One document matched: draft-ietf-dhc-isnsoption-10.txt

Differences from draft-ietf-dhc-isnsoption-09.txt



      
        DHC Working Group                                   Charles Monia 
        INTERNET DRAFT                                         Josh Tseng 
        Expires: March 2004                                 Kevin Gibbons 
        Internet Draft                                                    
        Document: <draft-ietf-dhc-isnsoption-10.txt>       Nishan Systems 
        Category: Standards Track                          September 2003 
      

              The IPv4 DHCP Option for the Internet Storage Name Service 

     Status of this Memo 

        This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with 
        all provisions of Section 10 of [RFC2026].  

        Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering 
        Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that 
        other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
        Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of 
        six months and may be updated, replaced, or made obsolete by other 
        documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts 
        as reference 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. 

     Comments 

        Comments should be sent to the DHCP mailing list (dhcwg@ietf.org) or 
        to the authors. 

                                 Table of Contents 

















      
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     Status of this Memo...................................................1 
     Comments..............................................................1 
     Abstract..............................................................3 
     Conventions used in this document.....................................3 
     1.   Introduction.....................................................3 
     2.   iSNS Option for DHCP.............................................4 
     2.1  iSNS Functions Field.............................................5 
     2.2  Discovery Domain Access Field....................................7 
     2.3  Administrative Flags Field.......................................8 
     2.4  iSNS Server Security Bitmap......................................9 
     3.   Security Considerations.........................................10 
     4.   IANA Considerations.............................................11 
     5.   Normative References............................................11 
     6.   Non-Normative References........................................11 
     7.   Author's Addresses..............................................12 
     Full Copyright Statement.............................................13 
         





































      
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     Abstract 

        This document describes the DHCP option to allow Internet Storage 
        Name Service (iSNS) clients to automatically discover the location 
        of the iSNS server through the use of DHCP for IPv4. iSNS provides 
        discovery and management capabilities for Internet SCSI (iSCSI) and 
        Internet Fibre Channel Protocol (iFCP) storage devices in an 
        enterprise-scale IP storage network.  iSNS provides intelligent 
        storage management services comparable to those found in Fibre 
        Channel networks, allowing a commodity IP network to function in a 
        similar capacity as a storage area network. 

     Conventions used in this document 

        iSNS refers to the Internet Storage Name Service framework 
        consisting of the storage network model and associated services. 

        The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", 
        "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED",  "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in 
        this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. 

        All frame formats are in big endian network byte order.  RESERVED 
        fields SHOULD be set to zero. 

        This document uses the following terms: 

        "iSNS Client" - iSNS clients are processes resident in iSCSI and 
        iFCP devices that initiate transactions with the iSNS server using 
        the iSNS Protocol. 

        "iSNS Server" - The iSNS server responds to iSNS protocol query and 
        registration messages, and initiates asynchronous notification 
        messages.  The iSNS server stores information registered by iSNS 
        clients. 

        "iSCSI (Internet SCSI)" - iSCSI is an encapsulation of SCSI for a 
        new generation of storage devices interconnected with TCP/IP. 

        "iFCP (Internet Fibre Channel Protocol)" - iFCP is a gateway-to-
        gateway protocol designed to interconnect existing Fibre Channel 
        devices using TCP/IP.  iFCP maps the Fibre Channel transport and 
        fabric services to TCP/IP. 

     1.       Introduction 

        The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv4 provides a 
        framework for passing configuration information to hosts.  Its 
        usefulness extends to hosts and devices using the iSCSI and iFCP 
        protocols to connect to block level storage assets over a TCP/IP 
        network. 

        The iSNS Protocol provides a framework for automated discovery, 
        management, and configuration of iSCSI and iFCP devices on a TCP/IP 
        network.  It provides functionality similar to that found on Fibre 
      
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        Channel networks, except that iSNS works within the context of an IP 
        network.  iSNS thereby provides the requisite storage intelligence 
        to IP networks that are standard on existing Fibre Channel networks. 

        Existing DHCP options cannot be used to find iSNS servers for the 
        following reasons: 

         a) iSNS functionality is distinctly different from other protocols 
            using DHCP options.  Specifically, iSNS provides a significant 
            superset of capabilities compared to typical name resolution 
            protocols such as DNS.  It is designed to support client devices 
            that allow themselves to be configured and managed from a 
            central iSNS server 

         b) iSNS requires a DHCP option format that provides more than the 
            location of the iSNS server.  The DHCP option needs to specify 
            the subset of iSNS services that may be actively used by the 
            iSNS client. 

