Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. Bagnulo
Request for Comments: 6181 UC3M
Category: Informational March 2011
ISSN: 2070-1721
Threat Analysis for TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation
with Multiple Addresses
Abstract
Multipath TCP (MPTCP for short) describes the extensions proposed for
TCP so that endpoints of a given TCP connection can use multiple
paths to exchange data. Such extensions enable the exchange of
segments using different source-destination address pairs, resulting
in the capability of using multiple paths in a significant number of
scenarios. Some level of multihoming and mobility support can be
achieved through these extensions. However, the support for multiple
IP addresses per endpoint may have implications on the security of
the resulting MPTCP. This note includes a threat analysis for MPTCP.
Status of This Memo
This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
published for informational purposes.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Not all documents
approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6181.
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3. Related Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
4. Basic MPTCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. Flooding Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6. Hijacking Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.1. Hijacking Attacks to the Basic MPTCP . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.2. Time-Shifted Hijacking Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.3. NAT Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
7. Recommendation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
8. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
9. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
10. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
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1. Introduction
Multipath TCP (MPTCP for short) describes the extensions proposed for
TCP [RFC0793] so that endpoints of a given TCP connection can use
multiple paths to exchange data. Such extensions enable the exchange
of segments using different source-destination address pairs,
resulting in the capability of using multiple paths in a significant
number of scenarios. Some level of multihoming and mobility support
can be achieved through these extensions. However, the support for
multiple IP addresses per endpoint may have implications on the
security of the resulting MPTCP. This note includes a threat
analysis for MPTCP. There are many other ways to provide multiple
paths for a TCP connection other than the usage of multiple
addresses. The threat analysis performed in this document is limited
to the specific case of using multiple addresses per endpoint.
2. Scope
There are multiple ways to achieve Multipath TCP. Essentially, what
is needed is for different segments of the communication to be
forwarded through different paths by enabling the sender to specify
some form of path selector. There are multiple options for such a
path selector, including the usage of different next hops, using
tunnels to different egress points, and so on. The scope of the
analysis included in this note is limited to a particular approach,
namely MPTCP, that relies on the usage of multiple IP address per
endpoint and that uses different source-destination address pairs as
a means to express different paths. So, in the rest of this note,
the MPTCP expression will refer to this multi-addressed flavor of
Multipath TCP [MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED].
This goal of this note is to perform a threat analysis for MPTCP.
Introducing the support of multiple addresses per endpoint in a
single TCP connection may result in additional vulnerabilities
compared to single-path TCP. The scope of this note is to identify
and characterize these new vulnerabilities. So, the scope of the
analysis is limited to the additional vulnerabilities resulting from
the multi-address support compared to the current TCP (where each
endpoint only has one address available for use per connection). A
full analysis of the complete set of threats is explicitly out of the
scope. The goal of this analysis is to help the MPTCP designers
create an MPTCP specification that is as secure as the current TCP.
It is a non-goal of this analysis to help in the design of MPTCP that
is more secure than regular TCP.
The focus of the analysis is on attackers that are not along the
path, at least not during the whole duration of the connection. In
the current single-path TCP, an on-path attacker can launch a
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significant number of attacks, including eavesdropping, connection
hijacking Man-in-the-Middle (MiTM) attacks, and so on. However, it
is not possible for the off-path attackers to launch such attacks.
There is a middle ground in case the attacker is located along the
path for a short period of time to launch the attack and then moves
away, but the attack effects still apply. These are the so-called
time-shifted attacks. Since these are not possible in today's TCP,
they are also consider in the analysis. So, summarizing, both
attacks launched by off-path attackers and time-shifted attacks are
considered to be within scope. Attacks launched by on-path attackers
are out of scope, since they also apply to current single-path TCP.
However, that some current on-path attacks may become more difficult
with Multipath TCP, since an attacker (on a single path) will not
have visibility of the complete data stream.
3. Related Work
There is a significant amount of previous work in terms of analysis
of protocols that support address agility. The most relevant ones
are presented in this section.
