RADIUS attributes for Randomized and Changing MAC addresses
draft-henry-radext-stable-mac-identifier-00
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| Document | Type | Active Internet-Draft (individual) | |
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| Authors | Jerome Henry , Nancy Cam-Winget | ||
| Last updated | 2021-10-11 | ||
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draft-henry-radext-stable-mac-identifier-00
RADEXT Working Group J. Henry
Internet-Draft N. Cam-Winget
Intended status: Standards Track Cisco Systems, Inc.
Expires: 14 April 2022 11 October 2021
RADIUS attributes for Randomized and Changing MAC addresses
draft-henry-radext-stable-mac-identifier-00
Abstract
This document describes the means by which a Stable MAC address
identifier can be signaled to a Authentication Authorization and
Accounting (AAA) server.
Status of This Memo
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provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 14 April 2022.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2021 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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Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
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provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. Stable Machine Identifier expressed to the Wireless
Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1.1. General Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1.2. Special scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1.3. Failure Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2. Stable RADIUS machine identifier . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2.1. General Use cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2.2. Special scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.2.3. Failure Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.3. Stable NAS and stable RADIUS machine identifiers . . . . 9
2.3.1. General cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.3.2. Special scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.3.3. Failure Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3. Stable-Machine-Identifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4. Attribute table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
5. Security & Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1. Introduction
In many cases where a client establishes communication over a
wireless network, an observer (as defined in [RFC6973]) might monitor
the client MAC address and the associated traffic. Although the
traffic payload itself may be protected (e.g. encrypted in some way),
the outer header is commonly not obfuscated. When the client is a
personal device (as defined in IEEE 802E), observing the client
traffic may allow an attacker to characterize, from the traffic, the
associated user activity. For this reason, many vendors of personal
devices have started operating under a Randomized and Changing MAC
address (RCM) scheme, where the visible and external MAC address
changes over time, so as to make fingerprinting more difficult. An
account of these efforts can be found in [ZUNIGA] draft-zuniga-mac-
address-randomization.
Such RCM scheme does not necessarily mean that the client intends to
obfuscate the machine identifier from all infrastructure devices. In
many cases, the intent is to hide the MAC address from external
observers. For example, a wireless infrastructure may use a stable
identifier for the client to provide service continuity within a
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RADIUS accounting session, between the Access Point (AP) or the
Wireless LAN controller (WLC), acting as a Network Access Server
[NAS]) and the RADIUS server; with the stable identifier being
independent from the RCM. In this scenario, the NAS is the means for
the client to access network services, and the client may expect or
need service continuity. Continuity might include for example
obtaining the same IP address from the DHCP server, the continued
access to cached resources or the persistence of established exchange
pathways. In many of these cases, the provider of the service needs
to be informed that a new RCM matches a previously connected object
that should continue to obtain the same service, independently of the
changed MAC address. When this happens, it is useful for the
continuity of network services that the wireless infrastructure,
acting as the NAS, exchanges with the RADIUS server about the client
capability to express an identity independent from the RCM. For this
purpose, this document specifies a Stable Machine Identifier
attribute.
2. Operations
The attributes in this document are intended to be applicable across
a wide variety of network access scenarios in which RADIUS is
involved: * In some cases, the client may express a machine identity
to the NAS, after the authentication has completed and the client has
established a trusted and secure connection to the AP, that the NAS
interprets as stable. The client may then have not provided a stable
machine identifier (SMI) to the RADIUS server, for example because
the 802.1X/EAP process authenticated the user.
* There are cases where the client may express a machine identity to
the RADIUS server during the authentication phase, and that the
RADIUS server interprets as stable, but may not express a stable
machine identifier to the NAS.
* In other cases, the client may express a machine identifier to the
RADIUS server during the authentication phase that the RADIUS
server interprets as stable, and may also express a machine
identifier to the NAS after the establishment of a trusted and
secure connection to the AP, that the NAS interprets as stable.
The machine identifier expressed to the NAS and the RADIUS server
may not be the same.
It should be noted that cases where both the NAS and the RADIUS
server are unable to determine a stable machine identifier for the
client are not considered in this document. Additionally, the
machine identifier expressed to the NAS or the RADIUS server may not
be the SMI attribute in this document. However, the machine
identifier is interpreted as stable by the receiving side.
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This section further describes these use cases.
