Network Working Group T. Henderson
Internet-Draft S. Venema
Intended status: Experimental D. Mattes
Expires: September 1, 2010 The Boeing Company
February 28, 2010
HIP-based Virtual Private LAN Service (HIPLS)
draft-henderson-hip-vpls-00
Abstract
The Host Identity Protocol (HIP) and architecture adds a
cryptographic name space to name Internet hosts. This draft
describes a use case of the HIP architecture, which is to provide a
HIP-enabled virtual private LAN service (VPLS) over an untrusted
network. In this case, HIP is used to secure tunnels between the
provider edge (PE) equipment.
Status of this Memo
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2010 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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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Reference model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Service description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
5. System description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.1. Provisioning the PEs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.2. Walkthrough of unicast protocol operation . . . . . . . . 9
5.3. Names and access control lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5.4. Walkthrough of multicast operation . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
5.5. Mobility, multihoming, and address families . . . . . . . 11
6. Proposed extensions to HIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
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1. Introduction
Virtual private networks (VPNs) are popular in the wide-area Internet
and also among enterprises that wish to separate multiple LAN
broadcast domains across shared network infrastructure. Several
techniques have been defined to provide VPNs at different layers in
the stack, including layer-1 [RFC4847], layer-2 (virtual LAN, virtual
private LAN service (VPLS), and pseudo-wire (PW)) [RFC4664], and
layer-3 (virtual router and BGP/MPLS provider-provisioned VPNs)
[RFC4176].
The Host Identity Protocol (HIP) [RFC5201] and architecture [RFC4423]
adds a new public-key-based name space for use as host identifiers in
Internet protocols. HIP specifies a means for hosts to use public
keys to authenticate one another over Internet protocols and to set
up secure data channels using Encapsulating Security Payload
[RFC5202] and possibly other transports in the future.
This document describes how HIP can be used to create a customer
Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) overlaid on top of a standard IPv4
and/or IPv6 provider network. Using the nomenclature in RFC 4664
[RFC4664], a VPLS connects several physically separate LAN segments
into a single logical LAN segment. The Provider Edge (PE) devices
that connect the Customer Edge (CE) devices behave like a learning
bridge, and the CE devices may be any layer-2 or layer-3 device,
including hosts, routers, bridges, or switches.
In the specific use case described, the tunnels between PEs are
realized by Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) tunnels, whose
management is controlled by the Host Identity Protocol (HIP)
signaling protocol. Each PE device is assigned a cryptographic host
identifier, which may be bound to other identifiers in the system via
certificates or other means. The HIP signaling protocol is used to
allow PE devices to authenticate one another and to build secure
tunnels over untrusted provider network infrastructure. Extensions
to HIP are described to allow the PE devices to integrate with a
public-key infrastructure, in order to ease deployment.
Readers may note that this application of HIP differs from the
traditional implementation of HIP within end hosts. The key
differences are that HIP is here implemented within a middlebox
(using the terminology of RFC 4301 [RFC4301], a "bump-in-the-wire"
implementation) and that the payloads of the ESP-encrypted datagrams
are not transport protocol data units (PDUs) but instead are layer-2
frames.
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2. Terminology
Terminology is reused from [RFC4664] and and [RFC5201].
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3. Reference model
Section 2.2 of RFC 4664 [RFC4664] specifies the VPLS reference model
where PE devices that are VPLS-capable provide a logical interconnect
such that CE devices belonging to a specific VPLS appear to be on a
single bridged Ethernet. A VPLS can contain a single VLAN or
multiple tagged VLANs.
+-----+ +-----+
+ CE1 +--+ +---| CE2 |
+-----+ | ................... | +-----+
VPLS A | +----+ +----+ | VPLS A
| |VPLS| |VPLS| |
+--| PE |--Routed---| PE |-+
+----+ Backbone +----+
/ . | . \ _ /\_
+-----+ / . | . \ / \ / \ +-----+
+ CE +--+ . | . +--\ Access \----| CE |
+-----+ . +----+ . | Network | +-----+
VPLS B .....|VPLS|........ \ / VPLS B
| PE | ^ -------
+----+ |
| |
| |
+-----+ |
| CE3 | +-- Emulated LAN
+-----+
VPLS A
Figure 1: Reference model
Figure 1, copied from Figure 2 of [RFC4664], depicts the reference
model for this use case. A number of CE devices are connected to PE
devices over layer-2 networks. Although not shown in the figure,
each CE device may be reachable by one or more PE device (for
example, CE1 and CE3 may also be able to reach each other directly
without using the VPLS). Moreover, the connectivity of the L2
networks (and correspondingly, between a given PE and CE) may change
over time. No assumptions are made about the capabilities of the CE
devices. From the perspective of the CE devices, each other CE
device is reachable, using broadcast, multicast, or unicast, as if it
were on the same LAN segment. Therefore, the service provided by the
PE devices is that of a L2VPN. Since this is a L2VPN, CE devices are
free to use higher layer protocols such as IPv4 and IPv6 and domain
specific protocols such as those found in industrial control systems.
