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	new configuration structure: peer_cfg: configuration related to a peer (authenitcation, ...= ike_cfg: config to use for IKE setup (proposals) child_Cfg: config for CHILD_SA (proposals, traffic selectors) a peer_cfg has one ike_cfg and multiple child_cfg's stroke now uses fixed count of threads
		
			
				
	
	
		
			3252 lines
		
	
	
		
			127 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			3252 lines
		
	
	
		
			127 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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Network Working Group                                          P. Eronen
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Request for Comments: 4718                                         Nokia
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Category: Informational                                       P. Hoffman
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                                                          VPN Consortium
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                                                            October 2006
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           IKEv2 Clarifications and Implementation Guidelines
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Status of This Memo
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   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
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   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
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   memo is unlimited.
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Copyright Notice
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   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
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Abstract
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   This document clarifies many areas of the IKEv2 specification.  It
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   does not to introduce any changes to the protocol, but rather
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   provides descriptions that are less prone to ambiguous
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   interpretations.  The purpose of this document is to encourage the
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   development of interoperable implementations.
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 1]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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Table of Contents
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   1. Introduction ....................................................4
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   2. Creating the IKE_SA .............................................4
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      2.1. SPI Values in IKE_SA_INIT Exchange .........................4
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      2.2. Message IDs for IKE_SA_INIT Messages .......................5
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      2.3. Retransmissions of IKE_SA_INIT Requests ....................5
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      2.4. Interaction of COOKIE and INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD ...............6
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      2.5. Invalid Cookies ............................................8
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   3. Authentication ..................................................9
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      3.1. Data Included in AUTH Payload Calculation ..................9
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      3.2. Hash Function for RSA Signatures ...........................9
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      3.3. Encoding Method for RSA Signatures ........................10
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      3.4. Identification Type for EAP ...............................11
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      3.5. Identity for Policy Lookups When Using EAP ................11
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      3.6. Certificate Encoding Types ................................12
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      3.7. Shared Key Authentication and Fixed PRF Key Size ..........12
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      3.8. EAP Authentication and Fixed PRF Key Size .................13
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      3.9. Matching ID Payloads to Certificate Contents ..............13
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      3.10. Message IDs for IKE_AUTH Messages ........................14
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   4. Creating CHILD_SAs .............................................14
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      4.1. Creating SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange ............14
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      4.2. Creating an IKE_SA without a CHILD_SA .....................16
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      4.3. Diffie-Hellman for First CHILD_SA .........................16
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      4.4. Extended Sequence Numbers (ESN) Transform .................17
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      4.5. Negotiation of ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED ..............17
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      4.6. Negotiation of NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO ...................18
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      4.7. Semantics of Complex Traffic Selector Payloads ............18
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      4.8. ICMP Type/Code in Traffic Selector Payloads ...............19
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      4.9. Mobility Header in Traffic Selector Payloads ..............20
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      4.10. Narrowing the Traffic Selectors ..........................20
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      4.11. SINGLE_PAIR_REQUIRED .....................................21
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      4.12. Traffic Selectors Violating Own Policy ...................21
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      4.13. Traffic Selector Authorization ...........................22
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   5. Rekeying and Deleting SAs ......................................23
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      5.1. Rekeying SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange ............23
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      5.2. Rekeying the IKE_SA vs. Reauthentication ..................24
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      5.3. SPIs When Rekeying the IKE_SA .............................25
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      5.4. SPI When Rekeying a CHILD_SA ..............................25
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      5.5. Changing PRFs When Rekeying the IKE_SA ....................26
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      5.6. Deleting vs. Closing SAs ..................................26
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      5.7. Deleting a CHILD_SA Pair ..................................26
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      5.8. Deleting an IKE_SA ........................................27
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      5.9. Who is the original initiator of IKE_SA ...................27
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      5.10. Comparing Nonces .........................................27
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      5.11. Exchange Collisions ......................................28
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      5.12. Diffie-Hellman and Rekeying the IKE_SA ...................36
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 2]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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   6. Configuration Payloads .........................................37
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      6.1. Assigning IP Addresses ....................................37
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      6.2. Requesting any INTERNAL_IP4/IP6_ADDRESS ...................38
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      6.3. INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET/INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET ...................38
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      6.4. INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK ......................................41
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      6.5. Configuration Payloads for IPv6 ...........................42
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      6.6. INTERNAL_IP6_NBNS .........................................43
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      6.7. INTERNAL_ADDRESS_EXPIRY ...................................43
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      6.8. Address Assignment Failures ...............................44
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   7. Miscellaneous Issues ...........................................45
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      7.1. Matching ID_IPV4_ADDR and ID_IPV6_ADDR ....................45
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      7.2. Relationship of IKEv2 to RFC 4301 .........................45
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      7.3. Reducing the Window Size ..................................46
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      7.4. Minimum Size of Nonces ....................................46
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      7.5. Initial Zero Octets on Port 4500 ..........................46
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      7.6. Destination Port for NAT Traversal ........................47
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      7.7. SPI Values for Messages outside an IKE_SA .................47
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      7.8. Protocol ID/SPI Fields in Notify Payloads .................48
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      7.9. Which message should contain INITIAL_CONTACT ..............48
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      7.10. Alignment of Payloads ....................................48
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      7.11. Key Length Transform Attribute ...........................48
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      7.12. IPsec IANA Considerations ................................49
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      7.13. Combining ESP and AH .....................................50
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   8. Implementation Mistakes ........................................50
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   9. Security Considerations ........................................51
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   10. Acknowledgments ...............................................51
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   11. References ....................................................51
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      11.1. Normative References .....................................51
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      11.2. Informative References ...................................52
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   Appendix A. Exchanges and Payloads ................................54
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      A.1. IKE_SA_INIT Exchange ......................................54
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      A.2. IKE_AUTH Exchange without EAP .............................54
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      A.3. IKE_AUTH Exchange with EAP ................................55
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      A.4. CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange for Creating/Rekeying
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           CHILD_SAs .................................................56
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      A.5. CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange for Rekeying the IKE_SA ..........56
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      A.6. INFORMATIONAL Exchange ....................................56
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 3]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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1.  Introduction
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   This document clarifies many areas of the IKEv2 specification that
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   may be difficult to understand to developers not intimately familiar
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   with the specification and its history.  The clarifications in this
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   document come from the discussion on the IPsec WG mailing list, from
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   experience in interoperability testing, and from implementation
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   issues that have been brought to the editors' attention.
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   IKEv2/IPsec can be used for several different purposes, including
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   IPsec-based remote access (sometimes called the "road warrior" case),
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   site-to-site virtual private networks (VPNs), and host-to-host
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   protection of application traffic.  While this document attempts to
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   consider all of these uses, the remote access scenario has perhaps
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   received more attention here than the other uses.
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   This document does not place any requirements on anyone and does not
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   use [RFC2119] keywords such as "MUST" and "SHOULD", except in
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   quotations from the original IKEv2 documents.  The requirements are
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   given in the IKEv2 specification [IKEv2] and IKEv2 cryptographic
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   algorithms document [IKEv2ALG].
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   In this document, references to a numbered section (such as "Section
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   2.15") mean that section in [IKEv2].  References to mailing list
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   messages or threads refer to the IPsec WG mailing list at
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   ipsec@ietf.org.  Archives of the mailing list can be found at
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   <http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ipsec/index.html>.
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2.  Creating the IKE_SA
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2.1.  SPI Values in IKE_SA_INIT Exchange
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   Normal IKE messages include the initiator's and responder's Security
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   Parameter Indexes (SPIs), both of which are non-zero, in the IKE
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   header.  However, there are some corner cases where the IKEv2
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   specification is not fully consistent about what values should be
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   used.
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   First, Section 3.1 says that the Responder's SPI "...MUST NOT be zero
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   in any other message" (than the first message of the IKE_SA_INIT
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   exchange).  However, the figure in Section 2.6 shows the second
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   IKE_SA_INIT message as "HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE)", contradicting the text
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   in 3.1.
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   Since the responder's SPI identifies security-related state held by
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   the responder, and in this case no state is created, sending a zero
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   value seems reasonable.
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 4]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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   Second, in addition to cookies, there are several other cases when
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   the IKE_SA_INIT exchange does not result in the creation of an IKE_SA
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   (for instance, INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD or NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN).  What
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   responder SPI value should be used in the IKE_SA_INIT response in
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   this case?
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   Since the IKE_SA_INIT request always has a zero responder SPI, the
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   value will not be actually used by the initiator.  Thus, we think
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   sending a zero value is correct also in this case.
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   If the responder sends a non-zero responder SPI, the initiator should
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   not reject the response only for that reason.  However, when retrying
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   the IKE_SA_INIT request, the initiator will use a zero responder SPI,
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   as described in Section 3.1: "Responder's SPI [...]  This value MUST
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   be zero in the first message of an IKE Initial Exchange (including
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   repeats of that message including a cookie) [...]".  We believe the
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   intent was to cover repeats of that message due to other reasons,
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   such as INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD, as well.
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   (References: "INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD and clarifications document" thread,
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   Sep-Oct 2005.)
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2.2.  Message IDs for IKE_SA_INIT Messages
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   The Message ID for IKE_SA_INIT messages is always zero.  This
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   includes retries of the message due to responses such as COOKIE and
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   INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD.
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   This is because Message IDs are part of the IKE_SA state, and when
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   the responder replies to IKE_SA_INIT request with N(COOKIE) or
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   N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD), the responder does not allocate any state.
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   (References: "Question about N(COOKIE) and N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD)
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   combination" thread, Oct 2004.  Tero Kivinen's mail "Comments of
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   draft-eronen-ipsec-ikev2-clarifications-02.txt", 2005-04-05.)
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2.3.  Retransmissions of IKE_SA_INIT Requests
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   When a responder receives an IKE_SA_INIT request, it has to determine
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   whether the packet is a retransmission belonging to an existing
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   "half-open" IKE_SA (in which case the responder retransmits the same
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   response), or a new request (in which case the responder creates a
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   new IKE_SA and sends a fresh response).
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   The specification does not describe in detail how this determination
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   is done.  In particular, it is not sufficient to use the initiator's
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   SPI and/or IP address for this purpose: two different peers behind a
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   single NAT could choose the same initiator SPI (and the probability
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 5]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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   of this happening is not necessarily small, since IKEv2 does not
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   require SPIs to be chosen randomly).  Instead, the responder should
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   do the IKE_SA lookup using the whole packet or its hash (or at the
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   minimum, the Ni payload which is always chosen randomly).
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   For all other packets than IKE_SA_INIT requests, looking up right
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   IKE_SA is of course done based on the recipient's SPI (either the
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   initiator or responder SPI depending on the value of the Initiator
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   bit in the IKE header).
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2.4.  Interaction of COOKIE and INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD
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   There are two common reasons why the initiator may have to retry the
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   IKE_SA_INIT exchange: the responder requests a cookie or wants a
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   different Diffie-Hellman group than was included in the KEi payload.
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   Both of these cases are quite simple alone, but it is not totally
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   obvious what happens when they occur at the same time, that is, the
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   IKE_SA_INIT exchange is retried several times.
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   The main question seems to be the following: if the initiator
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   receives a cookie from the responder, should it include the cookie in
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   only the next retry of the IKE_SA_INIT request, or in all subsequent
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   retries as well?  Section 3.10.1 says that:
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      "This notification MUST be included in an IKE_SA_INIT request
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      retry if a COOKIE notification was included in the initial
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      response."
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   This could be interpreted as saying that when a cookie is received in
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   the initial response, it is included in all retries.  On the other
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   hand, Section 2.6 says that:
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      "Initiators who receive such responses MUST retry the
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      IKE_SA_INIT with a Notify payload of type COOKIE containing
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      the responder supplied cookie data as the first payload and
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      all other payloads unchanged."
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   Including the same cookie in later retries makes sense only if the
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   "all other payloads unchanged" restriction applies only to the first
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   retry, but not to subsequent retries.
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   It seems that both interpretations can peacefully coexist.  If the
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   initiator includes the cookie only in the next retry, one additional
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   roundtrip may be needed in some cases:
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Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 6]
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RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
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      Initiator                   Responder
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     -----------                 -----------
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      HDR(A,0), SAi1, KEi, Ni -->
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                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE)
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      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi, Ni  -->
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                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD)
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      HDR(A,0), SAi1, KEi', Ni -->
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                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE')
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      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE'), SAi1, KEi',Ni -->
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                              <-- HDR(A,B), SAr1, KEr, Nr
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   An additional roundtrip is needed also if the initiator includes the
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   cookie in all retries, but the responder does not support this
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   functionality.  For instance, if the responder includes the SAi1 and
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   KEi payloads in cookie calculation, it will reject the request by
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   sending a new cookie (see also Section 2.5 of this document for more
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						||
   text about invalid cookies):
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						||
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      Initiator                   Responder
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     -----------                 -----------
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      HDR(A,0), SAi1, KEi, Ni -->
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                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE)
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      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi, Ni  -->
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						||
                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD)
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						||
      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi', Ni -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE')
 | 
						||
      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE'), SAi1, KEi',Ni -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- HDR(A,B), SAr1, KEr, Nr
 | 
						||
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						||
   If both peers support including the cookie in all retries, a slightly
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						||
   shorter exchange can happen:
 | 
						||
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						||
      Initiator                   Responder
 | 
						||
     -----------                 -----------
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						||
      HDR(A,0), SAi1, KEi, Ni -->
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						||
                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE)
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						||
      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi, Ni  -->
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						||
                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD)
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						||
      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi', Ni -->
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						||
                              <-- HDR(A,B), SAr1, KEr, Nr
 | 
						||
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						||
   This document recommends that implementations should support this
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						||
   shorter exchange, but it must not be assumed the other peer also
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						||
   supports the shorter exchange.
