Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        E. Ertekin
Request for Comments: 5856                                     R. Jasani
Category: Informational                                      C. Christou
ISSN: 2070-1721                                      Booz Allen Hamilton
                                                             C. Bormann
                                                Universitaet Bremen TZI
                                                               May 2010


            Integration of Robust Header Compression over
                     IPsec Security Associations

Abstract

  IP Security (IPsec) provides various security services for IP
  traffic.  However, the benefits of IPsec come at the cost of
  increased overhead.  This document outlines a framework for
  integrating Robust Header Compression (ROHC) over IPsec (ROHCoIPsec).
  By compressing the inner headers of IP packets, ROHCoIPsec proposes
  to reduce the amount of overhead associated with the transmission of
  traffic over IPsec Security Associations (SAs).

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It has been approved for publication by the Internet
  Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents approved by the
  IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; see Section
  2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5856.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must



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  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

  This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
  10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
  material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
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  Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
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  not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
  it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
  than English.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Audience ........................................................3
  3. Terminology .....................................................3
  4. Problem Statement: IPsec Packet Overhead ........................4
  5. Overview of the ROHCoIPsec Framework ............................5
     5.1. ROHCoIPsec Assumptions .....................................5
     5.2. Summary of the ROHCoIPsec Framework ........................5
  6. Details of the ROHCoIPsec Framework .............................7
     6.1. ROHC and IPsec Integration .................................7
          6.1.1. Header Compression Protocol Considerations ..........9
          6.1.2. Initialization and Negotiation of the ROHC Channel ..9
          6.1.3. Encapsulation and Identification of Header
                 Compressed Packets .................................10
          6.1.4. Motivation for the ROHC ICV ........................11
          6.1.5. Path MTU Considerations ............................11
     6.2. ROHCoIPsec Framework Summary ..............................12
  7. Security Considerations ........................................12
  8. IANA Considerations ............................................12
  9. Acknowledgments ................................................13
  10. Informative References ........................................14













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1.  Introduction

  This document outlines a framework for integrating ROHC [ROHC] over
  IPsec [IPSEC] (ROHCoIPsec).  The goal of ROHCoIPsec is to reduce the
  protocol overhead associated with packets traversing between IPsec SA
  endpoints.  This can be achieved by compressing the transport layer
  header (e.g., UDP, TCP, etc.) and inner IP header of packets at the
  ingress of the IPsec tunnel, and decompressing these headers at the
  egress.

  For ROHCoIPsec, this document assumes that ROHC will be used to
  compress the inner headers of IP packets traversing an IPsec tunnel.
  However, since current specifications for ROHC detail its operation
  on a hop-by-hop basis, it requires extensions to enable its operation
  over IPsec SAs.  This document outlines a framework for extending the
  usage of ROHC to operate at IPsec SA endpoints.

  ROHCoIPsec targets the application of ROHC to tunnel mode SAs.
  Transport mode SAs only protect the payload of an IP packet, leaving
  the IP header untouched.  Intermediate routers subsequently use this
  IP header to route the packet to a decryption device.  Therefore, if
  ROHC is to operate over IPsec transport-mode SAs, (de)compression
  functionality can only be applied to the transport layer headers, and
  not to the IP header.  Because current ROHC specifications do not
  include support for the compression of transport layer headers alone,
  the ROHCoIPsec framework outlined by this document describes the
  application of ROHC to tunnel mode SAs.

2.  Audience

  The authors target members of both the ROHC and IPsec communities who
  may consider extending the ROHC and IPsec protocols to meet the
  requirements put forth in this document.  In addition, this document
  is directed towards vendors developing IPsec devices that will be
  deployed in bandwidth-constrained IP networks.

3.  Terminology

  ROHC Process

     Generic reference to a ROHC instance (as defined in RFC 3759
     [ROHC-TERM]) or any supporting ROHC components.

