Security Considerations for Transient Numeric Identifiers Employed in Network Protocols
EdgeUno
Segurola y Habana 4310 7mo piso
Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires
Argentina
fernando.gont@edgeuno.com
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Quarkslab
Segurola y Habana 4310 7mo piso
Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires
Argentina
iarce@quarkslab.com
https://www.quarkslab.com
Poor selection of transient numerical identifiers in protocols such as the TCP/IP suite has historically led to a number of attacks on implementations, ranging from Denial of Service (DoS) to data injection and information leakage that can be exploited by pervasive monitoring. To prevent such flaws in future protocols and implementations, this document updates RFC 3552, requiring future RFCs to contain a vulnerability assessment of their transient numeric identifiers.
Network protocols employ a variety of transient numeric identifiers for different protocol entities, ranging from DNS Transaction IDs (TxIDs) to transport protocol numbers (e.g. TCP ports) or IPv6 Interface Identifiers (IIDs). These identifiers usually have specific properties that must be satisfied such that they do not result in negative interoperability implications (e.g., uniqueness during a specified period of time), and an associated failure severity when such properties not met.
The TCP/IP protocol suite alone has been subject to variety of attacks on its transient numeric identifiers over the past 30 years or more, with effects ranging from Denial of Service (DoS) or data injection, to information leakage that could be exploited for pervasive monitoring . The root of these issues has been, in many cases, the poor selection of identifiers in such protocols, usually as a result of insufficient or misleading specifications. While it is generally trivial to identify an algorithm that can satisfy the interoperability requirements for a given identifier, there exists practical evidence that doing so without negatively affecting the security and/or privacy properties of the aforementioned protocols is prone to error.
For example, implementations have been subject to security and/or privacy issues resulting from:
Predictable TCP sequence numbers (see e.g. , , and )
Predictable transport protocol numbers (see e.g. and )
Predictable IPv4 or IPv6 Fragment Identifiers (see e.g. , , and )
Predictable IPv6 IIDs (see e.g. , , and )
Predictable DNS TxIDs (see e.g. and )
Recent history indicates that when new protocols are standardized or new protocol implementations are produced, the security and privacy properties of the associated identifiers tend to be overlooked and inappropriate algorithms to generate such identifiers are either suggested in the specification or selected by implementers. As a result, advice in this area is warranted.
We note that the use of cryptographic techniques for confidentiality and authentication may readily mitigate some of the issues arising from predictable transient numeric identifiers. For example, cryptographic authentication can readily mitigate data injection attacks even in the presence of predictable transient numeric identifiers (such as "sequence numbers"). However, use of flawed algorithms (such as global counters) for generating transient numeric identifiers could still result in information leakages even when cryptographic techniques are employed.
provides an overview of common flaws in the specification of transient numeric identifiers. provides an overview of the implications of predictable transient numeric identifiers. Finally, provides key guidelines for protocol designers.
A data object in a protocol specification that can be used to definitely distinguish a protocol object (a datagram, network interface, transport protocol endpoint, session, etc) from all other objects of the same type, in a given context. Transient numeric identifiers are usually defined as a series of bits, and represented using integer values. These identifiers are typically dynamically selected, as opposed to statically-assigned numeric identifiers (see e.g. ). We note that different identifiers may have additional requirements or properties depending on their specific use in a protocol. We use the term "transient numeric identifier" (or simply "numeric identifier" or "identifier" as short forms) as a generic term to refer to any data object in a protocol specification that satisfies the identification property stated above.
The consequences of a failure to comply with the interoperability requirements of a given identifier. Severity considers the worst potential consequence of a failure, determined by the system damage and/or time lost to repair the failure. In this document we define two types of failure severity: "soft" and "hard".
A hard failure is a non-recoverable condition in which a protocol does not operate in the prescribed manner or it operates with excessive degradation of service. For example, an established TCP connection that is aborted due to an error condition constitutes, from the point of view of the transport protocol, a hard failure, since it enters a state from which normal operation cannot be recovered.
A soft failure is a recoverable condition in which a protocol does not operate in the prescribed manner but normal operation can be resumed automatically in a short period of time. For example, a simple packet-loss event that is subsequently recovered with a retransmission can be considered a soft failure.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.
