One document matched: draft-ietf-msec-ipsec-extensions-02.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-msec-ipsec-extensions-01.txt
MSEC Working Group B. Weis
Internet-Draft Cisco Systems
Expires: December, 2006 G. Gross
IdentAware Security
D. Ignjatic
Polycom
June, 2006
Multicast Extensions to the Security Architecture for the Internet
Protocol
draft-ietf-msec-ipsec-extensions-02.txt
Status of this Memo
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
Abstract
The Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol [RFC4301]
describes security services for traffic at the IP layer. That
architecture primarily defines services for Internet Protocol (IP)
unicast packets, as well as manually configured IP multicast packets.
This document further defines the security services for manually and
dynamically keyed IP multicast packets within that Security
Architecture.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction........................................................3
1.1 Scope............................................................4
1.2 Terminology......................................................5
2. Overview of IP Multicast Operation..................................6
3. Security Association Modes..........................................7
3.1 Tunnel Mode with Address Preservation............................7
4. Security Association................................................8
4.1 Major IPsec Databases............................................8
4.1.1 Group Security Policy Database (GSPD)........................9
4.1.2 Security Association Database (SAD).........................10
4.1.3 Peer Authorization Database (PAD)...........................10
4.2 Group Security Association (GSA)................................12
4.3 Data Origin Authentication......................................13
4.4 Group SA and Key Management.....................................14
4.4.1 Co-Existence of Multiple Key Management Protocols...........14
4.4.2 New Security Association Attributes.........................14
5. IP Traffic Processing..............................................15
5.1 Outbound IP Multicast Traffic Processing........................15
5.2 Inbound IP Multicast Traffic Processing.........................15
6. IP-v4 Network Address Translation..................................15
6.1 GSPD Losses Synchronization with Internet Layer's State.........16
6.1.1 Mobile Multicast Care-Of Address Route Optimization.........16
6.1.2 NAT Translation Mappings Are Not Predictable................16
6.2 Secondary Problems Created by NAT Traversal.....................17
6.2.1 SSM Routing Dependency on Source IP Address.................17
6.2.2 ESP Cloaks Its Payloads from NAT Gateway....................17
6.2.3 UDP Checksum Dependency on Source IP Address................18
6.2.4 Cannot Use AH with NAT Gateway..............................18
6.3 Avoidance of NAT Using an IPv6 Over IPv4 Network................18
6.4 GKM/IPsec Multi-Realm IPv4 NAT Architecture.....................19
6.4.1 GKM/IPsec IPv4 NAT Architectural Assumptions................20
6.4.2 Multicast Application GSA NAT Traversal.....................21
6.5 ESP Encapsulated by UDP in a Multicast Group....................22
7. Security Considerations............................................22
8. IANA Considerations................................................23
9. Acknowledgements...................................................23
10. References........................................................23
10.1 Normative References...........................................23
10.2 Informative References.........................................23
Appendix A _ Multicast Application Service Models.....................26
A.1 Unidirectional Multicast Applications...........................26
A.2 Bi-directional Reliable Multicast Applications..................26
A.3 Any-To-Any Multicast Applications...............................27
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Author's Address......................................................28
Intellectual Property Statement.......................................29
Copyright Statement...................................................29
1. Introduction
The Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol [RFC4301]
provides security services for traffic at the IP layer. It describes
an architecture for IPsec compliant systems, and a set of security
services for the IP layer. These security services primarily describe
services and semantics for IPsec Security Associations (SAs) shared
between two IPsec devices. Typically, this includes SAs with traffic
selectors that include a unicast address in the IP destination field,
and results in an IPsec packet with a unicast address in the IP
destination field. The security services defined in RFC 4301 can also
be used to tunnel IP multicast packets, where the tunnel is a
pairwise association between two IPsec devices. RFC4301 defined
manually keyed transport mode IPsec SA support for IP packets with a
multicast address in the IP destination address field. However,
RFC4301 did not define the interaction of an IPsec subsystem with a
Group Key Management protocol or the semantics of a tunnel mode IPsec
SA with an IP multicast address in the outer IP header.
This document describes extensions to RFC 4301 that further define
the IPsec security architecture for groups of IPsec devices to share
SAs. In particular, it supports SAs with traffic selectors that
include a multicast address in the IP destination field, and results
in an IPsec packet with an IP multicast address in the IP destination
field. It also describes additional semantics for IPsec Group Key
Management (GKM) subsystems. Note that this document uses the term
"GKM protocol" generically and therefore it does not assume a
particular GKM protocol.
1.1 Scope
The IPsec extensions described in this document support IPsec
Security Associations that result in IPsec packets with IPv4 or IPv6
multicast group addresses as the destination address. Both Any-Source
Multicast (ASM) and Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) [RFC3569]
[RFC3376] group addresses are supported.
These extensions also support Security Associations with IPv4
Broadcast addresses that result in an IPv4 link-level broadcast
packet, and IPv6 Anycast addresses [RFC2526] that result in an IPv6
Anycast packet. These destination address types share many of the
same characteristics of multicast addresses because there may be
multiple receivers of a packet protected by IPsec.
The IPsec architecture does not make requirements upon entities not
participating in IPsec (e.g., network devices between IPsec
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endpoints). As such, these multicast extensions do not require
intermediate systems in a multicast enabled network to participate in
IPsec. In particular, no requirements are placed on the use of
multicast routing protocols (e.g., PIM-SM [RFC2362]) or multicast
admission protocols (e.g., IGMP [RFC3376].
All implementation models of IPsec (e.g., "bump-in-the-stack", "bump-
in-the-wire") are supported.
This version of the multicast IPsec extension specification requires
that all IPsec devices participating in a Security Association are
homogeneous. They MUST share a common set of cryptographic transform
and protocol handling capabilities. The semantics of an "IPsec
composite group", a heterogeneous IPsec cryptographic group formed
from the union of two or more sub-groups, is an area for future
standardization.
1.2 Terminology
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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
The following key terms are used throughout this document.
Any-Source Multicast (ASM)
The Internet Protocol (IP) multicast service model as defined in
RFC 1112 [RFC1112]. In this model one or more senders source
packets to a single IP multicast address. When receivers join the
group, they receive all packets sent to that IP multicast address.
This is known as a (*,G) group.
Group Controller Key Server (GCKS)
A Group Key Management (GKM) protocol server that manages IPsec
state for a group. A GCKS authenticates and provides the IPsec SA
policy and keying material to GKM group members.
