DOTS R. Dobbins
Internet-Draft Arbor Networks
Intended status: Informational D. Migault
Expires: April 28, 2018 Ericsson
S. Fouant
R. Moskowitz
HTT Consulting
N. Teague
Verisign
L. Xia
Huawei
K. Nishizuka
NTT Communications
October 25, 2017
Use cases for DDoS Open Threat Signaling
draft-ietf-dots-use-cases-08
Abstract
The DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) effort is intended to provide a
protocol that facilitates interoperability between multivendor
solutions/services. This document presents use cases to evaluate the
interactions expected between the DOTS components as well as DOTS
messaging exchanges. The purpose of describing use cases is to
identify the interacting DOTS components, how they collaborate and
what are the types of information to be exchanged.
Status of This Memo
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
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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 28, 2018.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Terminology and Acronyms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. Requirements Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Use Cases Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1. Inter-domain Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1.1. End-customer with a single upstream transit provider
offering DDoS mitigation services . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1.2. End-customer with multiple upstream transit providers
offering DDoS mitigation services . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.1.3. End-customer with multiple upstream transit
providers, but only a single upstream transit
provider offering DDoS mitigation services . . . . . 8
3.1.4. End-customer with an overlay DDoS mitigation managed
security service provider (MSSP) . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.1.5. End-customer operating an application or service with
an integrated DOTS client . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.1.6. End-customer operating a CPE network infrastructure
device with an integrated DOTS client . . . . . . . . 11
3.1.7. End-customer with an out-of-band smartphone
application featuring DOTS client capabilities . . . 11
3.1.8. MSSP as an end-customer requesting overflow DDoS
mitigation assistance from other MSSPs . . . . . . . 12
3.2. Intra-domain Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.2.1. Suppression of outbound DDoS traffic originating from
a consumer broadband access network . . . . . . . . . 13
3.2.2. Home Network DDoS Detection Collaboration for ISP
network management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.2.3. DDoS Orchestration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
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7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
1. Introduction
Currently, distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack mitigation
solutions are largely based upon siloed, proprietary communications
schemes which result in vendor lock-in. As a side-effect, this makes
the configuration, provisioning, operation, and activation of these
solutions a highly manual and often time-consuming process.
Additionally, coordination of multiple DDoS mitigation solutions
simultaneously engaged in defending the same organization (resources)
against DDoS attacks is fraught with both technical and process-
related hurdles. This greatly increase operational complexity and
often results in suboptimal DDoS attack mitigation efficacy.
The DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) effort is intended to specify a
protocol that facilitates interoperability between multivendor DDoS
mitigation solutions and ensures more automation in term of
mitigation requests and attack characterization patterns. As DDoS
solutions are broadly heterogeneous among different vendors, the
primary goal for DOTS is to provide a high level interaction with
these DDoS solutions such as initiating or terminating DDoS
mitigation assistance.
It should be noted that DOTS is not in and of itself intended to
perform orchestration functions duplicative of the functionality
being developed by the [I2NSF] WG; rather, DOTS is intended to allow
devices, services, and applications to request DDoS attack mitigation
assistance and receive mitigation status updates.
These use cases are expected to provide inputs for the design of the
DOTS protocol(s).
2. Terminology and Acronyms
This document makes use of the terms defined in
[I-D.ietf-dots-requirements].
In addition, this document introduces the following terms:
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Inter-domain: a DOTS communications relationship between distinct
organizations with separate spans of administrative control.
Typical inter-domain DOTS communication relationships would be
between a DDoS mitigation service provider and an end-customer who
requires DDoS mitigation assistance; between multiple DDoS
mitigation service providers coordinating mutual defense of a
mutual end-customer; or between DDoS mitigation service providers
which are requesting additional DDoS mitigation assistance in for
attacks which exceed their inherent DDoS mitigation capacities
and/or capabilities.
Intra-domain: a DOTS communications relationship between various
(network) elements that are owned and operated by the same
administrative entity. A typical intra-domain DOTS communications
relationship would be between DOTS agents [I-D.ietf-dots-
requirements] within the same organization.
2.1. Requirements Terminology
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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
3. Use Cases Scenarios
This section provides a high-level description of scenarios addressed
by DOTS. In both sub-sections, the scenarios are provided in order
to illustrate the use of DOTS in typical DDoS attack scenarios. They
are not definitive, and other use cases are expected to emerge with
widespread DOTS deployment.
All scenarios present a coordination between the targeted
organization, the DDoS attack telemetry and the mitigator. The
coordination and communication between these entities depends, for
example, on the characteristic or functionality of the entity itself,
the reliability of the information provided by DDoS attack telemetry,
and the business relationship between the DDoS target domain and the
mitigator.
More explicitly, in some cases, the DDoS attack telemetry may simply
activate a DDoS mitigation, whereas in other cases, it may
collaborate by providing some information about an attack. In some
cases, the DDoS mitigation may be orchestrated, which includes
selecting a specific appliance as well as starting/ending a
mitigation.
