One document matched: draft-ietf-netconf-server-model-04.xml
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<!--<?rfc strict="no"?> -->
<rfc category="std"
ipr="trust200902"
docName="draft-ietf-netconf-server-model-04" >
<front>
<title abbrev="NETCONF Server Configuration Model">NETCONF Server Configuration Model</title>
<author initials="K.W." surname="Watsen" fullname="Kent Watsen">
<organization>Juniper Networks</organization>
<address>
<email>kwatsen@juniper.net</email>
</address>
</author>
<author initials="J.S." surname="Schoenwaelder" fullname="Juergen Schoenwaelder">
<organization>Jacobs University Bremen</organization>
<address>
<email>j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de</email>
</address>
</author>
<date day="26" month="October" year="2014"/>
<area>Operations</area>
<workgroup>NETCONF Working Group</workgroup>
<keyword>netconf-server</keyword>
<abstract>
<t>This draft defines a NETCONF server configuration data model.
This data model enables configuration of the NETCONF service
itself, including which transports it supports, what ports
they listen on, whether call-home is supported, and associated
parameters.</t>
</abstract>
</front>
<middle>
<section title="Introduction">
<t>This draft defines a NETCONF <xref target="RFC6241"/> server
configuration data model.
This data model enables configuration of the NETCONF service
itself, including which transports are supported, what ports
the server listens on, whether call-home is supported, and
associated parameters.</t>
<section title="Terminology">
<t>The keywords "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 <xref target="RFC2119"/>.</t>
</section>
<section title="Tree Diagrams">
<t>A simplified graphical representation of data models
is used in this document. The meaning of the symbols in
these diagrams is as follows:
<list style="symbols">
<t>Brackets "[" and "]" enclose list keys.</t>
<t>Abbreviations before data node names: "rw" means
configuration (read-write) and "ro" state data
(read-only).</t>
<t>Symbols after data node names: "?" means an optional
node, "!" means a presence container, and "*" denotes a
list and leaf-list.</t>
<t>Parentheses enclose choice and case nodes, and case
nodes are also marked with a colon (":").</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Objectives">
<t>The primary purpose of the YANG module defined herein is
to enable the configuration of the NETCONF server
service on the device. This scope includes the following
objectives:</t>
<section title="Support all NETCONF transports">
<t>The YANG module should support all current NETCONF
transports, namely NETCONF over SSH <xref
target="RFC6242"/> and NETCONF over TLS <xref
target="rfc5539bis"/>, and be extensible
to support future transports as necessary.</t>
<t>Because implementations may not support all transports,
the module should use YANG "feature" statements
so that implementations can accurately advertise which
transports are supported.</t>
</section>
<section title="Enable each transport to select which keys to use">
<t>Systems may have a multiplicity of host-keys or server-certificates
from which subsets are configured for specific uses. For instance,
a system may want to use one set of SSH host-keys when listening
on port 830, and a different set of SSH host-keys when calling
home.</t>
</section>
<section title="Support authenticating client-certificates">
<t>When certificates are used to authenticate NETCONF clients, there is a need to
configure the system to know how to authenticate the certificates. The system
should be able to do this either by using path-validation to a configured trust
anchor or by matching the client-certificate to one previously configured.</t>
</section>
<section title="Support mapping authenticated client-certificates to usernames">
<t>Some transports (e.g., TLS) need additional support to map authenticated
transport-level sessions to a NETCONF username. The NETCONF server model
defined herein should define an ability for this mapping to be configured."</t>
</section>
<section title="Support both Listening for connections and Call Home">
<t>NETCONF has always supported the server opening
a port to listen for client connections. More recently
the NETCONF working group defined support for call-home
(<xref target="draft-ietf-netconf-call-home"/>). The
module should configure both listening for connections
and call-home.</t>
<t>Because implementations may not support both listening for
connections and call home, YANG "feature" statements
should be used so that implementation can accurately
advertise the connection types it supports.</t>
</section>
<section title="For Call Home connections">
<t>The following objectives only pertain to call home
connections.</t>
<section title="Support more than one application">
<t>A device may be managed by more than one northbound
application. For instance, a deployment may have one
application for provisioning and another for fault
monitoring. Therefore, when it is desired for a device
to initiate call home connections, it should be able to
do so for more than one application.</t>
</section>
<section title="Support applications having more than one server">
<t>An application managing a device may implement a
high-availability strategy employing a multiplicity of
active and/or passive servers. Therefore, when it is
desired for a device to initiate call home connections,
it should be able to connect to any of the application's
servers.</t>
</section>
<section title="Support a reconnection strategy">
<t>Assuming an application has more than one server, then
it becomes necessary to configure how a device should
reconnect to the application should it lose its
connection to the application's servers.
