DOTS | T. Reddy |
Internet-Draft | McAfee |
Intended status: Standards Track | M. Boucadair |
Expires: April 30, 2018 | Orange |
K. Nishizuka | |
NTT Communications | |
L. Xia | |
Huawei | |
P. Patil | |
Cisco | |
A. Mortensen | |
Arbor Networks, Inc. | |
N. Teague | |
Verisign, Inc. | |
October 27, 2017 |
Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Data Channel
draft-ietf-dots-data-channel-06
The document specifies a Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) data channel used for bulk exchange of data not easily or appropriately communicated through the DOTS signal channel under attack conditions. This is a companion document to the DOTS signal channel specification.
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on April 30, 2018.
Copyright (c) 2017 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 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.
A distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack is an attempt to make machines or network resources unavailable to their intended users. In most cases, sufficient scale can be achieved by compromising enough end-hosts and using those infected hosts to perpetrate and amplify the attack. The victim in this attack can be an application server, a client, a router, a firewall, or an entire network.
+---------------+ +---------------+ | | <------- Signal Channel ------> | | | DOTS Client | | DOTS Server | | | <======= Data Channel ======> | | +---------------+ +---------------+
Figure 1: DOTS Channels
DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) [I-D.ietf-dots-architecture] defines two channels: signal and data channels (Figure 1). The DOTS signal channel used to convey that a network is under a DDOS attack to an upstream DOTS server so that appropriate mitigation actions are undertaken on the suspect traffic is further elaborated in [I-D.ietf-dots-signal-channel]. The DOTS data channel is used for infrequent bulk data exchange between DOTS agents in the aim to significantly augment attack response coordination.
Section 2 of [I-D.ietf-dots-architecture] identifies that the DOTS data channel is used to perform the tasks listed below:
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].
The reader should be familiar with the terms defined in [I-D.ietf-dots-architecture].
The terminology for describing YANG data modules is defined in [RFC7950]. The meaning of the symbols in tree diagrams is defined in [I-D.ietf-netmod-yang-tree-diagrams].
For simplicity, all of the examples in this document use "/restconf" as the discovered RESTCONF API root path. Many protocol header lines and message-body text within examples throughout the document are split into multiple lines for display purposes only. When a line ends with backslash ('\') as the last character, the line is wrapped for display purposes. It is to be considered to be joined to the next line by deleting the backslash, the following line break, and the leading whitespace of the next line.
The DOTS data channel is intended to be used for bulk data exchanges between DOTS agents. Unlike the signal channel [I-D.ietf-dots-signal-channel], which must operate nominally even when confronted with signal degradation due to packets loss, the data channel is not expected to be constructed to deal with DDoS attack conditions.
As the primary function of the data channel is data exchange, a reliable transport is required in order for DOTS agents to detect data delivery success or failure. RESTCONF [RFC8040] over TLS [RFC5246] over TCP is used for DOTS data channel (Figure 2). RESTCONF uses HTTP methods to provide CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations on a conceptual datastore containing YANG data, which is compatible with a server implementing NETCONF datastores.
The HTTP POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE methods are used to edit data resources represented by DOTS data channel YANG data models. These basic edit operations allow the DOTS data channel running configuration to be altered by a DOTS client.
DOTS data channel configuration data and state data can be retrieved with the GET method. HTTP status codes are used to report success or failure for RESTCONF operations.
The DOTS client will perform the root resource discovery procedure discussed in Section 3.1 of [RFC8040] to determine the root of the RESTCONF API. After discovering the RESTCONF API root, the DOTS client uses this value as the initial part of the path in the request URI, in any subsequent request to the DOTS server. The DOTS server may support retrieval of the YANG modules it supports (Section 3.7 in [RFC8040]), for example, a DOTS client may use RESTCONF to retrieve the company proprietary YANG modules supported by the DOTS server.
+--------------+ | DOTS | +--------------+ | RESTCONF | +--------------+ | TLS | +--------------+ | TCP | +--------------+ | IP | +--------------+
Figure 2: Abstract Layering of DOTS data channel over RESTCONF over TLS
JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) [RFC7159] payload is used to propagate data channel specific payload messages that convey request parameters and response information such as errors. This specification uses the encoding rules defined in [RFC7951] for representing DOTS data channel configuration data defined using YANG (Section 3.1) as JSON text.