 | 
						||
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						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 7]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In theory, even this exchange has one unnecessary roundtrip, as both
 | 
						||
   the cookie and Diffie-Hellman group could be checked at the same
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						||
   time:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Initiator                   Responder
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						||
     -----------                 -----------
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						||
      HDR(A,0), SAi1, KEi, Ni -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE),
 | 
						||
                                            N(INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD)
 | 
						||
      HDR(A,0), N(COOKIE), SAi1, KEi',Ni -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- HDR(A,B), SAr1, KEr, Nr
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, it is clear that this case is not allowed by the text in
 | 
						||
   Section 2.6, since "all other payloads" clearly includes the KEi
 | 
						||
   payload as well.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD and clarifications document" thread,
 | 
						||
   Sep-Oct 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
2.5.  Invalid Cookies
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There has been some confusion what should be done when an IKE_SA_INIT
 | 
						||
   request containing an invalid cookie is received ("invalid" in the
 | 
						||
   sense that its contents do not match the value expected by the
 | 
						||
   responder).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The correct action is to ignore the cookie and process the message as
 | 
						||
   if no cookie had been included (usually this means sending a response
 | 
						||
   containing a new cookie).  This is shown in Section 2.6 when it says
 | 
						||
   "The responder in that case MAY reject the message by sending another
 | 
						||
   response with a new cookie [...]".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Other possible actions, such as ignoring the whole request (or even
 | 
						||
   all requests from this IP address for some time), create strange
 | 
						||
   failure modes even in the absence of any malicious attackers and do
 | 
						||
   not provide any additional protection against DoS attacks.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Invalid Cookie" thread, Sep-Oct 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 8]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.  Authentication
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.1.  Data Included in AUTH Payload Calculation
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.15 describes how the AUTH payloads are calculated; this
 | 
						||
   calculation involves values prf(SK_pi,IDi') and prf(SK_pr,IDr').  The
 | 
						||
   text describes the method in words, but does not give clear
 | 
						||
   definitions of what is signed or MACed (i.e., protected with a
 | 
						||
   message authentication code).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The initiator's signed octets can be described as:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       InitiatorSignedOctets = RealMessage1 | NonceRData | MACedIDForI
 | 
						||
       GenIKEHDR = [ four octets 0 if using port 4500 ] | RealIKEHDR
 | 
						||
       RealIKEHDR =  SPIi | SPIr |  . . . | Length
 | 
						||
       RealMessage1 = RealIKEHDR | RestOfMessage1
 | 
						||
       NonceRPayload = PayloadHeader | NonceRData
 | 
						||
       InitiatorIDPayload = PayloadHeader | RestOfIDPayload
 | 
						||
       RestOfInitIDPayload = IDType | RESERVED | InitIDData
 | 
						||
       MACedIDForI = prf(SK_pi, RestOfInitIDPayload)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The responder's signed octets can be described as:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       ResponderSignedOctets = RealMessage2 | NonceIData | MACedIDForR
 | 
						||
       GenIKEHDR = [ four octets 0 if using port 4500 ] | RealIKEHDR
 | 
						||
       RealIKEHDR =  SPIi | SPIr |  . . . | Length
 | 
						||
       RealMessage2 = RealIKEHDR | RestOfMessage2
 | 
						||
       NonceIPayload = PayloadHeader | NonceIData
 | 
						||
       ResponderIDPayload = PayloadHeader | RestOfIDPayload
 | 
						||
       RestOfRespIDPayload = IDType | RESERVED | InitIDData
 | 
						||
       MACedIDForR = prf(SK_pr, RestOfRespIDPayload)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.2.  Hash Function for RSA Signatures
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.8 says that RSA digital signature is "Computed as specified
 | 
						||
   in section 2.15 using an RSA private key over a PKCS#1 padded hash."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Unlike IKEv1, IKEv2 does not negotiate a hash function for the
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA.  The algorithm for signatures is selected by the signing
 | 
						||
   party who, in general, may not know beforehand what algorithms the
 | 
						||
   verifying party supports.  Furthermore, [IKEv2ALG] does not say what
 | 
						||
   algorithms implementations are required or recommended to support.
 | 
						||
   This clearly has a potential for causing interoperability problems,
 | 
						||
   since authentication will fail if the signing party selects an
 | 
						||
   algorithm that is not supported by the verifying party, or not
 | 
						||
   acceptable according to the verifying party's policy.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                      [Page 9]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document recommends that all implementations support SHA-1 and
 | 
						||
   use SHA-1 as the default hash function when generating the
 | 
						||
   signatures, unless there are good reasons (such as explicit manual
 | 
						||
   configuration) to believe that the peer supports something else.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that hash function collision attacks are not important for the
 | 
						||
   AUTH payloads, since they are not intended for third-party
 | 
						||
   verification, and the data includes fresh nonces.  See [HashUse] for
 | 
						||
   more discussion about hash function attacks and IPsec.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Another reasonable choice would be to use the hash function that was
 | 
						||
   used by the CA when signing the peer certificate.  However, this does
 | 
						||
   not guarantee that the IKEv2 peer would be able to validate the AUTH
 | 
						||
   payload, because the same code might not be used to validate
 | 
						||
   certificate signatures and IKEv2 message signatures, and these two
 | 
						||
   routines may support a different set of hash algorithms.  The peer
 | 
						||
   could be configured with a fingerprint of the certificate, or
 | 
						||
   certificate validation could be performed by an external entity using
 | 
						||
   [SCVP].  Furthermore, not all CERT payloads types include a
 | 
						||
   signature, and the certificate could be signed with some algorithm
 | 
						||
   other than RSA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that unlike IKEv1, IKEv2 uses the PKCS#1 v1.5 [PKCS1v20]
 | 
						||
   signature encoding method (see next section for details), which
 | 
						||
   includes the algorithm identifier for the hash algorithm.  Thus, when
 | 
						||
   the verifying party receives the AUTH payload it can at least
 | 
						||
   determine which hash function was used.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Magnus Alstrom's mail "RE:", 2005-01-03.  Pasi Eronen's
 | 
						||
   reply, 2005-01-04.  Tero Kivinen's reply, 2005-01-04.  "First draft
 | 
						||
   of IKEv2.1" thread, Dec 2005/Jan 2006.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.3.  Encoding Method for RSA Signatures
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.8 says that the RSA digital signature is "Computed as
 | 
						||
   specified in section 2.15 using an RSA private key over a PKCS#1
 | 
						||
   padded hash."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The PKCS#1 specification [PKCS1v21] defines two different encoding
 | 
						||
   methods (ways of "padding the hash") for signatures.  However, the
 | 
						||
   Internet-Draft approved by the IESG had a reference to the older
 | 
						||
   PKCS#1 v2.0 [PKCS1v20].  That version has only one encoding method
 | 
						||
   for signatures (EMSA-PKCS1-v1_5), and thus there is no ambiguity.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 10]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that this encoding method is different from the encoding method
 | 
						||
   used in IKEv1.  If future revisions of IKEv2 provide support for
 | 
						||
   other encoding methods (such as EMSA-PSS), they will be given new
 | 
						||
   Auth Method numbers.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Pasi Eronen's mail "RE:", 2005-01-04.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.4.  Identification Type for EAP
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.5 defines several different types for identification
 | 
						||
   payloads, including, e.g., ID_FQDN, ID_RFC822_ADDR, and ID_KEY_ID.
 | 
						||
   EAP [EAP] does not mandate the use of any particular type of
 | 
						||
   identifier, but often EAP is used with Network Access Identifiers
 | 
						||
   (NAIs) defined in [NAI].  Although NAIs look a bit like email
 | 
						||
   addresses (e.g., "joe@example.com"), the syntax is not exactly the
 | 
						||
   same as the syntax of email address in [RFC822].  This raises the
 | 
						||
   question of which identification type should be used.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document recommends that ID_RFC822_ADDR identification type is
 | 
						||
   used for those NAIs that include the realm component.  Therefore,
 | 
						||
   responder implementations should not attempt to verify that the
 | 
						||
   contents actually conform to the exact syntax given in [RFC822] or
 | 
						||
   [RFC2822], but instead should accept any reasonable looking NAI.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For NAIs that do not include the realm component, this document
 | 
						||
   recommends using the ID_KEY_ID identification type.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "need your help on this IKEv2/i18n/EAP issue" and "IKEv2
 | 
						||
   identifier issue with EAP" threads, Aug 2004.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.5.  Identity for Policy Lookups When Using EAP
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   When the initiator authentication uses EAP, it is possible that the
 | 
						||
   contents of the IDi payload is used only for AAA routing purposes and
 | 
						||
   selecting which EAP method to use.  This value may be different from
 | 
						||
   the identity authenticated by the EAP method (see [EAP], Sections 5.1
 | 
						||
   and 7.3).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It is important that policy lookups and access control decisions use
 | 
						||
   the actual authenticated identity.  Often the EAP server is
 | 
						||
   implemented in a separate AAA server that communicates with the IKEv2
 | 
						||
   responder using, e.g., RADIUS [RADEAP].  In this case, the
 | 
						||
   authenticated identity has to be sent from the AAA server to the
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 responder.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Pasi Eronen's mail "RE: Reauthentication in IKEv2",
 | 
						||
   2004-10-28.  "Policy lookups" thread, Oct/Nov 2004.  RFC 3748,
 | 
						||
   Section 7.3.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 11]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.6.  Certificate Encoding Types
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.6 defines a total of twelve different certificate encoding
 | 
						||
   types, and continues that "Specific syntax is for some of the
 | 
						||
   certificate type codes above is not defined in this document."
 | 
						||
   However, the text does not provide references to other documents that
 | 
						||
   would contain information about the exact contents and use of those
 | 
						||
   values.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Without this information, it is not possible to develop interoperable
 | 
						||
   implementations.  Therefore, this document recommends that the
 | 
						||
   following certificate encoding values should not be used before new
 | 
						||
   specifications that specify their use are available.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        PKCS #7 wrapped X.509 certificate    1
 | 
						||
        PGP Certificate                      2
 | 
						||
        DNS Signed Key                       3
 | 
						||
        Kerberos Token                       6
 | 
						||
        SPKI Certificate                     9
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document recommends that most implementations should use only
 | 
						||
   those values that are "MUST"/"SHOULD" requirements in [IKEv2]; i.e.,
 | 
						||
   "X.509 Certificate - Signature" (4), "Raw RSA Key" (11), "Hash and
 | 
						||
   URL of X.509 certificate" (12), and "Hash and URL of X.509 bundle"
 | 
						||
   (13).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Furthermore, Section 3.7 says that the "Certificate Encoding" field
 | 
						||
   for the Certificate Request payload uses the same values as for
 | 
						||
   Certificate payload.  However, the contents of the "Certification
 | 
						||
   Authority" field are defined only for X.509 certificates (presumably
 | 
						||
   covering at least types 4, 10, 12, and 13).  This document recommends
 | 
						||
   that other values should not be used before new specifications that
 | 
						||
   specify their use are available.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The "Raw RSA Key" type needs one additional clarification.  Section
 | 
						||
   3.6 says it contains "a PKCS #1 encoded RSA key".  What this means is
 | 
						||
   a DER-encoded RSAPublicKey structure from PKCS#1 [PKCS1v21].
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.7.  Shared Key Authentication and Fixed PRF Key Size
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.15 says that "If the negotiated prf takes a fixed-size key,
 | 
						||
   the shared secret MUST be of that fixed size".  This statement is
 | 
						||
   correct: the shared secret must be of the correct size.  If it is
 | 
						||
   not, it cannot be used; there is no padding, truncation, or other
 | 
						||
   processing involved to force it to that correct size.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 12]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This requirement means that it is difficult to use these pseudo-
 | 
						||
   random functions (PRFs) with shared key authentication.  The authors
 | 
						||
   think this part of the specification was very poorly thought out, and
 | 
						||
   using PRFs with a fixed key size is likely to result in
 | 
						||
   interoperability problems.  Thus, we recommend that such PRFs should
 | 
						||
   not be used with shared key authentication.  PRF_AES128_XCBC
 | 
						||
   [RFC3664] originally used fixed key sizes; that RFC has been updated
 | 
						||
   to handle variable key sizes in [RFC4434].
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that Section 2.13 also contains text that is related to PRFs
 | 
						||
   with fixed key size: "When the key for the prf function has fixed
 | 
						||
   length, the data provided as a key is truncated or padded with zeros
 | 
						||
   as necessary unless exceptional processing is explained following the
 | 
						||
   formula".  However, this text applies only to the prf+ construction,
 | 
						||
   so it does not contradict the text in Section 2.15.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Paul Hoffman's mail "Re: ikev2-07: last nits",
 | 
						||
   2003-05-02.  Hugo Krawczyk's reply, 2003-05-12.  Thread "Question
 | 
						||
   about PRFs with fixed size key", Jan 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.8.  EAP Authentication and Fixed PRF Key Size
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   As described in the previous section, PRFs with a fixed key size
 | 
						||
   require a shared secret of exactly that size.  This restriction
 | 
						||
   applies also to EAP authentication.  For instance, a PRF that
 | 
						||
   requires a 128-bit key cannot be used with EAP since [EAP] specifies
 | 
						||
   that the MSK is at least 512 bits long.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Thread "Question about PRFs with fixed size key", Jan
 | 
						||
   2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.9.  Matching ID Payloads to Certificate Contents
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In IKEv1, there was some confusion about whether or not the
 | 
						||
   identities in certificates used to authenticate IKE were required to
 | 
						||
   match the contents of the ID payloads.  The PKI4IPsec Working Group
 | 
						||
   produced the document [PKI4IPsec] which covers this topic in much
 | 
						||
   more detail.  However, Section 3.5 of [IKEv2] explicitly says that
 | 
						||
   the ID payload "does not necessarily have to match anything in the
 | 
						||
   CERT payload".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 13]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
3.10.  Message IDs for IKE_AUTH Messages
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   According to Section 2.2, "The IKE_SA initial setup messages will
 | 
						||
   always be numbered 0 and 1."  That is true when the IKE_AUTH exchange
 | 
						||
   does not use EAP.  When EAP is used, each pair of messages has their
 | 
						||
   message numbers incremented.  The first pair of AUTH messages will
 | 
						||
   have an ID of 1, the second will be 2, and so on.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Question about MsgID in AUTH exchange" thread, April
 | 
						||
   2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.  Creating CHILD_SAs
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.1.  Creating SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 1.3's organization does not lead to clear understanding of
 | 
						||
   what is needed in which environment.  The section can be reorganized
 | 
						||
   with subsections for each use of the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange
 | 
						||
   (creating child SAs, rekeying IKE SAs, and rekeying child SAs.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The new Section 1.3 with subsections and the above changes might look
 | 
						||
   like the following.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   NEW-1.3 The CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange is used to create new CHILD_SAs and
 | 
						||
        to rekey both IKE_SAs and CHILD_SAs.  This exchange consists of
 | 
						||
        a single request/response pair, and some of its function was
 | 
						||
        referred to as a phase 2 exchange in IKEv1.  It MAY be initiated
 | 
						||
        by either end of the IKE_SA after the initial exchanges are
 | 
						||
        completed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        All messages following the initial exchange are
 | 
						||
        cryptographically protected using the cryptographic algorithms
 | 
						||
        and keys negotiated in the first two messages of the IKE
 | 
						||
        exchange.  These subsequent messages use the syntax of the
 | 
						||
        Encrypted Payload described in section 3.14.  All subsequent
 | 
						||
        messages include an Encrypted Payload, even if they are referred
 | 
						||
        to in the text as "empty".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The CREATE_CHILD_SA is used for rekeying IKE_SAs and CHILD_SAs.