2.1. Stable Machine Identifier expressed to the Wireless Infrastructure
In this scenario, the client initially joins the network in a
constrained state and proceeds through the 802.1X/EAP authentication
phase. The client MAC address is likely locally administered (second
bit of first octet set), although this condition is not necessary for
support of the SMI attribute. This characteristic is visible to the
NAS (in the client source address) and possibly to the RADIUS server
(in the Calling-Station-ID). The RADIUS validates the user identity
(but not a stable machine identity). After the RADIUS server returns
an Access-Accept, keying material is built on the client and on the
NAS.
Once authentication is completed and a protected link has been
established between the client machine and the access network
infrastructure (acting as NAS), the client machine exchanges with the
infrastructure a stable identifier. In one scenario, the client
provides a stable identifier to the AP/WLC. In another scenario, the
client requests a stable identifier from the AP/WLC.
In cases where the client generates the stable identifier, the NAS
records the identifier and uses it as SMI. Some implementations may
choose to let the NAS generate a SMI in all cases, and simply map the
NAS SMI to the stable identifier returned by the client.
2.1.1. General Use Cases
In all cases, the RADIUS server received during the 802.1X/EAP phase
the client RCM as the Calling-Station-Id value. When the client
rotates its MAC address, the RADIUS server receives the new MAC
Address as the Calling-Station-Id, and has no mechanism to know that
the same client machine is initiating a new session with a new MAC
address. This can cause database inflation on the RADIUS server,
keeping cached a set of policies for a client that may never come
back (as the client is already back with a different MAC address), or
causing possible confusion when RCM collision happens. If the
wireless infrastructure (NAS) receives a stable machine identifier
information from the client, after authentication with the client
first MAC address, then the NAS SHOULD share this identifier with the
RADIUS server.
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Thus, after the NAS has received a stable identifier representation
from the client machine, the NAS SHOULD send a new access-request
message to the RADIUS server. The SMI attribute SHOULD be added with
the value determined by the NAS from the identifier sent by the
client machine. The Calling-Station-ID is the current RCM MAC
address. If the STA is requesting the SMI, the SMI payload SHOULD
set to Null.
The RADIUS server supporting the SMI attribute considers the
authentication as already validated and SHOULD returns an Access-
Accept message. At this point, the RADIUS records the SMI value for
that client if it was in the Access-Request message.
If the NAS request had the SMI AVP set to Null and the RADIUS server
did not uniquely identify the client machine, then the RADIUS server
SHOULD return an Access-Accept message with the SMI AVP set to the
Null value. The NAS then generates a local SMI for the client, and
sends it to the client machine over a protected frame on one hand,
and to the RADIUS server as above on the other hand.
Later, the client rotates its MAC address. If neither the wireless
infrastructure or the RADIUS server is forewarned about the change,
then a new session is started and the process above repeats.
Alternatively, several implementations allow the client machine to
forewarn the wireless infrastructure about the upcoming RCM change,
and for the AP to know in advance the value of the next MAC address
for that client. In that case, the infrastructure recognizes the
same machine in the new MAC address. However, the MAC address has
changed from the RADIUS viewpoint (new Calling-Station-ID) and most
implementations will require a new authentication. As the client
initiates a new authentication request to the RADIUS server, the
Calling-Station-ID is the new MAC address, and the RADIUS server sees
the client as a new machine.
Thus as above, at the end of the re-authentication phase, the NAS
SHOULD send to the RADIUS server a new Access-Request message
mentioning both the new Calling-Station-ID and the SMI. The RADIUS
server records the unicity of the machine across both MAC addresses.
This information can be used to flush the older entry, provide
continuation of policies (posture) or other purposes.
If the SMI was included in an Access-Request packet, the NAS MUST
ensure that the SMI appears in subsequent Accounting-Request (Start,
Interim and Stop) for the same client.
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Later and at any time, the source of the SMI (the client or the NAS)
may update the SMI value. At that time, the NAS SHOULD send to the
RADIUS server the updated SMI as per above. In all these cases, the
SMI is a new attribute to the session identity that the RADIUS server
is tracking.
2.1.2. Special scenarios
The infrastructure can opt to represent to other infrastructure
systems (including RADIUS) the client directly as the RCM (case 1),
the stable identifier expressed by the client (case 2), or another
stable identifier generated by the infrastructure (case 3). In case
1, the RADIUS server receives the RCM as the Calling-Id and the
provisions from 2.1.1 apply directly. In cases 2 and 3, when the
client changes its MAC address and the infrastructure immediately
recognizes the new MAC address as representing the same machine as
before, no client MAC address change occurs from the perspective of
the other infrastructure systems. In this context, RCM management is
only occurring within the infrastructure system acting as the NAS,
and no new SMI exchange is needed with the RADIUS server. It is only
when a new stable machine identifier is expressed between the NAS the
other infrastructure elements that a new SMI exchange is needed
between the NAS and the RADIUS server.
