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- Network Working Group B. Aboba
- Request for Comments: 3748 Microsoft
- Obsoletes: 2284 L. Blunk
- Category: Standards Track Merit Network, Inc
- J. Vollbrecht
- Vollbrecht Consulting LLC
- J. Carlson
- Sun
- H. Levkowetz, Ed.
- ipUnplugged
- June 2004
- Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- Status of this Memo
- This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
- Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
- improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
- Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
- and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
- Copyright Notice
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).
- Abstract
- This document defines the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP),
- an authentication framework which supports multiple authentication
- methods. EAP typically runs directly over data link layers such as
- Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) or IEEE 802, without requiring IP. EAP
- provides its own support for duplicate elimination and
- retransmission, but is reliant on lower layer ordering guarantees.
- Fragmentation is not supported within EAP itself; however, individual
- EAP methods may support this.
- This document obsoletes RFC 2284. A summary of the changes between
- this document and RFC 2284 is available in Appendix A.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 1]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
- 1.1. Specification of Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 1.2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 1.3. Applicability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 2. Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP). . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 2.1. Support for Sequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 2.2. EAP Multiplexing Model. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 2.3. Pass-Through Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 2.4. Peer-to-Peer Operation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
- 3. Lower Layer Behavior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 3.1. Lower Layer Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- 3.2. EAP Usage Within PPP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- 3.2.1. PPP Configuration Option Format. . . . . . . . . 18
- 3.3. EAP Usage Within IEEE 802 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 3.4. Lower Layer Indications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
- 4. EAP Packet Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- 4.1. Request and Response. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
- 4.2. Success and Failure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
- 4.3. Retransmission Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- 5. Initial EAP Request/Response Types. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- 5.1. Identity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
- 5.2. Notification. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
- 5.3. Nak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 5.3.1. Legacy Nak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- 5.3.2. Expanded Nak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- 5.4. MD5-Challenge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
- 5.5. One-Time Password (OTP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
- 5.6. Generic Token Card (GTC). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
- 5.7. Expanded Types. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
- 5.8. Experimental. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
- 6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
- 6.1. Packet Codes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
- 6.2. Method Types. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
- 7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
- 7.1. Threat Model. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
- 7.2. Security Claims . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
- 7.2.1. Security Claims Terminology for EAP Methods. . . 44
- 7.3. Identity Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
- 7.4. Man-in-the-Middle Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
- 7.5. Packet Modification Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
- 7.6. Dictionary Attacks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
- 7.7. Connection to an Untrusted Network. . . . . . . . . . . 49
- 7.8. Negotiation Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
- 7.9. Implementation Idiosyncrasies . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
- 7.10. Key Derivation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
- 7.11. Weak Ciphersuites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 2]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 7.12. Link Layer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
- 7.13. Separation of Authenticator and Backend Authentication
- Server. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
- 7.14. Cleartext Passwords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
- 7.15. Channel Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
- 7.16. Protected Result Indications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
- 8. Acknowledgements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
- 9. References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
- 9.1. Normative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
- 9.2. Informative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
- Appendix A. Changes from RFC 2284. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
- Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
- Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
- 1. Introduction
- This document defines the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP),
- an authentication framework which supports multiple authentication
- methods. EAP typically runs directly over data link layers such as
- Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) or IEEE 802, without requiring IP. EAP
- provides its own support for duplicate elimination and
- retransmission, but is reliant on lower layer ordering guarantees.
- Fragmentation is not supported within EAP itself; however, individual
- EAP methods may support this.
- EAP may be used on dedicated links, as well as switched circuits, and
- wired as well as wireless links. To date, EAP has been implemented
- with hosts and routers that connect via switched circuits or dial-up
- lines using PPP [RFC1661]. It has also been implemented with
- switches and access points using IEEE 802 [IEEE-802]. EAP
- encapsulation on IEEE 802 wired media is described in [IEEE-802.1X],
- and encapsulation on IEEE wireless LANs in [IEEE-802.11i].
- One of the advantages of the EAP architecture is its flexibility.