Group Key Management (GKM) Protocol
A key management protocol used by a GCKS to distribute IPsec
Security Association policy and keying material. A GKM protocol is
used when a group of IPsec devices require the same SAs. For
example, when an IPsec SA describes an IP multicast destination,
the sender and all receivers must have the group SA.
Group Key Management Subsystem
A subsystem in an IPsec device implementing a Group Key Management
protocol. The GKM subsystem provides IPsec SAs to the IPsec
subsystem on the IPsec device.
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Group Member
An IPsec device that belongs to a group. A Group Member is
authorized to be a Group Speaker and/or a Group Receiver.
Group Owner
An administrative entity that chooses the policy for a group.
Group Security Association (GSA)
A collection of IPsec Security Associations (SAs) and GKM
Subsystem SAs necessary for a Group Member to receive key updates.
A GSA describes the working policy for a group. Refer to RFC4046
[RFC4046] for additional information.
Group Security Policy Database (GSPD)
The GSPD is a multicast-capable security policy database, as
mentioned in RFC3740 and RFC4301 section 4.4.1.1. Its semantics
are a superset of the unicast SPD defined by RFC4301 section
4.4.1. Unlike a unicast SPD-S in which point-to-point security
associations are inherently bi-directional, multicast security
associations in the GSPD-S introduce a "sender only" or "receiver
only" or "symmetric" SA direction attribute. Refer to section
4.1.1 for more details.
Group Receiver
A Group Member that is authorized to receive packets sent to a
group by a Group Speaker.
Group Speaker
A Group Member that is authorized to send packets to a group.
Source-Specific Multicast (SSM)
The Internet Protocol (IP) multicast service model as defined in
RFC 3569 [RFC3569]. In this model, each combination of a sender
and an IP multicast address is considered a group. This is known
as an (S,G) group.
Tunnel Mode with Address Preservation
A type of IPsec tunnel mode used by security gateway
implementations when encapsulating IP multicast packets such that
they remain IP multicast packets. This mode is necessary for IP
multicast routing to correctly route IP multicast packets
protected by IPsec.
2. Overview of IP Multicast Operation
IP multicasting is a means of sending a single packet to a "host
group", a set of zero or more hosts identified by a single IP
destination address. IP multicast packets are UDP data packets
delivered to all members of the group with either "best-effort"
[RFC1112], or reliable delivery (e.g., NORM) [RFC3940].
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A sender to an IP multicast group sets the destination of the packet
to an IP address that has been allocated for IP multicast. Allocated
IP multicast addresses are defined in RFC 3171, RFC3306, and RFC3307
[RFC3171] [RFC3306] [RFC3307]. Potential receivers of the packet
"join" the IP multicast group by registering with a network routing
device [RFC3376] [MLD], signaling its intent to receive packets sent
to a particular IP multicast group.
Network routing devices configured to pass IP multicast packets
participate in multicast routing protocols (e.g., PIM-SM) [RFC2362].
Multicast routing protocols maintain state regarding which devices
have registered to receive packets for a particular IP multicast
group. When a router receives an IP multicast packet, it forwards a
copy of the packet out each interface for which there are known
receivers.
3. Security Association Modes
IPsec supports two modes of use: transport mode and tunnel mode. In
transport mode, IP Authentication Header (AH) [RFC4302] and IP
Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) [RFC4303] provide protection
primarily for next layer protocols; in tunnel mode, AH and ESP are
applied to tunneled IP packets.
A host implementation of IPsec using the multicast extensions MAY use
either transport mode and tunnel mode to encapsulate an IP multicast
packet. These processing rules are identical to the rules described
in [RFC4301, Section 4.1]. However, the destination address for the
IPsec packet is an IP multicast address, rather than a unicast host
address.
A security gateway implementation of IPsec using the multicast
extensions MUST use a tunnel mode SA, for the reasons described in
[RFC4301, Section 4.1]. In particular, the security gateway must use
tunnel mode to encapsulate incoming fragments, since IPsec cannot
directly operate on fragments.
3.1 Tunnel Mode with Address Preservation
New header construction semantics are required when tunnel mode is
used to encapsulate IP multicast packets that are to remain IP
multicast packets. This is due to the following unique requirements
of IP multicast routing protocols (e.g., PIM-SM [RFC2362]).
- IP multicast routing protocols compare the destination address on
a packet to the multicast routing state. If the destination of an
IP multicast packet is changed it will no longer be properly
routed. Therefore, an IPsec security gateway must preserve the
multicast IP destination address after IPsec tunnel encapsulation.
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The GKM Subsystem on a security gateway implementing the IPsec
multicast extensions preserves the multicast IP address as
follows. Firstly, the GKM Subsystem sets the Remote Address PFP
flag in the GSPD-S entry for the traffic selectors. This flag
causes the remote address of the packet matching IPsec SA traffic
selectors to be propagated to the IPsec tunnel encapsulation.
Secondly, the GKM Subsystem needs to signal that destination
address preservation is in effect for a particular IPsec SA. The
GKM protocol MUST define an attribute that signals destination
address preservation to the GKM Subsystem on an IPsec security
gateway.
- IP multicast routing protocols also typically create multicast
distribution trees based on the source address. If an IPsec
security gateway changes the source address of an IP multicast
packet (e.g., to its own IP address), the resulting IPsec
protected packet may fail RPF checks on other routers. A failed
RPF check may result in the packet being dropped.
To accommodate routing protocol RPF checks, the GKM Subsystem on a
security gateway implementation implementing the IPsec multicast
extensions must preserve the original packet IP source address as
follows. Firstly, the GSPD-S entry for the traffic selectors must
have the Source Address PFP flag set. This flag causes the remote
address to be propagated to the IPsec SA. Secondly, the GKM
Subsystem needs to signal that source address preservation is in
effect for a particular IPsec SA. The GKM Subsystem MUST define a
protocol attribute that signals source address preservation to the
GKM Subsystem on an IPsec security gateway.
Some applications of address preservation may only require the
destination address to be preserved. For this reason, the
specification of destination address preservation and source address
preservation are separated in the above description.
Address preservation is applicable only for tunnel mode IPsec SAs
that specify the IP version of the encapsulating header to be the
same version as that of the inner header. When the IP versions are
different, tunnel processing semantics described in RFC 4301 MUST be
followed.