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3.1. Inter-domain Use Cases
Inter-domain DOTS deployment scenarios span two or more distinct
spans of administrative control. A typical inter-domain DOTS
deployment may consist of an endpoint network such as an Internet-
connected enterprise requesting DDoS mitigation assistance from one
or more upstream transit providers offering DDoS mitigation services,
or from a topologically-distant MSSP offering cloud-based overlay
DDoS mitigation services. DOTS may also be used to facilitate
coordination of DDoS mitigation activities between mitigation
providers.
Coordination between organizations making use of DOTS in such
scenarios is necessary. Along with DOTS-specific tasks such as DOTS
peering and validating the exchange of DOTS messaging between the
relevant organizations, externalities relating to routing
advertisements, authoritative DNS records (for DNS-based diversion),
network access policies for DOTS nodes, service-level agreements
(SLAs), and DDoS mitigation provisioning are required.
3.1.1. End-customer with a single upstream transit provider offering
DDoS mitigation services
In this scenario, an enterprise network with self-hosted Internet-
facing properties such as Web servers, authoritative DNS servers, and
VoIP PBXes has an intelligent DDoS mitigation system (IDMS) deployed
to protect those servers and applications from DDoS attacks. In
addition to their on-premise DDoS defense capability, they have
contracted with their Internet transit provider for DDoS mitigation
services which threaten to overwhelm their transit link bandwidth.
The IDMS is configured such that if the incoming Internet traffic
volume exceeds 50% of the provisioned upstream Internet transit link
capacity, the IDMS will request DDoS mitigation assistance from the
upstream transit provider.
The requests to trigger, manage, and finalize a DDoS mitigation
between the enterprise IDMS and the transit provider is performed
using DOTS. The enterprise IDMS implements a DOTS client while the
transit provider implements a DOTS server which is integrated with
their DDoS mitigation orchestration system.
When the IDMS detects an inbound DDoS attack targeting the enterprise
servers and applications, it immediately begins mitigating the
attack.
During the course of the attack, the inbound traffic volume exceeds
the 50% threshold; the IDMS DOTS client signals the DOTS server on
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the upstream transit provider network to initiate DDoS mitigation.
The DOTS server signals the DOTS client that it can service this
request, and mitigation is initiated on the transit provider network.
Over the course of the attack, the DOTS server on the transit
provider network periodically signals the DOTS client on the
enterprise IDMS in order to provide mitigation status information,
statistics related to DDoS attack traffic mitigation, and related
information. Once the DDoS attack has ended, the DOTS server signals
the enterprise IDMS DOTS client that the attack has subsided.
The enterprise IDMS then requests that DDoS mitigation services on
the upstream transit provider network be terminated. The DOTS server
on the transit provider network receives this request, communicates
with the transit provider orchestration system controlling its DDoS
mitigation system to terminate attack mitigation, and once the
mitigation has ended, confirms the end of upstream DDoS mitigation
service to the enterprise IDMS DOTS client.
Note that communications between the enterprise DOTS client and the
upstream transit provider DOTS server may take place in-band within
the main Internet transit link between the enterprise and the transit
provider; out-of-band via a separate, dedicated wireline network link
utilized solely for DOTS signaling; or out-of-band via some other
form of network connectivity such as a third-party wireless 4G
network link.
(a) A DDoS attack is initiated against online properties of an
organization which has deployed DOTS-client-capable DDoS mitigators.
(b) CPE or PE DDoS mitigators detect, classify, and begin mitigating
the DDoS attack.
(c) CPE or PE DDoS mitigators determine that their capacity and/or
capability to mitigate the DDoS attack is insufficient, and utilize
their DOTS client functionality to send a DOTS mitigation service
initiation request to one or more DOTS servers residing on one or
more upstream transit networks, peer networks, or overlay MSSP
networks. This DOTS mitigation service initiation request may be
automatically initiated by the CPE or PE DDoS mitigators, or may be
manually triggered by personnel of the requesting organization in
response to an alert from the mitigators (the mechanism by which this
process takes place is beyond the scope of this document).
(d) The DOTS servers which receive the DOTS mitigation service
initiation requests determine that they have been configured to honor
requests from the requesting CPE or PE mitigators, and initiate
situationally-appropriate DDoS mitigation service on their respective
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networks (the mechanism by which this process takes place is beyond
the scope of this document).
(e) The DOTS servers transmit a DOTS service status message to the
requesting CPE or PE mitigators indicating that upstream DDoS
mitigation service has been initiated.
(f) While DDoS mitigation services are active, the DOTS servers
regularly transmit DOTS mitigation status updates to the requesting
CPE or PE mitigators.