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|-----Routed Backbone-----|
| (P Routers) |PSN Tunnels,
Emulated LAN | |Pseudowires
.......................................................................
. | | .
. |---------------------|----| |--------|-----------------| .
. | --------------------|--- | | -------|---------------- | .
. | VPLS Forwarder | | VPLS Forwarder | .
. | ----------|------------- | | ----------|------------- | .
..|.................................................................|..
| | Emulated LAN | | | Emulated LAN |
| | Interface | VPLS-PEs | | Interface |
| | | <----> | | |
| ----------|------------ | | ----------|------------ |
| | Bridge | | | | Bridge | |
| -|--------|---------|-- | | ---|-------|---------|- |
|--|--------|---------|----| |----|-------|---------|---|
| | | | | |
| | Access | | | Access |
| | Networks| | | Networks|
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
CE devices CE devices
Figure 2: PE Reference model
Figure 2, copied from Figure 3 of RFC4664, depicts the design model
for the PE. In this model, a CE device attaches, possibly through an
access network, to a "bridge" module of a VPLS-PE. Within the
VPLS-PE, the bridge module attaches, through an "Emulated LAN
Interface", to an Emulated LAN. For each VPLS, there is an Emulated
LAN instance. Figure 3 shows some internal structure to the Emulated
LAN: it consists of "VPLS Forwarder" modules connected by
pseudowires, where the pseudowires may be traveling through PSN
tunnels over a routed backbone.
A "VPLS instance" consists of a set of VPLS Forwarders (no more than
one per PE) connected by pseudowires. In our application, it is the
HIP-enabled ESP tunnels that constitute the pseudowires.
The PE devices are interconnected by an IP-based network. This
network may be IPv4-based or IPv6-based, or a hybrid. The PEs are
responsible for providing a secure (encrypted, authenticated) tunnel
over which Layer-2 frames may flow betweeen CEs that are
interconnected by the VPN. The PE devices are also responsible for
authenticating the peer PE devices as belonging to the same overlay
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(L2VPN). Furthermore, PE devices may be responsible for maintaining
access control lists (ACLs) that govern which CEs are permitted to
talk to which other CEs. In addition to IP and MAC addresses found
in ACLs, the ACLs may also use the cryptographic identities already
bound to the PE devices for use by the HIP protocol.
To build tunnels, the PEs must use pre-provisioned configuration
information or must consult, on-demand, a mapping database (such as
DNS or an LDAP server) to find the bindings between PE and CE device.
These bindings may be secured by a public key infrastructure (PKI).
PEs may change their point of attachment (and also, their IP address)
to the IP-based network, and may be multihomed to the IP-based
network (see PE3 in the above figure), and the PE devices must
accommodate such changes such that they are transparent to the L2VPN
overlay and the CEs.
In this model, the PE devices use HIP as follows. Each PE device is
assigned (provisioned with) a unique name, such as a serial number or
asset tag, and with a public/private key pair. This unique name may
be bound to the public key using an X.509 certificate. The L2VPN is
also given a name. Each PE device knows which of its interfaces
belong to a particular named overlay, and which of its interfaces
belong to the underlay (the "routed backbone" in Figure 2). Each PE
device knows or learns which CE devices it is fronting for, and how
to obtain mapping information that maps a remote CE to a remote PE
device.
The tunnels established between PE devices are HIP-enabled ESP
tunnels. HIP signaling between PE devices is used to establish and
maintain the tunnels. A certificate, signed by a trust anchor in the
system, binds the PE name to the PE's public key; this public key is
used as the host identity in the HIP exchanges. The HIP exchanges
carry a PE's certificate, thereby allowing a remote PE to
authenticate the PE as a member of the overlay. HIP signaling may
also be used between the PE devices and the mapping database, or this
communications channel may be secured by other means.
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4. Service description
RFC 4665 [RFC4665] describes service requirements for L2VPNs, and
outlines a number of options for variations on the L2VPN design. In
this section, we describe the HIPLS service in terms of the RFC 4665
taxonomy.
With respect to Section 5 of RFC 4665, we are describing a full VPLS
solution; any variations or caveats should be documented according to
Section 5.1 of RFC 4665. For example, a VPLS must support unicast,
multicast, and broadcast traffic, even if realized with ESP unicast-
based tunnels.
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5. System description
In this section, we walk through how the HIP-enabled VPLS can be
provisioned and how it operates in a few use case scenarios.
In the following, we refer to each L2VPN as an overlay network, and
to the routed backbone as the underlay.