In summary, retaining both the IP source and destination addresses of
the inner IP header allow IP multicast routing protocols to route the
packet irrespective of the packet being IPsec protected. This result
is necessary in order for the multicast extensions to allow a
security gateway to provide IPsec services for IP multicast packets.
This variation of RFC4301 tunnel mode is known as "tunnel mode with
address preservation".
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4. Security Association
4.1 Major IPsec Databases
The following sections describe the GKM Subsystem and IPsec extension
interactions with the major IPsec databases. The major IPsec
databases needed expanded semantics to fully support multicast.
4.1.1 Group Security Policy Database (GSPD)
The Group Security Policy Database is a security policy database
capable of implementing both unicast security associations as defined
by RFC4301 and the multicast extensions defined by this
specification. A new Group Security Policy Database (GSPD) attribute
is introduced: GSPD entry directionality. Directionality can take
three types. Each GSPD entry can be marked "symmetric", "sender only"
or "receiver only". Symmetric GSPD entries are the common entries as
specified by RFC 4301. Symmetric SHOULD be the default directionality
unless specified otherwise. GSPD entries marked as "sender only" or
"receiver only" SHOULD support multicast IP addresses in their
destination address selectors. If the processing requested is bypass
or discard and a sender only type is configured the entry SHOULD be
put in GSPD-O only. Reciprocally, if the type is receiver only, the
entry SHOULD go to GSPD-I only. SSM is supported by the use of
unicast IP address selectors as documented in RFC 4301.
GSPD entries created by a GCKS may be assigned identical SPIs to SPD
entries created by IKEv2 [RFC4306]. This is not a problem for the
inbound traffic as the appropriate SAs can be matched using the
algorithm described in RFC 4301 section 4.1. In addition, SAs with
identical SPI values but not manually keyed can be differentiated
because they contain a link to their parent SPD entries. However, the
outbound traffic needs to be matched against the GSPD selectors so
that the appropriate SA can be created on packet arrival. IPsec
implementations that support multicast MUST use the destination
address as the additional selector and match it against the GSPD
entries marked "sender only".
To facilitate dynamic group keying, the outbound GSPD MUST implement
a policy action capability that triggers a GKM protocol registration
exchange (as per [RFC4301] section 5.1). For example, the Group
Speaker GSPD policy might trigger on a match with a specified
multicast application packet. The ensuing Group Speaker registration
exchange would setup the Group Speaker's outbound SAD entry that
encrypts the multicast application's data stream. In the inverse
direction, group policy may also setup an inbound IPsec SA.
At the Group Receiver endpoint(s), the GSPD policy might trigger on a
match with the multicast application packet sent from the Group
Speaker. The ensuing Group Receiver registration exchange would setup
the Group Receiver's inbound SAD entry that decrypts the multicast
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application's data stream. In the inverse direction, the group policy
may also setup an outbound IPsec SA (e.g. when supporting an ASM
service model).
The IPsec subsystem MAY provide GSPD policy mechanisms (e.g. trigger
on detection of IGMP/MLD leave group exchange) that automatically
initiate a GKM protocol de-registration exchange. De-registration
minimizes exposure of the group's secret key. It also minimizes cost
for those groups that incur cost on the basis of membership duration.
Alternatively, the GKM subsystem MAY setup the GSPD/SAD state
information independent of the multicast application's state. In this
scenario, the group's Group Owner issues management directives that
tells the GKM subsystem when it should start GKM registration and de-
registration protocol exchanges. Typically the registration policy
strives to make sure that the group's IPsec subsystem state is
"always ready" in anticipation of the multicast application starting
its execution.
4.1.2 Security Association Database (SAD)
The Security Association Database (SAD) can support multicast SAs, if
manually configured. An outbound multicast SA has the same structure
as a unicast SA. The source address is that of the Group Speaker and
the destination address is the multicast group address. An inbound
multicast SA must be configured with the source addresses of each
Group Speaker peer authorized to transmit to the multicast SA in
question. The SPI value for a multicast SA is provided by a GCKS, not
by the receiver as occurs for a unicast SA. Other than the SPI
assignment and the inbound packet de-multiplexing described in
RFC4301 section 4.1, the SAD behaves identically for unicast and
multicast security associations.
4.1.3 Peer Authorization Database (PAD)
The Peer Authorization Database (PAD) needs to be extended in order
to accommodate peers that may take on specific roles in the group.
Such roles can be GCKS, Group Speaker (in case of SSM) or a Group
Receiver. A peer can have multiple roles. The PAD may also contain
root certificates for PKI used by the group.
4.1.3.1 GKM/IPsec Interactions with the PAD
The RFC 4301 section 4.4.3 introduced the PAD. In summary, the PAD
manages the IPsec entity authentication mechanism(s) and
authorization of each such peer identity to negotiate modifications
to the GSPD/SAD. Within the context of the GKM/IPsec subsystem, the
PAD defines for each group:
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. For those groups that authenticate identities using a Public Key
Infrastructure, the PAD contains the group's set of one or more
trusted root public key certificates. The PAD may also include the
PKI configuration data needed to retrieve supporting certificates
needed for an end entity's certificate path validation.
. A set of one or more group membership authorization rules. The
GCKS examines these rules to determine a candidate group member's
acceptable authentication mechanism and to decide whether that
candidate has the authority to join the group.
. A set of one or more GCKS role authorization rules. A group member
uses these rules to decide which systems are authorized to act as
a GCKS for a given group. These rules also declare the permitted
GCKS authentication mechanism(s).
. A set of one or more Group Speaker role authorization rules. In
some groups the group members allowed to send protected packets is
restricted.
Some GKM protocols (e.g. GSAKMP [GSAKMP]) distribute their group's
PAD configuration in a security policy token [COREPT] signed by the
group's policy authority, also known as the Group Owner (GO). Each
group member receives the policy token (using a method not described
in this memo) and verifies the Group Owner's signature on the policy
token. If that GO signature is accepted, then the group member
dynamically updates its PAD with the policy token's contents.
The PAD MUST provide a management interface capability that allows an
administrator to enforce that the scope of a GKM group's policy
specified GSPD/SAD modifications are restricted to only those traffic
data flows that belong to that group. This authorization MUST be
configurable at GKM group granularity. In the inverse direction, the
PAD management interface MUST provide a mechanism(s) to enforce that
IKEv2 security associations do not negotiate traffic selectors that
conflict or override GKM group policies. An implementation SHOULD
offer PAD configuration capabilities that authorize the GKM policy
configuration mechanism to set security policy for other aspects of
an endpoint's GSPD/SAD configuration, not confined to its group
security associations. This capability allows the group's policy to
inhibit the creation of back channels that might otherwise leak
confidential group application data.
