GENWiki

Premier IT Outsourcing and Support Services within the UK

User Tools

Site Tools


rfc:rfc7908

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) K. Sriram Request for Comments: 7908 D. Montgomery Category: Informational US NIST ISSN: 2070-1721 D. McPherson

                                                          E. Osterweil
                                                        Verisign, Inc.
                                                            B. Dickson
                                                             June 2016
      Problem Definition and Classification of BGP Route Leaks

Abstract

 A systemic vulnerability of the Border Gateway Protocol routing
 system, known as "route leaks", has received significant attention in
 recent years.  Frequent incidents that result in significant
 disruptions to Internet routing are labeled route leaks, but to date
 a common definition of the term has been lacking.  This document
 provides a working definition of route leaks while keeping in mind
 the real occurrences that have received significant attention.
 Further, this document attempts to enumerate (though not
 exhaustively) different types of route leaks based on observed events
 on the Internet.  The aim is to provide a taxonomy that covers
 several forms of route leaks that have been observed and are of
 concern to the Internet user community as well as the network
 operator community.

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 7841.
 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/rfc7908.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 1] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2016 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.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
 2.  Working Definition of Route Leaks . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
 3.  Classification of Route Leaks Based on Documented Events  . .   4
   3.1.  Type 1: Hairpin Turn with Full Prefix . . . . . . . . . .   4
   3.2.  Type 2: Lateral ISP-ISP-ISP Leak  . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   3.3.  Type 3: Leak of Transit-Provider Prefixes to Peer . . . .   5
   3.4.  Type 4: Leak of Peer Prefixes to Transit Provider . . . .   5
   3.5.  Type 5: Prefix Re-origination with Data Path to
         Legitimate Origin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   3.6.  Type 6: Accidental Leak of Internal Prefixes and More-
         Specific Prefixes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
 4.  Additional Comments about the Classification  . . . . . . . .   7
 5.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
 6.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
 Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
 Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 2] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

1. Introduction

 Frequent incidents [Huston2012] [Cowie2013] [Toonk2015-A]
 [Toonk2015-B] [Cowie2010] [Madory] [Zmijewski] [Paseka] [LRL] [Khare]
 that result in significant disruptions to Internet routing are
 commonly called "route leaks".  Examination of the details of some of
 these incidents reveals that they vary in their form and technical
 details.  In order to pursue solutions to "the route-leak problem" it
 is important to first provide a clear, technical definition of the
 problem and enumerate its most common forms.  Section 2 provides a
 working definition of route leaks, keeping in view many recent
 incidents that have received significant attention.  Section 3
 attempts to enumerate (though not exhaustively) different types of
 route leaks based on observed events on the Internet.  Further,
 Section 3 provides a taxonomy that covers several forms of route
 leaks that have been observed and are of concern to the Internet user
 community as well as the network operator community.  This document
 builds on and extends earlier work in the IETF [ROUTE-LEAK-DEF]
 [ROUTE-LEAK-REQ].

2. Working Definition of Route Leaks

 A proposed working definition of "route leak" is as follows:
 A route leak is the propagation of routing announcement(s) beyond
 their intended scope.  That is, an announcement from an Autonomous
 System (AS) of a learned BGP route to another AS is in violation of
 the intended policies of the receiver, the sender, and/or one of the
 ASes along the preceding AS path.  The intended scope is usually
 defined by a set of local redistribution/filtering policies
 distributed among the ASes involved.  Often, these intended policies
 are defined in terms of the pair-wise peering business relationship
 between ASes (e.g., customer, transit provider, peer).  For
 literature related to AS relationships and routing policies, see
 [Gao], [Luckie], and [Gill].  For measurements of valley-free
 violations in Internet routing, see [Anwar], [Giotsas], and
 [Wijchers].
 The result of a route leak can be redirection of traffic through an
 unintended path that may enable eavesdropping or traffic analysis and
 may or may not result in an overload or black hole.  Route leaks can
 be accidental or malicious but most often arise from accidental
 misconfigurations.
 The above definition is not intended to be all encompassing.  Our aim
 here is to have a working definition that fits enough observed
 incidents so that the IETF community has a basis for developing
 solutions for route-leak detection and mitigation.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 3] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