Most of the problems related to address agility have been deeply
analyzed and understood in the context of Route Optimization support
in Mobile IPv6 (MIPv6 RO) [RFC3775]. [RFC4225] includes the
rationale for the design of the security of MIPv6 RO. All the
attacks described in the aforementioned analysis apply here and are
an excellent basis for our own analysis. The main differences are as
follows:
o In MIPv6 RO, the address binding affects all the communications
involving an address, while in the MPTCP case, a single connection
is at stake. If a binding between two addresses is created at the
IP layer, this binding can and will affect all the connections
that involve those addresses. However, in MPTCP, if an additional
address is added to an ongoing TCP connection, the additional
address will/can only affect the connection at hand and not other
connections, even if the same address is being used for those
other connections. The result is that, in MPTCP, there is much
less at stake and the resulting vulnerabilities are less. On the
other hand, it is very important to keep the assumption valid that
the address bindings for a given connection do not affect other
connections. If reusing of binding or security information is to
be considered, this assumption could be no longer valid and the
full impact of the vulnerabilities must be assessed.
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o In MIPv6, there is a trusted third party, called the Home Agent
that can help with some security problems, as expanded in the next
bullet.
o In MIPv6 RO, there is the assumption that the original address
(Home Address) through which the connection has been established
is always available, and in case it is not, the communication will
be lost. This is achieved by leveraging in the on the trusted
party (the Home Agent) to relay the packets to the current
location of the Mobile Node. In MPTCP, it is an explicit goal to
provide communication resilience when one of the address pairs is
no longer usable, so it is not possible to leverage on the
original address pair to be always working.
o MIPv6 RO is, of course, designed for IPv6, and it is an explicit
goal of MPTCP to support both IPv6 and IPv4. Some MIPv6 RO
security solutions rely on the usage of some characteristics of
IPv6 (such as the usage of Cryptographically Generated Addresses
(CGA) [RFC3972]), which will not be usable in the context of
MPTCP.
o As opposed to MPTCP, MIPv6 RO does not have connection-state-
information, including sequence numbers, port numbers that could
be leveraged to provide security in some form.
In the Shim6 [RFC5533] design, similar issues related to address
agility were considered and a threat analysis was also performed
[RFC4218]. The analysis performed for Shim6 also largely applies to
the MPTCP context, the main differences being:
o The Shim6 protocol is a layer 3 protocol so all the communications
involving the target address are at stake; in MPTCP, the impact
can be limited to a single TCP connection.
o Similar to MIPv6 RO, Shim6 only uses IPv6 addresses as identifiers
and leverages on some of their properties to provide the security,
such as relying on CGA or Hash-Based Addresses (HBA) [RFC5535],
which is not possible in the MPTCP case where IPv4 addresses must
be supported.
o Similar to MIPv6 RO, Shim6 does not have a connection-state-
information, including sequence numbers, port that could be
leveraged to provide security in some form.
Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) [RFC4960]is a transport
protocol that supports multiple addresses per endpoint and the
security implications are very close to the ones of MPTCP. A
security analysis, identifying a set of attacks and proposed
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solutions was performed in [RFC5062]. The results of this analysis
apply directly to the case of MPTCP. However, the analysis was
performed after the base SCTP was designed and the goal of the
document was essentially to improve the security of SCTP. As such,
the document is very specific to the actual SCTP specification and
relies on the SCTP messages and behavior to characterize the issues.
While some them can be translated to the MPTCP case, some may be
caused by the specific behavior of SCTP.
So, the conclusion is that while there is significant amount of
previous work that is closely related, and it can and will be used it
as a basis for this analysis, there is a set of characteristics that
are specific to MPTCP that grant the need for a specific analysis for
MPTCP. The goal of this analysis is to help MPTCP designers to
include a set of security mechanisms that prevent the introduction of
new vulnerabilities to the Internet due to the adoption of MPTCP.
4. Basic MPTCP
The goal of this document is to serve as input for MPTCP designers to
properly take into account the security issues. As such, the
analysis cannot be performed for a specific MPTCP specification, but
must be a general analysis that applies to the widest possible set of
MPTCP designs. In order to do that, the fundamental features that
any MPTCP must provide are identified and only those are assumed
while performing the security analysis. In some cases, there is a
design choice that significantly influences the security aspects of
the resulting protocol. In that case, both options are considered.
