1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
3 ========================================================
4 TCP Authentication Option Linux implementation (RFC5925)
5 ========================================================
7 TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO) provides a TCP extension aimed at verifying
8 segments between trusted peers. It adds a new TCP header option with
9 a Message Authentication Code (MAC). MACs are produced from the content
10 of a TCP segment using a hashing function with a password known to both peers.
11 The intent of TCP-AO is to deprecate TCP-MD5 providing better security,
12 key rotation and support for a variety of hashing algorithms.
17 .. table:: Short and Limited Comparison of TCP-AO and TCP-MD5
19 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
20 | | TCP-MD5 | TCP-AO |
21 +======================+========================+=======================+
22 |Supported hashing |MD5 |Must support HMAC-SHA1 |
23 |algorithms |(cryptographically weak)|(chosen-prefix attacks)|
24 | | |and CMAC-AES-128 (only |
25 | | |side-channel attacks). |
26 | | |May support any hashing|
28 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
29 |Length of MACs (bytes)|16 |Typically 12-16. |
30 | | |Other variants that fit|
31 | | |TCP header permitted. |
32 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
33 |Number of keys per |1 |Many |
35 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
36 |Possibility to change |Non-practical (both |Supported by protocol |
37 |an active key |peers have to change | |
38 | |them during MSL) | |
39 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
40 |Protection against |No |Yes: ignoring them |
41 |ICMP 'hard errors' | |by default on |
42 | | |established connections|
43 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
44 |Protection against |No |Yes: pseudo-header |
45 |traffic-crossing | |includes TCP ports. |
47 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
48 |Protection against |No |Sequence Number |
49 |replayed TCP segments | |Extension (SNE) and |
50 | | |Initial Sequence |
52 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
53 |Supports |Yes |No. ISNs+SNE are needed|
54 |Connectionless Resets | |to correctly sign RST. |
55 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
56 |Standards |RFC 2385 |RFC 5925, RFC 5926 |
57 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
60 1.1 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) with references to RFC 5925
61 ----------------------------------------------------------------
63 Q: Can either SendID or RecvID be non-unique for the same 4-tuple
64 (srcaddr, srcport, dstaddr, dstport)?
68 >> The IDs of MKTs MUST NOT overlap where their TCP connection
71 Q: Can Master Key Tuple (MKT) for an active connection be removed?
73 A: No, unless it's copied to Transport Control Block (TCB) [3.1]::
75 It is presumed that an MKT affecting a particular connection cannot
76 be destroyed during an active connection -- or, equivalently, that
77 its parameters are copied to an area local to the connection (i.e.,
78 instantiated) and so changes would affect only new connections.
80 Q: If an old MKT needs to be deleted, how should it be done in order
81 to not remove it for an active connection? (As it can be still in use
84 A: Not specified by RFC 5925, seems to be a problem for key management
85 to ensure that no one uses such MKT before trying to remove it.
87 Q: Can an old MKT exist forever and be used by another peer?
89 A: It can, it's a key management task to decide when to remove an old key [6.1]::
91 Deciding when to start using a key is a performance issue. Deciding
92 when to remove an MKT is a security issue. Invalid MKTs are expected
93 to be removed. TCP-AO provides no mechanism to coordinate their removal,
94 as we consider this a key management operation.
98 The only way to avoid reuse of previously used MKTs is to remove the MKT
99 when it is no longer considered permitted.
101 Linux TCP-AO will try its best to prevent you from removing a key that's
102 being used, considering it a key management failure. But since keeping
103 an outdated key may become a security issue and as a peer may
104 unintentionally prevent the removal of an old key by always setting
105 it as RNextKeyID - a forced key removal mechanism is provided, where
106 userspace has to supply KeyID to use instead of the one that's being removed
107 and the kernel will atomically delete the old key, even if the peer is
108 still requesting it. There are no guarantees for force-delete as the peer
109 may yet not have the new key - the TCP connection may just break.
