Network File System Version 4 | T. Myklebust |
Internet-Draft | Hammerspace |
Updates: 5531 (if approved) | C. Lever, Ed. |
Intended status: Standards Track | Oracle |
Expires: August 6, 2020 | February 3, 2020 |
Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption By Default
draft-ietf-nfsv4-rpc-tls-06
This document describes a mechanism that, through the use of opportunistic Transport Layer Security (TLS), enables encryption of in-transit Remote Procedure Call (RPC) transactions while interoperating with ONC RPC implementations that do not support this mechanism. This document updates RFC 5531.
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In 2014 the IETF published [RFC7258], which recognized that unauthorized observation of network traffic had become widespread and was a subversive threat to all who make use of the Internet at large. It strongly recommended that newly defined Internet protocols should make a genuine effort to mitigate monitoring attacks. Typically this mitigation is done by encrypting data in transit.
The Remote Procedure Call version 2 protocol has been a Proposed Standard for three decades (see [RFC5531] and its antecedents). Over twenty years ago, Eisler et al. first introduced RPCSEC GSS as an in-transit encryption mechanism for RPC [RFC2203]. However, experience has shown that RPCSEC GSS with in-transit encryption can be challenging to use in practice:
However strong a privacy service is, it cannot provide any security if the challenges of using it result in choosing not to deploy it at all.
Moreover, the use of AUTH_SYS remains common despite the adverse effects that acceptance of UIDs and GIDs from unauthenticated clients brings with it. Continued use is in part because:
The alternative described in the current document is to employ a transport layer security mechanism that can protect the privacy of each RPC connection transparently to RPC and upper-layer protocols. The Transport Layer Security protocol [RFC8446] (TLS) is a well-established Internet building block that protects many standard Internet protocols such as the Hypertext Transport Protocol (HTTP) [RFC2818].
Encrypting at the RPC transport layer accords several significant benefits:
The current document specifies the implementation of RPC on an encrypted transport in a fashion that is transparent to upper-layer protocols based on RPC. The imposition of encryption at the transport layer protects any upper-layer protocol that employs RPC, without alteration of that protocol.
Further, the current document defines policies in line with [RFC7435] which enable RPC-on-TLS to be deployed opportunistically in environments with RPC implementations that do not support TLS. Specifications for RPC-based upper-layer protocols are free to require stricter policies to guarantee that encryption or host authentication is in use on every connection.
The protocol specification in the current document assumes that support for RPC, TLS, PKI, GSS-API, and DNSSEC is already available in an RPC implementation where TLS support is to be added.
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 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
This document adopts the terminology introduced in Section 3 of [RFC6973] and assumes a working knowledge of the Remote Procedure Call (RPC) version 2 protocol [RFC5531] and the Transport Layer Security (TLS) version 1.3 protocol [RFC8446].
Note also that the NFS community uses the term "privacy" where other Internet communities use "confidentiality". In the current document the two terms are synonymous.
We adhere to the convention that a "client" is a network host that actively initiates an association, and a "server" is a network host that passively accepts an association request.
RPC documentation historically refers to the authentication of a connecting host as "machine authentication" or "host authentication". TLS documentation refers to the same as "peer authentication". In the current document there is little distinction between these terms.
The term "user authentication" in this document refers specifically to the RPC caller's credential, provided in the "cred" and "verf" fields in each RPC Call.
The mechanism described in this document interoperates fully with RPC implementations that do not support TLS. The use of TLS is automatically disabled in these cases.
<CODE BEGINS> enum auth_flavor { AUTH_NONE = 0, AUTH_SYS = 1, AUTH_SHORT = 2, AUTH_DH = 3, AUTH_KERB = 4, AUTH_RSA = 5, RPCSEC_GSS = 6, AUTH_TLS = 7, /* and more to be defined */ }; <CODE ENDS>
To achieve this, we introduce a new RPC authentication flavor called AUTH_TLS. This new flavor signals that the client wants to initiate TLS negotiation if the server supports it. Except for the modifications described in this section, the RPC protocol is unaware of security encapsulation.
