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rfc:rfc6813

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) J. Salowey Request for Comments: 6813 Cisco Systems Category: Informational S. Hanna ISSN: 2070-1721 Juniper Networks

                                                         December 2012
    The Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA) Asokan Attack Analysis

Abstract

 The Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA) protocols are subject to a
 subtle forwarding attack that has become known as the NEA Asokan
 Attack.  This document describes the attack and countermeasures that
 may be mounted.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6813.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2012 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
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 1] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................2
 2. NEA Asokan Attack Explained .....................................2
 3. Lying Endpoints .................................................4
 4. Countermeasures against the NEA Asokan Attack ...................4
    4.1. Identity Binding ...........................................4
    4.2. Cryptographic Binding ......................................5
         4.2.1. Binding Options .....................................5
 5. Conclusions .....................................................6
 6. Security Considerations .........................................6
 7. Informative References ..........................................7
 8. Acknowledgments .................................................7

1. Introduction

 The Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA) [2] protocols are subject to a
 subtle forwarding attack that has become known as the NEA Asokan
 Attack.  This document describes the attack and countermeasures that
 may be mounted.  The Posture Transport (PT) protocols developed by
 the NEA working group, PT-TLS [5] and PT-EAP [6], include mechanisms
 that can provide cryptographic-binding and identity-binding
 countermeasures.

2. NEA Asokan Attack Explained

 The NEA Asokan Attack is a variation on an attack described in a 2002
 paper written by Asokan, Niemi, and Nyberg [1].  Figure 1 depicts one
 version of the original Asokan attack.  This attack involves tricking
 an authorized user into authenticating to a decoy Authentication,
 Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) server, which forwards the
 authentication protocol from one tunnel to another, tricking the real
 AAA server into believing these messages originated from the
 attacker-controlled machine.  As a result, the real AAA server grants
 access to the attacker-controlled machine.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 2] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

                          +-------------+ ========== +----------+
                          |   Attacker  |-AuthProto--|AAA Server|
                          +-------------+ ========== +----------+
                                 |
                             AuthProto
                                 |
 +--------------+ ========== +----------------+
 |AuthorizedUser|-AuthProto--|Decoy AAA Server|
 +--------------+ ========== +----------------+
            Figure 1: One Example of Original Asokan Attack
 As described in the NEA Overview [2], the NEA Reference Model is
 composed of several nested protocols.  The Posture Attribute (PA)
 protocol is nested in the Posture Broker (PB) protocol, which is
 nested in the PT protocol.  When used together successfully, these
 protocols allow an NEA Server to assess the security posture of an
 endpoint.  The NEA Server may use this information to decide whether
 network access should be granted, or it may use this information for
 other purposes.
 Figure 2 illustrates an NEA Asokan Attack.  The attacker wants to
 trick GoodServer into believing that DirtyEndpoint has good security
 posture.  This might allow, for example, the attacker to bring an
 infected machine onto a network and infect others.  To accomplish
 this goal, the attacker forwards PA messages from CleanEndpoint
 through BadServer to DirtyEndpoint, which sends them on to
 GoodServer.  GoodServer is tricked into thinking that the PA messages
 came from DirtyEndpoint and therefore considers DirtyEndpoint to be
 clean.
                          +-------------+ ========== +----------+
                          |DirtyEndpoint|-----PA-----|GoodServer|
                          +-------------+ ========== +----------+
                                 |
                                PA
                                 |
 +-------------+ ========== +---------+
 |CleanEndpoint|-----PA-----|BadServer|
 +-------------+ ========== +---------+
                      Figure 2: NEA Asokan Attack
 Countermeasures against an NEA Asokan Attack are described in Section
 4.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 3] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