(g) While DDoS mitigation services are active, the CPE or PE
mitigators may optionally regularly transmit DOTS mitigation efficacy
updates to the relevant DOTS servers.
(h) When the upstream DDoS mitigators determine that the DDoS attack
has ceased, they indicate this change in status to their respective
DOTS servers (the mechanism by which this process takes place is
beyond the scope of this document).
(i) The DOTS servers transmit a DOTS mitigation status update to the
CPE or PE mitigators indicating that the DDoS attack has ceased.
(j) The CPE or PE DDoS mitigators transmit a DOTS mitigation service
termination request to the DOTS servers. This DOTS mitigation
service termination request may be automatically initiated by the CPE
or PE DDoS mitigators, or may be manually triggered by personnel of
the requesting organization in response to an alert from the
mitigators or a management system which monitors them (the mechanism
by which this process takes place is beyond the scope of this
document).
(k) The DOTS servers terminate DDoS mitigation service on their
respective networks (the mechanism by which this process takes place
is beyond the scope of this document).
(l) The DOTS servers transmit a DOTS mitigation status update to the
CPE or PE mitigators indicating that DDoS mitigation services have
been terminated.
(m) The CPE or PE DDoS mitigators transmit a DOTS mitigation
termination status acknowledgement to the DOTS servers.
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3.1.2. End-customer with multiple upstream transit providers offering
DDoS mitigation services
This scenario shares many characteristics with the above, but with
the key difference that the enterprise in question is multi-homed,
i.e., has two or more upstream transit providers, and that they all
provide DDoS mitigation services.
In most cases, the communications model for a multi-homed model would
be the same as in the single-homed model, merely duplicated in
parallel. However, if two or more of the upstream transit providers
have entered into a mutual DDoS mitigation agreement and have
established DOTS peering between the participants, DDoS mitigation
status messages may exchanged between the DOTS servers of the
participants in order to provide a more complete picture of the DDoS
attack scope, and allow for either automated or operator-assisted
programmatic cooperative DDoS mitigation activities on the part of
the transit providers.
The DOTS communications between the upstream transit providers will
consist of mitigation start, mitigation status, and mitigation
termination messages.
3.1.3. End-customer with multiple upstream transit providers, but only
a single upstream transit provider offering DDoS mitigation
services
This scenario is similar to the multi-homed scenario referenced
above; however, only one of the upstream transit providers in
question offers DDoS mitigation services. In this situation, the
enterprise would cease advertising the relevant network prefixes via
the transit providers which do not provide DDoS mitigation services -
or, in the case where the enterprise does not control its own
routing, request that the upstream transit providers which do not
offer DDoS mitigation services stop advertising the relevant network
prefixes on their behalf.
Once it has been determined that the DDoS attack has ceased, the
enterprise once again announces the relevant routes to the upstream
transit providers which do not offer DDoS mitigation services, or
requests that they resume announcing the relevant routes on behalf of
the enterprise.
Note that falling back to a single transit provider has the effect of
reducing available inbound transit bandwidth during a DDoS attack.
Without proper planning and sufficient provisioning of both the link
capacity and DDoS mitigation capacity of the sole transit provider
offering DDoS mitigation services, this reduction of available
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bandwidth could lead to network link congestion caused by legitimate
inbound network traffic. Therefore, careful planning and
provisioning of both upstream transit bandwidth as well as DDoS
mitigation capacity is required in scenarios of this nature.
The withdrawal and announcement of routing prefixes described in this
use-case falls outside the scope of DOTS, although they could
conceivably be triggered as a result of provider-specific
orchestration triggered by the receipt of specific DOTS messages from
the enterprise in question.
The DOTS communications model for this scenario will be identical to
that described in Section 3.1.1.
3.1.4. End-customer with an overlay DDoS mitigation managed security
service provider (MSSP)
This use case details an enterprise that has a local DDoS detection
and classification capability and may or may not have an on-premise
mitigation capability. The enterprise is contracted with an overlay
DDoS mitigation MSSP, topologically distant from the enterprise
network (i.e., not a direct upstream transit provider), which can
redirect (divert) traffic away from the enterprise, provide DDoS
mitigation services services, and then forward (re-inject) legitimate
traffic to the enterprise on an on-demand basis. In this scenario,
diversion of Internet traffic destined for the enterprise network
into the overlay DDoS mitigation MSSP network is typically
accomplished via eBGP announcements of the relevant enterprise
network CIDR blocks, or via authoritative DNS subdomain-based
mechanisms (other mechanisms are not precluded, these are merely the
most common ones in use today).
The enterprise determines thresholds at which a request for
mitigation is triggered indicating to the MSSP that inbound network
traffic should be diverted into the MSSP network and that DDoS
mitigation should be initiated. The enterprise may also elect to
manually request diversion and mitigation via the MSSP network as
desired.