In some cases, the AP and the client establish a secure link, but the
client does not immediately exchange with the infrastructure on a
unique identifier. In that case, the NAS is initially unable to
establish a unique identifier for the client machine, but does not
know if the RADIUS server may have such value. Thus, after a secure
link has been established with the client, the NAS SHOULD send an
Access-Request message to the RADIUS server with the SMI AVP and its
value set to Null. The RADIUS server supporting the SMI attribute
but that has not established a unique identifier for the client
machine SHOULD respond with an Access-Accept message and the SMI
attribute with value set to Null. Just as above, the NAS then
records that the RADIUS server does not have a stable identifier for
the client. Later, the client machine and the NAS exchange on a
stable identifier. After this exchange completes, the NAS SHOULD
send a new Access-Request to the RADIUS server with the SMI value
set. The process then continues as in 2.1.1.
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2.1.3. Failure Handling
Clients not supporting stable identifiers exchanges with the wireless
infrastructure will neither provide a stable identifier to the AP/WLC
nor request one. As the NAS is unable to determine if the client has
exchanged a stable identifier with the RADIUS server, the NAS SHOULD
initiate an Access-Request with the SMI value set to Null even in
that case.
The RADIUS server not supporting the SMI is unable to process the
request and SHOULD respond with an Access-Reject, a NACK, or SHOULD
NOT respond. The NAS SHOULD then consider that the RADIUS server is
unable to exchange SMI values for that client, and should stop
sending Access-Requests with SMI values pertaining to that client to
that RADIUS server. In this configuration, it is likely that a solid
implementation will record this non-support, and stop sending SMIs
for later clients as well.
Additionally, the RADIUS server may detect an anomaly in the SMI
(format error, duplication, suspicion of impersonation or other
malicious detection). The RADIUS server may then return to the NAS a
warning in the form of a VSA, thus causing the NAS to reject or
contain the offender.
2.2. Stable RADIUS machine identifier
Some methods use RADIUS to authenticate the client machine itself,
irrespective of the user authentication. In that case, the RADIUS
server receives a stable identifier for the machine, even when the
MAC address and the associated Calling Station-Id are changing.
In this case, the client initially joins the network in a constrained
state and proceeds through the 802.1X/EAP authentication phase. The
client MAC address is likely locally administered. During the
authentication phase, the RADIUS server validates the machine
identity, or validates the user identity with an identifier also
unique for the particular machine.
2.2.1. General Use cases
After the NAS and the client machine have established a secure
connection, no stable identifier exchange occurs between the client
and the NAS. Thus the NAS SHOULD send to the RADIUS server an
Access-Request for the Calling-ID with the SMI AVP, but with a
payload set to the Null value.
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As the RADIUS server uniquely identifies the machine, the RADIUS
SHOULD interpret the Null value as 1. the NAS supports the SMI AVP,
2. the NAS does not have an SMI yet for this client and 3. the NAS
requests the SMI for the client, if available.
The RADIUS server having established a unique identifier for the
client machine SHOULD respond with an Access-Accept response that
includes the SMI AVP and value. It should be clear that in cases
where the STA uses its real MAC address (locally-significant bit set
to 0), the SMI may contain the STA Calling-ID value (STA MAC
address), or another identifier determined by the RADIUS server and
which value is implementation-specific.
In cases where the RADIUS returned a valid SMI value, the NAS records
this identifier as a stable value for the client machine.
Later, client MAC rotation occurs and the client does not express a
stable identifier to the NAS during that phase. The NAS thus
considers the new MAC address as a new client and initiates 802.1X
authentication.
At the end of the authentication, the RADIUS server and the NAS
operate as above: the NAS SHOULD send an Access-Request message with
the SMI AVP, set to Null. The RADIUS server has identified the
client machine and SHOULD respond with an Access-Accept containing
the SMI AVP and value.
The NAS uses this value to recognize that the new MAC is the same
client as the previous MAC. the NAS can then use this awareness to
facilitate network operations (e.g. flush previous MAC address cached
keys, ensure IP address continuity [DHCP proxy], inform upstream
devices [gratuitous ARPs] or others).
If the SMI was included in an Access-Request packet, the NAS MUST
ensure that the SMI appears in subsequent Accounting-Request (Start,
Interim and Stop) for the same client.