It is assumed that any MPTCP will behave in the case of a single
address per endpoint as TCP. This means that an MPTCP connection
will be established by using the TCP 3-way handshake and will use a
single address pair.
The addresses used for the establishment of the connection do have a
special role in the sense that this is the address used as identifier
by the upper layers. The address used as destination address in the
SYN packet is the address that the application is using to identify
the peer and has been obtained either through the DNS (with or
without DNS Security (DNSSEC) validation) or passed by a referral or
manually introduced by the user. As such, the initiator does have a
certain amount of trust in the fact that it is establishing a
communication with that particular address. If due to MPTCP, packets
end up being delivered to an alternative address, the trust that the
initiator has placed on that address would be deceived. In any case,
the adoption of MPTCP necessitates a slight evolution of the
traditional TCP trust model, in that the initiator is additionally
trusting the peer to provide additional addresses that it will trust
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to the same degree as the original pair. An application or
implementation that cannot trust the peer in this way should not make
use of multiple paths.
During the 3-way handshake, the sequence number will be synchronized
for both ends, as in regular TCP. It is assumed that an MPTCP
connection will use a single sequence number for the data, even if
the data is exchanged through different paths, as MPTCP provides an
in-order delivery service of bytes
Once the connection is established, the MPTCP extensions can be used
to add addresses for each of the endpoints. This is achieved by each
end sending a control message containing the additional address(es).
In order to associate the additional address to an ongoing
connection, the connection needs to be identified. It is assumed
that the connection can be identified by the 4-tuple of source
address, source port, destination address, destination port used for
the establishment of the connection. So, at least, the control
message that will convey the additional address information can also
contain the 4-tuple in order to inform about what connection the
address belong to (if no other connection identifier is defined).
There are two different ways to convey address information:
o Explicit mode: the control message contain a list of addresses.
o Implicit mode: the address added is the one included in the source
address field of the IP header
These two modes have different security properties for some type of
attacks. The explicit mode seems to be the more vulnerable to abuse.
The implicit mode may benefit from forms of ingress filtering
security, which would reduce the possibility of an attacker to add
any arbitrary address to an ongoing connection. However, ingress
filtering deployment is far from universal, and it is unwise to rely
on it as a basis for the protection of MPTCP.
Further consideration regarding the interaction between ingress
filtering and implicit mode signaling is needed in the case that an
address that is no longer available from the MPTCP connection is
removed. A host attached to a network that performs ingress
filtering and using implicit signaling would not be able to remove an
address that is no longer available (either because of a failure or
due to a mobility event) from an ongoing MPTCP connection.
It is assumed that MPTCP will use all the address pairs that it has
available for sending packets, and that it will distribute the load
based on congestion among the different paths.
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5. Flooding Attacks
The first type of attacks that are introduced by address agility are
the flooding (or bombing) attacks. The setup for this attack is
depicted in the following figure:
+--------+ (step 1) +------+
|Attacker| ------------------------- |Source|
| A |IPA IPS| S |
+--------+ /+------+
/
(step 2) /
/
v IPT
+------+
|Target|
| T |
+------+
The scenario consists of an Attacker A who has an IP address IPA. A
server that can generate a significant amount of traffic (such as a
streaming server), called source S and that has IP address IPS.
Target T has an IP address IPT.