The communications required to initiate, manage, and terminate active
DDoS mitigation by the MSSP is performed using DOTS. The enterprise
DDoS detection/classification system implements a DOTS client, while
the MSSP implements a DOTS server integrated with its DDoS mitigation
orchestration system. One or more out-of-band methods for initiating
a mitigation request, such as a Web portal, a smartphone app, or
voice support hotline, may also be made available by the MSSP.
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When an attack is detected, an automated or manual DOTS mitigation
request is be generated by the enterprise and sent to the MSSP. The
enterprise DOTS mitigation request is processed by the MSSP DOTS
server, which validates the origin of the request and passes it to
the MSSP DDoS mitigation orchestration system, which then initiates
active DDoS mitigation. This action will usually involve the
diversion of all network traffic destined for the targeted enterprise
into the MSSP DDoS mitigation network, where it will be subjected to
further scrutiny, with DDoS attack traffic filtered by the MSSP.
Successful mitigation of the DDoS attack will not only result
preserving the availability of services and applications resident on
the enterprise network, but will also prevent DDoS attack traffic
from ingressing the networks of the enterprise upstream transit
providers/peers.
The MSSP should signal via DOTS to the enterprise that a mitigation
request has been received and acted upon, and should also include an
update of the mitigation status. The MSSP may respond periodically
with additional updates on the mitigation status to in order to
enable the enterprise to make an informed decision on whether to
maintain or terminate the mitigation. An alternative approach would
be for the DOTS client mitigation request to include a time to live
(TTL) for the mitigation, which may also be extended by the client
should the attack still be ongoing as the TTL reaches expiration.
A variation of this use case may be that the enterprise is providing
a DDoS monitoring and analysis service to customers whose networks
may be protected by any one of a number of third-party providers.
The enterprise in question may integrate with these third-party
providers using DOTS and signal accordingly when a customer is
attacked - the MSSP may then manage the life-cycle of the attack
mitigation on behalf of the enterprise.
The DOTS communication model used in these scenarios will be
identical to those described in Section 3.1.1 or Section 3.1.2.
3.1.5. End-customer operating an application or service with an
integrated DOTS client
In this scenario, a Web server has a built-in mechanism to detect and
classify DDoS attacks, which also incorporates a DOTS client. When
an attack is detected, the self-defense mechanism is activated, and
local DDoS mitigation is initiated.
The DOTS client built into the Web server has been configured to
request DDoS mitigation services from an upstream transit provider or
overlay MSSP once specific attack traffic thresholds have been
reached, or certain network traffic conditions prevail. Once the
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specified conditions have been met, the DOTS communications dialogue
and subsequent DDoS mitigation initiation and termination actions
described above take place.
The DOTS communication model used in these scenarios will be
identical to those described in Section 3.1.1, Section 3.1.2 or
Section 3.1.4, with the exception that the DOTS client will be the
application or service in question.
3.1.6. End-customer operating a CPE network infrastructure device with
an integrated DOTS client
Similar to the above use-case featuring applications or services with
built-in DDoS attack detection/classification and DOTS client
capabilities, in this scenario, an end-customer network
infrastructure CPE device such as a router, layer-3 switch, firewall,
or load-balance incorporates both the functionality required to
detect and classify incoming DDoS attacks as well as DOTS client
functionality.
The subsequent DOTS communications dialogue and resultant DDoS
mitigation initiation and termination activities take place as
described in Section 3.1.1, Section 3.1.2 or Section 3.1.4.
3.1.7. End-customer with an out-of-band smartphone application
featuring DOTS client capabilities
This scenario would typically apply in a small office/home office
(SOHO) setting, where the end-customer does not have CPE equipment or
software capable of detecting/classifying/mitigating DDoS attack, yet
still has a requirement for on-demand DDoS mitigation services. A
smartphone application containing a DOTS client would be provided by
the upstream transit mitigation provider or overlay DDoS MSSP to the
SOHO end-customer; this application would allow a manual 'panic-
button' to request the initiation and termination of DDoS mitigation
services.
The DOTS communications dialogue and resultant DDoS mitigation
initiation/status reporting/termination actions would then take place
as in as described in in Section 3.1.1, Section 3.1.2 or
Section 3.1.4, with the end-customer DOTS client application serving
to display received status information while DDoS mitigation
activities are taking place.
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3.1.8. MSSP as an end-customer requesting overflow DDoS mitigation
assistance from other MSSPs
This is a more complex use-case involving multiple DDoS MSSPs,
whether transit operators, overlay MSSPs, or both. In this scenario,
an MSSP has entered into a pre-arranged DDoS mitigation assistance
agreement with one or more other DDoS MSSPs in order to ensure that
sufficient DDoS mitigation capacity and/or capabilities may be
activated in the event that a given DDoS attack threatens to
overwhelm the ability of a given DDoS MSSP to mitigate the attack on
its own.