5.1. Provisioning the PEs
At a minimum, a network operator must define a unique overlay name,
and must authorize (or list) the PEs that belong to that overlay. In
particular, the interfaces (overlay and underlay) that belong to the
system must be identified for each PE. Additionally, each PE must
possess a public/private key pair, which must be accessible to a host
via a smart card, Trusted Platform Module (TPM) hardware, or a local
file.
The PEs must be able to authenticate the other PEs in the underlay as
belonging to a given overlay. One way to do this is to pre-provision
a list of PEs (and their HITs) that belong to the overlay, and deploy
this list on each PE in a static configuration file. A drawback to
this approach is that whenever the set of PEs on the overlay changes,
each PE's master list must be edited. An alternative is to deploy an
authorization system in which a PE's key is authorized by a server as
belonging to that overlay.
In addition, there are a number of other configuration items that may
either be pre-provisioned or dynamically learned. These include
access control lists, associations between PE devices and local CEs,
and associations between remote PE devices and remote CEs. All of
this type of information may either be pre-provisioned in static
configuration files, or stored in a database accessible on the
underlay.
5.2. Walkthrough of unicast protocol operation
Referring again to Figure 1, consider the case in which CE1 wishes to
send an IPv4 unicast datagram to CE3, and no corresponding session
state exists between the respective PEs. We assume that CE1 and CE3
both share a network prefix, and that CE1 first sends an ARP request
or Neighbor Discovery on its local LAN segment. This request is
picked up by PE1 which listens promiscuously on its LAN segment. No
other devices respond to this request.
PE1 learns that it is the responsible PE device for the source MAC
address of the ARP request, and stores this forwarding entry in its
forwarding database (address learning). Note that some
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implementations may populate the forwarding database manually.
Manual configuration is required for CE devices that never send an L2
frame ("listen only" devices) or that only send L2 frames when they
have received instructions to do so. Since the ARP message is a
broadcast layer-2 frame, the PE device must either perform a proxy-
ARP function or must send the ARP request to all other PEs on the
overlay. Therefore, a means whereby each PE knows all of the other
PEs in the overlay is required, either by static configuration or by
dynamic discovery.
Next, the PE device must forward the ARP request to all peer PEs
servicing a particular overlay, or to a specific peer PE if the MAC-
to-PE mapping is already known (either by static configuration or
earlier dynamic discovery). Since the PEs communicate with each
other via HIP, the PE forwarding the ARP must build a HIP tunnel to
each target PE if it does not already exist. The source PE wraps the
L2 frame within the ESP payload, fragments it if necessary, and sends
to the remote PEs where it is detunneled and placed on the remote
access network segment again as a L2 broadcast frame. From this
point, the intended host will ARP reply with a unicast frame. This
frame should be mapped to the ESP association back to the originating
PE.
Note that flooding of broadcast datagrams in an L2 network is prone
to loops. There may be other transparent bridges present in the
access network. Therefore, the PE devices MUST implement and
participate in an 802.1d spanning tree algorithm. Note that the
nature of 802.1d and the number of broadcast frames typical in most
networks will require the setup and maintenance of a full mesh of ESP
associations between PEs on an overlay, in general.
5.3. Names and access control lists
The name by which the PE devices know one another, at the protocol
level, is the HIT, which is a hash of the host identity public key.
This key can be used to authenticate messages from PE devices
purporting to be a named PE device.
However, from a management perspective, the names that operators will
want to use in configuration files and in access control lists should
be more operationally relevant, such as human- friendly strings and
asset tags. Certificates are used to bind a PE device's operational
name to its HIT. The HIT is obtained as usual, as a hash of the PE
device's public key. All PE devices in the overlay must share a
common set of CAs.
Certificates should be presented as parameters in the base exchange,
to allow peer PE devices to validate them.
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5.4. Walkthrough of multicast operation
Multicast operation is similer to that described in the section on
handling of broadcast ARP requests.
5.5. Mobility, multihoming, and address families
The PE devices may be mobile or multihomed on the underlay. The HIP
mobility mechanisms [RFC5206] may be used in this case to preserve
existing security associations and to update database records upon
such changes to the underlying IP addresses.
The underlay may itself be a combination of IPv4 and IPv6 network
segments. A given overlay may be supported by either or both IPv4
and IPv6-based ESP security associations.
The CE devices may be multihomed to PE devices. In this case, the
PEs must coordinate to ensure that only one PE sources ingress frames
destined from CE4 to another CE. The PE devices may have "backdoor"
connections with one another. The 802.1d spanning tree protocol
should alleviate problems of this sort.
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6. Proposed extensions to HIP
The system described above relies on the ability of the PE devices to
exchange certificates in the R1, I2, and UPDATE messages, based on
local policy. Note that passing of certificates in the HIP exchanges
is not strictly necessary, but it will reduce latency if the host
proactively provides its certificate as part of the signaling
exchange. Work is already underway in the HIP working group to
define such a certificate (CERT) parameter [I-D.ietf-hip-cert].
