Network Working Group                                         S. Farrell
Request for Comments: 5327                        Trinity College Dublin
Category: Experimental                                        M. Ramadas
                                                           ISTRAC, ISRO
                                                            S. Burleigh
                                         NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
                                                         September 2008


        Licklider Transmission Protocol - Security Extensions

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

  This RFC is not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard.  It
  represents the consensus of the Delay Tolerant Networking (DTN)
  Research Group of the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF).  It may be
  considered for standardization by the IETF in the future, but the
  IETF disclaims any knowledge of the fitness of this RFC for any
  purpose and in particular notes that the decision to publish is not
  based on IETF review for such things as security, congestion control,
  or inappropriate interaction with deployed protocols.  See RFC 3932
  for more information.

Abstract

  The Licklider Transmission Protocol (LTP) is intended to serve as a
  reliable convergence layer over single-hop deep-space radio frequency
  (RF) links.  LTP does Automatic Repeat reQuest (ARQ) of data
  transmissions by soliciting selective-acknowledgment reception
  reports.  It is stateful and has no negotiation or handshakes.  This
  document describes security extensions to LTP, and is part of a
  series of related documents describing LTP.

  This document is a product of the Delay Tolerant Networking Research
  Group and has been reviewed by that group.  No objections to its
  publication as an RFC were raised.








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RFC 5327                    LTP - Extensions              September 2008


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Security Extensions .............................................2
     2.1. LTP Authentication .........................................3
     2.2. A Cookie Mechanism .........................................6
  3. Security Considerations .........................................7
  4. IANA Considerations .............................................7
  5. Acknowledgments .................................................8
  6. References ......................................................8
     6.1. Normative References .......................................8
     6.2. Informative References .....................................9

1.  Introduction

  This document describes extensions to the base LTP protocol
  [LTPSPEC].  The background to LTP is described in the "motivation"
  document [LTPMOTIVE].  All the extensions defined in this document
  provide additional security features for LTP.

  LTP is designed to provide retransmission-based reliability over
  links characterized by extremely long message round-trip times (RTTs)
  and/or frequent interruptions in connectivity.  Since communication
  across interplanetary space is the most prominent example of this
  sort of environment, LTP is principally aimed at supporting "long-
  haul" reliable transmission in interplanetary space, but has
  applications in other environments as well.

  This document describes security extensions to LTP, and is part of a
  series of related documents describing LTP.  Other documents in this
  series cover the motivation for LTP and the main protocol
  specification.  We recommend reading all the documents in the series
  before writing code based on 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 [B97].

2.  Security Extensions

  The syntactical layout of the extensions are defined in Section 3.1.4
  of the base protocol specification [LTPSPEC].

  Implementers should note that the LTP extension mechanism allows for
  multiple occurrences of any extension tag, in both (or either) the
  header or trailer.  For example, the LTP authentication mechanism
  defined below requires both header and trailer extensions, which both
  use the same tag.



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  This document defines new security extensions for LTP but does not
  address key management since key management in Delay-Tolerant
  Networking (DTN) remains an open research question.

  If LTP were deployed layered on top of UDP, it might be possible to
  use IPsec or other existing security mechanisms.  However, in general
  DTN, IPsec's key exchange (IKE) cannot work (e.g., where link delays
  are measured in minutes).

2.1.  LTP Authentication

  The LTP authentication mechanism provides cryptographic
  authentication of the segment.

  Implementations MAY support this extension field.  If they do not
  support this header, then they MUST ignore it.

  The LTP authentication extension field has the extension tag value
  0x00.

  LTP authentication requires three new fields, the first two of which
  are carried as the value of the Extensions field of the LTP segment
  header, and the third of which is carried in the segment trailer.

  The fields that are carried in the header extensions field are
  catenated together to form the extension value (with the leftmost
  octet representing the ciphersuite and the remaining octets the
  KeyID).  The KeyID field is optional, and is determined to be absent
  if the extension value consists of a single octet.

     Ciphersuite: an 8-bit integer value with values defined below.

     KeyID: An optional key identifier, the interpretation of which is
     out of scope for this specification (that is, implementers MUST
     treat these KeyID fields as raw octets, even if they contained an
     ASN.1 DER encoding of an X.509 IssuerSerial construct [PKIXPROF],
     for example).

  The LTP-auth header extension MUST be present in the first segment
  from any LTP session that uses LTP authentication, but MAY be omitted
  from subsequent segments in that session.  To guard against
  additional problems arising from lost segments, implementations
  SHOULD, where bandwidth allows, include these fields in a number of
  segments in the LTP session.  If the first segment (or any part
  thereof) is retransmitted, then the LTP-auth header extension MUST be
  included in the retransmission.





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  The field carried as a trailer extension is the AuthVal field.  It
  contains the authentication value, which is either a message
  authentication code (MAC) or a digital signature.  This is itself a
  structured field whose length and formatting depend on the
  ciphersuite.

