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7 Network Working Group P. Eronen, Ed.
8 Request for Comments: 4555 Nokia
9 Category: Standards Track June 2006
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12 IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming Protocol (MOBIKE)
13
14 Status of This Memo
15
16 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
17 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
18 improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
19 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
20 and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
21
22 Copyright Notice
23
24 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
25
26 Abstract
27
28 This document describes the MOBIKE protocol, a mobility and
29 multihoming extension to Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2). MOBIKE
30 allows the IP addresses associated with IKEv2 and tunnel mode IPsec
31 Security Associations to change. A mobile Virtual Private Network
32 (VPN) client could use MOBIKE to keep the connection with the VPN
33 gateway active while moving from one address to another. Similarly,
34 a multihomed host could use MOBIKE to move the traffic to a different
35 interface if, for instance, the one currently being used stops
36 working.
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58 Eronen Standards Track [Page 1]
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60 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
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63 Table of Contents
64
65 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
66 1.1. Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
67 1.2. Scope and Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
68 1.3. Terminology and Notation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
69 2. Protocol Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
70 2.1. Basic Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
71 2.2. Example Protocol Exchanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
72 2.3. MOBIKE and Network Address Translation (NAT) . . . . . . . 9
73 3. Protocol Exchanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
74 3.1. Initial IKE Exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
75 3.2. Signaling Support for MOBIKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
76 3.3. Initial Tunnel Header Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
77 3.4. Additional Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
78 3.5. Changing Addresses in IPsec SAs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
79 3.6. Updating Additional Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
80 3.7. Return Routability Check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
81 3.8. Changes in NAT Mappings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
82 3.9. NAT Prohibition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
83 3.10. Path Testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
84 3.11. Failure Recovery and Timeouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
85 3.12. Dead Peer Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
86 4. Payload Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
87 4.1. Notify Messages - Error Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
88 4.2. Notify Messages - Status Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
89 5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
90 5.1. Traffic Redirection and Hijacking . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
91 5.2. IPsec Payload Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
92 5.3. Denial-of-Service Attacks against Third Parties . . . . . 25
93 5.4. Spoofing Network Connectivity Indications . . . . . . . . 26
94 5.5. Address and Topology Disclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
95 6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
96 7. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
97 8. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
98 8.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
99 8.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
100 Appendix A. Implementation Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
101 A.1. Links from SPD Cache to Outbound SAD Entries . . . . . . . 31
102 A.2. Creating Outbound SAs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
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119 1. Introduction
120
121 1.1. Motivation
122
123 IKEv2 is used for performing mutual authentication, as well as
124 establishing and maintaining IPsec Security Associations (SAs). In
125 the base IKEv2 protocol [IKEv2], the IKE SAs and tunnel mode IPsec
126 SAs are created implicitly between the IP addresses that are used
127 when the IKE_SA is established. These IP addresses are then used as
128 the outer (tunnel header) addresses for tunnel mode IPsec packets
129 (transport mode IPsec SAs are beyond the scope of this document).
130 Currently, it is not possible to change these addresses after the
131 IKE_SA has been created.
132
133 There are scenarios where these IP addresses might change. One
134 example is mobility: a host changes its point of network attachment
135 and receives a new IP address. Another example is a multihoming host
136 that would like to change to a different interface if, for instance,
137 the currently used interface stops working for some reason.
138
139 Although the problem can be solved by creating new IKE and IPsec SAs
140 when the addresses need to be changed, this may not be optimal for
141 several reasons. In some cases, creating a new IKE_SA may require
142 user interaction for authentication, such as entering a code from a
143 token card. Creating new SAs often involves expensive calculations
144 and possibly a large number of round-trips. For these reasons, a
145 mechanism for updating the IP addresses of existing IKE and IPsec SAs
146 is needed. The MOBIKE protocol described in this document provides
147 such a mechanism.
148
149 The main scenario for MOBIKE is enabling a remote access VPN user to
150 move from one address to another without re-establishing all security
151 associations with the VPN gateway. For instance, a user could start
152 from fixed Ethernet in the office and then disconnect the laptop and
153 move to the office's wireless LAN. When the user leaves the office,
154 the laptop could start using General Packet Radio Service (GPRS);
155 when the user arrives home, the laptop could switch to the home
156 wireless LAN. MOBIKE updates only the outer (tunnel header)
157 addresses of IPsec SAs, and the addresses and other traffic selectors
158 used inside the tunnel stay unchanged. Thus, mobility can be
159 (mostly) invisible to applications and their connections using the
160 VPN.
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175 MOBIKE also supports more complex scenarios where the VPN gateway
176 also has several network interfaces: these interfaces could be
177 connected to different networks or ISPs, they may be a mix of IPv4
178 and IPv6 addresses, and the addresses may change over time.
179 Furthermore, both parties could be VPN gateways relaying traffic for
180 other parties.
181
182 1.2. Scope and Limitations
183
184 This document focuses on the main scenario outlined above and
185 supports only tunnel mode IPsec SAs.
186
187 The mobility support in MOBIKE allows both parties to move, but does
188 not provide a "rendezvous" mechanism that would allow simultaneous
189 movement of both parties or discovery of the addresses when the
190 IKE_SA is first established. Therefore, MOBIKE is best suited for
191 situations where the address of at least one endpoint is relatively
192 stable and can be discovered using existing mechanisms such as DNS
193 (see Section 3.1).
194
195 MOBIKE allows both parties to be multihomed; however, only one pair
196 of addresses is used for an SA at a time. In particular, load
197 balancing is beyond the scope of this specification.
198
199 MOBIKE follows the IKEv2 practice where a response message is sent to
200 the same address and port from which the request was received. This
201 implies that MOBIKE does not work over address pairs that provide
202 only unidirectional connectivity.
203
204 Network Address Translators (NATs) introduce additional limitations
205 beyond those listed above. For details, refer to Section 2.3.
206
207 The base version of the MOBIKE protocol does not cover all potential
208 future use scenarios, such as transport mode, application to securing
209 SCTP, or optimizations desirable in specific circumstances. Future
210 extensions may be defined later to support additional requirements.
211 Please consult the MOBIKE design document [Design] for further
212 information and rationale behind these limitations.
213
214 1.3. Terminology and Notation
215
216 When messages containing IKEv2 payloads are described, optional
217 payloads are shown in brackets (for instance, "[FOO]"), and a plus
218 sign indicates that a payload can be repeated one or more times (for
219 instance, "FOO+"). To provide context, some diagrams also show what
220 existing IKEv2 payloads would typically be included in the exchanges.
221 These payloads are shown for illustrative purposes only; see [IKEv2]
222 for an authoritative description.
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230
231 When this document describes updating the source/destination
232 addresses of an IPsec SA, it means updating IPsec-related state so
233 that outgoing Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)/Authentication
234 Header (AH) packets use those addresses in the tunnel header.
235 Depending on how the nominal divisions between Security Association
236 Database (SAD), Security Policy Database (SPD), and Peer
237 Authorization Database (PAD) described in [IPsecArch] are actually
238 implemented, an implementation can have several different places that
239 have to be updated.
240
241 In this document, the term "initiator" means the party who originally
242 initiated the first IKE_SA (in a series of possibly several rekeyed
243 IKE_SAs); "responder" is the other peer. During the lifetime of the
244 IKE_SA, both parties may initiate INFORMATIONAL or CREATE_CHILD_SA
245 exchanges; in this case, the terms "exchange initiator" and "exchange
246 responder" are used. The term "original initiator" (which in [IKEv2]
247 refers to the party who started the latest IKE_SA rekeying) is not
248 used in this document.
249
250 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
251 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
252 document are to be interpreted as described in [KEYWORDS].