        The DHCP option number for iSNS is used by iSCSI and iFCP devices to 
        discover the location and role of the iSNS server.  The DHCP option 
        number assigned for iSNS by IANA is <<TBD>>.  

     2.       iSNS Option for DHCP 

        This option specifies the location of the primary and backup iSNS 
        servers and the iSNS services available to an iSNS client. 

         0                   1                   2                   3 
         0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |   Code = TBD  |    Length     |          iSNS Functions       | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |           DD Access           |     Administrative FLAGS      | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |                 iSNS Server Security Bitmap                   | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |      a1       |       a2      |       a3      |       a4      | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |      b1       |       b2      |       b3      |       b4      | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |                            . . . .                            | 
        |                 Additional Secondary iSNS Servers             | 
        |                            . . . .                            | 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                           Figure 1 -- iSNS Server Option 

        The iSNS Option specifies a list of IP addresses used by iSNS 
        servers. The option contains the following parameters: 

        Length: the number of bytes that follow the Length field. 



      
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        iSNS Functions: A bitmapped field defining the functions supported 
                by the iSNS servers.  The format of this field is described 
                in section 2.1. 

        Discovery Domain Access: A bit field indicating the types of iSNS 
                clients that are allowed to modify Discovery Domains. The 
                field contents are described in section 2.2. 

        Administrative Flags field: Contains the administrative settings for 
                the iSNS servers discovered through the DHCP query.  The 
                contents of this field are described in section 2.3. 

        iSNS Server Security Bitmap: Contains the iSNS server security 
                settings specified in section 2.4. 

        a1...a4: Depending on the setting of the Heartbeat bit in the 
                Administrative Flags field (see section 2.3), this field 
                contains either the IP address from which the iSNS heartbeat 
                originates (see [ISNS]) or the IP address of the primary 
                iSNS server. 

        b1...b4: Depending on the setting of Heartbeat bit in the 
                Administrative Flags field (see section 2.3), this field 
                contains either the IP address of the primary iSNS server or 
                a secondary iSNS server. 

        Additional Secondary iSNS Servers: Each set of four octets specifies 
                the IP address of a secondary iSNS server. 

        The Code field through IP address field a1...a4 MUST be present in 
        every response to the iSNS query, hence the Length field has a 
        minimum value of 14. 

        If the Heartbeat bit is set in the Administrative Flags field (see 
        section 2.3), then b1...b4 MUST also be present. In this case, the 
        minimum value of the Length field is 18. 

        The inclusion of Additional Secondary iSNS Servers in the response 
        MUST be indicated by increasing the Length field accordingly. 

     2.1      iSNS Functions Field 

        The iSNS Functions Field defines the iSNS server's operational role 
        (i.e., how the iSNS server is to be used).  The iSNS server's role 
        can be as basic as providing simple discovery information, or as 
        significant as providing IKE/IPSec security policies and 
        certificates for the use of iSCSI and iFCP devices. The format of 
        the iSNS Functions field is shown in Figure 2: 






      
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                      0                   1         1 
                      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 
                     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                     |       Reserved          |S|A|E| 
                     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                     Figure 2 -- iSNS Functions Field 

                Bit field     Significance 
                ---------     ------------ 
                15            Function Fields Enabled 
                14            DD-Based Authorization 
                13            Security Policy Distribution 
      
        iSNS Functions Field definitions: 

      
                Function Fields This bit specifies the validity of the 
                Enabled:        remaining iSNS Function fields.  If set to 
                                 one, then the contents of all other iSNS 
                                 Function fields are valid.  If set to zero, 
                                 then the contents of all other iSNS 
                                 Function fields MUST be ignored. 

                DD-based        Indicates whether or not devices in a 
                Authorization:  common Discovery Domain (DD) are implicitly 
                                 authorized to access one another. Although 
                                 Discovery Domains control the scope of 
                                 device discovery, they do not necessarily 
                                 indicate whether or not a domain member is 
                                 authorized to access discovered devices.  
                                 If this bit is set to one, then devices in 
                                 a common Discovery Domain are automatically 
                                 allowed access to each other (if 
                                 successfully authenticated).  If this bit 
                                 is set to zero, then access authorization 
                                 is not implied by domain membership and 
                                 must be explicitly performed by each 
                                 device. In either case, devices not in a 
                                 common discovery domain are not allowed to 
                                 access each other. 

                Security Policy Indicates whether the iSNS client is to 
                Distribution:   download and use the security policy 
                                 configuration stored in the iSNS server.  
                                 If set to one, then the policy is stored in 
                                 the iSNS server and must be used by the 
                                 iSNS client for its own security policy.  
                                 If set to zero, then the iSNS client must 
                                 obtain its security policy configuration by 
                                 other means. 