In step 1 of this attack, the Attacker A establishes an MPTCP
connection with the source of the traffic server S and starts
downloading a significant amount of traffic. The initial connection
only involves one IP address per endpoint, IPA and IPS. Once the
download is on course, in step 2 of the attack, the Attacker A adds
IPT as one of the available addresses for the communication. How the
additional address is added depends on the MPTCP address management
mode. In explicit address management, the Attacker A only needs to
send a signaling packet conveying address IPT. In implicit mode, the
Attacker A would need to send a packet with IPT as the source
address. Depending on whether ingress filtering is deployed and the
location of the attacker, it may or may not be possible for the
attacker to send such a packet. At this stage, the MPTCP connection
still has a single address for the Source S, i.e., IPS, but has two
addresses for the Attacker A, IPA, and IPT. The attacker now
attempts to get the Source S to send the traffic of the ongoing
download to the Target T IP address, i.e., IPT. The attacker can do
that by pretending that the path between IPA and IPT is congested but
that the path between IPS and IPT is not. In order to do that, it
needs to send ACKs for the data that flows through the path between
IPS and IPT and not send ACKs for the data that is sent to IPA. The
details of this will depend on how the data sent through the
different paths is ACKed. One possibility is that ACKs for the data
sent using a given address pair should come in packets containing the
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same address pair. If so, the attacker would need to send ACKs using
packets containing IPT as the source address to keep the attack
flowing. This may or may not be possible depending on the deployment
of ingress filtering and the location of the attacker. The attacker
would also need to guess the sequence number of the data being sent
to the Target. Once the attacker manages to perform these actions,
the attack is on place and the download will hit the target. In this
type of attack, the Source S still thinks it is sending packets to
the Attacker A while in reality it is sending the packet to Target T.
Once the traffic from the Source S start hitting the Target T, the
target will react. Since the packets are likely to belong to a non-
existent TCP connection, the Target T will issue RST packets. It is
relevant to understand how MPTCP reacts to incoming RST packets. It
seems that the at least the MPTCP that receives a RST packet should
terminate the packet exchange corresponding to the particular address
pair (maybe not the complete MPTCP connection, but at least it should
not send more packets with the address pair involved in the RST
packet). However, if the attacker, before redirecting the traffic
has managed to increase the window size considerably, the flight size
could be enough to impose a significant amount of traffic to the
Target node. There is a subtle operation that the attacker needs to
achieve in order to launch a significant attack. On the one hand, it
needs to grow the window enough so that the flight size is big enough
to cause enough effect; on the other hand, the attacker needs to be
able to simulate congestion on the IPA-IPS path so that traffic is
actually redirected to the alternative path without significantly
reducing the window. This will heavily depend on how the coupling of
the windows between the different paths works, in particular how the
windows are increased. Some designs of the congestion control window
coupling could render this attack ineffective. If the MPTCP requires
performing slow start per subflow, then the flooding will be limited
by the slow-start initial window size.
Previous protocols, such as MIPv6 RO and SCTP, that have to deal with
this type of attacks have done so by adding a reachability check
before actually sending data to a new address. The solution used in
other protocols would include the Source S to explicitly asking the
host sitting in the new address (the Target T sitting in IPT) whether
it is willing to accept packets from the MPTCP connection identified
by the 4-tuple IPA, port A, IPS, port S. Since this is not part of
the established connection that Target T has, T would not accept the
request and Source S would not use IPT to send packets for this MPTCP
connection. Usually, the request also includes a nonce that cannot
be guessed by the Attacker A so that it cannot fake the reply to the
request easily. In the case of SCTP, it sends a message with a 64-
bit nonce (in a HEARTBEAT).
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One possible approach to do this reachability test would be to
perform a 3-way handshake for each new address pair that is going to
be used in an MPTCP connection. While there are other reasons for
doing this (such as NAT traversal), such approach would also act as a
reachability test and would prevent the flooding attacks described in
this section.
Another type of flooding attack that could potentially be performed
with MPTCP is one where the attacker initiates a communication with a
peer and includes a long list of alternative addresses in explicit
mode. If the peer decides to establish subflows with all the
available addresses, the attacker has managed to achieve an amplified
attack, since by sending a single packet containing all the
alternative addresses, it triggers the peer to generate packets to
all the destinations.
6. Hijacking Attacks
6.1. Hijacking Attacks to the Basic MPTCP
The hijacking attacks essentially use the MPTCP address agility to
allow an attacker to hijack a connection. This means that the victim
of a connection thinks that it is talking to a peer, while it is
actually exchanging packets with the attacker. In some sense, it is
the dual of the flooding attacks (where the victim thinks it is
exchanging packets with the attacker but in reality is sending the
packets to the target).
The scenario for a hijacking attack is described in the next figure.