BGP-based diversion (including relevant Letters of Authorization, or
LoAs), DNS-based diversion (including relevant LoAs), traffic re-
injection mechanisms such as Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)
tunnels, provisioning of DDoS orchestration systems, et. al,. must be
arranged in advance between the DDoS MSSPs which are parties to the
agreement. They should also be tested on a regular basis.
When a DDoS MSSP which is party to the agreement is nearing its
capacity or ability to mitigate a given DDoS attack traffic, the DOTS
client integrated with the MSSP DDoS mitigation orchestration system
signals partner MSSPs to initiate network traffic diversion and DDoS
mitigation activities. Ongoing attack and mitigation status messages
may be passed between the DDoS MSSPs, and between the requesting MSSP
and the ultimate end-customer of the attack.
The DOTS dialogues and resultant DDoS mitigation-related activities
in this scenario progress as described in the other use-cases
detailed above. Once the requesting DDoS MSSP is confident that the
DDoS attack has either ceased or has fallen to levels of traffic/
complexity which they can handle on their own, the requesting DDoS
MSSP DOTS client sends mitigation termination requests to the
participating overflow DDoS MSSPs.
3.2. Intra-domain Use Cases
While many of the DOTS-specific elements of inter-domain DOTS
deployment scenarios apply to intra-domain scenarios, it is expected
that many externalities such as coordination of and authorization for
routing advertisements and authoritative DNS updates may be automated
to a higher degree than is practicable in inter-domain scenarios,
given that the scope of required activities and authorizations are
confined to a single organization. In theory, provisioning and
change-control related both to DOTS itself as well as relevant
externalities may require less administrative overhead and less
implementation lead-times.
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The scope of potential DDoS mitigation actions may also be broader in
intra-organizational scenarios, as presumably an organization will
have a higher degree of autonomy with regards to both techically and
administratively feasible activities.
3.2.1. Suppression of outbound DDoS traffic originating from a consumer
broadband access network
While most DDoS defenses concentrate on inbound DDoS attacks
ingressing from direct peering links or upstream transit providers,
the DDoS attack traffic in question originates from one or more
Internet-connected networks. In some cases, compromised devices
residing on the local networks of broadband access customers are used
to directly generate this DDoS attack traffic; in others,
misconfigured devices residing on said local customer networks are
exploited by attackers to launch reflection/amplification DDoS
attacks. In either scenario, the outbound DDoS traffic emanating
from these devices can be just as disruptive as an inbound DDoS
attack, and can cause disruption for substantial proportions of the
broadband access network operator's customer base.
Some broadband access network operators provide CPE devices (DSL
modems/routers, cablemodems, FTTH routers, etc.) to their end-
customers. Others allow end-customers to provide their own CPE
devices. Many will either provide CPE devices or allow end-customers
to supply their own.
Broadband access network operators typically have mechanisms to
detect and classify both inbound and outbound DDoS attacks, utilizing
flow telemetry exported from their peering/transit and customer
aggregation routers. In the event of an outbound DDoS attack, they
may make use of internally-developed systems which leverage their
subscriber-management systems to de-provision end-customers who are
sourcing outbound DDoS traffic; in some cases, they may have
implemented quarantine systems to block all outbound traffic sourced
from the offending end-customers. In either case, the perceived
disruption of the end-customer's Internet access often prompts a
help-desk call, which erodes the margins of the broadband access
provider and can cause end-customer dissatisfaction.
Increasingly, CPE devices themselves are targeted by attackers who
exploit security flaws in these devices in order to compromise them
and subsume them into botnets, and then leverage them to launch
outbound DDoS attacks. In all of the described scenarios, the end-
customers are unaware that their computers and/or CPE devices have
been compromised and are being used to launch outbound DDoS attacks -
however, they may notice a degradation of their Internet connectivity
as a result of outbound bandwidth consumption or other disruption.
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By deploying DOTS-enabled telemetry systems and CPE devices (and
possibly requiring DOTS functionality in customer-provided CPE
devices), broadband access providers can utilize a standards-based
mechanism to suppress outbound DDoS attack traffic while optionally
allowing legitimate end-customer traffic to proceed unmolested.
In order to achieve this capability, the telemetry analysis system
utilized by the broadband access provider must have DOTS client
functionality, and the end-customer CPE devices must have DOTS server
functionality. When the telemetry analysis system detects and
classifies an outbound DDoS attack sourced from one or more end-
customer networks/devices, the DOTS client of the telemetry analysis
system sends a DOTS request to the DOTS server implemented on the CPE
devices, requesting local mitigation assistance in suppressing either
the identified outbound DDoS traffic, or all outbound traffic sourced
from the end-customer networks/devices. The DOTS server residing
within the CPE device(s) would then perform predefined actions such
as implementing on-board access-control lists (ACLs) to suppress the
outbound traffic in question and prevent it from leaving the local
end-customer network(s).
