One document matched: draft-giaretta-mip6-aaa-ha-goals-00.txt


   MIP6 Working Group                                       G. Giaretta 
   Internet Draft                                           I. Guardini 
   Expires: March 2005                                       E. Demaria 
                                                                  TILab 
                                                           J. Bournelle 
                                                                GET/INT 
                                                               R. Lopez 
                                                        Univ. of Murcia 
                                                         September 2004 
    
    
                        Goals for AAA-HA interface 
                <draft-giaretta-mip6-aaa-ha-goals-00.txt> 
    
Status of this Memo 
    
   This document is an Internet-Draft and is subject to all provisions   
   of section 3 of RFC 3667. By submitting this Internet-Draft, I 
   certify that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which I am 
   aware have been disclosed, and any of which I become aware will be 
   disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668. 
    
   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering 
   Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that 
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   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six 
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   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." 
    
   The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at 
        http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt 
    
   The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at 
        http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. 
    
Abstract 
    
   In commercial deployments Mobile IPv6 can be a service offered by a 
   Mobility Services Provider (MSP). In this case all protocol 
   operations may need to be explicitely authorized and traced. A 
   convenient approach to do that is to define an interface between the 
   Home Agent (HA) and the AAA infrastructure of the MSP, which stores 
   user's credentials and service profiles. The availability of this 
   interface can be useful also to enable dynamic Mobile IPv6 
   bootstrapping on both the mobile node and the designated HA. 
   This document describes various scenarios where an interface between 
   the HA and the AAA infrastructure of the MSP is required. 
   Furthermore, a list of design goals for this interface is provided. 
    
    
Internet-Draft          AAA-HA interface goals          September 2004 
 
    
Table of Contents 
    
   1.   Introduction................................................3 
   2.   Motivation..................................................4 
   3.   Basic security model........................................5 
   4.   Bootstrapping scenarios.....................................6 
      4.1  Scenario 1...............................................6 
      4.2  Scenario 2...............................................6 
      4.3  Scenario 3...............................................7 
      4.4  Scenario 4...............................................8 
   5.   Goals for the AAA-HA interface..............................9 
      5.1  General goals............................................9 
      5.2  Service Authorization....................................9 
      5.3  Accounting..............................................10 
      5.4  Mobile Node Authentication..............................10 
      5.5  Provisioning of configuration parameters................10 
   6.   Mapping between goals and scenarios........................11 
   7.   Security Considerations....................................12 
   References......................................................13 
   AuthorsĘ Addresses..............................................14 
   Intellectual Property Statement.................................15 
    
    
    

























 
 
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1. Introduction 
    
   Mobile IPv6 [1] was originally designed as a standalone protocol to 
   handle terminal mobility relying on a centralized and pre-configured 
   Home Agent (HA). Nonetheless, if Mobile IPv6 is a service offered by 
   a Mobility Services Provider (MSP), all protocol operations may need 
   to be explicitely authorized and traced (e.g. for accounting 
   purposes). A convenient approach to achieve this result is to define 
   an interface between the AAA infrastructure of the MSP and the HA. 
   Such an interface may be useful also in some Mobile IPv6 dynamic 
   bootstrapping scenarios [2]. 
    
   This document describes various scenarios for which an interface 
   between the HA and the AAA infrastructure of the MSP is useful. 
   Furthermore, a list of goals for such an interface is provided. 
    
   No assumptions are made on the protocol used to implement the 
   interface. An obvious choice may be the employment of a AAA protocol 
   such as RADIUS or Diameter. Nonetheless, for some scenarios, other 
   non AAA protocols such as SNMPv3 [4] or COPS-PR [5] may satisfy all 
   the goals described herewith. 
    
    



























 
 
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2. Motivation 
 
   Mobile IPv6 specification [1] requires that Mobile Nodes (MNs) are 
   provisioned with a set of configuration parameters, namely the Home 
   Address and the Home Agent Address, in order to accomplish a home 
   registration. Moreover MNs and Home Agents (HAs) must share the 
   cryptographic material needed to protect Mobile IPv6 signaling (e.g. 
   shared keys or certificates to setup an IPsec security association).    
    