A recent survey of transient numeric identifier usage in protocol specifications and implementations revealed that most of the issues discussed in this document arise as a result of one of the following conditions:
Protocol specifications that under-specify the requirements for their identifiers
Protocol specifications that over-specify their identifiers
Protocol implementations that simply fail to comply with the specified requirements
Both under-specifying and over-specifying identifier contents is
hazardous. TCP port numbers and sequence numbers and DNS TxID
were under-specified, leading to implementations that used
predictable values and thus were vulnerable to numerous off-path
attacks. Over-specification, as for IPv6 Interface Identifiers (IIDs)
and Fragment Identification values , leaves
implementations unable to respond to security and privacy issues
stemming from the mandated algorithm -- IPv6 IIDs need not expose
privacy-sensitive link-layer addresses, and predictable Fragment
Identifiers invite the same off-path attacks that plague TCP.
Finally, there are protocol implementations that simply fail to comply with existing protocol specifications. That is, appropriate guidance is provided by the protocol specification (whether the core specification or or an update to it), but an implementation simply fails to follow such guidance. For example, some popular operating systems (notably Microsoft Windows) still fail to implement transport-protocol port randomization, as specified in .
Clear specification of the interoperability requirements for the transient numeric identifiers will help identify possible algorithms that could be employed to generate them, and also make evident if such identifiers are being over-specified. A protocol specification will usually also benefit from a vulnerability assessment of the transient numeric identifiers they specify, to prevent the corresponding considerations from being overlooked.
This section briefly notes common flaws associated with the generation of transient numeric identifiers. Such common flaws include, but are not limited to:
Employing trivial algorithms (e.g. global counters) that result in predictable identifiers
Employing the same identifier across contexts in which constancy is not required
Re-using identifiers across different protocols or layers of the protocol stack
Initializing counters or timers to constant values, when such initialization is not required
Employing the same increment space across different contexts
Use of flawed pseudo-random number generators (PRNGs).
Employing trivial algorithms for generating the identifiers means
that any node that is able to sample such identifiers can easily
predict future identifiers employed by the victim node.
When one identifier is employed across contexts where such constancy
is not needed, activity correlation is made made possible. For
example, employing an identifier that is constant across networks
allows for node tracking across networks.
Re-using identifiers across different layers or protocols ties the
security and privacy properties of the protocol re-using the identifier to the
security and privacy properties of the original identifier (over
which the protocol re-using the identifier may have no control
regarding its generation). Besides, when re-using an identifier
across protocols from different layers, the goal of of isolating the
properties of a layer from that of another layer is broken, and the
vulnerability assessment may be harder to perform, since the
combined system, rather than each protocol in isolation will have to
be assessed.
At times, a protocol needs to convey order information (whether
sequence, timing, etc.). In many cases, there is no reason for the
corresponding counter or timer to be initialized to any specific
value e.g. at system bootstrap. Similarly, there may not be a need for the difference between successive counted
values to be a predictable.
A node that implements a per-context linear function may share the
increment space among different contexts (please see the "Simple
Hash-Based Algorithm" in ).
Sharing the same increment space allows an attacker that can sample
identifiers in other context to e.g. learn how many identifiers have
been generated between two sampled values.
Finally, some implementations have been found to employ flawed PRNGs (see e.g. ).
Protocol specifications that employ transient numeric identifiers SHOULD:
Clearly specify the interoperability requirements for the aforementioned transient numeric identifiers (e.g., required properties such as uniqueness, along with the failure severity if such properties are not met).
Provide a vulnerability assessment of the aforementioned identifiers.
Note: Section 8 and Section 9 of provide a general vulnerability assessment of transient numeric identifiers, along with a vulnerability assessment of common algorithms for generating transient numeric identifiers.
Recommend an algorithm for generating the aforementioned transient numeric identifiers that mitigates the vulnerabilities identified in the previous step, such as those discussed in .
There are no IANA registries within this document. The RFC-Editor can remove this section before publication of this document as an RFC.
This document formally updates such
that a vulnerability assessment of transient numeric
identifiers is performed when writing the "Security Considerations"
section of future RFCs.
The authors would like to thank Bernard Aboba, Theo de Raadt, Russ Housley, Benjamin Kaduk, Charlie Kaufman, and Joe Touch, for providing valuable comments on earlier versions of this document.
The authors would like to thank (in alphabetical order) Steven Bellovin, Joseph Lorenzo Hall, Gre Norcie, for providing valuable comments on , on which the present document is based.
The authors would like to thank Diego Armando Maradona for his magic and inspiration.
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