- EAP is used to select a specific authentication mechanism, typically
- after the authenticator requests more information in order to
- determine the specific authentication method to be used. Rather than
- requiring the authenticator to be updated to support each new
- authentication method, EAP permits the use of a backend
- authentication server, which may implement some or all authentication
- methods, with the authenticator acting as a pass-through for some or
- all methods and peers.
- Within this document, authenticator requirements apply regardless of
- whether the authenticator is operating as a pass-through or not.
- Where the requirement is meant to apply to either the authenticator
- or backend authentication server, depending on where the EAP
- authentication is terminated, the term "EAP server" will be used.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 3]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 1.1. Specification of Requirements
- In this document, several words are used to signify the requirements
- of the specification. 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
- [RFC2119].
- 1.2. Terminology
- This document frequently uses the following terms:
- authenticator
- The end of the link initiating EAP authentication. The term
- authenticator is used in [IEEE-802.1X], and has the same meaning
- in this document.
- peer
- The end of the link that responds to the authenticator. In
- [IEEE-802.1X], this end is known as the Supplicant.
- Supplicant
- The end of the link that responds to the authenticator in [IEEE-
- 802.1X]. In this document, this end of the link is called the
- peer.
- backend authentication server
- A backend authentication server is an entity that provides an
- authentication service to an authenticator. When used, this
- server typically executes EAP methods for the authenticator. This
- terminology is also used in [IEEE-802.1X].
- AAA
- Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting. AAA protocols with
- EAP support include RADIUS [RFC3579] and Diameter [DIAM-EAP]. In
- this document, the terms "AAA server" and "backend authentication
- server" are used interchangeably.
- Displayable Message
- This is interpreted to be a human readable string of characters.
- The message encoding MUST follow the UTF-8 transformation format
- [RFC2279].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 4]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- EAP server
- The entity that terminates the EAP authentication method with the
- peer. In the case where no backend authentication server is used,
- the EAP server is part of the authenticator. In the case where
- the authenticator operates in pass-through mode, the EAP server is
- located on the backend authentication server.
- Silently Discard
- This means the implementation discards the packet without further
- processing. The implementation SHOULD provide the capability of
- logging the event, including the contents of the silently
- discarded packet, and SHOULD record the event in a statistics
- counter.
- Successful Authentication
- In the context of this document, "successful authentication" is an
- exchange of EAP messages, as a result of which the authenticator
- decides to allow access by the peer, and the peer decides to use
- this access. The authenticator's decision typically involves both
- authentication and authorization aspects; the peer may
- successfully authenticate to the authenticator, but access may be
- denied by the authenticator due to policy reasons.
- Message Integrity Check (MIC)
- A keyed hash function used for authentication and integrity
- protection of data. This is usually called a Message
- Authentication Code (MAC), but IEEE 802 specifications (and this
- document) use the acronym MIC to avoid confusion with Medium
- Access Control.
- Cryptographic Separation
- Two keys (x and y) are "cryptographically separate" if an
- adversary that knows all messages exchanged in the protocol cannot
- compute x from y or y from x without "breaking" some cryptographic
- assumption. In particular, this definition allows that the
- adversary has the knowledge of all nonces sent in cleartext, as
- well as all predictable counter values used in the protocol.
- Breaking a cryptographic assumption would typically require
- inverting a one-way function or predicting the outcome of a
- cryptographic pseudo-random number generator without knowledge of
- the secret state. In other words, if the keys are
- cryptographically separate, there is no shortcut to compute x from
- y or y from x, but the work an adversary must do to perform this
- computation is equivalent to performing an exhaustive search for
- the secret state value.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 5]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Master Session Key (MSK)
- Keying material that is derived between the EAP peer and server
- and exported by the EAP method. The MSK is at least 64 octets in
- length. In existing implementations, a AAA server acting as an
- EAP server transports the MSK to the authenticator.
- Extended Master Session Key (EMSK)
- Additional keying material derived between the EAP client and
- server that is exported by the EAP method. The EMSK is at least
- 64 octets in length. The EMSK is not shared with the
- authenticator or any other third party. The EMSK is reserved for
- future uses that are not defined yet.