   The simplest option is to statically provision all the necessary 
   configuration data on MNs and HAs. This solution raises obvious 
   scalability issues especially in a large network with a lot of users 
   (e.g. a mobile operator network). For this reason the dynamic Mobile 
   IPv6 bootstrapping problem is currently under study [2]. 
    
   In case Mobile IPv6 is a service offered by a Mobility Service 
   Provider (MSP) all protocol operations (e.g. home registrations) may 
   need to be explicitely authorized and monitored (e.g. for accounting 
   purposes). This can be done relying on the AAA infrastructure of the 
   MSP, that stores users' service profiles and credentials. 
    
   The deployment of this service model requires the availability of an 
   interface between the AAA infrastructure and the HA, that can be 
   seen as the Network Access Server (NAS) for Mobile IPv6. The core 
   capabilities that should be supported by this interface include 
   Mobile IPv6 service authorization and maintenance (e.g. asynchronous  
   service termination) as well as the exchange of accounting data. 
   This is the basic set of features needed in any Mobile IPv6 
   bootstrapping scenario (i.e. static or dynamic). 
    
   Moreover, whenever static provisioning is not feasible, the AAA 
   infrastructure of the MSP can be used as the central element to 
   build a dynamic Mobile IPv6 bootstrapping solution. In this case the 
   AAA infrastructure can be exploited also to send to the designated 
   HA the needed configuration parameters (e.g. keying material) as 
   well as to assist the HA with mobile node authentication. 
    
   There is therefore space for the definition of a general AAA-HA 
   communication interface capable to support the basic features 
   described above (e.g. authorization and accounting) as well as the 
   extended capabilities (e.g. transfer of configuration data) needed 
   to enable various dynamic Mobile IPv6 bootstrapping scenarios. 
    
 
    





 
 
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3. Basic security model  
 
   The basic security model behind this draft assumes that the mobile 
   node shares a pre-configured trust relationship with the AAA server 
   of the MSP (AAAH), as stated in [2]. Furthermore the HA is expected 
   to share a trust relationship with the AAAH server (see Figure 1). 
    
 
                     MN               AAAH              HA 
                     ^                ^  ^               ^ 
                     |                |  |               | 
                     +----------------+  +---------------+ 
                     trust relationship  trust relationship 
    
                          Figure 1 - Basic Model 
    


































 
 
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4. Bootstrapping scenarios 
    
   This section describes some bootstrapping scenarios in which a 
   communication between the AAA infrastructure of the Mobility Service 
   Provider and the Home Agent is needed. These scenarios include both 
   dynamic (Scenario 1 and Scenario 2) and static (Scenario 3 and 
   Scenario 4) bootstrapping.  
    
4.1 Scenario 1 
    
   In this scenario, depicted in Figure 2, the MN discovers the Home 
   Agent address (e.g. by means of a new DNS SRV record or DHCP) and 
   performs an IKEv2 [3] exchange with the HA to setup the IPsec SA 
   needed to protect mobility signaling. Eventually, during this 
   handshake, the MN can also obtain a valid Home Address from the HA. 
    
   The MN is not expected to share a pre-configured trust relationship 
   with the HA, nor to share a secret with it. For this reason, peer 
   authentication in IKEv2 can be performed through an EAP exchange. 
   The HA, behaving as an EAP authenticator operating in pass-through 
   mode, forwards this EAP exchange to the AAAH server, that can 
   authenticate the MN and authorize the Mobile IPv6 service. 
   Therefore, in this case an interface between the HA and the AAAH 
   server is needed at least for authentication and authorization 
   purposes.  
    
                 MN                AAAH            HA 
                                                      
                   <---------- IKEv2(EAP) -------->   
                                                      
                                        <--------->   
                                      AAA-HA protocol 
    
       Figure 2 - Dynamic MIPv6 bootstrapping through IKEv2 and EAP 
    
4.2 Scenario 2 
    
   In this scenario Mobile IPv6 bootstrapping is performed during 
   network access authentication (it is assumed that the access 
   provider and the MSP are the same entity, i.e. Integrated ASP [2]) 
   and the AAA server of the MSP (AAAH) controls the whole 
   bootstrapping procedure interacting with both the mobile node and 
   the designated HA. 
    