Of primary interest is if the device should
start with first server defined in a user-ordered
list of servers or with the last server it was connected
to. Secondary settings might specify the frequency of
attempts and number of attempts per server. Therefore,
a reconnection strategy should be configurable.</t>
</section>
<section title="Support both persistent and periodic connections">
<t>Applications may vary greatly on how frequently they
need to interact with a device, how responsive interactions
with devices need to be, and how many simultaneous connections
they can support. Some applications may need a persistent
connection to devices to optimize real-time interactions,
while others are satisfied with periodic interactions and
reduced resources required. Therefore, when it is necessary
for devices to initiate connections, the type of connection
desired should be configured.</t>
</section>
<section title="Reconnection strategy for periodic connections">
<t>The reconnection strategy should apply to both
persistent and periodic connections. How it
applies to periodic connections becomes clear when
considering that a periodic "connection" is
a logical connection to a single server. That is,
the periods of unconnectedness are intentional as
opposed to due to external reasons. A periodic
"connection" should always reconnect to
the same server until it is no longer able to, at
which time the reconnection strategy guides how to
connect to another server.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="keepalives" title="Keep-alives for persistent connections">
<t>If a persistent connection is desired, it is the
responsibility of the connection-initiator to actively
test the "aliveness" of the connection. The connection
initiator must immediately work to reestablish a
persistent connection as soon as the connection is
lost. How often the connection should be tested is
driven by application requirements, and therefore
keep-alive settings should be configurable on a
per-application basis.</t>
</section>
<section title="Customizations for periodic connections">
<t>If a periodic connection is desired, it is necessary
for the device to know how often it should connect. This
delay essentially determines how long the
application might have to wait to send data to the device.
This setting does not constrain how often the
device must wait to send data to the application, as the
device should immediately connect to the application
whenever it has data to send to it.</t>
<t>A common communication pattern is that one data
transmission is many times closely followed by
another. For instance, if the device needs to send a
notification message, there's a high probability that
it will send another shortly thereafter. Likewise,
the application may have a sequence of pending messages
to send. Thus, it should be possible for a device to
hold a connection open until some amount of time of no
data being transmitted as transpired.</t>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Data Model">
<section title="Overview">
<section title="The "session-options" subtree">
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
module: ietf-netconf-server
+--rw netconf-server
+--rw session-options
+--rw hello-timeout? uint32
+--rw idle-timeout? uint32
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>The above subtree illustrates how this YANG module
enables configuration of NETCONF session options,
independent of any transport or connection strategy.
Please see the YANG module (<xref target="yang-module"/>)
for a complete description of these configuration knobs.</t>
</section>
<section title="The "listen" subtree">
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
module: ietf-netconf-server
+--rw netconf-server
+--rw listen {"(ssh-listen or tls-listen)"}? // YANG 1.1 syntax
+--rw max-sessions? uint16
+--rw endpoint* [name]
+--rw name string
+--rw (transport)
| +--:(ssh) {ssh-listen}?
| | +--rw ssh
| | +--rw address? inet:ip-address
| | +--rw port? inet:port-number
| | +--rw host-keys
| | +--rw host-key* string
| +--:(tls) {tls-listen}?
| +--rw tls
| +--rw address? inet:ip-address
| +--rw port? inet:port-number
| +--rw certificates
| +--rw certificate* string
+--rw keep-alives
+--rw interval-secs? uint8
+--rw count-max? uint8
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>The above subtree illustrates how this YANG module
enables configuration for listening for remote connections,
as described in <xref target="RFC6242"/> and <xref
target="rfc5539bis"/>. Feature statements are used to limit both
if listening is supported at all as well as for which transports.
If listening for connections is supported, then the model
enables configuring a list of listening endpoints, each
configured with a
user-specified name (the key field), the transport to use
(i.e. SSH, TLS), and the IP address and port to listen on.
The port field is optional, defaulting to the transport-specific
port when not configured.</t>
</section>
<section title="The "call-home" subtree">
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
module: ietf-netconf-server
+--rw netconf-server
+--rw call-home {"(ssh-call-home or tls-call-home)"}? // YANG 1.1 syntax
+--rw application* [name]
+--rw name string
+--rw (transport)
| +--:(ssh) {ssh-call-home}?
| | +--rw ssh
| | +--rw endpoints
| | | +--rw endpoint* [name]
| | | +--rw name string
| | | +--rw address inet:host
| | | +--rw port? inet:port-number
| | +--rw host-keys
| | +--rw host-key* string
| +--:(tls) {tls-call-home}?
| +--rw tls
| +--rw endpoints
| | +--rw endpoint* [name]
| | +--rw name string
| | +--rw address inet:host
| | +--rw port? inet:port-number
| +--rw certificates
| +--rw certificate* string
+--rw connection-type
| +--rw (connection-type)?
| +--:(persistent-connection)
| | +--rw persistent
| | +--rw keep-alives
| | +--rw interval-secs? uint8
| | +--rw count-max? uint8
| +--:(periodic-connection)
| +--rw periodic
| +--rw timeout-mins? uint8
| +--rw linger-secs? uint8
+--rw reconnect-strategy
+--rw start-with? enumeration
+--rw interval-secs? uint8
+--rw count-max? uint8
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>The above subtree illustrates how this YANG module
enables configuration for call home, as described in
<xref target="draft-ietf-netconf-call-home"/>. Feature
statements are used to limit both if call-home is supported
at all as well as for which transports, if it is. If call-home
is supported, then the model supports configuring a list of
applications to connect to. Each application is configured
with a user-specified name (the key field), the transport to
be used (i.e. SSH, TLS), and a list of remote endpoints, each
having a name, an IP address, and an optional port. Additionally,
the configuration for each remote application indicates the
connection-type (persistent vs. periodic) and associated
parameters, as well as the reconnection strategy to use.</t>
</section>
<section title="The "ssh" subtree">
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
module: ietf-netconf-server
+--rw netconf-server
+--rw ssh
+--ro host-keys
+--ro host-key* [name]
+--ro name string
+--ro format-identifier string
+--ro data binary
+--ro fingerprint string
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>The above subtree illustrates how this YANG module
provides SSH state independent of if the NETCONF server if
listening or calling home. This data-model provides a
read-only listing of currently configured TLC certificates.</t>
</section>
<section title="The "tls" subtree">
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
module: ietf-netconf-server
+--rw netconf-server
+--rw tls
+--ro certificates
| +--ro certificate* [name]
| +--ro name string
| +--ro data binary
+--rw client-auth
+--rw trusted-ca-certs
| +--rw trusted-ca-cert* binary
+--rw trusted-client-certs
| +--rw trusted-client-cert* binary
+--rw cert-maps
+--rw cert-to-name* [id]
+--rw id uint32
+--rw fingerprint x509c2n:tls-fingerprint
+--rw map-type identityref
+--rw name string
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>The above subtree illustrates how this YANG module
provides TLS state and enables TLS configuration independent
of if the NETCONF server if listening or calling home.