The flavor value of the verifier received in the reply message from the server MUST be AUTH_NONE. The length of the verifier's body field is eight. The bytes of the verifier's body field encode the ASCII characters "STARTTLS" as a fixed-length opaque.
When an RPC client is ready to begin sending encrypted traffic to a server, it starts with a NULL RPC request with an auth_flavor of AUTH_TLS. The NULL request is made to the same port as if TLS were not in use.
The RPC server can respond in one of three ways:
Once the TLS handshake is complete, the RPC client and server have established a secure channel for communicating. The client MUST switch to a security flavor other than AUTH_TLS within that channel, presumably after negotiating down redundant RPCSEC_GSS privacy and integrity services and applying channel binding [RFC7861].
If TLS negotiation fails for any reason, the RPC client reports this failure to the upper-layer application the same way it would report an AUTH_ERROR rejection from the RPC server.
If an RPC client attempts to use AUTH_TLS for anything other than the NULL RPC procedure, the RPC server MUST respond with a reject_stat of AUTH_ERROR.
Both RPC and TLS have peer and user authentication, with some overlap in capability between RPC and TLS. The goal of interoperability with implementations that do not support TLS requires limiting the combinations that are allowed and precisely specifying the role that each layer plays. We also want to handle TLS such that an RPC implementation can make the use of TLS invisible to existing RPC consumer applications.
Each RPC server that supports RPC-over-TLS MUST possess a unique global identity (e.g., a certificate that is signed by a well-known trust anchor). Such an RPC server MUST request a TLS peer identity from each client upon first contact. There are two different modes of client deployment:
In either of these modes, RPC user authentication is not affected by the use of transport layer security. When a client presents a TLS peer identity to an RPC server, the protocol extension described in the current document provides no way for the server to know whether that identity represents one RPC user on that client, or is shared amongst many RPC users. Therefore, a server implementation must not utilize the remote TLS peer identity for RPC user authentication.
RPCSEC GSS can provide per-request integrity or privacy (also known as confidentiality) services. When operating over a TLS session, the GSS services become redundant. A TLS-capable RPC implementation uses GSS channel binding to determine when GSS integrity or privacy is unnecessary. See Section 2.5 of [RFC7861] for details.
When using GSS on a TLS session, the RPC server is still required to possess a GSS service principal. GSS mutual authentication still occurs after a TLS session has been established.
When peers negotiate a TLS session that is to transport RPC, the following restrictions apply:
The use of TLS [RFC8446] protects RPC on TCP connections. Typically, once a client completes the TCP handshake and performs RPC service discovery via NULL RPC operations, it uses the mechanism described in Section 4.1 to discover TLS support. It can then negotiate a TLS session on that connection.
After establishing a TLS session, an RPC server MUST reject with a reject_stat of AUTH_ERROR any subsequent RPC requests over a TLS-protected connection that are outside of a TLS session. Likewise, an RPC client MUST silently discard any subsequent RPC replies over the connection that are outside of a TLS session.
This restriction includes reverse-direction RPC operations (i.e., RPC calls initiated on the server-end of the connection). An RPC client receiving a reverse-direction call on a connection outside of an existing TLS session MUST reject the request with a reject_stat of AUTH_ERROR.
An RPC peer terminates a TLS session by sending a TLS closure alert, or by closing the TLS-protected TCP connection.
RPC over UDP is protected using DTLS [RFC6347]. As soon as a client initializes a socket for use with an unfamiliar server, it uses the mechanism described in Section 4.1 to discover DTLS support and then negotiate a DTLS session. Connected operation is RECOMMENDED.
Using a DTLS transport does not introduce reliable or in-order semantics to RPC on UDP. Also, DTLS does not support fragmentation of RPC messages. Each RPC message MUST fit in a single DTLS datagram. DTLS encapsulation has overhead, which reduces the effective Path MTU (PMTU) and thus the maximum RPC payload size.
DTLS does not detect STARTTLS replay. Sending a TLS closure alert terminates a DTLS session. Subsequent RPC messages passing between the client and server are no longer protected until a new TLS session is established.