110 Alternatively, one may choose to shut down the socket.
112 Q: What happens when a packet is received on a new connection with no known
115 A: RFC 5925 specifies that by default it is accepted with a warning logged, but
116 the behaviour can be configured by the user [7.5.1.a]::
118 If the segment is a SYN, then this is the first segment of a new
119 connection. Find the matching MKT for this segment, using the segment's
120 socket pair and its TCP-AO KeyID, matched against the MKT's TCP connection
121 identifier and the MKT's RecvID.
123 i. If there is no matching MKT, remove TCP-AO from the segment.
124 Proceed with further TCP handling of the segment.
125 NOTE: this presumes that connections that do not match any MKT
126 should be silently accepted, as noted in Section 7.3.
130 >> A TCP-AO implementation MUST allow for configuration of the behavior
131 of segments with TCP-AO but that do not match an MKT. The initial default
132 of this configuration SHOULD be to silently accept such connections.
133 If this is not the desired case, an MKT can be included to match such
134 connections, or the connection can indicate that TCP-AO is required.
135 Alternately, the configuration can be changed to discard segments with
136 the AO option not matching an MKT.
140 Connections not matching any MKT do not require TCP-AO. Further, incoming
141 segments with TCP-AO are not discarded solely because they include
142 the option, provided they do not match any MKT.
144 Note that Linux TCP-AO implementation differs in this aspect. Currently, TCP-AO
145 segments with unknown key signatures are discarded with warnings logged.
147 Q: Does the RFC imply centralized kernel key management in any way?
148 (i.e. that a key on all connections MUST be rotated at the same time?)
150 A: Not specified. MKTs can be managed in userspace, the only relevant part to
151 key changes is [7.3]::
153 >> All TCP segments MUST be checked against the set of MKTs for matching
154 TCP connection identifiers.
156 Q: What happens when RNextKeyID requested by a peer is unknown? Should
157 the connection be reset?
159 A: It should not, no action needs to be performed [7.5.2.e]::
161 ii. If they differ, determine whether the RNextKeyID MKT is ready.
163 1. If the MKT corresponding to the segment’s socket pair and RNextKeyID
164 is not available, no action is required (RNextKeyID of a received
165 segment needs to match the MKT’s SendID).
167 Q: How is current_key set, and when does it change? Is it a user-triggered
168 change, or is it triggered by a request from the remote peer? Is it set by the
169 user explicitly, or by a matching rule?
171 A: current_key is set by RNextKeyID [6.1]::
173 Rnext_key is changed only by manual user intervention or MKT management
174 protocol operation. It is not manipulated by TCP-AO. Current_key is updated
175 by TCP-AO when processing received TCP segments as discussed in the segment
176 processing description in Section 7.5. Note that the algorithm allows
177 the current_key to change to a new MKT, then change back to a previously
178 used MKT (known as "backing up"). This can occur during an MKT change when
179 segments are received out of order, and is considered a feature of TCP-AO,
180 because reordering does not result in drops.
184 2. If the matching MKT corresponding to the segment’s socket pair and
185 RNextKeyID is available:
187 a. Set current_key to the RNextKeyID MKT.
189 Q: If both peers have multiple MKTs matching the connection's socket pair
190 (with different KeyIDs), how should the sender/receiver pick KeyID to use?
192 A: Some mechanism should pick the "desired" MKT [3.3]::
194 Multiple MKTs may match a single outgoing segment, e.g., when MKTs
195 are being changed. Those MKTs cannot have conflicting IDs (as noted
196 elsewhere), and some mechanism must determine which MKT to use for each
197 given outgoing segment.
199 >> An outgoing TCP segment MUST match at most one desired MKT, indicated
200 by the segment’s socket pair. The segment MAY match multiple MKTs, provided
201 that exactly one MKT is indicated as desired. Other information in
202 the segment MAY be used to determine the desired MKT when multiple MKTs
203 match; such information MUST NOT include values in any TCP option fields.