This document refers to re-key mechanisms as being multicast because
of the inherent scalability of IP multicast distribution. However,
there is no particular reason that re-key mechanisms must be
multicast. For example, [ZLLY03] describes a method of re-key
employing both unicast and multicast messages.
4.2 Group Security Association (GSA)
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An IPsec implementation supporting these extensions has a number of
security associations: one or more IPsec SAs, and one or more GKM SAs
used to download IPsec SAs [RFC3740, Section 4]. These SAs are
collectively referred to as a Group Security Association (GSA).
4.2.4.1 Concurrent IPsec SA Life Spans and Re-key Rollover
During a cryptographic group's lifetime, multiple IPsec security
associations can exist concurrently. This occurs principally due to
two reasons:
- There are multiple Group Speakers authorized in the group, each
with its own IPsec SA that maintains anti-replay state. A group
that does not rely on IP Security anti-replay services can share
one IPsec SA for all of its Group Speakers.
- The life spans of a Group Speaker's two (or more) IPsec SAs are
allowed to overlap in time, so that there is continuity in the
multicast data stream across group re-key events. This capability
is referred to as "re-key rollover continuity".
Each group re-key multicast message sent by a GCKS signals the start
of a new Group Speaker time epoch, with each such epoch having an
associated IPsec SA. The group membership interacts with these IPsec
SAs as follows:
- As a precursor to the Group Speaker beginning its re-key rollover
continuity processing, the GCKS periodically multicasts a Re-Key
Event (RKE) message to the group. The RKE multicast contains group
policy directives, and new IPsec SA policy and keying material. In
the absence of a reliable multicast transport protocol, the GCKS
may re-transmit the RKE a policy defined number of times to improve
the availability of re-key information.
- The RKE multicast configures the group's GSPD/SAD with the new
IPsec SAs. Each IPsec SA that replaces an existing SA is called a
"leading edge" IPsec SA. The leading edge IPsec SA has a new
Security Parameter Index (SPI) and its associated keying material
keys it. For a short period after the GCKS multicasts the RKE, a
Group Speaker does not yet transmit data using the leading edge
IPsec SA. Meanwhile, other Group Members prepare to use this IPsec
SA by installing the new IPsec SAs to their respective GSPD/SAD.
- After waiting a sufficiently long enough period such that all of
the Group Members have processed the RKE multicast, the Group
Speaker begins to transmit using the leading edge IPsec SA with its
data encrypted by the new keying material. Only authorized Group
Members can decrypt these IPsec SA multicast transmissions. The
time delay that a Group Speaker waits before starting its first
leading edge SA transmission is a GKM/IPsec policy parameter. This
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value SHOULD be configurable at the Group Owner management
interface on a per group basis.
- The Group Speaker's "trailing edge" SA is the oldest security
association in use by the group for that speaker. All authorized
Group Members can receive and decrypt data for this SA, but the
Group Speaker does not transmit new data using the "trailing edge"
SA after it has transitioned to the "leading edge GSA". The
trailing edge SA is deleted by the group's endpoints according to
group policy (e.g., after a defined period has elapsed)"
This re-key rollover strategy allows the group to drain its in
transit datagrams from the network while transitioning to the leading
edge SA. Staggering the roles of each respective IPsec SA as
described above improves the group's synchronization even when there
are high network propagation delays. Note that due to group
membership joins and leaves, each Group Speaker time epoch may have a
different group membership set.
It is a group policy decision whether the re-key event transition
between epochs provides forward and backward secrecy. The group's re-
key protocol keying material and algorithm (e.g. Logical Key
Hierarchy) enforces this policy. Implementations MAY offer a Group
Owner management interface option to enable/disable re-key rollover
continuity for a particular group. This specification requires that a
GKM/IPsec implementation MUST support at least two concurrent IPsec
SA per Group Speaker and this re-key rollover continuity algorithm.
4.3 Data Origin Authentication
As defined in [RFC4301], data origin authentication is a security
service that verifies the identity of the claimed source of data. A
Message Authentication Code (MAC) is often used to achieve data
origin authentication for connections shared between two parties. But
MAC authentication methods are not sufficient to provide data origin
authentication for groups with more than two parties. With a MAC
algorithm, every group member can use the MAC key to create a valid
MAC tag, whether or not they are the authentic originator of the
group application's data.
When the property of data origin authentication is required for an
IPsec SA distributed from a GKCS, an authentication transform where
the originator keeps a secret should be used. Two possible algorithms
are TESLA [RFC4082] or RSA digital signature [RFC4359].
In some cases, (e.g., digital signature authentication transforms)
the processing cost of the algorithm is significantly greater than an
HMAC authentication method. To protect against denial of service
attacks from device that is not authorized to join the group, the
IPsec SA using this algorithm may be encapsulated with an IPsec SA
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using a MAC authentication algorithm. However, doing so requires the
packet to be sent across the IPsec boundary for additional inbound
processing [RFC4301, Section 5.2]. This use of ESP encapsulated
within ESP accommodates the constraint that an ESP trailer defines an
Integrity Check Value (ICV) for only a single authenticator
transform. Relaxing this constraint on the use of the ICV field is an
area for future standardization.
4.4 Group SA and Key Management
4.4.1 Co-Existence of Multiple Key Management Protocols
Often, the GKM subsystem will be introduced to an existent IPsec
subsystem as a companion key management protocol to IKEv2 [RFC4306].
A fundamental GKM protocol IP Security subsystem requirement is that
both the GKM protocol and IKEv2 can simultaneously share access to a
common Group Security Policy Database and Security Association
Database. The mechanisms that provide mutually exclusive access to
the common GSPD/SAD data structures are a local matter. This includes
the GSPD-outbound cache and the GSPD-inbound cache. However,
implementers should note that IKEv2 SPI allocation is entirely
independent from GKM SPI allocation because group security
associations are qualified by a destination multicast IP address and
may optionally have a source IP address qualifier. See [RFC4303,
Section 2.1] for further explanation.
The Peer Authorization Database does require explicit coordination
between the GKM protocol and IKEv2. Section 4.1.3 describes these
interactions.