This data-model provides 1) a read-only listing of currently
configured TLC certificates and 2) an ability to configure
how client-certificates are authenicated and how authenticated
client-certificates are mapped to NETCONF user names.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="YANG Module" anchor="yang-module">
<t>This YANG module imports YANG types from <xref
target="RFC6991"/>, and
<xref target="draft-ietf-netmod-snmp-cfg"/>.</t>
<t>
<figure>
<!--<preamble>The YANG Module</preamble>-->
<artwork><![CDATA[
RFC Ed.: update the date below with the date of RFC publication
and remove this note.
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-netconf-server@2014-10-26.yang"
module ietf-netconf-server {
namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-netconf-server";
prefix "ncserver";
import ietf-inet-types {
prefix inet; // RFC 6991
}
import ietf-x509-cert-to-name {
prefix x509c2n; // draft-ietf-netmod-snmp-cfg
}
organization
"IETF NETCONF (Network Configuration) Working Group";
contact
"WG Web: <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/netconf/>
WG List: <mailto:netconf@ietf.org>
WG Chair: Mehmet Ersue
<mailto:mehmet.ersue@nsn.com>
WG Chair: Bert Wijnen
<mailto:bertietf@bwijnen.net>
Editor: Kent Watsen
<mailto:kwatsen@juniper.net>";
description
"This module contains a collection of YANG definitions for
configuring NETCONF servers.
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
authors of the code. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject
to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD
License set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's
Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see
the RFC itself for full legal notices.";
// RFC Ed.: replace XXXX with actual RFC number and
// remove this note
// RFC Ed.: please update the date to the date of publication
revision "2014-10-26" { // YYYY-MM-DD
description
"Initial version";
reference
"RFC XXXX: NETCONF Server Configuration Model";
}
// Features
feature ssh-listen {
description
"The ssh-listen feature indicates that the NETCONF server can
open a port to listen for incoming client connections.";
}
feature ssh-call-home {
description
"The ssh-call-home feature indicates that the NETCONF server can
connect to a client.";
reference
"RFC XXXX: Reverse Secure Shell (Reverse SSH)";
}
feature tls-listen {
description
"The tls-listen feature indicates that the NETCONF server can
open a port to listen for incoming client connections.";
}
feature tls-call-home {
description
"The tls-call-home feature indicates that the NETCONF server can
connect to a client.";
}
// top-level container (groupings below)
container netconf-server {
description
"Top-level container for NETCONF server configuration.";
uses session-options-container;
uses listen-container;
uses call-home-container;
uses ssh-container;
uses tls-container;
}
grouping session-options-container {
description
"";
container session-options {
description
"NETCONF session options, independent of transport
or connection strategy.";
leaf hello-timeout {
type uint32 {
range "0 | 10 .. 3600";
}
units "seconds";
default '600';
description
"Specifies the number of seconds that a session
may exist before the hello PDU is received.
A session will be dropped if no hello PDU
is received before this number of seconds elapses.
If this parameter is set to zero, then the server
will wait forever for a hello message, and not
drop any sessions stuck in 'hello-wait' state.
Setting this parameter to zero may permit
denial of service attacks, since only a limited
number of concurrent sessions are supported
by the server.";
}
leaf idle-timeout {
type uint32 {
range "0 | 10 .. 360000";
}
units "seconds";
default '3600';
description
"Specifies the number of seconds that a session
may remain idle without issuing any RPC requests.
A session will be dropped if it is idle for an
interval longer than this number of seconds.
Sessions that have a notification subscription
active are never dropped.