 | 
						||
        This section describes the first part of rekeying, the creation
 | 
						||
        of new SAs; Section 2.8 covers the mechanics of rekeying,
 | 
						||
        including moving traffic from old to new SAs and the deletion of
 | 
						||
        the old SAs.  The two sections must be read together to
 | 
						||
        understand the entire process of rekeying.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 14]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        Either endpoint may initiate a CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange, so in
 | 
						||
        this section the term initiator refers to the endpoint
 | 
						||
        initiating this exchange.  An implementation MAY refuse all
 | 
						||
        CREATE_CHILD_SA requests within an IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The CREATE_CHILD_SA request MAY optionally contain a KE payload
 | 
						||
        for an additional Diffie-Hellman exchange to enable stronger
 | 
						||
        guarantees of forward secrecy for the CHILD_SA or IKE_SA.  The
 | 
						||
        keying material for the SA is a function of SK_d established
 | 
						||
        during the establishment of the IKE_SA, the nonces exchanged
 | 
						||
        during the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange, and the Diffie-Hellman
 | 
						||
        value (if KE payloads are included in the CREATE_CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
        exchange).  The details are described in sections 2.17 and 2.18.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        If a CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange includes a KEi payload, at least
 | 
						||
        one of the SA offers MUST include the Diffie-Hellman group of
 | 
						||
        the KEi.  The Diffie-Hellman group of the KEi MUST be an element
 | 
						||
        of the group the initiator expects the responder to accept
 | 
						||
        (additional Diffie-Hellman groups can be proposed).  If the
 | 
						||
        responder rejects the Diffie-Hellman group of the KEi payload,
 | 
						||
        the responder MUST reject the request and indicate its preferred
 | 
						||
        Diffie-Hellman group in the INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD Notification
 | 
						||
        payload.  In the case of such a rejection, the CREATE_CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
        exchange fails, and the initiator SHOULD retry the exchange with
 | 
						||
        a Diffie-Hellman proposal and KEi in the group that the
 | 
						||
        responder gave in the INVALID_KE_PAYLOAD.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   NEW-1.3.1 Creating New CHILD_SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        A CHILD_SA may be created by sending a CREATE_CHILD_SA request.
 | 
						||
        The CREATE_CHILD_SA request for creating a new CHILD_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
            Initiator                                 Responder
 | 
						||
           -----------                               -----------
 | 
						||
            HDR, SK {[N+], SA, Ni, [KEi],
 | 
						||
                       TSi, TSr}        -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The initiator sends SA offer(s) in the SA payload, a nonce in
 | 
						||
        the Ni payload, optionally a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEi
 | 
						||
        payload, and the proposed traffic selectors for the proposed
 | 
						||
        CHILD_SA in the TSi and TSr payloads.  The request can also
 | 
						||
        contain Notify payloads that specify additional details for the
 | 
						||
        CHILD_SA: these include IPCOMP_SUPPORTED, USE_TRANSPORT_MODE,
 | 
						||
        ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED, and NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 15]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The CREATE_CHILD_SA response for creating a new CHILD_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                       <--    HDR, SK {[N+], SA, Nr,
 | 
						||
                                                    [KEr], TSi, TSr}
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The responder replies with the accepted offer in an SA payload,
 | 
						||
        and a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEr payload if KEi was
 | 
						||
        included in the request and the selected cryptographic suite
 | 
						||
        includes that group.  As with the request, optional Notification
 | 
						||
        payloads can specify additional details for the CHILD_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        The traffic selectors for traffic to be sent on that SA are
 | 
						||
        specified in the TS payloads in the response, which may be a
 | 
						||
        subset of what the initiator of the CHILD_SA proposed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The text about rekeying SAs can be found in Section 5.1 of this
 | 
						||
   document.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.2.  Creating an IKE_SA without a CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   CHILD_SAs can be created either by being piggybacked on the IKE_AUTH
 | 
						||
   exchange, or using a separate CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange.  The
 | 
						||
   specification is not clear about what happens if creating the
 | 
						||
   CHILD_SA during the IKE_AUTH exchange fails for some reason.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Our recommendation in this situation is that the IKE_SA is created as
 | 
						||
   usual.  This is also in line with how the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange
 | 
						||
   works: a failure to create a CHILD_SA does not close the IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The list of responses in the IKE_AUTH exchange that do not prevent an
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA from being set up include at least the following:
 | 
						||
   NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN, TS_UNACCEPTABLE, SINGLE_PAIR_REQUIRED,
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_ADDRESS_FAILURE, and FAILED_CP_REQUIRED.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Questions about internal address" thread, April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.3.  Diffie-Hellman for First CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 1.2 shows that IKE_AUTH messages do not contain KEi/KEr or
 | 
						||
   Ni/Nr payloads.  This implies that the SA payload in IKE_AUTH
 | 
						||
   exchange cannot contain Transform Type 4 (Diffie-Hellman Group) with
 | 
						||
   any other value than NONE.  Implementations should probably leave the
 | 
						||
   transform out entirely in this case.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 16]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.4.  Extended Sequence Numbers (ESN) Transform
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The description of the ESN transform in Section 3.3 has be proved
 | 
						||
   difficult to understand.  The ESN transform has the following
 | 
						||
   meaning:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  A proposal containing one ESN transform with value 0 means "do not
 | 
						||
      use extended sequence numbers".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  A proposal containing one ESN transform with value 1 means "use
 | 
						||
      extended sequence numbers".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  A proposal containing two ESN transforms with values 0 and 1 means
 | 
						||
      "I support both normal and extended sequence numbers, you choose".
 | 
						||
      (Obviously this case is only allowed in requests; the response
 | 
						||
      will contain only one ESN transform.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In most cases, the exchange initiator will include either the first
 | 
						||
   or third alternative in its SA payload.  The second alternative is
 | 
						||
   rarely useful for the initiator: it means that using normal sequence
 | 
						||
   numbers is not acceptable (so if the responder does not support ESNs,
 | 
						||
   the exchange will fail with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that including the ESN transform is mandatory when creating
 | 
						||
   ESP/AH SAs (it was optional in earlier drafts of the IKEv2
 | 
						||
   specification).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Technical change needed to IKEv2 before publication",
 | 
						||
   "STRAW POLL: Dealing with the ESN negotiation interop issue in IKEv2"
 | 
						||
   and "Results of straw poll regarding: IKEv2 interoperability issue"
 | 
						||
   threads, March-April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.5.  Negotiation of ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The description of ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED notification in
 | 
						||
   Section 3.10.1 says that "This notification asserts that the sending
 | 
						||
   endpoint will NOT accept packets that contain Flow Confidentiality
 | 
						||
   (TFC) padding".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, the text does not say in which messages this notification
 | 
						||
   should be included, or whether the scope of this notification is a
 | 
						||
   single CHILD_SA or all CHILD_SAs of the peer.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Our interpretation is that the scope is a single CHILD_SA, and thus
 | 
						||
   this notification is included in messages containing an SA payload
 | 
						||
   negotiating a CHILD_SA.  If neither endpoint accepts TFC padding,
 | 
						||
   this notification will be included in both the request proposing an
 | 
						||
   SA and the response accepting it.  If this notification is included
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 17]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   in only one of the messages, TFC padding can still be sent in one
 | 
						||
   direction.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.6.  Negotiation of NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO notification is described in Section 3.10.1
 | 
						||
   simply as "Used for fragmentation control.  See [RFC4301] for
 | 
						||
   explanation."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC4301] says "Implementations that will transmit non-initial
 | 
						||
   fragments on a tunnel mode SA that makes use of non-trivial port (or
 | 
						||
   ICMP type/code or MH type) selectors MUST notify a peer via the IKE
 | 
						||
   NOTIFY NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO payload.  The peer MUST reject this
 | 
						||
   proposal if it will not accept non-initial fragments in this context.
 | 
						||
   If an implementation does not successfully negotiate transmission of
 | 
						||
   non-initial fragments for such an SA, it MUST NOT send such fragments
 | 
						||
   over the SA."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, it is not clear exactly how the negotiation works.  Our
 | 
						||
   interpretation is that the negotiation works the same way as for
 | 
						||
   IPCOMP_SUPPORTED and USE_TRANSPORT_MODE: sending non-first fragments
 | 
						||
   is enabled only if NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO notification is included
 | 
						||
   in both the request proposing an SA and the response accepting it.
 | 
						||
   In other words, if the peer "rejects this proposal", it only omits
 | 
						||
   NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO notification from the response, but does not
 | 
						||
   reject the whole CHILD_SA creation.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.7.  Semantics of Complex Traffic Selector Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   As described in Section 3.13, the TSi/TSr payloads can include one or
 | 
						||
   more individual traffic selectors.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There is no requirement that TSi and TSr contain the same number of
 | 
						||
   individual traffic selectors.  Thus, they are interpreted as follows:
 | 
						||
   a packet matches a given TSi/TSr if it matches at least one of the
 | 
						||
   individual selectors in TSi, and at least one of the individual
 | 
						||
   selectors in TSr.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For instance, the following traffic selectors:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        TSi = ((17, 100, 192.0.1.66-192.0.1.66),
 | 
						||
               (17, 200, 192.0.1.66-192.0.1.66))
 | 
						||
        TSr = ((17, 300, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255),
 | 
						||
               (17, 400, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255))
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   would match UDP packets from 192.0.1.66 to anywhere, with any of the
 | 
						||
   four combinations of source/destination ports (100,300), (100,400),
 | 
						||
   (200,300), and (200, 400).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 18]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This implies that some types of policies may require several CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
   pairs.  For instance, a policy matching only source/destination ports
 | 
						||
   (100,300) and (200,400), but not the other two combinations, cannot
 | 
						||
   be negotiated as a single CHILD_SA pair using IKEv2.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "IKEv2 Traffic Selectors?" thread, Feb 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.8.  ICMP Type/Code in Traffic Selector Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The traffic selector types 7 and 8 can also refer to ICMP type and
 | 
						||
   code fields.  As described in Section 3.13.1, "For the ICMP protocol,
 | 
						||
   the two one-octet fields Type and Code are treated as a single 16-bit
 | 
						||
   integer (with Type in the most significant eight bits and Code in the
 | 
						||
   least significant eight bits) port number for the purposes of
 | 
						||
   filtering based on this field."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since ICMP packets do not have separate source and destination port
 | 
						||
   fields, there is some room for confusion what exactly the four TS
 | 
						||
   payloads (two in the request, two in the response, each containing
 | 
						||
   both start and end port fields) should contain.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The answer to this question can be found from [RFC4301] Section
 | 
						||
   4.4.1.3.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   To give a concrete example, if a host at 192.0.1.234 wants to create
 | 
						||
   a transport mode SA for sending "Destination Unreachable" packets
 | 
						||
   (ICMPv4 type 3) to 192.0.2.155, but is not willing to receive them
 | 
						||
   over this SA pair, the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange would look like this:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Initiator                   Responder
 | 
						||
     -----------                 -----------
 | 
						||
      HDR, SK { N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE), SA, Ni,
 | 
						||
                TSi(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234),
 | 
						||
                TSr(1, 65535-0, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155) } -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
         <-- HDR, SK { N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE), SA, Nr,
 | 
						||
                       TSi(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234),
 | 
						||
                       TSr(1, 65535-0, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155) }
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since IKEv2 always creates IPsec SAs in pairs, two SAs are also
 | 
						||
   created in this case, even though the second SA is never used for
 | 
						||
   data traffic.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   An exchange creating an SA pair that can be used both for sending and
 | 
						||
   receiving "Destination Unreachable" places the same value in all the
 | 
						||
   port:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 19]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Initiator                   Responder
 | 
						||
     -----------                 -----------
 | 
						||
      HDR, SK { N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE), SA, Ni,
 | 
						||
                TSi(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234),
 | 
						||
                TSr(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155) } -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
         <-- HDR, SK { N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE), SA, Nr,
 | 
						||
                       TSi(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234),
 | 
						||
                       TSr(1, 0x0300-0x03FF, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155) }
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "ICMP and MH TSs for IKEv2" thread, Sep 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.9.  Mobility Header in Traffic Selector Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Traffic selectors can use IP Protocol ID 135 to match the IPv6
 | 
						||
   mobility header [MIPv6].  However, the IKEv2 specification does not
 | 
						||
   define how to represent the "MH Type" field in traffic selectors.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At some point, it was expected that this will be defined in a
 | 
						||
   separate document later.  However, [RFC4301] says that "For IKE, the
 | 
						||
   IPv6 mobility header message type (MH type) is placed in the most
 | 
						||
   significant eight bits of the 16 bit local "port" selector".  The
 | 
						||
   direction semantics of TSi/TSr port fields are the same as for ICMP
 | 
						||
   and are described in the previous section.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Tero Kivinen's mail "Issue #86: Add IPv6 mobility header
 | 
						||
   message type as selector", 2003-10-14.  "ICMP and MH TSs for IKEv2"
 | 
						||
   thread, Sep 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.10.  Narrowing the Traffic Selectors
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.9 describes how traffic selectors are negotiated when
 | 
						||
   creating a CHILD_SA.  A more concise summary of the narrowing process
 | 
						||
   is presented below.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  If the responder's policy does not allow any part of the traffic
 | 
						||
      covered by TSi/TSr, it responds with TS_UNACCEPTABLE.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  If the responder's policy allows the entire set of traffic covered
 | 
						||
      by TSi/TSr, no narrowing is necessary, and the responder can
 | 
						||
      return the same TSi/TSr values.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  Otherwise, narrowing is needed.  If the responder's policy allows
 | 
						||
      all traffic covered by TSi[1]/TSr[1] (the first traffic selectors
 | 
						||
      in TSi/TSr) but not entire TSi/TSr, the responder narrows to an
 | 
						||
      acceptable subset of TSi/TSr that includes TSi[1]/TSr[1].