253
254 2. Protocol Overview
255
256 2.1. Basic Operation
257
258 MOBIKE allows both parties to have several addresses, and there are
259 up to N*M pairs of IP addresses that could potentially be used. The
260 decision of which of these pairs to use has to take into account
261 several factors. First, the parties may have preferences about which
262 interface should be used due to, for instance, performance and cost
263 reasons. Second, the decision is constrained by the fact that some
264 of the pairs may not work at all due to incompatible IP versions,
265 outages in the network, problems at the local link at either end, and
266 so on.
267
268 MOBIKE solves this problem by taking a simple approach: the party
269 that initiated the IKE_SA (the "client" in a remote access VPN
270 scenario) is responsible for deciding which address pair is used for
271 the IPsec SAs and for collecting the information it needs to make
272 this decision (such as determining which address pairs work or do not
273 work). The other party (the "gateway" in a remote access VPN
274 scenario) simply tells the initiator what addresses it has, but does
275 not update the IPsec SAs until it receives a message from the
276 initiator to do so. This approach applies to the addresses in the
277 IPsec SAs; in the IKE_SA case, the exchange initiator can decide
278 which addresses are used.
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287 Making the decision at the initiator is consistent with how normal
288 IKEv2 works: the initiator decides which addresses it uses when
289 contacting the responder. It also makes sense, especially when the
290 initiator is a mobile node: it is in a better position to decide
291 which of its network interfaces should be used for both upstream and
292 downstream traffic.
293
294 The details of exactly how the initiator makes the decision, what
295 information is used in making it, how the information is collected,
296 how preferences affect the decision, and when a decision needs to be
297 changed are largely beyond the scope of MOBIKE. This does not mean
298 that these details are unimportant: on the contrary, they are likely
299 to be crucial in any real system. However, MOBIKE is concerned with
300 these details only to the extent that they are visible in IKEv2/IPsec
301 messages exchanged between the peers (and thus need to be
302 standardized to ensure interoperability).
303
304 Many of these issues are not specific to MOBIKE, but are common with
305 the use of existing hosts in dynamic environments or with mobility
306 protocols such as Mobile IP [MIP4] [MIP6]. A number of mechanisms
307 already exist or are being developed to deal with these issues. For
308 instance, link-layer and IP-layer mechanisms can be used to track the
309 status of connectivity within the local link [RFC2461]; movement
310 detection is being specified for both IPv4 and IPv6 in [DNA4],
311 [DNA6], and so on.
312
313 Naturally, updating the addresses of IPsec SAs has to take into
314 account several security considerations. MOBIKE includes two
315 features designed to address these considerations. First, a "return
316 routability" check can be used to verify the addresses provided by
317 the peer. This makes it more difficult to flood third parties with
318 large amounts of traffic. Second, a "NAT prohibition" feature
319 ensures that IP addresses have not been modified by NATs, IPv4/IPv6
320 translation agents, or other similar devices. This feature is
321 enabled only when NAT Traversal is not used.
322
323 2.2. Example Protocol Exchanges
324
325 A simple MOBIKE exchange in a mobile scenario is illustrated below.
326 The notation is based on [IKEv2], Section 1.2. In addition, the
327 source/destination IP addresses and ports are shown for each packet:
328 here IP_I1, IP_I2, IP_R1, and IP_R2 represent IP addresses used by
329 the initiator and the responder.
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343 Initiator Responder
344 ----------- -----------
345 1) (IP_I1:500 -> IP_R1:500)
346 HDR, SAi1, KEi, Ni,
347 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
348 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) -->
349
350 <-- (IP_R1:500 -> IP_I1:500)
351 HDR, SAr1, KEr, Nr,
352 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
353 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)
354
355 2) (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
356 HDR, SK { IDi, CERT, AUTH,
357 CP(CFG_REQUEST),
358 SAi2, TSi, TSr,
359 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED) } -->
360
361 <-- (IP_R1:4500 -> IP_I1:4500)
362 HDR, SK { IDr, CERT, AUTH,
363 CP(CFG_REPLY),
364 SAr2, TSi, TSr,
365 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED) }
366
367 (Initiator gets information from lower layers that its attachment
368 point and address have changed.)
369
370 3) (IP_I2:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
371 HDR, SK { N(UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES),
372 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
373 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) } -->
374
375 <-- (IP_R1:4500 -> IP_I2:4500)
376 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
377 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) }
378
379 (Responder verifies that the initiator has given it a correct IP
380 address.)
381
382 4) <-- (IP_R1:4500 -> IP_I2:4500)
383 HDR, SK { N(COOKIE2) }
384
385 (IP_I2:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
386 HDR, SK { N(COOKIE2) } -->
387
388 Step 1 is the normal IKE_INIT exchange. In step 2, the peers inform
389 each other that they support MOBIKE. In step 3, the initiator
390 notices a change in its own address, and informs the responder about
391
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399 this by sending an INFORMATIONAL request containing the
400 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES notification. The request is sent using the new
401 IP address. At this point, it also starts to use the new address as
402 a source address in its own outgoing ESP traffic. Upon receiving the
403 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES notification, the responder records the new
404 address and, if it is required by policy, performs a return
405 routability check of the address. When this check (step 4)
406 completes, the responder starts to use the new address as the
407 destination for its outgoing ESP traffic.
408
409 Another protocol run in a multihoming scenario is illustrated below.
410 In this scenario, the initiator has one address but the responder has
411 two.
412
413 Initiator Responder
414 ----------- -----------
415 1) (IP_I1:500 -> IP_R1:500)
416 HDR, SAi1, KEi, Ni,
417 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
418 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) -->
419
420 <-- (IP_R1:500 -> IP_I1:500)
421 HDR, SAr1, KEr, Nr,
422 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
423 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)
424
425 2) (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
426 HDR, SK { IDi, CERT, AUTH,
427 CP(CFG_REQUEST),
428 SAi2, TSi, TSr,
429 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED) } -->
430
431 <-- (IP_R1:4500 -> IP_I1:4500)
432 HDR, SK { IDr, CERT, AUTH,
433 CP(CFG_REPLY),
434 SAr2, TSi, TSr,
435 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED),
436 N(ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS) }
437
438 (The initiator suspects a problem in the currently used address pair
439 and probes its liveness.)
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455 3) (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
456 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
457 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) } -->
458
459 (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R1:4500)
460 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
461 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) } -->
462
463 ...
464
465 (Eventually, the initiator gives up on the current address pair and
466 tests the other available address pair.)
467
468 4) (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R2:4500)
469 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
470 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) }
471
472 <-- (IP_R2:4500 -> IP_I1:4500)
473 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
474 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP) }
475
476 (This worked, and the initiator requests the peer to switch to new
477 addresses.)
478
479 5) (IP_I1:4500 -> IP_R2:4500)
480 HDR, SK { N(UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES),
481 N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
482 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP),
483 N(COOKIE2) } -->
484
485 <-- (IP_R2:4500 -> IP_I1:4500)
486 HDR, SK { N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
487 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP),
488 N(COOKIE2) }
489
490 2.3. MOBIKE and Network Address Translation (NAT)
491
492 In some MOBIKE scenarios, the network may contain NATs or stateful
493 packet filters (for brevity, the rest of this document simply
494 describes NATs). The NAT Traversal feature specified in [IKEv2]
495 allows IKEv2 to work through NATs in many cases, and MOBIKE can
496 leverage this functionality: when the addresses used for IPsec SAs
497 are changed, MOBIKE can enable or disable IKEv2 NAT Traversal, as
498 needed.
