Protected EAP Protocol (PEAP) Version 2 (original) (raw)

Internet Draft H. Andersson S. Josefsson RSA Security August 2001

             Protecting EAP with TLS (EAP-TLS-EAP)
            <[draft-josefsson-pppext-eap-tls-eap-00](/doc/html/draft-josefsson-pppext-eap-tls-eap-00)>

                      Status of this Memo

This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.

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                             Abstract

This document specifies an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) mechanism for mutual authentication and session key generation in a roaming environment. The server authentication and the negotiation of the session key is done using the PPP EAP Transport Layer Security (TLS) Authentication Protocol. The user authenticates using a PPP EAP mechanism, integrity and privacy protected by TLS. In essence, a wrapping of EAP inside TLS inside EAP is specified. An important application discussed in this document is to provide authentication of access points and stations within an IEEE 802.11 Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN), but other applications such as LAN access over Bluetooth might also be considered in the future.

1. Introduction

The PPP Extensible Authentication Protocol [2] defines a general authentication framework. This document specifies an EAP mechanism for mutual authentication and session key generation, with support for a roaming environment. The connection is made, using EAP terminology, between a peer and an authenticator. The (public-key)

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authentication of the authenticator and the negotiation of the session key is done using the PPP EAP Transport Layer Security (TLS) Authentication Protocol [1]. The user performs authentication using any defined PPP EAP mechanism, see [2].

Section 2 defines the model and some terminology. A overview of this EAP mechanism is given in Section 3, and Section 4 gives a detailed description of packet formats. In Section 5, the protocol is applied to an IEEE 802.11 Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN). Finally, Section 6 discusses security issues.

2. Model and Terminology

The term peer refers to a client, acting on behalf of a user, that requests access to a network. The entity contacted by the peer is denoted authenticator. The authenticator is in turn connected to an entity called back-end server. In our model, the authenticator is acting merely as a passthrough device during the authentication phase, forwarding each packet received from the peer to the back-end server, and vice versa. It should be noted that the back-end server may be a logical entity located in the same physical device as the authenticator. The realisation of the back-end server and the communication between the authenticator and backend server are outside the scope of this document.

      +---+
      | B |
      | a |
      | c |
      | k |               +---------------+         +--------+
      |   | <-----------> | Authenticator | <-----> |  Peer  |
      | e |               +---------------+   EAP   +--------+
      | n |                                         .
      | d |                                       .
      |   |                                     .
      | S |               +---------------+   .   EAP
      | e | <-----------> | Authenticator | .
      | r |               +---------------+
      | v |
      | e |
      | r |
      +---+

An overview of the assumed environment is found in the figure above. The peer initially contacts the first authenticator (at the top of the figure). The dotted line between the peer and the second authenticator symbolizes roaming, i.e. the situation where the peer transits from one authenticator to another while still maintaining

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server and user authentication. It is assumed that the same logical back-end server sits behind all of the authenticators contacted by the peer. In practice, the back-end server may be distributed over several machines, for e.g. fail-over or load-balancing purposes, but in this document we regard them as one logical unit.

This document frequently uses the following terms and abbreviations:

  authenticator

     The end of the link requiring the authentication.

  EAP

     Extensible Authentication Protocol. After a connection link has
     been established between two entities, an authentication phase may
     take place. The PPP EAP protocol [[2](#ref-2)] is a general authentication
     protocol. The authenticator sends one or more requests to the
     peer, and the peer sends a response in reply to each request. The
     authenticator ends the authentication phase with a success or
     failure message.

  peer

     The other end of the point-to-point link; the end which is
     being authenticated by the authenticator.

  TLS

     Transport Layer Security. Internet security protocol for
     point-to-point connections (enhancement of Secure Sockets Layer,
     SSL). Defined in [[3](#ref-3)]. Under this protocol, two entities are able
     to authenticate each other and to establish a secure link. TLS
     operates at the transport layer. The protocol PPP EAP TLS [[1](#ref-1)]
     describes how to provide for TLS mechanisms within EAP.

3. Overview of the conversation

A peer wishes to set up a connection with an authenticator, for the purpose of authenticating itself to e.g. a wireless infrastructure. In our model, the authenticators are in connection with an back-end server. The following describes each EAP packet that is sent between the authenticator and peer during the EAP connection.