4.4.2 New Security Association Attributes
A number of new security association attributes are defined in this
document. Each GKM protocol supporting this architecture MUST support
the following list of attributes described elsewhere in this
document.
- Address Preservation (Section 3.1). This attribute describes
whether address preservation is to be applied to the SA on the source
address, destination address, or both source and destination
addresses.
- Direction attribute (Section 4.1.1). This attribute describes
whether the GSPD direction is to be symmetric, receiver only, or
sender only.
- Specification of UDP Encapsulation (Section 6.1.4.2). This
attribute declares that the UDP encapsulation of IPsec ESP packets
[RFC 3948] will be used as part of an ESP SA.
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- Any of the cryptographic transform-specific parameters and keys
that are sent from the GCKS to the Group Members (e.g. data origin
authentication parameters as described in section 4.3).
5. IP Traffic Processing
Processing of traffic follows [RFC4301, Section 5], with the
additions described below when these IP multicast extensions are
supported.
5.1 Outbound IP Multicast Traffic Processing
If an IPsec SA is marked as supporting tunnel mode with address
preservation (as described in Section 3.1), either or both of the
outer header source or destination addresses is marked as being
preserved. If the source address is marked as being preserved, during
header construction the "src address" header field MUST be "copied
from inner hdr" rather than "constructed" as described in [RFC4301].
Similarly, if the destination address is marked as being preserved,
during header construction the "dest address" header field MUST be
"copied from inner hdr" rather than "constructed".
5.2 Inbound IP Multicast Traffic Processing
If an IPsec SA is marked as supporting tunnel mode with address
preservation (as described in Section 3.0), the marked address (i.e.,
source and/or destination address) on the outer IP header MUST be
verified to be the same value as the inner IP header. If the
addresses are not consistent, the IPsec system MUST treat the error
in the same manner as other invalid selectors, as described in
[RFC4301, Section 5.2]. In particular the IPsec system MUST discard
the packet, as well as treat the inconsistency as an auditable event.
6. IP-v4 Network Address Translation
With the advent of NAT and mobile Nodes, IPsec multicast applications
must overcome several architectural barriers to their successful
deployment. This section surveys those problems and identifies the
GSPD/SAD state information that the GKM protocol must synchronize
across the group membership.
6.1 GSPD Losses Synchronization with Internet Layer's State
The most prominent problem facing GKM protocols supporting IPsec is
that the GKM protocol's group security policy mechanism can
inadvertently configure the group's GSPD traffic selectors with
unreliable transient IP addresses. The IP addresses are transient
because of either Node mobility or Network Address Translation (NAT),
both of which can unilaterally change a multicast speaker's source IP
address without signaling the GKM protocol. The absence of a GSPD
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synchronization mechanism can cause the group's data traffic to be
discarded rather than processed correctly.
6.1.1 Mobile Multicast Care-Of Address Route Optimization
Both Mobile IPv4 [RFC3344] and Mobile IPv6 provide transparent
unicast communications to a mobile Node. However, comparable support
for secure multicast mobility management is not specified by these
standards. The goal is the ability to maintain an end-to-end
transport mode group SA between a Group Speaker mobile node that has
a volatile care-of-address and a Group Receiver membership that also
may have mobile endpoints. In particular, there is no secure
mechanism for route optimization of the triangular multicast path
between the correspondent Group Receiver Nodes, the home agent, and
the mobile Node. Any proposed solution must be secure against hostile
re-direct and flooding attacks.
6.1.2 NAT Translation Mappings Are Not Predictable
The following spontaneous NAT behaviors adversely impact source-
specific secure multicast groups. When a NAT gateway is on the path
between a Group Speaker residing behind a NAT and a public IPv4
multicast Group Receiver, the NAT gateway alters the private source
address to a public IPv4 address. This translation must be
coordinated with every Group Receiver's inbound GSPD multicast
entries that depend on that source address as a traffic selector. One
might mistakenly assume that the GCKS could set up the Group Members
with an GSPD entry that anticipates the value(s) that the NAT
translates the packet's source address. However, there are known
cases where this address translation can spontaneously change without
warning:
- NAT gateways may re-boot and lose their address translation state
information.
- The NAT gateway may de-allocate its address translation state after
an inactivity timer expires. The address translation used by the
NAT gateway after the resumption of data flow may differ than that
known to the GSPD selectors at the group endpoints.
- The GCKS may not have global consistent knowledge of a group
endpoint's current public and private address mappings due to
network errors or race conditions. For example, a Group Member's
address may change due to a DHCP assigned address lease expiration.
- Alternate paths may exist between a given pair of Group Members. If
there are parallel NAT gateways along those paths, then the address
translation state information at each NAT gateway may produce
different translations on a per packet basis.
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The consequence of this problem is that the GCKS can not be pre-
configured with NAT mappings, as the GSPD at the Group Members will
lose synchronization as soon as a NAT mapping changes due to any of
the above events. In the worst case, Group Members in different
sections of the network will see different NAT mappings, because the
multicast packet traversed multiple NAT gateways.
6.2 Secondary Problems Created by NAT Traversal
6.2.1 SSM Routing Dependency on Source IP Address
Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) routing depends on a multicast
packet's source IP address and multicast destination IP address to
make a correct forwarding decision. However, a NAT gateway alters
that packet's source IP address as its passes from a private network
into the public network. Mobility changes a Group Member's point of
attachment to the Internet, and this will change the packet's source
IP address. Regardless of why it happened, this alteration in the
source IP address makes it infeasible for transit multicast routers
in the public Internet to know which SSM speaker originated the
multicast packet, which in turn selects the correct multicast
forwarding policy.
6.2.2 ESP Cloaks Its Payloads from NAT Gateway
When traversing NAT, application layer protocols that contain IPv4
addresses in their payload need the intervention of an Application
Layer Gateway (ALG) that understands that application layer protocol
[RFC3027] [RFC3235]. The ALG massages the payload's private IPv4
addresses into equivalent public IPv4 addresses. However, when
encrypted by end-to-end ESP, such payloads are opaque to application
layer gateways.
When multiple Group Speakers reside behind a NAT with a single public
IPv4 address, the NAT gateway can not do UDP or TCP protocol port
translation (i.e. NAPT) because the ESP encryption conceals the
transport layer protocol headers. The use of UDP encapsulated ESP
[RFC3948] avoids this problem. However, this capability must be
configured at the GCKS as a group policy, and it must be supported in
unison by all of the group endpoints within the group, even those
that reside in the public Internet.