- Result indications
- A method provides result indications if after the method's last
- message is sent and received:
- 1) The peer is aware of whether it has authenticated the server,
- as well as whether the server has authenticated it.
- 2) The server is aware of whether it has authenticated the peer,
- as well as whether the peer has authenticated it.
- In the case where successful authentication is sufficient to
- authorize access, then the peer and authenticator will also know if
- the other party is willing to provide or accept access. This may not
- always be the case. An authenticated peer may be denied access due
- to lack of authorization (e.g., session limit) or other reasons.
- Since the EAP exchange is run between the peer and the server, other
- nodes (such as AAA proxies) may also affect the authorization
- decision. This is discussed in more detail in Section 7.16.
- 1.3. Applicability
- EAP was designed for use in network access authentication, where IP
- layer connectivity may not be available. Use of EAP for other
- purposes, such as bulk data transport, is NOT RECOMMENDED.
- Since EAP does not require IP connectivity, it provides just enough
- support for the reliable transport of authentication protocols, and
- no more.
- EAP is a lock-step protocol which only supports a single packet in
- flight. As a result, EAP cannot efficiently transport bulk data,
- unlike transport protocols such as TCP [RFC793] or SCTP [RFC2960].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 6]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- While EAP provides support for retransmission, it assumes ordering
- guarantees provided by the lower layer, so out of order reception is
- not supported.
- Since EAP does not support fragmentation and reassembly, EAP
- authentication methods generating payloads larger than the minimum
- EAP MTU need to provide fragmentation support.
- While authentication methods such as EAP-TLS [RFC2716] provide
- support for fragmentation and reassembly, the EAP methods defined in
- this document do not. As a result, if the EAP packet size exceeds
- the EAP MTU of the link, these methods will encounter difficulties.
- EAP authentication is initiated by the server (authenticator),
- whereas many authentication protocols are initiated by the client
- (peer). As a result, it may be necessary for an authentication
- algorithm to add one or two additional messages (at most one
- roundtrip) in order to run over EAP.
- Where certificate-based authentication is supported, the number of
- additional roundtrips may be much larger due to fragmentation of
- certificate chains. In general, a fragmented EAP packet will require
- as many round-trips to send as there are fragments. For example, a
- certificate chain 14960 octets in size would require ten round-trips
- to send with a 1496 octet EAP MTU.
- Where EAP runs over a lower layer in which significant packet loss is
- experienced, or where the connection between the authenticator and
- authentication server experiences significant packet loss, EAP
- methods requiring many round-trips can experience difficulties. In
- these situations, use of EAP methods with fewer roundtrips is
- advisable.
- 2. Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- The EAP authentication exchange proceeds as follows:
- [1] The authenticator sends a Request to authenticate the peer. The
- Request has a Type field to indicate what is being requested.
- Examples of Request Types include Identity, MD5-challenge, etc.
- The MD5-challenge Type corresponds closely to the CHAP
- authentication protocol [RFC1994]. Typically, the authenticator
- will send an initial Identity Request; however, an initial
- Identity Request is not required, and MAY be bypassed. For
- example, the identity may not be required where it is determined
- by the port to which the peer has connected (leased lines,
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 7]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- dedicated switch or dial-up ports), or where the identity is
- obtained in another fashion (via calling station identity or MAC
- address, in the Name field of the MD5-Challenge Response, etc.).
- [2] The peer sends a Response packet in reply to a valid Request. As
- with the Request packet, the Response packet contains a Type
- field, which corresponds to the Type field of the Request.
- [3] The authenticator sends an additional Request packet, and the
- peer replies with a Response. The sequence of Requests and
- Responses continues as long as needed. EAP is a 'lock step'
- protocol, so that other than the initial Request, a new Request
- cannot be sent prior to receiving a valid Response. The
- authenticator is responsible for retransmitting requests as
- described in Section 4.1. After a suitable number of
- retransmissions, the authenticator SHOULD end the EAP
- conversation. The authenticator MUST NOT send a Success or
- Failure packet when retransmitting or when it fails to get a
- response from the peer.