  Compressed Traffic

     Traffic that is processed through the ROHC compressor and
     decompressor instances.  Packet headers are compressed and
     decompressed using a specific header compression profile.



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  Uncompressed Traffic

     Traffic that is not processed by the ROHC compressor instance.
     Instead, this type of traffic bypasses the ROHC process.

  IPsec Process

     Generic reference to the Internet Protocol Security (IPsec)
     process.

  Next Header

     Refers to the Protocol (IPv4) or Next Header (IPv6, Extension)
     field.

  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 [BRA97].

4.  Problem Statement: IPsec Packet Overhead

  IPsec mechanisms provide various security services for IP networks.
  However, the benefits of IPsec come at the cost of increased per-
  packet overhead.  For example, traffic flow confidentiality
  (generally leveraged at security gateways) requires the tunneling of
  IP packets between IPsec implementations.  Although these IPsec
  tunnels will effectively mask the source-destination patterns that an
  intruder can ascertain, tunneling comes at the cost of increased
  packet overhead.  Specifically, an Encapsulating Security Payload
  (ESP) tunnel mode SA applied to an IPv6 flow results in at least 50
  bytes of additional overhead per packet.  This additional overhead
  may be undesirable for many bandwidth-constrained wireless and/or
  satellite communications networks, as these types of infrastructure
  are not overprovisioned.  ROHC applied on a per-hop basis over
  bandwidth-constrained links will also suffer from reduced performance
  when encryption is used on the tunneled header, since encrypted
  headers cannot be compressed.  Consequently, the additional overhead
  incurred by an IPsec tunnel may result in the inefficient utilization
  of bandwidth.

  Packet overhead is particularly significant for traffic profiles
  characterized by small packet payloads (e.g., various voice codecs).
  If these small packets are afforded the security services of an IPsec
  tunnel mode SA, the amount of per-packet overhead is increased.
  Thus, a mechanism is needed to reduce the overhead associated with
  such flows.





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5.  Overview of the ROHCoIPsec Framework

5.1.  ROHCoIPsec Assumptions

  The goal of ROHCoIPsec is to provide efficient transport of IP
  packets between IPsec devices without compromising the security
  services offered by IPsec.  The ROHCoIPsec framework has been
  developed based on the following assumptions:

  o  ROHC will be leveraged to reduce the amount of overhead associated
     with unicast IP packets traversing an IPsec SA.

  o  ROHC will be instantiated at the IPsec SA endpoints, and it will
     be applied on a per-SA basis.

  o  Once the decompression operation completes, decompressed packet
     headers will be identical to the original packet headers before
     compression.

5.2.  Summary of the ROHCoIPsec Framework

  ROHC reduces packet overhead in a network by exploiting intra- and
  inter-packet redundancies of network and transport-layer header
  fields of a flow.

  Current ROHC protocol specifications compress packet headers on a
  hop-by-hop basis.  However, IPsec SAs are instantiated between two
  IPsec endpoints.  Therefore, various extensions to both ROHC and
  IPsec need to be defined to ensure the successful operation of the
  ROHC protocol at IPsec SA endpoints.

  The specification of ROHC over IPsec SAs is straightforward, since SA
  endpoints provide source/destination pairs where (de)compression
  operations can take place.  Compression of the inner IP and upper
  layer protocol headers in such a manner offers a reduction of packet
  overhead between the two SA endpoints.  Since ROHC will now operate
  between IPsec endpoints (over multiple intermediate nodes that are
  transparent to an IPsec SA), it is imperative to ensure that its
  performance will not be severely impacted due to increased packet
  reordering and/or packet loss between the compressor and
  decompressor.

  In addition, ROHC can no longer rely on the underlying link layer for
  ROHC channel parameter configuration and packet identification.  The
  ROHCoIPsec framework proposes that ROHC channel parameter
  configuration is accomplished by an SA management protocol (e.g.,
  Internet Key Exchange Protocol version 2 (IKEv2) [IKEV2]), while
  identification of compressed header packets is achieved through the



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  Next Header field of the security protocol (e.g., Authentication
  Header (AH) [AH], ESP [ESP]) header.