  If for some reason the sender includes two instances of LTP-auth
  headers, then there is a potential problem for the receiver in that
  presumably at least one of the AuthVal fields will not verify.  There
  are very few situations where it would make sense to include more
  than one LTP-auth extension in a single segment, since LTP is a peer-
  to-peer protocol.  If however, keys are being upgraded, then the
  sender might protect the segment with both the new and old keys.  In
  such cases, the receiver MUST search and can consider the LTP
  authentication valid so long as one AuthVal is correct.

  For all ciphersuites, the input to the calculation is the entire
  encoded segment including the AuthVal extension tag and length, but
  not of course, including the AuthVal value.

  We define three ciphersuites in this specification.  Our approach is
  to follow the precedent set by TLS [TLS], and to "hardcode" all
  algorithm options in a single ciphersuite number.  This means that
  there are 256 potential ciphersuites supported by this version of
  LTP-auth.  Since this is a limited space, IANA has established a
  registry for LTP Ciphersuites as described in the IANA Considerations
  section below.  Current ciphersuite assignments are:

     Ciphersuite                        Value
     -----------                        -----
     HMAC-SHA1-80                          0
     RSA-SHA256                            1
     Unassigned                          2-127
     Reserved                           128-191
     Private/Experimental Use           192-254
     NULL                                 255

  1. HMAC-SHA1-80 Ciphersuite

     The HMAC-SHA1-80 ciphersuite involves generating a MAC over the
     LTP segment and appending the resulting AuthVal field to the end
     of the segment.  There is only one MACing algorithm defined for
     this, which is HMAC-SHA1-80 [HMAC].  The AuthVal field in this
     case contains just the output of the HMAC-SHA1-80 algorithm, which
     is a fixed-width field (10 octets).






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  2. RSA-SHA256 Ciphersuite

     The RSA-SHA256 ciphersuite involves generating a digital signature
     of the LTP segment and appending the resulting AuthVal field to
     the end of the segment.  There is only one signature algorithm
     currently defined for this, which is RSA with SHA256 as defined in
     [RSA], Section 8.2.  The AuthVal field in this case is simply the
     signature value, where the signature value occupies the minimum
     number of octets, e.g., 128 octets for a 1024-bit signature).

  3. NULL Ciphersuite

     The NULL ciphersuite is basically the same as the HMAC-SHA1-80
     ciphersuite, but with a hardcoded key.  This ciphersuite
     effectively provides only a strong checksum without
     authentication, and thus is subject to active attacks and is the
     equivalent of providing a Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC).

     The hardcoded key to be used with this ciphersuite is the
     following:

        HMAC_KEY     :  c37b7e64 92584340
                     :  bed12207 80894115
                     :  5068f738
        (The above is the test vector from RFC 3537 [WRAP].)

     In each case, the bytes that are input to the cryptographic
     algorithm consist of the entire LTP segment except the AuthVal.
     In particular, the header extensions field that may contain the
     ciphersuite number and the KeyID field is part of the input.

     The output bytes of the cryptographic operation are the payload of
     the AuthVal field.

  The following shows an example LTP-auth header, starting from and
  including the Extensions field.

      ext  tag  sdnv  c-s  k-id
     +----+----+----+----+----+
     |0x11|0x00|0x02|0x00|0x24|
     +----+----+----+----+----+










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  The Extensions field has the value 0x11 with the most significant and
  least significant nibble value 1, indicating the presence of one
  header and one trailer extension, respectively.  The next octet is
  the extension tag (0x00 for LTP-auth), followed by the Self-
  Delimiting Numeric Value (SDNV) encoded length of the ensuing data: a
  one-octet ciphersuite (0x00 meaning HMAC-SHA1-80) and the KeyID (in
  this case with a short value of 0x24).  The trailer extension (not
  shown above) should contain the AuthVal.

2.2.  A Cookie Mechanism

  The use of cookies is a well-known way to make Denial of Service
  (DoS) attacks harder to mount.  We define the cookie extension for
  use in environments where an LTP implementation is liable to such
  attacks.

  The cookie is placed in a header extension field, and has no related
  trailer extension field.  It has the extension tag value 0x01.

  The cookie value can essentially be viewed as a sufficiently long
  random number, where the length can be determined by the
  implementation (longer cookies are harder to guess and therefore
  better, though using more bandwidth).  Note that cookie values can be
  derived using lots of different schemes so long as they produce
  random-looking and hard-to-predict values.

  The first cookie inserted into a segment for this session is called
  the initial cookie.

  Note that cookies do not outlast an LTP session.

  The basic mode of operation is that an LTP engine can include a
  cookie in a segment at any time.  After that time, all segments
  corresponding to that LTP session MUST contain a good cookie value --
  that is, all segments both to and from the engine MUST contain a good
  cookie.  Clearly, there will be some delay before the cookie is seen
  in incoming segments -- implementations MUST determine an acceptable
  delay for these cases, and MUST only accept segments without a cookie
  until that time.

  The cookie value can be extended at any time by catenating more
  random bits.  This allows both LTP engines to contribute to the
  randomness of the cookie, where that is useful.  It also allows a
  node that considers the cookie value too short (say due to changing
  circumstances) to add additional security.  In this case, the
  extended cookie value becomes the "to-be-checked-against" cookie
  value for all future segments (modulo the communications delay as
  above).