- [4] The conversation continues until the authenticator cannot
- authenticate the peer (unacceptable Responses to one or more
- Requests), in which case the authenticator implementation MUST
- transmit an EAP Failure (Code 4). Alternatively, the
- authentication conversation can continue until the authenticator
- determines that successful authentication has occurred, in which
- case the authenticator MUST transmit an EAP Success (Code 3).
- Advantages:
- o The EAP protocol can support multiple authentication mechanisms
- without having to pre-negotiate a particular one.
- o Network Access Server (NAS) devices (e.g., a switch or access
- point) do not have to understand each authentication method and
- MAY act as a pass-through agent for a backend authentication
- server. Support for pass-through is optional. An authenticator
- MAY authenticate local peers, while at the same time acting as a
- pass-through for non-local peers and authentication methods it
- does not implement locally.
- o Separation of the authenticator from the backend authentication
- server simplifies credentials management and policy decision
- making.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 8]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Disadvantages:
- o For use in PPP, EAP requires the addition of a new authentication
- Type to PPP LCP and thus PPP implementations will need to be
- modified to use it. It also strays from the previous PPP
- authentication model of negotiating a specific authentication
- mechanism during LCP. Similarly, switch or access point
- implementations need to support [IEEE-802.1X] in order to use EAP.
- o Where the authenticator is separate from the backend
- authentication server, this complicates the security analysis and,
- if needed, key distribution.
- 2.1. Support for Sequences
- An EAP conversation MAY utilize a sequence of methods. A common
- example of this is an Identity request followed by a single EAP
- authentication method such as an MD5-Challenge. However, the peer
- and authenticator MUST utilize only one authentication method (Type 4
- or greater) within an EAP conversation, after which the authenticator
- MUST send a Success or Failure packet.
- Once a peer has sent a Response of the same Type as the initial
- Request, an authenticator MUST NOT send a Request of a different Type
- prior to completion of the final round of a given method (with the
- exception of a Notification-Request) and MUST NOT send a Request for
- an additional method of any Type after completion of the initial
- authentication method; a peer receiving such Requests MUST treat them
- as invalid, and silently discard them. As a result, Identity Requery
- is not supported.
- A peer MUST NOT send a Nak (legacy or expanded) in reply to a Request
- after an initial non-Nak Response has been sent. Since spoofed EAP
- Request packets may be sent by an attacker, an authenticator
- receiving an unexpected Nak SHOULD discard it and log the event.
- Multiple authentication methods within an EAP conversation are not
- supported due to their vulnerability to man-in-the-middle attacks
- (see Section 7.4) and incompatibility with existing implementations.
- Where a single EAP authentication method is utilized, but other
- methods are run within it (a "tunneled" method), the prohibition
- against multiple authentication methods does not apply. Such
- "tunneled" methods appear as a single authentication method to EAP.
- Backward compatibility can be provided, since a peer not supporting a
- "tunneled" method can reply to the initial EAP-Request with a Nak
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 9]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- (legacy or expanded). To address security vulnerabilities,
- "tunneled" methods MUST support protection against man-in-the-middle
- attacks.
- 2.2. EAP Multiplexing Model
- Conceptually, EAP implementations consist of the following
- components:
- [a] Lower layer. The lower layer is responsible for transmitting and
- receiving EAP frames between the peer and authenticator. EAP has
- been run over a variety of lower layers including PPP, wired IEEE
- 802 LANs [IEEE-802.1X], IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs [IEEE-802.11],
- UDP (L2TP [RFC2661] and IKEv2 [IKEv2]), and TCP [PIC]. Lower
- layer behavior is discussed in Section 3.
- [b] EAP layer. The EAP layer receives and transmits EAP packets via
- the lower layer, implements duplicate detection and
- retransmission, and delivers and receives EAP messages to and
- from the EAP peer and authenticator layers.
- [c] EAP peer and authenticator layers. Based on the Code field, the
- EAP layer demultiplexes incoming EAP packets to the EAP peer and
- authenticator layers. Typically, an EAP implementation on a
- given host will support either peer or authenticator
- functionality, but it is possible for a host to act as both an
- EAP peer and authenticator. In such an implementation both EAP
- peer and authenticator layers will be present.