The system described above can be thought of as a "bump-in-the-wire"
type of HIP deployment. Conceptually, what is being encapsulated is
not a transport PDU but instead a layer-2 frame. Therefore, HIP
implementations in the PE devices need to be able to successfully
encapsulate and decapsulate such frames; i.e., this system alters the
protocol processing in the stack compared to a host-based HIP
implementation.
An additional change is that layer-2 (and, by extension, layer-3)
multicast and broadcast frames, as well as layer-2 control frames
such as bridge PDUs, must be passed as needed. This requires a
capability for the PEs to send a copy of each such frame to all other
PEs in the overlay. One technique to do this is to replicate each
frame and send to each other PE in the system. To support such a
transmission framework, N*(N-1) tunnels must be maintained
collectively between the PE devices. Alternatively, a constrained
system may be deployed that does not support multicast or broadcast,
nor bridge PDUs; this would be more like a unicast-only IPLS VPN.
If temporary certificates are used, it has not yet been defined in
HIP how a host identity may change for active security associations.
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7. Security Considerations
The model considered above assumes that PE devices that hold trusted
credentials (certificates and private keys) are trustworthy; a
malicious or misconfigured PE device could subvert packet delivery
across the overlay.
The model also assumes that the information that PE devices need to
obtain to bind the PE name to the overlay and to its respective
public key is not compromised, and that the keys of the PE devices
are themselves not compromised. A PKI revocation system may aid in
dealing with compromised keys.
Otherwise, the system described above inherits the security
properties found in HIP, including strong authentication of the
binding between host identity and (underlay) IP address, and some
level of robustness from denial-of-service attacks on the underlay
network, based on the properties of the HIP base exchange.
Section 5.5 of RFC 4665 describes security features from the
perspective of the L2VPN solution, while Section 6.5 of RFC 4665
describes the security from a user perspective. The HIPLS solution
must protect against the attacks listed in Section 5.5 of RFC 4665.
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8. IANA Considerations
There are no IANA considerations.
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9. Acknowledgments
Jeff Ahrenholz, Orlie Brewer, Eric Byres, Jin Fang, Darren Lissimore
and Jeff Meegan have provided invaluable support in the design and
prototype implementation of this HIPLS functionality. Richard Paine
and Craig Dupler were instrumental in guiding early work along these
lines. Members of other Standards organizations such as The Open
Group, the Trusted Computing Group (TCG), and the International
Society of Automation (ISA) have been involved in standards
development activities that leverage HIP and this HIPLS
functionality.
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10. References
10.1. Normative References
[RFC4664] Andersson, L. and E. Rosen, "Framework for Layer 2 Virtual
Private Networks (L2VPNs)", RFC 4664, September 2006.
[RFC5201] Moskowitz, R., Nikander, P., Jokela, P., and T. Henderson,
"Host Identity Protocol", RFC 5201, April 2008.
[RFC5202] Jokela, P., Moskowitz, R., and P. Nikander, "Using the
Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) Transport Format with
the Host Identity Protocol (HIP)", RFC 5202, April 2008.
[RFC5206] Nikander, P., Henderson, T., Vogt, C., and J. Arkko, "End-
Host Mobility and Multihoming with the Host Identity
Protocol", RFC 5206, April 2008.
[I-D.ietf-hip-cert]
Heer, T. and S. Varjonen, "HIP Certificates",
draft-ietf-hip-cert-02 (work in progress), October 2009.
10.2. Informative References
[RFC4176] El Mghazli, Y., Nadeau, T., Boucadair, M., Chan, K., and
A. Gonguet, "Framework for Layer 3 Virtual Private
Networks (L3VPN) Operations and Management", RFC 4176,
October 2005.
[RFC4301] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the
Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005.
[RFC4423] Moskowitz, R. and P. Nikander, "Host Identity Protocol
(HIP) Architecture", RFC 4423, May 2006.
[RFC4665] Augustyn, W. and Y. Serbest, "Service Requirements for
Layer 2 Provider-Provisioned Virtual Private Networks",
RFC 4665, September 2006.
[RFC4847] Takeda, T., "Framework and Requirements for Layer 1
Virtual Private Networks", RFC 4847, April 2007.
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Authors' Addresses
Tom Henderson
The Boeing Company
P.O. Box 3707
Seattle, WA
USA
Email: thomas.r.henderson@boeing.com
Steven C. Venema
The Boeing Company
P.O. Box 3707
Seattle, WA
USA
Email: steven.c.venema@boeing.com
David Mattes
The Boeing Company
P.O. Box 3707
Seattle, WA
USA
Email: david.mattes@boeing.com
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