+------+ +------+
| Node | ------------------------- | Node |
| 1 |IP1 IP2| 2 |
+------+ /+------+
/
/
/
v IPA
+--------+
|Attacker|
| A |
+--------+
An MPTCP connection is established between Node 1 and Node 2. The
connection is using only one address per endpoint, IP1 and IP2. The
attacker then launches the hijacking attack by adding IPA as an
additional address for Node 1. There is not much difference between
explicit or implicit address management, since, in both cases, the
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Attacker A could easily send a control packet adding the address IPA,
either as control data or as the source address of the control
packet. In order to be able to hijack the connection, the attacker
needs to know the 4-tuple that identifies the connection, including
the pair of addresses and the pair of ports. It seems reasonable to
assume that knowing the source and destination IP addresses and the
port of the server side is fairly easy for the attacker. Learning
the port of the client (i.e., of the initiator of the connection) may
prove to be more challenging. The attacker would need to guess what
the port is or to learn it by intercepting the packets. Assuming
that the attacker can gather the 4-tuple and issue the message adding
IPA to the addresses available for the MPTCP connection, then the
Attacker A has been able to participate in the communication. In
particular:
o Segments flowing from the Node 2: Depending how the usage of
addresses is defined, Node 2 will start using IPA to send data to.
In general, since the main goal is to achieve multipath
capabilities, it can be assumed that unless there are already many
IP address pairs in use in the MPTCP connection, Node 2 will start
sending data to IPA. This means that part of the data of the
communication will reach the attacker but probably not all of it.
This already has negative effects, since Node 1 will not receive
all the data from Node 2. Moreover, from the application
perspective, this would result in a Denial-of-Service (DoS)
attack, since the byte flow will stop waiting for the missing
data. However, it is not enough to achieve full hijacking of the
connection, since part of data will be still delivered to IP1, so
it would reach Node 1 and not the attacker. In order for the
attacker to receive all the data of the MPTCP connection, the
attacker must somehow remove IP1 of the set of available addresses
for the connection. In the case of implicit address management,
this operation is likely to imply sending a termination packet
with IP1 as source address, which may or may not be possible for
the attacker depending on whether ingress filtering is in place
and the location of the attacker. If explicit address management
is used, then the attacker will send a remove address control
packet containing IP1. Once IP1 is removed, all the data sent by
Node 2 will reach the attacker and the incoming traffic has been
hijacked.
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o Segments flowing to the Node 2: As soon as IPA is accepted by Node
2 as part of the address set for the MPTCP connection, the
attacker can send packets using IPA, and those packets will be
considered as part of MPTCP connection by Node 2. This means that
the attacker will be able to inject data into the MPTCP
connection, so from this perspective, the attacker has hijacked
part of the outgoing traffic. However, Node 1 would still be able
to send traffic that will be received by Node 2 as part of the
MPTCP connection. This means that there will be two sources of
data, i.e., Node 1 and the attacker, potentially preventing the
full hijacking of the outgoing traffic by the attacker. In order
to achieve a full hijacking, the attacker would need to remove IP1
from the set of available addresses. This can be done using the
same techniques described in the previous paragraph.
A related attack that can be achieved using similar techniques would
be an MiTM attack. The scenario for the attack is depicted in the
figure below.
+------+ +------+
| Node | --------------- | Node |
| 1 |IP1 IP2| 2 |
+------+ \ /+------+
\ /
\ /
\ /
v IPA v
+--------+
|Attacker|
| A |
+--------+
There is an established connection between Node 1 and Node 2. The
Attacker A will use the MPTCP address agility capabilities to place
itself as a MiTM. In order to do so, it will add IP address IPA as
an additional address for the MPTCP connection on both Node 1 and
Node 2. This is essentially the same technique described earlier in
this section, only that it is used against both nodes involved in the
communication. The main difference is that in this case, the
attacker can simply sniff the content of the communication that is
forwarded through it and in turn forward the data to the peer of the
communication. The result is that the attacker can place himself in
the middle of the communication and sniff part of the traffic
unnoticed. Similar considerations about how the attacker can manage
to get to see all the traffic by removing the genuine address of the
peer apply.
