| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ======================================================== |
| TCP Authentication Option Linux implementation (RFC5925) |
| ======================================================== |
| |
| TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO) provides a TCP extension aimed at verifying |
| segments between trusted peers. It adds a new TCP header option with |
| a Message Authentication Code (MAC). MACs are produced from the content |
| of a TCP segment using a hashing function with a password known to both peers. |
| The intent of TCP-AO is to deprecate TCP-MD5 providing better security, |
| key rotation and support for variety of hashing algorithms. |
| |
| 1. Introduction |
| =============== |
| |
| .. table:: Short and Limited Comparison of TCP-AO and TCP-MD5 |
| |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | | TCP-MD5 | TCP-AO | |
| +======================+========================+=======================+ |
| |Supported hashing |MD5 |Must support HMAC-SHA1 | |
| |algorithms |(cryptographically weak)|(chosen-prefix attacks)| |
| | | |and CMAC-AES-128 (only | |
| | | |side-channel attacks). | |
| | | |May support any hashing| |
| | | |algorithm. | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Length of MACs (bytes)|16 |Typically 12-16. | |
| | | |Other variants that fit| |
| | | |TCP header permitted. | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Number of keys per |1 |Many | |
| |TCP connection | | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Possibility to change |Non-practical (both |Supported by protocol | |
| |an active key |peers have to change | | |
| | |them during MSL) | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Protection against |No |Yes: ignoring them | |
| |ICMP 'hard errors' | |by default on | |
| | | |established connections| |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Protection against |No |Yes: pseudo-header | |
| |traffic-crossing | |includes TCP ports. | |
| |attack | | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Protection against |No |Sequence Number | |
| |replayed TCP segments | |Extension (SNE) and | |
| | | |Initial Sequence | |
| | | |Numbers (ISNs) | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Supports |Yes |No. ISNs+SNE are needed| |
| |Connectionless Resets | |to correctly sign RST. | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |Standards |RFC 2385 |RFC 5925, RFC 5926 | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |
| |
| 1.1 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) with references to RFC 5925 |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Q: Can either SendID or RecvID be non-unique for the same 4-tuple |
| (srcaddr, srcport, dstaddr, dstport)? |
| |
| A: No [3.1]:: |
| |
| >> The IDs of MKTs MUST NOT overlap where their TCP connection |
| identifiers overlap. |
| |
| Q: Can Master Key Tuple (MKT) for an active connection be removed? |
| |
| A: No, unless it's copied to Transport Control Block (TCB) [3.1]:: |
| |
| It is presumed that an MKT affecting a particular connection cannot |
| be destroyed during an active connection -- or, equivalently, that |
| its parameters are copied to an area local to the connection (i.e., |
| instantiated) and so changes would affect only new connections. |
| |
| Q: If an old MKT needs to be deleted, how should it be done in order |
| to not remove it for an active connection? (As it can be still in use |
| at any moment later) |
| |
| A: Not specified by RFC 5925, seems to be a problem for key management |
| to ensure that no one uses such MKT before trying to remove it. |
| |
| Q: Can an old MKT exist forever and be used by another peer? |
| |
| A: It can, it's a key management task to decide when to remove an old key [6.1]:: |
| |
| Deciding when to start using a key is a performance issue. Deciding |
| when to remove an MKT is a security issue. Invalid MKTs are expected |
| to be removed. TCP-AO provides no mechanism to coordinate their removal, |
| as we consider this a key management operation. |
| |
| also [6.1]:: |
| |
| The only way to avoid reuse of previously used MKTs is to remove the MKT |
| when it is no longer considered permitted. |
| |
| Linux TCP-AO will try its best to prevent you from removing a key that's |