- [d] EAP method layers. EAP methods implement the authentication
- algorithms and receive and transmit EAP messages via the EAP peer
- and authenticator layers. Since fragmentation support is not
- provided by EAP itself, this is the responsibility of EAP
- methods, which are discussed in Section 5.
- The EAP multiplexing model is illustrated in Figure 1 below. Note
- that there is no requirement that an implementation conform to this
- model, as long as the on-the-wire behavior is consistent with it.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 10]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | | | | | |
- | EAP method| EAP method| | EAP method| EAP method|
- | Type = X | Type = Y | | Type = X | Type = Y |
- | V | | | ^ | |
- +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ! | | ! |
- | EAP ! Peer layer | | EAP ! Auth. layer |
- | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ! | | ! |
- | EAP ! layer | | EAP ! layer |
- | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | ! | | ! |
- | Lower ! layer | | Lower ! layer |
- | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- ! !
- ! Peer ! Authenticator
- +------------>-------------+
- Figure 1: EAP Multiplexing Model
- Within EAP, the Code field functions much like a protocol number in
- IP. It is assumed that the EAP layer demultiplexes incoming EAP
- packets according to the Code field. Received EAP packets with
- Code=1 (Request), 3 (Success), and 4 (Failure) are delivered by the
- EAP layer to the EAP peer layer, if implemented. EAP packets with
- Code=2 (Response) are delivered to the EAP authenticator layer, if
- implemented.
- Within EAP, the Type field functions much like a port number in UDP
- or TCP. It is assumed that the EAP peer and authenticator layers
- demultiplex incoming EAP packets according to their Type, and deliver
- them only to the EAP method corresponding to that Type. An EAP
- method implementation on a host may register to receive packets from
- the peer or authenticator layers, or both, depending on which role(s)
- it supports.
- Since EAP authentication methods may wish to access the Identity,
- implementations SHOULD make the Identity Request and Response
- accessible to authentication methods (Types 4 or greater), in
- addition to the Identity method. The Identity Type is discussed in
- Section 5.1.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 11]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- A Notification Response is only used as confirmation that the peer
- received the Notification Request, not that it has processed it, or
- displayed the message to the user. It cannot be assumed that the
- contents of the Notification Request or Response are available to
- another method. The Notification Type is discussed in Section 5.2.
- Nak (Type 3) or Expanded Nak (Type 254) are utilized for the purposes
- of method negotiation. Peers respond to an initial EAP Request for
- an unacceptable Type with a Nak Response (Type 3) or Expanded Nak
- Response (Type 254). It cannot be assumed that the contents of the
- Nak Response(s) are available to another method. The Nak Type(s) are
- discussed in Section 5.3.
- EAP packets with Codes of Success or Failure do not include a Type
- field, and are not delivered to an EAP method. Success and Failure
- are discussed in Section 4.2.
- Given these considerations, the Success, Failure, Nak Response(s),
- and Notification Request/Response messages MUST NOT be used to carry
- data destined for delivery to other EAP methods.
- 2.3. Pass-Through Behavior
- When operating as a "pass-through authenticator", an authenticator
- performs checks on the Code, Identifier, and Length fields as
- described in Section 4.1. It forwards EAP packets received from the
- peer and destined to its authenticator layer to the backend
- authentication server; packets received from the backend
- authentication server destined to the peer are forwarded to it.
- A host receiving an EAP packet may only do one of three things with
- it: act on it, drop it, or forward it. The forwarding decision is
- typically based only on examination of the Code, Identifier, and
- Length fields. A pass-through authenticator implementation MUST be
- capable of forwarding EAP packets received from the peer with Code=2
- (Response) to the backend authentication server. It also MUST be
- capable of receiving EAP packets from the backend authentication
- server and forwarding EAP packets of Code=1 (Request), Code=3
- (Success), and Code=4 (Failure) to the peer.