   The AAAH server and the MN can exploit AAA routing to exchange 
   configuration data. Possible approaches to implement this 
   communication are the following: 
    
   - if network access authentication is carried out using EAP, it is 
     possible to piggyback Mobile IPv6 configuration parameters (e.g. 
 
 
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     Home Agent address, Home Address) within the EAP exchange [6]. See 
     Figure 3; 
    
   - alternatively, Mobile IPv6 parameters can be transferred to the 
     Network Access Server (NAS) by means of RADIUS or Diameter AVPs 
     [7] and then forwarded to the MN through other means (e.g. L2-
     specific extensions, DHCP [8]). See Figure 4 for an example. 
 
   In both cases, the AAAH server must communicate with the designated 
   HA to select a suitable Home Address for the MN and to deliver to 
   the HA the necessary configuration parameters (e.g. pre-shared key 
   for IKE bootstrapping). Therefore also in this scenario an interface 
   between the AAAH server and the HA must be defined for parameter 
   exchange as well as authentication and Mobile IPv6 service 
   authorization. 
    
              MN                          AAAH           HA  
                <------------------------>     <-------->    
                  Piggybacking of MIPv6      AAA-HA protocol  
                     data within EAP                         
                                                             
       Figure 3 - MIPv6 bootstrapping with piggybacking within EAP 
 
 
              MN            NAS           AAAH           HA  
                <---------->   <--------->     <-------->    
                L2-specific       MIPv6      AAA-HA protocol 
                extensions     RADIUS AVPs                   
                                                             
             Figure 4 - MIPv6 bootstrapping with RADIUS AVPs 
 
4.3 Scenario 3 
    
   In this scenario the MN is statically provisioned with the data 
   needed to bootstrap Mobile IPv6 service (i.e. Home Agent Address, 
   Home Address and a shared secret with the HA). For example, the MN 
   can be configured with a pre-shared key to dynamically establish an 
   IPsec Security Association with the HA using IKE.  
    
   However, in general the static configuration of these parameters and 
   the authentication performed through the pre-shared key may not be 
   sufficient to conclude that the MN is authorized for MIPv6 service. 
   For example, the MSP might want to prevent the usage of MIPv6 if the 
   the credit of the MN is going to exhaust. Moreover, there might be 
   the need for the MSP to enforce more complex dynamic authorization 
   policies based on time of day and/or visited location.  
    
   This implies that during the IKE exchange the HA must communicate 
   with the AAAH server in order to explicitly authorize MIPv6 service 
   for that particular MN. See Figure 5. 
 
 
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                 MN                AAAH             HA                   
    
                   <-------------- IKE ------------>    
     
                                       <-----------> 
                                      AAA-HA protocol 
    
      Figure 5 - Mobile IPv6 authorization with static boostrapping 
 
4.4 Scenario 4 
 
   In this scenario, the IPsec SA between MN and HA is statically and 
   manually configured, thus the MN does not need to perform an IKE 
   exchange with the HA. The MN activates MIPv6 service, sending a 
   Binding Update message to the HA in order to update its location. 
    
   The presence of the IPsec SA between MN and HA is enough in order to 
   authenticate the binding management messages. However, it is not 
   enough to authorize MIPv6 service; thus, as soon as it receives a 
   Binding Update, the HA must explicitly authorize MIPv6 service 
   interacting with the AAAH server (Figure 6). For this purpose, an 
   interface between the HA and the AAAH is needed at least for 
   authorization purposes. 
    
   If deemed necessary, the explicit authorization of Binding Updates 
   based on the handshake depicted in Figure 5 can be used also in the 
   bootstrapping scenarios described in the previous sections. It may 
   be useful to enforce dynamic authorization policies, such as those 
   based on the MN's location. 
    