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 20]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  If the responder's policy does not allow all traffic covered by
 | 
						||
      TSi[1]/TSr[1], but does allow some parts of TSi/TSr, it narrows to
 | 
						||
      an acceptable subset of TSi/TSr.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In the last two cases, there may be several subsets that are
 | 
						||
   acceptable (but their union is not); in this case, the responder
 | 
						||
   arbitrarily chooses one of them and includes ADDITIONAL_TS_POSSIBLE
 | 
						||
   notification in the response.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.11.  SINGLE_PAIR_REQUIRED
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The description of the SINGLE_PAIR_REQUIRED notify payload in
 | 
						||
   Sections 2.9 and 3.10.1 is not fully consistent.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   We do not attempt to describe this payload in this document either,
 | 
						||
   since it is expected that most implementations will not have policies
 | 
						||
   that require separate SAs for each address pair.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Thus, if only some part (or parts) of the TSi/TSr proposed by the
 | 
						||
   initiator is (are) acceptable to the responder, most responders
 | 
						||
   should simply narrow TSi/TSr to an acceptable subset (as described in
 | 
						||
   the last two paragraphs of Section 2.9), rather than use
 | 
						||
   SINGLE_PAIR_REQUIRED.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.12.  Traffic Selectors Violating Own Policy
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.9 describes traffic selector negotiation in great detail.
 | 
						||
   One aspect of this negotiation that may need some clarification is
 | 
						||
   that when creating a new SA, the initiator should not propose traffic
 | 
						||
   selectors that violate its own policy.  If this rule is not followed,
 | 
						||
   valid traffic may be dropped.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This is best illustrated by an example.  Suppose that host A has a
 | 
						||
   policy whose effect is that traffic to 192.0.1.66 is sent via host B
 | 
						||
   encrypted using Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), and traffic to
 | 
						||
   all other hosts in 192.0.1.0/24 is also sent via B, but encrypted
 | 
						||
   using Triple Data Encryption Standard (3DES).  Suppose also that host
 | 
						||
   B accepts any combination of AES and 3DES.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If host A now proposes an SA that uses 3DES, and includes TSr
 | 
						||
   containing (192.0.1.0-192.0.1.0.255), this will be accepted by host
 | 
						||
   B.  Now, host B can also use this SA to send traffic from 192.0.1.66,
 | 
						||
   but those packets will be dropped by A since it requires the use of
 | 
						||
   AES for those traffic.  Even if host A creates a new SA only for
 | 
						||
   192.0.1.66 that uses AES, host B may freely continue to use the first
 | 
						||
   SA for the traffic.  In this situation, when proposing the SA, host A
 | 
						||
   should have followed its own policy, and included a TSr containing
 | 
						||
   ((192.0.1.0-192.0.1.65),(192.0.1.67-192.0.1.255)) instead.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 21]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In general, if (1) the initiator makes a proposal "for traffic X
 | 
						||
   (TSi/TSr), do SA", and (2) for some subset X' of X, the initiator
 | 
						||
   does not actually accept traffic X' with SA, and (3) the initiator
 | 
						||
   would be willing to accept traffic X' with some SA' (!=SA), valid
 | 
						||
   traffic can be unnecessarily dropped since the responder can apply
 | 
						||
   either SA or SA' to traffic X'.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Question about "narrowing" ..." thread, Feb 2005.
 | 
						||
   "IKEv2 needs a "policy usage mode"..." thread, Feb 2005.  "IKEv2
 | 
						||
   Traffic Selectors?" thread, Feb 2005.  "IKEv2 traffic selector
 | 
						||
   negotiation examples", 2004-08-08.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
4.13.  Traffic Selector Authorization
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 relies on information in the Peer Authorization Database (PAD)
 | 
						||
   when determining what kind of IPsec SAs a peer is allowed to create.
 | 
						||
   This process is described in [RFC4301] Section 4.4.3.  When a peer
 | 
						||
   requests the creation of an IPsec SA with some traffic selectors, the
 | 
						||
   PAD must contain "Child SA Authorization Data" linking the identity
 | 
						||
   authenticated by IKEv2 and the addresses permitted for traffic
 | 
						||
   selectors.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For example, the PAD might be configured so that authenticated
 | 
						||
   identity "sgw23.example.com" is allowed to create IPsec SAs for
 | 
						||
   192.0.2.0/24, meaning this security gateway is a valid
 | 
						||
   "representative" for these addresses.  Host-to-host IPsec requires
 | 
						||
   similar entries, linking, for example, "fooserver4.example.com" with
 | 
						||
   192.0.1.66/32, meaning this identity a valid "owner" or
 | 
						||
   "representative" of the address in question.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   As noted in [RFC4301], "It is necessary to impose these constraints
 | 
						||
   on creation of child SAs to prevent an authenticated peer from
 | 
						||
   spoofing IDs associated with other, legitimate peers."  In the
 | 
						||
   example given above, a correct configuration of the PAD prevents
 | 
						||
   sgw23 from creating IPsec SAs with address 192.0.1.66 and prevents
 | 
						||
   fooserver4 from creating IPsec SAs with addresses from 192.0.2.0/24.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It is important to note that simply sending IKEv2 packets using some
 | 
						||
   particular address does not imply a permission to create IPsec SAs
 | 
						||
   with that address in the traffic selectors.  For example, even if
 | 
						||
   sgw23 would be able to spoof its IP address as 192.0.1.66, it could
 | 
						||
   not create IPsec SAs matching fooserver4's traffic.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IKEv2 specification does not specify how exactly IP address
 | 
						||
   assignment using configuration payloads interacts with the PAD.  Our
 | 
						||
   interpretation is that when a security gateway assigns an address
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 22]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   using configuration payloads, it also creates a temporary PAD entry
 | 
						||
   linking the authenticated peer identity and the newly allocated inner
 | 
						||
   address.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It has been recognized that configuring the PAD correctly may be
 | 
						||
   difficult in some environments.  For instance, if IPsec is used
 | 
						||
   between a pair of hosts whose addresses are allocated dynamically
 | 
						||
   using Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), it is extremely
 | 
						||
   difficult to ensure that the PAD specifies the correct "owner" for
 | 
						||
   each IP address.  This would require a mechanism to securely convey
 | 
						||
   address assignments from the DHCP server and link them to identities
 | 
						||
   authenticated using IKEv2.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Due to this limitation, some vendors have been known to configure
 | 
						||
   their PADs to allow an authenticated peer to create IPsec SAs with
 | 
						||
   traffic selectors containing the same address that was used for the
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 packets.  In environments where IP spoofing is possible (i.e.,
 | 
						||
   almost everywhere) this essentially allows any peer to create IPsec
 | 
						||
   SAs with any traffic selectors.  This is not an appropriate or secure
 | 
						||
   configuration in most circumstances.  See [Aura05] for an extensive
 | 
						||
   discussion about this issue, and the limitations of host-to-host
 | 
						||
   IPsec in general.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.  Rekeying and Deleting SAs
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.1.  Rekeying SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Continued from Section 4.1 of this document.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 NEW-1.3.2 Rekeying IKE_SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The CREATE_CHILD_SA request for rekeying an IKE_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          Initiator                                 Responder
 | 
						||
         -----------                               -----------
 | 
						||
          HDR, SK {SA, Ni, [KEi]} -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The initiator sends SA offer(s) in the SA payload, a nonce in
 | 
						||
      the Ni payload, and optionally a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEi
 | 
						||
      payload.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The CREATE_CHILD_SA response for rekeying an IKE_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                     <--    HDR, SK {SA, Nr, [KEr]}
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 23]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The responder replies (using the same Message ID to respond)
 | 
						||
      with the accepted offer in an SA payload, a nonce in the Nr
 | 
						||
      payload, and, optionally, a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEr
 | 
						||
      payload.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The new IKE_SA has its message counters set to 0, regardless of
 | 
						||
      what they were in the earlier IKE_SA.  The window size starts at
 | 
						||
      1 for any new IKE_SA.  The new initiator and responder SPIs are
 | 
						||
      supplied in the SPI fields of the SA payloads.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 NEW-1.3.3 Rekeying CHILD_SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The CREATE_CHILD_SA request for rekeying a CHILD_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
          Initiator                                 Responder
 | 
						||
         -----------                               -----------
 | 
						||
          HDR, SK {N(REKEY_SA), [N+], SA,
 | 
						||
              Ni, [KEi], TSi, TSr}  -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The leading Notify payload of type REKEY_SA identifies the
 | 
						||
      CHILD_SA being rekeyed, and it contains the SPI that the initiator
 | 
						||
      expects in the headers of inbound packets.  In addition, the
 | 
						||
      initiator sends SA offer(s) in the SA payload, a nonce in the Ni
 | 
						||
      payload, optionally a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEi payload,
 | 
						||
      and the proposed traffic selectors in the TSi and TSr payloads.
 | 
						||
      The request can also contain Notify payloads that specify
 | 
						||
      additional details for the CHILD_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The CREATE_CHILD_SA response for rekeying a CHILD_SA is:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                                     <--    HDR, SK {[N+], SA, Nr,
 | 
						||
                                                  [KEr], TSi, TSr}
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The responder replies with the accepted offer in an SA payload,
 | 
						||
      and a Diffie-Hellman value in the KEr payload if KEi was
 | 
						||
      included in the request and the selected cryptographic suite
 | 
						||
      includes that group.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      The traffic selectors for traffic to be sent on that SA are
 | 
						||
      specified in the TS payloads in the response, which may be a
 | 
						||
      subset of what the initiator of the CHILD_SA proposed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.2.  Rekeying the IKE_SA vs. Reauthentication
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Rekeying the IKE_SA and reauthentication are different concepts in
 | 
						||
   IKEv2.  Rekeying the IKE_SA establishes new keys for the IKE_SA and
 | 
						||
   resets the Message ID counters, but it does not authenticate the
 | 
						||
   parties again (no AUTH or EAP payloads are involved).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 24]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   While rekeying the IKE_SA may be important in some environments,
 | 
						||
   reauthentication (the verification that the parties still have access
 | 
						||
   to the long-term credentials) is often more important.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 does not have any special support for reauthentication.
 | 
						||
   Reauthentication is done by creating a new IKE_SA from scratch (using
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA_INIT/IKE_AUTH exchanges, without any REKEY_SA notify
 | 
						||
   payloads), creating new CHILD_SAs within the new IKE_SA (without
 | 
						||
   REKEY_SA notify payloads), and finally deleting the old IKE_SA (which
 | 
						||
   deletes the old CHILD_SAs as well).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This means that reauthentication also establishes new keys for the
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA and CHILD_SAs.  Therefore, while rekeying can be performed
 | 
						||
   more often than reauthentication, the situation where "authentication
 | 
						||
   lifetime" is shorter than "key lifetime" does not make sense.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   While creation of a new IKE_SA can be initiated by either party
 | 
						||
   (initiator or responder in the original IKE_SA), the use of EAP
 | 
						||
   authentication and/or configuration payloads means in practice that
 | 
						||
   reauthentication has to be initiated by the same party as the
 | 
						||
   original IKE_SA.  IKEv2 base specification does not allow the
 | 
						||
   responder to request reauthentication in this case; however, this
 | 
						||
   functionality is added in [ReAuth].
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Reauthentication in IKEv2" thread, Oct/Nov 2004.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.3.  SPIs When Rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.18 says that "New initiator and responder SPIs are supplied
 | 
						||
   in the SPI fields".  This refers to the SPI fields in the Proposal
 | 
						||
   structures inside the Security Association (SA) payloads, not the SPI
 | 
						||
   fields in the IKE header.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Tom Stiemerling's mail "Rekey IKE SA", 2005-01-24.
 | 
						||
   Geoffrey Huang's reply, 2005-01-24.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.4.  SPI When Rekeying a CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.10.1 says that in REKEY_SA notifications, "The SPI field
 | 
						||
   identifies the SA being rekeyed."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since CHILD_SAs always exist in pairs, there are two different SPIs.
 | 
						||
   The SPI placed in the REKEY_SA notification is the SPI the exchange
 | 
						||
   initiator would expect in inbound ESP or AH packets (just as in
 | 
						||
   Delete payloads).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 25]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.5.  Changing PRFs When Rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   When rekeying the IKE_SA, Section 2.18 says that "SKEYSEED for the
 | 
						||
   new IKE_SA is computed using SK_d from the existing IKE_SA as
 | 
						||
   follows:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      SKEYSEED = prf(SK_d (old), [g^ir (new)] | Ni | Nr)"
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If the old and new IKE_SA selected a different PRF, it is not totally
 | 
						||
   clear which PRF should be used.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since the rekeying exchange belongs to the old IKE_SA, it is the old
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA's PRF that is used.  This also follows the principle that the
 | 
						||
   same key (the old SK_d) should not be used with multiple
 | 
						||
   cryptographic algorithms.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that this may work poorly if the new IKE_SA's PRF has a fixed
 | 
						||
   key size, since the output of the PRF may not be of the correct size.
 | 
						||
   This supports our opinion earlier in the document that the use of
 | 
						||
   PRFs with a fixed key size is a bad idea.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Changing PRFs when rekeying the IKE_SA" thread, June
 | 
						||
   2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.6.  Deleting vs. Closing SAs
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IKEv2 specification talks about "closing" and "deleting" SAs, but
 | 
						||
   it is not always clear what exactly is meant.  However, other parts
 | 
						||
   of the specification make it clear that when local state related to a
 | 
						||
   CHILD_SA is removed, the SA must also be actively deleted with a
 | 
						||
   Delete payload.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In particular, Section 2.4 says that "If an IKE endpoint chooses to
 | 
						||
   delete CHILD_SAs, it MUST send Delete payloads to the other end
 | 
						||
   notifying it of the deletion".  Section 1.4 also explains that "ESP
 | 
						||
   and AH SAs always exist in pairs, with one SA in each direction.
 | 
						||
   When an SA is closed, both members of the pair MUST be closed."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.7.  Deleting a CHILD_SA Pair
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 1.4 describes how to delete SA pairs using the Informational
 | 
						||
   exchange: "To delete an SA, an INFORMATIONAL exchange with one or
 | 
						||
   more delete payloads is sent listing the SPIs (as they would be
 | 
						||
   expected in the headers of inbound packets) of the SAs to be deleted.
 | 
						||
   The recipient MUST close the designated SAs."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 26]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The "one or more delete payloads" phrase has caused some confusion.
 | 
						||
   You never send delete payloads for the two sides of an SA in a single
 | 
						||
   message.  If you have many SAs to delete at the same time (such as
 | 
						||
   the nested example given in that paragraph), you include delete
 | 
						||
   payloads for the inbound half of each SA in your Informational
 | 
						||
   exchange.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.8.  Deleting an IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since IKE_SAs do not exist in pairs, it is not totally clear what the
 | 
						||
   response message should contain when the request deleted the IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since there is no information that needs to be sent to the other side
 | 
						||
   (except that the request was received), an empty Informational
 | 
						||
   response seems like the most logical choice.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Question about delete IKE SA" thread, May 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.9.  Who is the original initiator of IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In the IKEv2 document, "initiator" refers to the party who initiated
 | 
						||
   the exchange being described, and "original initiator" refers to the
 | 
						||
   party who initiated the whole IKE_SA.  However, there is some
 | 
						||
   potential for confusion because the IKE_SA can be rekeyed by either
 | 
						||
   party.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   To clear up this confusion, we propose that "original initiator"
 | 
						||
   always refers to the party who initiated the exchange that resulted
 | 
						||
   in the current IKE_SA.  In other words, if the "original responder"
 | 
						||
   starts rekeying the IKE_SA, that party becomes the "original
 | 
						||
   initiator" of the new IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Paul Hoffman's mail "Original initiator in IKEv2",
 | 
						||
   2005-04-21.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.10.  Comparing Nonces
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.8 about rekeying says that "If redundant SAs are created
 | 
						||
   though such a collision, the SA created with the lowest of the four
 | 
						||
   nonces used in the two exchanges SHOULD be closed by the endpoint
 | 
						||
   that created it."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 27]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Here "lowest" uses an octet-by-octet (lexicographical) comparison
 | 
						||
   (instead of, for instance, comparing the nonces as large integers).