205 Q: Can TCP-MD5 connection migrate to TCP-AO (and vice-versa):
209 TCP MD5-protected connections cannot be migrated to TCP-AO because TCP MD5
210 does not support any changes to a connection’s security algorithm
213 Q: If all MKTs are removed on a connection, can it become a non-TCP-AO signed
216 A: [7.5.2] doesn't have the same choice as SYN packet handling in [7.5.1.i]
217 that would allow accepting segments without a sign (which would be insecure).
218 While switching to non-TCP-AO connection is not prohibited directly, it seems
219 what the RFC means. Also, there's a requirement for TCP-AO connections to
220 always have one current_key [3.3]::
222 TCP-AO requires that every protected TCP segment match exactly one MKT.
226 >> An incoming TCP segment including TCP-AO MUST match exactly one MKT,
227 indicated solely by the segment’s socket pair and its TCP-AO KeyID.
231 One or more MKTs. These are the MKTs that match this connection’s
234 Q: Can a non-TCP-AO connection become a TCP-AO-enabled one?
236 A: No: for an already established non-TCP-AO connection it would be impossible
237 to switch to using TCP-AO, as the traffic key generation requires the initial
238 sequence numbers. Paraphrasing, starting using TCP-AO would require
239 re-establishing the TCP connection.
241 2. In-kernel MKTs database vs database in userspace
242 ===================================================
244 Linux TCP-AO support is implemented using ``setsockopt()s``, in a similar way
245 to TCP-MD5. It means that a userspace application that wants to use TCP-AO
246 should perform ``setsockopt()`` on a TCP socket when it wants to add,
247 remove or rotate MKTs. This approach moves the key management responsibility
248 to userspace as well as decisions on corner cases, i.e. what to do if
249 the peer doesn't respect RNextKeyID; moving more code to userspace, especially
250 responsible for the policy decisions. Besides, it's flexible and scales well
251 (with less locking needed than in the case of an in-kernel database). One also
252 should keep in mind that mainly intended users are BGP processes, not any
253 random applications, which means that compared to IPsec tunnels,
254 no transparency is really needed and modern BGP daemons already have
255 ``setsockopt()s`` for TCP-MD5 support.
257 .. table:: Considered pros and cons of the approaches
259 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
260 | | ``setsockopt()`` | in-kernel DB |
261 +======================+========================+=======================+
262 | Extendability | ``setsockopt()`` | Netlink messages are |
263 | | commands should be | simple and extendable |
264 | | extendable syscalls | |
265 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
266 | Required userspace | BGP or any application | could be transparent |
267 | changes | that wants TCP-AO needs| as tunnels, providing |
268 | | to perform | something like |
269 | | ``setsockopt()s`` | ``ip tcpao add key`` |
270 | | and do key management | (delete/show/rotate) |
271 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
272 |MKTs removal or adding| harder for userspace | harder for kernel |
273 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
274 | Dump-ability | ``getsockopt()`` | Netlink .dump() |
276 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
277 | Limits on kernel | equal |
278 | resources/memory | |
279 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
280 | Scalability | contention on | contention on |
281 | | ``TCP_LISTEN`` sockets | the whole database |
282 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
283 | Monitoring & warnings| ``TCP_DIAG`` | same Netlink socket |
284 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
285 | Matching of MKTs | half-problem: only | hard |
286 | | listen sockets | |
287 +----------------------+------------------------+-----------------------+
293 Linux provides a set of ``setsockopt()s`` and ``getsockopt()s`` that let
294 userspace manage TCP-AO on a per-socket basis. In order to add/delete MKTs
295 ``TCP_AO_ADD_KEY`` and ``TCP_AO_DEL_KEY`` TCP socket options must be used.
296 It is not allowed to add a key on an established non-TCP-AO connection
297 as well as to remove the last key from TCP-AO connection.