  Using the ROHCoIPsec framework proposed below, outbound and inbound
  IP traffic processing at an IPsec device needs to be modified.  For
  an outbound packet, a ROHCoIPsec implementation will compress
  appropriate packet headers, and subsequently encrypt and/or integrity
  protect the packet.  For tunnel mode SAs, compression may be applied
  to the transport layer and the inner IP headers.  For inbound
  packets, an IPsec device must first decrypt and/or integrity check
  the packet.  Then, decompression of the inner packet headers is
  performed.  After decompression, the packet is checked against the
  access controls imposed on all inbound traffic associated with the SA
  (as specified in RFC 4301 [IPSEC]).

     Note: Compression of inner headers is independent from compression
     of the security protocol (e.g., ESP) and outer IP headers.  ROHC
     profiles have been defined to allow for the compression of the
     security protocol and the outer IP header on a hop-by-hop basis.
     The applicability of ROHCoIPsec and hop-by-hop ROHC on an IPv4
     ESP-processed packet [ESP] is shown below in Figure 1.

            -----------------------------------------------------------
      IPv4  | new IP hdr  |     | orig IP hdr   |   |    | ESP   | ESP|
            |(any options)| ESP | (any options) |TCP|Data|Trailer| ICV|
            -----------------------------------------------------------
            |<-------(1)------->|<------(2)-------->|

            (1) Compressed hop-by-hop by the ROHC [ROHC]
                ESP/IP profile
            (2) Compressed end-to-end by the ROHCoIPsec [IPSEC-ROHC]
                TCP/IP profile

     Figure 1.  Applicability of hop-by-hop ROHC and ROHCoIPsec on an
     IPv4 ESP-processed packet.

  If IPsec NULL encryption is applied to packets, ROHC may still be
  used to compress the inner headers at IPsec SA endpoints.  However,
  compression of these inner headers may pose challenges for
  intermediary devices (e.g., traffic monitors, sampling/management
  tools) that are inspecting the contents of ESP-NULL packets.  For
  example, policies on these devices may need to be updated to ensure
  that packets that contain the "ROHC" protocol identifier are not
  dropped.  In addition, intermediary devices may require additional
  functionality to determine the content of the header compressed
  packets.





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  In certain scenarios, a ROHCoIPsec implementation may encounter UDP-
  encapsulated ESP or IKE packets (i.e., packets that are traversing
  NATs).  For example, a ROHCoIPsec implementation may receive a UDP-
  encapsulated ESP packet that contains an ESP/UDP/IP header chain.
  Currently, ROHC profiles do not support compression of the entire
  header chain associated with this packet; only the UDP/IP headers can
  be compressed.

6.  Details of the ROHCoIPsec Framework

6.1.  ROHC and IPsec Integration

  Figure 2 illustrates the components required to integrate ROHC with
  the IPsec process, i.e., ROHCoIPsec.

                 +-------------------------------+
                 | ROHC Module                   |
                 |                               |
                 |                               |
       +-----+   |     +-----+     +---------+   |
       |     |   |     |     |     |  ROHC   |   |
     --|  A  |---------|  B  |-----| Process |------> Path 1
       |     |   |     |     |     |         |   |   (ROHC-enabled SA)
       +-----+   |     +-----+     +---------+   |
          |      |        |                      |
          |      |        |-------------------------> Path 2
          |      |                               |   (ROHC-enabled SA,
          |      +-------------------------------+  but no compression)
          |
          |
          |
          |
          +-----------------------------------------> Path 3
                                                     (ROHC-disabled SA)

                Figure 2.  Integration of ROHC with IPsec

  The process illustrated in Figure 2 augments the IPsec processing
  model for outbound IP traffic (protected-to-unprotected).  Initial
  IPsec processing is consistent with RFC 4301 [IPSEC] (Section 5.1,
  Steps 1-2).