- Unless the authenticator implements one or more authentication
- methods locally which support the authenticator role, the EAP method
- layer header fields (Type, Type-Data) are not examined as part of the
- forwarding decision. Where the authenticator supports local
- authentication methods, it MAY examine the Type field to determine
- whether to act on the packet itself or forward it. Compliant pass-
- through authenticator implementations MUST by default forward EAP
- packets of any Type.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 12]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- EAP packets received with Code=1 (Request), Code=3 (Success), and
- Code=4 (Failure) are demultiplexed by the EAP layer and delivered to
- the peer layer. Therefore, unless a host implements an EAP peer
- layer, these packets will be silently discarded. Similarly, EAP
- packets received with Code=2 (Response) are demultiplexed by the EAP
- layer and delivered to the authenticator layer. Therefore, unless a
- host implements an EAP authenticator layer, these packets will be
- silently discarded. The behavior of a "pass-through peer" is
- undefined within this specification, and is unsupported by AAA
- protocols such as RADIUS [RFC3579] and Diameter [DIAM-EAP].
- The forwarding model is illustrated in Figure 2.
- Peer Pass-through Authenticator Authentication
- Server
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | | | |
- |EAP method | |EAP method |
- | V | | ^ |
- +-+-+-!-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-!-+-+-+
- | ! | |EAP | EAP | | | ! |
- | ! | |Peer | Auth.| EAP Auth. | | ! |
- |EAP ! peer| | | +-----------+ | |EAP !Auth.|
- | ! | | | ! | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-!-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-!-+-+-+
- | ! | | ! | ! | | ! |
- |EAP !layer| | EAP !layer| EAP !layer | |EAP !layer|
- | ! | | ! | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-!-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-!-+-+-+
- | ! | | ! | ! | | ! |
- |Lower!layer| | Lower!layer| AAA ! /IP | | AAA ! /IP |
- | ! | | ! | ! | | ! |
- +-+-+-!-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+-+-!-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-!-+-+-+
- ! ! ! !
- ! ! ! !
- +-------->--------+ +--------->-------+
- Figure 2: Pass-through Authenticator
- For sessions in which the authenticator acts as a pass-through, it
- MUST determine the outcome of the authentication solely based on the
- Accept/Reject indication sent by the backend authentication server;
- the outcome MUST NOT be determined by the contents of an EAP packet
- sent along with the Accept/Reject indication, or the absence of such
- an encapsulated EAP packet.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 13]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 2.4. Peer-to-Peer Operation
- Since EAP is a peer-to-peer protocol, an independent and simultaneous
- authentication may take place in the reverse direction (depending on
- the capabilities of the lower layer). Both ends of the link may act
- as authenticators and peers at the same time. In this case, it is
- necessary for both ends to implement EAP authenticator and peer
- layers. In addition, the EAP method implementations on both peers
- must support both authenticator and peer functionality.
- Although EAP supports peer-to-peer operation, some EAP
- implementations, methods, AAA protocols, and link layers may not
- support this. Some EAP methods may support asymmetric
- authentication, with one type of credential being required for the
- peer and another type for the authenticator. Hosts supporting peer-
- to-peer operation with such a method would need to be provisioned
- with both types of credentials.
- For example, EAP-TLS [RFC2716] is a client-server protocol in which
- distinct certificate profiles are typically utilized for the client
- and server. This implies that a host supporting peer-to-peer
- authentication with EAP-TLS would need to implement both the EAP peer
- and authenticator layers, support both peer and authenticator roles
- in the EAP-TLS implementation, and provision certificates appropriate
- for each role.
- AAA protocols such as RADIUS/EAP [RFC3579] and Diameter EAP [DIAM-
- EAP] only support "pass-through authenticator" operation. As noted
- in [RFC3579] Section 2.6.2, a RADIUS server responds to an Access-
- Request encapsulating an EAP-Request, Success, or Failure packet with
- an Access-Reject. There is therefore no support for "pass-through
- peer" operation.
- Even where a method is used which supports mutual authentication and
- result indications, several considerations may dictate that two EAP
- authentications (one in each direction) are required. These include:
- [1] Support for bi-directional session key derivation in the lower
- layer. Lower layers such as IEEE 802.11 may only support uni-
- directional derivation and transport of transient session keys.