3. Classification of Route Leaks Based on Documented Events

 As illustrated in Figure 1, a common form of route leak occurs when a
 multihomed customer AS (such as AS3 in Figure 1) learns a prefix
 update from one transit provider (ISP1) and leaks the update to
 another transit provider (ISP2) in violation of intended routing
 policies, and further, the second transit provider does not detect
 the leak and propagates the leaked update to its customers, peers,
 and transit ISPs.
                                    /\              /\
                                     \ route leak(P)/
                                      \ propagated /
                                       \          /
            +------------+    peer    +------------+
      ______| ISP1 (AS1) |----------->|  ISP2 (AS2)|---------->
     /       ------------+  prefix(P) +------------+ route leak(P)
    | prefix |          \   update      /\        \  propagated
     \  (P)  /           \              /          \
      -------   prefix(P) \            /            \
                   update  \          /              \
                            \        /route leak(P)  \/
                            \/      /
                         +---------------+
                         | customer(AS3) |
                         +---------------+
                Figure 1: Basic Notion of a Route Leak
 This document proposes the following taxonomy to cover several types
 of observed route leaks while acknowledging that the list is not
 meant to be exhaustive.  In what follows, the AS that announces a
 route that is in violation of the intended policies is referred to as
 the "offending AS".

3.1. Type 1: Hairpin Turn with Full Prefix

 Description: A multihomed AS learns a route from one upstream ISP and
 simply propagates it to another upstream ISP (the turn essentially
 resembling a hairpin).  Neither the prefix nor the AS path in the
 update is altered.  This is similar to a straightforward path-
 poisoning attack [Kapela-Pilosov], but with full prefix.  It should
 be noted that leaks of this type are often accidental (i.e., not
 malicious).  The update basically makes a hairpin turn at the
 offending AS's multihomed AS.  The leak often succeeds (i.e., the
 leaked update is accepted and propagated) because the second ISP
 prefers customer announcement over peer announcement of the same
 prefix.  Data packets would reach the legitimate destination, albeit

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 4] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 via the offending AS, unless they are dropped at the offending AS due
 to its inability to handle resulting large volumes of traffic.
 o  Example incidents: Examples of Type 1 route-leak incidents are (1)
    the Dodo-Telstra incident in March 2012 [Huston2012], (2) the
    VolumeDrive-Atrato incident in September 2014 [Madory], and (3)
    the massive Telekom Malaysia route leak of about 179,000 prefixes,
    which in turn Level3 accepted and propagated [Toonk2015-B].

3.2. Type 2: Lateral ISP-ISP-ISP Leak

 Description: The term "lateral" here is synonymous with "non-transit"
 or "peer-to-peer".  This type of route leak typically occurs when,
 for example, three sequential ISP peers (e.g., ISP-A, ISP-B, and
 ISP-C) are involved, and ISP-B receives a route from ISP-A and in
 turn leaks it to ISP-C.  The typical routing policy between laterally
 (i.e., non-transit) peering ISPs is that they should only propagate
 to each other their respective customer prefixes.
 o  Example incidents: In [Mauch-nanog] and [Mauch], route leaks of
    this type are reported by monitoring updates in the global BGP
    system and finding three or more very large ISPs' Autonomous
    System Numbers (ASNs) in a sequence in a BGP update's AS path.
    [Mauch] observes that its detection algorithm detects for these
    anomalies and potentially route leaks because very large ISPs do
    not, in general, buy transit services from each other.  However,
    it also notes that there are exceptions when one very large ISP
    does indeed buy transit from another very large ISP, and
    accordingly, exceptions are made in its detection algorithm for
    known cases.

3.3. Type 3: Leak of Transit-Provider Prefixes to Peer

 Description: This type of route leak occurs when an offending AS
 leaks routes learned from its transit provider to a lateral (i.e.,
 non-transit) peer.
 o  Example incidents: The incidents reported in [Mauch] include
    Type 3 leaks.