| being used, considering it a key management failure. But since keeping |
| an outdated key may become a security issue and as a peer may |
| unintentionally prevent the removal of an old key by always setting |
| it as RNextKeyID - a forced key removal mechanism is provided, where |
| userspace has to supply KeyID to use instead of the one that's being removed |
| and the kernel will atomically delete the old key, even if the peer is |
| still requesting it. There are no guarantees for force-delete as the peer |
| may yet not have the new key - the TCP connection may just break. |
| Alternatively, one may choose to shut down the socket. |
| |
| Q: What happens when a packet is received on a new connection with no known |
| MKT's RecvID? |
| |
| A: RFC 5925 specifies that by default it is accepted with a warning logged, but |
| the behaviour can be configured by the user [7.5.1.a]:: |
| |
| If the segment is a SYN, then this is the first segment of a new |
| connection. Find the matching MKT for this segment, using the segment's |
| socket pair and its TCP-AO KeyID, matched against the MKT's TCP connection |
| identifier and the MKT's RecvID. |
| |
| i. If there is no matching MKT, remove TCP-AO from the segment. |
| Proceed with further TCP handling of the segment. |
| NOTE: this presumes that connections that do not match any MKT |
| should be silently accepted, as noted in Section 7.3. |
| |
| [7.3]:: |
| |
| >> A TCP-AO implementation MUST allow for configuration of the behavior |
| of segments with TCP-AO but that do not match an MKT. The initial default |
| of this configuration SHOULD be to silently accept such connections. |
| If this is not the desired case, an MKT can be included to match such |
| connections, or the connection can indicate that TCP-AO is required. |
| Alternately, the configuration can be changed to discard segments with |
| the AO option not matching an MKT. |
| |
| [10.2.b]:: |
| |
| Connections not matching any MKT do not require TCP-AO. Further, incoming |
| segments with TCP-AO are not discarded solely because they include |
| the option, provided they do not match any MKT. |
| |
| Note that Linux TCP-AO implementation differs in this aspect. Currently, TCP-AO |
| segments with unknown key signatures are discarded with warnings logged. |
| |
| Q: Does the RFC imply centralized kernel key management in any way? |
| (i.e. that a key on all connections MUST be rotated at the same time?) |
| |
| A: Not specified. MKTs can be managed in userspace, the only relevant part to |
| key changes is [7.3]:: |
| |
| >> All TCP segments MUST be checked against the set of MKTs for matching |
| TCP connection identifiers. |
| |
| Q: What happens when RNextKeyID requested by a peer is unknown? Should |
| the connection be reset? |
| |
| A: It should not, no action needs to be performed [7.5.2.e]:: |
| |
| ii. If they differ, determine whether the RNextKeyID MKT is ready. |
| |
| 1. If the MKT corresponding to the segment’s socket pair and RNextKeyID |
| is not available, no action is required (RNextKeyID of a received |
| segment needs to match the MKT’s SendID). |
| |
| Q: How current_key is set and when does it change? It is a user-triggered |
| change, or is it by a request from the remote peer? Is it set by the user |
| explicitly, or by a matching rule? |
| |
| A: current_key is set by RNextKeyID [6.1]:: |
| |
| Rnext_key is changed only by manual user intervention or MKT management |
| protocol operation. It is not manipulated by TCP-AO. Current_key is updated |
| by TCP-AO when processing received TCP segments as discussed in the segment |
| processing description in Section 7.5. Note that the algorithm allows |
| the current_key to change to a new MKT, then change back to a previously |
| used MKT (known as "backing up"). This can occur during an MKT change when |
| segments are received out of order, and is considered a feature of TCP-AO, |
| because reordering does not result in drops. |
| |
| [7.5.2.e.ii]:: |
| |
| 2. If the matching MKT corresponding to the segment’s socket pair and |
| RNextKeyID is available: |
| |
| a. Set current_key to the RNextKeyID MKT. |
| |
| Q: If both peers have multiple MKTs matching the connection's socket pair |
| (with different KeyIDs), how should the sender/receiver pick KeyID to use? |
| |
| A: Some mechanism should pick the "desired" MKT [3.3]:: |