         


      
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     2.2      Discovery Domain Access Field 

        The format of the DD Access bit field is shown in Figure 3: 

                       0                               1 
                       0   1   2   3   4   5   6  ...  5 
                     +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ 
                     | if| tf| is| ts| C | E |  Reserved | 
                     +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ 
                    Figure 3 -- Discovery Domain Access Field 

                 Bit field  Significance 
                 ---------  ------------ 
                      5      Enabled 
                      4      Control Node 
                      3      iSCSI Target 
                      2      iSCSI Initiator 
                      1      iFCP Target Port 
                      0      iFCP Initiator Port 
         

        Discovery Domain Access Field Definitions: 

                Enabled:           This bit specifies the validity of the 
                                   remaining DD Access bit fields.  If this 
                                   bit is set to one, then the contents of 
                                   the remainder of the DD Access field are 
                                   valid.  If this bit is set to zero, then 
                                   the contents of the remainder of this 
                                   field MUST be ignored. 

                Control Node:      Specifies whether the iSNS server allows 
                                   Discovery Domains to be added, modified 
                                   or deleted by means of Control Nodes. If 
                                   set to one, then Control Nodes are 
                                   allowed to modify the Discovery Domain 
                                   configuration.  If set to zero, then 
                                   Control Nodes are not allowed to modify 
                                   Discovery Domain configurations. 

                iSCSI Target,      These bits determine whether the 
                iSCSI Initiator,   respective registered iSNS client  
                iFCP Target Port,  (determined by iSCSI Node Type or iFCP 
                iFCP Initiator     Port Role) is allowed to add, delete, or 
                Port:              modify Discovery Domains.  If set to 
                                   one, then modification by the specified 
                                   client type is allowed. If set to zero, 
                                   then modification by the specified 
                                   client type is not allowed. 

                                   (A node may implement multiple node 
                                   types.) 

         
      
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     2.3      Administrative Flags Field 

        The format of the Administrative Flags bit field is shown in                  
        Figure 4: 

                           0                   1         1 
                           0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 
                          +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                          |    RESERVED           |D|M|H|E| 
                          +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                           Figure 4 -- Administrative Flags 

                            Bit Field      Significance 
                            ---------      ------------ 
                                15          Enabled 
                                14          Heartbeat 
                                13          Management SCNs 
                                12          Default Discovery Domain 
         

        Administrative Flags Field definitions: 

                Enabled:           Specifies the validity of the remainder 
                                   of the Administrative Flags field.  If 
                                   set to one, then the contents of the 
                                   remaining Administrative Flags are 
                                   valid.  If set to zero, then the 
                                   remaining contents MUST be ignored, 
                                   indicating that iSNS administrative 
                                   settings are obtained through means 
                                   other than DHCP. 

                Heartbeat:         Indicates whether the first IP address 
                                   is the multicast address to which the 
                                   iSNS heartbeat message is sent.  If set 
                                   to one, then a1-a4 contains the 
                                   heartbeat multicast address and b1-b4 
                                   contains the IP address of the primary 
                                   iSNS server, followed by the IP 
                                   address(es) of any backup servers (see 
                                   Figure 1).  If set to zero, then a1-a4 
                                   contains the IP address of the primary 
                                   iSNS server, followed by the IP 
                                   address(es) of any backup servers. 

                Management SCNs:   Indicates whether control nodes are 
                                   authorized to register to receive 
                                   Management State Change Notifications 
                                   (SCN's).  Management SCN's are a special 
                                   class of State Change Notification whose 
                                   scope is the entire iSNS database.  If 
                                   set to one, then control nodes are 
                                   authorized to register to receive 
                                   Management SCN's.  If set to zero, then 
      
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                                   control nodes are not authorized to 
                                   receive Management SCN's (although they 
                                   may receive normal SCN's). 

                Default Discovery  Indicates whether a newly registered 
                Domain:            device that is not explicitly placed 
                                   into a Discovery Domain (DD) and 
                                   Discovery Domain Set (DDS) should be 
                                   automatically placed into a default DD 
                                   and DDS.  If set to one, then a default 
                                   DD shall contain all devices in the iSNS 
                                   database that have not been explicitly 
                                   placed into a DD by an iSNS client.  If 
                                   set to zero, then devices not explicitly 
                                   placed into a DD are not members of any 
                                   DD. 

         

     2.4      iSNS Server Security Bitmap 

        The format of the iSNS server security Bitmap field is shown in 
        Figure 5. If valid, this field communicates to the DHCP client the 
        security settings that are required to communicate with the 
        indicated iSNS server. 