A DOTS client registers itself to its DOTS server(s) in order to set up DOTS data channel related configuration data and receive state data (i.e., non-configuration data) from the DOTS server(s).
A single DOTS data channel between DOTS agents can be used to exchange multiple requests and multiple responses. To reduce DOTS client and DOTS server workload, DOTS client SHOULD re-use the same TLS session. While the communication to the DOTS server is quiescent, the DOTS client MAY probe the server to ensure it has maintained cryptographic state. Such probes can also keep alive firewall and/or NAT bindings. A TLS heartbeat [RFC6520] verifies the DOTS server still has TLS state by returning a TLS message.
This document defines a YANG module for creating identifiers, such as names or aliases, for resources for which mitigation may be requested. Such identifiers may be used in subsequent DOTS signal channel exchanges to refer more efficiently to the resources under attack.
This document defines the YANG module "ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier", which has the following tree structure:
module: ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier +--rw identifier +--rw client-identifier* binary +--rw alias* [alias-name] +--rw alias-name string +--rw target-ip* inet:ip-address +--rw target-prefix* inet:ip-prefix +--rw target-port-range* [lower-port upper-port] | +--rw lower-port inet:port-number | +--rw upper-port inet:port-number +--rw target-protocol* uint8 +--rw fqdn* inet:domain-name +--rw uri* inet:uri
[I-D.ietf-dots-signal-channel].
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier@2017-10-12.yang" module ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier { yang-version 1.1; namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier"; prefix "alias"; import ietf-inet-types { prefix "inet"; } organization "IETF DOTS Working Group"; contact "Konda, Tirumaleswar Reddy <TirumaleswarReddy_Konda@McAfee.com> Mohamed Boucadair <mohamed.boucadair@orange.com> Kaname Nishizuka <kaname@nttv6.jp> Liang Xia <frank.xialiang@huawei.com> Prashanth Patil <praspati@cisco.com> Andrew Mortensen <amortensen@arbor.net> Nik Teague <nteague@verisign.com>"; description "This module contains YANG definition for configuring identifiers for resources using DOTS data channel. Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as authors of the code. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info). This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the RFC itself for full legal notices."; revision 2017-10-12 { description "Fix nits and align the module with the signal channel."; reference "-05"; } revision 2017-08-03 { reference "https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dots-data-channel"; } container identifier { description "Top level container for identifiers"; leaf-list client-identifier { type binary; description "A client identifier conveyed by a DOTS gateway to a remote DOTS server."; reference "I-D.itef-dots-signal-channel"; } list alias { key alias-name; description "List of identifiers"; leaf alias-name { type string; description "alias name"; } leaf-list target-ip { type inet:ip-address; description "IPv4 or IPv6 address identifying the target."; } leaf-list target-prefix { type inet:ip-prefix; description "IPv4 or IPv6 prefix identifying the target."; } list target-port-range { key "lower-port upper-port"; description "Port range. When only lower-port is present, it represents a single port."; leaf lower-port { type inet:port-number; mandatory true; description "Lower port number."; } leaf upper-port { type inet:port-number; must ". >= ../lower-port" { error-message "The upper-port must be greater than or equal to lower-port"; } description "Upper port number."; } } leaf-list target-protocol { type uint8; description "Identifies the target protocol number."; reference "https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers/ protocol-numbers.xhtml"; } leaf-list fqdn { type inet:domain-name; description "FQDN"; } leaf-list uri { type inet:uri; description "URI"; } } } } <CODE ENDS>
This document augments the "ietf-access-control-list" Access Control List (ACL) YANG module [I-D.ietf-netmod-acl-model] for managing filtering rules. ACL is explained in Section 1 of [I-D.ietf-netmod-acl-model].
Examples of ACL management include, but not limited to,:
This document defines the YANG module "ietf-dots-access-control-list" to augment the "ietf-access-control-list" module to support filters based on the client identifier (client-identifier), to support rate-limit action (rate-limit), and to handle fragmented packets (fragments).