  Block A: The ROHC data item (part of the SA state information)
  retrieved from the "relevant SAD entry" ([IPSEC], Section 5.1,
  Step3a) determines if the traffic traversing the SA is handed to the
  ROHC module.  Packets selected to a ROHC-disabled SA MUST follow
  normal IPsec processing and MUST NOT be sent to the ROHC module




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  (Figure 2, Path 3).  Conversely, packets selected to a ROHC-enabled
  SA MUST be sent to the ROHC module.

  Block B: This step determines if the packet can be compressed.  If
  the packet is compressed, an integrity algorithm MAY be used to
  compute an Integrity Check Value (ICV) for the uncompressed packet
  ([IPSEC-ROHC], Section 4.2; [IKE-ROHC], Section 3.1).  The Next
  Header field of the security protocol header (e.g., ESP, AH) MUST be
  populated with a "ROHC" protocol identifier [PROTOCOL], inner packet
  headers MUST be compressed, and the computed ICV MAY be appended to
  the packet (Figure 2, Path 1).  However, if it is determined that the
  packet will not be compressed (e.g., due to one of the reasons
  described in Section 6.1.3), the Next Header field MUST be populated
  with the appropriate value indicating the next-level protocol (Figure
  2, Path 2), and ROHC processing MUST NOT be applied to the packet.

  After the ROHC process completes, IPsec processing resumes, as
  described in Section 5.1, Step3a, of RFC 4301 [IPSEC].

  The process illustrated in Figure 2 also augments the IPsec
  processing model for inbound IP traffic (unprotected-to-protected).
  For inbound packets, IPsec processing is performed ([IPSEC], Section
  5.2, Steps 1-3) followed by AH or ESP processing ([IPSEC], Section
  5.2, Step 4).

  Block A: After AH or ESP processing, the ROHC data item retrieved
  from the SAD entry will indicate if traffic traversing the SA is
  processed by the ROHC module ([IPSEC], Section 5.2, Step 3a).
  Packets traversing a ROHC-disabled SA MUST follow normal IPsec
  processing and MUST NOT be sent to the ROHC module.  Conversely,
  packets traversing a ROHC-enabled SA MUST be sent to the ROHC module.

  Block B: The decision at Block B is made using the value of the Next
  Header field of the security protocol header.  If the Next Header
  field does not indicate a ROHC header, the decompressor MUST NOT
  attempt decompression (Figure 2, Path 2).  If the Next Header field
  indicates a ROHC header, decompression is applied.  After
  decompression, the signaled ROHCoIPsec integrity algorithm MAY be
  used to compute an ICV value for the decompressed packet.  This ICV,
  if present, is compared to the ICV that was calculated at the
  compressor.  If the ICVs match, the packet is forwarded by the ROHC
  module (Figure 2, Path 1); otherwise, the packet MUST be dropped.
  Once the ROHC module completes processing, IPsec processing resumes,
  as described in Section 5.2, Step 4, of RFC 4301 [IPSEC].

  When there is a single SA between a compressor and decompressor, ROHC
  MUST operate in unidirectional mode, as described in Section 5 of RFC
  3759 [ROHC-TERM].  When there is a pair of SAs instantiated between



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  ROHCoIPsec implementations, ROHC MAY operate in bi-directional mode,
  where an SA pair represents a bi-directional ROHC channel (as
  described in Sections 6.1 and 6.2 of RFC 3759 [ROHC-TERM]).

  Note that to further reduce the size of an IPsec-protected packet,
  ROHCoIPsec and IPComp [IPCOMP] can be implemented in a nested
  fashion.  This process is detailed in [IPSEC-ROHC], Section 4.4.