 | 
						||
   In other words, start by comparing the first octet; if they're equal,
 | 
						||
   move to the next octet, and so on.  If you reach the end of one
 | 
						||
   nonce, that nonce is the lower one.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "IKEv2 rekeying question" thread, July 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.  Exchange Collisions
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since IKEv2 exchanges can be initiated by both peers, it is possible
 | 
						||
   that two exchanges affecting the same SA partly overlap.  This can
 | 
						||
   lead to a situation where the SA state information is temporarily not
 | 
						||
   synchronized, and a peer can receive a request it cannot process in a
 | 
						||
   normal fashion.  Some of these corner cases are discussed in the
 | 
						||
   specification, some are not.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Obviously, using a window size greater than one leads to infinitely
 | 
						||
   more complex situations, especially if requests are processed out of
 | 
						||
   order.  In this section, we concentrate on problems that can arise
 | 
						||
   even with window size 1.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "IKEv2: invalid SPI in DELETE payload" thread, Dec 2005/
 | 
						||
   Jan 2006.  "Problem with exchanges collisions" thread, Dec 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.1.  Simultaneous CHILD_SA Close
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Probably the simplest case happens if both peers decide to close the
 | 
						||
   same CHILD_SA pair at the same time:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: D(SPIa) -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: D(SPIb)
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: ()
 | 
						||
      recv resp1
 | 
						||
      recv req2
 | 
						||
      send resp2: () -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv resp2
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This case is described in Section 1.4 and is handled by omitting the
 | 
						||
   Delete payloads from the response messages.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 28]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.2.  Simultaneous IKE_SA Close
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Both peers can also decide to close the IKE_SA at the same time.  The
 | 
						||
   desired end result is obvious; however, in certain cases the final
 | 
						||
   exchanges may not be fully completed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: D() -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: D()
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, host B should reply as usual (with empty Informational
 | 
						||
   response), close the IKE_SA, and stop retransmitting req2.  This is
 | 
						||
   because once host A receives resp1, it may not be able to reply any
 | 
						||
   longer.  The situation is symmetric, so host A should behave the same
 | 
						||
   way.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: ()
 | 
						||
      send resp2: ()
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Even if neither resp1 nor resp2 ever arrives, the end result is still
 | 
						||
   correct: the IKE_SA is gone.  The same happens if host A never
 | 
						||
   receives req2.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.3.  Simultaneous CHILD_SA Rekeying
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Another case that is described in the specification is simultaneous
 | 
						||
   rekeying.  Section 2.8 says
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      "If the two ends have the same lifetime policies, it is possible
 | 
						||
      that both will initiate a rekeying at the same time (which will
 | 
						||
      result in redundant SAs).  To reduce the probability of this
 | 
						||
      happening, the timing of rekeying requests SHOULD be jittered
 | 
						||
      (delayed by a random amount of time after the need for rekeying is
 | 
						||
      noticed).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      This form of rekeying may temporarily result in multiple similar
 | 
						||
      SAs between the same pairs of nodes.  When there are two SAs
 | 
						||
      eligible to receive packets, a node MUST accept incoming packets
 | 
						||
      through either SA.  If redundant SAs are created though such a
 | 
						||
      collision, the SA created with the lowest of the four nonces used
 | 
						||
      in the two exchanges SHOULD be closed by the endpoint that created
 | 
						||
      it."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 29]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, a better explanation on what impact this has on
 | 
						||
   implementations is needed.  Assume that hosts A and B have an
 | 
						||
   existing IPsec SA pair with SPIs (SPIa1,SPIb1), and both start
 | 
						||
   rekeying it at the same time:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: N(REKEY_SA,SPIa1),
 | 
						||
         SA(..,SPIa2,..),Ni1,..  -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: N(REKEY_SA,SPIb1),
 | 
						||
                                     SA(..,SPIb2,..),Ni2,..
 | 
						||
      recv req2 <--
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, A knows there is a simultaneous rekeying going on.
 | 
						||
   However, it cannot yet know which of the exchanges will have the
 | 
						||
   lowest nonce, so it will just note the situation and respond as
 | 
						||
   usual.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      send resp2: SA(..,SPIa3,..),Nr1,.. -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Now B also knows that simultaneous rekeying is going on.  Similarly
 | 
						||
   as host A, it has to respond as usual.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: SA(..,SPIb3,..),Nr2,..
 | 
						||
       recv resp1 <--
 | 
						||
                              --> recv resp2
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, there are three CHILD_SA pairs between A and B (the
 | 
						||
   old one and two new ones).  A and B can now compare the nonces.
 | 
						||
   Suppose that the lowest nonce was Nr1 in message resp2; in this case,
 | 
						||
   B (the sender of req2) deletes the redundant new SA, and A (the node
 | 
						||
   that initiated the surviving rekeyed SA) deletes the old one.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      send req3: D(SPIa1) -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req4: D(SPIb2)
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req3
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp4: D(SPIb1)
 | 
						||
      recv req4 <--
 | 
						||
      send resp4: D(SPIa3) -->
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The rekeying is now finished.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, there is a second possible sequence of events that can
 | 
						||
   happen if some packets are lost in the network, resulting in
 | 
						||
   retransmissions.  The rekeying begins as usual, but A's first packet
 | 
						||
   (req1) is lost.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 30]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: N(REKEY_SA,SPIa1),
 | 
						||
         SA(..,SPIa2,..),Ni1,..  -->  (lost)
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: N(REKEY_SA,SPIb1),
 | 
						||
                                     SA(..,SPIb2,..),Ni2,..
 | 
						||
      recv req2 <--
 | 
						||
      send resp2: SA(..,SPIa3,..),Nr1,.. -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv resp2
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req3: D(SPIb1)
 | 
						||
      recv req3 <--
 | 
						||
      send resp3: D(SPIa1) -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv resp3
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   From B's point of view, the rekeying is now completed, and since it
 | 
						||
   has not yet received A's req1, it does not even know that these was
 | 
						||
   simultaneous rekeying.  However, A will continue retransmitting the
 | 
						||
   message, and eventually it will reach B.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      resend req1 -->
 | 
						||
                               --> recv req1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   What should B do in this point?  To B, it looks like A is trying to
 | 
						||
   rekey an SA that no longer exists; thus failing the request with
 | 
						||
   something non-fatal such as NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN seems like a
 | 
						||
   reasonable approach.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                               <-- send resp1: N(NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN)
 | 
						||
      recv resp1 <--
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   When A receives this error, it already knows there was simultaneous
 | 
						||
   rekeying, so it can ignore the error message.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.4.  Simultaneous IKE_SA Rekeying
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Probably the most complex case occurs when both peers try to rekey
 | 
						||
   the IKE_SA at the same time.  Basically, the text in Section 2.8
 | 
						||
   applies to this case as well; however, it is important to ensure that
 | 
						||
   the CHILD_SAs are inherited by the right IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The case where both endpoints notice the simultaneous rekeying works
 | 
						||
   the same way as with CHILD_SAs.  After the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchanges,
 | 
						||
   three IKE_SAs exist between A and B; the one containing the lowest
 | 
						||
   nonce inherits the CHILD_SAs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, there is a twist to the other case where one rekeying
 | 
						||
   finishes first:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 31]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1:
 | 
						||
         SA(..,SPIa1,..),Ni1,.. -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: SA(..,SPIb1,..),Ni2,..
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: SA(..,SPIb2,..),Nr2,..
 | 
						||
      recv resp1 <--
 | 
						||
      send req3: D() -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req3
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, host B sees a request to close the IKE_SA.  There's
 | 
						||
   not much more to do than to reply as usual.  However, at this point
 | 
						||
   host B should stop retransmitting req2, since once host A receives
 | 
						||
   resp3, it will delete all the state associated with the old IKE_SA
 | 
						||
   and will not be able to reply to it.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp3: ()
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.5.  Closing and Rekeying a CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A case similar to simultaneous rekeying can occur if one peer decides
 | 
						||
   to close an SA and the other peer tries to rekey it:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: D(SPIa) -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: N(REKEY_SA,SPIb),SA,..
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, host B notices that host A is trying to close an SA
 | 
						||
   that host B is currently rekeying.  Replying as usual is probably the
 | 
						||
   best choice:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: D(SPIb)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Depending on in which order req2 and resp1 arrive, host A sees either
 | 
						||
   a request to rekey an SA that it is currently closing, or a request
 | 
						||
   to rekey an SA that does not exist.  In both cases,
 | 
						||
   NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN is probably fine.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      recv req2
 | 
						||
      recv resp1
 | 
						||
      send resp2: N(NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN) -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv resp2
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 32]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.6.  Closing a New CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Yet another case occurs when host A creates a CHILD_SA pair, but soon
 | 
						||
   thereafter host B decides to delete it (possible because its policy
 | 
						||
   changed):
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: [N(REKEY_SA,SPIa1)],
 | 
						||
         SA(..,SPIa2,..),.. -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
                       (lost) <-- send resp1: SA(..,SPIb2,..),..
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: D(SPIb2)
 | 
						||
      recv req2
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, host A has not yet received message resp1 (and is
 | 
						||
   retransmitting message req1), so it does not recognize SPIb in
 | 
						||
   message req2.  What should host A do?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   One option would be to reply with an empty Informational response.
 | 
						||
   However, this same reply would also be sent if host A has received
 | 
						||
   resp1, but has already sent a new request to delete the SA that was
 | 
						||
   just created.  This would lead to a situation where the peers are no
 | 
						||
   longer in sync about which SAs exist between them.  However, host B
 | 
						||
   would eventually notice that the other half of the CHILD_SA pair has
 | 
						||
   not been deleted.  Section 1.4 describes this case and notes that "a
 | 
						||
   node SHOULD regard half-closed connections as anomalous and audit
 | 
						||
   their existence should they persist", and continues that "if
 | 
						||
   connection state becomes sufficiently messed up, a node MAY close the
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Another solution that has been proposed is to reply with an
 | 
						||
   INVALID_SPI notification that contains SPIb.  This would explicitly
 | 
						||
   tell host B that the SA was not deleted, so host B could try deleting
 | 
						||
   it again later.  However, this usage is not part of the IKEv2
 | 
						||
   specification and would not be in line with normal use of the
 | 
						||
   INVALID_SPI notification where the data field contains the SPI the
 | 
						||
   recipient of the notification would put in outbound packets.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Yet another solution would be to ignore req2 at this time and wait
 | 
						||
   until we have received resp1.  However, this alternative has not been
 | 
						||
   fully analyzed at this time; in general, ignoring valid requests is
 | 
						||
   always a bit dangerous, because both endpoints could do it, leading
 | 
						||
   to a deadlock.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document recommends the first alternative.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 33]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.7.  Rekeying a New CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Yet another case occurs when a CHILD_SA is rekeyed soon after it has
 | 
						||
   been created:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: [N(REKEY_SA,SPIa1)],
 | 
						||
         SA(..,SPIa2,..),..  -->
 | 
						||
                       (lost) <-- send resp1: SA(..,SPIb2,..),..
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: N(REKEY_SA,SPIb2),
 | 
						||
                                     SA(..,SPIb3,..),..
 | 
						||
      recv req2 <--
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   To host A, this looks like a request to rekey an SA that does not
 | 
						||
   exist.  Like in the simultaneous rekeying case, replying with
 | 
						||
   NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN is probably reasonable:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      send resp2: N(NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN) -->
 | 
						||
      recv resp1
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.8.  Collisions with IKE_SA Rekeying
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Another set of cases occurs when one peer starts rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
   at the same time the other peer starts creating, rekeying, or closing
 | 
						||
   a CHILD_SA.  Suppose that host B starts creating a CHILD_SA, and soon
 | 
						||
   after, host A starts rekeying the IKE_SA:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req1: SA,Ni1,TSi,TSr
 | 
						||
      send req2: SA,Ni2,.. -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req2
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   What should host B do at this point?  Replying as usual would seem
 | 
						||
   like a reasonable choice:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp2: SA,Ni2,..
 | 
						||
      recv resp2 <--
 | 
						||
      send req3: D() -->
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req3
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Now, a problem arises: If host B now replies normally with an empty
 | 
						||
   Informational response, this will cause host A to delete state
 | 
						||
   associated with the IKE_SA.  This means host B should stop
 | 
						||
   retransmitting req1.  However, host B cannot know whether or not host
 | 
						||
   A has received req1.  If host A did receive it, it will move the
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 34]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   CHILD_SA to the new IKE_SA as usual, and the state information will
 | 
						||
   then be out of sync.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It seems this situation is tricky to handle correctly.  Our proposal
 | 
						||
   is as follows: if a host receives a request to rekey the IKE_SA when
 | 
						||
   it has CHILD_SAs in "half-open" state (currently being created or
 | 
						||
   rekeyed), it should reply with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.  If a host
 | 
						||
   receives a request to create or rekey a CHILD_SA after it has started
 | 
						||
   rekeying the IKE_SA, it should reply with NO_ADDITIONAL_SAS.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The case where CHILD_SAs are being closed is even worse.  Our
 | 
						||
   recommendation is that if a host receives a request to rekey the
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA when it has CHILD_SAs in "half-closed" state (currently being
 | 
						||
   closed), it should reply with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.  And if a host
 | 
						||
   receives a request to close a CHILD_SA after it has started rekeying
 | 
						||
   the IKE_SA, it should reply with an empty Informational response.
 | 
						||
   This ensures that at least the other peer will eventually notice that
 | 
						||
   the CHILD_SA is still in "half-closed" state and will start a new
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA from scratch.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.9.  Closing and Rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The final case considered in this section occurs if one peer decides
 | 
						||
   to close the IKE_SA while the other peer tries to rekey it.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      Host A                      Host B
 | 
						||
     --------                    --------
 | 
						||
      send req1: SA(..,SPIa1,..),Ni1 -->
 | 
						||
                              <-- send req2: D()
 | 
						||
                              --> recv req1
 | 
						||
      recv req2 <--
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   At this point, host B should probably reply with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN,
 | 
						||
   and host A should reply as usual, close the IKE_SA, and stop
 | 
						||
   retransmitting req1.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                              <-- send resp1: N(NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN)
 | 
						||
      send resp2: ()
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If host A wants to continue communication with B, it can now start a
 | 
						||
   new IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.11.10.  Summary
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If a host receives a request to rekey:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that the host is currently trying to close: reply
 | 
						||
      with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 35]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that the host is currently rekeying: reply as
 | 
						||
      usual, but prepare to close redundant SAs later based on the
 | 
						||
      nonces.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that does not exist: reply with
 | 
						||
      NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  the IKE_SA, and the host is currently rekeying the IKE_SA: reply
 | 
						||
      as usual, but prepare to close redundant SAs and move inherited
 | 
						||
      CHILD_SAs later based on the nonces.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  the IKE_SA, and the host is currently creating, rekeying, or
 | 
						||
      closing a CHILD_SA: reply with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  the IKE_SA, and the host is currently trying to close the IKE_SA:
 | 
						||
      reply with NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If a host receives a request to close:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that the host is currently trying to close: reply
 | 
						||
      without Delete payloads.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that the host is currently rekeying: reply as
 | 
						||
      usual, with Delete payload.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  a CHILD_SA pair that does not exist: reply without Delete
 | 
						||
      payloads.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  the IKE_SA, and the host is currently rekeying the IKE_SA: reply
 | 
						||
      as usual, and forget about our own rekeying request.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  the IKE_SA, and the host is currently trying to close the IKE_SA:
 | 
						||
      reply as usual, and forget about our own close request.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If a host receives a request to create or rekey a CHILD_SA when it is
 | 
						||
   currently rekeying the IKE_SA: reply with NO_ADDITIONAL_SAS.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If a host receives a request to delete a CHILD_SA when it is
 | 
						||
   currently rekeying the IKE_SA: reply without Delete payloads.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
5.12.  Diffie-Hellman and Rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There has been some confusion whether doing a new Diffie-Hellman
 | 
						||
   exchange is mandatory when the IKE_SA is rekeyed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It seems that this case is allowed by the IKEv2 specification.