Broadband access network operators may choose to implement a
quarantine of all or selected network traffic originating from end-
customer networks/devices which are sourcing outbound DDoS traffic,
redirecting traffic from interactive applications such as Web
browsers to an internal portal which informs the end-customer of the
quarantine action, and providing instructions for self-remediation
and/or helpdesk contact information.
Quarantine systems for broadband access networks are typically
custom-developed and -maintained, and are generally deployed only by
a relatively small number of broadband access providers with
considerable internal software development and support capabilities.
By requiring the manufacturers of operator-supplied CPE devices to
implement DOTS server functionality, and requiring customer-provided
CPE devices to feature DOTS server functionality, broadband access
network operators who previously could not afford the development
expense of creating custom quarantine systems to integrate DOTS-
enabled network telemetry systems to act as DOTS clients and perform
effective quarantine of end-customer networks and devices until such
time as they have been remediated.
The DOTS communications model in this scenario resembles that
described in Section 3.1.1, except that all the DOTS communications
take place within the same span of administrative control and the
same network.
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3.2.2. Home Network DDoS Detection Collaboration for ISP network
management
Home networks run with (limited) bandwidth as well as limited routing
resources, while they are expected to provide services reachable from
the outside [RFC7368]. This makes such networks some easy targets to
DDoS attacks via their WAN interface. As these DDoS attacks are easy
to perform, they may remain undetected by the upstream ISP. When the
CPE is congested, the customer is likely to call the ISP hotline. In
order to improve the quality of experience of the connectivity as
well as to automate the request for DDoS mitigation, ISPs are likely
to consider a standard mean for CPEs to automatically inform a
dedicated service mitigation platform when they are under a suspected
DDoS.
Note also that this section only considers DDoS attacks CPE or
services in the home network are encountering. This differs from
DDoS attacks the CPE or any device within the home network may take
part of - such as botnets. In the later attacks, the home network
generates traffic under the control of a botmaster. Such attacks may
only be detected once the attacks have been characterized. It would
be tempting to consider a feature in the DOTS protocol to allow a
DOTS server to inform a CPE that some suspect traffic is being sent
by the CPE so that appropriate actions are undertaken by the CPE/
user. Nevertheless, this feature would require some interaction with
the CPE administrator. Such scenario is outside the scope of this
document.
In this use case, ISPs are willing to prevent their customer
undergoing DDoS attacks in order to enhance the quality of experience
of their customers, to avoid unnecessary costly call on hot lines as
well as to optimize the bandwidth of their network. A key challenge
for the ISP is to detect DDoS attacks. In fact, DDoS detection is
not only fine grained but is also expected to be different for each
home network or small businesses networks (SOHO), and the ISP is
unlikely to have sufficient resource to inspect the traffic of all
its customers.
In order to address these challenges, ISPs are delegating the DDoS
detection to CPE of home network or SOHO. Outsourcing the detection
on the CPE provides the following advantages to the ISP: 1) Avoid the
ISP to dedicate a huge amount of resource for deep packet inspection
over a large amount of traffic with a specific security policies
associated to each home network. It is expected that such traffic
only constitutes a small fraction of the total traffic the ISP is
responsible for. 2) DDoS detection is deployed in a scalable way. 3)
Provide more deterministic DDoS attack detection. For example, what
could be suspected to be an UDP flood by the ISP may be consented by
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the terminating point hosted in the home network or SOHO. In fact,
without specific home network security policies, the ISP is likely to
detect DDoS attack over regular traffic or to miss DDoS attacks
targeting a specific home network or CPE. In the first case, this
would result in the ISP spending unnecessary resources and in the
second case this would directly impact the quality of experience of
the customer.
Note that in this scenario slightly differs from the "Enterprise with
an upstream transit provider DDoS mitigation Service" scenario
described in Section 3.1.1. In this scenario, the detection DDoS is
motivated by the ISP in order to operate appropriately its network.
For that purpose, it requires some collaboration with the home
network. In Section 3.1.1, the target network requests a mitigation
service from the upstream transit provider in order to operate its
services.
Even though the motivations differ, there are still significant
advantages for the home network to collaborate. On the home network
or SOHO perspective such collaboration provides the following
advantages: 1) If it removes the flows contributing to a DDoS
attacks, then it enhances the quality of experience of the users of
the targeted services or the entire home network. 2) If mitigation is
being handled by the ISP rather then the home network, then it
reduces the management of DDoS attacks by the network administrator
which involves detection as well as mitigation as well as the
provisioning of extra resources. 3) If the DDoS detection is based on
information specific to the home network, such as for example the
description of the services, the hosts capacities or the network
topology, then performing the DDoS detection by the home network
instead of the ISP avoids the home network to leak private
information to the ISP. In that sense, it better preserves the home
network or SOHO privacy while enabling a better detection. However,
the request for mitigation may still leak some informations. ISPs
must not retrieve sensitive data without the consent of the user.