3.4. Type 4: Leak of Peer Prefixes to Transit Provider

 Description: This type of route leak occurs when an offending AS
 leaks routes learned from a lateral (i.e., non-transit) peer to its
 (the AS's) own transit provider.  These leaked routes typically
 originate from the customer cone of the lateral peer.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 5] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 o  Example incidents: Examples of Type 4 route-leak incidents are (1)
    the Axcelx-Hibernia route leak of Amazon Web Services (AWS)
    prefixes causing disruption of AWS and a variety of services that
    run on AWS [Kephart], (2) the Hathway-Airtel route leak of 336
    Google prefixes causing widespread interruption of Google services
    in Europe and Asia [Toonk2015-A], (3) the Moratel-PCCW route leak
    of Google prefixes causing Google's services to go offline
    [Paseka], and (4) some of the example incidents cited for Type 1
    route leaks above are also inclusive of Type 4 route leaks.  For
    instance, in the Dodo-Telstra incident [Huston2012], the leaked
    routes from Dodo to Telstra included routes that Dodo learned from
    its transit providers as well as lateral peers.

3.5. Type 5: Prefix Re-origination with Data Path to Legitimate Origin

 Description: A multihomed AS learns a route from one upstream ISP and
 announces the prefix to another upstream ISP as if it is being
 originated by it (i.e., strips the received AS path and re-originates
 the prefix).  This can be called re-origination or mis-origination.
 However, somehow a reverse path to the legitimate origination AS may
 be present and data packets reach the legitimate destination albeit
 via the offending AS.  (Note: The presence of a reverse path here is
 not attributable to the use of a path-poisoning trick by the
 offending AS.)  But sometimes the reverse path may not be present,
 and data packets destined for the leaked prefix may be simply
 discarded at the offending AS.
 o  Example incidents: Examples of Type 5 route leak include (1) the
    China Telecom incident in April 2010 [Hiran] [Cowie2010]
    [Labovitz], (2) the Belarusian GlobalOneBel route-leak incidents
    in February-March 2013 and May 2013 [Cowie2013], (3) the Icelandic
    Opin Kerfi-Simmin route-leak incidents in July-August 2013
    [Cowie2013], and (4) the Indosat route-leak incident in April 2014
    [Zmijewski].  The reverse paths (i.e., data paths from the
    offending AS to the legitimate destinations) were present in
    incidents #1, #2, and #3 cited above, but not in incident #4.  In
    incident #4, the misrouted data packets were dropped at Indosat's
    AS.

3.6. Type 6: Accidental Leak of Internal Prefixes and More-Specific

    Prefixes
 Description: An offending AS simply leaks its internal prefixes to
 one or more of its transit-provider ASes and/or ISP peers.  The
 leaked internal prefixes are often more-specific prefixes subsumed by
 an already announced, less-specific prefix.  The more-specific
 prefixes were not intended to be routed in External BGP (eBGP).
 Further, the AS receiving those leaks fails to filter them.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 6] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 Typically, these leaked announcements are due to some transient
 failures within the AS; they are short-lived and typically withdrawn
 quickly following the announcements.  However, these more-specific
 prefixes may momentarily cause the routes to be preferred over other
 aggregate (i.e., less specific) route announcements, thus redirecting
 traffic from its normal best path.
 o  Example incidents: Leaks of internal routes occur frequently
    (e.g., multiple times in a week), and the number of prefixes
    leaked range from hundreds to thousands per incident.  One highly
    conspicuous and widely disruptive leak of internal routes happened
    in August 2014 when AS701 and AS705 leaked about 22,000 more-
    specific prefixes of already-announced aggregates [Huston2014]
    [Toonk2014].

4. Additional Comments about the Classification

 It is worth noting that Types 1 through 4 are similar in that a route
 is leaked in violation of policy in each case, but what varies is the
 context of the leaked-route source AS and destination AS roles.
 A Type 5 route leak (i.e., prefix mis-origination with data path to
 legitimate origin) can also happen in conjunction with the AS
 relationship contexts in Types 2, 3, and 4.  While these
 possibilities are acknowledged, simply enumerating more types to
 consider all such special cases does not add value as far as solution
 development for route leaks is concerned.  Hence, the special cases
 mentioned here are not included in enumerating route-leak types.

5. Security Considerations

 No security considerations apply since this is a problem definition
 document.