3. Lying Endpoints

 Some may argue that there are other attacks against NEA systems that
 are simpler than the Asokan attack, such as lying endpoint attacks.
 That is true.  It's easy for an endpoint to simply lie about its
 posture.  But, there are defenses against lying endpoint attacks,
 such as using an External Measurement Agent (EMA).
 An EMA is hardware, software, or firmware that is especially secure,
 hard to compromise, and designed to accurately report on endpoint
 configuration.  The EMA observes and reports on critical aspects of
 endpoint posture, such as which security-relevant firmware and
 software have been loaded.
 When an EMA is used for NEA, the PA messages that reliably and
 securely establish endpoint posture are exchanged between the EMA
 itself and a Posture Validator on the NEA Server.  The Posture
 Collector on the endpoint and any other intermediaries between the
 EMA and the Posture Validator on the NEA Server are not trusted.
 They just pass messages along as untrusted intermediaries.
 To ensure that the EMA's messages are accurately conveyed to the
 Posture Validator, even if the Posture Collector or other
 intermediaries have been compromised, these PA messages must provide
 integrity protection, replay protection, and source authentication
 between the EMA and the Posture Validator.  Confidentiality
 protection is not needed, at least with respect to the software on
 the endpoint, but integrity protection should include protection
 against message deletion and session truncation.  Organizations that
 have developed EMAs have typically developed remote attestation
 protocols that provide these properties (e.g., the Trusted Computing
 Group's (TCG's) Platform Trust Service (PTS) Protocol Binding to IF-M
 [7]).  While the development of lying endpoint detection technologies
 is out of scope for NEA, these technologies must be supported by the
 NEA protocols.  Therefore, the NEA protocols must support
 countermeasures against the NEA Asokan Attack.

4. Countermeasures against the NEA Asokan Attack

4.1. Identity Binding

 One way to mitigate the Asokan attack is to bind the identities used
 in tunnel establishment into a cryptographic exchange at the PA
 layer.  While this can go a long way to preventing the attack, it
 does not bind the exchange to a specific TLS exchange, which is
 desirable.  In addition, there is no standard way to extract an
 identity from a TLS session, which could make implementation
 difficult.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 4] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

4.2. Cryptographic Binding

 Another way to thwart the NEA Asokan Attack is for the PA exchange to
 be cryptographically bound to the PT exchange and to any keying
 material or privileges granted as a result of these two exchanges.
 This allows the NEA Server to ensure that the PA messages pertain to
 the same endpoint as the party terminating the PT exchange and that
 no other party gains any access or advantage from this exchange.

4.2.1. Binding Options

 This section discusses binding protocol solution options and provides
 analysis.  Since PT-TLS and PT-EAP involve TLS, this document focuses
 on TLS-based solutions that can work with either transport.

4.2.1.1. Information from the TLS Tunnel

 The TLS handshake establishes a cryptographic state between the TLS
 client and TLS server.  There are several mechanisms that can be used
 to export information derived from this state.  The client and server
 independently include this information in calculations to bind the
 instance of the tunnel into the PA protocol.
 Keying Material Export - RFC 5705 [8] defines Keying Material
 Exporters for TLS that allow additional secret key material to be
 extracted from the TLS master secret.
 tls-unique Channel Binding Data - RFC 5929 [9] defines several
 quantities that can be extracted from the TLS session to bind the TLS
 session to other protocols.  The tls-unique binding consists of data
 extracted from the TLS handshake finished message.

4.2.1.2. TLS Cipher Suites

 In order to eliminate the possibility of a man-in-the-middle attack
 and thwart the Asokan attack when using the keying material export
 binding export mechanism, it is important that neither TLS endpoint
 be in sole control of the TLS pre-master secret.  Cipher suites based
 on key transport, such as RSA cipher suites, do not meet this
 requirement; instead, Diffie-Hellman Cipher Suites, such as RSA-DHE,
 are required when this mechanism is employed.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 5] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

4.2.1.3. Using Additional Key Material from TLS

 In some cases, key material is extracted from the TLS tunnel and used
 to derive ciphering keys used in another protocol.  For example,
 EAP-TLS [10] uses key material extracted from TLS in lower-layer
 ciphering.  In this case, the extracted keys must not be under the
 control of a single party, so the considerations in the previous
 section are important.