299 ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)`` command may specify ``tcp_ao_del::current_key``
300 + ``tcp_ao_del::set_current`` and/or ``tcp_ao_del::rnext``
301 + ``tcp_ao_del::set_rnext`` which makes such delete "forced": it
302 provides userspace a way to delete a key that's being used and atomically set
303 another one instead. This is not intended for normal use and should be used
304 only when the peer ignores RNextKeyID and keeps requesting/using an old key.
305 It provides a way to force-delete a key that's not trusted but may break
306 the TCP-AO connection.
308 The usual/normal key-rotation can be performed with ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_INFO)``.
309 It also provides a uAPI to change per-socket TCP-AO settings, such as
310 ignoring ICMPs, as well as clear per-socket TCP-AO packet counters.
311 The corresponding ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_INFO)`` can be used to get those
312 per-socket TCP-AO settings.
314 Another useful command is ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_GET_KEYS)``. One can use it
315 to list all MKTs on a TCP socket or use a filter to get keys for a specific
316 peer and/or sndid/rcvid, VRF L3 interface or get current_key/rnext_key.
318 To repair TCP-AO connections ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_REPAIR)`` is available,
319 provided that the user previously has checkpointed/dumped the socket with
320 ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_REPAIR)``.
322 A tip here for scaled TCP_LISTEN sockets, that may have some thousands TCP-AO
323 keys, is: use filters in ``getsockopt(TCP_AO_GET_KEYS)`` and asynchronous
324 delete with ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)``.
326 Linux TCP-AO also provides a bunch of segment counters that can be helpful
327 with troubleshooting/debugging issues. Every MKT has good/bad counters
328 that reflect how many packets passed/failed verification.
329 Each TCP-AO socket has the following counters:
330 - for good segments (properly signed)
331 - for bad segments (failed TCP-AO verification)
332 - for segments with unknown keys
333 - for segments where an AO signature was expected, but wasn't found
334 - for the number of ignored ICMPs
336 TCP-AO per-socket counters are also duplicated with per-netns counters,
337 exposed with SNMP. Those are ``TCPAOGood``, ``TCPAOBad``, ``TCPAOKeyNotFound``,
338 ``TCPAORequired`` and ``TCPAODroppedIcmps``.
340 For monitoring purposes, there are following TCP-AO trace events:
341 ``tcp_hash_bad_header``, ``tcp_hash_ao_required``, ``tcp_ao_handshake_failure``,
342 ``tcp_ao_wrong_maclen``, ``tcp_ao_wrong_maclen``, ``tcp_ao_key_not_found``,
343 ``tcp_ao_rnext_request``, ``tcp_ao_synack_no_key``, ``tcp_ao_snd_sne_update``,
344 ``tcp_ao_rcv_sne_update``. It's possible to separately enable any of them and
345 one can filter them by net-namespace, 4-tuple, family, L3 index, and TCP header
346 flags. If a segment has a TCP-AO header, the filters may also include
347 keyid, rnext, and maclen. SNE updates include the rolled-over numbers.
349 RFC 5925 very permissively specifies how TCP port matching can be done for
352 TCP connection identifier. A TCP socket pair, i.e., a local IP
353 address, a remote IP address, a TCP local port, and a TCP remote port.
354 Values can be partially specified using ranges (e.g., 2-30), masks
355 (e.g., 0xF0), wildcards (e.g., "*"), or any other suitable indication.
357 Currently Linux TCP-AO implementation doesn't provide any TCP port matching.
358 Probably, port ranges are the most flexible for uAPI, but so far
361 4. ``setsockopt()`` vs ``accept()`` race
362 ========================================
364 In contrast with an established TCP-MD5 connection which has just one key,
365 TCP-AO connections may have many keys, which means that accepted connections
366 on a listen socket may have any amount of keys as well. As copying all those
367 keys on a first properly signed SYN would make the request socket bigger, that
368 would be undesirable. Currently, the implementation doesn't copy keys
369 to request sockets, but rather look them up on the "parent" listener socket.
