESP SA, process the packet according to standard IPsec
      rules.  If there are no SAs identified with the SPI, the host MAY



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      send an ICMP packet as defined in Section 5.4.  How to handle
      lost state is an implementation issue.

  2.  If the SPI matches with an active HIP-based ESP SA, the IP
      addresses in the datagram are replaced with the HITs associated
      with the SPI.  Note that this IP-address-to-HIT conversion step
      MAY also be performed at some other point in the stack, e.g.,
      after ESP processing.  Note also that if the incoming packet has
      IPv4 addresses, the packet must be converted to IPv6 format
      before replacing the addresses with HITs (such that the transport
      checksum will pass if there are no errors).

  3.  The transformed packet is next processed normally by ESP, as if
      the packet were a transport mode packet.  The packet may be
      dropped by ESP, as usual.  In a typical implementation, the
      result of successful ESP decryption and verification is a
      datagram with the associated HITs as source and destination.

  4.  The datagram is delivered to the upper layer.  Demultiplexing the
      datagram to the right upper layer socket is performed as usual,
      except that the HITs are used in place of IP addresses during the
      demultiplexing.

6.3.  HMAC and SIGNATURE Calculation and Verification

  The new HIP parameters described in this document, ESP_INFO and
  ESP_TRANSFORM, must be protected using HMAC and signature
  calculations.  In a typical implementation, they are included in R1,
  I2, R2, and UPDATE packet HMAC and SIGNATURE calculations as
  described in [RFC5201].

6.4.  Processing Incoming ESP SA Initialization (R1)

  The ESP SA setup is initialized in the R1 message.  The receiving
  host (Initiator) selects one of the ESP transforms from the presented
  values.  If no suitable value is found, the negotiation is
  terminated.  The selected values are subsequently used when
  generating and using encryption keys, and when sending the reply
  packet.  If the proposed alternatives are not acceptable to the
  system, it may abandon the ESP SA establishment negotiation, or it
  may resend the I1 message within the retry bounds.

  After selecting the ESP transform and performing other R1 processing,
  the system prepares and creates an incoming ESP security association.
  It may also prepare a security association for outgoing traffic, but
  since it does not have the correct SPI value yet, it cannot activate
  it.




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6.5.  Processing Incoming Initialization Reply (I2)

  The following steps are required to process the incoming ESP SA
  initialization replies in I2.  The steps below assume that the I2 has
  been accepted for processing (e.g., has not been dropped due to HIT
  comparisons as described in [RFC5201]).

  o  The ESP_TRANSFORM parameter is verified and it MUST contain a
     single value in the parameter, and it MUST match one of the values
     offered in the initialization packet.

  o  The ESP_INFO NEW SPI field is parsed to obtain the SPI that will
     be used for the Security Association outbound from the Responder
     and inbound to the Initiator.  For this initial ESP SA
     establishment, the old SPI value MUST be zero.  The KEYMAT Index
     field MUST contain the index value to the KEYMAT from where the
     ESP SA keys are drawn.

  o  The system prepares and creates both incoming and outgoing ESP
     security associations.

  o  Upon successful processing of the initialization reply message,
     the possible old Security Associations (as left over from an
     earlier incarnation of the HIP association) are dropped and the
     new ones are installed, and a finalizing packet, R2, is sent.
     Possible ongoing rekeying attempts are dropped.

6.6.  Processing Incoming ESP SA Setup Finalization (R2)

  Before the ESP SA can be finalized, the ESP_INFO NEW SPI field is
  parsed to obtain the SPI that will be used for the ESP Security
  Association inbound to the sender of the finalization message R2.
  The system uses this SPI to create or activate the outgoing ESP
  security association used for sending packets to the peer.

6.7.  Dropping HIP Associations

  When the system drops a HIP association, as described in the HIP base
  specification, the associated ESP SAs MUST also be dropped.

6.8.  Initiating ESP SA Rekeying

  During ESP SA rekeying, the hosts draw new keys from the existing
  keying material, or new keying material is generated from where the
  new keys are drawn.

  A system may initiate the SA rekeying procedure at any time.  It MUST
  initiate a rekey if its incoming ESP sequence counter is about to



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  overflow.  The system MUST NOT replace its keying material until the
  rekeying packet exchange successfully completes.

  Optionally, a system may include a new Diffie-Hellman key for use in
  new KEYMAT generation.  New KEYMAT generation occurs prior to drawing
  the new keys.