RPC-over-RDMA can make use of Transport Layer Security below the RDMA transport layer [RFC8166]. The exact mechanism is not within the scope of this document. Because there might not be other provisions to exchange client and server certificates, authentication material exchange would need to be provided by facilities within a future RPC-over-RDMA transport.
Transports that provide intrinsic TLS-level security (e.g., QUIC) would need to be addressed separately from the current document. In such cases, the use of TLS would not be opportunistic as it is for TCP or UDP.
TLS can perform peer authentication using any of the following mechanisms:
Implementations are REQUIRED to support this mechanism. In this mode, the tuple (serial number of the presented certificate; Issuer) uniquely identifies the RPC peer.
Authenticating a connecting entity does not mean the RPC server necessarily wants to communicate with that client. For example, if the Issuer is not in a trusted set of Issuers, the RPC server may decline to perform RPC transactions with this client. Implementations that want to support a wide variety of trust models should expose as many details of the presented certificate to the administrator as possible so that the administrator can implement the trust model. As a suggestion, at least the following parameters of the X.509 client certificate SHOULD be exposed:
This mechanism is OPTIONAL to implement. In this mode, the fingerprint of the presented certificate uniquely identifies the RPC peer.
Implementations SHOULD allow the configuration of a list of trusted certificates, identified via fingerprint of the DER-encoded certificate octets. Implementations MUST support SHA-256 [FIPS.180-4] or stronger as the hash algorithm for the fingerprint.
This mechanism is OPTIONAL to implement. In this mode, the RPC peer is uniquely identified by keying material that has been shared out-of-band or by a previous TLS-protected connection (see Section 2.2 of [RFC8446]). At least the following parameters of the TLS connection SHOULD be exposed:
This mechanism is OPTIONAL to implement. In this mode, a token uniquely identifies the RPC peer.
Versions of TLS after TLS 1.2 contain a token binding mechanism that is more secure than using certificates. This mechanism is detailed in [RFC8471].
This section records the status of known implementations of the protocol defined by this specification at the time of posting of this Internet-Draft, and is based on a proposal described in [RFC7942]. The description of implementations in this section is intended to assist the IETF in its decision processes in progressing drafts to RFCs.
Please note that the listing of any individual implementation here does not imply endorsement by the IETF. Furthermore, no effort has been spent to verify the information presented here that was supplied by IETF contributors. This is not intended as, and must not be construed to be, a catalog of available implementations or their features. Readers are advised to note that other implementations may exist.
One purpose of the mechanism described in the current document is to protect RPC-based applications against threats to the privacy of RPC transactions and RPC user identities. A taxonomy of these threats appears in Section 5 of [RFC6973]. Also, Section 6 of [RFC7525] contains a detailed discussion of technologies used in conjunction with TLS. Implementers should familiarize themselves with these materials.
The purpose of using an explicitly opportunistic approach is to enable interoperation with implementations that do not support RPC-over-TLS. A range of options is allowed by this approach, from "no peer authentication or encryption" to "server-only authentication with encryption" to "mutual authentication with encryption". The actual security level may indeed be selected based on policy and without user intervention.
In cases where interoperability is a priority, the security benefits of TLS are partially or entirely waived. Implementations of the mechanism described in the current document must take care to accurately represent to all RPC consumers the level of security that is actually in effect. Implementations are REQUIRED to provide an audit log of RPC-over-TLS security mode selection.
A classic form of attack on network protocols that initiate an association in plain-text to discover support for TLS is a man-in-the-middle that alters the plain-text handshake to make it appear as though TLS support is not available on one or both peers. Clients implementers can choose from the following to mitigate STRIPTLS attacks:
The goal of the RPC-on-TLS protocol extension is to hide the content of RPC requests while they are in transit. The RPC-on-TLS protocol by itself cannot protect against exposure of a user's RPC requests to other users on the same client.
Moreover, client implementations are free to transmit RPC requests for more than one RPC user using the same TLS session. Depending on the details of the client RPC implementation, this means that the client's TLS identity material is potentially visible to every RPC user that shares a TLS session. Privileged users may also be able to access this TLS identity.