371 The result is that when userspace removes TCP-AO keys, that may break
372 not-yet-established connections on request sockets as well as not removing
373 keys from sockets that were already established, but not yet ``accept()``'ed,
374 hanging in the accept queue.
376 The reverse is valid as well: if userspace adds a new key for a peer on
377 a listener socket, the established sockets in the accept queue won't
380 At this moment, the resolution for the two races:
381 ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_ADD_KEY)`` vs ``accept()``
382 and ``setsockopt(TCP_AO_DEL_KEY)`` vs ``accept()`` is delegated to userspace.
383 This means that it's expected that userspace would check the MKTs on the socket
384 that was returned by ``accept()`` to verify that any key rotation that
385 happened on the listen socket is reflected on the newly established connection.
387 This is a similar "do-nothing" approach to TCP-MD5 from the kernel side and
388 may be changed later by introducing new flags to ``tcp_ao_add``
391 Note that this race is rare for it needs TCP-AO key rotation to happen
392 during the 3-way handshake for the new TCP connection.
394 5. Interaction with TCP-MD5
395 ===========================
397 A TCP connection can not migrate between TCP-AO and TCP-MD5 options. The
398 established sockets that have either AO or MD5 keys are restricted for
399 adding keys of the other option.
401 For listening sockets the picture is different: BGP server may want to receive
402 both TCP-AO and (deprecated) TCP-MD5 clients. As a result, both types of keys
403 may be added to TCP_CLOSED or TCP_LISTEN sockets. It's not allowed to add
404 different types of keys for the same peer.
406 6. SNE Linux implementation
407 ===========================
409 RFC 5925 [6.2] describes the algorithm of how to extend TCP sequence numbers
410 with SNE. In short: TCP has to track the previous sequence numbers and set
411 sne_flag when the current SEQ number rolls over. The flag is cleared when
412 both current and previous SEQ numbers cross 0x7fff, which is 32Kb.
414 In times when sne_flag is set, the algorithm compares SEQ for each packet with
415 0x7fff and if it's higher than 32Kb, it assumes that the packet should be
416 verified with SNE before the increment. As a result, there's
417 this [0; 32Kb] window, when packets with (SNE - 1) can be accepted.
419 Linux implementation simplifies this a bit: as the network stack already tracks
420 the first SEQ byte that ACK is wanted for (snd_una) and the next SEQ byte that
421 is wanted (rcv_nxt) - that's enough information for a rough estimation
422 on where in the 4GB SEQ number space both sender and receiver are.
423 When they roll over to zero, the corresponding SNE gets incremented.
425 tcp_ao_compute_sne() is called for each TCP-AO segment. It compares SEQ numbers
426 from the segment with snd_una or rcv_nxt and fits the result into a 2GB window around them,
427 detecting SEQ numbers rolling over. That simplifies the code a lot and only
428 requires SNE numbers to be stored on every TCP-AO socket.
430 The 2GB window at first glance seems much more permissive compared to
431 RFC 5926. But that is only used to pick the correct SNE before/after
432 a rollover. It allows more TCP segment replays, but yet all regular
433 TCP checks in tcp_sequence() are applied on the verified segment.
434 So, it trades a bit more permissive acceptance of replayed/retransmitted
435 segments for the simplicity of the algorithm and what seems better behaviour
436 for large TCP windows.
441 RFC 5925 The TCP Authentication Option
442 https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc5925.txt.pdf
444 RFC 5926 Cryptographic Algorithms for the TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO)
445 https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc5926.txt.pdf
447 Draft "SHA-2 Algorithm for the TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO)"
448 https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-nayak-tcp-sha2-03
450 RFC 2385 Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option
451 https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/pdfrfc/rfc2385.txt.pdf