6.1.1.  Header Compression Protocol Considerations

  ROHCv2 [ROHCV2] profiles include various mechanisms that provide
  increased robustness over reordering channels.  These mechanisms
  SHOULD be adopted for ROHC to operate efficiently over IPsec SAs.

  A ROHC decompressor implemented within IPsec architecture MAY
  leverage additional mechanisms to improve performance over reordering
  channels (either due to random events or to an attacker intentionally
  reordering packets).  Specifically, IPsec's sequence number MAY be
  used by the decompressor to identify a packet as "sequentially late".
  This knowledge will increase the likelihood of successful
  decompression of a reordered packet.

  Additionally, ROHCoIPsec implementations SHOULD minimize the amount
  of feedback sent from the decompressor to the compressor.  If a ROHC
  feedback channel is not used sparingly, the overall gains from
  ROHCoIPsec can be significantly reduced.  More specifically, any
  feedback sent from the decompressor to the compressor MUST be
  processed by IPsec and tunneled back to the compressor (as designated
  by the SA associated with FEEDBACK_FOR).  As such, some
  implementation alternatives can be considered, including the
  following:

  o  Eliminate feedback traffic altogether by operating only in ROHC
     Unidirectional mode (U-mode).

  o  Piggyback ROHC feedback messages within the feedback element
     (i.e., on ROHC traffic that normally traverses the SA designated
     by FEEDBACK_FOR).

6.1.2.  Initialization and Negotiation of the ROHC Channel

  Hop-by-hop ROHC typically uses the underlying link layer (e.g., PPP)
  to negotiate ROHC channel parameters.  In the case of ROHCoIPsec,
  channel parameters can be set manually (i.e., administratively
  configured for manual SAs) or negotiated by IKEv2.  The extensions
  required for IKEv2 to support ROHC channel parameter negotiation are
  detailed in [IKE-ROHC].




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  If the ROHC protocol requires bi-directional communications, two SAs
  MUST be instantiated between the IPsec implementations.  One of the
  two SAs is used for carrying ROHC-traffic from the compressor to the
  decompressor, while the other is used to communicate ROHC-feedback
  from the decompressor to the compressor.  Note that the requirement
  for two SAs aligns with the operation of IKE, which creates SAs in
  pairs by default.  However, IPsec implementations will dictate how
  decompressor feedback received on one SA is associated with a
  compressor on the other SA.  An IPsec implementation MUST relay the
  feedback received by the decompressor on an inbound SA to the
  compressor associated with the corresponding outbound SA.

6.1.3.  Encapsulation and Identification of Header Compressed Packets

  As indicated in Section 6.1, new state information (i.e., a new ROHC
  data item) is defined for each SA.  The ROHC data item MUST be used
  by the IPsec process to determine whether it sends all traffic
  traversing a given SA to the ROHC module (ROHC-enabled) or bypasses
  the ROHC module and sends the traffic through regular IPsec
  processing (ROHC-disabled).

  The Next Header field of the IPsec security protocol (e.g., AH or
  ESP) header MUST be used to demultiplex header-compressed traffic
  from uncompressed traffic traversing a ROHC-enabled SA.  This
  functionality is needed in situations where packets traversing a
  ROHC-enabled SA contain uncompressed headers.  Such situations may
  occur when, for example, a compressor only supports up to n
  compressed flows and cannot compress a flow number n+1 that arrives.
  Another example is when traffic is selected to a ROHC-enabled SA, but
  cannot be compressed by the ROHC process because the appropriate ROHC
  Profile has not been signaled for use.  As a result, the decompressor
  MUST be able to identify packets with uncompressed headers and MUST
  NOT attempt to decompress them.  The Next Header field is used to
  demultiplex these header-compressed and uncompressed packets where
  the "ROHC" protocol identifier will indicate that the packet contains
  compressed headers.  To accomplish this, IANA has allocated value 142
  to "ROHC" from the Protocol ID registry [PROTOCOL].