As a result, client implementations need to carefully segregate TLS identity material so that local access to it is restricted to only the local users that are authorized to perform operations on the remote RPC server.
Using a TLS-protected transport when the AUTH_SYS authentication flavor is in use addresses several longstanding weaknesses (as detailed in Appendix A). TLS augments AUTH_SYS by providing both integrity protection and a privacy service that AUTH_SYS lacks. TLS protects data payloads, RPC headers, and user identities against monitoring and alteration while in transit. TLS guards against the insertion or deletion of messages, thus also ensuring the integrity of the message stream between RPC client and server. Lastly, transport layer encryption plus peer authentication protects receiving XDR decoders from deserializing untrusted data, a common coding vulnerability.
The use of TLS enables strong authentication of the communicating RPC peers, providing a degree of non-repudiation. When AUTH_SYS is used with TLS, but the RPC client is unauthenticated, the RPC server still acts on RPC requests for which there is no trustworthy authentication. In-transit traffic is protected, but the RPC client itself can still misrepresent user identity without server detection. TLS without authentication is an improvement from AUTH_SYS without encryption, but it leaves a critical security exposure.
In light of the above, it is RECOMMENDED that when AUTH_SYS is used, every RPC client should present host authentication material to RPC servers to prove that the client is a known one. The server can then determine whether the UIDs and GIDs in AUTH_SYS requests from that client can be accepted.
The use of TLS does not enable RPC clients to detect compromise that leads to the impersonation of RPC users. Also, there continues to be a requirement that the mapping of 32-bit user and group ID values to user identities is the same on both the RPC client and server.
RPC-over-TLS implementations and deployments are strongly encouraged to adhere to the following policies to achieve the strongest possible security with RPC-over-TLS.
Following Section 6 of [RFC7301], the authors request the allocation of the following value in the "Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) Protocol IDs" registry. The "sunrpc" string identifies SunRPC when used over TLS.
The ONC RPC protocol, as specified in [RFC5531], provides several modes of security, traditionally referred to as "authentication flavors". Some of these flavors provide much more than an authentication service. We refer to these as authentication flavors, security flavors, or simply, flavors. One of the earliest and most basic flavors is AUTH_SYS, also known as AUTH_UNIX. Appendix A of [RFC5531] specifies AUTH_SYS.
AUTH_SYS assumes that the RPC client and server both use POSIX-style user and group identifiers (each user and group can be distinctly represented as a 32-bit unsigned integer). It also assumes that the client and server both use the same mapping of user and group to an integer. One user ID, one primary group ID, and up to 16 supplemental group IDs are associated with each RPC request. The combination of these identifies the entity on the client that is making the request.
A string identifies peers (hosts) in each RPC request. [RFC5531] does not specify any requirements for this string other than that is no longer than 255 octets. It does not have to be the same from request to request. Also, it does not have to match the DNS hostname of the sending host. For these reasons, even though most implementations fill in their hostname in this field, receivers typically ignore its content.
Appendix A of [RFC5531] contains a brief explanation of security considerations:
It should be clear, therefore, that AUTH_SYS by itself offers little to no communication security:
Special mention goes to Charles Fisher, author of "Encrypting NFSv4 with Stunnel TLS" . His article inspired the mechanism described in this document.
Many thanks to Tigran Mkrtchyan for his work on the DESY prototype and his feedback on the current document.
Thanks to Derrell Piper for numerous suggestions that improved both this simple mechanism and the current document's security-related discussion.
The authors are grateful to Bill Baker, David Black, Alan DeKok, Lars Eggert, Benjamin Kaduk, Olga Kornievskaia, Greg Marsden, Alex McDonald, Justin Mazzola Paluska, Tom Talpey, and Martin Thomson for their input and support of this work.
Lastly, special thanks to document shepherd David Noveck, Transport Area Director Magnus Westerlund, NFSV4 Working Group Chairs Spencer Shepler and Brian Pawlowski, and NFSV4 Working Group Secretary Thomas Haynes for their guidance and oversight.