| |
| Multiple MKTs may match a single outgoing segment, e.g., when MKTs |
| are being changed. Those MKTs cannot have conflicting IDs (as noted |
| elsewhere), and some mechanism must determine which MKT to use for each |
| given outgoing segment. |
| |
| >> An outgoing TCP segment MUST match at most one desired MKT, indicated |
| by the segment’s socket pair. The segment MAY match multiple MKTs, provided |
| that exactly one MKT is indicated as desired. Other information in |
| the segment MAY be used to determine the desired MKT when multiple MKTs |
| match; such information MUST NOT include values in any TCP option fields. |
| |
| Q: Can TCP-MD5 connection migrate to TCP-AO (and vice-versa): |
| |
| A: No [1]:: |
| |
| TCP MD5-protected connections cannot be migrated to TCP-AO because TCP MD5 |
| does not support any changes to a connection’s security algorithm |
| once established. |
| |
| Q: If all MKTs are removed on a connection, can it become a non-TCP-AO signed |
| connection? |
| |
| A: [7.5.2] doesn't have the same choice as SYN packet handling in [7.5.1.i] |
| that would allow accepting segments without a sign (which would be insecure). |
| While switching to non-TCP-AO connection is not prohibited directly, it seems |
| what the RFC means. Also, there's a requirement for TCP-AO connections to |
| always have one current_key [3.3]:: |
| |
| TCP-AO requires that every protected TCP segment match exactly one MKT. |
| |
| [3.3]:: |
| |
| >> An incoming TCP segment including TCP-AO MUST match exactly one MKT, |
| indicated solely by the segment’s socket pair and its TCP-AO KeyID. |
| |
| [4.4]:: |
| |
| One or more MKTs. These are the MKTs that match this connection’s |
| socket pair. |
| |
| Q: Can a non-TCP-AO connection become a TCP-AO-enabled one? |
| |
| A: No: for already established non-TCP-AO connection it would be impossible |
| to switch using TCP-AO as the traffic key generation requires the initial |
| sequence numbers. Paraphrasing, starting using TCP-AO would require |
| re-establishing the TCP connection. |
| |
| 2. In-kernel MKTs database vs database in userspace |
| =================================================== |
| |
| Linux TCP-AO support is implemented using ``setsockopt()s``, in a similar way |
| to TCP-MD5. It means that a userspace application that wants to use TCP-AO |
| should perform ``setsockopt()`` on a TCP socket when it wants to add, |
| remove or rotate MKTs. This approach moves the key management responsibility |
| to userspace as well as decisions on corner cases, i.e. what to do if |
| the peer doesn't respect RNextKeyID; moving more code to userspace, especially |
| responsible for the policy decisions. Besides, it's flexible and scales well |
| (with less locking needed than in the case of an in-kernel database). One also |
| should keep in mind that mainly intended users are BGP processes, not any |
| random applications, which means that compared to IPsec tunnels, |
| no transparency is really needed and modern BGP daemons already have |
| ``setsockopt()s`` for TCP-MD5 support. |
| |
| .. table:: Considered pros and cons of the approaches |
| |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | | ``setsockopt()`` | in-kernel DB | |
| +======================+========================+=======================+ |
| | Extendability | ``setsockopt()`` | Netlink messages are | |
| | | commands should be | simple and extendable | |
| | | extendable syscalls | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Required userspace | BGP or any application | could be transparent | |
| | changes | that wants TCP-AO needs| as tunnels, providing | |
| | | to perform | something like | |
| | | ``setsockopt()s`` | ``ip tcpao add key`` | |
| | | and do key management | (delete/show/rotate) | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |MKTs removal or adding| harder for userspace | harder for kernel | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Dump-ability | ``getsockopt()`` | Netlink .dump() | |
| | | | callback | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Limits on kernel | equal | |
| | resources/memory | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Scalability | contention on | contention on | |