  The rekeying procedure uses the UPDATE mechanism defined in
  [RFC5201].  Because each peer must update its half of the security
  association pair (including new SPI creation), the rekeying process
  requires that each side both send and receive an UPDATE.  A system
  will then rekey the ESP SA when it has sent parameters to the peer
  and has received both an ACK of the relevant UPDATE message and
  corresponding peer's parameters.  It may be that the ACK and the
  required HIP parameters arrive in different UPDATE messages.  This is
  always true if a system does not initiate ESP SA update but responds
  to an update request from the peer, and may also occur if two systems
  initiate update nearly simultaneously.  In such a case, if the system
  has an outstanding update request, it saves the one parameter and
  waits for the other before completing rekeying.

  The following steps define the processing rules for initiating an ESP
  SA update:

  1.  The system decides whether to continue to use the existing KEYMAT
      or to generate a new KEYMAT.  In the latter case, the system MUST
      generate a new Diffie-Hellman public key.

  2.  The system creates an UPDATE packet, which contains the ESP_INFO
      parameter.  In addition, the host may include the optional
      DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter.  If the UPDATE contains the
      DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter, the KEYMAT Index in the ESP_INFO
      parameter MUST be zero, and the Diffie-Hellman group ID must be
      unchanged from that used in the initial handshake.  If the UPDATE
      does not contain DIFFIE_HELLMAN, the ESP_INFO KEYMAT Index MUST
      be greater than or equal to the index of the next byte to be
      drawn from the current KEYMAT.

  3.  The system sends the UPDATE packet.  For reliability, the
      underlying UPDATE retransmission mechanism MUST be used.

  4.  The system MUST NOT delete its existing SAs, but continue using
      them if its policy still allows.  The rekeying procedure SHOULD
      be initiated early enough to make sure that the SA replay
      counters do not overflow.

  5.  In case a protocol error occurs and the peer system acknowledges
      the UPDATE but does not itself send an ESP_INFO, the system may



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      not finalize the outstanding ESP SA update request.  To guard
      against this, a system MAY re-initiate the ESP SA update
      procedure after some time waiting for the peer to respond, or it
      MAY decide to abort the ESP SA after waiting for an
      implementation-dependent time.  The system MUST NOT keep an
      outstanding ESP SA update request for an indefinite time.

  To simplify the state machine, a host MUST NOT generate new UPDATEs
  while it has an outstanding ESP SA update request, unless it is
  restarting the update process.

6.9.  Processing Incoming UPDATE Packets

  When a system receives an UPDATE packet, it must be processed if the
  following conditions hold (in addition to the generic conditions
  specified for UPDATE processing in Section 6.12 of [RFC5201]):

  1.  A corresponding HIP association must exist.  This is usually
      ensured by the underlying UPDATE mechanism.

  2.  The state of the HIP association is ESTABLISHED or R2-SENT.

  If the above conditions hold, the following steps define the
  conceptual processing rules for handling the received UPDATE packet:

  1.  If the received UPDATE contains a DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter, the
      received KEYMAT Index MUST be zero and the Group ID must match
      the Group ID in use on the association.  If this test fails, the
      packet SHOULD be dropped and the system SHOULD log an error
      message.

  2.  If there is no outstanding rekeying request, the packet
      processing continues as specified in Section 6.9.1.

  3.  If there is an outstanding rekeying request, the UPDATE MUST be
      acknowledged, the received ESP_INFO (and possibly DIFFIE_HELLMAN)
      parameters must be saved, and the packet processing continues as
      specified in Section 6.10.

6.9.1.  Processing UPDATE Packet: No Outstanding Rekeying Request

  The following steps define the conceptual processing rules for
  handling a received UPDATE packet with the ESP_INFO parameter:

  1.  The system consults its policy to see if it needs to generate a
      new Diffie-Hellman key, and generates a new key (with same Group
      ID) if needed.  The system records any newly generated or




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      received Diffie-Hellman keys for use in KEYMAT generation upon
      finalizing the ESP SA update.

  2.  If the system generated a new Diffie-Hellman key in the previous
      step, or if it received a DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter, it sets the
      ESP_INFO KEYMAT Index to zero.  Otherwise, the ESP_INFO KEYMAT
      Index MUST be greater than or equal to the index of the next byte
      to be drawn from the current KEYMAT.  In this case, it is
      RECOMMENDED that the host use the KEYMAT Index requested by the
      peer in the received ESP_INFO.

  3.  The system creates an UPDATE packet, which contains an ESP_INFO
      parameter and the optional DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameter.  This UPDATE
      would also typically acknowledge the peer's UPDATE with an ACK
      parameter, although a separate UPDATE ACK may be sent.

  4.  The system sends the UPDATE packet and stores any received
      ESP_INFO and DIFFIE_HELLMAN parameters.  At this point, it only
      needs to receive an acknowledgment for the newly sent UPDATE to
      finish ESP SA update.  In the usual case, the acknowledgment is
      handled by the underlying UPDATE mechanism.