  It is noted that the use of the "ROHC" protocol identifier for
  purposes other than ROHCoIPsec is currently not defined.  In other
  words, the "ROHC" protocol identifier is only defined for use in the
  Next Header field of security protocol headers (e.g., ESP, AH).

  The ROHC Data Item, IANA Protocol ID allocation, and other IPsec
  extensions to support ROHCoIPsec are specified in [IPSEC-ROHC].






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6.1.4.  Motivation for the ROHC ICV

  Although ROHC was designed to tolerate packet loss and reordering,
  the algorithm does not guarantee that packets reconstructed at the
  decompressor are identical to the original packet.  As stated in
  Section 5.2 of RFC 4224 [REORDR], the consequences of packet
  reordering between ROHC peers may include undetected decompression
  failures, where erroneous packets are constructed and forwarded to
  upper layers.  Significant packet loss can have similar consequences.

  When using IPsec integrity protection, a packet received at the
  egress of an IPsec tunnel is identical to the packet that was
  processed at the ingress (given that the key is not compromised,
  etc.).

  When ROHC is integrated into the IPsec processing framework, the ROHC
  processed packet is protected by the AH/ESP ICV.  However, bits in
  the original IP header are not protected by this ICV; they are
  protected only by ROHC's integrity mechanisms (which are designed for
  random packet loss/reordering, not malicious packet loss/reordering
  introduced by an attacker).  Therefore, under certain circumstances,
  erroneous packets may be constructed and forwarded into the protected
  domain.

  To ensure the integrity of the original IP header within the
  ROHCoIPsec-processing model, an additional integrity check MAY be
  applied before the packet is compressed.  This integrity check will
  ensure that erroneous packets are not forwarded into the protected
  domain.  The specifics of this integrity check are documented in
  Section 4.2 of [IPSEC-ROHC].

6.1.5.  Path MTU Considerations

  By encapsulating IP packets with AH/ESP and tunneling IP headers,
  IPsec increases the size of IP packets.  This increase may result in
  Path MTU issues in the unprotected domain.  Several approaches to
  resolving these path MTU issues are documented in Section 8 of RFC
  4301 [IPSEC]; approaches include fragmenting the packet before or
  after IPsec processing (if the packet's Don't Fragment (DF) bit is
  clear), or possibly discarding packets (if the packet's DF bit is
  set).

  The addition of ROHC within the IPsec processing model may result in
  similar path MTU challenges.  For example, under certain
  circumstances, ROHC headers are larger than the original uncompressed
  headers.  In addition, if an integrity algorithm is used to validate
  packet headers, the resulting ICV will increase the size of packets.
  Both of these properties of ROHCoIPsec increase the size of packets,



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RFC 5856           Integration of ROHC over IPsec SAs           May 2010


  and therefore may result in additional challenges associated with
  path MTU.

  Approaches to addressing these path MTU issues are specified in
  Section 4.3 of [IPSEC-ROHC].

6.2.  ROHCoIPsec Framework Summary

  To summarize, the following items are needed to achieve ROHCoIPsec:

  o  IKEv2 Extensions to Support ROHCoIPsec

  o  IPsec Extensions to Support ROHCoIPsec

7.  Security Considerations

  Several security considerations associated with the use of ROHCoIPsec
  are covered in Section 6.1.4.  These considerations can be mitigated
  by using a strong integrity-check algorithm to ensure the valid
  decompression of packet headers.

  A malfunctioning or malicious ROHCoIPsec compressor (i.e., the
  compressor located at the ingress of the IPsec tunnel) has the
  ability to send erroneous packets to the decompressor (i.e., the
  decompressor located at the egress of the IPsec tunnel) that do not
  match the original packets emitted from the end-hosts.  Such a
  scenario may result in decreased efficiency between compressor and
  decompressor, or may cause the decompressor to forward erroneous
  packets into the protected domain.  A malicious compressor could also
  intentionally generate a significant number of compressed packets,
  which may result in denial of service at the decompressor, as the
  decompression of a significant number of invalid packets may drain
  the resources of an IPsec device.