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6.2. Time-Shifted Hijacking Attacks
A simple way to prevent off-path attackers from launching hijacking
attacks is to provide security for the control messages that adds and
removes addresses by the usage of a cookie. In this type of
approaches, the peers involved in the MPTCP connection agree on a
cookie that is exchanged in plaintext during the establishment of the
connection and that needs to be presented in every control packet
that adds or removes an address for any of the peers. The result is
that the attacker needs to know the cookie in order to launch any of
the hijacking attacks described earlier. This implies that off-path
attackers can no longer perform the hijacking attacks and that only
on-path attackers can do so, so one may consider a cookie-based
approach to secure MPTCP connection results in similar security to
current TCP. While it is close, it is not entirely true.
The main difference between the security of an MPTCP secured through
cookies and the current TCP is the time-shifted attacks. As has been
described earlier, a time-shifted attack is one where the attacker is
along the path during a period of time, and then moves away but the
effects of the attack still remain, after the attacker is long gone.
In the case of an MPTCP secured through the usage of cookies, the
attacker needs to be along the path until the cookie is exchanged.
After the attacker has learned the cookie, it can move away from the
path and can still launch the hijacking attacks described in the
previous section.
There are several types of approaches that provide some protection
against hijacking attacks and that are vulnerable to some forms of
time-shifted attacks. A general taxonomy of solutions and the
residual threats for each type is presented next:
o Cookie-based solution: As it has been described earlier, one
possible approach is to use a cookie that is sent in cleartext in
every MPTCP control message that adds a new address to the
existing connection. The residual threat in this type of solution
is that any attacker that can sniff any of these control messages
will learn the cookie and will be able to add new addresses at any
given point in the lifetime of the connection. Moreover, the
endpoints will not detect the attack since the original cookie is
being used by the attacker. Summarizing, the vulnerability window
of this type of attacks includes all the flow establishment
exchanges and it is undetectable by the endpoints.
o Shared secret exchanged in plaintext: An alternative option that
is more secure than the cookie-based approach is to exchange a key
in cleartext during the establishment of the first subflow and
then validate the following subflows by using a keyed Hashed
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Message Authentication Code (HMAC) signature using the shared key.
This solution would be vulnerable to attackers sniffing the
message exchange for the establishment of the first subflow, but
after that, the shared key is not transmitted any more, so the
attacker cannot learn it through sniffing any other message.
Unfortunately, in order to be compatible with NATs (see analysis
below) even though this approach includes a keyed HMAC signature,
this signature cannot cover the IP address that is being added.
This means that this type of approaches are also vulnerable to
integrity attacks of the exchanged messages. This means that even
though the attacker cannot learn the shared key by sniffing the
subsequent subflow establishment, the attacker can modify the
subflow establishment message and change the address that is being
added. So, the vulnerability window for confidentially to the
shared key is limited to the establishment of the first subflow,
but the vulnerability window for integrity attacks still includes
all the subflow establishment exchanges. These attacks are still
undetectable by the endpoints. The SCTP security falls in this
category.
o Strong crypto anchor exchange: Another approach that could be used
would be to exchange some strong crypto anchor while the
establishment of the first subflow, such as a public key or a hash
chain anchor. Subsequent subflows could be protected by using the
crypto material associated to that anchor. An attacker in this
case would need to change the crypto material exchanged in the
connection establishment phase. As a result, the vulnerability
window for forging the crypto anchor is limited to the initial
connection establishment exchange. Similar to the previous case,
due to NAT traversal considerations, the vulnerability window for
integrity attacks include all the subflow establishment exchanges.
Because the attacker needs to change the crypto anchor, this
approach are detectable by the endpoints, if they communicate
directly.
6.3. NAT Considerations
In order to be widely adopted, MPTCP must work through NATs. NATs
are an interesting device from a security perspective. In terms of
MPTCP, they essentially behave as an MiTM attacker. MPTCP's security
goal is to prevent from any attacker to insert their addresses as
valid addresses for a given MPTCP connection. But that is exactly
what a NAT does: it modifies the addresses. So, if MPTCP is to work
through NATs, MPTCP must accept address rewritten by NATs as valid
addresses for a given session. The most direct corollary is that the
MPTCP messages that add addresses in the implicit mode (i.e., the SYN
of new subflows) cannot be protected against integrity attacks, since
they must allow for NATs to change their addresses. This rules out
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any solution that would rely on providing integrity protection to
prevent an attacker from changing the address used in a subflow
establishment exchange. This implies that alternative creative
mechanisms are needed to protect from integrity attacks to the MPTCP
signaling that adds new addresses to a connection. It is far from
obvious how one such creative approach could look like at this point.