This is usually captured in administrative contracts that are out of
scope of this document.
When the CPE suspects an attack, it notifies automatically or the
ISP. The contact address of the DDoS Mitigation service of the ISP
may be hard coded or may be configured manually or automatically
(e.g., eventually the DHCP server may provide the DDoS mitigation
service via specific DHCP options).
The communication to trigger a DDoS mitigation between the home
network and the ISP is performed using DOTS. The home network CPE
implements a DOTS client while the ISP implements a DOTS server.
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The DOTS client on the CPE monitors the status of CPE's resource and
WAN link bandwidth usage. If something unusual happens based on
preconfigured throughput, traffic patter, explicit action from the
user, or some heuristics methods, the DOTS client sends a DOTS
mitigation request to the ISP DOTS server. Typically, a default
configuration with no additional information associated to the DOTS
mitigation request is expected. The ISP derives traffic to mitigate
from the CPE IP address.
In some cases, the DOTS mitigation request contains options such as
some IP addresses or prefixes that belongs to a whitelist or a
blacklist. In this case, the white and black lists are not
associated to some analysis performed by the CPE - as the CPE is
clearly not expected to analyze such attacks. Instead these are part
of some configuration parameters. For example, in the case of small
business, one may indicate specific legitimate IP addresses such as
those used for VPNs, or third party services the company is likely to
set a session. Similarly, the CPE may provide the IP addresses
targeting the assets to be protected inside the network. Note that
the IP address is the IP address used to reach the asset from the
internet, and as such is expected to be globally routable. Such
options may include the IP address as well as a service description.
Similarly to the previous blacklist and whitelist, such information
are likely not derived from a traffic analysis performed by the CPE,
but instead are more related to configuration parameters.
Upon receiving the DOTS mitigation request, the DOTS server
acknowledges its reception and confirms DDoS mitigation starts or
not. Such feed back is mostly to avoid retransmission of the
request.
Note that the ISP is connected to multiple CPEs and as such the CPE
can potentially perform DDoS attack to the DOTS server. ISP may use
gateways to absorbs the traffic. These gateways, will typically
aggregate a smaller number of CPEs and retransmit to the destination
DOTS Server a selected information. Note that such gateways may
somehow act as a DOTS relay, which is implemented with a DOTS Server
and a DOTS Client. Note also that the case of a large DDoS attack
targeting simultaneously multiple CPEs is expected to be detected and
mitigated by the upstream architecture, eventually without DOTS
alerts sent by each single CPE.
ISP may activate mitigation for the traffic associated to the CPE
sending the alert or instead to the traffic associated to all CPE.
Such decisions are not part of DOTS, but instead depend on the
policies of the ISP.
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It is unlikely the CPE will follow the status of the mitigation. The
ISP is only expected to inform the CPE the mitigation has been
stopped.
Upon receipt of such notification the CPE may, for example, re-
activate the monitoring jobs and thus is likely to provide some
further DOTS alert.
3.2.3. DDoS Orchestration
In this use case, one or multiple DDoS telemetry systems or
monitoring devices such as a flow telemetry collector monitor a
network -- typically an ISP network. Upon detection of a DDoS
attack, these telemetry systems alert an orchestrator in charge of
coordinating the various DDoS mitigation systems within the domain.
The telemetry systems may be configured to provide necessary and
useful pieces of information, such as a preliminary analysis of the
observation to the orchestrator.
The orchestrator analyses the various information it receives from
specialized equipement, and elaborates one or multiple DDoS
mitigation strategies. In some case, a manual confirmation may also
be required to choose a proposed strategy or to initiate a DDoS
mitigation. The DDoS mitigation may consist of multiple steps such
as configuring the network, various hardware, or updating already
instantiated DDoS mitigation functions. In some cases, some specific
virtual DDoS mitigation functions must be instantiated and properly
ordered. Eventually, the coordination of the mitigation may involve
external DDoS resources such as a transit provider (Section 3.1.1) or
an MSSP (Section 3.1.4).
The communications used to trigger a DDoS mitigation between the
telemetry and monitoring systems and the orchestrator is performed
using DOTS. The telemetry systems implements a DOTS client while the
orchestrator implements a DOTS server.
The communication between a network administrator and the
orchestrator is also performed using DOTS. The network administrator
via its web interfaces implements a DOTS client, while the
Orchestrator implements a DOTS server.
The communication between the Orchestrator and the DDoS mitigation
systems is performed using DOTS. The Orchestrator implements a DOTS
client while the DDoS mitigation systems implement a DOTS server.
The configuration aspects of each DDoS mitigation system, as well as
the instantiations of DDoS mitigation functions or network
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configuration is not part of DOTS. Similarly, the discovery of
available DDoS mitigation functions is not part of DOTS.