                 MN               AAAH             HA                   
    
                      ------------ BU ------------>    
     
                                      <-----------> 
                                     AAA-HA protocol 
    
                      <----------- BA -------------   
    
                 Figure 6 - Binding Update Authorization 






 
 
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5. Goals for the AAA-HA interface 
    
   The motivations and scenarios illustrated in previous sections raise 
   the need to define an interface between the AAAH server and the HA. 
   The following sections list a set of goals for this interface. 
    
5.1 General goals 
    
   G1.1 The AAAH server and the HA must be able to authenticate each 
        other (mutual authentication) in order to prevent the 
        installation of unauthorized state on the HA. 
    
   G1.2 The AAA-HA interface must provide integrity protection in 
        order to prevent any alteration of exchanged data (e.g. Mobile 
        IPv6 configuration parameters). 
    
   G1.3 The AAA-HA interface must provide replay protection.   
    
   G1.4 The AAA-HA interface should provide confidentiality since it 
        may be used to transfer security parameters (e.g. IKE pre-
        shared key). 
    
   G1.5 The AAA-HA interface should support inactive peer detection. 
        This functionality can be used by the AAAH server to maintain 
        a list of active HAs (e.g. useful for HA selection). 
    
5.2 Service Authorization 
    
   G2.1 The AAA-HA interface should allow the use of Network Access 
        Identifier (NAI) to identify the mobile node. 
    
   G2.2 The HA should be able to query the AAAH server to verify 
        Mobile IPv6 service authorization for the mobile node. 
    
   G2.3 The AAAH server should be able to enforce explicit operational 
        limitations and authorization restrictions on the HA (e.g. 
        packet filters, QoS parameters). 
    
   G2.4 The AAAH server should be able to send an authorization 
        lifetime to the HA to limit Mobile IPv6 session duration for 
        the MN. 
 
   G2.5 The HA should be able to request to the AAAH server an 
        extension of the authorization lifetime granted to the MN. 
    
   G2.6 The AAAH server should be able to force the HA to terminate an 
        active Mobile IPv6 session for authorization policy reasons 
        (e.g. credit exhaustion). 
    

 
 
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   G2.7 The AAAH server should be able to retreive the Mobile IPv6 
        state associated to a specific MN from the correspondent HA. 
        This may be useful to periodically verify the Mobile IPv6 
        service status. 
    
5.3 Accounting 
 
   G3.1 The AAA-HA interface must support the transfer of accounting 
        records needed for service control and charging. These include 
        (but may not be limited to): time of binding cache entry 
        creation and deletion, octets sent and received by the mobile 
        node in Bi-directional Tunneling, etc. 
 
5.4 Mobile Node Authentication 
    
   G4.1 The AAA-HA interface should support MN authentication (and re-
        authentication) with the HA working as a NAS and the AAAH 
        server working a back-end authentication server. 
    
   G4.2 The AAA-HA interface should support at least pass-through EAP 
        authentication with the HA working as a EAP authenticator 
        operating in pass-through mode and the AAAH server working as 
        back-end authentication server. 
 
5.5 Provisioning of configuration parameters 
    
   G5.1 The AAAH server should be able to poll the designated HA for 
        the allocation of a Home Address to the MN. Optionally, the 
        AAAH server can provide a set of hints for the construction of 
        the Home Address (e.g. a preferred Home Address or a preferred 
        Interface Identifier). 
    
   G5.2 The HA should be able to communicate to the AAAH server the 
        Home Address allocated to the MN. 
    
   G5.3 The AAAH server should be able to send to the HA the security 
        data needed to setup the IPsec SA between the MN and the HA. 
        Possible security data are the authentication method and the 
        cryptographic material to be used for IKE bootstrapping. 
    
         
 
    
    
    
    




 
 
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6. Mapping between goals and scenarios 
 
   The table below shows which goals, among those listed in section 5, 
   are strictly (X) or optionally (O) required for each of the 
   scenarios discussed in section 4.  
 