6.2.3 UDP Checksum Dependency on Source IP Address
An IPsec subsystem using UDP within an ESP payload will encounter NAT
induced problems. The original IPv4 source address is an input
parameter into a receiver's UDP pseudo-header checksum verification,
yet that value is lost after the IP header's address translation by a
transit NAT gateway. The UDP header checksum is opaque within the
encrypted ESP payload. Consequently, the checksum can not be
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manipulated by the transit NAT gateways. UDP checksum verification
needs a mechanism that recovers the original source IPv4 address at
the Group Receiver endpoints.
In a transport mode multicast application GSA, the UDP checksum
operation requires the origin endpoint's IP address to complete
successfully. In IKEv2, this information is exchanged between the
endpoints by a NAT-OA payload (NAT original address). See also
reference [RFC3947]. A comparable facility must exist in a GKM
protocol payload that defines the multicast application GSA
attributes for each Group Speaker.
6.2.4 Cannot Use AH with NAT Gateway
The presence of a NAT gateway makes it impossible to use an
Authentication Header, keyed by a group-wide key, to protect the
integrity of the IP header for transmissions between members of the
cryptographic group.
6.3 Avoidance of NAT Using an IPv6 Over IPv4 Network
A straightforward and standards-based architecture that effectively
avoids the GKM protocol interaction with NAT gateways is the IPv6
over IPv4 transition mechanism [RFC2529]. In IPv6 over IPv4 (a.k.a.
"6over4"), the underlying IPv4 network is treated as a virtual
multicast-capable Local Area Network. The IPv6 traffic tunnels over
that IPv4 virtual link layer.
Applying GKM/IPsec in a 6over4 architecture leverages the fact that
an administrative domain deploying GKM/IPsec would already be
planning to deploy IPv4 multicast router(s). The group's IPv6
multicast routing can execute in parallel to IPv4 multicast routing
on that same physical router infrastructure. In particular, IPv6
multicast routers operating with 6over4 mode enabled on their network
interfaces replaces the NAT gateways at administrative domain
public/private boundaries.
Within the GKM subsystem, all references to IP addresses are IPv6
addresses for all security association endpoints and these addresses
do not change over the group's lifetime. This yields a substantial
reduction in complexity and error cases over the NAT-based
approaches. This reduction in complexity can translate into better
security.
Reliable scalable GKM/IPsec based on 6over4 deployment is far more
practical than an IPv4 with NAT deployment. In particular, new
GKM/IPsec multicast applications SHOULD prefer IPv6 native mode.
However, the GKM/IPsec architecture supports either choice. The
following factors may weigh against the decision to deploy GKM/IPsec
using 6over4:
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- A drawback of the GKM/IPsec 6over4 approach is that the application
layer protocol itself must embed references to IPv6 addresses
rather than IPv4 addresses within its payloads. For new
applications, this may not be of consequence; it usually only
becomes an issue if the application and its protocol has an
embedded base.
- An embedded base of GKM/IPsec IPv4 multicast applications that are
only available in binary form will not be able to migrate to these
transitional IPv6 mechanisms.
- The secondary drawbacks of GKM/IPsec using 6over4 are that the IP
hosts must be upgraded to dual-stack, the attendant overlay IPv6
multicast network operational costs, and the perceived difficulty
of deploying commercial wide-area IPv6 multicast services.
6.4 GKM/IPsec Multi-Realm IPv4 NAT Architecture
In a multi-realm group, GKM/IPsec security association endpoints may
straddle any combination of IPv4 public addresses and private
addresses [RFC1918]. In such cases, transport layer endpoint
identifiers when resolved to their underlying private or public IPv4
addresses entangle the GKM protocol with NAT gateway behaviors. The
NAT translation of IPv4 header addresses impacts the GKM protocol
registration SA, the GKM protocol re-key GSA, and the secure
multicast application GSA.
This section overviews the GKM/IPsec mechanisms that partially
mitigate the inherent complexity spawned by IPv4 NAT and Network
Address Protocol Translation (NAPT) traversal. However, the attendant
Group Owner configuration procedures are labor-intensive, prone to
configuration mismatch errors between the GCKS and NAT gateways, and
they do not scale well to large groups. Given the large number of
documented NAT problems and its erosion of end-to-end security, new
GKM/IPsec applications and deployments SHOULD strongly prefer the use
of IPv6.
6.4.1 GKM/IPsec IPv4 NAT Architectural Assumptions
To make the multi-realm GKM/IPsec IPv4 NAT interaction problem
tractable to a solution, this specification profiles the available
options with the following simplifying assumptions:
- The secure multicast group destination address is a statically
allocated public IPv4 multicast address known to all group
endpoints.
- Wherever they are present in the GKM subsystem, group endpoint
addresses are expressed as permanent IP-v6 "6to4" addresses
[RFC3056] to assure that the group endpoints that refer to hosts
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assigned private IPv4 addresses are globally unique. In this
context, a "permanent" 6to4 address means that the address is
constant for the group's lifetime.
- Each private IPv4 address space has one or more NAT gateways
directly connected to the IPv4 public Internet, and a packet does
not have to traverse multiple private networks to reach the public
Internet. This can be thought of as a "spoke and hub" configuration
wherein the public Internet is the hub.
- A GCKS may reside within one of the private networks, but it also
MUST have a permanent public IPv4 address on at least one of its
network interfaces.
- Since the one or more GCKS are constrained to straddle a
public/private network boundary, GKM/IPsec group security
associations effectively terminate the GSA at a combined
NAT/security gateway [RFC2709].
- The GCKS domain name RR record should point to that public IPv4
address, and it is recommended that it be protected by DNS-SEC.
- The inbound NAT gateway will forward a Group Speaker's multicast
traffic from the public Internet to the private network so long as
at least one Group Receiver within the private network has joined
the Group Speaker's multicast group. The Group Receiver(s) use
IGMP-v3 to signal their interest in a group's traffic to the
administrative domain's multicast routers, at least one of which is
an ingress NAT gateway. Alternatively, in simple private networks
without multicast routers, the Group Receivers send their IGMP-v3
packets directly to the NAT gateway [BEHAVE] acting in the role of
an IGMP-v3 proxy. The NAT gateway redirects the IGMP-v3 packets to
a multicast router in the public Internet.