If this parameter is set to zero, then the server
will never drop a session because it is idle.";
}
}
}
grouping listen-container {
description
"";
container listen {
description
"Configures listen behavior";
//if-feature "(ssh-listen or tls-listen)";
leaf max-sessions {
type uint16 {
range "0 .. 1024";
}
default '0';
description
"Specifies the maximum number of concurrent sessions
that can be active at one time. The value 0 indicates
that no artificial session limit should be used.";
}
list endpoint {
key name;
description
"List of endpoints to listen for connections on.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"An arbitrary name for the listen endpoint.";
}
choice transport {
mandatory true;
description
"Selects between SSH and TLS transports.";
case ssh {
if-feature ssh-listen;
container ssh {
description
"SSH-specific listening configuration for inbound
connections.";
uses address-and-port-grouping {
refine port {
default 830;
}
}
uses host-keys-container;
}
}
case tls {
if-feature tls-listen;
container tls {
description
"TLS-specific listening configuration for inbound
connections.";
uses address-and-port-grouping {
refine port {
default 6513;
}
}
uses certificates-container;
}
}
}
uses keep-alives-container {
refine keep-alives/interval-secs {
default 0; // disabled by default for listen connections
}
}
}
}
}
grouping call-home-container {
description
"";
container call-home {
//if-feature "(ssh-call-home or tls-call-home)";
description
"Configures call-home behavior";
list application {
key name;
description
"List of applications to call-home to.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"An arbitrary name for the remote application.";
}
choice transport {
mandatory true;
description
"Selects between SSH and TLS transports.";
case ssh {
if-feature ssh-call-home;
container ssh {
description
"Specifies SSH-specific call-home transport
configuration.";
uses endpoints-container {
refine endpoints/endpoint/port {
default 8888; // pending IANA assignment
}
}
uses host-keys-container;
}
}
case tls {
if-feature tls-call-home;
container tls {
description
"Specifies TLS-specific call-home transport
configuration.";
uses endpoints-container {
refine endpoints/endpoint/port {
default 9999; // pending IANA assignment
}
}
uses certificates-container;
}
}
}
container connection-type {
description
"Indicates the NETCONF client's preference for how the
device's connection is maintained.";
choice connection-type {
default persistent-connection;
description
"Selects between persistent and periodic connections.";
case persistent-connection {
container persistent {
description
"Maintain a persistent connection to the
NETCONF client. If the connection goes down,
immediately start trying to reconnect to it,
using the reconnection strategy.
This connection type minimizes any NETCONF
client to NETCONF server data-transfer delay,
albeit at the expense of holding resources
longer.";
uses keep-alives-container {
refine keep-alives/interval-secs {
default 15; // 15 seconds for call-home sessions
}
}
}
}
case periodic-connection {
container periodic {
description
"Periodically connect to NETCONF client, using the
reconnection strategy, so the NETCONF client can
deliver pending messages to the NETCONF server.
For messages the NETCONF server wants to send to
to the NETCONF client, the NETCONF server should
proactively connect to the NETCONF client, if
not already, to send the messages immediately.";
leaf timeout-mins {
type uint8;
units minutes;
default 5;
description
"The maximum amount of unconnected time the
device will wait until establishing a
connection to the NETCONF client again. The
device MAY establish a connection before this
time if it has data it needs to send to the
NETCONF client. Note: this value differs from
the reconnection strategy's interval-secs
value.";
}
leaf linger-secs {
type uint8;
units seconds;
default 30;
description
"The amount of time the device should wait after
last receiving data from or sending data to the
NETCONF client's endpoint before closing its
connection to it. This is an optimization to
prevent unnecessary connections.";
}
}
}
}
}
container reconnect-strategy {
description
"The reconnection strategy guides how a device reconnects
to an application, after losing a connection to it,
even if due to a reboot. The device starts with the
specified endpoint, tries to connect to it count-max
times, waiting interval-secs between each connection
attempt, before trying the next endpoint in the list
(round robin).";
leaf start-with {
type enumeration {
enum first-listed {
description
"Indicates that reconnections should start with
the first endpoint listed.";
}
enum last-connected {
description
"Indicates that reconnections should start with
the endpoint last connected to. NETCONF servers
SHOULD support this flag across reboots.";
}
}
default first-listed;
description
"Specifies which of the application's endpoints the
device should start with when trying to connect to
the application. If no previous connection has
ever been established, last-connected defaults to
the first endpoint listed.";
}
leaf interval-secs {
type uint8;
units seconds;
default 5;
description
"Specifies the time delay between connection attempts
to the same endpoint. Note: this value differs from
the periodic-connection's timeout-mins value.";
}
leaf count-max {
type uint8;
default 3;
description
"Specifies the number times the device tries to
connect to a specific endpoint before moving on to
the next endpoint in the list (round robin).";
}
}
}
}
}
grouping ssh-container {
description
"";
container ssh {
description
"Configures SSH properties not specific to the listen
or call-home use-cases";
//if-feature "(ssh-listen or ssh-call-home)";
container host-keys {
config false;
description
"Parent container for a list of host keys";
list host-key {
key name;
description
"A read-only list of host-keys supported by server";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"Common name for the host-key";
}
leaf format-identifier {
type string;
mandatory true;
description
"ssh-dss, ssh-rsa, x509v3-rsa2048-sha256, etc.";
reference
"RFC 4253: SSH Transport Layer Protocol, section 6.6
RFC 6187: X.509v3 Certificates for SSH, section 3";
}
leaf data {
type binary;
mandatory true;
description
"Key-specific binary encoding.";
reference
"RFC 4253: SSH Transport Layer Protocol, section 6.6";
}
leaf fingerprint {
type string;
mandatory true;
description
"c1:b1:30:29:d7:b8:de:6c:97:77:10:d7:46:41:63:87";
reference
"RFC 4716: The Secure Shell (SSH) Public Key File
Format, section 4";
}
}
}
}
}
grouping tls-container {
description
"";
container tls {
description
"Configures TLS properties not specific to the listen
or call-home use-cases";
//if-feature "(tls-listen or tls-call-home)";
container certificates {
config false;
description
"Parent container for a list of certificates";
list certificate {
key name;
description
"A list of certificates";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"the certificate's common name";
}
leaf data {
type binary;
mandatory true;
description
"The binary certificate structure, as specified
by RFC 5246, Section 7.4.2, i.e.,: opaque
ASN.1Cert<1..2^24-1>;";
}
}
}
container client-auth {
description
"Container for TLS client authentication configuration.";
container trusted-ca-certs {
description
"A list of Certificate Authority (CA) certificates that
a NETCONF server can use to authenticate NETCONF client
certificates. A client's certificate is authenticated
if there is a chain of trust to a configured trusted CA
certificate. Note, in the TLS protocol, the client
certificate MAY be accompanied with additional
certificates forming a chain of trust. The client's
certificate is authenticated if there is path-validation
from any of the certificates it presents to a configured
trust anchor.";
leaf-list trusted-ca-cert {
type binary;
ordered-by system;
description
"The binary certificate structure as specified by RFC
5246, Section 7.4.6, i.e.,: opaque ASN.1Cert<1..2^24>;
";
reference
"RFC 5246: The Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Protocol Version 1.2";
}
}
container trusted-client-certs {
description
"A list of client certificates that a NETCONF server can
use to authenticate a NETCONF client's certificate. A
client's certificate is authenticated if it is an exact
match to a configured trusted client certificates.";
leaf-list trusted-client-cert {
type binary;
ordered-by system;
description
"The binary certificate structure, as
specified by RFC 5246, Section 7.4.6, i.e.,:
opaque ASN.1Cert<1..2^24>;
";
reference
"RFC 5246: The Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Protocol Version 1.2";
}
}
container cert-maps {
uses x509c2n:cert-to-name;
description
"The cert-maps container is used by a NETCONF server to
map the NETCONF client's presented X.509 certificate to
a NETCONF username.
