Internet DRAFT - draft-moustafa-krb-wg-mesh-nw
draft-moustafa-krb-wg-mesh-nw
Kerberos Working Group H. Moustafa
Internet-Draft France Telecom - Orange
Intended status: Informational G. Bourdon
Expires: April 19, 2012 France Telecom - Orange France
T. Yu
MIT Kerberos Consortium
October 17, 2011
Distributed Authentication in Wireless Mesh Networks Through Kerberos
Tickets
draft-moustafa-krb-wg-mesh-nw-02.txt
Abstract
This document presents the problem of authentication and
authorization in wireless mesh networks constituted by several users
communicating with application servers and communicating with each
other in a single or multi-hop fashion. Each user in this
environment can also play the role of an application provider.
Imagine a large music event where the provided network infrastructure
is enhanced with network storage equipment to allow visitors to
access content relating to the bands playing at the events, such as
recorded video of previous performances, supplementary audio and
video material relevant to the bands playing, etc. Certain content
is, however, not necessarily available to everyone under the same
conditions. Instead access control is applied before the full range
of audio, and video material can be accessed. Other content, such as
previews, might be offered for free. How can such authentication,
and authorization infrastructure be made available with minimal
configuration complexity for a temporary event like a music festival?
This document lists the requirements for a potentially needed
Kerberos extension and presents a solution proposal based on the
attempt to use a Kerberos extension for mutual authentication in
wireless mesh networks.
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF 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 http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
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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 19, 2012.
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.
1. Specification Requirements
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].
2. Introduction and Problem Statement
Authentication and authorization to services access is still an open
problem in wireless mesh network distributed environments in which
several users would need to communicate to several application
servers and with each other in a single or multi-hop fashion, and
each user could play the role of an application provider.
The Kerberos authentication model [RFC4120] uses a symmetric
cryptography approach, offering a high security level and allowing
mutual authentication. The principle of using service tickets in
Kerberos allows for credentials distribution which is suitable for
wireless mesh networks distributed environments. However, the
centralized approach in Kerberos (where each user should communicate
with the authentication server each time he needs services
credentials) restricts its usage for authentication in such
distributed environments. Furthermore, Kerberos rather authenticates
each node with respect to the authentication server and to the
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application server. The distributed credentials principle in
Kerberos (through Service tickets) is promising for allowing
authentication between each user and the application. However, the
authentication between each two users who communicate with each other
is still not covered by Service tickets, especially with the dynamic
nature of distributed environments in which users connectivity (that
could be single or multi-hop) change frequently with time.
Although the multi-hop communication is transparent to the
application, there is a need to handle the authentication and access
control among the different multi-hop communicating nodes to prevent
against malicious actions taken by the human users themselves. Based
on this fact, this draft proposes to use a common key obtained by
Kerberos for authentication among each two nodes who communicate
together in a multi-hop fashion. This common key is dynamic
(renewable with time) for security reasons in such dynamic and
distributed wireless environment that is less secure.
3. Requirements
This section presents a number of requirements motivated by the
problem defined in the previous section. These requirements are as
follows:
o Distributed environment consisting of fixed and mobile nodes.
o Dynamic neighbors and dynamic application providers (any node
could be an application provider at any time providing
applications to other nodes in the network, e.g. file sharing,
sending special announcement concerning the surrounding
environments, and sending alarms in case of problems).
o User Generated Content (UGC) application, in which each node could
be a source of content (mainly multimedia contents) for other
nodes in the network, e.g. transmitting video snapshots during
festival events.
o Hundreds of nodes (indoor or outdoor environment).
o Personal devices (of low power) individually used by users.
o Multihop communication.
o Authentication and access control of each user node by a trusted
third party.
o Access control of each user by a trusted third party in a way that
corresponds to the user subscription type and profile.
o Mutual authentication between each pair of communicating users.
o Limited bandwidth: need for minimizing traffic (minimizing the
communication with the KDC).
o Dynamic credentials (attributing dynamic credentials to be
distributed to each user).