 | 
						||
   Section 2.18 shows the Diffie-Hellman term (g^ir) in brackets.
 | 
						||
   Section 3.3.3 does not contradict this when it says that including
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 36]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   the D-H transform is mandatory: although including the transform is
 | 
						||
   mandatory, it can contain the value "NONE".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, having the option to skip the Diffie-Hellman exchange when
 | 
						||
   rekeying the IKE_SA does not add useful functionality to the
 | 
						||
   protocol.  The main purpose of rekeying the IKE_SA is to ensure that
 | 
						||
   the compromise of old keying material does not provide information
 | 
						||
   about the current keys, or vice versa.  This requires performing the
 | 
						||
   Diffie-Hellman exchange when rekeying.  Furthermore, it is likely
 | 
						||
   that this option would have been removed from the protocol as
 | 
						||
   unnecessary complexity had it been discussed earlier.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Given this, we recommend that implementations should have a hard-
 | 
						||
   coded policy that requires performing a new Diffie-Hellman exchange
 | 
						||
   when rekeying the IKE_SA.  In other words, the initiator should not
 | 
						||
   propose the value "NONE" for the D-H transform, and the responder
 | 
						||
   should not accept such a proposal.  This policy also implies that a
 | 
						||
   successful exchange rekeying the IKE_SA always includes the KEi/KEr
 | 
						||
   payloads.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Rekeying IKE_SAs with the CREATE_CHILD_SA exhange"
 | 
						||
   thread, Oct 2005.  "Comments of
 | 
						||
   draft-eronen-ipsec-ikev2-clarifications-02.txt" thread, Apr 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.  Configuration Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.1.  Assigning IP Addresses
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.9 talks about traffic selector negotiation and mentions
 | 
						||
   that "In support of the scenario described in section 1.1.3, an
 | 
						||
   initiator may request that the responder assign an IP address and
 | 
						||
   tell the initiator what it is."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This sentence is correct, but its placement is slightly confusing.
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 does allow the initiator to request assignment of an IP address
 | 
						||
   from the responder, but this is done using configuration payloads,
 | 
						||
   not traffic selector payloads.  An address in a TSi payload in a
 | 
						||
   response does not mean that the responder has assigned that address
 | 
						||
   to the initiator; it only means that if packets matching these
 | 
						||
   traffic selectors are sent by the initiator, IPsec processing can be
 | 
						||
   performed as agreed for this SA.  The TSi payload itself does not
 | 
						||
   give the initiator permission to configure the initiator's TCP/IP
 | 
						||
   stack with the address and use it as its source address.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In other words, IKEv2 does not have two different mechanisms for
 | 
						||
   assigning addresses, but only one: configuration payloads.  In the
 | 
						||
   scenario described in Section 1.1.3, both configuration and traffic
 | 
						||
   selector payloads are usually included in the same message, and they
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 37]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   often contain the same information in the response message (see
 | 
						||
   Section 6.3 of this document for some examples).  However, their
 | 
						||
   semantics are still different.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.2.  Requesting any INTERNAL_IP4/IP6_ADDRESS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   When describing the INTERNAL_IP4/IP6_ADDRESS attributes, Section
 | 
						||
   3.15.1 says that "In a request message, the address specified is a
 | 
						||
   requested address (or zero if no specific address is requested)".
 | 
						||
   The question here is whether "zero" means an address "0.0.0.0" or a
 | 
						||
   zero-length string.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Earlier, the same section also says that "If an attribute in the
 | 
						||
   CFG_REQUEST Configuration Payload is not zero-length, it is taken as
 | 
						||
   a suggestion for that attribute".  Also, the table of configuration
 | 
						||
   attributes shows that the length of INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS is either "0
 | 
						||
   or 4 octets", and likewise, INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS is either "0 or 17
 | 
						||
   octets".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Thus, if the client does not request a specific address, it includes
 | 
						||
   a zero-length INTERNAL_IP4/IP6_ADDRESS attribute, not an attribute
 | 
						||
   containing an all-zeroes address.  The example in 2.19 is thus
 | 
						||
   incorrect, since it shows the attribute as
 | 
						||
   "INTERNAL_ADDRESS(0.0.0.0)".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, since the value is only a suggestion, implementations are
 | 
						||
   recommended to ignore suggestions they do not accept; or in other
 | 
						||
   words, to treat the same way a zero-length INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS,
 | 
						||
   "0.0.0.0", and any other addresses the implementation does not
 | 
						||
   recognize as a reasonable suggestion.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.3.  INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET/INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.15.1 describes the INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET as "The protected
 | 
						||
   sub-networks that this edge-device protects.  This attribute is made
 | 
						||
   up of two fields: the first is an IP address and the second is a
 | 
						||
   netmask.  Multiple sub-networks MAY be requested.  The responder MAY
 | 
						||
   respond with zero or more sub-network attributes."
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET is defined in a similar manner.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This raises two questions: first, since this information is usually
 | 
						||
   included in the TSr payload, what functionality does this attribute
 | 
						||
   add?  And second, what does this attribute mean in CFG_REQUESTs?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For the first question, there seem to be two sensible
 | 
						||
   interpretations.  Clearly TSr (in IKE_AUTH or CREATE_CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
   response) indicates which subnets are accessible through the SA that
 | 
						||
   was just created.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 38]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The first interpretation of the INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET attributes is
 | 
						||
   that they indicate additional subnets that can be reached through
 | 
						||
   this gateway, but need a separate SA.  According to this
 | 
						||
   interpretation, the INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET attributes are useful
 | 
						||
   mainly when they contain addresses not included in TSr.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The second interpretation is that the INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET
 | 
						||
   attributes express the gateway's policy about what traffic should be
 | 
						||
   sent through the gateway.  The client can choose whether other
 | 
						||
   traffic (covered by TSr, but not in INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET) is sent
 | 
						||
   through the gateway or directly to the destination.  According to
 | 
						||
   this interpretation, the attributes are useful mainly when TSr
 | 
						||
   contains addresses not included in the INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET
 | 
						||
   attributes.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It turns out that these two interpretations are not incompatible, but
 | 
						||
   rather two sides of the same principle: traffic to the addresses
 | 
						||
   listed in the INTERNAL_IP4/6_SUBNET attributes should be sent via
 | 
						||
   this gateway.  If there are no existing IPsec SAs whose traffic
 | 
						||
   selectors cover the address in question, new SAs have to be created.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A couple of examples are given below.  For instance, if there are two
 | 
						||
   subnets, 192.0.1.0/26 and 192.0.2.0/24, and the client's request
 | 
						||
   contains the following:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REQUEST) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS()
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Then a valid response could be the following (in which TSr and
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET contain the same information):
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REPLY) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS(192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.1.0/255.255.255.192)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.2.0/255.255.255.0)
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
        TSr = ((0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.0-192.0.1.63),
 | 
						||
               (0, 0-65535, 192.0.2.0-192.0.2.255))
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In these cases, the INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET does not really carry any
 | 
						||
   useful information.  Another possible reply would have been this:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REPLY) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS(192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.1.0/255.255.255.192)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.2.0/255.255.255.0)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 39]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This would mean that the client can send all its traffic through the
 | 
						||
   gateway, but the gateway does not mind if the client sends traffic
 | 
						||
   not included by INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET directly to the destination
 | 
						||
   (without going through the gateway).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A different situation arises if the gateway has a policy that
 | 
						||
   requires the traffic for the two subnets to be carried in separate
 | 
						||
   SAs.  Then a response like this would indicate to the client that if
 | 
						||
   it wants access to the second subnet, it needs to create a separate
 | 
						||
   SA:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REPLY) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS(192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.1.0/255.255.255.192)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.2.0/255.255.255.0)
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.0-192.0.1.63)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET can also be useful if the client's TSr included
 | 
						||
   only part of the address space.  For instance, if the client requests
 | 
						||
   the following:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REQUEST) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS()
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Then the gateway's reply could be this:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REPLY) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS(192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.1.0/255.255.255.192)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET(192.0.2.0/255.255.255.0)
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.1.234-192.0.1.234)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, 192.0.2.155-192.0.2.155)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It is less clear what the attributes mean in CFG_REQUESTs, and
 | 
						||
   whether other lengths than zero make sense in this situation (but for
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET, zero length is not allowed at all!).  This
 | 
						||
   document recommends that implementations should not include
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET or INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET attributes in
 | 
						||
   CFG_REQUESTs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For the IPv4 case, this document recommends using only netmasks
 | 
						||
   consisting of some amount of "1" bits followed by "0" bits; for
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 40]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   instance, "255.0.255.0" would not be a valid netmask for
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It is also worthwhile to note that the contents of the INTERNAL_IP4/
 | 
						||
   6_SUBNET attributes do not imply link boundaries.  For instance, a
 | 
						||
   gateway providing access to a large company intranet using addresses
 | 
						||
   from the 10.0.0.0/8 block can send a single INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET
 | 
						||
   attribute (10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0) even if the intranet has hundreds of
 | 
						||
   routers and separate links.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Tero Kivinen's mail "Intent of couple of attributes in
 | 
						||
   Configuration Payload in IKEv2?", 2004-11-19.  Srinivasa Rao
 | 
						||
   Addepalli's mail "INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET and INTERNAL_IP6_SUBNET in
 | 
						||
   IKEv2", 2004-09-10.  Yoav Nir's mail "Re: New I-D: IKEv2
 | 
						||
   Clarifications and Implementation Guidelines", 2005-02-07.
 | 
						||
   "Clarifications open issue: INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET/NETMASK" thread,
 | 
						||
   April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.4.  INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.15.1 defines the INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK attribute and says
 | 
						||
   that "The internal network's netmask.  Only one netmask is allowed in
 | 
						||
   the request and reply messages (e.g., 255.255.255.0) and it MUST be
 | 
						||
   used only with an INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS attribute".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, it is not clear what exactly this attribute means, as the
 | 
						||
   concept of "netmask" is not very well defined for point-to-point
 | 
						||
   links (unlike multi-access links, where it means "you can reach hosts
 | 
						||
   inside this netmask directly using layer 2, instead of sending
 | 
						||
   packets via a router").  Even if the operating system's TCP/IP stack
 | 
						||
   requires a netmask to be configured, for point-to-point links it
 | 
						||
   could be just set to 255.255.255.255.  So, why is this information
 | 
						||
   sent in IKEv2?
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   One possible interpretation would be that the host is given a whole
 | 
						||
   block of IP addresses instead of a single address.  This is also what
 | 
						||
   Framed-IP-Netmask does in [RADIUS], the IPCP "subnet mask" extension
 | 
						||
   does in PPP [IPCPSubnet], and the prefix length in the IPv6 Framed-
 | 
						||
   IPv6-Prefix attribute does in [RADIUS6].  However, nothing in the
 | 
						||
   specification supports this interpretation, and discussions on the
 | 
						||
   IPsec WG mailing list have confirmed it was not intended.  Section
 | 
						||
   3.15.1 also says that multiple addresses are assigned using multiple
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4/6_ADDRESS attributes.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Currently, this document's interpretation is the following:
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK in a CFG_REPLY means roughly the same thing as
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET containing the same information ("send traffic to
 | 
						||
   these addresses through me"), but also implies a link boundary.  For
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 41]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   instance, the client could use its own address and the netmask to
 | 
						||
   calculate the broadcast address of the link.  (Whether the gateway
 | 
						||
   will actually deliver broadcast packets to other VPN clients and/or
 | 
						||
   other nodes connected to this link is another matter.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   An empty INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK attribute can be included in a
 | 
						||
   CFG_REQUEST to request this information (although the gateway can
 | 
						||
   send the information even when not requested).  However, it seems
 | 
						||
   that non-empty values for this attribute do not make sense in
 | 
						||
   CFG_REQUESTs.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Fortunately, Section 4 clearly says that a minimal implementation
 | 
						||
   does not need to include or understand the INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK
 | 
						||
   attribute, and thus this document recommends that implementations
 | 
						||
   should not use the INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK attribute or assume that the
 | 
						||
   other peer supports it.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Charlie Kaufman's mail "RE: Proposed Last Call based
 | 
						||
   revisions to IKEv2", 2004-05-27.  Email discussion with Tero Kivinen,
 | 
						||
   Jan 2005.  Yoav Nir's mail "Re: New I-D: IKEv2 Clarifications and
 | 
						||
   Implementation Guidelines", 2005-02-07.  "Clarifications open issue:
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET/NETMASK" thread, April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.5.  Configuration Payloads for IPv6
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 also defines configuration payloads for IPv6.  However, they
 | 
						||
   are based on the corresponding IPv4 payloads and do not fully follow
 | 
						||
   the "normal IPv6 way of doing things".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A client can be assigned an IPv6 address using the
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS configuration payload.  A minimal exchange could
 | 
						||
   look like this:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REQUEST) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS()
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP6_DNS()
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, :: - FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, :: - FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
        CP(CFG_REPLY) =
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS(2001:DB8:0:1:2:3:4:5/64)
 | 
						||
          INTERNAL_IP6_DNS(2001:DB8:99:88:77:66:55:44)
 | 
						||
        TSi = (0, 0-65535, 2001:DB8:0:1:2:3:4:5 - 2001:DB8:0:1:2:3:4:5)
 | 
						||
        TSr = (0, 0-65535, :: - FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF:FFFF)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In particular, IPv6 stateless autoconfiguration or router
 | 
						||
   advertisement messages are not used; neither is neighbor discovery.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 42]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The client can also send a non-empty INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS attribute
 | 
						||
   in the CFG_REQUEST to request a specific address or interface
 | 
						||
   identifier.  The gateway first checks if the specified address is
 | 
						||
   acceptable, and if it is, returns that one.  If the address was not
 | 
						||
   acceptable, the gateway will attempt to use the interface identifier
 | 
						||
   with some other prefix; if even that fails, the gateway will select
 | 
						||
   another interface identifier.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS attribute also contains a prefix length
 | 
						||
   field.  When used in a CFG_REPLY, this corresponds to the
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_IP4_NETMASK attribute in the IPv4 case (and indeed, was
 | 
						||
   called INTERNAL_IP6_NETMASK in earlier versions of the IKEv2 draft).