Later and at any time, the source of the SMI (the client or the NAS)
may update the SMI value. At that time, the NAS SHOULD send to the
RADIUS server the updated SMI as per above. In all these cases, the
SMI is a new attribute to the session identity that the RADIUS server
is tracking.
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2.2.2. Special scenarios
In some cases, the RADIUS server supports the SMI AVP, receives the
Access-Request message with the SMI value set to Null from the NAS,
but the RADIUS server did not uniquely authenticate the machine (e.g.
user authentication). The RADIUS server SHOULD then return an
Access-Accept message, with the SMI AVP, which payload value is set
to Null. The NAS records in that case that no SMI is available on
the RADIUS server for this client.
2.2.3. Failure Handling
As in 2.1, RADIUS servers that do not support SMI SHOULD return an
Access-Reject, a NACK, or SHOULD NOT respond. RADIUS servers that do
not receive an Access-Request message with the SMI value from the NAS
SHOULD NOT send an unsolicited SMI attribute and value to the NAS.
2.3. Stable NAS and stable RADIUS machine identifiers
In this scenario, both the NAS and the RADIUS server are able to
establish a stable identity for the client, from their respective
exchanges with the client. The client first joins the network in a
constrained state and proceeds through the 802.1X/EAP authentication
phase. The client MAC address is likely locally administered. As in
2.2, the server RADIUS uniquely identifies the machine.
Additionally, once a protected link has been established between the
client and the AP/WLC, as in 2.1, the client requests from the NAS a
stable identifier or provides to the NAS a stable identifier. This
identifier may be different from that established by the RADIUS
server.
2.3.1. General cases
After keying material is exchanged between the NAS and the client
machine, scenario 2.1 occurs. The NAS SHOULD send an Access-Request
message to the RADIUS server with the SMI AVP. The AVP value is the
client identifier determined by the NAS. The RADIUS server compares
the value to its own SMI value for that client. Several
possibilities arise: * Some RADIUS implementations may decide to
replace the RADIUS SMI with the SMI forwarded by the NAS. In that
case, the RADIUS server SHOULD return to the NAS an Access-Accept,
optionally with the SMI AVP, which value is the one sent by the NAS.
The NAS records the Access-Accept to signify that the SMI was
successfully recorded by the supporting RADIUS server. * Some
implementations may decide to replace the NAS SMI with the SMI
determined by the RADIUS server. In that case, the RADIUS server
SHOULD return to the NAS an Access-Accept, with the SMI AVP, which
value is the one determined by the RADIUS server. The NAS records
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the Access-Accept and the SMI returned by the RADIUS server. Some
NAS implementations may decide to conserve both values, some others
may decide to replace the NAS SMI with the SMI returned by the RADIUS
server.
If the SMI was included in an Access-Request packet, the NAS MUST
ensure that the SMI appears in subsequent Accounting-Request (Start,
Interim and Stop) for the same client.
Later and at any time, the source of the SMI (the client or the NAS)
may update the SMI value. At that time, the NAS SHOULD send to the
RADIUS server the updated SMI as per above. In all these cases, the
SMI is a new attribute to the session identity that the RADIUS server
is tracking.
2.3.2. Special scenarios
As in 2.1, RADIUS servers that do not support SMI SHOULD return an
Access-Reject, a NACK, or SHOULD NOT respond. In some cases, the AP
and the client establish a secure link, but the client does not
immediately exchange with the infrastructure on a unique identifier.
In that case, the NAS is initially unable to establish a unique
identifier for the client machine, but does not know if the RADIUS
server may have such value. Thus, after a secure link has been
established with the client, the NAS SHOULD send an Access-Request
message to the RADIUS server with the SMI AVP and its value set to
Null. The RADIUS server supporting the SMI attribute that has
established a unique identifier for the client machine SHOULD respond
with an Access-Accept message and the SMI attribute and its value.
Just as in 2.2, the NAS then records the RADIUS server SMI value for
the client.
Later, the client machine and the NAS exchange on a stable
identifier. After this exchange completes, the NAS SHOULD send a new
Access-Request to the RADIUS server with the SMI value set. The
process then continues as in 2.3.1.
2.3.3. Failure Handling
As in 2.1, RADIUS servers that do not support SMI SHOULD return an
Access-Reject, a NACK, or SHOULD NOT respond. RADIUS servers that do
not receive an Access-Request message with the SMI value from the NAS
SHOULD NOT send an unsolicited SMI attribute and value to the NAS.