If no matching and valid cert-to-name list entry can be
found, then the NETCONF server MUST close the connection,
and MUST NOT accept NETCONF messages over it.";
}
}
}
}
grouping host-keys-container {
description
"";
container host-keys {
description
"Parent container for the list of host-keys.";
leaf-list host-key {
type string;
min-elements 1;
ordered-by user;
description
"User-ordered list of host-keys the SSH server
considers when composing the list of server
host key algorithms it will send to the client.
The value of the string is the name of a
host-key configured on the system, as returned
by /netconf-server/ssh/host-keys/host-key/name.";
reference
"RFC 4253: The SSH Transport Layer Protocol, Section 7";
}
}
}
grouping certificates-container {
description
"";
container certificates {
description
"Parent container for the list of certificates.";
leaf-list certificate {
type string;
min-elements 1;
description
"Unordered list of certificates the TLS server can
pick from when sending its Server Certificate
message. The value of the string is the name of a
certificate configured on the system, as returned by
/netconf-server/tls/certificates/certificate/name";
reference
"RFC 5246: The TLS Protocol, Section 7.4.2";
}
}
}
grouping address-and-port-grouping {
description
"a common grouping";
leaf address {
type inet:ip-address;
description
"The IP address of the interface to listen on.";
}
leaf port {
type inet:port-number;
description
"The local port number on this interface the
NETCONF server listens on.";
}
}
grouping endpoints-container {
description
"Grouping for transport-specific configuration for
call-home connections.";
container endpoints {
description
"Container for the list of endpoints.";
list endpoint {
key name;
min-elements 1;
ordered-by user;
description
"User-ordered list of endpoints for this application.
Defining more than one enables high-availability.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"An arbitrary name for the endpoint to connect to.";
}
leaf address {
type inet:host;
mandatory true;
description
"The hostname or IP address or hostname of the
endpoint. If a hostname is provided and DNS
resolves to more than one IP address, the device
SHOULD try all of the ones it can based on how
its networking stack is configured (e.g. v4, v6,
dual-stack).";
}
leaf port {
type inet:port-number;
description
"The IP port for this endpoint. The device will use
the IANA-assigned well-known port if not specified.";
}
}
}
}
grouping keep-alives-container {
description
"";
container keep-alives {
description
"Configures the keep-alive policy, to proactively
test the aliveness of the NETCONF client, in
order to know when a new call home connection
should be established. Keepalive implementation
is described in RFC XXXX, section 4.";
reference
"RFC XXXX: NETCONF Server Configuration Model
Section 4";
leaf interval-secs {
type uint8;
units seconds;
description
"Sets a timeout interval in seconds after which
if no data has been received from the NETCONF
client, a message will be sent to request a
response from the NETCONF client. A value of
'0' indicates that no keep-alive messages
should be sent.";
}
leaf count-max {
type uint8;
default 3;
description
"Sets the number of keep-alive messages that
may be sent without receiving any data from
the NETCONF client before assuming the NETCONF
client is no longer alive. If this threshold
is reached, the transport-level connection
will be disconnected, which will trigger the
reconnection strategy). The interval timer is
reset after each transmission, thus an
unresponsive NETCONF client will be dropped
after ~count-max * interval-secs seconds.";
}
}
}
}
<CODE ENDS>
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Implementation strategy for keep-alives">
<t>One of the objectives listed above, <xref target="keepalives">
Keep-alives for persistent connections</xref>, indicates a need
for a "keep-alive" mechanism. This section specifies how the
NETCONF keep-alive mechanism is to be implemented for both the
SSH and TLS transports.</t>
<t>Both SSH and TLS have the ability to support keep-alives securely.