- Group Members also use IGMP-v3 to join the GKM protocol's re-key SA
multicast group if that group has been assigned a different
destination multicast IP address than the multicast application
group.
- In the outbound direction, NAT gateways generally translate the
Group Speaker packet's private source IP address into a dynamically
selected public IP address. Exceptions to this policy for source
specific multicast are noted in subsequent sections.
- Within each administrative domain, a multicast routing protocol
domain routes packets based on the group's destination multicast
public IPv4 address. The multicast routers will distribute the
group's packets to all of the group's Group Receiver endpoints
residing in that administrative domain.
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- The border routers of each of the administrative domains spanned by
the group do cross-realm multicast routing and distribution on
behalf of the group. The IP-v4 multicast routers that exchange
reachability information regarding the group across trust
boundaries authenticate that information.
6.4.2 Multicast Application GSA NAT Traversal
Unlike the GKM protocol rekey message multicast to the Re-Key GSA, a
multicast application message sent to the group may originate from a
Group Speaker endpoint located behind a NAT gateway. Since the
application's message is encrypted within an ESP payload, the
transport layer protocol header port fields are concealed from NAT
gateways and they cannot participate in NAPT. The multicast
application GSA must be handled differently depending on whether the
application requires source-specific multicast.
If the application requires source-specific multicast routing, then
there must be a separate public IP-v4 address statically reserved at
the NAT gateway for each Group Speaker endpoint private/public
address mapping. This constraint allows the GCKS to specify at every
Group Member the inbound GSPD traffic selector with a pre-determined
public source address for each Group Speaker endpoint in the group.
The traffic selector's public source address in combination with the
group's destination multicast address and SPI selects the inbound SA.
Keeping the NAT gateway's source address mapping static rather than
dynamic also allows the multicast routers along the packet's path to
apply source-specific routing policies. Note that the use of a static
source address mapping NAT avoids the need for the group's policy
token to specify UDP encapsulated ESP. The drawback of this approach
is that the GCKS GSPD/SAD configuration database must be kept
synchronized with the group's NAT gateway address mapping
configurations. These operational procedures can be labor-intensive
and error-prone, making large-scale group deployments difficult. A
more sophisticated GKM subsystem may sidestep this problem by
dynamically setting the Group Receiver endpoint's GSPD/SAD entry
traffic selector rather than relying on static GCKS configuration.
If the application requires the any-source multicast service model,
then the NAT gateway's source address translation can use dynamically
allocated public IPv4 addresses rather than statically allocated IPv4
addresses. However, unless the group uses UDP encapsulated ESP, then
the NAT gateway must have a pool of public IPv4 addresses reserved
that is at least as large as the number of Group Speaker endpoints
within its private network. The public IP address pool allows the NAT
gateway to do a one-to-one mapping from every Group Speaker
endpoint's private source address to a dynamically allocated public
source address. In this case, the use of NAPT rather than NAT is not
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an option, since the transport layer protocol is within an opaque ESP
payload. The GCKS specifies the SPD/SAD traffic selector as the
combination of the group's destination multicast address and the SPI.
In some deployments, the number of public IPv4 addresses assigned to
a NAT gateway is very limited (e.g. only one public IPv4 address).
Also, it may be difficult to predict how many Group Speaker endpoints
will reside within the private network before the group begins its
operation. For these cases, the group MAY use UDP encapsulated ESP.
The NAT gateway applies NAPT to the UDP header's source port field,
sidestepping the constraint of its limited public IPv4 address pool.
The Group Owner modifies the group policy to specify that the
outbound GSPD processing must pre-append a UDP header in front of the
ESP header. When a Group Speaker endpoint originates a multicast
application packet, it inserts a UDP header in front of the ESP
header, as per reference [RFC3948].
6.5 ESP Encapsulated by UDP in a Multicast Group
To be supplied.
7. Security Considerations
This document describes architecture for securing group network
traffic using IPsec. As such, security considerations are found
throughout this document.
[BEW: Need to expand.]
8. IANA Considerations
This document has no actions for IANA.
9. Acknowledgements
[TBD]
10. References
10.1 Normative References
[RFC1112] Deering, S., "Host Extensions for IP Multicasting," RFC
1112, August 1989.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Level", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3552] Rescorla, E., et. al., "Guidelines for Writing RFC Text on
Security Considerations", RFC 3552, July 2003.
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[RFC3948] Huttenen, A., et. al., "UDP Encapsulation of IPsec ESP
Packets", RFC 3948, January 2005.
[RFC4301] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.
[RFC4302] Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 4302, December
2005.
[RFC4303] Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)", RFC
4303, December 2004.
10.2 Informative References
[COREPT] Colegrove, A., and H. Harney, "Group Security Policy Token
v1", (work in progress), draft-ietf-msec-policy-token-sec-06.txt
(work in progress), January 2006.
[GSAKMP] H. Harney, Colegrove A. , U. Meth, and G. Gross.; "Group
Secure Association Key Management Protocol (GSAKMP)", (work in
progress), draft-ietf-msec-gsakmp-sec-10.txt, January 2006.
[RFC3306] B. Haberman, D. Thaler, " Unicast-Prefix-based IPv6
Multicast Addresses", RFC3306, August 2002.
[RFC3307] B. Haberman, " Allocation Guidelines for IPv6 Multicast
Addresses", RFC3307, August 2002.
[RFC4046] M. Bauger, L. Dondeti, R. Canetti, F. Lindholm, " Multicast
Security (MSEC) Group Key Management Architecture", RFC4046, April
2005.
[RFC4291] S. Deering, R. Hinden, " IP Version 6 Addressing
Architecture", RFC4291, February 2006.
[RFC2362] Estrin, D., et. al., "Protocol Independent Multicast-Sparse
Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification", RFC 2362, June 1998.
[RFC2526] Johnson, D., and S. Deering., "Reserved IPv6 Subnet Anycast
Addresses", RFC 2526, March 1999.
[RFC2529] Carpenter, B. and C. Jung, "Transmission of IPv6 over IPv4
Domains without Explicit Tunnels", RFC 2529, March 1999.
[RFC2588] Finlayson, R., "IP Multicast and Firewalls", RFC 2588, May
1999.
[RFC2709] Srisuresh, P., "Security Model with Tunnel-mode IPsec for
NAT Domains", RFC 2709, October 1999.