3.1. Initial registration

The first two steps are described in detail in Section 3.1 of [2], we include them here for illustration. Note that as per the EAP

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specification, this Identity exchange is not required.

  1. The first EAP Request packet sent by the authenticator to the
     peer is of type Identity. The data field may optionally contain a
     displayable message.

  2. The peer responds with an EAP-Response packet of type Identity.

Note that the data field of the Identity packet, which contains the peer identity, cannot be assumed to be integrity or privacy protected. Accordingly, it should not be used instead of the peer identity sent inside the TLS channel later on.

The entities now initiate an EAP-TLS conversation. The following is an example of a successful TLS handshake within EAP -- the packets are described in detail in Section 4 of [1]. The EAP method defined in this document does not terminate the TLS connection once the TLS handshake phase is concluded (and thus differs subtly from how TLS is used in [1]). The retry behavior and fragmentation concerns of section 3.2 and 3.3 of [1] are still applicable (but not illustrated in this example).

  3. The authenticator sends an EAP-TLS packet of type Start with empty
     data field. The data field of following packets will encapsulate
     TLS Handshake Protocol messages.

  4. Client hello: The peer sends a preferred TLS protocol version
     number, an empty Session ID field, a list of preferred
     cryptographic algorithms, and a random number to initialize the
     TLS handshake.

  5. Server hello: The authenticator responds with a selected TLS
     protocol version number, a new Session ID, a list of selected
     cryptographic algorithms, and another random number. Server
     certificate: The authenticator then sends a chain of X.509v3
     certificates, starting with its own certificate. The packet may
     optionally include a server key exchange. Server hello
     done: Finally, the authenticator indicates the end of this message
     stream. (Note that the authenticator must NOT send any certificate
     request.)

  6. Client key exchange: The peer generates a premaster secret,
     encrypts it using the public key obtained from the server
     certificate, and sends the result. Change cipher spec: The
     peer selects the cipher(s) to use. Client finished: The peer also
     calculates a master secret from the premaster secret, and sends a
     hash of a message consisting of the master secret; all of the data
     from all previous handshake messages; the string "client

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     finished".

  7. Change cipher spec: The authenticator selects the cipher(s) to
     use. Server finished: Finally, the authenticator itself
     generates the master secret from the premaster secret and
     responds with a hash of a message consisting of the master
     secret; all of the data from all previous handshake messages;
     the string "server finished".

  8. The peer acknowledges the end of the TLS negotiation by sending
     an empty EAP Response packet.

This concludes the TLS handshake phase and the authentication of the authenticator. It remains to perform user authentication. Note that it is not until now that we deviate from the TLS EAP specification. The authenticator will now intiate a second EAP handshake, within TLS, to provide peer authentication in a protected channel. In this EAP handshake, any EAP mechanism may be used to provide the peer authentication.

This concludes the mutual authentication, and upon success both authenticator and peer may generate any amount of new key material to be forwarded to the underlying transport. This is accomplished within the TLS Record Protocol by using the so-called PRF (Pseudo-Random Function), see Section 3.5 "Key Derivation" of [3].

It remains to be described what happens upon failures. In case the TLS negotiation has failed fatally (after the proper TLS Alert messages have been sent), an EAP-Failure messages is transmitted. Within the TLS channel, in the second EAP handshake, after any EAP- Success and EAP-Failure messages has successfully been sent, the same type of packet should be send in the outer EAP channel as well.

3.2. Roaming

We now describe the case where the peer is transiting between two authenticators during a session. In order to obtain a seamless transition to a connection between the peer and the new authenticator, we use the connection re-establishment mechanism provided by the TLS Handshake Protocol. Note that the new authenticator is assumed to use the same back-end server as the old one, hence the old security parameters are still available. In the case where the back-end server is just a logical entity residing at the authenticator, the second authenticator will be required to (securely) transfer the security parameters from the first authenticator.

The steps 1-3 above are repeated without change. The following

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describes a successful TLS handshake:

  4. Client hello: The peer sends the TLS protocol version number, the
     Session ID of the old connection, the previously negotiated
     cryptographic algorithms, and a random number.