499
500 Nevertheless, there are some limitations because NATs usually
501 introduce an asymmetry into the network: only packets coming from the
502 "inside" cause state to be created. This asymmetry leads to
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511 restrictions on what MOBIKE can do. To give a concrete example,
512 consider a situation where both peers have only a single address, and
513 the initiator is behind a NAT. If the responder's address now
514 changes, it needs to send a packet to the initiator using its new
515 address. However, if the NAT is, for instance, of the common
516 "restricted cone" type (see [STUN] for one description of different
517 NAT types), this is not possible. The NAT will drop packets sent
518 from the new address (unless the initiator has previously sent a
519 packet to that address -- which it cannot do until it knows the
520 address).
521
522 For simplicity, MOBIKE does not attempt to handle all possible NAT-
523 related scenarios. Instead, MOBIKE assumes that if NATs are present,
524 the initiator is the party "behind" the NAT, and the case where the
525 responder's addresses change is not fully supported (meaning that no
526 special effort is made to support this functionality). Responders
527 may also be unaware of NATs or specific types of NATs they are
528 behind. However, when a change has occurred that will cause a loss
529 of connectivity, MOBIKE responders will still attempt to inform the
530 initiator of the change. Depending on, for instance, the exact type
531 of NAT, it may or may not succeed. However, analyzing the exact
532 circumstances when this will or will not work is not done in this
533 document.
534
535 3. Protocol Exchanges
536
537 3.1. Initial IKE Exchange
538
539 The initiator is responsible for finding a working pair of addresses
540 so that the initial IKE exchange can be carried out. Any information
541 from MOBIKE extensions will only be available later, when the
542 exchange has progressed far enough. Exactly how the addresses used
543 for the initial exchange are discovered is beyond the scope of this
544 specification; typical sources of information include local
545 configuration and DNS.
546
547 If either or both of the peers have multiple addresses, some
548 combinations may not work. Thus, the initiator SHOULD try various
549 source and destination address combinations when retransmitting the
550 IKE_SA_INIT request.
551
552 3.2. Signaling Support for MOBIKE
553
554 Implementations that wish to use MOBIKE for a particular IKE_SA MUST
555 include a MOBIKE_SUPPORTED notification in the IKE_AUTH exchange (in
556 case of multiple IKE_AUTH exchanges, in the message containing the SA
557 payload).
558
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566
567 The format of the MOBIKE_SUPPORTED notification is described in
568 Section 4.
569
570 3.3. Initial Tunnel Header Addresses
571
572 When an IPsec SA is created, the tunnel header IP addresses (and
573 port, if doing UDP encapsulation) are taken from the IKE_SA, not the
574 IP header of the IKEv2 message requesting the IPsec SA. The
575 addresses in the IKE_SA are initialized from the IP header of the
576 first IKE_AUTH request.
577
578 The addresses are taken from the IKE_AUTH request because IKEv2
579 requires changing from port 500 to 4500 if a NAT is discovered. To
580 simplify things, implementations that support both this specification
581 and NAT Traversal MUST change to port 4500 if the correspondent also
582 supports both, even if no NAT was detected between them (this way,
583 there is no need to change the ports later if a NAT is detected on
584 some other path).
585
586 3.4. Additional Addresses
587
588 Both the initiator and responder MAY include one or more
589 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and/or ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications in
590 the IKE_AUTH exchange (in case of multiple IKE_AUTH exchanges, in the
591 message containing the SA payload). Here "ADDITIONAL_*_ADDRESS"
592 means either an ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS or an ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS
593 notification.
594
595 Initiator Responder
596 ----------- -----------
597 HDR, SK { IDi, [CERT], [IDr], AUTH,
598 [CP(CFG_REQUEST)]
599 SAi2, TSi, TSr,
600 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED),
601 [N(ADDITIONAL_*_ADDRESS)+] } -->
602
603 <-- HDR, SK { IDr, [CERT], AUTH,
604 [CP(CFG_REPLY)],
605 SAr2, TSi, TSr,
606 N(MOBIKE_SUPPORTED)
607 [N(ADDITIONAL_*_ADDRESS)+] }
608
609 The recipient stores this information, but no other action is taken
610 at this time.
611
612 Although both the initiator and responder maintain a set of peer
613 addresses (logically associated with the IKE_SA), it is important to
614 note that they use this information for slightly different purposes.
615
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622
623 The initiator uses the set of responder addresses as an input to its
624 address selection policy; it may, at some later point, decide to move
625 the IPsec traffic to one of these addresses using the procedure
626 described in Section 3.5. The responder normally does not use the
627 set of initiator addresses for anything: the addresses are used only
628 when the responder's own addresses change (see Section 3.6).
629
630 The set of addresses available to the peers can change during the
631 lifetime of the IKE_SA. The procedure for updating this information
632 is described in Section 3.6.
633
634 Note that if some of the initiator's interfaces are behind a NAT
635 (from the responder's point of view), the addresses received by the
636 responder will be incorrect. This means the procedure for changing
637 responder addresses described in Section 3.6 does not fully work when
638 the initiator is behind a NAT. For the same reason, the peers also
639 SHOULD NOT use this information for any other purpose than what is
640 explicitly described either in this document or a future
641 specification updating it.
642
643 3.5. Changing Addresses in IPsec SAs
644
645 In MOBIKE, the initiator decides what addresses are used in the IPsec
646 SAs. That is, the responder does not normally update any IPsec SAs
647 without receiving an explicit UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES request from the
648 initiator. (As described below, the responder can, however, update
649 the IKE_SA in some circumstances.)
650
651 The reasons why the initiator wishes to change the addresses are
652 largely beyond the scope of MOBIKE. Typically, triggers include
653 information received from lower layers, such as changes in IP
654 addresses or link-down indications. Some of this information can be
655 unreliable: for instance, ICMP messages could be spoofed by an
656 attacker. Unreliable information SHOULD be treated only as a hint
657 that there might be a problem, and the initiator SHOULD trigger Dead
658 Peer Detection (that is, send an INFORMATIONAL request) to determine
659 if the current path is still usable.
660
661 Changing addresses can also be triggered by events within IKEv2. At
662 least the following events can cause the initiator to re-evaluate its
663 local address selection policy, possibly leading to changing the
664 addresses.
665
666 o An IKEv2 request has been re-transmitted several times, but no
667 valid reply has been received. This suggests the current path is
668 no longer working.
669
670
671
672
673
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676 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
677
678
679 o An INFORMATIONAL request containing an ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS,
680 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS, or NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notification is
681 received. This means the peer's addresses may have changed. This
682 is particularly important if the announced set of addresses no
683 longer contains the currently used address.
684
685 o An UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES notification is received as a response
686 to address update request (described below).
687
688 o The initiator receives a NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP notification
689 that does not match the previous UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES response (see
690 Section 3.8 for a more detailed description).
691
692 The description in the rest of this section assumes that the
693 initiator has already decided what the new addresses should be. When
694 this decision has been made, the initiator:
695
696 o Updates the IKE_SA with the new addresses, and sets the
697 "pending_update" flag in the IKE_SA.
698
699 o Updates the IPsec SAs associated with this IKE_SA with the new
700 addresses (unless the initiator's policy requires a return
701 routability check before updating the IPsec SAs, and the check has
702 not been done for this responder address yet).
703
704 o If the IPsec SAs were updated in the previous step: If NAT
705 Traversal is not enabled, and the responder supports NAT Traversal
706 (as indicated by NAT detection payloads in the IKE_SA_INIT
707 exchange), and the initiator either suspects or knows that a NAT
708 is likely to be present, enables NAT Traversal (that is, enables
709 UDP encapsulation of outgoing ESP packets and sending of NAT-
710 Keepalive packets).
711
712 o If there are outstanding IKEv2 requests (requests for which the
713 initiator has not yet received a reply), continues retransmitting
714 them using the addresses in the IKE_SA (the new addresses).