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4. Kerberos Extension Solution Proposal
This section presents a solution proposal extending the Kerberos
authentication model for authenticating each user node in wireless
mesh networks with respect to the network operator and with respect
to other users nodes participating in the network.
The Kerberos server resides in the local mesh network or in an
external network and each user node needs to communicate firstly with
this server in order to authenticate with respect to the operator and
to obtain the necessary credentials (Kerberos tickets) for
authentication with other users nodes and for accessing the offered
services in the mesh network. The communication can take place in a
single hop or through multi-hops (passing by intermediate users
nodes) according to the proximity of each user node from the
application providers nodes.
To prevent unreliable communication from taking place (intermediate
nodes could do DoS, messages truncating,...), this solution proposal
extends the classical Kerberos authentication model to adapt to the
multi-hop communication through introducing a new shared secret for
authentication and access control between intermediate nodes along
the multi-hop communication. But, if this secret is the same for all
the time, it could be compromised and the entire network would be
compromised. It is then proposed in this draft to obtain several
shared secrets during the service ticket request for the service for
which the multihop communication is needed.
The solution proposal takes the following sequence:
o Each user node wishing to access the services offered by the mesh
network starts by sending a first request to the KDC (TGT part) in
order to authenticate with respect to the operator and to obtain
the TGT ticket. The process is similar to the classical Kerberos
authentication approach, and the user, if legitimate, obtains the
corresponding TGT ticket.
o After obtaining the TGT, the user node re-contacts the KDC (TGS
part), through sending a TGS request, in order to obtain the
necessary credentials (including the service ticket for the
service for which multihop communication will be employed in
addition to the shared secrets for authentication during the
multihop communication) while presenting the obtained TGT ticket
as a proof of authenticity. The classical Kerberos TGS request
should be extended to illustrate the need of extra credentials for
authentication with intermediate nodes along the multi-hop
communication. The following figure illustrates this extension,
where a new flag is defined in the flags field in the reserved
bits between bits 12 and 25 taking the value 1 to indicate the
case of Kerberos in the multi-hop mode.
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o
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _
|pvno| msg-type | padata | req-body |
|_ _ |_ __ _ _ _|_ _ _ __|_ _ _ _ _ |
|
|
|
V
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
|flags|cna-|realm|sna-|fr|ti|rtime|nonce|etype|addr|enc |addit. |
|_ _ _|_me |_ _ _|_me |om|ll|_ _ _|_ _ _|_ _ _|_ _ |authdata|tickets|
|
|
|
V
0_ _ _ _ _ _ 12_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 25_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _31
|_|_ ___ _ _| _| _ _ _ _ _|X |__ _ _ |_|_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ |_|
Figure 1: Extended TGS-REQ
o Once the KDC (TGS part), receiving the TGS request from the user,
verifies the TGT ticket and the user authenticity, it sends to the
user the Kerberos TGS reply message extended to contain the
necessary credentials according to the user profile and according
to the required service.
o The extended Kerberos TGS reply message includes the service
ticket for the service for which the multihop wommunication will
be employed as well as the shared secrets.
o To avoid the shared secret compromise, several shared secrets are
obtained, where each shared secret is valid for a given time
interval. However, the shared secret distributions should be done
in a mean that would not compromise the security of the whole
network:
* If the shared secrets are required by each mesh node at each
time interval, this would generate lot of traffic during the
communication with the KDC.
* If the shared secrets for future time intervals are pre-
generated by the KDC and given in batch to each user, this
would optimize traffic, but if a node is compromised at an
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interval of time, all the shared secrets would be known and the
network would be compromised.
o Then, the KDC sends to each mesh node in the extended TGS reply
message the current interval shared secret and the pre-generated
ones for the future, while each pre-generated shared secret is
encrypted with a key corresponding to the its related time
interval. This encryption key should be sent to each mesh node in
the corresponding time interval either through Kerberos protocol
or through a multicast routing protocol. The following figure
illustrates the extended TGS reply message. In this extended
message: i) a new flag is defined in the flags field in the
reserved bits between bits 14 and 31 taking the value 1 to
indicate the case of Kerberos in the multi-hop mode. ii) a new
field authorized-data is added which is identical to the
authorization data field existing in the service ticket and
containing elements, where the first element contains the current
time interval in its (type) part and the corresponding shared key
to this interval in its (data part). The other elements contains
the upcoming time intervals and the corresponding shared keys in
an encrypted form as explained above.