| | | ``TCP_LISTEN`` sockets | the whole database | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Monitoring & warnings| ``TCP_DIAG`` | same Netlink socket | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| | Matching of MKTs | half-problem: only | hard | |
| | | listen sockets | | |
| +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+ |
| |
| |
| 3. uAPI |
| ======= |
| |
| Linux provides a set of ``setsockopt()s`` and ``getsockopt()s`` that let |
| userspace manage TCP-AO on a per-socket basis. In order to add/delete MKTs |
| ``TCP_AO_ADD_KEY`` and ``TCP_AO_DEL_KEY`` TCP socket options must be used |
| It is not allowed to add a key on an established non-TCP-AO connection |
| as well as to remove the last key from TCP-AO connection. |
| |
| ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)`` command may specify ``tcp_ao_del::current_key`` |
| + ``tcp_ao_del::set_current`` and/or ``tcp_ao_del::rnext`` |
| + ``tcp_ao_del::set_rnext`` which makes such delete "forced": it |
| provides userspace a way to delete a key that's being used and atomically set |
| another one instead. This is not intended for normal use and should be used |
| only when the peer ignores RNextKeyID and keeps requesting/using an old key. |
| It provides a way to force-delete a key that's not trusted but may break |
| the TCP-AO connection. |
| |
| The usual/normal key-rotation can be performed with ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_INFO)``. |
| It also provides a uAPI to change per-socket TCP-AO settings, such as |
| ignoring ICMPs, as well as clear per-socket TCP-AO packet counters. |
| The corresponding ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_INFO)`` can be used to get those |
| per-socket TCP-AO settings. |
| |
| Another useful command is ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_GET_KEYS)``. One can use it |
| to list all MKTs on a TCP socket or use a filter to get keys for a specific |
| peer and/or sndid/rcvid, VRF L3 interface or get current_key/rnext_key. |
| |
| To repair TCP-AO connections ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_REPAIR)`` is available, |
| provided that the user previously has checkpointed/dumped the socket with |
| ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_REPAIR)``. |
| |
| A tip here for scaled TCP_LISTEN sockets, that may have some thousands TCP-AO |
| keys, is: use filters in ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_GET_KEYS)`` and asynchronous |
| delete with ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)``. |
| |
| Linux TCP-AO also provides a bunch of segment counters that can be helpful |
| with troubleshooting/debugging issues. Every MKT has good/bad counters |
| that reflect how many packets passed/failed verification. |
| Each TCP-AO socket has the following counters: |
| - for good segments (properly signed) |
| - for bad segments (failed TCP-AO verification) |
| - for segments with unknown keys |
| - for segments where an AO signature was expected, but wasn't found |
| - for the number of ignored ICMPs |
| |
| TCP-AO per-socket counters are also duplicated with per-netns counters, |
| exposed with SNMP. Those are ``TCPAOGood``, ``TCPAOBad``, ``TCPAOKeyNotFound``, |
| ``TCPAORequired`` and ``TCPAODroppedIcmps``. |
| |
| RFC 5925 very permissively specifies how TCP port matching can be done for |
| MKTs:: |
| |
| TCP connection identifier. A TCP socket pair, i.e., a local IP |
| address, a remote IP address, a TCP local port, and a TCP remote port. |
| Values can be partially specified using ranges (e.g., 2-30), masks |
| (e.g., 0xF0), wildcards (e.g., "*"), or any other suitable indication. |
| |
| Currently Linux TCP-AO implementation doesn't provide any TCP port matching. |
| Probably, port ranges are the most flexible for uAPI, but so far |
| not implemented. |
| |
| 4. ``setsockopt()`` vs ``accept()`` race |
| ======================================== |
| |
| In contrast with TCP-MD5 established connection which has just one key, |
| TCP-AO connections may have many keys, which means that accepted connections |
| on a listen socket may have any amount of keys as well. As copying all those |
| keys on a first properly signed SYN would make the request socket bigger, that |
| would be undesirable. Currently, the implementation doesn't copy keys |
| to request sockets, but rather look them up on the "parent" listener socket. |
| |