715
716 o When the window size allows, sends an INFORMATIONAL request
717 containing the UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES notification (which does not
718 contain any data), and clears the "pending_update" flag. The
719 request will be as follows:
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730 Eronen Standards Track [Page 13]
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732 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
733
734
735 Initiator Responder
736 ----------- -----------
737 HDR, SK { N(UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES),
738 [N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
739 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)],
740 [N(NO_NATS_ALLOWED)],
741 [N(COOKIE2)] } -->
742
743 o If a new address change occurs while waiting for the response,
744 starts again from the first step (and ignores responses to this
745 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES request).
746
747 When processing an INFORMATIONAL request containing the
748 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES notification, the responder:
749
750 o Determines whether it has already received a newer
751 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES request than this one (if the responder uses a
752 window size greater than one, it is possible that requests are
753 received out of order). If it has, a normal response message
754 (described below) is sent, but no other action is taken.
755
756 o If the NO_NATS_ALLOWED notification is present, processes it as
757 described in Section 3.9.
758
759 o Checks that the (source IP address, destination IP address) pair
760 in the IP header is acceptable according to local policy. If it
761 is not, replies with a message containing the
762 UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES notification (and possibly COOKIE2).
763
764 o Updates the IP addresses in the IKE_SA with the values from the IP
765 header. (Using the address from the IP header is consistent with
766 normal IKEv2, and allows IKEv2 to work with NATs without needing
767 unilateral self-address fixing [UNSAF].)
768
769 o Replies with an INFORMATIONAL response:
770
771 Initiator Responder
772 ----------- -----------
773 <-- HDR, SK { [N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
774 N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)],
775 [N(COOKIE2)] }
776
777 o If necessary, initiates a return routability check for the new
778 initiator address (see Section 3.7) and waits until the check is
779 completed.
780
781 o Updates the IPsec SAs associated with this IKE_SA with the new
782 addresses.
783
784
785
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788 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
789
790
791 o If NAT Traversal is supported and NAT detection payloads were
792 included, enables or disables NAT Traversal.
793
794 When the initiator receives the reply:
795
796 o If an address change has occurred after the request was first
797 sent, no MOBIKE processing is done for the reply message because a
798 new UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES is going to be sent (or has already been
799 sent, if window size greater than one is in use).
800
801 o If the response contains the UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED notification,
802 the initiator processes the response as described in Section 3.9.
803
804 o If the response contains an UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES notification,
805 the initiator MAY select another addresses and retry the exchange,
806 keep on using the previously used addresses, or disconnect.
807
808 o It updates the IPsec SAs associated with this IKE_SA with the new
809 addresses (unless this was already done earlier before sending the
810 request; this is the case when no return routability check was
811 required).
812
813 o If NAT Traversal is supported and NAT detection payloads were
814 included, the initiator enables or disables NAT Traversal.
815
816 There is one exception to the rule that the responder never updates
817 any IPsec SAs without receiving an UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES request. If
818 the source address that the responder is currently using becomes
819 unavailable (i.e., sending packets using that source address is no
820 longer possible), the responder is allowed to update the IPsec SAs to
821 use some other address (in addition to initiating the procedure
822 described in the next section).
823
824 3.6. Updating Additional Addresses
825
826 As described in Section 3.4, both the initiator and responder can
827 send a list of additional addresses in the IKE_AUTH exchange. This
828 information can be updated by sending an INFORMATIONAL exchange
829 request message that contains either one or more
830 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS/ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications or the
831 NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notification.
832
833 If the exchange initiator has only a single IP address, it is placed
834 in the IP header, and the message contains the
835 NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notification. If the exchange initiator has
836 several addresses, one of them is placed in the IP header, and the
837 rest in ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS/ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications.
838
839
840
841
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844 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
845
846
847 The new list of addresses replaces the old information (in other
848 words, there are no separate add/delete operations; instead, the
849 complete list is sent every time these notifications are used).
850
851 The message exchange will look as follows:
852
853 Initiator Responder
854 ----------- -----------
855 HDR, SK { [N(ADDITIONAL_*_ADDRESS)+],
856 [N(NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES)],
857 [N(NO_NATS_ALLOWED)],
858 [N(COOKIE2)] } -->
859
860 <-- HDR, SK { [N(COOKIE2)] }
861
862 When a request containing an ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS,
863 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS, or NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notification is
864 received, the exchange responder:
865
866 o Determines whether it has already received a newer request to
867 update the addresses (if a window size greater than one is used,
868 it is possible that the requests are received out of order). If
869 it has, a response message is sent, but the address set is not
870 updated.
871
872 o If the NO_NATS_ALLOWED notification is present, processes it as
873 described in Section 3.9.
874
875 o Updates the set of peer addresses based on the IP header and the
876 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS, ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS, and
877 NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notifications.
878
879 o Sends a response.
880
881 The initiator MAY include these notifications in the same request as
882 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES.
883
884 If the request to update the addresses is retransmitted using several
885 different source addresses, a new INFORMATIONAL request MUST be sent.
886
887 There is one additional complication: when the responder wants to
888 update the address set, the currently used addresses may no longer
889 work. In this case, the responder uses the additional address list
890 received from the initiator, and the list of its own addresses, to
891 determine which addresses to use for sending the INFORMATIONAL
892 request. This is the only time the responder uses the additional
893 address list received from the initiator.
894
895
896
897
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900 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
901
902
903 Note that both peers can have their own policies about what addresses
904 are acceptable to use, and certain types of policies may simplify
905 implementation. For instance, if the responder has a single fixed
906 address, it does not need to process the ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and
907 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications it receives (beyond ignoring
908 unrecognized status notifications, as already required in [IKEv2]).
909 Furthermore, if the initiator has a policy saying that only the
910 responder address specified in local configuration is acceptable, it
911 does not have to send its own additional addresses to the responder
912 (since the responder does not need them except when changing its own
913 address).
914
915 3.7. Return Routability Check
916
917 Both parties can optionally verify that the other party can actually
918 receive packets at the claimed address. By default, this "return
919 routability check" SHOULD be performed. In environments where the
920 peer is expected to be well-behaved (many corporate VPNs, for
921 instance), or the address can be verified by some other means (e.g.,
922 a certificate issued by an authority trusted for this purpose), the
923 return routability check MAY be omitted.
924
925 The check can be done before updating the IPsec SAs, immediately
926 after updating them, or continuously during the connection. By
927 default, the return routability check SHOULD be done before updating
928 the IPsec SAs, but in some environments it MAY be postponed until
929 after the IPsec SAs have been updated.
930
931 Any INFORMATIONAL exchange can be used for return routability
932 purposes, with one exception (described later in this section): when
933 a valid response is received, we know the other party can receive
934 packets at the claimed address.
935
936 To ensure that the peer cannot generate the correct INFORMATIONAL
937 response without seeing the request, a new payload is added to
938 INFORMATIONAL messages. The sender of an INFORMATIONAL request MAY
939 include a COOKIE2 notification, and if included, the recipient of an
940 INFORMATIONAL request MUST copy the notification as-is to the
941 response. When processing the response, the original sender MUST
942 verify that the value is the same one as sent. If the values do not
943 match, the IKE_SA MUST be closed. (See also Section 4.2.5 for the
944 format of the COOKIE2 notification.)
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
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956 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
957
958
959 The exception mentioned earlier is as follows: If the same
960 INFORMATIONAL request has been sent to several different addresses
961 (i.e., the destination address in the IKE_SA has been updated after
962 the request was first sent), receiving the INFORMATIONAL response
963 does not tell which address is the working one. In this case, a new
964 INFORMATIONAL request needs to be sent to check return routability.
965
966 3.8. Changes in NAT Mappings
967
968 IKEv2 performs Dead Peer Detection (DPD) if there has recently been
969 only outgoing traffic on all of the SAs associated with the IKE_SA.