Filtering fragments adds an additional layer of protection against a DoS attack that uses only noninitial fragments. When there is only Layer 3 information in the ACL entry and the fragments keyword is present, for noninitial fragments matching the ACL entry, the deny or permit action associated with the ACL entry will be enforced and for initial or non-fragment matching the ACL entry, the next ACL entry will be processed. When there is both Layer 3 and Layer 4 information in the ACL entry and the fragments keyword is present, the ACL action is conservative for both permit and deny actions. The actions are conservative to not accidentally deny a fragmented portion of a flow because the fragments do not contain sufficient information to match all of the filter attributes. In the deny action case, instead of denying a non-initial fragment, the next ACL entry is processed. In the permit case, it is assumed that the Layer 4 information in the non-initial fragment, if available, matches the Layer 4 information in the ACL entry.
The "ietf-dots-access-control-list" module has the following structure:
module: ietf-dots-access-control-list augment /ietf-acl:access-lists: +--rw client-identifier* binary augment /ietf-acl:access-lists/ietf-acl:acl/ietf-acl:aces/ietf-acl:ace/ietf-acl:actions/ietf-acl:packet-handling: +--:(rate-limit) +--rw rate-limit? decimal64 augment /ietf-acl:access-lists/ietf-acl:acl/ietf-acl:aces/ietf-acl:ace: +--rw fragments? empty
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-dots-access-control-list@2017-10-12.yang" module ietf-dots-access-control-list { yang-version 1.1; namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-dots-access-control-list"; prefix "dots-acl"; import ietf-access-control-list { prefix "ietf-acl"; } organization "IETF DOTS Working Group"; contact "Konda, Tirumaleswar Reddy <TirumaleswarReddy_Konda@McAfee.com> Mohamed Boucadair <mohamed.boucadair@orange.com> Kaname Nishizuka <kaname@nttv6.jp> Liang Xia <frank.xialiang@huawei.com> Prashanth Patil <praspati@cisco.com> Andrew Mortensen <amortensen@arbor.net> Nik Teague <nteague@verisign.com>"; description "This module contains YANG definition for configuring filtering rules using DOTS data channel. Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as authors of the code. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info). This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the RFC itself for full legal notices."; revision 2017-10-12 { description "Fix nits and align the module with the signal channel."; reference "-05"; } revision 2017-06-12 { reference "https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dots-data-channel"; } augment "/ietf-acl:access-lists" { description "client-identifier parameter."; leaf-list client-identifier { type binary; description "A client identifier conveyed by a DOTS gateway to a remote DOTS server."; } } augment "/ietf-acl:access-lists/ietf-acl:acl/ietf-acl:aces/" + "ietf-acl:ace/ietf-acl:actions" { description "rate-limit action"; leaf rate-limit { type decimal64 { fraction-digits 2; } description "rate-limit action."; } } augment "/ietf-acl:access-lists/ietf-acl:acl/ietf-acl:aces/ietf-acl:ace" { description "Handle non-initial and initial fragments."; leaf fragments { type empty; description "Handle fragments."; } } } <CODE ENDS>
A POST request is used to create identifiers, such as names or aliases, for resources for which a mitigation may be requested. Such identifiers may then be used in subsequent DOTS signal channel exchanges to refer more efficiently to the resources under attack (Figure 3).
POST /restconf/data/ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier HTTP/1.1 Host: {host}:{port} Content-Format: "application/yang.api+json" { "ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier:identifier": { "client-identifier": [ "string" ], "alias": [ { "alias-name": "string", "target-ip": [ "string" ], "target-prefix": [ "string" ], "target-port-range": [ { "lower-port": integer, "upper-port": integer } ], "target-protocol": [ integer ], "fqdn": [ "string" ], "uri": [ "string" ] } ] } }
Figure 3: POST to create identifiers
The header parameters are described below:
In the POST request at least one of the attributes 'target-ip' or 'target-prefix' or 'fqdn' or 'uri' MUST be present. DOTS agents can safely ignore Vendor-Specific parameters they don't understand.
Figure 4 shows a POST request to create alias called "https1" for HTTP(S) servers with IP addresses 2001:db8:6401::1 and 2001:db8:6401::2 listening on port 443.