Using the strategies listed below, the keep-alive messages are sent
inside the encrypted transport sessions.</t>
<section title="Keep-alives for SSH">
<t>The SSH keep-alive solution that is expected to be used
is ubiquitous in practice, though never being explicitly defined
in an RFC. The strategy used is to purposely send a malformed
request message with a flag set to ensure a response. More
specifically, per section 4 of <xref target="RFC4253"/>, either
SSH peer can send a SSH_MSG_GLOBAL_REQUEST message with "want
reply" set to '1' and that, if there is an error, will get back
a SSH_MSG_REQUEST_FAILURE response. Similarly, section 5 of
<xref target="RFC4253"/> says that either SSH peer can send a
SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_REQUEST message with "want reply" set to '1'
and that, if there is an error, will get back a
SSH_MSG_CHANNEL_FAILURE response.</t>
<t>To ensure that the request will fail, current implementations
of this keep-alive strategy (e.g. OpenSSH's `sshd` server) send an
invalid "request name" or "request type", respectively. Abiding
to the extensibility guidelines specified in Section 6
of <xref target="RFC4251"/>, these implementations use the
"name@domain". For instance, when configured to send keep-alives,
OpenSSH sends the string "keepalive@openssh.com". In order to
remain compatible with existing implementations, this draft does
not require a specific "request name" or "request type" string
be used, implementations are free to pick values of their choosing.</t>
</section>
<section title="Keep-alives for TLS">
<t>The TLS keep-alive solution that is expected to be used is
defined in <xref target="RFC6520"/>.
This solution allows both peers to advertise if they can
receive heartbeat request messages from its peer.
For standard NETCONF over TLS connections, devices SHOULD
advertise "peer_allowed_to_send", as per <xref target="RFC6520"/>.
This advertisement is not a "MUST" in order to grandfather
existing NETCONF over TLS implementations.
For NETCONF Call Home, the network management
system MUST advertise "peer_allowed_to_send" per
<xref target="RFC6520"/>. This is a "MUST" so as to ensure
devices can depend in it always being there for call home
connections, which is when keep-alives are needed the most.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Security Considerations">
<t>The YANG modules defined in this memo are designed to be
accessed via the NETCONF protocol <xref target="RFC6241"/>.
Authorization for access to specific portions of conceptual
data and operations within this module is provided by the
NETCONF access control model (NACM) <xref target="RFC6536"/>.</t>
<t>There are a number of data nodes defined in the
"ietf-netconf-server" YANG module which are readable and/or
writable that may be considered sensitive or vulnerable in some
network environments. Write and read operations to
these data nodes can have a negative effect on network
operations. It is thus important to control write
and read access to these data nodes. Below are the
data nodes and their sensitivity/vulnerability.</t>
<t>netconf-server/tls/client-auth/trusted-ca-certs:
<list style="symbols">
<t>This container contains certificates that the system
is to use as trust anchors for authenticating TLS-specific
client certificates. Write access to this node should be
protected.</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>netconf-server/tls/client-auth/trusted-client-certs:
<list style="symbols">
<t>This container contains certificates that the system
is to trust directly when authenticating TLS-specific
client certificates. Write access to this node should be
protected.</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>netconf-server/tls/client-auth/cert-map:
<list style="symbols">
<t>This container contains a user name that some deployments
may consider sensitive information. Read access to this
node may need to be guarded.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="IANA Considerations">
<t>This document registers two URIs in the IETF XML
registry <xref target="RFC2119"/>. Following the format in
<xref target="RFC3688"/>, the following registrations are
requested:</t>
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-netconf-server
Registrant Contact: The NETCONF WG of the IETF.
XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace.
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-system-tle-auth
Registrant Contact: The NETCONF WG of the IETF.
XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace.
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
<t>This document registers two YANG modules in the
YANG Module Names registry <xref target="RFC6020"/>.</t>
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
name: ietf-netconf-server
namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-netconf-server
prefix: ncserver
reference: RFC XXXX
name: ietf-system-tls-auth
namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-system-tls-auth
prefix: sys-tls-auth
reference: RFC XXXX
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Other Considerations">
<t>The YANG module define herein does not itself support
virtual routing and forwarding (VRF). It is expected that
external modules will augment in VRF designations when needed.</t>
</section>
<section title="Acknowledgements">
<t>The authors would like to thank for following for
lively discussions on list and in the halls (ordered
by last name): Andy Bierman, Martin Bjorklund,
Benoit Claise, David Lamparter, Alan Luchuk, Ladislav Lhotka,
Radek Krejci, Tom Petch, and Phil Shafer.</t>
<t>
Juergen Schoenwaelder and was partly funded by Flamingo, a
Network of Excellence project (ICT-318488) supported by the
European Commission under its Seventh Framework Programme.
</t>
</section>
</middle>
<back>
<references title="Normative References">
&rfc2119;
&rfc4251;
&rfc4253;
&rfc6020;
&rfc6241;
&rfc6242;
&rfc6520;
&rfc6536;
&rfc6991;
<reference anchor='rfc5539bis'>
<front>
<title>
Using the NETCONF Protocol over Transport Layer
Security (TLS)
</title>
<author initials='M' surname='Badra'
fullname='Mohamad Badra'>
<organization>LIMOS Laboratory</organization>
</author>
<author initials='A' surname='Luchuk'
fullname='Alan Luchuk'>
<organization>SNMP Research, Inc.</organization>
</author>
<author initials='J' surname='Schönwälder'
fullname='Jürgen Schönwälder'>
<organization>Jacobs University</organization>
</author>
<date month='October' day='21' year='2013' />
</front>
<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft'
value='draft-ietf-netconf-rfc5539bis-04' />
</reference>
<reference anchor='draft-ietf-netmod-snmp-cfg'>
<front>
<title>A YANG Data Model for SNMP Configuration</title>
<author initials='M' surname='Bjorklund'
fullname='Martin Bjorklund'>
<organization>Tail-f Systems</organization>
</author>
<author initials='J' surname='Schönwälder'
fullname='Jürgen Schönwälder'>
<organization>Jacobs University</organization>
</author>
<date month='September' day='18' year='2014' />
</front>
<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-netmod-snmp-cfg-08' />
</reference>
<reference anchor='draft-ietf-netconf-call-home'>
<front>
<title>
NETCONF Call Home
</title>
<author initials='K.W.' surname='Watsen'
fullname='Kent Watsen'>
<organization>Juniper Networks</organization>
</author>
<date year='2014' />
</front>
<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft'
value='draft-ieft-netconf-call-home-00' />
</reference>
<!--
<reference anchor='draft-ietf-netmod-system-mgmt'>
<front>
<title>
A YANG Data Model for System Management
</title>
<author initials='A.B.' surname='Bierman'
fullname='Andy Bierman'>
<organization>YumaWorks</organization>
</author>
<date month='May' day='14' year='2014' />
</front>
<seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft'
value='draft-ieft-netmod-system-mgmt-16' />
</reference>
-->
</references>
<references title="Informative References">
<reference anchor="RFC3688">
<front>
<title>The IETF XML Registry</title>
<author initials="M.M." surname="Mealling"
fullname="Michael Mealling">
<organization>VeriSign Inc.</organization>
</author>
<date month="January" year="2004" />
</front>
<seriesInfo name="BCP" value="81" />
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3688"/>
</reference>
</references>
<section title="Examples">
<section title="SSH Transport Configuration + State">
<t>
The following example illustrastes the <get> response from a NETCONF server
that only supports SSH, both listening for incoming connections as well as
calling home to a single application having two endpoints. Please also note
that the list of host-keys at the end is read-only operational state.
</t>
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
<netconf-server xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-netconf-server">
<listen>
<endpoint>
<name>foo bar</name>
<ssh>
<address>11.22.33.44</address>
<host-keys>
<host-key>my-rsa-key</host-key>
<host-key>my-dss-key</host-key>
</host-keys>
</ssh>
</endpoint>
</listen>
<call-home>
<application>
<name>config-mgr</name>
<ssh>
<endpoints>
<endpoint>
<name>east-data-center</name>
<address>11.22.33.44</address>
</endpoint>
<endpoint>
<name>west-data-center</name>
<address>55.66.77.88</address>
</endpoint>
</endpoints>
<host-keys>
<host-key>my-call-home-x509-key</host-key>
</host-keys>
</ssh>
</application>
</call-home>
<ssh>
<host-keys>
<host-key>
<name>my-rsa-key</name>
<format-identifier>ssh-rsa</format-identifier>
<data> <!-- base64 reformated for draft -->
AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEA7D2lxYg3+WD97RZqZtO8bUU8QpIl6g9
X11kZHZ8NgSIR+x2H1MHCD5sEjmx/B6JIouK5eBvbJE9FFV3phsl62fupN6
Y4EmXosC6iqpuI41dcGA63XCQ1OenWG4ppdq1f8tlecSrmEcLw7MKPzBHK6
rNQTciqMuVuLPOKwBu/54QAiUwvvHKAsk8bkN9YxEJ1NTV1FFQmvMOADVcD
2qqPangETwV5zInW8AEkBbLccM/mmHucGNS81axXR3V9R5KgXF2DyGB47d2
k6iOnGa3LBIOYi/5Q+O8IFUlO+kytfqwuFgUc+Mx7aKReSIAPov3owVjeBL
KWsvjD24UO68qtwQ==
</data>
<fingerprint>
c1:b1:30:29:d7:b8:de:6c:97:77:10:d7:46:41:63:87
</fingerprint>
</host-key>
<host-key>
<name>my-dss-key</name>
<format-identifier>ssh-dss</format-identifier>
<data> <!-- base64 reformated for draft -->
AAAAB3NzaC1kc3MAAACBAIq7XfGmZKJgibJEIMzj70YMVfpeewBCj89VrUS
gLsJmxP/TrXFuhzW2UIaI8sePMYUXj/Vgp5DUD+eBSBkHMH4ga0U5t/clqn
y73x8Vg6LQg9f0OTaUnpRWbWrdac7U5/BRBTtMA3amHZhHrKs7BrCepS/y8
cUbxBCPF3aYMK/5AAAAFQC7wetEbDwghYtz8Z3xIwDdxs6mOwAAAIBursEk
jnvs5zzyUH7iNiyBojDoyrsq81jPM6KopkfA5Ypp2KTySPev/mkL0SoVfIb
+HttVfQ3Q63+sf1Qyk+gUtniSdN2AqtFQYKxtTcXim4McWk6IixkYFP8kkt
02t9Hsl0eXvltmogrlRsiuJsTAbFS+QTeq4OGTODCT5jjVdQAAAIA2llpZg
y5v46lGt4dQhkH8ytyMGyjBRPF6rm51msinX3lMR9xfwTaS7ZYP0b6HJt5M
sQI+m7iIYaVFB1oC8niXbkkavLcxhGpNVkwE2INWS4TIBbTQhivuoE+dMYY
KauLQxqSUjixJk3LjhCQb
</data>
<fingerprint>
c1:b1:30:29:d7:b8:de:6c:97:77:10:d7:46:41:63:87
</fingerprint>
</host-key>
<host-key>
<name>my-call-home-x509-key</name>
<format-identifier>x509v3-rsa2048-sha256</format-identifier>
<data> <!-- base64 reformated for draft -->
AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEAyBLl90dPUGX7Es12q7YKkw6v8WgWop+
B62zhT39C+yvslMIwIqgHYii0h/TGktahKpBwssawfhvAZoMF/nOyO3yDPD
pQxNrA76H7owNOjG5206QHDYfVALKPvxgrDy/6BjsR9MayOGkZTSL6GRFSl
g7ivT9AIR9E5qXmP+1z+IDufRlpwfaGfpZAxjJLEwzAjFAIwXsXKJ5FH/QP
mfC6gxfhqpt9rJCDlgqmzrXi8dXKsFUC3/o1lzezqTXTV1iMETTuCHgWegF
5QcX2baBdFgCnkd1SnftVoBHVnvXA1euRqgiG3fMNK4rct0D99D+GI+kZc+
vQyUdCw3dPlhXPZw==
</data>
<fingerprint>
97:77:10:29:d7:b8:de:6c:97:77:30:29:d7:41:63:87
</fingerprint>
</host-key>
</host-keys>
</ssh>
</netconf-server>
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
</section>
<section title="TLS Transport Configuration + State">
<t>
The following example illustrastes the <get> response from a NETCONF server
that only supports TLS, both listening for incoming connections as well as
calling home to a single application having two endpoints. Please note also
the configurations for authenticating client certificates and mappings
authenticated certificates to NETCONF user names.
</t>
<t>
<figure>
<artwork><![CDATA[
<netconf-server xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-netconf-server">
<listen>
<endpoint>
<name>primary-netconf-endpoint</name>
<tls>
<address>11.22.33.44</address>
<certificates>
<certificate>fw1.east.example.com</certificate>
</certificates>
</tls>
</endpoint>
</listen>
<call-home>
<application>
<name>config-mgr</name>
<tls>
<endpoints>
<endpoint>
<name>east-data-center</name>
<address>11.22.33.44</address>
</endpoint>
<endpoint>
<name>west-data-center</name>
<address>55.66.77.88</address>
</endpoint>
</endpoints>
<certificates>
<certificate>fw1.east.example.com</certificate>
</certificates>
</tls>
</application>
</call-home>
<tls>
<certificates>
<certificate>
<name>fw1.east.example.com</name>
<data> <!-- base64 reformated for draft -->
AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEA7D2lxYg3+WD97RZqZtO8bUU8QpIl6g9
X11kZHZ8NgSIR+x2H1MHCD5sEjmx/B6JIouK5eBvbJE9FFV3phsl62fupN6
Y4EmXosC6iqpuI41dcGA63XCQ1OenWG4ppdq1f8tlecSrmEcLw7MKPzBHK6
rNQTciqMuVuLPOKwBu/54QAiUwvvHKAsk8bkN9YxEJ1NTV1FFQmvMOADVcD
2qqPangETwV5zInW8AEkBbLccM/mmHucGNS81axXR3V9R5KgXF2DyGB47d2
k6iOnGa3LBIOYi/5Q+O8IFUlO+kytfqwuFgUc+Mx7aKReSIAPov3owVjeBL
KWsvjD24UO68qtwQ==
</data>
</certificate>
</certificates>
<client-auth>
<trusted-ca-certs>
<trusted-ca-cert>
QW4gRWFzdGVyIGVnZywgZm9yIHRob3NlIHdobyBtaWdodCBsb29rICA6KQo=
</trusted-ca-cert>
</trusted-ca-certs>
<trusted-client-certs>
<trusted-client-cert>
SSBhbSB0aGUgZWdnIG1hbiwgdGhleSBhcmUgdGhlIGVnZyBtZW4uCg==
</trusted-client-cert>
<trusted-client-cert>
SSBhbSB0aGUgd2FscnVzLCBnb28gZ29vIGcnam9vYi4K
</trusted-client-cert>
</trusted-client-certs>
<cert-maps>
<cert-to-name>
<id>1</id>
<fingerprint>11:0A:05:11:00</fingerprint>
<map-type>x509c2n:san-any</map-type>
</cert-to-name>
<cert-to-name>
<id>2</id>
<fingerprint>11:0A:05:11:00</fingerprint>
<map-type>x509c2n:specified</map-type>
<name>Joe Cool</name>
</cert-to-name>
</cert-maps>
</client-auth>
</tls>
</netconf-server>
]]></artwork>
</figure>
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Change Log">
<section title="00 to 01">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Restructured document so it flows better</t>
<t>Added trusted-ca-certs and trusted-client-certs
objects into the ietf-system-tls-auth module</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="01 to 02">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>removed the "one-to-many" construct</t>
<t>removed "address" as a key field</t>
<t>removed "network-manager" terminology</t>
<t>moved open issues to github issues</t>
<t>brought TLS client auth back into model</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="02 to 03">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>fixed tree diagrams and surrounding text</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="03 to 04">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>reduced the number of grouping statements</t>
<t>removed psk-maps and associated feature statements</t>
<t>added ability for listen/call-home instances to specify
which host-keys/certificates (of all listed) to use</t>
<t>clarified that last-connected should span reboots</t>
<t>added missing "objectives" for selecting which keys to use,
authenticating client-certificates, and mapping authenticated
client-certificates to usernames</t>
<t>clarified indirect client certificate authentication</t>
<t>added keep-alive configuration for listen connections</t>
<t>added global-level NETCONF session parameters</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Open Issues">
<t>Please see: https://github.com/netconf-wg/server-model/issues.</t>
</section>
</back>
</rfc>
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-22 04:54:43 |