6.10.  Finalizing Rekeying

  A system finalizes rekeying when it has both received the
  corresponding UPDATE acknowledgment packet from the peer and it has
  successfully received the peer's UPDATE.  The following steps are
  taken:

  1.  If the received UPDATE messages contain a new Diffie-Hellman key,
      the system has a new Diffie-Hellman key due to initiating ESP SA
      update, or both, the system generates a new KEYMAT.  If there is
      only one new Diffie-Hellman key, the old existing key is used as
      the other key.

  2.  If the system generated a new KEYMAT in the previous step, it
      sets the KEYMAT Index to zero, independent of whether the
      received UPDATE included a Diffie-Hellman key or not.  If the
      system did not generate a new KEYMAT, it uses the greater KEYMAT
      Index of the two (sent and received) ESP_INFO parameters.

  3.  The system draws keys for new incoming and outgoing ESP SAs,
      starting from the KEYMAT Index, and prepares new incoming and
      outgoing ESP SAs.  The SPI for the outgoing SA is the new SPI
      value received in an ESP_INFO parameter.  The SPI for the
      incoming SA was generated when the ESP_INFO was sent to the peer.
      The order of the keys retrieved from the KEYMAT during the
      rekeying process is similar to that described in Section 7.



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      Note, that only IPsec ESP keys are retrieved during the rekeying
      process, not the HIP keys.

  4.  The system starts to send to the new outgoing SA and prepares to
      start receiving data on the new incoming SA.  Once the system
      receives data on the new incoming SA, it may safely delete the
      old SAs.

6.11.  Processing NOTIFY Packets

  The processing of NOTIFY packets is described in the HIP base
  specification.

7.  Keying Material

  The keying material is generated as described in the HIP base
  specification.  During the base exchange, the initial keys are drawn
  from the generated material.  After the HIP association keys have
  been drawn, the ESP keys are drawn in the following order:

     SA-gl ESP encryption key for HOST_g's outgoing traffic

     SA-gl ESP authentication key for HOST_g's outgoing traffic

     SA-lg ESP encryption key for HOST_l's outgoing traffic

     SA-lg ESP authentication key for HOST_l's outgoing traffic

  HOST_g denotes the host with the greater HIT value, and HOST_l
  denotes the host with the lower HIT value.  When HIT values are
  compared, they are interpreted as positive (unsigned) 128-bit
  integers in network byte order.

  The four HIP keys are only drawn from KEYMAT during a HIP I1->R2
  exchange.  Subsequent rekeys using UPDATE will only draw the four ESP
  keys from KEYMAT.  Section 6.9 describes the rules for reusing or
  regenerating KEYMAT based on the rekeying.

  The number of bits drawn for a given algorithm is the "natural" size
  of the keys.  For the mandatory algorithms, the following sizes
  apply:

  AES  128 bits

  SHA-1  160 bits

  NULL  0 bits




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8.  Security Considerations

  In this document, the usage of ESP [RFC4303] between HIP hosts to
  protect data traffic is introduced.  The Security Considerations for
  ESP are discussed in the ESP specification.

  There are different ways to establish an ESP Security Association
  between two nodes.  This can be done, e.g., using IKE [RFC4306].
  This document specifies how the Host Identity Protocol is used to
  establish ESP Security Associations.

  The following issues are new or have changed from the standard ESP
  usage:

  o  Initial keying material generation

  o  Updating the keying material

  The initial keying material is generated using the Host Identity
  Protocol [RFC5201] using the Diffie-Hellman procedure.  This document
  extends the usage of the UPDATE packet, defined in the base
  specification, to modify existing ESP SAs.  The hosts may rekey,
  i.e., force the generation of new keying material using the Diffie-
  Hellman procedure.  The initial setup of ESP SA between the hosts is
  done during the base exchange, and the message exchange is protected
  using methods provided by base exchange.  Changes in connection
  parameters means basically that the old ESP SA is removed and a new
  one is generated once the UPDATE message exchange has been completed.
  The message exchange is protected using the HIP association keys.
  Both HMAC and signing of packets is used.

9.  IANA Considerations

  This document defines additional parameters and NOTIFY error types
  for the Host Identity Protocol [RFC5201].

  The new parameters and their type numbers are defined in
  Section 5.1.1 and Section 5.1.2, and they have been added to the
  Parameter Type namespace specified in [RFC5201].

  The new NOTIFY error types and their values are defined in
  Section 5.1.3, and they have been added to the Notify Message Type
  namespace specified in [RFC5201].