970
971 In MOBIKE, these messages can also be used to detect if NAT mappings
972 have changed (for example, if the keepalive interval is too long, or
973 the NAT box is rebooted). More specifically, if both peers support
974 both this specification and NAT Traversal, the
975 NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP and NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP
976 notifications MAY be included in any INFORMATIONAL request; if the
977 request includes them, the responder MUST also include them in the
978 response (but no other action is taken, unless otherwise specified).
979
980 When the initiator is behind a NAT (as detected earlier using the
981 NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP and NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP
982 notifications), it SHOULD include these notifications in DPD messages
983 and compare the received NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP notifications
984 with the value from the previous UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES response (or the
985 IKE_SA_INIT response). If the values do not match, the IP address
986 and/or port seen by the responder has changed, and the initiator
987 SHOULD send UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES as described in Section 3.5. If the
988 initiator suspects that the NAT mapping has changed, it MAY also skip
989 the detection step and send UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES immediately. This
990 saves one roundtrip if the NAT mapping has indeed changed.
991
992 Note that this approach to detecting NAT mapping changes may cause an
993 extra address update when the IKE_SA is rekeyed. This is because the
994 NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP hash also includes the IKE Security
995 Parameter Indexes (SPIs), which change when performing rekeying.
996 This unnecessary update is harmless, however.
997
998 When MOBIKE is in use, the dynamic updates (specified in [IKEv2],
999 Section 2.23), where the peer address and port are updated from the
1000 last valid authenticated packet, work in a slightly different
1001 fashion. The host not behind a NAT MUST NOT use these dynamic
1002 updates for IKEv2 packets, but MAY use them for ESP packets. This
1003 ensures that an INFORMATIONAL exchange that does not contain
1004 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES does not cause any changes, allowing it to be
1005 used for, e.g., testing whether a particular path works.
1006
1007
1008
1009
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1012 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1013
1014
1015 3.9. NAT Prohibition
1016
1017 Basic IKEv2/IPsec without NAT Traversal support may work across some
1018 types of one-to-one "basic" NATs and IPv4/IPv6 translation agents in
1019 tunnel mode. This is because the IKEv2 integrity checksum does not
1020 cover the addresses in the IP header. This may be considered a
1021 problem in some circumstances, because in some sense any modification
1022 of the IP addresses can be considered an attack.
1023
1024 This specification addresses the issue by protecting the IP addresses
1025 when NAT Traversal has not been explicitly enabled. This means that
1026 MOBIKE without NAT Traversal support will not work if the paths
1027 contain NATs, IPv4/IPv6 translation agents, or other nodes that
1028 modify the addresses in the IP header. This feature is mainly
1029 intended for IPv6 and site-to-site VPN cases, where the
1030 administrators may know beforehand that NATs are not present, and
1031 thus any modification to the packet can be considered an attack.
1032
1033 More specifically, when NAT Traversal is not enabled, all messages
1034 that can update the addresses associated with the IKE_SA and/or IPsec
1035 SAs (the first IKE_AUTH request and all INFORMATIONAL requests that
1036 contain any of the following notifications: UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES,
1037 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS, ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS,
1038 NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES) MUST also include a NO_NATS_ALLOWED
1039 notification. The exchange responder MUST verify that the contents
1040 of the NO_NATS_ALLOWED notification match the addresses in the IP
1041 header. If they do not match, a response containing an
1042 UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED notification is sent. The response message
1043 is sent to the address and port that the corresponding request came
1044 from, not to the address contained in the NO_NATS_ALLOWED
1045 notification.
1046
1047 If the exchange initiator receives an UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED
1048 notification in response to its INFORMATIONAL request, it SHOULD
1049 retry the operation several times using new INFORMATIONAL requests.
1050 Similarly, if the initiator receives UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED in the
1051 IKE_AUTH exchange, it SHOULD retry IKE_SA establishment several
1052 times, starting from a new IKE_SA_INIT request. This ensures that an
1053 attacker who is able to modify only a single packet does not
1054 unnecessarily cause a path to remain unused. The exact number of
1055 retries is not specified in this document because it does not affect
1056 interoperability. However, because the IKE message will also be
1057 rejected if the attacker modifies the integrity checksum field, a
1058 reasonable number here would be the number of retries that is being
1059 used for normal retransmissions.
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
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1068 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1069
1070
1071 If an UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED notification is sent, the exchange
1072 responder MUST NOT use the contents of the NO_NATS_ALLOWED
1073 notification for any other purpose than possibly logging the
1074 information for troubleshooting purposes.
1075
1076 3.10. Path Testing
1077
1078 IKEv2 Dead Peer Detection allows the peers to detect if the currently
1079 used path has stopped working. However, if either of the peers has
1080 several addresses, Dead Peer Detection alone does not tell which of
1081 the other paths might work.
1082
1083 If required by its address selection policy, the initiator can use
1084 normal IKEv2 INFORMATIONAL request/response messages to test whether
1085 a certain path works. Implementations MAY do path testing even if
1086 the path currently being used is working to, for example, detect when
1087 a better (but previously unavailable) path becomes available.
1088
1089 3.11. Failure Recovery and Timeouts
1090
1091 In MOBIKE, the initiator is responsible for detecting and recovering
1092 from most failures.
1093
1094 To give the initiator enough time to detect the error, the responder
1095 SHOULD use relatively long timeout intervals when, for instance,
1096 retransmitting IKEv2 requests or deciding whether to initiate Dead
1097 Peer Detection. While no specific timeout lengths are required, it
1098 is suggested that responders continue retransmitting IKEv2 requests
1099 for at least five minutes before giving up.
1100
1101 3.12. Dead Peer Detection
1102
1103 MOBIKE uses the same Dead Peer Detection method as normal IKEv2, but
1104 as addresses may change, it is not sufficient to just verify that the
1105 peer is alive, but also that it is synchronized with the address
1106 updates and has not, for instance, ignored an address update due to
1107 failure to complete return routability test. This means that when
1108 there are incoming IPsec packets, MOBIKE nodes SHOULD inspect the
1109 addresses used in those packets and determine that they correspond to
1110 those that should be employed. If they do not, such packets SHOULD
1111 NOT be used as evidence that the peer is able to communicate with
1112 this node and or that the peer has received all address updates.
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
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1124 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1125
1126
1127 4. Payload Formats
1128
1129 This specification defines several new IKEv2 Notify payload types.
1130 See [IKEv2], Section 3.10, for a general description of the Notify
1131 payload.
1132
1133 4.1. Notify Messages - Error Types
1134
1135 4.1.1. UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES Notify Payload
1136
1137 The responder can include this notification in an INFORMATIONAL
1138 exchange response to indicate that the address change in the
1139 corresponding request message (which contained an UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES
1140 notification) was not carried out.
1141
1142 The Notify Message Type for UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES is 40. The
1143 Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. There is no data
1144 associated with this Notify type.
1145
1146 4.1.2. UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED Notify Payload
1147
1148 See Section 3.9 for a description of this notification.
1149
1150 The Notify Message Type for UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED is 41. The
1151 Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. There is no data
1152 associated with this Notify type.
1153
1154 4.2. Notify Messages - Status Types
1155
1156 4.2.1. MOBIKE_SUPPORTED Notify Payload
1157
1158 The MOBIKE_SUPPORTED notification is included in the IKE_AUTH
1159 exchange to indicate that the implementation supports this
1160 specification.
1161
1162 The Notify Message Type for MOBIKE_SUPPORTED is 16396. The Protocol
1163 ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. The notification data field
1164 MUST be left empty (zero-length) when sending, and its contents (if
1165 any) MUST be ignored when this notification is received. This allows
1166 the field to be used by future versions of this protocol.