In the case of explicit mode, you could protect the address included
in the MPTCP option. Now the question is what address to include in
the MPTCP option that conveys address information. If the address
included is the address configured in the host interface and that
interface is behind a NAT, the address information is useless, as the
address is not actually reachable from the other end so there is no
point in conveying it and even less in securing it. It would be
possible to envision the usage of NAT traversal techniques, such as
Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) to learn the address and
port that the NAT has assigned and convey that information in a
secure. While this is possible, it relies on using NAT traversal
techniques and also tools to convey the address and the port in a
secure manner.
7. Recommendation
The presented analysis shows that there is a tradeoff between the
complexity of the security solution and the residual threats. After
evaluating the different aspects in the MPTCP WG, the conclusions are
as follows:
MPTCP should implement some form of reachability check using a random
nonce (e.g., TCP 3-way handshake) before adding a new address to an
ongoing communication in order to prevent flooding attacks.
The default security mechanisms for MPTCP should be to exchange a key
in cleartext in the establishment of the first subflow and then
secure following address additions by using a keyed HMAC using the
exchanged key.
MPTCP security mechanism should support using a pre-shared key to be
used in the keyed HMAC, providing a higher level of protection than
the previous one.
A mechanism to prevent replay attacks using these messages should be
provided, e.g., a sequence number protected by the HMAC.
The MPTCP should be extensible and it should be able to accommodate
multiple security solutions, in order to enable the usage of more
secure mechanisms if needed.
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8. Security Considerations
This note contains a security analysis for MPTCP, so no further
security considerations need to be described in this section.
9. Contributors
Alan Ford - Roke Manor Research, Ltd.
10. Acknowledgments
Rolf Winter, Randall Stewart, Andrew McDonald, Michael Tuexen,
Michael Scharf, Tim Shepard, Yoshifumi Nishida, Lars Eggert, Phil
Eardley, Jari Arkko, David Harrington, Dan Romascanu, and Alexey
Melnikov reviewed an earlier version of this document and provided
comments to improve it.
Mark Handley pointed out the problem with NATs and integrity
protection of MPTCP signaling.
Marcelo Bagnulo is partly funded by Trilogy, a research project
supported by the European Commission under its Seventh Framework
Program.
11. References
11.1. Normative References
[RFC0793] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,
RFC 793, September 1981.
11.2. Informative References
[RFC4225] Nikander, P., Arkko, J., Aura, T., Montenegro, G., and E.
Nordmark, "Mobile IP Version 6 Route Optimization Security
Design Background", RFC 4225, December 2005.
[RFC4218] Nordmark, E. and T. Li, "Threats Relating to IPv6
Multihoming Solutions", RFC 4218, October 2005.
[RFC3972] Aura, T., "Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGA)",
RFC 3972, March 2005.
[RFC5062] Stewart, R., Tuexen, M., and G. Camarillo, "Security
Attacks Found Against the Stream Control Transmission
Protocol (SCTP) and Current Countermeasures", RFC 5062,
September 2007.
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[RFC5535] Bagnulo, M., "Hash-Based Addresses (HBA)", RFC 5535,
June 2009.
[RFC3775] Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support
in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.
[RFC5533] Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, "Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming
Shim Protocol for IPv6", RFC 5533, June 2009.
[RFC4960] Stewart, R., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",
RFC 4960, September 2007.
[MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED]
Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, "TCP Extensions for
Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses", Work
in Progress, October 2010.
Author's Address
Marcelo Bagnulo
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Av. Universidad 30
Leganes, Madrid 28911
SPAIN
Phone: 34 91 6248814
EMail: marcelo@it.uc3m.es
URI: http://www.it.uc3m.es
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