Network Working Group                                       A. Heffernan
Request for Comments: 2385                                 cisco Systems
Category: Standards Track                                    August 1998


     Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

IESG Note

  This document describes currrent existing practice for securing BGP
  against certain simple attacks.  It is understood to have security
  weaknesses against concerted attacks.

Abstract

  This memo describes a TCP extension to enhance security for BGP.  It
  defines a new TCP option for carrying an MD5 [RFC1321] digest in a
  TCP segment.  This digest acts like a signature for that segment,
  incorporating information known only to the connection end points.
  Since BGP uses TCP as its transport, using this option in the way
  described in this paper significantly reduces the danger from certain
  security attacks on BGP.

1.0  Introduction

  The primary motivation for this option is to allow BGP to protect
  itself against the introduction of spoofed TCP segments into the
  connection stream.  Of particular concern are TCP resets.

  To spoof a connection using the scheme described in this paper, an
  attacker would not only have to guess TCP sequence numbers, but would
  also have had to obtain the password included in the MD5 digest.
  This password never appears in the connection stream, and the actual
  form of the password is up to the application.  It could even change





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  during the lifetime of a particular connection so long as this change
  was synchronized on both ends (although retransmission can become
  problematical in some TCP implementations with changing passwords).

  Finally, there is no negotiation for the use of this option in a
  connection, rather it is purely a matter of site policy whether or
  not its connections use the option.

2.0  Proposal

  Every segment sent on a TCP connection to be protected against
  spoofing will contain the 16-byte MD5 digest produced by applying the
  MD5 algorithm to these items in the following order:

      1. the TCP pseudo-header (in the order: source IP address,
         destination IP address, zero-padded protocol number, and
         segment length)
      2. the TCP header, excluding options, and assuming a checksum of
         zero
      3. the TCP segment data (if any)
      4. an independently-specified key or password, known to both TCPs
         and presumably connection-specific

  The header and pseudo-header are in network byte order.  The nature
  of the key is deliberately left unspecified, but it must be known by
  both ends of the connection.  A particular TCP implementation will
  determine what the application may specify as the key.

  Upon receiving a signed segment, the receiver must validate it by
  calculating its own digest from the same data (using its own key) and
  comparing the two digest.  A failing comparison must result in the
  segment being dropped and must not produce any response back to the
  sender.  Logging the failure is probably advisable.

  Unlike other TCP extensions (e.g., the Window Scale option
  [RFC1323]), the absence of the option in the SYN,ACK segment must not
  cause the sender to disable its sending of signatures.  This
  negotiation is typically done to prevent some TCP implementations
  from misbehaving upon receiving options in non-SYN segments.  This is
  not a problem for this option, since the SYN,ACK sent during
  connection negotiation will not be signed and will thus be ignored.
  The connection will never be made, and non-SYN segments with options
  will never be sent.  More importantly, the sending of signatures must
  be under the complete control of the application, not at the mercy of
  the remote host not understanding the option.






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RFC 2385                TCP MD5 Signature Option             August 1998


3.0  Syntax

  The proposed option has the following format:

            +---------+---------+-------------------+
            | Kind=19 |Length=18|   MD5 digest...   |
            +---------+---------+-------------------+
            |                                       |
            +---------------------------------------+
            |                                       |
            +---------------------------------------+
            |                                       |
            +-------------------+-------------------+
            |                   |
            +-------------------+

  The MD5 digest is always 16 bytes in length, and the option would
  appear in every segment of a connection.

4.0  Some Implications

4.1  Connectionless Resets

  A connectionless reset will be ignored by the receiver of the reset,
  since the originator of that reset does not know the key, and so
  cannot generate the proper signature for the segment.  This means,
  for example, that connection attempts by a TCP which is generating
  signatures to a port with no listener will time out instead of being
  refused.  Similarly, resets generated by a TCP in response to
  segments sent on a stale connection will also be ignored.
  Operationally this can be a problem since resets help BGP recover
  quickly from peer crashes.

4.2  Performance

  The performance hit in calculating digests may inhibit the use of
  this option.  Some measurements of a sample implementation showed
  that on a 100 MHz R4600, generating a signature for simple ACK
  segment took an average of 0.0268 ms, while generating a signature
  for a data segment carrying 4096 bytes of data took 0.8776 ms on
  average.  These times would be applied to both the input and output
  paths, with the input path also bearing the cost of a 16-byte
  compare.








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4.3  TCP Header Size

  As with other options that are added to every segment, the size of
  the MD5 option must be factored into the MSS offered to the other
  side during connection negotiation.  Specifically, the size of the
  header to subtract from the MTU (whether it is the MTU of the
  outgoing interface or IP's minimal MTU of 576 bytes) is now at least
  18 bytes larger.

  The total header size is also an issue.  The TCP header specifies
  where segment data starts with a 4-bit field which gives the total
  size of the header (including options) in 32-byte words.  This means
  that the total size of the header plus option must be less than or
  equal to 60 bytes -- this leaves 40 bytes for options.

  As a concrete example, 4.4BSD defaults to sending window-scaling and
  timestamp information for connections it initiates.  The most loaded
  segment will be the initial SYN packet to start the connection.  With
  MD5 signatures, the SYN packet will contain the following:

      -- 4 bytes MSS option
      -- 4 bytes window scale option (3 bytes padded to 4 in 4.4BSD)
      -- 12 bytes for timestamp (4.4BSD pads the option as recommended
         in RFC 1323 Appendix A)
      -- 18 bytes for MD5 digest
      -- 2 bytes for end-of-option-list, to pad to a 32-bit boundary.

      This sums to 40 bytes, which just makes it.

4.4  MD5 as a Hashing Algorithm

  Since this memo was first issued (under a different title), the MD5
  algorithm has been found to be vulnerable to collision search attacks
  [Dobb], and is considered by some to be insufficiently strong for
  this type of application.

  This memo still specifies the MD5 algorithm, however, since the
  option has already been deployed operationally, and there was no
  "algorithm type" field defined to allow an upgrade using the same
  option number.  The original document did not specify a type field
  since this would require at least one more byte, and it was felt at
  the time that taking 19 bytes for the complete option (which would
  probably be padded to 20 bytes in TCP implementations) would be too
  much of a waste of the already limited option space.







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  This does not prevent the deployment of another similar option which
  uses another hashing algorithm (like SHA-1).  Also, if most
  implementations pad the 18 byte option as defined to 20 bytes anyway,
  it would be just as well to define a new option which contains an
  algorithm type field.

  This would need to be addressed in another document, however.

4.5 Key configuration

  It should be noted that the key configuration mechanism of routers
  may restrict the possible keys that may be used between peers.  It is
  strongly recommended that an implementation be able to support at
  minimum a key composed of a string of printable ASCII of 80 bytes or
  less, as this is current practice.

5.0 Security Considerations

  This document defines a weak but currently practiced security
  mechanism for BGP.  It is anticipated that future work will provide
  different stronger mechanisms for dealing with these issues.

6.0  References

  [RFC1321] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm," RFC 1321,
            April 1992.

  [RFC1323] Jacobson, V., Braden, R., and D. Borman, "TCP Extensions
            for High Performance", RFC 1323, May 1992.

  [Dobb] H. Dobbertin, "The Status of MD5 After a Recent Attack", RSA
            Labs' CryptoBytes, Vol. 2 No. 2, Summer 1996.
            http://www.rsa.com/rsalabs/pubs/cryptobytes.html

Author's Address

  Andy Heffernan
  cisco Systems
  170 West Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA  95134  USA

  Phone:  +1 408 526-8115
  EMail:  [email protected]








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Full Copyright Statement

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