| The result is that when userspace removes TCP-AO keys, that may break |
| not-yet-established connections on request sockets as well as not removing |
| keys from sockets that were already established, but not yet ``accept()``'ed, |
| hanging in the accept queue. |
| |
| The reverse is valid as well: if userspace adds a new key for a peer on |
| a listener socket, the established sockets in accept queue won't |
| have the new keys. |
| |
| At this moment, the resolution for the two races: |
| ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_ADD_KEY)`` vs ``accept()`` |
| and ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)`` vs ``accept()`` is delegated to userspace. |
| This means that it's expected that userspace would check the MKTs on the socket |
| that was returned by ``accept()`` to verify that any key rotation that |
| happened on listen socket is reflected on the newly established connection. |
| |
| This is a similar "do-nothing" approach to TCP-MD5 from the kernel side and |
| may be changed later by introducing new flags to ``tcp_ao_add`` |
| and ``tcp_ao_del``. |
| |
| Note that this race is rare for it needs TCP-AO key rotation to happen |
| during the 3-way handshake for the new TCP connection. |
| |
| 5. Interaction with TCP-MD5 |
| =========================== |
| |
| A TCP connection can not migrate between TCP-AO and TCP-MD5 options. The |
| established sockets that have either AO or MD5 keys are restricted for |
| adding keys of the other option. |
| |
| For listening sockets the picture is different: BGP server may want to receive |
| both TCP-AO and (deprecated) TCP-MD5 clients. As a result, both types of keys |
| may be added to TCP_CLOSED or TCP_LISTEN sockets. It's not allowed to add |
| different types of keys for the same peer. |
| |
| 6. SNE Linux implementation |
| =========================== |
| |
| RFC 5925 [6.2] describes the algorithm of how to extend TCP sequence numbers |
| with SNE. In short: TCP has to track the previous sequence numbers and set |
| sne_flag when the current SEQ number rolls over. The flag is cleared when |
| both current and previous SEQ numbers cross 0x7fff, which is 32Kb. |
| |
| In times when sne_flag is set, the algorithm compares SEQ for each packet with |
| 0x7fff and if it's higher than 32Kb, it assumes that the packet should be |
| verified with SNE before the increment. As a result, there's |
| this [0; 32Kb] window, when packets with (SNE - 1) can be accepted. |
| |
| Linux implementation simplifies this a bit: as the network stack already tracks |
| the first SEQ byte that ACK is wanted for (snd_una) and the next SEQ byte that |
| is wanted (rcv_nxt) - that's enough information for a rough estimation |
| on where in the 4GB SEQ number space both sender and receiver are. |
| When they roll over to zero, the corresponding SNE gets incremented. |
| |
| tcp_ao_compute_sne() is called for each TCP-AO segment. It compares SEQ numbers |
| from the segment with snd_una or rcv_nxt and fits the result into a 2GB window around them, |
| detecting SEQ numbers rolling over. That simplifies the code a lot and only |
| requires SNE numbers to be stored on every TCP-AO socket. |
| |
| The 2GB window at first glance seems much more permissive compared to |
| RFC 5926. But that is only used to pick the correct SNE before/after |
| a rollover. It allows more TCP segment replays, but yet all regular |
| TCP checks in tcp_sequence() are applied on the verified segment. |
| So, it trades a bit more permissive acceptance of replayed/retransmitted |
| segments for the simplicity of the algorithm and what seems better behaviour |
| for large TCP windows. |
| |
| 7. Links |
| ======== |
| |
| RFC 5925 The TCP Authentication Option |
| https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc5925.txt.pdf |
| |
| RFC 5926 Cryptographic Algorithms for the TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO) |
| https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc5926.txt.pdf |
| |
| Draft "SHA-2 Algorithm for the TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO)" |
| https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-nayak-tcp-sha2-03 |
| |
| RFC 2385 Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option |
| https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc2385.txt.pdf |
| |
| :Author: Dmitry Safonov <dima@arista.com> |