  A malfunctioning or malicious ROHCoIPsec decompressor has the ability
  to disrupt communications as well.  For example, a decompressor may
  simply discard a subset of (or all) the packets that are received,
  even if packet headers were validly decompressed.  Ultimately, this
  could result in denial of service.  A malicious decompressor could
  also intentionally indicate that its context is not synchronized with
  the compressor's context, forcing the compressor to transition to a
  lower compression state.  This will reduce the overall efficiency
  gain offered by ROHCoIPsec.

8.  IANA Considerations

  All IANA considerations for ROHCoIPsec are documented in [IKE-ROHC]
  and [IPSEC-ROHC].



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9.  Acknowledgments

  The authors would like to thank Sean O'Keeffe, James Kohler, and
  Linda Noone of the Department of Defense, as well as Rich Espy of
  OPnet for their contributions and support in the development of this
  document.

  The authors would also like to thank Yoav Nir and Robert A Stangarone
  Jr.: both served as committed document reviewers for this
  specification.

  In addition, the authors would like to thank the following for their
  numerous reviews and comments to this document:

  o  Magnus Westerlund

  o  Stephen Kent

  o  Pasi Eronen

  o  Joseph Touch

  o  Tero Kivinen

  o  Jonah Pezeshki

  o  Lars-Erik Jonsson

  o  Jan Vilhuber

  o  Dan Wing

  o  Kristopher Sandlund

  o  Ghyslain Pelletier

  o  David Black

  o  Tim Polk

  o  Brian Carpenter

  Finally, the authors would also like to thank Tom Conkle, Renee
  Esposito, Etzel Brower, and Michele Casey of Booz Allen Hamilton for
  their assistance in completing this work.






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10.  Informative References

  [ROHC]        Sandlund, K., Pelletier, G., and L-E. Jonsson, "The
                RObust Header Compression (ROHC) Framework", RFC 5795,
                March 2010.

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

  [ROHC-TERM]   Jonsson, L-E., "Robust Header Compression (ROHC):
                Terminology and Channel Mapping Examples", RFC 3759,
                April 2004.

  [BRA97]       Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [IKEV2]       Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",
                RFC 4306, December 2005.

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

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

  [IPSEC-ROHC]  Ertekin, E., Christou, C., and C. Bormann, "IPsec
                Extensions to Support Robust Header Compression over
                IPsec", RFC 5858, May 2010.

  [IKE-ROHC]    Ertekin, E., Christou, C., Jasani, R., Kivinen, T., and
                C. Bormann, "IKEv2 Extensions to Support Robust Header
                Compression over IPsec", RFC 5857, May 2010.

  [PROTOCOL]    IANA, "Assigned Internet Protocol Numbers",
                <http://www.iana.org>.

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

  [ROHCV2]      Pelletier, G. and K. Sandlund, "RObust Header
                Compression Version 2 (ROHCv2): Profiles for RTP, UDP,
                IP, ESP and UDP-Lite", RFC 5225, April 2008.

  [REORDR]      Pelletier, G., Jonsson, L-E., and K. Sandlund, "RObust
                Header Compression (ROHC): ROHC over Channels That Can
                Reorder Packets", RFC 4224, January 2006.




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Authors' Addresses

  Emre Ertekin
  Booz Allen Hamilton
  5220 Pacific Concourse Drive, Suite 200
  Los Angeles, CA  90045
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Rohan Jasani
  Booz Allen Hamilton
  13200 Woodland Park Dr.
  Herndon, VA  20171
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Chris Christou
  Booz Allen Hamilton
  13200 Woodland Park Dr.
  Herndon, VA  20171
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Carsten Bormann
  Universitaet Bremen TZI
  Postfach 330440
  Bremen  D-28334
  Germany

  EMail: [email protected]















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