1167
1168 4.2.2. ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS Notify
1169 Payloads
1170
1171 Both parties can include ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and/or
1172 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications in the IKE_AUTH exchange and
1173 INFORMATIONAL exchange request messages; see Section 3.4 and
1174 Section 3.6 for more detailed description.
1175
1176
1177
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1180 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1181
1182
1183 The Notify Message Types for ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and
1184 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS are 16397 and 16398, respectively. The
1185 Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. The data associated
1186 with these Notify types is either a four-octet IPv4 address or a
1187 16-octet IPv6 address.
1188
1189 4.2.3. NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES Notify Payload
1190
1191 The NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES notification can be included in an
1192 INFORMATIONAL exchange request message to indicate that the exchange
1193 initiator does not have addresses beyond the one used in the exchange
1194 (see Section 3.6 for more detailed description).
1195
1196 The Notify Message Type for NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES is 16399. The
1197 Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. There is no data
1198 associated with this Notify type.
1199
1200 4.2.4. UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES Notify Payload
1201
1202 This notification is included in INFORMATIONAL exchange requests sent
1203 by the initiator to update addresses of the IKE_SA and IPsec SAs (see
1204 Section 3.5).
1205
1206 The Notify Message Type for UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES is 16400. The
1207 Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero. There is no data
1208 associated with this Notify type.
1209
1210 4.2.5. COOKIE2 Notify Payload
1211
1212 This notification MAY be included in any INFORMATIONAL request for
1213 return routability check purposes (see Section 3.7). If the
1214 INFORMATIONAL request includes COOKIE2, the exchange responder MUST
1215 copy the notification to the response message.
1216
1217 The data associated with this notification MUST be between 8 and 64
1218 octets in length (inclusive), and MUST be chosen by the exchange
1219 initiator in a way that is unpredictable to the exchange responder.
1220 The Notify Message Type for this message is 16401. The Protocol ID
1221 and SPI Size fields are set to zero.
1222
1223 4.2.6. NO_NATS_ALLOWED Notify Payload
1224
1225 See Section 3.9 for a description of this notification.
1226
1227 The Notify Message Type for this message is 16402. The notification
1228 data contains the IP addresses and ports from/to which the packet was
1229 sent. For IPv4, the notification data is 12 octets long and is
1230 defined as follows:
1231
1232
1233
1234 Eronen Standards Track [Page 22]
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1236 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1237
1238
1239 1 2 3
1240 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
1241 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1242 ! Source IPv4 address !
1243 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1244 ! Destination IPv4 address !
1245 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1246 ! Source port ! Destination port !
1247 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1248
1249 For IPv6, the notification data is 36 octets long and is defined as
1250 follows:
1251
1252 1 2 3
1253 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
1254 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1255 ! !
1256 ! Source IPv6 address !
1257 ! !
1258 ! !
1259 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1260 ! !
1261 ! Destination IPv6 address !
1262 ! !
1263 ! !
1264 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1265 ! Source port ! Destination port !
1266 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
1267
1268 The Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are set to zero.
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
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1292 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1293
1294
1295 5. Security Considerations
1296
1297 The main goals of this specification are to maintain the security
1298 offered by usual IKEv2 procedures and to counter mobility-related
1299 threats in an appropriate manner. This section describes new
1300 security considerations introduced by MOBIKE. See [IKEv2] for
1301 security considerations for IKEv2 in general.
1302
1303 5.1. Traffic Redirection and Hijacking
1304
1305 MOBIKE payloads relating to updating addresses are encrypted,
1306 integrity protected, and replay protected using the IKE_SA. This
1307 assures that no one except the participants can, for instance, give a
1308 control message to change the addresses.
1309
1310 However, as with normal IKEv2, the actual IP addresses in the IP
1311 header are not covered by the integrity protection. This means that
1312 a NAT between the parties (or an attacker acting as a NAT) can modify
1313 the addresses and cause incorrect tunnel header (outer) IP addresses
1314 to be used for IPsec SAs. The scope of this attack is limited mainly
1315 to denial of service because all traffic is protected using IPsec.
1316
1317 This attack can only be launched by on-path attackers that are
1318 capable of modifying IKEv2 messages carrying NAT detection payloads
1319 (such as Dead Peer Detection messages). By modifying the IP header
1320 of these packets, the attackers can lead the peers to believe a new
1321 NAT or a changed NAT binding exists between them. The attack can
1322 continue as long as the attacker is on the path, modifying the IKEv2
1323 messages. If this is no longer the case, IKEv2 and MOBIKE mechanisms
1324 designed to detect NAT mapping changes will eventually recognize that
1325 the intended traffic is not getting through, and will update the
1326 addresses appropriately.
1327
1328 MOBIKE introduces the NO_NATS_ALLOWED notification that is used to
1329 detect modification, by outsiders, of the addresses in the IP header.
1330 When this notification is used, communication through NATs and other
1331 address translators is impossible, so it is sent only when not doing
1332 NAT Traversal. This feature is mainly intended for IPv6 and site-to-
1333 site VPN cases, where the administrators may know beforehand that
1334 NATs are not present.
1335
1336 5.2. IPsec Payload Protection
1337
1338 The use of IPsec protection on payload traffic protects the
1339 participants against disclosure of the contents of the traffic,
1340 should the traffic end up in an incorrect destination or be subject
1341 to eavesdropping.
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346 Eronen Standards Track [Page 24]
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1348 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1349
1350
1351 However, security associations originally created for the protection
1352 of a specific flow between specific addresses may be updated by
1353 MOBIKE later on. This has to be taken into account if the (outer) IP
1354 address of the peer was used when deciding what kind of IPsec SAs the
1355 peer is allowed to create.
1356
1357 For instance, the level of required protection might depend on the
1358 current location of the VPN client, or access might be allowed only
1359 from certain IP addresses.
1360
1361 It is recommended that security policies, for peers that are allowed
1362 to use MOBIKE, are configured in a manner that takes into account
1363 that a single security association can be used at different times
1364 through paths of varying security properties.
1365
1366 This is especially critical for traffic selector authorization. The
1367 (logical) Peer Authorization Database (PAD) contains the information
1368 used by IKEv2 when determining what kind of IPsec SAs a peer is
1369 allowed to create. This process is described in [IPsecArch], Section
1370 4.4.3. When a peer requests the creation of an IPsec SA with some
1371 traffic selectors, the PAD must contain "Child SA Authorization Data"
1372 linking the identity authenticated by IKEv2 and the addresses
1373 permitted for traffic selectors. See also [Clarifications] for a
1374 more extensive discussion.
1375
1376 It is important to note that simply sending IKEv2 packets using some
1377 particular address does not automatically imply a permission to
1378 create IPsec SAs with that address in the traffic selectors.
1379 However, some implementations are known to use policies where simply
1380 being reachable at some address X implies a temporary permission to
1381 create IPsec SAs for address X. Here "being reachable" usually means
1382 the ability to send (or spoof) IP packets with source address X and
1383 receive (or eavesdrop) packets sent to X.
1384
1385 Using this kind of policies or extensions with MOBIKE may need
1386 special care to enforce the temporary nature of the permission. For
1387 example, when the peer moves to some other address Y (and is no
1388 longer reachable at X), it might be necessary to close IPsec SAs with
1389 traffic selectors matching X. However, these interactions are beyond
1390 the scope of this document.
1391
1392 5.3. Denial-of-Service Attacks against Third Parties
1393
1394 Traffic redirection may be performed not just to gain access to the
1395 traffic or to deny service to the peers, but also to cause a denial-
1396 of-service attack on a third party. For instance, a high-speed TCP
1397 session or a multimedia stream may be redirected towards a victim
1398 host, causing its communications capabilities to suffer.