4.2.1.4. EMA Assumptions

 The EMA needs to obtain the binding data from the TLS exchange and
 prove knowledge of the binding data in an exchange that has integrity
 protection, source authentication, and replay protection.

5. Conclusions

 The recommendations for addressing the NEA Asokan Attack are as
 follows:
 1.  Protocols should make use of cryptographic binding; in addition,
     binding identities of the tunnel endpoints in the EMA may be
     useful.
 2.  In particular, L2 and L3 TLS-based PT transports (e.g., PT-TLS
     and PT-EAP) should use the same cryptographic binding mechanism.
 3.  The preferred approach is to use the tls-unique channel binding
     data from [9].  The tls-unique value will be made available to
     the EMA that will use it.  This approach can utilize any TLS
     cipher suite based on a strong cipher algorithm.

6. Security Considerations

 This document is primarily concerned with analyzing and proposing
 countermeasures for the NEA Asokan Attack.  That does not mean that
 it covers all the possible attacks against the NEA protocols or
 against the NEA Reference Model.  For a broader security analysis,
 see the Security Considerations section of the NEA Overview [2],
 PA-TNC [3], PB-TNC [4], PT-TLS [5], and PT-EAP [6].

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 6] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

7. Informative References

 [1]  Asokan, N., Niemi, V., and K. Nyberg, "Man-in-the-Middle Attacks
      in Tunneled Authentication Protocols", Nokia Research Center,
      Finland, Nov. 11, 2002, http://eprint.iacr.org/2002/163.pdf.
 [2]  Sangster, P., Khosravi, H., Mani, M., Narayan, K., and J. Tardo,
      "Network Endpoint Assessment (NEA): Overview and Requirements",
      RFC 5209, June 2008.
 [3]  Sangster, P. and K. Narayan, "PA-TNC: A Posture Attribute (PA)
      Protocol Compatible with Trusted Network Connect (TNC)", RFC
      5792, March 2010.
 [4]  Sahita, R., Hanna, S., Hurst, R., and K. Narayan, "PB-TNC: A
      Posture Broker (PB) Protocol Compatible with Trusted Network
      Connect (TNC)", RFC 5793, March 2010.
 [5]  Sangster, P., N. Cam-Winget, and J. Salowey, "PT-TLS: A TCP-
      based Posture Transport (PT) Protocol", Work in Progress,
      October 2012.
 [6]  Cam-Winget, N. and P. Sangster, "PT-EAP: Posture Transport (PT)
      Protocol For EAP Tunnel Methods", Work in Progress, July 2012.
 [7]  Trusted Computing Group, "TCG Attestation PTS Protocol: Binding
      to TNC IF-M", Version 1.0, Revision 27, August 2011.
 [8]  Rescorla, E., "Keying Material Exporters for Transport Layer
      Security (TLS)", RFC 5705, March 2010.
 [9]  Altman, J., Williams, N., and L. Zhu, "Channel Bindings for
      TLS", RFC 5929, July 2010.
 [10] Simon, D., Aboba, B., and R. Hurst, "The EAP-TLS Authentication
      Protocol", RFC 5216, March 2008.

8. Acknowledgments

 The members of the NEA Asokan Design Team were critical to the
 development of this document: Nancy Cam-Winget, Steve Hanna, Joe
 Salowey, and Paul Sangster.
 The authors would also like to recognize N. Asokan, Valtteri Niemi,
 and Kaisa Nyberg who published the original paper on this type of
 attack and Pasi Eronen who extended this attack to NEA protocols.

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 7] RFC 6813 NEA Asokan Attack Analysis December 2012

Authors' Addresses

 Joseph Salowey
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 2901 3rd. Ave
 Seattle, WA 98121
 USA
 EMail: jsalowey@cisco.com
 Steve Hanna
 Juniper Networks, Inc.
 79 Parsons Street
 Brighton, MA 02135
 USA
 EMail: shanna@juniper.net

Salowey & Hanna Informational [Page 8]

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