6. Informative References

 [Anwar]    Anwar, R., Niaz, H., Choffnes, D., Cunha, I., Gill, P.,
            and N. Katz-Bassett, "Investigating Interdomain Routing
            Policies in the Wild", In Proceedings of the 2015
            ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC),
            DOI 10.1145/2815675.2815712, October 2015,
            <http://www.cs.usc.edu/assets/007/94928.pdf>.
 [Cowie2010]
            Cowie, J., "China's 18 Minute Mystery", Dyn Research: The
            New Home of Renesys Blog, November 2010,
            <http://research.dyn.com/2010/11/
            chinas-18-minute-mystery/>.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 7] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 [Cowie2013]
            Cowie, J., "The New Threat: Targeted Internet Traffic
            Misdirection", Dyn Research: The New Home of Renesys Blog,
            November 2013, <http://research.dyn.com/2013/11/
            mitm-internet-hijacking/>.
 [Gao]      Gao, L. and J. Rexford, "Stable Internet Routing Without
            Global Coordination", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking
            (TON), Volume 9, Issue 6, pp 689-692,
            DOI 10.1109/90.974523, December 2001,
            <http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~jrex/papers/
            sigmetrics00.long.pdf>.
 [Gill]     Gill, P., Schapira, M., and S. Goldberg, "A Survey of
            Interdomain Routing Policies", ACM SIGCOMM Computer
            Communication Review, Volume 44, Issue 1, pp 28-34,
            DOI 10.1145/2567561.2567566, January 2014,
            <http://www.cs.bu.edu/~goldbe/papers/survey.pdf>.
 [Giotsas]  Giotsas, V. and S. Zhou, "Valley-free violation in
            Internet routing - Analysis based on BGP Community data",
            2012 IEEE International Conference on
            Communications (ICC), DOI 10.1109/ICC.2012.6363987, June
            2012.
 [Hiran]    Hiran, R., Carlsson, N., and P. Gill, "Characterizing
            Large-Scale Routing Anomalies: A Case Study of the China
            Telecom Incident", In Proceedings of the 14th
            International Conference on Passive and Active Measurement
            (PAM) 2013, DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-36516-4_23, March 2013,
            <http://www3.cs.stonybrook.edu/~phillipa/papers/
            CTelecom.html>.
 [Huston2012]
            Huston, G., "Leaking Routes", Asia Pacific Network
            Information Centre (APNIC) Blog, March 2012,
            <http://labs.apnic.net/blabs/?p=139/>.
 [Huston2014]
            Huston, G., "What's so special about 512?", Asia Pacific
            Network Information Centre (APNIC) Blog, September 2014,
            <http://labs.apnic.net/blabs/?p=520/>.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 8] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 [Kapela-Pilosov]
            Pilosov, A. and T. Kapela, "Stealing the Internet: An
            Internet-Scale Man in the Middle Attack", 16th
            Defcon Conference, August 2008,
            <https://www.defcon.org/images/defcon-16/
            dc16-presentations/defcon-16-pilosov-kapela.pdf>.
 [Kephart]  Kephart, N., "Route Leak Causes Amazon and AWS Outage",
            ThousandEyes Blog, June 2015,
            <https://blog.thousandeyes.com/
            route-leak-causes-amazon-and-aws-outage>.
 [Khare]    Khare, V., Ju, Q., and B. Zhang, "Concurrent Prefix
            Hijacks: Occurrence and Impacts", In Proceedings of the
            2013 ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC),
            DOI 10.1145/2398776.2398780, November 2012,
            <http://www.cs.arizona.edu/~bzhang/
            paper/12-imc-hijack.pdf>.
 [Labovitz] Labovitz, C., "Additional Discussion of the April China
            BGP Hijack Incident", Arbor Networks IT Security Blog,
            November 2010,
            <http://www.arbornetworks.com/asert/2010/11/additional-
            discussion-of-the-april-china-bgp-hijack-incident/>.
 [LRL]      Khare, V., Ju, Q., and B. Zhang, "Large Route Leaks",
            University of Arizona (UA) Network Research Lab: Projects
            Webpage, 2012, <http://nrl.cs.arizona.edu/projects/
            lsrl-events-from-2003-to-2009/>.
 [Luckie]   Luckie, M., Huffaker, B., Dhamdhere, A., Giotsas, V., and
            kc. claffy, "AS Relationships, Customer Cones, and
            Validation", In Proceedings of the 2013 ACM Internet
            Measurement Conference (IMC), DOI 10.1145/2504730.2504735,
            October 2013,
            <http://www.caida.org/~amogh/papers/asrank-IMC13.pdf>.
 [Madory]   Madory, D., "Why Far-Flung Parts of the Internet Broke
            Today", Dyn Research: The New Home of Renesys Blog,
            September 2014, <http://research.dyn.com/2014/09/
            why-the-internet-broke-today/>.
 [Mauch]    Mauch, J., "BGP Routing Leak Detection System",  Project
            web page, 2014,
            <http://puck.nether.net/bgp/leakinfo.cgi/>.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 9] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