1399
1400
1401
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1404 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1405
1406
1407 The attackers in this threat can be either outsiders or even one of
1408 the IKEv2 peers. In usual VPN usage scenarios, attacks by the peers
1409 can be easily dealt with if the authentication performed in the
1410 initial IKEv2 negotiation can be traced to persons who can be held
1411 responsible for the attack. This may not be the case in all
1412 scenarios, particularly with opportunistic approaches to security.
1413
1414 If the attack is launched by an outsider, the traffic flow would
1415 normally stop soon due to the lack of responses (such as transport
1416 layer acknowledgements). However, if the original recipient of the
1417 flow is malicious, it could maintain the traffic flow for an extended
1418 period of time, since it often would be able to send the required
1419 acknowledgements (see [Aura02] for more discussion).
1420
1421 It should also be noted, as shown in [Bombing], that without ingress
1422 filtering in the attacker's network, such attacks are already
1423 possible simply by sending spoofed packets from the attacker to the
1424 victim directly. Furthermore, if the attacker's network has ingress
1425 filtering, this attack is largely prevented for MOBIKE as well.
1426 Consequently, it makes little sense to protect against attacks of
1427 similar nature in MOBIKE. However, it still makes sense to limit the
1428 amplification capabilities provided to attackers, so that they cannot
1429 use stream redirection to send a large number of packets to the
1430 victim by sending just a few packets themselves.
1431
1432 This specification includes return routability tests to limit the
1433 duration of any "third party bombing" attacks by off-path (relative
1434 to the victim) attackers. The tests are authenticated messages that
1435 the peer has to respond to, and can be performed before the address
1436 change takes effect, immediately afterwards, or even periodically
1437 during the session. The tests contain unpredictable data, and only
1438 someone who has the keys associated with the IKE SA and has seen the
1439 request packet can properly respond to the test.
1440
1441 The duration of the attack can also be limited if the victim reports
1442 the unwanted traffic to the originating IPsec tunnel endpoint using
1443 ICMP error messages or INVALID_SPI notifications. As described in
1444 [IKEv2], Section 2.21, this SHOULD trigger a liveness test, which
1445 also doubles as a return routability check if the COOKIE2
1446 notification is included.
1447
1448 5.4. Spoofing Network Connectivity Indications
1449
1450 Attackers may spoof various indications from lower layers and the
1451 network in an effort to confuse the peers about which addresses are
1452 or are not working. For example, attackers may spoof link-layer
1453 error messages in an effort to cause the parties to move their
1454 traffic elsewhere or even to disconnect. Attackers may also spoof
1455
1456
1457
1458 Eronen Standards Track [Page 26]
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1460 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1461
1462
1463 information related to network attachments, router discovery, and
1464 address assignments in an effort to make the parties believe they
1465 have Internet connectivity when, in reality, they do not.
1466
1467 This may cause use of non-preferred addresses or even denial of
1468 service.
1469
1470 MOBIKE does not provide any protection of its own for indications
1471 from other parts of the protocol stack. These vulnerabilities can be
1472 mitigated through the use of techniques specific to the other parts
1473 of the stack, such as validation of ICMP errors [ICMPAttacks], link
1474 layer security, or the use of [SEND] to protect IPv6 Router and
1475 Neighbor Discovery.
1476
1477 Ultimately, MOBIKE depends on the delivery of IKEv2 messages to
1478 determine which paths can be used. If IKEv2 messages sent using a
1479 particular source and destination addresses reach the recipient and a
1480 reply is received, MOBIKE will usually consider the path working; if
1481 no reply is received even after retransmissions, MOBIKE will suspect
1482 the path is broken. An attacker who can consistently control the
1483 delivery or non-delivery of the IKEv2 messages in the network can
1484 thus influence which addresses actually get used.
1485
1486 5.5. Address and Topology Disclosure
1487
1488 MOBIKE address updates and the ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS/
1489 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications reveal information about which
1490 networks the peers are connected to.
1491
1492 For example, consider a host A with two network interfaces: a
1493 cellular connection and a wired Ethernet connection to a company LAN.
1494 If host A now contacts host B using IKEv2 and sends
1495 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS/ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications, host B
1496 receives additional information it might not otherwise know. If host
1497 A used the cellular connection for the IKEv2 traffic, host B can also
1498 see the company LAN address (and perhaps further guess that host A is
1499 used by an employee of that company). If host A used the company LAN
1500 to make the connection, host B can see that host A has a subscription
1501 from this particular cellular operator.
1502
1503 These additional addresses can also disclose more accurate location
1504 information than just a single address. Suppose that host A uses its
1505 cellular connection for IKEv2 traffic, but also sends an
1506 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS notification containing an IP address
1507 corresponding to, say, a wireless LAN at a particular coffee shop
1508 location. It is likely that host B can now make a much better guess
1509 at A's location than would be possible based on the cellular IP
1510 address alone.
1511
1512
1513
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1516 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1517
1518
1519 Furthermore, as described in Section 3.4, some of the addresses could
1520 also be private addresses behind a NAT.
1521
1522 In many environments, disclosing address information is not a problem
1523 (and indeed it cannot be avoided if the hosts wish to use those
1524 addresses for IPsec traffic). For instance, a remote access VPN
1525 client could consider the corporate VPN gateway sufficiently
1526 trustworthy for this purpose. Furthermore, the
1527 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS and ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS notifications are
1528 sent encrypted, so the addresses are not visible to eavesdroppers
1529 (unless, of course, they are later used for sending IKEv2/IPsec
1530 traffic).
1531
1532 However, if MOBIKE is used in some more opportunistic approach, it
1533 can be desirable to limit the information that is sent. Naturally,
1534 the peers do not have to disclose any addresses they do not want to
1535 use for IPsec traffic. Also, as noted in Section 3.6, an initiator
1536 whose policy is to always use the locally configured responder
1537 address does not have to send any ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS/
1538 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS payloads.
1539
1540 6. IANA Considerations
1541
1542 This document does not create any new namespaces to be maintained by
1543 IANA, but it requires new values in namespaces that have been defined
1544 in the IKEv2 base specification [IKEv2].
1545
1546 This document defines several new IKEv2 notifications whose values
1547 have been allocated from the "IKEv2 Notify Message Types" namespace.
1548
1549 Notify Messages - Error Types Value
1550 ----------------------------- -----
1551 UNACCEPTABLE_ADDRESSES 40
1552 UNEXPECTED_NAT_DETECTED 41
1553
1554 Notify Messages - Status Types Value
1555 ------------------------------ -----
1556 MOBIKE_SUPPORTED 16396
1557 ADDITIONAL_IP4_ADDRESS 16397
1558 ADDITIONAL_IP6_ADDRESS 16398
1559 NO_ADDITIONAL_ADDRESSES 16399
1560 UPDATE_SA_ADDRESSES 16400
1561 COOKIE2 16401
1562 NO_NATS_ALLOWED 16402
1563
1564 These notifications are described in Section 4.
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570 Eronen Standards Track [Page 28]
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1572 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1573
1574
1575 7. Acknowledgements
1576
1577 This document is a collaborative effort of the entire MOBIKE WG. We
1578 would particularly like to thank Jari Arkko, Tuomas Aura, Marcelo
1579 Bagnulo, Stephane Beaulieu, Elwyn Davies, Lakshminath Dondeti,
1580 Francis Dupont, Paul Hoffman, James Kempf, Tero Kivinen, Pete McCann,
1581 Erik Nordmark, Mohan Parthasarathy, Pekka Savola, Bill Sommerfeld,
1582 Maureen Stillman, Shinta Sugimoto, Hannes Tschofenig, and Sami
1583 Vaarala. This document also incorporates ideas and text from earlier
1584 MOBIKE-like protocol proposals, including [AddrMgmt], [Kivinen],
1585 [MOPO], and [SMOBIKE], and the MOBIKE design document [Design].