- For example, the group-key handshake defined in [IEEE-802.11i] is
- uni-directional, since in IEEE 802.11 infrastructure mode, only
- the Access Point (AP) sends multicast/broadcast traffic. In IEEE
- 802.11 ad hoc mode, where either peer may send
- multicast/broadcast traffic, two uni-directional group-key
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 14]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- exchanges are required. Due to limitations of the design, this
- also implies the need for unicast key derivations and EAP method
- exchanges to occur in each direction.
- [2] Support for tie-breaking in the lower layer. Lower layers such
- as IEEE 802.11 ad hoc do not support "tie breaking" wherein two
- hosts initiating authentication with each other will only go
- forward with a single authentication. This implies that even if
- 802.11 were to support a bi-directional group-key handshake, then
- two authentications, one in each direction, might still occur.
- [3] Peer policy satisfaction. EAP methods may support result
- indications, enabling the peer to indicate to the EAP server
- within the method that it successfully authenticated the EAP
- server, as well as for the server to indicate that it has
- authenticated the peer. However, a pass-through authenticator
- will not be aware that the peer has accepted the credentials
- offered by the EAP server, unless this information is provided to
- the authenticator via the AAA protocol. The authenticator SHOULD
- interpret the receipt of a key attribute within an Accept packet
- as an indication that the peer has successfully authenticated the
- server.
- However, it is possible that the EAP peer's access policy was not
- satisfied during the initial EAP exchange, even though mutual
- authentication occurred. For example, the EAP authenticator may not
- have demonstrated authorization to act in both peer and authenticator
- roles. As a result, the peer may require an additional
- authentication in the reverse direction, even if the peer provided an
- indication that the EAP server had successfully authenticated to it.
- 3. Lower Layer Behavior
- 3.1. Lower Layer Requirements
- EAP makes the following assumptions about lower layers:
- [1] Unreliable transport. In EAP, the authenticator retransmits
- Requests that have not yet received Responses so that EAP does
- not assume that lower layers are reliable. Since EAP defines its
- own retransmission behavior, it is possible (though undesirable)
- for retransmission to occur both in the lower layer and the EAP
- layer when EAP is run over a reliable lower layer.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 15]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Note that EAP Success and Failure packets are not retransmitted.
- Without a reliable lower layer, and with a non-negligible error rate,
- these packets can be lost, resulting in timeouts. It is therefore
- desirable for implementations to improve their resilience to loss of
- EAP Success or Failure packets, as described in Section 4.2.
- [2] Lower layer error detection. While EAP does not assume that the
- lower layer is reliable, it does rely on lower layer error
- detection (e.g., CRC, Checksum, MIC, etc.). EAP methods may not
- include a MIC, or if they do, it may not be computed over all the
- fields in the EAP packet, such as the Code, Identifier, Length,
- or Type fields. As a result, without lower layer error
- detection, undetected errors could creep into the EAP layer or
- EAP method layer header fields, resulting in authentication
- failures.
- For example, EAP TLS [RFC2716], which computes its MIC over the
- Type-Data field only, regards MIC validation failures as a fatal
- error. Without lower layer error detection, this method, and
- others like it, will not perform reliably.
- [3] Lower layer security. EAP does not require lower layers to
- provide security services such as per-packet confidentiality,
- authentication, integrity, and replay protection. However, where
- these security services are available, EAP methods supporting Key
- Derivation (see Section 7.2.1) can be used to provide dynamic
- keying material. This makes it possible to bind the EAP
- authentication to subsequent data and protect against data
- modification, spoofing, or replay. See Section 7.1 for details.
- [4] Minimum MTU. EAP is capable of functioning on lower layers that
- provide an EAP MTU size of 1020 octets or greater.
- EAP does not support path MTU discovery, and fragmentation and
- reassembly is not supported by EAP, nor by the methods defined in
- this specification: Identity (1), Notification (2), Nak Response
- (3), MD5-Challenge (4), One Time Password (5), Generic Token Card
- (6), and expanded Nak Response (254) Types.