 [Mauch-nanog]
            Mauch, J., "Detecting Routing Leaks by Counting", 41st
            NANOG Conference, October 2007,
            <https://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog41/presentations/
            mauch-lightning.pdf>.
 [Paseka]   Paseka, T., "Why Google Went Offline Today and a Bit about
            How the Internet Works", CloudFlare Blog, November 2012,
            <http://blog.cloudflare.com/
            why-google-went-offline-today-and-a-bit-about/>.
 [ROUTE-LEAK-DEF]
            Dickson, B., "Route Leaks -- Definitions", Work in
            Progress, draft-dickson-sidr-route-leak-def-03, October
            2012.
 [ROUTE-LEAK-REQ]
            Dickson, B., "Route Leaks -- Requirements for Detection
            and Prevention thereof", Work in Progress, draft-dickson-
            sidr-route-leak-reqts-02, March 2012.
 [Toonk2014]
            Toonk, A., "What caused today's Internet hiccup",
            BGPMON Blog, August 2014, <http://www.bgpmon.net/
            what-caused-todays-internet-hiccup/>.
 [Toonk2015-A]
            Toonk, A., "What caused the Google service interruption",
            BGPMON Blog, March 2015, <http://www.bgpmon.net/
            what-caused-the-google-service-interruption/>.
 [Toonk2015-B]
            Toonk, A., "Massive route leak causes Internet slowdown",
            BGPMON Blog, June 2015, <http://www.bgpmon.net/
            massive-route-leak-cause-internet-slowdown/>.
 [Wijchers] Wijchers, B. and B. Overeinder, "Quantitative Analysis of
            BGP Route Leaks", Reseaux IP Europeens (RIPE) 69th
            Meeting, November 2014, <http://ripe69.ripe.net/
            presentations/157-RIPE-69-Routing-WG.pdf>.
 [Zmijewski]
            Zmijewski, E., "Indonesia Hijacks the World", Dyn
            Research: The New Home of Renesys Blog, April 2014,
            <http://research.dyn.com/2014/04/
            indonesia-hijacks-world/>.

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 10] RFC 7908 Route-Leak Problem Definition June 2016

Acknowledgements

 The authors wish to thank Jared Mauch, Jeff Haas, Warren Kumari,
 Amogh Dhamdhere, Jakob Heitz, Geoff Huston, Randy Bush, Job Snijders,
 Ruediger Volk, Andrei Robachevsky, Charles van Niman, Chris Morrow,
 and Sandy Murphy for comments, suggestions, and critique.  The
 authors are also thankful to Padma Krishnaswamy, Oliver Borchert, and
 Okhee Kim for their comments and review.

Authors' Addresses

 Kotikalapudi Sriram
 US NIST
 Email: ksriram@nist.gov
 Doug Montgomery
 US NIST
 Email: dougm@nist.gov
 Danny McPherson
 Verisign, Inc.
 Email: dmcpherson@verisign.com
 Eric Osterweil
 Verisign, Inc.
 Email: eosterweil@verisign.com
 Brian Dickson
 Email: brian.peter.dickson@gmail.com

Sriram, et al. Informational [Page 11]

/data/webs/external/dokuwiki/data/pages/rfc/rfc7908.txt · Last modified: 2016/06/21 23:49 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki