One document matched: draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-02.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-01.txt
Network Working Group B. Sterman
Internet-Draft Kayote Networks
Expires: October 17, 2005 D. Sadolevsky
SecureOL, Inc.
D. Schwartz
Kayote Networks
D. Williams
Cisco Systems
W. Beck
Deutsche Telekom AG
April 15, 2005
RADIUS Extension for Digest Authentication
draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-02.txt
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
Abstract
This document defines an extension to the RADIUS protocol to enable
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support of Digest authentication, for use with HTTP-style protocols
like SIP and HTTP.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.1 Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2 Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3 Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3.1 Scenario 1, RADIUS client chooses nonces . . . . . . . 6
1.3.2 Scenario 2, RADIUS server chooses nonces . . . . . . . 7
2. Detailed Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.1 RADIUS Client Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.2 RADIUS Server Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3. New RADIUS attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.1 Digest-Response attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.2 Digest-Realm attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
3.3 Digest-Nonce attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
3.4 Digest-Response-Auth attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.5 Digest-Nextnonce attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.6 Digest-Method attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
3.7 Digest-URI attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
3.8 Digest-Qop attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
3.9 Digest-Algorithm attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.10 Digest-Entity-Body-Hash attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.11 Digest-CNonce attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.12 Digest-Nonce-Count attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.13 Digest-Username attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3.14 Digest-Opaque attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3.15 Digest-Auth-Param attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3.16 Digest-AKA-Auts attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
3.17 Digest-Domain attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
3.18 Digest-Stale attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
3.19 Digest-HA1 attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
3.20 SIP-AOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4. Table of Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5. Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
8. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
9.1 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
9.2 Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
A. Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
A.1 Changes from draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-01 . . . . . . 31
A.2 Changes from draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-00 . . . . . . 31
A.3 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-04 . . . . . . . . . . 31
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A.4 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-03 . . . . . . . . . . 32
A.5 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-02 . . . . . . . . . . 32
A.6 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-01 . . . . . . . . . . 32
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . 33
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1. Introduction
1.1 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 [RFC2119].
HTTP-style protocol
a protocol using HTTP digest, like HTTP, SIP.
nonce
An unpredictable value used to prevent replay attacks.
protection space
The combination of realm and digest URI the use of which is
authorized by the RADIUS server.
1.2 Motivation
The HTTP Digest Authentication mechanism, defined in [RFC2617], was
subsequently adapted to use with SIP in [RFC2543] (obsoleted by
[RFC3261]). Due to the limitations and weaknesses of Digest
authentication (see [RFC2617], section 4), additional authentication
and encryption mechanisms are defined in SIP [RFC3261], including TLS
[RFC2246] and S/MIME [RFC2633]. However, Digest Authentication has
been widely implemented within SIP clients and to support those
clients there is a need for support of Digest Authentication within
AAA protocols such as RADIUS [RFC2865] and Diameter [RFC3588].
This document defines an extension to the RADIUS protocol to enable
support of Digest authentication, for use with SIP, HTTP, and other
HTTP-style protocols using this authentication method. Support for
Digest mechanisms such as AKA [RFC3310] is also supported. A
companion document [I-D.ietf-aaa-diameter-sip-app] defines support
for Digest authentication within Diameter.
1.3 Overview
HTTP digest is a challenge-response protocol used to authenticate a
client's request to access some resource on a server. Figure 1 shows
a single HTTP digest transaction.
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HTTP/SIP..
+------------+ (1) +------------+
| |--------->| |
| HTTP-style | (2) | HTTP-style |
| Client |<---------| server |
| | (3) | |
| |--------->| |
| | (4) | |
| |<---------| |
+------------+ +------------+
Figure 1: digest operation without RADIUS
If the client sends a request without any credentials (1), the server
will reply with an error response (2) containing a nonce. The client
creates a cryptographic digest from parts of the request, from the
nonce it received from the server, and a shared secret. The client
re-transmits the request (3) to the server, but now includes the
digest into the message. The server does the same digest calculation
as the client and compares the result with the digest it received in
(3). If the digest values are identical, the server grants access to
the resource and sends a positive response to the client (4). If the
digest values differ, the server sends a negative response to the
client (4).
Instead of maintaining a local user database, the server could use
RADIUS. However, RADIUS does not support HTTP digest without an
extension like the one described in this document. The RADIUS client
can not send a User-Password attribute as it does not receive a
password from the HTTP-style client. The RADIUS mechanism for CHAP
resembles HTTP digest, but the digest algorithms are not compatible.
This document extends RADIUS to support Digest Authentication, via
addition as a native authentication mechanism. An implementation
supporting this extension MUST include a Digest-Response attribute
within an Access-Request packet where Digest authentication is
desired. An Access-Request MUST NOT contain both a Digest-Response
attribute and another authentication attribute, such as User-
Password, CHAP-Password, or EAP-Message.
This document defines new attributes that enable the RADIUS server to
perform the digest calculation defined in [RFC2617].
The nonces required by the digest algorithm are either generated by
the RADIUS client or by the RADIUS server. A mix of nonce generation
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modes is not supported.
RADIUS clients and servers can support one, or both nonce generation
modes.
If the RADIUS server generates nonces, its RADIUS clients MUST NOT
try to generate nonces. If the RADIUS server does not generate
nonces, its RADIUS clients MUST generate nonces locally. If at least
one HTTP-style client requires AKA authentication [RFC3310], the
RADIUS server MUST generate nonces and its RADIUS clients MUST NOT
generate nonces locally. The nonce generation mode is a configurable
parameter
The operator MUST make sure that the RADIUS client software uses the
correct nonce generation mode when accessing a specific RADIUS
server. RADIUS clients implementing both modes MUST offer respective
configuration options.
1.3.1 Scenario 1, RADIUS client chooses nonces
HTTP/SIP RADIUS
+-----+ (1) +-----+ +-----+
| |==========>| | | |
| | (2) | | | |
| |<==========| | | |
| | (3) | | | |
| |==========>| | | |
| A | | B | (4) | C |
| | | |---------->| |
| | | | (5) | |
| | | |<----------| |
| | (6) | | | |
| |<==========| | | |
+-----+ +-----+ +-----+
====> HTTP/SIP
----> RADIUS
Figure 2: RADIUS client chooses nonces
The roles played by the entities in this scenario are as follows:
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A: HTTP client / SIP UA
B: {HTTP server / HTTP proxy server / SIP proxy server / SIP UAS}
acting also as a RADIUS NAS (RADIUS client)
C: RADIUS server
The relevant order of messages sent in this scenario is as follows:
A sends B an HTTP/SIP request without authorization header (step 1).
B challenges A sending an HTTP/SIP "407 / 401 (Proxy) Authorization
required" response containing a locally generated nonce (step 2). A
sends B an HTTP/SIP request with authorization header (step 3). B
sends C a RADIUS Access-Request with attributes described in this
document (step 4). C responds to B with a RADIUS Access-Accept/
Access-Reject response (step 5). If credentials were accepted B
receives an Access-Accept response and the message sent from A is
considered authentic. If B receives an Access-Reject response,
however, B then responds to A with a "407 / 401 (Proxy)
Authorization required" response (step 6).
1.3.2 Scenario 2, RADIUS server chooses nonces
In most cases, the operation outlined in Section 1.3.1 is sufficient.
It reduces the load on the RADIUS server to a minimum. However, when
using AKA [RFC3310] the nonce is partially derived from a precomputed
authentication vector. These authentication vectors are often stored
centrally.
Figure 3 depicts a scenario, where the RADIUS server chooses nonces.
It shows a generic case where entities A and B communicate in the
front-end using protocols such as HTTP/SIP, while entities B and C
communicate in the back-end using RADIUS.
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HTTP/SIP RADIUS
+-----+ (1) +-----+ +-----+
| |==========>| | (2) | |
| | | |---------->| |
| | | | (3) | |
| | (4) | |<----------| |
| |<==========| | | |
| | (5) | | | |
| |==========>| | | |
| A | | B | (6) | C |
| | | |---------->| |
| | | | (7) | |
| | | |<----------| |
| | (8) | | | |
| |<==========| | | |
+-----+ +-----+ +-----+
====> HTTP/SIP
----> RADIUS
Figure 3: RADIUS server chooses nonces
The roles played by the entities in this scenario are as follows:
A: HTTP client / SIP UA
B: {HTTP server / HTTP proxy server / SIP proxy server / SIP UAS}
acting also as a RADIUS NAS
C: RADIUS server
The relevant order of messages sent in this scenario is as follows:
A sends B an HTTP/SIP request without authorization header (step 1).
B sends an Access-Request message with the newly defined Digest-
Method and Digest-URI attributes but without a Digest-Nonce attribute
to the RADIUS server, C (step 2). C chooses a nonce and responds
with an Access-Challenge (step 3). This Access-Challenge contains
Digest attributes, from which B takes values to construct an HTTP/SIP
"(Proxy) Authorization required" response. The remaining steps are
identical with scenario 1 (Section 1.3.1): B sends this response to A
(step 4). A resends its request with its credentials (step 5). B
sends an Access-Request to C (step 6). C checks the credentials and
replies with Access-Accept or Access-Reject (step 7). Dependent on
the C's result, B processes A's request or rejects it with a "(Proxy)
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Authorization required" response (step 8).
2. Detailed Description
2.1 RADIUS Client Behavior
If the messages between RADIUS client and RADIUS server are not
protected with IPsec, the RADIUS client MUST NOT accept secured
connections (like https or sips) from its HTTP-style clients (or else
the HTTP-style clients would have a false sense of security).
On reception of an HTTP-style request message, the RADIUS client
checks whether it is responsible to authenticate the request. There
are situation where an HTTP-style request traverses several proxies,
and each of the proxies request to authenticate the HTTP-style
client. In this situation, it is a valid scenario that a HTTP-style
request received at a HTTP-style server contains several sets of
credentials. The 'realm' directive in HTTP is the key that the
RADIUS client can use to determine which credential is applicable.
It may happen also that none of the realms are of interest to the
RADIUS client, in which case the RADIUS client MUST consider that no
credentials (of interest) were sent. In any case, a RADIUS client
MUST send zero or exactly one credential to the RADIUS server. The
RADIUS client MUST choose the credential of the (Proxy-)Authorization
header where the realm directive matches its locally configured realm
value.
If such a header is present and contains HTTP digest information, the
RADIUS client checks the 'nonce' parameter. If the RADIUS client
generates nonces but did not issue the received nonce, it responds
with a 401 (Unauthorized) or 407 (Proxy Authentication Required) to
the HTTP-style client. In this error response, the RADIUS client
sends a new nonce.
If the RADIUS client recognizes the nonce or does not generate
nonces, it takes the header directives and puts them into a RADIUS
Access-Request message. It puts the 'response' directive into a
Digest-Response attribute and the realm / nonce / digest-uri / qop /
algorithm / cnonce / nc / username / opaque directives into the
respective Digest-Realm / Digest-Nonce / Digest-URI / Digest-Qop /
Digest-Algorithm / Digest-CNonce / Digest-Nonce-Count / Digest-
Username / Digest-Opaque attributes. The request method is put into
the Digest-Method attribute. The RADIUS clients adds a Message-
Authenticator (see [RFC3579]) attribute. Now, the RADIUS client
sends the Access-Request message to the RADIUS server.
The RADIUS server processes the message and responds with an Access-
Accept or an Access-Reject message.
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The RADIUS client constructs an Authentication-Info header:
o If the Access-Accept message contains a Digest-Response-Auth
attribute, the RADIUS client checks the Digest-Qop attribute:
* If the Digest-Qop attribute's value is 'auth' or not specified,
the RADIUS client puts the Digest-Response-Auth attribute's
content into the Authentication-Info header's 'rspauth'
directive of the HTTP-style response.
* If the Digest-Qop attribute's value is 'auth-int', the RADIUS
client ignores the Access-Accept message and behaves like it
had received an Access-Reject message (Digest-Response-Auth
can't be correct as the RADIUS server does not know the
contents of the HTTP-style response's body).
o If the Access-Accept message contains a Digest-HA1 attribute, the
RADIUS client checks the 'qop' and 'algorithm' directives in the
Authorization header of the HTTP-style request it wants to
authorize:
* If the 'qop' directive is missing or its value is 'auth', the
RADIUS client ignores the Digest-HA1 attribute. It does not
include an Authentication-Info header into its HTTP-style
response.
* If the 'qop' directive's value is 'auth-int' and at least one
of the following conditions is true, the RADIUS client
calculates the contents of the HTTP-style response's 'rspauth'
directive:
+ The algorithm directive's value is 'MD5-sess' or 'AKAv1-MD5-
sess'.
+ The messages between RADIUS client and RADIUS server are
protected with IPsec (see Section 7).
It creates the HTTP-style response message and calculates the
hash of this message's body. It uses the result and the
Digest-URI attribute's value of the corresponding Access-
Request message to perform the H(A2) calculation. It takes the
Digest-Nonce, Digest-Nonce-Count, Digest-CNonce and Digest-Qop
values of the corresponding Access-Request and the Digest-HA1
attribute's value to finish the computation of the 'rspauth'
value.
o If the Access-Accept message contains neither a Digest-Response-
Auth nor a Digest-HA1 attribute, the RADIUS client will not create
an Authentication-Info header for its HTTP-style response.
The RADIUS server MAY have added a Digest-Nextnonce attribute into an
Access-Accept message. If the RADIUS client discovers this, it puts
the contents of this attribute into a 'nextnonce' directive. Now it
can send an HTTP-style response.
If the RADIUS client did receive an HTTP-style request without a
(Proxy-)Authorization header matching its locally configured realm
value, it obtains a new nonce and sends an error response (401 or
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407) containing a (Proxy-)Authenticate header.
If the RADIUS client receives an Access-Reject or no response from
the RADIUS server, it sends an error response to the HTTP-style
request it has received.
The RADIUS client has three ways to obtain nonces: it generates them
locally, it has received one in a Digest-Nextnonce attribute of a
previously received Access-Accept message, or it asks the RADIUS
server for one. To do the latter, it sends an Access-Request
containing a Digest-Method and a Digest-URI attribute but without a
Digest-Nonce attribute. It adds a Message-Authenticator (see
[RFC3579]) attribute to the Access-Request message. The RADIUS
server chooses a nonce and responds with an Access-Challenge
containing a Digest-Nonce attribute.
The RADIUS server can send Digest-Qop, Digest-Algorithm, Digest-
Realm, Digest-Domain and Digest-Opaque attributes in the Access-
Challenge carrying the nonce. If these attributes are present, the
client MUST use them.
If the RADIUS client receives an Access-Challenge message in response
to an Access-Request containing a Digest-Nonce attribute, the RADIUS
server did not accept the nonce. If a Digest-Stale attribute is
present in the Access-Challenge and has a value of 'true' (without
quotes), the RADIUS client sends an error (401 or 407) response
containing WWW-/Proxy-Authenticate header with the directive 'stale'
and the digest directives derived from the Digest-* attributes.
2.2 RADIUS Server Behavior
If the RADIUS server receives an Access-Request message with a
Digest-Method and a Digest-URI attribute but without a Digest-Nonce
attribute, it chooses a nonce. It puts the nonce into a Digest-Nonce
attribute and sends it in an Access-Challenge message to the RADIUS
client. The RADIUS server Digest-Realm, Message-Authenticator (see
[RFC3579]), SHOULD add Digest-Algorithm, one or more Digest-Qop and
MAY add Digest-Domain, Digest-Opaque attributes to the Access-
Challenge message. If the server cannot choose a nonce, it replies
with an Access-Reject message.
If the RADIUS server receives an Access-Request message containing a
Digest-Response attribute, it looks for the following attributes:
Digest-Realm, Digest-Nonce, Digest-Method, Digest-URI, Digest-Qop,
Digest-Algorithm, Digest-Username. Depending on the content of
Digest-Algorithm and Digest-Qop, it looks for Digest-Entity-Body-
Hash, Digest-CNonce and Digest-AKA-Auts, too. See [RFC2617] and
[RFC3310] for details. If the Digest-Algorithm attribute is missing,
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'MD5' is assumed. If the RADIUS server has issued a Digest-Opaque
attribute along with the nonce, the Access-Request MUST have a
matching Digest-Opaque attribute.
If mandatory attributes are missing, it MUST respond with an Access-
Reject message. If the attributes are present, the RADIUS server
calculates the digest response as described in [RFC2617]. To look up
the password, the RADIUS server uses the RADIUS User-Name attribute.
The RADIUS server MUST check if the user identified by the User-Name
attribute
o is authorized to access the protection space defined by the
Digest-URI and Digest-Realm attributes,
o is authorized to use the URI included in the SIP-AOR attribute, if
this attribute is present.
If any of those checks fails, the RADIUS server MUST send an Access-
Reject.
Correlation between User-Name and SIP-AOR AVP values is required just
to avoid that any user can register or misuse a SIP-AOR allocated to
another user.
A RADIUS MUST check if the RADIUS client is authorized to serve users
of the realm mentioned in the Digest-Realm attribute. If the RADIUS
client is not authorized, the RADIUS server silently discards the
Access-Request message. Other actions taken by the RADIUS server are
out of scope of this document. However, the RADIUS server should
notify the operator and may take additional action such as discarding
all future requests from this client, until some management action
tells it to do so again.