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3. Stable-Machine-Identifier
The Stable-Machine-Identifier attribute conveys the SMI. A summary
of the RADIUS SMI attribute is shown below. The fields are
transmitted from left to right. The assignment rules follow RFC 6929
section 10.3
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Extended-Type | Value …
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Type:
This field is identical to the Type field of the Attribute format
defined in [RFC2865] Section 5. The code is 241.
Length
The Length field is one octet and indicates the length of this
Attribute, including the Type, Length, and "Value" fields. This
field is identical to the Type field of the Attribute format defined
in [RFC2865] Section 5.
Extended-Type The Extended type field is one octet, and follows the
definition of [RFC6929] section 2.1. The code is 12.
Value The Value represents the Stable Machine Identifier. The format
and content of the value is implementation-specific. Most
implementations might choose to store the SMI as a 48 bit-value.
4. Attribute table
The following table provides a guide to which attribute(s) may be
found in which kinds of packets, and in what quantity.
Request Accept Reject Challenge Accounting # Attribute
Request
0-1 0-1 0 0 0-1 241.12 Stable Machine Identifier
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5. Security & Privacy Considerations
It is strongly recommended that the SMI format used is such that
neither the machine globally unique MAC address nor the machine user
identity are revealed. Furthermore, where a reference is used to the
machine globally unique MAC address or to the machine user identity,
it is recommended that the binding lifetime of that reference be kept
as short as possible.
The RADIUS entities (RADIUS proxies and clients) outside the home
network MUST NOT modify the SMI or insert a SMI in an Access-Accept.
However, there is no way to detect or prevent this.
Attempting theft of service, a man-in-the-middle may try to insert,
modify, or remove the SMI in the Access-Accept packets and Accounting
packets. However, RADIUS Access-Accept and Accounting packets
already provide integrity protection.
If the NAS includes SMI in an Access-Request packet, a man-in-the-
middle may remove it. This will cause the issues that the SMI was
designed to solve. To prevent such an attack, the NAS SHOULD include
a Message-Authenticator(80) attribute within Access-Request packets
containing a SMI attribute.
6. IANA Considerations
This document requests a new RADIUS Extension Attribute to be defined
as:
Value: TBD
Description: Stable Machine Identifier
Data Type: string
Reference: this document
7. References
7.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC2865] Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
"Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
RFC 2865, DOI 10.17487/RFC2865, June 2000,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2865>.
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[RFC4005] Calhoun, P., Zorn, G., Spence, D., and D. Mitton,
"Diameter Network Access Server Application", RFC 4005,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4005, August 2005,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4005>.
[RFC6929] DeKok, A. and A. Lior, "Remote Authentication Dial In User
Service (RADIUS) Protocol Extensions", RFC 6929,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6929, April 2013,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6929>.
[RFC6973] Cooper, A., Tschofenig, H., Aboba, B., Peterson, J.,
Morris, J., Hansen, M., and R. Smith, "Privacy
Considerations for Internet Protocols", RFC 6973,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6973, July 2013,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6973>.
7.2. Informative References
[ESNI] Rescorla, E., Oku, K., Sullivan, N., and C. A. Wood,
"Encrypted Server Name Indication for TLS 1.3", Work in
Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-tls-esni-05, 4
November 2019, <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-
ietf-tls-esni-05.txt>.
[SEC_IMPACT]
Durumeric, Z., Ma, Z., Springall, D., Barnes, R.,
Sullivan, N., Bursztein, E., Bailey, M., Halderman, J.A.,
and V. Paxson, "The Security Impact of HTTPS
Interception", 26 February 2017,
<https://jhalderm.com/pub/papers/interception-ndss17.pdf>.
[TLS_PROXY]
Wang, E., Ossipov, A., and R. DuToit, "TLS Proxy Best
Practice", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-wang-
tls-proxy-best-practice-01, 4 March 2020,
<https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-wang-tls-proxy-
best-practice-01.txt>.
[ZUNIGA] Zuniga, J. C., Bernardos, C. J., and A. Andersdotter, "MAC
address randomization", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft,
draft-zuniga-mac-address-randomization-01, 12 July 2021,
<https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-zuniga-mac-address-
randomization-01.txt>.
Acknowledgments
Authors' Addresses
Henry & Cam-Winget Expires 14 April 2022 [Page 13]
Internet-Draft RADIUS SMI TLV October 2021
Jerome Henry
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Email: jerhenry@cisco.com
Nancy Cam-Winget
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Email: ncamwing@cisco.com
Henry & Cam-Winget Expires 14 April 2022 [Page 14]