POST /restconf/data/ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com Content-Format: "application/yang.api+json" { "ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier:identifier": { "client-identifier": [ "E9CZ9INDbd+2eRQozYqqbQ2yXLVKB9+xcprMF+44U1g=" ], "alias": [ { "alias-name": "Server1", "target-protocol": [ 6 ], "target-ip": [ "2001:db8:6401::1", "2001:db8:6401::2" ], "target-port-range": [ { "lower-port": 443 } ] } ] } }
Figure 4: POST to create identifiers
The DOTS server indicates the result of processing the POST request using HTTP response codes. HTTP 2xx codes are success, HTTP 4xx codes are some sort of invalid requests and 5xx codes are returned if the DOTS server has erred or it is incapable of accepting the alias. Response code 201 (Created) will be returned in the response if the DOTS server has accepted the alias. If the request is missing one or more mandatory attributes then 400 (Bad Request) will be returned in the response or if the request contains invalid or unknown parameters then 400 (Invalid query) will be returned in the response. The HTTP response will include the JSON body received in the request.
The DOTS client can use the PUT request (Section 4.5 in [RFC8040]) to create or modify the aliases in the DOTS server.
A DELETE request is used to delete identifiers maintained by a DOTS server (Figure 5).
DELETE /restconf/data/ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier:identifier\ /alias=Server1 HTTP/1.1 Host: {host}:{port}
Figure 5: DELETE identifier
In RESTCONF, URI-encoded path expressions are used. A RESTCONF data resource identifier is encoded from left to right, starting with the top-level data node, according to the 'api-path' rule defined in Section 3.5.3.1 of [RFC8040]. The data node in the above path expression is a YANG list node and MUST be encoded according to the rules defined in Section 3.5.1 of [RFC8040].
If the DOTS server does not find the alias name conveyed in the DELETE request in its configuration data, then it responds with a 404 (Not Found) error response code. The DOTS server successfully acknowledges a DOTS client's request to remove the identifier using 204 (No Content) in the response.
A GET request is used to retrieve the set of installed identifiers from a DOTS server (Section 3.3.1 in [RFC8040]). Figure 6 shows how to retrieve all the identifiers that were instantiated by the DOTS client. The content parameter and its permitted values are defined in Section 4.8.1 of [RFC8040].
GET /restconf/data/ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier:identifier?\ content=config HTTP/1.1 Host: {host}:{port} Accept: application/yang-data+json
Figure 6: GET to retrieve all the installed identifiers
Figure 7 shows response for all identifiers on the DOTS server.
{ "ietf-dots-data-channel-identifier:identifier": { "client-identifier": [ "E9CZ9INDbd+2eRQozYqqbQ2yXLVKB9+xcprMF+44U1g=" ], "alias": [ { "alias-name": "Server1", "traffic-protocol": [ 6 ], "ip": [ "2001:db8:6401::1", "2001:db8:6401::2" ], "port-range": [ { "lower-port": 443 } ] }, { "alias-name": "Server2", "traffic-protocol": [ 6 ], "ip": [ "2001:db8:6401::10", "2001:db8:6401::20" ], "port-range": [ { "lower-port": 80 } ] } ] } }
Figure 7: Response body
If the DOTS server does not find the alias name conveyed in the GET request in its configuration data, then it responds with a 404 (Not Found) error response code.
The DOTS server either receives the filtering rules directly from the DOTS client or via a DOTS gateway.
If the DOTS client signals the filtering rules via a DOTS gateway, then the DOTS gateway validates if the DOTS client is authorized to signal the filtering rules and if the client is authorized propagates the rules to the DOTS server. Likewise, the DOTS server validates if the DOTS gateway is authorized to signal the filtering rules. To create or purge filters, the DOTS client sends HTTP requests to its DOTS gateway. The DOTS gateway validates the rules in the requests and proxies the requests containing the filtering rules to a DOTS server. When the DOTS gateway receives the associated HTTP response from the DOTS server, it propagates the response back to the DOTS client.
The following APIs define means for a DOTS client to configure filtering rules on a DOTS server.
A POST request is used to push filtering rules to a DOTS server. Figure 8 shows a POST request example to block traffic from 192.0.2.0/24, destined to 198.51.100.0/24. The ACL JSON configuration for the filtering rule is generated using the ACL YANG data model defined in [I-D.ietf-netmod-acl-model] and the ACL configuration XML for the filtering rule is specified in Section 4.3 of [I-D.ietf-netmod-acl-model].