  5. Server hello: The authenticator responds with the TLS protocol
     version number, the Session ID, the negotiated cryptographic
     algorithms, and another random number. If the old Session ID has
     expired, then a new Session ID is presented to the peer and full
     authentication takes place, as described in Sub[section 3.1](#section-3.1).
     Change cipher spec: the server selects the cipher(s) to
     use. Server finished: The authenticator responds with a hash of
     a message consisting of the master secret; data from all
     previous handshake messages; the string "server finished".

  6. Change cipher spec: The peer select cipher(s) to use. Client
     finished: The peer sends a hash of a message consisting of
     the previously calculated master secret; data from all previous
     handshake messages; the string "client finished".

Note that mutual authentication is achieved, since both peer and authenticator have to know the old master secret in order to successfully complete the protocol. An alternative to TLS resumption has been discussed, whereby a "Roaming ID" is used to identify the user moving between authenticators. At a new connection, server authentication and generation of new security parameters is mandatory. The advantage of this approach is that the authentication server does not have to store so much key material, since all data except the Roaming ID may be deleted when entities are disconnected. This can be an important issue if there are many peers to be served. On the other hand, having to generate much new key material could be very time consuming for the back-end server, and this potential danger has led us to choose TLS resumption as described above.

Finally, the length of time that a Session ID is valid should be limited. The time of validity is application dependent. In some environments it may be desirable that the authenticator notify the peer that the Session ID is about to expire. No mechanism is defined in this document to handle such a scenario, but note that the Session ID validity is checked during connection re-establishment (see 5 above).

4. Packet formats

It is assumed that underlying transport protocols has set up the connection so that it is ready to transfer EAP packets.

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4.1. TLS in EAP

The syntax of EAP packets containing TLS messages are per [1], and the TLS protocol description is per [3]. Note that [1] does not use the negotiated TLS tunnel to transfer any data, while this specification does, however this does not affect the EAP protocol syntax. We include the EAP syntax in the following figure, referring to Sections 4.2 and 4.3 of [1] for the definition of the Request and Response packets.

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Code      |   Identifier  |            Length             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |                  Data ...                     /
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

  Code

     1 - Request
     2 - Response

  Identifier

     The identifier field is one octet and aids in matching responses
     with requests.

  Length

     The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the EAP
     packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Data
     fields. Octets outside the range of the Length field should be
     treated as Data Link Layer padding and should be ignored on
     reception.

  Type

     TBA - EAP TLS EAP

  Data

     The format of the Data field is determined by the Code field.

4.2. EAP negotiation inside TLS

We now assume that the TLS handshake has been successfully completed and that a secure TLS connection is available within the TLS Record

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Protocol. The following packets (protected by TLS Record Protocol and sent inside EAP packets) are used to negotiate the peer EAP authentication.

The following figure describes the template packet structure that is used during this communication.

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                  EAP Data as per [RFC 2284](/doc/html/rfc2284) ...                 /
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The party acting as authenticator in this second, wrapped, EAP channel MUST be the same party that acted as authenticator in the original EAP channel.

5. Example: IEEE 802.11 WLAN

IEEE 802.11 Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) is a standard for wireless computer networks, see [5]. Any device that contains an IEEE 802.11 conformant medium access control and physical layer interface to the wireless medium is called a Station (STA). An entity that has station functionality and also provides access to the distribution services (e.g. a wired LAN) via the wireless medium for associated stations is called an Access Point (AP). The authentication services defined within IEEE 802.11 are discussed below, and the need for higher level authentication is addressed.

IEEE 802.11 defines two types of authentication methods -- Open system authentication and Shared key authentication. Open system authentication is essentially a null authentication. The conversation is done in clear, no challenge procedure is performed. The purpose of Shared key authentication is to check that both parties share a pre- negotiated encryption key. The AP sends a challenge and the STA responds by encrypting this challenge. If the AP successfully decrypts that message, the authentication is finished. In other words, the AP is never required to authenticate itself. This opens up for a number of attacks, such as denial of service attacks via rogue APs. It is thus crucial to achieve mutual authentication.

The IEEE 802.1X draft [4] specifies a general method for the provision of port based network access control. A port in this context is an attachment point to the LAN infrastructure, e.g. an association between a STA and an AP. The specification describes the architectural framework within which the authentication takes place, and establishes the requirements for a higher level authentication

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protocol between the station and the access point.