o
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
|pvno| msg-type| padata | crealm|cname | ticket| enc-part |
|_ _ |_ _ _ _ _|_ _ _ _ |_ _ _ _| _ _ |_ _ _ _|_ _ _ _ _ |
|
|
|
V
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
|key|last|non|key|flags|auth|start|end |renew|srea|sna|cad-|authorized|
|_ _|req_|_ce|exp|_ _ _|time|time |time|till_|_lm_|_me|_dr_|_ data_ _ |
| |
| |
V |
0_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _14_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 31 |
|_|_ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _|_|__ _ _ |X| _ _ _ _ _ _ |_| |
|
V
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
| _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ |
||ad-type | ad-data| . . . . . |ad-type|ad-data||
||_ _ _ _ |_ _ _ _| |__ _ _ |_ _ _ _||
|_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _|
Elements
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Figure 2: Extended TGS-REP
o Group keys can be also considered allowing to have a shared secret
for each group of mesh nodes and allowing each mesh node to
participate to more than one group and hence to have several group
keys. If one group key is compromised it could be deleted by the
KDC. Mesh nodes sharing the same group key are mesh nodes sharing
some common characteristics (making a cluster, hierarchal group
keys for example, ...).
5. Potential Use-cases
This section presents the potential use-cases for distributed
environments of wireless mesh networks having multi-hop communication
and requiring distributed authentication authorization.
o Temporary network infrastructure deployment for special events
(sport events, music festivals, ..). Network operators deploy
temporary low-cost infrastructure for temporary events and hence
counts on the communication of users with application servers that
are locally deployed. Also the users themselves can play the role
of application providers contributing to the diffusion of
multimedia services (video snapshots on the event,video streams
with inserted comments, video streaming for what was missed in the
event, downloading an interactive audio-visual program for the
event,. ..). In such use-case, there is a need for dynamic
credentials distribution on the different participating nodes and
there is also a need of controlling the access of each user to the
authorized service for a duration corresponding to his
subscription.
o Community networks, where a user owns the home gateway to the
Internet and allows other distributed users to have access to the
Internet through passing by his home gateway. Users may need to
pass by other users (in the community network) in order to reach
the home gateway. In this use-case, there is a need for
credentials distribution in a dynamic manner (adapting to the
random configuration of the community network) to allow mutual
authentication between each pair of communicating users and
between each user and the home gateway providing the Internet
access.
6. Security Considerations
This document focuses on the distributed authentication through the
Kerberos protocol and presents the requirements to be considered.
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7. IANA Considerations
This document does not require actions by IANA.
8. Acknowledgment
We would like to thank Hannes Tschofenig for his comments on this
draft and for encouraging us to publish it.
Many thanks for Sam Hartman for all his useful comments and feedbacks
on this draft.
We would also like to thank our colleague Estelle Transy for all the
discussions during the use-cases definition.
9. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", March 1997.
[RFC3365] Schiller, J., "Strong Security Requirements for Internet
Engineering Task Force Standard Protocols", August 2002.
[RFC4120] Neumann, C., Yu, T., Hartman, S., and K. Raeburn, "The
Kerberos Network Authentication Service (V5)", July 2005.
Authors' Addresses
Hassnaa Moustafa
France Telecom - Orange
38-40 rue du General Leclerc
Issy Les Moulineaux, 92794 Cedex 9
France
Email: hassnaa.moustafa@orange.com
Gilles Bourdon
France Telecom - Orange France
Immeuble Central 1, clos de la courtine
93162 Noisy le Grand,
France
Email: gilles.bourdon@orange.com
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Tom Yu
MIT Kerberos Consortium
Email: tlyu@mit.edu
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