POST /restconf/data/ietf-dots-access-control-list HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com Content-Format: "application/yang.api+json" { "ietf-dots-access-control-list:access-lists": { "client-identifier": [ "E9CZ9INDbd+2eRQozYqqbQ2yXLVKB9+xcprMF+44U1g=" ], "acl": [ { "acl-name": "sample-ipv4-acl", "acl-type": "ipv4-acl", "aces": { "ace": [ { "rule-name": "rule1", "matches": { "ipv4-acl": { "source-ipv4-network": "192.0.2.0/24", "destination-ipv4-network": "198.51.100.0/24" } }, "actions": { "deny": [null] } } ] } } ] } }
Figure 8: POST to install filterng rules
The header parameters defined in [I-D.ietf-netmod-acl-model] are discussed below:
The DOTS server indicates the result of processing the POST request using HTTP response codes. HTTP 2xx codes are success, HTTP 4xx codes are some sort of invalid requests and 5xx codes are returned if the DOTS server has erred or it is incapable of configuring the filtering rules. Response code 201 (Created) will be returned in the response if the DOTS server has accepted the filtering rules. If the request is missing one or more mandatory attributes then 400 (Bad Request) will be returned in the response or if the request contains invalid or unknown parameters then 400 (Invalid query) will be returned in the response.
The DOTS client can use the PUT request to create or modify the filtering rules in the DOTS server.
A DELETE request is used to delete filtering rules from a DOTS server (Figure 9).
DELETE /restconf/data/ietf-dots-access-control-list:access-lists/acl-name\ =sample-ipv4-acl&acl-type=ipv4-acl HTTP/1.1 Host: {host}:{port}
Figure 9: DELETE to remove the filtering rules
If the DOTS server does not find the access list name and access list type conveyed in the DELETE request in its configuration data, then it responds with a 404 (Not Found) error response code. The DOTS server successfully acknowledges a DOTS client's request to withdraw the filtering rules using 204 (No Content) response code, and removes the filtering rules as soon as possible.
The DOTS client periodically queries the DOTS server to check the counters for installed filtering rules. A GET request is used to retrieve filtering rules from a DOTS server. Figure 10 shows how to retrieve all the filtering rules programmed by the DOTS client and the number of matches for the installed filtering rules.
GET /restconf/data/ietf-dots-access-control-list:access-lists?content=all HTTP/1.1 Host: {host}:{port} Accept: application/yang-data+json
Figure 10: GET to retrieve the configuration data and state data for the filtering rules
If the DOTS server does not find the access list name and access list type conveyed in the GET request in its configuration data, then it responds with a 404 (Not Found) error response code.
This specification registers new parameters for the DOTS data channel and establishes registries for mappings to JSON attributes.
A new registry will be requested from IANA, entitled "DOTS data channel JSON attribute Mappings Registry". The registry is to be created as Expert Review Required.
The following individuals have contributed to this document:
Dan Wing
Email: dwing-ietf@fuggles.com
Authenticated encryption MUST be used for data confidentiality and message integrity. TLS based on client certificate MUST be used for mutual authentication. The interaction between the DOTS agents requires Transport Layer Security (TLS) with a cipher suite offering confidentiality protection and the guidance given in [RFC7525] MUST be followed to avoid attacks on TLS.
An attacker may be able to inject RST packets, bogus application segments, etc., regardless of whether TLS authentication is used. Because the application data is TLS protected, this will not result in the application receiving bogus data, but it will constitute a DoS on the connection. This attack can be countered by using TCP-AO [RFC5925]. If TCP-AO is used, then any bogus packets injected by an attacker will be rejected by the TCP-AO integrity check and therefore will never reach the TLS layer.
In order to prevent leaking internal information outside a client-domain, DOTS gateways located in the client-domain SHOULD NOT reveal the identity of internal DOTS clients (client-identifier) unless explicitly configured to do so.
Special care should be taken in order to ensure that the activation of the proposed mechanism won't have an impact on the stability of the network (including connectivity and services delivered over that network).
Involved functional elements in the cooperation system must establish exchange instructions and notification over a secure and authenticated channel. Adequate filters can be enforced to avoid that nodes outside a trusted domain can inject request such as deleting filtering rules. Nevertheless, attacks can be initiated from within the trusted domain if an entity has been corrupted. Adequate means to monitor trusted nodes should also be enabled.
Thanks to Christian Jacquenet, Roland Dobbins, Roman Danyliw, Ehud Doron, Russ White, Jon Shallow, and Gilbert Clark for the discussion and comments.