1586
1587 8. References
1588
1589 8.1. Normative References
1590
1591 [IKEv2] Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2)
1592 Protocol", RFC 4306, December 2005.
1593
1594 [IPsecArch] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
1595 Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.
1596
1597 [KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
1598 Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.
1599
1600 8.2. Informative References
1601
1602 [AddrMgmt] Dupont, F., "Address Management for IKE version 2",
1603 Work in Progress, November 2005.
1604
1605 [Aura02] Aura, T., Roe, M., and J. Arkko, "Security of
1606 Internet Location Management", Proc. 18th Annual
1607 Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC),
1608 December 2002.
1609
1610 [Bombing] Dupont, F., "A note about 3rd party bombing in
1611 Mobile IPv6", Work in Progress, December 2005.
1612
1613 [Clarifications] Eronen, P. and P. Hoffman, "IKEv2 Clarifications
1614 and Implementation Guidelines", Work in Progress,
1615 February 2006.
1616
1617 [DNA4] Aboba, B., Carlson, J., and S. Cheshire, "Detecting
1618 Network Attachment in IPv4 (DNAv4)", RFC 4436,
1619 March 2006.
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626 Eronen Standards Track [Page 29]
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1628 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1629
1630
1631 [DNA6] Narayanan, S., Daley, G., and N. Montavont,
1632 "Detecting Network Attachment in IPv6 - Best
1633 Current Practices for hosts", Work in Progress,
1634 October 2005.
1635
1636 [Design] Kivinen, T. and H. Tschofenig, "Design of the
1637 MOBIKE protocol", Work in Progress, January 2006.
1638
1639 [ICMPAttacks] Gont, F., "ICMP attacks against TCP", Work in
1640 Progress, October 2005.
1641
1642 [Kivinen] Kivinen, T., "MOBIKE protocol", Work in Progress,
1643 February 2004.
1644
1645 [MIP4] Perkins, C., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4",
1646 RFC 3344, August 2002.
1647
1648 [MIP6] Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility
1649 Support in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.
1650
1651 [MOPO] Eronen, P., "Mobility Protocol Options for IKEv2
1652 (MOPO-IKE)", Work in Progress, February 2005.
1653
1654 [RFC2461] Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor
1655 Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 2461,
1656 December 1998.
1657
1658 [SEND] Arkko, J., Kempf, J., Zill, B., and P. Nikander,
1659 "SEcure Neighbor Discovery (SEND)", RFC 3971,
1660 March 2005.
1661
1662 [SMOBIKE] Eronen, P. and H. Tschofenig, "Simple Mobility and
1663 Multihoming Extensions for IKEv2 (SMOBIKE)",
1664 Work in Progress, March 2004.
1665
1666 [STUN] Rosenberg, J., Weinberger, J., Huitema, C., and R.
1667 Mahy, "STUN - Simple Traversal of User Datagram
1668 Protocol (UDP) Through Network Address Translators
1669 (NATs)", RFC 3489, March 2003.
1670
1671 [UNSAF] Daigle, L., "IAB Considerations for UNilateral
1672 Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address
1673 Translation", RFC 3424, November 2002.
1674
1675
1676
1677
1678
1679
1680
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1684 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1685
1686
1687 Appendix A. Implementation Considerations
1688
1689 A.1. Links from SPD Cache to Outbound SAD Entries
1690
1691 [IPsecArch], Section 4.4.2, says that "For outbound processing, each
1692 SAD entry is pointed to by entries in the SPD-S part of the SPD
1693 cache". The document does not specify how exactly this "pointing" is
1694 done, since this is an implementation detail that does not have to be
1695 standardized.
1696
1697 However, it is clear that the links between the SPD cache and the SAD
1698 have to be done correctly to ensure that outbound packets are sent
1699 over the right SA. Some implementations are known to have problems
1700 in this area.
1701
1702 In particular, simply storing the (remote tunnel header IP address,
1703 remote SPI) pair in the SPD cache is not sufficient, since the pair
1704 does not always uniquely identify a single SAD entry. For instance,
1705 two hosts behind the same NAT can accidentally happen to choose the
1706 same SPI value. The situation can also occur when a host is assigned
1707 an IP address previously used by some other host, and the SAs
1708 associated with the old host have not yet been deleted by Dead Peer
1709 Detection. This may lead to packets being sent over the wrong SA or,
1710 if the key management daemon ensures the pair is unique, denying the
1711 creation of otherwise valid SAs.
1712
1713 Storing the remote tunnel header IP address in the SPD cache may also
1714 complicate the implementation of MOBIKE, since the address can change
1715 during the lifetime of the SA. Thus, we recommend implementing the
1716 links between the SPD cache and the SAD in a way that does not
1717 require modification when the tunnel header IP address is updated by
1718 MOBIKE.
1719
1720 A.2. Creating Outbound SAs
1721
1722 When an outbound packet requires IPsec processing but no suitable SA
1723 exists, a new SA will be created. In this case, the host has to
1724 determine (1) who is the right peer for this SA, (2) whether the host
1725 already has an IKE_SA with this peer, and (3) if no IKE_SA exists,
1726 the IP address(es) of the peer for contacting it.
1727
1728 Neither [IPsecArch] nor MOBIKE specifies how exactly these three
1729 steps are carried out. [IPsecArch], Section 4.4.3.4, says:
1730
1731
1732
1733
1734
1735
1736
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1738 Eronen Standards Track [Page 31]
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1740 RFC 4555 MOBIKE Protocol June 2006
1741
1742
1743 For example, assume that IKE A receives an outbound packet
1744 destined for IP address X, a host served by a security gateway.
1745 RFC 2401 [RFC2401] and this document do not specify how A
1746 determines the address of the IKE peer serving X. However, any
1747 peer contacted by A as the presumed representative for X must be
1748 registered in the PAD in order to allow the IKE exchange to be
1749 authenticated. Moreover, when the authenticated peer asserts that
1750 it represents X in its traffic selector exchange, the PAD will be
1751 consulted to determine if the peer in question is authorized to
1752 represent X.
1753
1754 In step 1, there may be more than one possible peer (e.g., several
1755 security gateways that are allowed to represent X). In step 3, the
1756 host may need to consult a directory such as DNS to determine the
1757 peer IP address(es).
1758
1759 When performing these steps, implementations may use information
1760 contained in the SPD, the PAD, and possibly some other
1761 implementation-specific databases. Regardless of how exactly the
1762 steps are implemented, it is important to remember that IP addresses
1763 can change, and that an IP address alone does not always uniquely
1764 identify a single IKE peer (for the same reasons as why the
1765 combination of the remote IP address and SPI does not uniquely
1766 identify an outbound IPsec SA; see Appendix A.1). Thus, in steps 1
1767 and 2 it may be easier to identify the "right peer" using its
1768 authenticated identity instead of its current IP address. However,
1769 these implementation details are beyond the scope of this
1770 specification.
1771
1772 Author's Address
1773
1774 Pasi Eronen (editor)
1775 Nokia Research Center
1776 P.O. Box 407
1777 FIN-00045 Nokia Group
1778 Finland
1779
1780 EMail: pasi.eronen@nokia.com
1781
1782
1783
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
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1797
1798
1799 Full Copyright Statement
1800
1801 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
1802
1803 This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
1804 contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
1805 retain all their rights.
1806
1807 This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
1808 "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
1809 OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
1810 ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
1811 INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
1812 INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
1813 WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
1814
1815 Intellectual Property
1816
1817 The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
1818 Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
1819 pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
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1825
1826 Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
1827 assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
1828 attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
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1831 http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
1832
1833 The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
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1837 ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
1838
1839 Acknowledgement
1840
1841 Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
1842 Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850 Eronen Standards Track [Page 33]
1851 \f