 | 
						||
   See the previous section for more details.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   While this approach to configuring IPv6 addresses is reasonably
 | 
						||
   simple, it has some limitations: IPsec tunnels configured using IKEv2
 | 
						||
   are not fully-featured "interfaces" in the IPv6 addressing
 | 
						||
   architecture [IPv6Addr] sense.  In particular, they do not
 | 
						||
   necessarily have link-local addresses, and this may complicate the
 | 
						||
   use of protocols that assume them, such as [MLDv2].  (Whether they
 | 
						||
   are called "interfaces" in some particular operating system is a
 | 
						||
   different issue.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "VPN remote host configuration IPv6 ?" thread, May 2004.
 | 
						||
   "Clarifications open issue: INTERNAL_IP4_SUBNET/NETMASK" thread,
 | 
						||
   April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.6.  INTERNAL_IP6_NBNS
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.15.1 defines the INTERNAL_IP6_NBNS attribute for sending
 | 
						||
   the IPv6 address of NetBIOS name servers.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, NetBIOS is not defined for IPv6 and probably never will be.
 | 
						||
   Thus, this attribute most likely does not make much sense.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (Pointed out by Bernard Aboba in the IP Configuration Security (ICOS)
 | 
						||
   BoF at IETF62.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.7.  INTERNAL_ADDRESS_EXPIRY
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.15.1 defines the INTERNAL_ADDRESS_EXPIRY attribute as
 | 
						||
   "Specifies the number of seconds that the host can use the internal
 | 
						||
   IP address.  The host MUST renew the IP address before this expiry
 | 
						||
   time.  Only one of these attributes MAY be present in the reply."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Expiry times and explicit renewals are primarily useful in
 | 
						||
   environments like DHCP, where the server cannot reliably know when
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 43]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   the client has gone away.  However, in IKEv2 this is known, and the
 | 
						||
   gateway can simply free the address when the IKE_SA is deleted.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Also, Section 4 says that supporting renewals is not mandatory.
 | 
						||
   Given that this functionality is usually not needed, we recommend
 | 
						||
   that gateways should not send the INTERNAL_ADDRESS_EXPIRY attribute.
 | 
						||
   (And since this attribute does not seem to make much sense for
 | 
						||
   CFG_REQUESTs, clients should not send it either.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Note that according to Section 4, clients are required to understand
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_ADDRESS_EXPIRY if they receive it.  A minimum implementation
 | 
						||
   would use the value to limit the lifetime of the IKE_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Tero Kivinen's mail "Comments of
 | 
						||
   draft-eronen-ipsec-ikev2-clarifications-02.txt", 2005-04-05.
 | 
						||
   "Questions about internal address" thread, April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
6.8.  Address Assignment Failures
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   If the responder encounters an error while attempting to assign an IP
 | 
						||
   address to the initiator, it responds with an
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_ADDRESS_FAILURE notification as described in Section 3.10.1.
 | 
						||
   However, there are some more complex error cases.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   First, if the responder does not support configuration payloads at
 | 
						||
   all, it can simply ignore all configuration payloads.  This type of
 | 
						||
   implementation never sends INTERNAL_ADDRESS_FAILURE notifications.
 | 
						||
   If the initiator requires the assignment of an IP address, it will
 | 
						||
   treat a response without CFG_REPLY as an error.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A second case is where the responder does support configuration
 | 
						||
   payloads, but only for particular type of addresses (IPv4 or IPv6).
 | 
						||
   Section 4 says that "A minimal IPv4 responder implementation will
 | 
						||
   ignore the contents of the CP payload except to determine that it
 | 
						||
   includes an INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS attribute".  If, for instance, the
 | 
						||
   initiator includes both INTERNAL_IP4_ADDRESS and INTERNAL_IP6_ADDRESS
 | 
						||
   in the CFG_REQUEST, an IPv4-only responder can thus simply ignore the
 | 
						||
   IPv6 part and process the IPv4 request as usual.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   A third case is where the initiator requests multiple addresses of a
 | 
						||
   type that the responder supports: what should happen if some (but not
 | 
						||
   all) of the requests fail?  It seems that an optimistic approach
 | 
						||
   would be the best one here: if the responder is able to assign at
 | 
						||
   least one address, it replies with those; it sends
 | 
						||
   INTERNAL_ADDRESS_FAILURE only if no addresses can be assigned.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "ikev2 and internal_ivpn_address" thread, June 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 44]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.  Miscellaneous Issues
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.1.  Matching ID_IPV4_ADDR and ID_IPV6_ADDR
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   When using the ID_IPV4_ADDR/ID_IPV6_ADDR identity types in IDi/IDr
 | 
						||
   payloads, IKEv2 does not require this address to match anything in
 | 
						||
   the TSi/TSr payloads.  For example, in a site-to-site VPN between two
 | 
						||
   security gateways, the gateways could authenticate each other as
 | 
						||
   ID_IPV4_ADDR(192.0.1.1) and ID_IPV4_ADDR(192.0.2.1), and then create
 | 
						||
   a CHILD_SA for protecting traffic between 192.0.1.55/32 (a host
 | 
						||
   behind the first security gateway) and 192.0.2.240/28 (a network
 | 
						||
   behind the second security gateway).  The authenticated identities
 | 
						||
   (IDi/IDr) are linked to the authorized traffic selectors (TSi/TSr)
 | 
						||
   using "Child SA Authorization Data" in the Peer Authorization
 | 
						||
   Database (PAD).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Furthermore, IKEv2 does not require that the addresses in
 | 
						||
   ID_IPV4_ADDR/ID_IPV6_ADDR match the address in the IP header of the
 | 
						||
   IKE packets.  However, other specifications may place additional
 | 
						||
   requirements regarding this.  For example, [PKI4IPsec] requires that
 | 
						||
   implementation must be capable of comparing the addresses in the
 | 
						||
   ID_IPV4_ADDR/ID_IPV6_ADDR with the addresses in the IP header of the
 | 
						||
   IKE packets, and this comparison must be enabled by default.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Identities types IP address,FQDN/user FQDN and DN and
 | 
						||
   its usage in preshared key authentication" thread, Jan 2005.
 | 
						||
   "Matching ID_IPV4_ADDR and ID_IPV6_ADDR" thread, May 2006.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.2.  Relationship of IKEv2 to RFC 4301
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IKEv2 specification refers to [RFC4301], but it never clearly
 | 
						||
   defines the exact relationship.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, there are some requirements in the specification that make
 | 
						||
   it clear that IKEv2 requires [RFC4301].  In other words, an
 | 
						||
   implementation that does IPsec processing strictly according to
 | 
						||
   [RFC2401] cannot be compliant with the IKEv2 specification.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   One such example can be found in Section 2.24: "Specifically, tunnel
 | 
						||
   encapsulators and decapsulators for all tunnel-mode SAs created by
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 [...]  MUST implement the tunnel encapsulation and
 | 
						||
   decapsulation processing specified in [RFC4301] to prevent discarding
 | 
						||
   of ECN congestion indications."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Nevertheless, the changes required to existing [RFC2401]
 | 
						||
   implementations are not very large, especially since supporting many
 | 
						||
   of the new features (such as Extended Sequence Numbers) is optional.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 45]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.3.  Reducing the Window Size
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In IKEv2, the window size is assumed to be a (possibly configurable)
 | 
						||
   property of a particular implementation and is not related to
 | 
						||
   congestion control (unlike the window size in TCP, for instance).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In particular, it is not defined what the responder should do when it
 | 
						||
   receives a SET_WINDOW_SIZE notification containing a smaller value
 | 
						||
   than is currently in effect.  Thus, there is currently no way to
 | 
						||
   reduce the window size of an existing IKE_SA.  However, when rekeying
 | 
						||
   an IKE_SA, the new IKE_SA starts with window size 1 until it is
 | 
						||
   explicitly increased by sending a new SET_WINDOW_SIZE notification.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: Tero Kivinen's mail "Comments of
 | 
						||
   draft-eronen-ipsec-ikev2-clarifications-02.txt", 2005-04-05.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.4.  Minimum Size of Nonces
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.10 says that "Nonces used in IKEv2 MUST be randomly chosen,
 | 
						||
   MUST be at least 128 bits in size, and MUST be at least half the key
 | 
						||
   size of the negotiated prf."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   However, the initiator chooses the nonce before the outcome of the
 | 
						||
   negotiation is known.  In this case, the nonce has to be long enough
 | 
						||
   for all the PRFs being proposed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.5.  Initial Zero Octets on Port 4500
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   It is not clear whether a peer sending an IKE_SA_INIT request on port
 | 
						||
   4500 should include the initial four zero octets.  Section 2.23 talks
 | 
						||
   about how to upgrade to tunneling over port 4500 after message 2, but
 | 
						||
   it does not say what to do if message 1 is sent on port 4500.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       IKE MUST listen on port 4500 as well as port 500.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       [...]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       The IKE initiator MUST check these payloads if present and if
 | 
						||
       they do not match the addresses in the outer packet MUST tunnel
 | 
						||
       all future IKE and ESP packets associated with this IKE_SA over
 | 
						||
       UDP port 4500.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
       To tunnel IKE packets over UDP port 4500, the IKE header has four
 | 
						||
       octets of zero prepended and the result immediately follows the
 | 
						||
       UDP header. [...]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 46]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The very beginning of Section 2 says "... though IKE messages may
 | 
						||
   also be received on UDP port 4500 with a slightly different format
 | 
						||
   (see section 2.23)."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   That "slightly different format" is only described in discussing what
 | 
						||
   to do after changing to port 4500.  However, [RFC3948] shows clearly
 | 
						||
   the format has the initial zeros even for initiators on port 4500.
 | 
						||
   Furthermore, without the initial zeros, the processing engine cannot
 | 
						||
   determine whether the packet is an IKE packet or an ESP packet.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Thus, all packets sent on port 4500 need the four-zero prefix;
 | 
						||
   otherwise, the receiver won't know how to handle them.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.6.  Destination Port for NAT Traversal
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 2.23 says that "an IPsec endpoint that discovers a NAT
 | 
						||
   between it and its correspondent MUST send all subsequent traffic to
 | 
						||
   and from port 4500".
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This sentence is misleading.  The peer "outside" the NAT uses source
 | 
						||
   port 4500 for the traffic it sends, but the destination port is, of
 | 
						||
   course, taken from packets sent by the peer behind the NAT.  This
 | 
						||
   port number is usually dynamically allocated by the NAT.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.7.  SPI Values for Messages outside an IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IKEv2 specification is not quite clear what SPI values should be
 | 
						||
   used in the IKE header for the small number of notifications that are
 | 
						||
   allowed to be sent outside an IKE_SA.  Note that such notifications
 | 
						||
   are explicitly not Informational exchanges; Section 1.5 makes it
 | 
						||
   clear that these are one-way messages that must not be responded to.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There are two cases when such a one-way notification can be sent:
 | 
						||
   INVALID_IKE_SPI and INVALID_SPI.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In case of INVALID_IKE_SPI, the message sent is a response message,
 | 
						||
   and Section 2.21 says that "If a response is sent, the response MUST
 | 
						||
   be sent to the IP address and port from whence it came with the same
 | 
						||
   IKE SPIs and the Message ID copied."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In case of INVALID_SPI, however, there are no IKE SPI values that
 | 
						||
   would be meaningful to the recipient of such a notification.  Also,
 | 
						||
   the message sent is now an INFORMATIONAL request.  A strict
 | 
						||
   interpretation of the specification would require the sender to
 | 
						||
   invent garbage values for the SPI fields.  However, we think this was
 | 
						||
   not the intention, and using zero values is acceptable.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "INVALID_IKE_SPI" thread, June 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 47]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.8.  Protocol ID/SPI Fields in Notify Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.10 says that the Protocol ID field in Notify payloads "For
 | 
						||
   notifications that do not relate to an existing SA, this field MUST
 | 
						||
   be sent as zero and MUST be ignored on receipt".  However, the
 | 
						||
   specification does not clearly say which notifications are related to
 | 
						||
   existing SAs and which are not.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Since the main purpose of the Protocol ID field is to specify the
 | 
						||
   type of the SPI, our interpretation is that the Protocol ID field
 | 
						||
   should be non-zero only when the SPI field is non-empty.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There are currently only two notifications where this is the case:
 | 
						||
   INVALID_SELECTORS and REKEY_SA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.9.  Which message should contain INITIAL_CONTACT
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The description of the INITIAL_CONTACT notification in Section 3.10.1
 | 
						||
   says that "This notification asserts that this IKE_SA is the only
 | 
						||
   IKE_SA currently active between the authenticated identities".
 | 
						||
   However, neither Section 2.4 nor 3.10.1 says in which message this
 | 
						||
   payload should be placed.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The general agreement is that INITIAL_CONTACT is best communicated in
 | 
						||
   the first IKE_AUTH request, not as a separate exchange afterwards.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Clarifying the use of INITIAL_CONTACT in IKEv2" thread,
 | 
						||
   April 2005.  "Initial Contact messages" thread, December 2004.
 | 
						||
   "IKEv2 and Initial Contact" thread, September 2004 and April 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.10.  Alignment of Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Many IKEv2 payloads contain fields marked as "RESERVED", mostly
 | 
						||
   because IKEv1 had them, and partly because they make the pictures
 | 
						||
   easier to draw.  In particular, payloads in IKEv2 are not, in
 | 
						||
   general, aligned to 4-octet boundaries.  (Note that payloads were not
 | 
						||
   aligned to 4-octet boundaries in IKEv1 either.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "IKEv2: potential 4-byte alignment problem" thread, June
 | 
						||
   2004.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.11.  Key Length Transform Attribute
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Section 3.3.5 says that "The only algorithms defined in this document
 | 
						||
   that accept attributes are the AES based encryption, integrity, and
 | 
						||
   pseudo-random functions, which require a single attribute specifying
 | 
						||
   key width."