All values required for the digest calculation are taken from the
Digest attributes described in this document. If the calculated
digest response equals the value received in the Digest-Response
attribute, the authentication was successful. If not, the RADIUS
server responds with an Access-Reject.
If the authentication was successful, the RADIUS server adds an
attribute to the Access-Accept message which can be used by the
RADIUS client to construct an Authentication-Info header:
o If the Digest-Qop attribute's value is 'auth' or unspecified, the
RADIUS server SHOULD put a Digest-Response-Auth attribute into the
Access-Accept message
o If the Digest-Qop attribute's value is 'auth-int' and at least one
of the following conditions is true, the RADIUS server SHOULD put
a Digest-HA1 attribute into the Access-Accept message:
* The Digest-Algorithm attribute's value is 'MD5-sess' or 'AKAv1-
MD5-sess'.
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* The messages between RADIUS client and RADIUS server are
protected with IPsec (see Section 7).
In all other cases, Digest-Response-Auth or Digest-HA1 MUST NOT be
sent.
RADIUS servers issuing nonces MAY construct a Digest-Nextnonce
attribute and add it to the Access-Accept message. This is useful to
limit the lifetime of a nonce and to save a round-trip in future
requests (see nextnonce discussion in [RFC2617], section 3.2.3). The
RADIUS server adds a Message-Authenticator attribute (see [RFC3579])
and sends the Access-Accept message to the RADIUS client.
If the RADIUS server does not accept the nonce received in an Access-
Request message but authentication was successful, the RADIUS server
MUST send an Access-Challenge message containing a Digest-Stale
attribute set to 'true' (without quotes). The RADIUS server MUST add
Message-Authenticator (see [RFC3579]), Digest-Nonce, Digest-Realm,
SHOULD add Digest-Algorithm, one or more Digest-Qop and MAY add
Digest-Domain, Digest-Opaque attributes to the Access-Challenge
message.
3. New RADIUS attributes
The term 'HTTP-style' denotes any protocol that uses HTTP-like
headers and uses HTTP digest authentication as described in
[RFC2617]. Examples are HTTP and SIP.
If not stated otherwise, the attributes have the following format:
0 1 2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Text ...
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
3.1 Digest-Response attribute
Description
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If this attribute is present in an Access-Request message, the
RADIUS server MUST view the Access-Request as a Digest one.
When a RADIUS client receives a (Proxy-)Authorization header,
it puts the request-digest value into a Digest-Response
attribute. The attribute proves the user knows the password
and MUST only be used in Access-Requests.
Type
[IANA: use 102 if possible] for Digest-Response.
Length
>= 3
Text
When using HTTP digest, the text field is 32 octets long and
contains hexadecimal representation of 16 octet digest value as
it was calculated by the authenticated client. Other digest
algorithms MAY define different digest lengths. The text field
MUST be copied from request-digest of digest-response
([RFC2617]) without quotes.
3.2 Digest-Realm attribute
Description
This attribute describes a protection space of the RADIUS
server. See [RFC2617] 1.2 for details. It MUST only be used
in Access-Request and Access-Challenge messages.
Type
[IANA: use 103 if possible] for Digest-Realm
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
realm directive (realm-value according to [RFC2617]) without
quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants to authenticate.
In Access-Challenge messages, the RADIUS server puts the
expected realm value into this attribute.
3.3 Digest-Nonce attribute
Description
This attribute holds a nonce to be used in the HTTP Digest
calculation. If the Access-Request had a Digest-Method and a
Digest-URI but no Digest-Nonce attribute and the RADIUS server
is configured to choose nonces, it MUST put a Digest-Nonce
attribute into its Access-Challenge message. This attribute
MUST only be used in Access-Request and Access-Challenge
messages.
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Type
[IANA: use 104 if possible] for Digest-Nonce
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
nonce directive (nonce-value in [RFC2617]) without quotes from
the HTTP-style request it wants to authenticate. In Access-
Challenge messages, the attribute contains the nonce selected
by the RADIUS server.
3.4 Digest-Response-Auth attribute
Description
This text proves the RADIUS server knows the password. If the
previously received Digest-Qop attribute was 'auth-int'
(without quotes), the RADIUS server MUST send a Digest-HA1
attribute instead of Digest-Response-Auth. The Digest-
Response-Auth attribute MUST only be used in Access-Accept
messages. The RADIUS client puts the attribute value without
quotes into the rspauth directive of the Authentication-Info
header.
Type
[IANA: use 105 if possible] for Digest-Response-Auth.
Length
>= 3
Text
The RADIUS server calculates a digest according to section
3.2.3 of [RFC2617] and copies the result into this attribute.
Other digest algorithms than the one defined in [RFC2617] MAY
define digest lengths other than 32.
3.5 Digest-Nextnonce attribute
This attribute holds a nonce to be used in the HTTP Digest
calculation.
Description
If the RADIUS server is configured to choose nonces it MAY put
a Digest-Nextnonce attribute into an Access-Accept message. If
this attribute is present, the RADIUS client MUST put the
contents of this attribute into the nextnonce directive of an
Authentication-Info header in its HTTP-style response. This
attribute MUST only be used in Access-Accept messages.
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Type
[IANA: use 106 if possible] for Digest-Nextnonce
Length
>=3
Text
It is recommended that this text be base64 or hexadecimal data.
3.6 Digest-Method attribute
Description
This attribute holds the method value to be used in the HTTP
Digest calculation. This attribute MUST only be used in
Access-Request messages.
Type
[IANA: use 107 if possible] for Digest-Method
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
request method from the HTTP-style request it wants to
authenticate.
3.7 Digest-URI attribute
Description
This attribute is used to transport the contents of the digest-
uri directive or the URI of the HTTP-style request. It MUST
only be used in Access-Request messages.
Type
[IANA: use 108 if possible] for Digest-URI
Length
>=3
Text
If the HTTP-style request has an Authorization header, the
RADIUS client puts the value of the "uri" directive in the
(known as "digest-uri-value" in section 3.2.2 of [RFC2617])
without quotes into this attribute. If there is no
Authorization header, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
request URI from the HTTP-style request it wants to
authenticate.
3.8 Digest-Qop attribute
Description
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This attribute holds the Quality of Protection parameter that
influences the HTTP Digest calculation. This attribute MUST
only be used in Access-Request and Access-Challenge messages.
A RADIUS client SHOULD insert one of the Digest-Qop attributes
it has received in a previous Access-Challenge message. RADIUS
servers SHOULD insert at least one Digest-Qop attribute in an
Access-Challenge message. Digest-Qop is optional in order to
preserve backward compatibility with a minimal implementation
of [RFC2069].
Type
[IANA: use 109 if possible] for Digest-Qop
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
qop directive (qop-value as described in [RFC2617]) without the
quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants to authenticate.
In Access-Challenge messages, the RADIUS server puts a desired
qop-value into this attribute. If the RADIUS server supports
more than one "quality of protection" value, it puts each qop-
value into a separate Digest-Qop attribute.
3.9 Digest-Algorithm attribute
Type
This attribute holds the algorithm parameter that influences
the HTTP Digest calculation. It MUST only be used in Access-
Request and Access-Challenge messages. If this attribute is
missing, "MD5" is assumed.
Type
[IANA: use 110 if possible] for Digest-Algorithm
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
algorithm directive (as described in [RFC2617], section 3.2.1)
without the quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants to
authenticate. In Access-Challenge messages, the RADIUS server
SHOULD put the desired algorithm into this attribute.
3.10 Digest-Entity-Body-Hash attribute
Description
When using the qop level 'auth-int', a hash of the HTTP-style
message body's contents is required for digest calculation.
Instead of sending the complete body of the message, only its
hash value is sent. This hash value can be used directly in
the digest calculation.
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The clarifications described in section 22.4 of [RFC2617] about
the hash of empty entity bodies apply to the Digest-Entity-
Body-Hash attribute. This attribute MUST only be sent in
Access-Request packets.
Type
[IANA: use 111 if possible] for Digest-Entity-Body-Hash
Length
>=3
Text
The attribute holds the hexadecimal representation of H(entity-
body). This hash is required by certain authentication
mechanisms, such as HTTP Digest with quality of protection set
to "auth-int". RADIUS clients MUST use this attribute to
transport the hash of the entity body when HTTP Digest is the
authentication mechanism and the RADIUS server requires to
verify the integrity of the entity body (e.g., qop parameter
set to "auth-int"). Extensions to this document may define
support for authentication mechanisms other than HTTP Digest.
3.11 Digest-CNonce attribute
Description
This attribute holds the client nonce parameter that is used in
the HTTP Digest calculation. It MUST only be used in Access-
Request messages.u
Type
[IANA: use 112 if possible] for Digest-CNonce
Length
>=3
Text
This attribute includes the value of the cnonce-value [RFC2617]
without quotes, taken from the HTTP-style request.
3.12 Digest-Nonce-Count attribute
Description
This attribute includes the nonce count parameter that is used
to detect replay attacks. The attribute MUST only be used in
Access-Request messages.
Type
[IANA: use 113 if possible] for Digest-Nonce-Count
Length
10
Text
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In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the nc
directive (nc-value according to [RFC2617]) without quotes from
the HTTP-style request it wants to authenticate.
3.13 Digest-Username attribute
Description
This attribute holds the user name parameter that is used in
the HTTP digest calculation. The RADIUS server MUST NOT use
this value for password finding, but only for digest
calculation purpose. In order to find the user record
containing the password, the RADIUS server MUST use the value
of the ([RFC2865] -)User-Name attribute. This attribute MUST
only be used in Access-Request packets.
Type
[IANA: use 114 if possible] for Digest-Username
Length
>= 3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
username directive (username-value according to [RFC2617])
without quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants to
authenticate.
3.14 Digest-Opaque attribute
Description
This attribute holds the opaque parameter that is passed to the
HTTP-style client. The HTTP-style client will pass this value
back to the server (ie the RADIUS client) without modification.
This attribute is only used when the RADIUS server chooses
nonces and MUST only be used in Access-Request and Access-
Challenge messages.
Type
[IANA: use 115 if possible] for Digest-Opaque
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
opaque directive (opaque-value according to [RFC2617]) without
quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants to authenticate and
puts it into this attribute. In Access-Challenge messages, the
RADIUS server MAY include this attribute.
3.15 Digest-Auth-Param attribute
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Description
This attribute is a placeholder for future extensions and
corresponds to the "auth-param" parameter defined in section
3.2.1 of [RFC2617]. The Digest-Auth-Param is the mechanism
whereby the RADIUS client and RADIUS server can exchange auth-
param extension parameters contained within Digest headers that
are not understood by the RADIUS client and for which there are
no corresponding stand-alone attributes.
Unlike the previously listed Digest-* attributes, the Digest-
Auth-Param contains not only the value, but also the parameter
name, since the parameter name is unknown to the RADIUS client.
If the Digest header contains several unknown parameters, then
the RADIUS implementation MUST repeat this attribute and each
instance MUST contain one different unknown Digest parameter/
value combination.
This attribute MUST ONLY be used in Access-Request, Access-
Challenge, or Access-Accept messages.
Type
[IANA: use 116 if possible] for Digest-Auth-Param
Length
>=3
Text
The text consists of the whole parameter, including its name
and the equal ('=') sign and quotes.
3.16 Digest-AKA-Auts attribute
Description
This attribute holds the auts parameter that is used in the
Digest AKA ([RFC3310]) calculation. It is only used if the
algorithm of the digest-response denotes a version of AKA
digest [RFC3310]. This attribute MUST only be used in Access-
Request messages.