The IEEE 802.1X draft provides a framework, Extensible Authentication Protocol Over Local area networks (EAPOL), that makes it possible to send EAP packets between IEEE 802.11 entities. In a WLAN environment, the "Authenticator" is the AP, and the "Peer" is a STA. An Authentication Server is an entity connected with the AP. The server is communicating with the STA during the authentication -- the AP is sitting in between, acting merely as a passthrough device. In a roaming environment, the STA may connect to several APs during a session. All the APs are assumed to be connected to the same authentication server. The protocol described in this paper may therefore be applied to a WLAN environment, providing authentication of the AP, strong authentication of the user of the STA, and session key negotiation.

Note that the present protocol is partly based on [1], which in turn assumes PPP EAP and not EAPOL as the underlying protocol. However, this minor difference will cause no problems whatsoever, since the TLS conversation carries over word by word to the new environment.

Let us finally comment on the Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) encryption scheme defined in the IEEE 802.11 standard. WEP uses the stream cipher RC4 with key obtained as the concatenation of a 24 bit IV and a 40 bit WEP key. Four WEP keys can be prestored, but it is also possible to use a session key negotiated during the authentication phase, i.e. follow the approach outlined in this work. WEP suffers from some serious security weaknesses, e.g. the WEP key is too short to withstand a brute force attack. Also, the IV is too short -- even if a new random IV is used for each packet, collisions will start appearing within a few seconds (according to the birthday paradox). XORing messages with the same IV results in plaintext difference that can be further analyzed. Finally, there is no real data integrity since the integrity check value used is just a linear checksum. An active attacker wishing to alter the plaintext can easily modify the checksum to be valid for the new plaintext. The IEEE 802.11 working group recognizes the need to improve security, and is currently working on a revision of the standard.

6. Security considerations

The Transport Layer Security protocol is presumed to be a strong security protocol and it is widely accepted. Here we discuss some security issues. The Session ID is sent in clear, so an attacker may contact an authenticator, pretending to be the legitimate user. However, by sending correct Finished messages, the parties prove to each other that they know the correct premaster secret. The attacker will not be able to finish the handshake properly (unless the

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protocol has been completely broken).

An attacker, acting as an active man-in-the-middle, might try to influence the choice of encryption algorithm by altering the corresponding handshake message. However, this will also be detected in the verification of the Finished messages, since each of these consists of a hash of all previous messages. The hash functions MD5 and SHA-1 are used in tandem wherever possible. The TLS designers claim that this approach ensures that a serious flaw in one of the functions will not lead to failure of the entire TLS protocol.

Finally, the strength of the user authentication is dependent on the EAP mechanism chosen. With the approach described here, the EAP packets sent by the peer are not transmitted in clear, which improve the security of some EAP mechanisms. This is particularly important in a wireless environment where passive eavesdropping is a serious threat.

7. Acknowledgements

We wish to thank Jan-Ove Larsson and Magnus Nystrom for helpful discussions and comments during the development of this draft. We would also like to thank Glen Zorn and Simon Blake-Wilson for comments on the first version of this draft.

References

  [1]  Aboba, B., Simon, D., "PPP EAP TLS Authentication Protocol",
       [RFC 2716](/doc/html/rfc2716), October 1999.

  [2]  Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., "PPP Extensible Authentication
       Protocol (EAP)", [RFC 2284](/doc/html/rfc2284), March 1998.

  [3]  Dierks, T., Allen, C., "The TLS Protocol", [RFC 2246](/doc/html/rfc2246), January
       1999.

  [4]  IEEE Standards for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Port
       based Network Access Control, IEEE Draft 802.1X/D10, January
       2001.

  [5]  Information technology -- Telecommunications and information
       exchange between systems -- Local and metropolitan area
       networks -- Specific requirements -- Part 11: Wireless LAN
       Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical Layer (PHY)
       Specifications, IEEE Std. 802.11, 1999.

Address of the authors

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Hakan Andersson RSA Security Box 107 04 SE-121 29 Stockholm Sweden E-mail: handersson@rsasecurity.com Phone: +46 8 725 9758 Fax: +46 8 649 4970

Simon Josefsson RSA Security Box 107 04 SE-121 29 Stockholm Sweden E-mail: sjosefsson@rsasecurity.com Phone: +46 8 725 0914 Fax: +46 8 649 4970

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