[RFC2914] Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", RFC 2914,
September 2000.
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[RFC3027] Holdrege, M., and P. Srisuresh, "Protocol Complications
with the IP Network Address Translator", RFC 3027, January 2001.
[RFC3171] Albanni, Z., et. al., "IANA Guideli nes for IPv4
Multicast Ad dress Assign ments", RFC 3171, August 2001.
[RFC3235]Senie, D., "Network Address Translator (NAT)-Friendly
Application Design Guidelines", RFC 3235, January 2002.
[RFC3344] Perkins, C., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4", RFC 3344,
August 2002.
[RFC3376] Cain, B., et. al., "Internet Group Management Protocol,
Version 3", RFC 3376, October 2002.
[RFC3547] Baugher, M., Weis, B., Hardjono, T., and H. Harney, "The
Group Domain of Interpretation", RFC 3547, December 2002.
[RFC3569] Bhattacharyya, S., "An Overview of Source-Specific
Multicast (SSM)", RFC 3569, July 2003.
[RFC3940] Adamson, B., et. al., "Negative-acknowledgment (NACK)-
Oriented Reliable Multicast (NORM) Protocol", RFC 3940, November
2004.
[RFC3947] Kivinen, T., et. al., "Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the
IKE", RFC 3947, January 2005.
[RFC3948] Huttunen, A., et. al., "UDP Encapsulation of IPsec ESP
Packets", RFC 3948, January 2005.
[RFC4082] Perrig, A., et. al., "Timed Efficient Stream Loss-Tolerant
Authentication (TESLA): Multicast Source Authentication Transform
Introduction", RFC 4082, June 2005.
[RFC4306] Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol", RFC
4306, December 2005.
[RFC4359] Weis., B., "The Use of RSA/SHA-1 Signatures within
Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) and Authentication Header (AH)",
RFC 4359, January 2006.
[ZLLY03] Zhang, X., et. al., "Protocol Design for Scalable and
Reliable Group Rekeying", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON),
Volume 11, Issue 6, December 2003. See
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/lam/Vita/Cpapers/ZLLY01.pdf.
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Appendix A _ Multicast Application Service Models
The vast majority of secure multicast applications can be catalogued
by their service model and accompanying intra-group communication
patterns. Both the Group Key Management (GKM) Subsystem and the
IPsec subsystem MUST be able to configure the GSPD/SAD security
policies to match these dominant usage scenarios. The GSPD/SAD
policies MUST include the ability to configure both Any-Source-
Multicast groups and Source-Specific-Multicast groups for each of
these service models. The GKM Subsystem management interface MAY
include mechanisms to configure the security policies for service
models not identified by this standard.
A.1 Unidirectional Multicast Applications
Multi-media content delivery multicast applications that do not have
congestion notification or retransmission error recovery mechanisms
are inherently unidirectional. RFC 4301 only defines bi-directional
unicast security associations (as per sections 4.4.1 and 5.1 with
respect to security association directionality). The GKM Subsystem
requires that the IPsec subsystem MUST support unidirectional Group
Security Associations (GSA). Multicast applications that have only
one group member authorized to transmit can use this type of group
security association to enforce that group policy. In the inverse
direction, the GSA does not have a SAD entry, and the GSPD
configuration is optionally setup to discard unauthorized attempts to
transmit unicast or multicast packets to the group.
The GKM Subsystem's management interface MUST have the ability to
setup a GKM Subsystem group having a unidirectional GSA security
policy.
A.2 Bi-directional Reliable Multicast Applications
Some secure multicast applications are characterized as one group
speaker to many receivers, but with inverse data flows required by a
reliable multicast transport protocol (e.g. NORM). In such
applications, the data flow from the speaker is multicast, and the
inverse flow from the group's receivers is unicast to the speaker.
Typically, the inverse data flows carry error repair requests and
congestion control status.
For such applications, the GSA SHOULD use IPsec anti-replay
protection service for the speaker's multicast data flow to the
group's receivers. Because of the scalability problem described in
the next section, it is not practical to use the IPsec anti-replay
service for the unicast inverse flows. Consequently, in the inverse
direction the IPsec anti-replay protection MUST be disabled. However,
the unicast inverse flows can use the group's IPsec group
authentication mechanism. The group receiver's GSPD entry for this
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GSA SHOULD be configured to only allow a unicast transmission to the
speaker Node rather than a multicast transmission to the whole group.
If an ESP digital signature authentication is available (E.g., RFC
4359), source authentication MAY be used to authenticate a receiver
Node's transmission to the speaker. The GKM protocol MUST define a
key management mechanism for the group speaker to validate the
asserted signature public key of any receiver Node without requiring
that the speaker maintain state about every group receiver.
This multicast application service model is RECOMMENDED because it
includes congestion control feedback capabilities. Refer to [RFC2914]
for additional background information.
The GKM Subsystem's Group Owner management interface MUST have the
ability to setup a GKM Subsystem GSA having a bi-directional GSA
security policy and one group speaker. The management interface
SHOULD be able to configure a group to have at least 16 concurrent
authorized speakers, each with their own GSA anti-replay state.
A.3 Any-To-Any Multicast Applications
Another family of secure multicast applications exhibits a "any to
many" communications pattern. A representative example of such an
application is a videoconference combined with an electronic
whiteboard.
For such applications, all (or a large subset) of the Group Members
are authorized multicast speakers. In such service models, creating a
distinct IPsec SA with anti-replay state for every potential speaker
does not scale to large groups. The group SHOULD share one IPsec SA
for all of its speakers. The IPsec SA SHOULD NOT use the IPsec anti-
replay protection service for the speaker's multicast data flow to
the Group Receivers.
The GKM Subsystem's management interface MUST have the ability to
setup a group having an Any-To-Many Multicast GSA security policy.
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Author's Address
Brian Weis
Cisco Systems
170 W. Tasman Drive,
San Jose, CA 95134-170
USA
Phone: +1-408-526-4796
Email: bew@cisco.com
George Gross
IdentAware Security
82 Old Mountain Road
Lebanon, NJ 08833
USA
Phone: +1-908-268-1629
Email: gmgross@identaware.com
Dragan Ignjatic
Polycom
1000 W. 14th Street
North Vancouver, BC V7P 3P3
Canada
Phone: +1-604-982-3424
Email: dignjatic@polycom.com
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Weis, et al. Expires December, 2006 [Page 27]
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