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10.  Acknowledgments

  This document was separated from the base "Host Identity Protocol"
  specification in the beginning of 2005.  Since then, a number of
  people have contributed to the text by providing comments and
  modification proposals.  The list of people include Tom Henderson,
  Jeff Ahrenholz, Jan Melen, Jukka Ylitalo, and Miika Komu.  The
  authors also want to thank Charlie Kaufman for reviewing the document
  with his eye on the usage of crypto algorithms.

  Due to the history of this document, most of the ideas are inherited
  from the base "Host Identity Protocol" specification.  Thus, the list
  of people in the Acknowledgments section of that specification is
  also valid for this document.  Many people have given valuable
  feedback, and our apologies to anyone whose name is missing.

11.  References

11.1.  Normative references

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

  [RFC2404]   Madson, C. and R. Glenn, "The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 within
              ESP and AH", RFC 2404, November 1998.

  [RFC3602]   Frankel, S., Glenn, R., and S. Kelly, "The AES-CBC Cipher
              Algorithm and Its Use with IPsec", RFC 3602,
              September 2003.

  [RFC4303]   Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
              RFC 4303, December 2005.

  [RFC5201]   Moskowitz, R., Nikander, P., Jokela, P., Ed., and T.
              Henderson, "Host Identity Protocol", RFC 5201,
              April 2008.

11.2.  Informative references

  [ESP-BEET]  Nikander, P. and J. Melen, "A Bound End-to-End Tunnel
              (BEET) mode for ESP", Work in Progress, November 2007.

  [RFC3260]   Grossman, D., "New Terminology and Clarifications for
              Diffserv", RFC 3260, April 2002.







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  [RFC3474]   Lin, Z. and D. Pendarakis, "Documentation of IANA
              assignments for Generalized MultiProtocol Label Switching
              (GMPLS) Resource Reservation Protocol - Traffic
              Engineering (RSVP-TE) Usage and Extensions for
              Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON)", RFC 3474,
              March 2003.

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

  [RFC4306]   Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",
              RFC 4306, December 2005.

  [RFC4423]   Moskowitz, R. and P. Nikander, "Host Identity Protocol
              (HIP) Architecture", RFC 4423, May 2006.

  [RFC5206]   Henderson, T., Ed., "End-Host Mobility and Multihoming
              with the Host Identity Protocol", RFC 5206, April 2008.

































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Appendix A.  A Note on Implementation Options

  It is possible to implement this specification in multiple different
  ways.  As noted above, one possible way of implementing this is to
  rewrite IP headers below IPsec.  In such an implementation, IPsec is
  used as if it was processing IPv6 transport mode packets, with the
  IPv6 header containing HITs instead of IP addresses in the source and
  destination address fields.  In outgoing packets, after IPsec
  processing, the HITs are replaced with actual IP addresses, based on
  the HITs and the SPI.  In incoming packets, before IPsec processing,
  the IP addresses are replaced with HITs, based on the SPI in the
  incoming packet.  In such an implementation, all IPsec policies are
  based on HITs and the upper layers only see packets with HITs in the
  place of IP addresses.  Consequently, support of HIP does not
  conflict with other uses of IPsec as long as the SPI spaces are kept
  separate.

  Another way to implement this specification is to use the proposed
  BEET mode (A Bound End-to-End mode for ESP, [ESP-BEET]).  The BEET
  mode provides some features from both IPsec tunnel and transport
  modes.  The HIP uses HITs as the "inner" addresses and IP addresses
  as "outer" addresses, like IP addresses are used in the tunnel mode.
  Instead of tunneling packets between hosts, a conversion between
  inner and outer addresses is made at end-hosts and the inner address
  is never sent on the wire after the initial HIP negotiation.  BEET
  provides IPsec transport mode syntax (no inner headers) with limited
  tunnel mode semantics (fixed logical inner addresses - the HITs - and
  changeable outer IP addresses).

  Compared to the option of implementing the required address rewrites
  outside of IPsec, BEET has one implementation level benefit.  The
  BEET-way of implementing the address rewriting keeps all the
  configuration information in one place, at the SAD.  On the other
  hand, when address rewriting is implemented separately, the
  implementation must make sure that the information in the SAD and the
  separate address rewriting DB are kept in synchrony.  As a result,
  the BEET-mode-based way of implementing this specification is
  RECOMMENDED over the separate implementation.













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Authors' Addresses

  Petri Jokela
  Ericsson Research NomadicLab
  JORVAS  FIN-02420
  FINLAND

  Phone: +358 9 299 1
  EMail: [email protected]


  Robert Moskowitz
  ICSAlabs, An Independent Division of Verizon Business Systems
  1000 Bent Creek Blvd, Suite 200
  Mechanicsburg, PA
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Pekka Nikander
  Ericsson Research NomadicLab
  JORVAS  FIN-02420
  FINLAND

  Phone: +358 9 299 1
  EMail: [email protected]
























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Full Copyright Statement

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