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  It can happen that both sides emit segments containing an initial
  cookie before their peer has a chance to see any cookie.  In that
  case, two cookie extension fields MUST be included in all segments
  subsequently (once the traffic has caught up).  That is, the sender
  and recipient cookies are handled independently.  In such cases, both
  cookie values MUST be "good" at all relevant times (i.e., modulo the
  delay).  In this case, the peer's initial cookie MUST arrive before
  the calculated delay for receipt of segments containing this engine's
  cookie -- there is only a finite window during which a second cookie
  can be inserted into the session.

  A "good" cookie is therefore one that starts with the currently
  stored cookie value, or else a new cookie where none has been seen in
  that session so far.  Once a cookie value is seen and treated as
  "good" (e.g., an extended value), the previous value is no longer
  "good".

  Modulo the communications delay, segments with an incorrect or
  missing cookie value MUST be silently discarded.

  If a segment is to be retransmitted (e.g., as a result of a timer
  expiring), then it needs to contain the correct cookie value at the
  time of (re)transmission.  Note that this may differ from what was
  the correct cookie value at the time of the original transmission.

3.  Security Considerations

  The extensions specified above are generally intended to help thwart
  DoS attacks.  For environments where lower layers provide neither
  integrity nor freshness, it makes sense to use both extensions
  together.  For example, in the case where a node extends an existing
  cookie, the lack of origin authentication would allow a man in the
  middle to lock out the session.

  While there are currently some concerns about using the SHA-1
  algorithm, these appear to only make it easier to find collisions.
  In that case, the use of HMAC with SHA-1 can still be considered
  safe.  However, we have changed to use SHA-256 for the signature
  ciphersuite.

4.  IANA Considerations

  IANA has created and now maintains registry for known LTP
  ciphersuites (as defined in Section 2.1).  The registry has been
  populated using the initial values given in Sections 2.1 and 2.2
  above.  IANA may assign LTP Extension Tag values from the range
  2..127 (decimal, inclusive) using the Specification Required rule
  [GUIDE].  The specification concerned can be an RFC (whether



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  Standards Track, Experimental, or Informational), or a specification
  from any other standards development organization recognized by IANA
  or with a liaison with the IESG, specifically including CCSDS
  (http://www.ccsds.org/).

5.  Acknowledgments

  Many thanks to Tim Ray, Vint Cerf, Bob Durst, Kevin Fall, Adrian
  Hooke, Keith Scott, Leigh Torgerson, Eric Travis, and Howie Weiss for
  their thoughts on this protocol and its role in Delay-Tolerant
  Networking architecture.

  Part of the research described in this document was carried out at
  the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology,
  under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space
  Administration.  This work was performed under DOD Contract DAA-B07-
  00-CC201, DARPA AO H912; JPL Task Plan No. 80-5045, DARPA AO H870;
  and NASA Contract NAS7-1407.

  Thanks are also due to Shawn Ostermann, Hans Kruse, and Dovel Myers
  at Ohio University for their suggestions and advice in making various
  design decisions.  This work was done when Manikantan Ramadas was a
  graduate student at the EECS Dept., Ohio University, in the
  Internetworking Research Group Laboratory.

  Part of this work was carried out at Trinity College Dublin as part
  of the Dev-SeNDT contract funded by Enterprise Ireland's technology
  development programme.

6.  References

6.1.  Normative References

  [B97]       Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

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

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

  [LTPSPEC]   Ramadas, M., Burleigh, S., and S. Farrell, "Licklider
              Transmission Protocol - Specification", RFC 5326,
              September 2008.




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RFC 5327                    LTP - Extensions              September 2008


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

6.2.  Informative References

  [LTPMOTIVE] Burleigh, S., Ramadas, M., and S. Farrell, "Licklider
              Transmission Protocol - Motivation", RFC 5325, September
              2008.

  [PKIXPROF]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
              Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
              Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation
              List (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, May 2008.

  [TLS]        Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer
              Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August
              2008.

  [WRAP]      Schaad, J. and R. Housley, "Wrapping a Hashed Message
              Authentication Code (HMAC) key with a Triple-Data
              Encryption Standard (DES) Key or an Advanced Encryption
              Standard (AES) Key", RFC 3537, May 2003.




























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RFC 5327                    LTP - Extensions              September 2008


Authors' Addresses

  Stephen Farrell
  Computer Science Department
  Trinity College Dublin
  Ireland
  Telephone: +353-1-896-1761
  EMail: [email protected]

  Manikantan Ramadas
  ISRO Telemetry Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC)
  Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)
  Plot # 12 & 13, 3rd Main, 2nd Phase
  Peenya Industrial Area
  Bangalore 560097
  India
  Telephone: +91 80 2364 2602
  EMail: [email protected]


  Scott C. Burleigh
  Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  4800 Oak Grove Drive
  M/S: 301-485B
  Pasadena, CA 91109-8099
  Telephone: +1 (818) 393-3353
  Fax: +1 (818) 354-1075
  EMail: [email protected]























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