+----------+
| network |C
| adminis |<-+
| trator | |
+----------+ |
| (internal)
+----------+ | S+--------------+ +-----------+
|telemetry/| +->| |C S| DDoS |+
|monitoring|<--->| Orchestrator |<--->| mitigation||
|systems |C S| |<-+ | systems ||
+----------+ +--------------+C | +-----------+|
| +----------+
|
| (external)
| +-----------+
| S| DDoS |
+->| mitigation|
| systems |
+-----------+
* C is for DOTS client functionality
* S is for DOTS server functionality
Figure 1: DDoS Orchestration
The telemetry systems monitor various traffic network and perform
their measurement tasks. They are configured so that when an event
or some measurements reach a predefined level to report a DOTS
mitigation request to the Orchestrator. The DOTS mitigation request
may be associated with some element such as specific reporting.
Upon receipt of the DOTS mitigation request from the telemetry
system, the Orchestrator responds with an acknowledgement, to avoid
retransmission of the request for mitigation. The status of the DDoS
mitigation indicates the Orchestrator is in an analysing phase. The
Orchestrator begins collecting various information from various
telemetry systems in order to correlate the measurements and provide
an analysis of the event. Eventually, the Orchestrator may ask
additional information to the telemetry system, however, the
collection of these information is performed outside DOTS.
The orchestrator may be configured to start a DDoS mitigation upon
approval from a network administrator. The analysis from the
orchestrator is reported to the network administrator via a web
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interface. If the network administrator decides to start the
mitigation, she orders through her web interface a DOTS client to
send a request for DDoS mitigation. This request is expected to be
associated with a context that identifies the DDoS mitigation
selected.
Upon receiving the DOTS request for DDoS mitigation from the network
administrator, the orchestrator orchestrates the DDoS mitigation
according to the specified strategy. Its status indicates the DDoS
mitigation is starting while not effective.
Orchestration of the DDoS mitigation systems works similarly as
described in Section 3.1.1 and Section 3.1.4. The Orchestrator
indicates with its status whether the DDoS Mitigation is effective.
When the DDoS mitigation is finished on the DDoS mitigation systems,
the orchestrator indicates to the Telemetry systems as well as to the
network administrator the DDoS mitigation is finished.
4. Security Considerations
DOTS is at risk from three primary attacks: DOTS agent impersonation,
traffic injection, and signaling blocking. Associated security
requirements and additional ones are defined in
[I-D.ietf-dots-requirements].
Impersonation and traffic injection mitigation can be managed through
current secure communications best practices. DOTS is not subject to
anything new in this area. One consideration could be to minimize
the security technologies in use at any one time. The more needed,
the greater the risk of failures coming from assumptions on one
technology providing protection that it does not in the presence of
another technology.
5. IANA Considerations
No IANA considerations exist for this document at this time.
6. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank among others Tirumaleswar Reddy, ,
Andrew Mortensen, Mohamed Boucadaire, and the DOTS WG chairs Roman D.
Danyliw and Tobias Gondrom for their valuable feedback.
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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>.
7.2. Informative References
[I-D.ietf-dots-requirements]
Mortensen, A., Moskowitz, R., and T. Reddy, "Distributed
Denial of Service (DDoS) Open Threat Signaling
Requirements", draft-ietf-dots-requirements-06 (work in
progress), July 2017.
[I2NSF] "Interface to Network Security Functions (i2nsf)", n.d.,
<https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/i2nsf/about/>.
[RFC6335] Cotton, M., Eggert, L., Touch, J., Westerlund, M., and S.
Cheshire, "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
Procedures for the Management of the Service Name and
Transport Protocol Port Number Registry", BCP 165,
RFC 6335, DOI 10.17487/RFC6335, August 2011,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6335>.
[RFC7368] Chown, T., Ed., Arkko, J., Brandt, A., Troan, O., and J.
Weil, "IPv6 Home Networking Architecture Principles",
RFC 7368, DOI 10.17487/RFC7368, October 2014,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7368>.
Authors' Addresses
Roland Dobbins
Arbor Networks
Singapore
EMail: rdobbins@arbor.net
Daniel Migault
Ericsson
8400 boulevard Decarie
Montreal, QC H4P 2N2
Canada
EMail: daniel.migault@ericsson.com
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Stefan Fouant
USA
EMail: stefan.fouant@copperriverit.com
Robert Moskowitz
HTT Consulting
Oak Park, MI 48237
USA
EMail: rgm@labs.htt-consult.com
Nik Teague
Verisign
12061 Bluemont Way
Reston, VA 20190
EMail: nteague@verisign.com
Liang Xia
Huawei
No. 101, Software Avenue, Yuhuatai District
Nanjing
China
EMail: Frank.xialiang@huawei.com
Kaname Nishizuka
NTT Communications
GranPark 16F 3-4-1 Shibaura, Minato-ku
Tokyo 108-8118
Japan
EMail: kaname@nttv6.jp
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