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 48]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This is incorrect.  The AES-based integrity and pseudo-random
 | 
						||
   functions defined in [IKEv2] always use a 128-bit key.  In fact,
 | 
						||
   there are currently no integrity or PRF algorithms that use the key
 | 
						||
   length attribute (and we recommend that they should not be defined in
 | 
						||
   the future either).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For encryption algorithms, the situation is slightly more complex
 | 
						||
   since there are three different types of algorithms:
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  The key length attribute is never used with algorithms that use a
 | 
						||
      fixed length key, such as DES and IDEA.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  The key length attribute is always included for the currently
 | 
						||
      defined AES-based algorithms (Cipher Block Chaining (CBC), Counter
 | 
						||
      (CTR) Mode, Counter with CBC-MAC (CCM), and Galois/Counter Mode
 | 
						||
      (GCM)).  Omitting the key length attribute is not allowed; if the
 | 
						||
      proposal does not contain it, the proposal has to be rejected.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  For other algorithms, the key length attribute can be included but
 | 
						||
      is not mandatory.  These algorithms include, e.g., RC5, CAST, and
 | 
						||
      BLOWFISH.  If the key length attribute is not included, the
 | 
						||
      default value specified in [RFC2451] is used.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.12.  IPsec IANA Considerations
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   There are currently three different IANA registry files that contain
 | 
						||
   important numbers for IPsec: ikev2-registry, isakmp-registry, and
 | 
						||
   ipsec-registry.  Implementers should note that IKEv2 may use numbers
 | 
						||
   different from those of IKEv1 for a particular algorithm.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   For instance, an encryption algorithm can have up to three different
 | 
						||
   numbers: the IKEv2 "Transform Type 1" identifier in ikev2-registry,
 | 
						||
   the IKEv1 phase 1 "Encryption Algorithm" identifier in ipsec-
 | 
						||
   registry, and the IKEv1 phase 2 "IPSEC ESP Transform Identifier"
 | 
						||
   isakmp-registry.  Although some algorithms have the same number in
 | 
						||
   all three registries, the registries are not identical.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Similarly, an integrity algorithm can have at least the IKEv2
 | 
						||
   "Transform Type 3" identifier in ikev2-registry, the IKEv1 phase 2
 | 
						||
   "IPSEC AH Transform Identifier" in isakmp-registry, and the IKEv1
 | 
						||
   phase 2 ESP "Authentication Algorithm Security Association Attribute"
 | 
						||
   identifier in isakmp-registry.  And there is also the IKEv1 phase 1
 | 
						||
   "Hash Algorithm" list in ipsec-registry.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This issue needs special care also when writing a specification for
 | 
						||
   how a new algorithm is used with IPsec.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 49]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
7.13.  Combining ESP and AH
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IKEv2 specification contains some misleading text about how ESP
 | 
						||
   and AH can be combined.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 is based on [RFC4301], which does not include "SA bundles" that
 | 
						||
   were part of [RFC2401].  While a single packet can go through IPsec
 | 
						||
   processing multiple times, each of these passes uses a separate SA,
 | 
						||
   and the passes are coordinated by the forwarding tables.  In IKEv2,
 | 
						||
   each of these SAs has to be created using a separate CREATE_CHILD_SA
 | 
						||
   exchange.  Thus, the text in Section 2.7 about a single proposal
 | 
						||
   containing both ESP and AH is incorrect.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Moreover, the combination of ESP and AH (between the same endpoints)
 | 
						||
   had already become largely obsolete in 1998 when RFC 2406 was
 | 
						||
   published.  Our recommendation is that IKEv2 implementations should
 | 
						||
   not support this combination, and implementers should not assume the
 | 
						||
   combination can be made to work in an interoperable manner.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   (References: "Rekeying SA bundles" thread, Oct 2005.)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
8.  Implementation Mistakes
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Some implementers at the early IKEv2 bakeoffs didn't do everything
 | 
						||
   correctly.  This may seem like an obvious statement, but it is
 | 
						||
   probably useful to list a few things that were clear in the document,
 | 
						||
   but that some implementers didn't do.  All of these things caused
 | 
						||
   interoperability problems.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  Some implementations continued to send traffic on a CHILD_SA after
 | 
						||
      it was rekeyed, even after receiving an DELETE payload.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  After rekeying an IKE_SA, some implementations did not reset their
 | 
						||
      message counters to zero.  One set the counter to 2, another did
 | 
						||
      not reset the counter at all.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  Some implementations could only handle a single pair of traffic
 | 
						||
      selectors or would only process the first pair in the proposal.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  Some implementations responded to a delete request by sending an
 | 
						||
      empty INFORMATIONAL response and then initiated their own
 | 
						||
      INFORMATIONAL exchange with the pair of SAs to delete.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   o  Although this did not happen at the bakeoff, from the discussion
 | 
						||
      there, it is clear that some people had not implemented message
 | 
						||
      window sizes correctly.  Some implementations might have sent
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 50]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
      messages that did not fit into the responder's message windows,
 | 
						||
      and some implementations may not have torn down an SA if they did
 | 
						||
      not ever receive a message that they know they should have.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
9.  Security Considerations
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document does not introduce any new security considerations to
 | 
						||
   IKEv2.  If anything, clarifying complex areas of the specification
 | 
						||
   can reduce the likelihood of implementation problems that may have
 | 
						||
   security implications.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
10.  Acknowledgments
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document is mainly based on conversations on the IPsec WG
 | 
						||
   mailing list.  The authors would especially like to thank Bernard
 | 
						||
   Aboba, Jari Arkko, Vijay Devarapalli, William Dixon, Francis Dupont,
 | 
						||
   Alfred Hoenes, Mika Joutsenvirta, Charlie Kaufman, Stephen Kent, Tero
 | 
						||
   Kivinen, Yoav Nir, Michael Richardson, and Joel Snyder for their
 | 
						||
   contributions.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   In addition, the authors would like to thank all the participants of
 | 
						||
   the first public IKEv2 bakeoff, held in Santa Clara in February 2005,
 | 
						||
   for their questions and proposed clarifications.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
11.  References
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
11.1.  Normative References
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [IKEv2]       Kaufman, C., Ed., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2)
 | 
						||
                 Protocol", RFC 4306, December 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [IKEv2ALG]    Schiller, J., "Cryptographic Algorithms for Use in the
 | 
						||
                 Internet Key Exchange Version 2 (IKEv2)", RFC 4307,
 | 
						||
                 December 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [PKCS1v20]    Kaliski, B. and J. Staddon, "PKCS #1: RSA Cryptography
 | 
						||
                 Specifications Version 2.0", RFC 2437, October 1998.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [PKCS1v21]    Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography
 | 
						||
                 Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications
 | 
						||
                 Version 2.1", RFC 3447, February 2003.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC2401]     Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for
 | 
						||
                 the Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC4301]     Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
 | 
						||
                 Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 51]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
11.2.  Informative References
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [Aura05]      Aura, T., Roe, M., and A. Mohammed, "Experiences with
 | 
						||
                 Host-to-Host IPsec", 13th International Workshop on
 | 
						||
                 Security Protocols, Cambridge, UK, April 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [EAP]         Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J., and
 | 
						||
                 H. Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication Protocol
 | 
						||
                 (EAP)", RFC 3748, June 2004.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [HashUse]     Hoffman, P., "Use of Hash Algorithms in IKE and IPsec",
 | 
						||
                 Work in Progress, July 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [IPCPSubnet]  Cisco Systems, Inc., "IPCP Subnet Mask Support
 | 
						||
                 Enhancements",  http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/
 | 
						||
                 doc/product/software/ios121/121newft/121limit/121dc/
 | 
						||
                 121dc3/ipcp_msk.htm, January 2003.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [IPv6Addr]    Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
 | 
						||
                 Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [MIPv6]       Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility
 | 
						||
                 Support in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [MLDv2]       Vida, R. and L. Costa, "Multicast Listener Discovery
 | 
						||
                 Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6", RFC 3810, June 2004.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [NAI]         Aboba, B., Beadles, M., Arkko, J., and P. Eronen, "The
 | 
						||
                 Network Access Identifier", RFC 4282, December 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [PKI4IPsec]   Korver, B., "Internet PKI Profile of IKEv1/ISAKMP,
 | 
						||
                 IKEv2, and PKIX", Work in Progress, April 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RADEAP]      Aboba, B. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS (Remote
 | 
						||
                 Authentication Dial In User Service) Support For
 | 
						||
                 Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3579,
 | 
						||
                 September 2003.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RADIUS]      Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
 | 
						||
                 "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
 | 
						||
                 RFC 2865, June 2000.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RADIUS6]     Aboba, B., Zorn, G., and D. Mitton, "RADIUS and IPv6",
 | 
						||
                 RFC 3162, August 2001.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC2119]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 | 
						||
                 Requirement  Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 52]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC2451]     Pereira, R. and R. Adams, "The ESP CBC-Mode Cipher
 | 
						||
                 Algorithms", RFC 2451, November 1998.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC2822]     Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822,
 | 
						||
                 April 2001.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC3664]     Hoffman, P., "The AES-XCBC-PRF-128 Algorithm for the
 | 
						||
                 Internet Key Exchange Protocol (IKE)", RFC 3664,
 | 
						||
                 January 2004.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC3948]     Huttunen, A., Swander, B., Volpe, V., DiBurro, L., and
 | 
						||
                 M. Stenberg, "UDP Encapsulation of IPsec ESP Packets",
 | 
						||
                 RFC 3948, January 2005.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC4434]     Hoffman, P., "The AES-XCBC-PRF-128 Algorithm for the
 | 
						||
                 Internet Key Exchange Protocol (IKE)", RFC 4434,
 | 
						||
                 February 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [RFC822]      Crocker, D., "Standard for the format of ARPA Internet
 | 
						||
                 text messages", RFC 822, August 1982.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [ReAuth]      Nir, Y., "Repeated Authentication in Internet Key
 | 
						||
                 Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol", RFC 4478, April 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   [SCVP]        Freeman, T., Housley, R., Malpani, A., Cooper, D., and
 | 
						||
                 T. Polk, "Simple Certificate Validation Protocol
 | 
						||
                 (SCVP)", Work in Progress, June 2006.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 53]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Appendix A.  Exchanges and Payloads
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This appendix contains a short summary of the IKEv2 exchanges, and
 | 
						||
   what payloads can appear in which message.  This appendix is purely
 | 
						||
   informative; if it disagrees with the body of this document or the
 | 
						||
   IKEv2 specification, the other text is considered correct.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Vendor-ID (V) payloads may be included in any place in any message.
 | 
						||
   This sequence shows what are, in our opinion, the most logical places
 | 
						||
   for them.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The specification does not say which messages can contain
 | 
						||
   N(SET_WINDOW_SIZE).  It can possibly be included in any message, but
 | 
						||
   it is not yet shown below.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.1.  IKE_SA_INIT Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   request             --> [N(COOKIE)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, KE, Ni,
 | 
						||
                           [N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP)+,
 | 
						||
                            N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)],
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   normal response     <-- SA, KE, Nr,
 | 
						||
   (no cookie)             [N(NAT_DETECTION_SOURCE_IP),
 | 
						||
                            N(NAT_DETECTION_DESTINATION_IP)],
 | 
						||
                           [[N(HTTP_CERT_LOOKUP_SUPPORTED)], CERTREQ+],
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.2.  IKE_AUTH Exchange without EAP
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   request             --> IDi, [CERT+],
 | 
						||
                           [N(INITIAL_CONTACT)],
 | 
						||
                           [[N(HTTP_CERT_LOOKUP_SUPPORTED)], CERTREQ+],
 | 
						||
                           [IDr],
 | 
						||
                           AUTH,
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REQUEST)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)+],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, TSi, TSr,
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 54]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   response            <-- IDr, [CERT+],
 | 
						||
                           AUTH,
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REPLY)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, TSi, TSr,
 | 
						||
                           [N(ADDITIONAL_TS_POSSIBLE)],
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.3.  IKE_AUTH Exchange with EAP
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   first request       --> IDi,
 | 
						||
                           [N(INITIAL_CONTACT)],
 | 
						||
                           [[N(HTTP_CERT_LOOKUP_SUPPORTED)], CERTREQ+],
 | 
						||
                           [IDr],
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REQUEST)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)+],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, TSi, TSr,
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   first response      <-- IDr, [CERT+], AUTH,
 | 
						||
                           EAP,
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
                     / --> EAP
 | 
						||
   repeat 1..N times |
 | 
						||
                     \ <-- EAP
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   last request        --> AUTH
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   last response       <-- AUTH,
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REPLY)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, TSi, TSr,
 | 
						||
                           [N(ADDITIONAL_TS_POSSIBLE)],
 | 
						||
                           [V+]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 55]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.4.  CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange for Creating/Rekeying CHILD_SAs
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   request             --> [N(REKEY_SA)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)+],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, Ni, [KEi], TSi, TSr
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   response            <-- [N(IPCOMP_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(USE_TRANSPORT_MODE)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(ESP_TFC_PADDING_NOT_SUPPORTED)],
 | 
						||
                           [N(NON_FIRST_FRAGMENTS_ALSO)],
 | 
						||
                           SA, Nr, [KEr], TSi, TSr,
 | 
						||
                           [N(ADDITIONAL_TS_POSSIBLE)]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.5.  CREATE_CHILD_SA Exchange for Rekeying the IKE_SA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   request             --> SA, Ni, [KEi]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   response            <-- SA, Nr, [KEr]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
A.6.  INFORMATIONAL Exchange
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   request             --> [N+],
 | 
						||
                           [D+],
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REQUEST)]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   response            <-- [N+],
 | 
						||
                           [D+],
 | 
						||
                           [CP(CFG_REPLY)]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 56]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Authors' Addresses
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Pasi Eronen
 | 
						||
   Nokia Research Center
 | 
						||
   P.O. Box 407
 | 
						||
   FIN-00045 Nokia Group
 | 
						||
   Finland
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   EMail: pasi.eronen@nokia.com
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Paul Hoffman
 | 
						||
   VPN Consortium
 | 
						||
   127 Segre Place
 | 
						||
   Santa Cruz, CA 95060
 | 
						||
   USA
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   EMail: paul.hoffman@vpnc.org
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 57]
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
RFC 4718                  IKEv2 Clarifications              October 2006
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Full Copyright Statement
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
 | 
						||
   contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
 | 
						||
   retain all their rights.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
 | 
						||
   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
 | 
						||
   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
 | 
						||
   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
 | 
						||
   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
 | 
						||
   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
 | 
						||
   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Intellectual Property
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
 | 
						||
   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
 | 
						||
   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
 | 
						||
   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
 | 
						||
   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
 | 
						||
   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information
 | 
						||
   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
 | 
						||
   found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
 | 
						||
   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
 | 
						||
   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
 | 
						||
   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
 | 
						||
   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
 | 
						||
   http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
 | 
						||
   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
 | 
						||
   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
 | 
						||
   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at
 | 
						||
   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Acknowledgement
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
 | 
						||
   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Eronen & Hoffman             Informational                     [Page 58]
 | 
						||
 |