    
        Section           +---------------------------------------+     
        Defined   Goals   | Scen. 1 | Scen. 2 | Scen. 3 | Scen. 4 |     
       -------------------+---------|---------|---------|---------|     
                   G1.1   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G1.2   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
          5.1      G1.3   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G1.4   |    O    |    X    |    O    |    O    |     
                   G1.5   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
       -------------------|---------|---------|---------|---------|     
                   G2.1   |    X    |    X    |    O    |    O    |     
                   G2.2   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G2.3   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
          5.2      G2.4   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G2.5   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G2.6   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
                   G2.7   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
       -------------------|---------|---------|---------|---------|     
          5.3      G3.1   |    X    |    X    |    X    |    X    |     
       -------------------|---------|---------|---------|---------|     
          5.4      G4.1   |    X    |         |         |         |     
                   G4.2   |    X    |         |         |         |     
       -------------------|---------|---------|---------|---------|     
                   G5.1   |         |    X    |         |         |     
          5.5      G5.2   |         |    X    |         |         |     
                   G5.3   |         |    X    |         |         |     
       -------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 









 
 
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7. Security Considerations 
 
   As stated in section 5.1 the AAA-HA interface must provide mutual 
   authentication, integrity and replay protection. Furthermore, if 
   security paramters (e.g. IKE pre-shared key) are transferred through 
   this interface, confidentiality support is also required.  
 











































 
 
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References 
    
[1] Johnson, D., Perkins, C. and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support in IPv6", 
    draft-ietf-mobileip-ipv6-24 (work in progress), July 2003. 
    
[2] Patel, A. et al. "Problem Statement for bootstrapping Mobile IPv6", 
    draft-ietf-mip6-bootstrap-ps-00 (work in progress), July 2004. 
 
[3] Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",             
    draft-ietf-ipsec-ikev2-16 (work in progress), September 2004. 
 
[4] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D. and B. Stewart, "Introduction and 
    Applicability Statements for Internet-Standard Management 
    Framework", RFC 3410, December 2002. 
 
[5] K. Chan, D. Durham, S. Gai, S. Herzog, K. McCloghrie, F. 
    Reichmeyer, J. Seligson, A. Smith, R. Yavatkar, "COPS Usage for 
    Policy Provisioning,", RFC 3084, March 2001. 
 
[6] Giaretta, G., Guardini, I., Demaria, E., Bournelle, J., Laurent-
    Maknavicius, M., "MIPv6 Authorization and Configuration based on 
    EAP", draft-giaretta-mip6-authorization-eap-02 (work in progress), 
    September 2004. 
 
[7] Chowdhury, K. and Lior, A., "RADIUS Attributes for Mobile IPv6 
    bootstrapping", draft-chowdhury-mip6-bootstrap-radius-00 (work in          
    progress), July 2004. 
 
[8] Jang, H. J. and Yegin, A., "DHCP Option for Home Agent Discovery in 
    MIPv6", draft-jang-dhc-haopt-00 (work in progress), May 2004. 
 














 
 
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Authors' Addresses 
    
   Gerardo Giaretta 
   Telecom Italia Lab 
   via G. Reiss Romoli, 274  
   10148 TORINO 
   Italy 
   Phone: +39 011 2286904 
   Email: gerardo.giaretta@tilab.com 
     
   Ivano Guardini 
   Telecom Italia Lab 
   via G. Reiss Romoli, 274  
   10148 TORINO 
   Italy 
   Phone: +39 011 2285424 
   Email: ivano.guardini@tilab.com 
    
   Elena Demaria 
   Telecom Italia Lab 
   via G. Reiss Romoli, 274  
   10148 TORINO 
   Italy 
   Phone: +39 011 2285403 
   Email: elena.demaria@tilab.com 
    
   Julien Bournelle 
   GET/INT 
   9 rue Charles Fourier 
   Evry  91011 
   France 
   Email: julien.bournelle@int-evry.fr 
    
   Rafa Marin Lopez 
   University of Murcia 
   30071 Murcia 
   Spain 
   EMail: rafa@dif.um.es 
    










 
 
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