Type
[IANA: use 117 if possible] for Digest-AKA-Auts
Length
>=3
Text
In Access-Requests, the RADIUS client takes the value of the
auts directive (auts-param according to section 3.4 of
[RFC3310]) without quotes from the HTTP-style request it wants
to authenticate.
3.17 Digest-Domain attribute
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Description
When a RADIUS client has asked for a nonce, the RADIUS server
MAY send one or more Digest-Domain attributes in its Access-
Challenge message. The RADIUS client puts them into the
quoted, space-separated list of URIs of the 'domain' directive
of a WWW-Authenticate header. The URIs in the list define the
protection space (see [RFC2617], section 3.2.1). RADIUS
servers MAY send one or more attributes of this type in Access-
Challenge messages. This attribute MUST only be used in
Access-Challenge messages.
Type
[IANA: use 118 if possible] for Digest-Domain
Length
3
Text
This attribute consists of a single URI, that defines a
protection space.
3.18 Digest-Stale attribute
Description
This attribute is sent by a RADIUS server in order to notify
the RADIUS client whether it has accepted a nonce. If the
nonce presented by the RADIUS client was stale, the value is
'true' and is 'false' otherwise. The RADIUS client puts the
content of this attribute into a 'stale' directive of the WWW-
Authenticate header in the HTTP-style response to the request
it wants to authenticate. The attribute MUST only be used in
Access-Challenge messages and only if the RADIUS server chooses
nonces.
Type
[IANA: use 119 if possible] for Digest-Stale
Length
3
Text
The attribute has either the value 'true' or 'false' (both
values without quotes).
3.19 Digest-HA1 attribute
Description
This attribute is used to allow the generation of an
Authentication-Info header, even if the HTTP-style response's
body is required for the calculation of the rspauth value. It
SHOULD be used in Access-Accept messages if the required
quality of protection ('qop') is 'auth-int'.
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This attribute MUST NOT be sent if the qop parameter was not
specified or has a value of 'auth' (in this case, use Digest-
Response-Auth instead).
The Digest-HA1 attribute MUST only be sent by the RADIUS server
or processed by the RADIUS client if at least one of the
following conditions is true:
+ The Digest-Algorithm attribute's value is 'MD5-sess' or
'AKAv1-MD5-sess'.
+ The messages between RADIUS client and RADIUS server are
protected with IPsec (see Section 7).
This attribute MUST only be used in Access-Accept messages.
Type
[IANA: use 120 if possible] for Digest-HA1
Length
>= 3
Text
This attribute contains the hexadecimal representation of H(A1)
as described in [RFC2617], section 3.1.3, 3.2.1 and 3.2.2.2.
3.20 SIP-AOR
Type
This attribute is used for the authorization of SIP messages.
The SIP-AOR attribute identifies the URI the use of which must
be authenticated and authorized. The RADIUS server uses this
attribute to authorize the processing of the SIP request. The
SIP-AOR can be derived from, e.g., the To header field in a SIP
REGISTER request (user under registration), or the From header
field in other SIP requests. However, the exact mapping of
this attribute to SIP can change due to new developments in the
protocol.
This attribute MUST only be used when the RADIUS client wants
to authorize SIP users and MUST only be used in Access-Request
messages.
Type
[IANA:use 121 if possible] for SIP-AOR
Length
>=3
Text
The syntax of this attribute corresponds either to a SIP URI
(with the format defined in [RFC3261] or a TEL URI (with the
format defined in [RFC3966]).
The SIP-AOR attribute holds the complete URI, including
parameters and other parts. It is up to the RADIUS server what
components of the URI are regarded in the authorization
decision.
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4. Table of Attributes
The following table provides a guide to which attributes may be found
in which kinds of packets, and in what quantity.
+-------------------------+-----+-----+--------+--------+-----------+
| Attribute | # | Req | Accept | Reject | Challenge |
+-------------------------+-----+-----+--------+--------+-----------+
| User-Name | TBD | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Message-Authenticator | TBD | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Digest-Response | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Realm | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Digest-Nonce | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Digest-Response-Auth | TBD | 0 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 |
| (see Note 1, 2) | | | | | |
| Digest-Nextnonce | TBD | 0 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Method | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-URI | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Qop | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 1+ |
| Digest-Algorithm (see | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0-1 |
| Note 3) | | | | | |
| Digest-Entity-Body-Hash | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-CNonce | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Nonce-Count | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Username | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Opaque | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0-1 |
| Digest-Auth-Param | TBD | 0+ | 0+ | 0 | 0+ |
| Digest-AKA-Auts | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Digest-Domain | TBD | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0-1 |
| Digest-Stale | TBD | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0-1 |
| Digest-HA1 (see Note 1, | TBD | 0 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 |
| 2) | | | | | |
| SIP-AOR | TBD | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
+-------------------------+-----+-----+--------+--------+-----------+
[Note 1] Digest-HA1 MUST be used instead of Digest-Response-Auth if
Digest-Qop is 'auth-int'.
[Note 2] Digest-Response-Auth MUST be used instead of Digest-HA1 if
Digest-Qop is 'auth'.
[Note 3] If Digest-Algorithm is missing, 'MD5' is assumed
5. Example
This is an example sniffed from the traffic between a softphone (A),
a Proxy Server (B) and example.com RADIUS server (C). The
communication between the Proxy Server and a SIP PSTN gateway is
omitted for brevity. The SIP messages are not shown completely.
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A->B
INVITE sip:97226491335@example.com SIP/2.0
From: <sip:12345678@example.com>
To: <sip:97226491335@example.com>
B->A
SIP/2.0 100 Trying
B->A
SIP/2.0 407 Proxy Authentication Required
Proxy-Authenticate: Digest realm="example.com"
,nonce="3bada1a0", algorithm="md5"
Content-Length: 0
A->B
ACK sip:97226491335@example.com SIP/2.0
A->B
INVITE sip:97226491335@example.com SIP/2.0
Proxy-Authorization: Digest algorithm="md5",nonce="3bada1a0"
,opaque="",realm="example.com"
,response="f3ce87e6984557cd0fecc26f3c5e97a4"
,uri="sip:97226491335@10.0.69.38",username="12345678"
From: <sip:12345678@example.com>
To: <sip:97226491335@example.com>
B->C
Code = 1 (Access-Request)
Attributes:
NAS-IP-Address = a 0 45 26 (10.0.69.38)
NAS-Port-Type = 5 (Virtual)
User-Name = "12345678"
Digest-Response = "f3ce87e6984557cd0fecc26f3c5e97a4"
Digest-Realm = "example.com"
Digest-Nonce = "3bada1a0"
Digest-Method = "INVITE"
Digest-URI = "sip:97226491335@example.com"
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Digest-Algorithm = "md5"
Digest-Username = "12345678"
SIP-AOR = "sip:12345678@example.com"
C->B
Code = 2 (Access-Accept)
Attributes:
Digest-Response-Auth =
"6303c41b0e2c3e524e413cafe8cce954"
B->A
SIP/2.0 180 Ringing
B->A
SIP/2.0 200 OK
A->B
ACK sip:97226491335@example.com SIP/2.0
A second example shows the traffic between a web browser (A), web
server (B) and a RADIUS server (C).
A->B
GET /index.html HTTP/1.1
B->A
HTTP/1.1 407 Authentication Required
WWW-Authenticate: Digest realm="example.com",
domain="/index.html",
nonce="a3086ac8", algorithm="md5"
Content-Length: 0
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A->B
GET /index.html HTTP/1.1
Authorization: Digest algorithm="md5",nonce="a3086ac8"
,opaque="",realm="example.com"
,response="f052b68058b2987aba493857ae1ab002"
,uri="/index.html",username="12345678"
B->C
Code = 1 (Access-Request)
Attributes:
NAS-IP-Address = a 0 45 26 (10.0.69.38)
NAS-Port-Type = 5 (Virtual)
User-Name = "12345678"
Digest-Response = "f052b68058b2987aba493857ae1ab002"
Digest-Realm = "example.com"
Digest-Nonce = "a3086ac8"
Digest-Method = "GET"
Digest-URI = "/index.html""
Digest-Algorithm = "md5"
Digest-Username = "12345678"
C->B
Code = 2 (Access-Accept)
Attributes:
Digest-Response-Auth =
"e644aa513effbfe1caff67103ff6433c"
B->A
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
<html>
...
6. IANA Considerations
This document serves as IANA registration request for a number of
values from the RADIUS attribute type number space:
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+-------------------------+------------------------+
| placeholder | value assigned by IANA |
+-------------------------+------------------------+
| Digest-Response | TBD |
| Digest-Realm | TBD |
| Digest-Nonce | TBD |
| Digest-Nextnonce | TBD |
| Digest-Response-Auth | TBD |
| Digest-Method | TBD |
| Digest-URI | TBD |
| Digest-Qop | TBD |
| Digest-Algorithm | TBD |
| Digest-Entity-Body-Hash | TBD |
| Digest-CNonce | TBD |
| Digest-Nonce-Count | TBD |
| Digest-Username | TBD |
| Digest-Opaque | TBD |
| Digest-Auth-Param | TBD |
| Digest-AKA-Auts | TBD |
| Digest-Domain | TBD |
| Digest-Stale | TBD |
| Digest-HA1 | TBD |
| SIP-AOR | TBD |
+-------------------------+------------------------+
Table 2
7. Security Considerations
The RADIUS extensions described in this document make RADIUS a
transport protocol for the data that is required to perform a digest
calculation. It adds the vulnerabilities of HTTP Digest (see
[RFC2617], section 4) to those of RADIUS (see [RFC2865], Section 8 or
Section 4 of [RFC3579]).
If an attacker gains control over a RADIUS client or RADIUS proxy, he
can perform man-in-the-middle attacks even if the paths between A, B
and B, C (Figure 2) have been secured with TLS or IPsec.
The RADIUS server MUST check the Digest-Realm attribute it has
received from a client. If the RADIUS client is not authorized to
serve HTTP-style clients of that realm, it might be compromised.
RADIUS clients implementing the extension described in this document
authenticate layer 3 requests received from the Internet. This is in
contrast to the original use of RADIUS, where layer 2 sessions are
authenticated. In layer 2 access networks, attackers can usually
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tracked down more easily.
An attacker could try to overload the RADIUS infrastructure by
excessively sending HTTP-style requests. To make simple denial of
service attacks more difficult, the nonce issuer (RADIUS client or
server) MUST check if it has generated the nonce received from an
HTTP-style client. This SHOULD be done statelessly. For example, a
nonce could consist of a cryptographically random part and some kind
of signature of the RADIUS client, as described in [RFC2617], section
3.2.1.
RADIUS servers SHOULD include Digest-Qop and Digest-Algorithm
attributes in Access-Challenge messages. A man in the middle can
modify or remove those attributes in a bidding down attack. In this
case, the RADIUS client would use a weaker authentication scheme than
intended. RfC 3579 [RFC3579], section 3.2 describes a Message-
Authenticator attribute which MUST be used to improve the integrity
protection of RADIUS messages. The RADIUS server can use this
attribute to verify the identity of the RADIUS client.
The Digest-HA1 attribute contains no random components if the
algorithm is 'MD5' or 'AKAv1-MD5'. This makes offline dictionary
attacks easier and can be used for replay attacks.
HTTP-style clients can use TLS with server side certificates together
with HTTP-Digest authentication. Instead of TLS, IPsec can be used,
too. TLS or IPsec secure the connection while Digest Authentication
authenticates the user. The RADIUS transaction can be regarded as
one leg on the path between the HTTP-style client and the HTTP-style
server. To prevent the RADIUS transaction from being the weakest hop
on the path, a RADIUS client receiving an HTTP-style request via TLS
or IPsec MUST use an equally secure connection to the RADIUS server.