         0                   1                   2                   3 
         0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
        |                     Reserved                    |T|X|P|A|M|S|E| 
        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
                      Figure 5 -- iSNS Server Security Bitmap 

                Bit Field     Significance 
                ---------     ---------------- 
                     31      Enabled 
                     30      IKE/IPSec 
                     29      Main Mode 
                     28      Aggressive Mode 
                     27      PFS 
                     26      Transport Mode 
                     25      Tunnel Mode 
         

        iSNS Server Security Bitmap definitions: 









      
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                Enabled          This bit specifies the validity of the 
                                  remainder of the iSNS server security 
                                  bitmap.  If set to one, then the contents 
                                  of the remainder of the field are valid.  
                                  If set to zero, then the contents of the 
                                  rest of the field are undefined and MUST 
                                  be ignored. 

                IKE/IPSec        1 = IKE/IPSec enabled; 0 = IKE/IPSec 
                                  disabled. 

                Main Mode        1 = Main Mode enabled; 0 = Main Mode 
                                  disabled. 

                Aggressive Mode  1 = Aggressive mode enabled; 0 = 
                                  Aggressive mode disabled. 

                PFS              1 = PFS enabled; 0 = PFS disabled. 

                Transport Mode   1 = Transport mode preferred; 0 = No 
                                  preference. 

                Tunnel Mode      1 = Tunnel mode preferred; 0 = No 
                                  preference. 

         

        If IKE/IPSec is disabled, this indicates that the Internet Key 
        Exchange (IKE) Protocol is not available to configure IPSec keys for 
        iSNS sessions to this iSNS server.  It does not necessarily preclude 
        other key exchange methods (e.g., manual keying) from establishing 
        an IPSec security association for the iSNS session. 

        If IKE/IPsec is enabled, an implementation SHALL enable: 

        a) One of Main Mode or Aggressive Mode but not both and  

        b) One of Transport Mode or Tunnel Mode but not both. 

     3.       Security Considerations 

        DHCP security considerations are addressed in [RFC3118].  Among 
        these is the potential for a "man-in-the-middle" attack by a hostile 
        entity modifying or replacing the original iSNS option message. 
        Unless some form of authentication is implemented, an attacker may 
        trick the iSNS client into connecting into rogue iSNS servers. 

        To thwart such attacks, the DHCP response should be verified in some 
        manner. One approach is direct authentication via [RFC3118], when 
        implemented.  Since this technology is not widely deployed, an 
        alternative is to authenticate the discovered iSNS server through 
        use of IPSec or the iSNS authentication block as described in 
        [ISNS]. Of course, use of iSNS Server authentication implies a site 

      
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        wide policy requiring use of one of the authentication methods 
        specified in [ISNS] by all iSNS servers. 

        If no authentication is used and it is determined that the potential 
        exists for one of the attacks described in [RFC3118], then the DHCP 
        option message for iSNS should not be utilized. 

     4.       IANA Considerations 

        In accordance with the policy defined in [DHCP], IANA has assigned a 
        value of TBD for this option. 

        There are no other IANA-assigned values defined by this 
        specification. 

     5.       Normative References 

            [DHCP]  Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol", RFC 
                    2131, Bucknell University, March 1997. 

            [iSNS]  Tseng, J. et al., "iSNS - Internet Storage Name 
                    Service", Internet draft (work in progress), draft-ietf-
                    ips-isns-12.txt, August 2002 

            [RFC2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- 
                    Revision 3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996 

            [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate 
                    Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997 

            [RFC3118] Arbaugh, W., Droms, R., "Authentication for DHCP 
                    Messages", RFC 3118, June 2001  

              

     6.       Non-Normative References 

            [iFCP]  Monia, C., et al., "iFCP - A Protocol for Internet Fibre 
                    Channel Storage Networking", Internet draft (work in 
                    progress), draft-ietf-ips-ifcp-13.txt, May 2002 

            [iSCSI] Satran, J., et al., "iSCSI", Internet draft (work in 
                    progress), draft-ietf-ips-iSCSI-15.txt, August 2002 

            [SEC-IPS] Aboba, B., et al., "Securing IP Block Storage 
                    Protocols", draft-ietf-ips-security-14.txt, June 2002 

         






      
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                      Internet Storage Name Service (iSNS)    November 2001 

     7.       Author's Addresses 

        Kevin Gibbons, 
        Charles Monia, 
        Josh Tseng 
         
        Nishan Systems 
        3850 North First Street 
        San Jose, CA 95134-1702 
        Phone: (408) 519-3700 
        Email: cmonia@nishansystems.com 
               jtseng@nishansystems.com 
               kgibbons@nishansystems.com 
         








































      
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