There are two ways to achieve this:
o the RADIUS client rejects HTTP-style requests received over TLS or
IPsec
o the operator of the RADIUS client takes actions to ensure that
RADIUS traffic is exclusively sent and received using IPsec.
When using IPsec, it MUST be set up as described [RFC3579] section
4.2.
8. Acknowledgments
We would like to acknowledge Kevin Mcdermott (Cisco Systems) /or
providing comments and experimental implementation.
Many thanks to all reviewers, especially to Miguel Garcia, Jari
Arkko, Avi Lior and Jun Wang.
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9. References
9.1 Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2616] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.
[RFC2617] Franks, J., Hallam-Baker, P., Hostetler, J., Lawrence, S.,
Leach, P., Luotonen, A., and L. Stewart, "HTTP
Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication",
RFC 2617, June 1999.
[RFC2865] Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
"Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
RFC 2865, June 2000.
[RFC3261] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
June 2002.
[RFC3310] Niemi, A., Arkko, J., and V. Torvinen, "Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) Digest Authentication Using Authentication
and Key Agreement (AKA)", RFC 3310, September 2002.
[RFC3579] Aboba, B. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS (Remote Authentication
Dial In User Service) Support For Extensible
Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3579, September 2003.
[RFC3966] Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",
RFC 3966, December 2004.
9.2 Informative References
[I-D.ietf-aaa-diameter-sip-app]
Garcia-Martin, M., "Diameter Session Initiation Protocol
(SIP) Application", draft-ietf-aaa-diameter-sip-app-07
(work in progress), March 2005.
[RFC1750] Eastlake, D., Crocker, S., and J. Schiller, "Randomness
Recommendations for Security", RFC 1750, December 1994.
[RFC2069] Franks, J., Hallam-Baker, P., Hostetler, J., Leach, P.,
Luotonen, A., Sink, E., and L. Stewart, "An Extension to
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Internet-Draft RADIUS Digest Authentication April 2005
HTTP : Digest Access Authentication", RFC 2069,
January 1997.
[RFC2246] Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",
RFC 2246, January 1999.
[RFC2543] Handley, M., Schulzrinne, H., Schooler, E., and J.
Rosenberg, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 2543,
March 1999.
[RFC2633] Ramsdell, B., "S/MIME Version 3 Message Specification",
RFC 2633, June 1999.
[RFC3588] Calhoun, P., Loughney, J., Guttman, E., Zorn, G., and J.
Arkko, "Diameter Base Protocol", RFC 3588, September 2003.
Authors' Addresses
Baruch Sterman
Kayote Networks
P.O. Box 1373
Efrat 90435
Israel
Email: baruch@kayote.com
Daniel Sadolevsky
SecureOL, Inc.
Jerusalem Technology Park
P.O. Box 16120
Jerusalem 91160
Israel
Email: dscreat@dscreat.com
David Schwartz
Kayote Networks
P.O. Box 1373
Efrat 90435
Israel
Email: david@kayote.com
Sterman, et al. Expires October 17, 2005 [Page 30]
Internet-Draft RADIUS Digest Authentication April 2005
David Williams
Cisco Systems
7025 Kit Creek Road
P.O. Box 14987
Research Triangle Park NC 27709
USA
Email: dwilli@cisco.com
Wolfgang Beck
Deutsche Telekom AG
Am Kavalleriesand 3
Darmstadt 64295
Germany
Email: beckw@t-systems.com
Appendix A. Change Log
RFC editor: please remove this section prior to RFC publication.
A.1 Changes from draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-01
o removed Diameter migration path section
o Included Digest-URI and Digest-Realm in the authorization
decision, not just in the digest calculation
o RADIUS server must check if a RADIUS client is authorized to serve
the realm mentioned in Digest-Realm
o moved 'Detailed Description' sections in front of 'New RADIUS
attributes' section
o replaced 'IPsec or otherwise secured connection' with IPsec
o changed MAY to SHOULD for Digest-Algorithm in Access-Challenge
o changed type of Digest-Entity-Body-Hash to text (all other H(..)
result attributes are hex and text, too)
o new abstract
o Terminology section changed
o 'Changes' section as appendix
A.2 Changes from draft-ietf-radext-digest-auth-00
o SIP-AOR attribute added
o clarified use of Digest-Qop
o attribute overview table added
A.3 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-04
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o clarified usage of Digest-HA1
o clarified usage of Digest-Stale (is sent in an Access-Challenge
now)
o clarified allowed attribute usage for message types
o changed attribute type to 'Text' where the corresponding Diameter
AVPs have a UTF8String
o added Diameter client - RADIUS server handling
A.4 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-03
o addressed 'auth-int' issue
o New Digest-Nextnonce attribute
o revised abstract, motivational section and examples
o Access-Challenge instead of 'Access-Accept carrying a Digest-Nonce
attribute'
o shortened SIP messages in example, removed real-world addresses
and product names
A.5 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-02
o Relaxed restrictions for Digest-Domain, Digest-Realm, Digest-
Opaque, Digest-Qop and Digest-Algorithm
o Additional security considerations for Digest-Domain, Digest-Qop
and Digest-Algorithm usage in Access-Accept messages
A.6 Changes from draft-sterman-aaa-sip-01
o Replaced Sub-attributes with flat attributes
o aligned naming with [I-D.ietf-aaa-diameter-sip-app]
o Added how a server must treat unknown attributes.
o Added a section 'Migration path to Diameter'
o Added an optional attribute for support of the digest scheme
described in informational [RFC3310].
o Added a mode of operation where the RADIUS server chooses the
nonce. This was required for AKA [RFC3310], but can be useful for
ordinary Digest authentication when the qop directive is not used.
This required the addition of several attributes.
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