- Typically, the EAP peer obtains information on the EAP MTU from
- the lower layers and sets the EAP frame size to an appropriate
- value. Where the authenticator operates in pass-through mode,
- the authentication server does not have a direct way of
- determining the EAP MTU, and therefore relies on the
- authenticator to provide it with this information, such as via
- the Framed-MTU attribute, as described in [RFC3579], Section 2.4.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 16]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- While methods such as EAP-TLS [RFC2716] support fragmentation and
- reassembly, EAP methods originally designed for use within PPP
- where a 1500 octet MTU is guaranteed for control frames (see
- [RFC1661], Section 6.1) may lack fragmentation and reassembly
- features.
- EAP methods can assume a minimum EAP MTU of 1020 octets in the
- absence of other information. EAP methods SHOULD include support
- for fragmentation and reassembly if their payloads can be larger
- than this minimum EAP MTU.
- EAP is a lock-step protocol, which implies a certain inefficiency
- when handling fragmentation and reassembly. Therefore, if the
- lower layer supports fragmentation and reassembly (such as where
- EAP is transported over IP), it may be preferable for
- fragmentation and reassembly to occur in the lower layer rather
- than in EAP. This can be accomplished by providing an
- artificially large EAP MTU to EAP, causing fragmentation and
- reassembly to be handled within the lower layer.
- [5] Possible duplication. Where the lower layer is reliable, it will
- provide the EAP layer with a non-duplicated stream of packets.
- However, while it is desirable that lower layers provide for
- non-duplication, this is not a requirement. The Identifier field
- provides both the peer and authenticator with the ability to
- detect duplicates.
- [6] Ordering guarantees. EAP does not require the Identifier to be
- monotonically increasing, and so is reliant on lower layer
- ordering guarantees for correct operation. EAP was originally
- defined to run on PPP, and [RFC1661] Section 1 has an ordering
- requirement:
- "The Point-to-Point Protocol is designed for simple links
- which transport packets between two peers. These links
- provide full-duplex simultaneous bi-directional operation,
- and are assumed to deliver packets in order."
- Lower layer transports for EAP MUST preserve ordering between a
- source and destination at a given priority level (the ordering
- guarantee provided by [IEEE-802]).
- Reordering, if it occurs, will typically result in an EAP
- authentication failure, causing EAP authentication to be re-run.
- In an environment in which reordering is likely, it is therefore
- expected that EAP authentication failures will be common. It is
- RECOMMENDED that EAP only be run over lower layers that provide
- ordering guarantees; running EAP over raw IP or UDP transport is
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 17]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- NOT RECOMMENDED. Encapsulation of EAP within RADIUS [RFC3579]
- satisfies ordering requirements, since RADIUS is a "lockstep"
- protocol that delivers packets in order.
- 3.2. EAP Usage Within PPP
- In order to establish communications over a point-to-point link, each
- end of the PPP link first sends LCP packets to configure the data
- link during the Link Establishment phase. After the link has been
- established, PPP provides for an optional Authentication phase before
- proceeding to the Network-Layer Protocol phase.
- By default, authentication is not mandatory. If authentication of
- the link is desired, an implementation MUST specify the
- Authentication Protocol Configuration Option during the Link
- Establishment phase.
- If the identity of the peer has been established in the
- Authentication phase, the server can use that identity in the
- selection of options for the following network layer negotiations.
- When implemented within PPP, EAP does not select a specific
- authentication mechanism at the PPP Link Control Phase, but rather
- postpones this until the Authentication Phase. This allows the
- authenticator to request more information before determining the
- specific authentication mechanism. This also permits the use of a
- "backend" server which actually implements the various mechanisms
- while the PPP authenticator merely passes through the authentication
- exchange. The PPP Link Establishment and Authentication phases, and
- the Authentication Protocol Configuration Option, are defined in The
- Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) [RFC1661].
- 3.2.1. PPP Configuration Option Format
- A summary of the PPP Authentication Protocol Configuration Option
- format to negotiate EAP follows. The fields are transmitted from
- left to right.
- Exactly one EAP packet is encapsulated in the Information field of a
- PPP Data Link Layer frame where the protocol field indicates type hex
- C227 (PPP EAP).
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 18]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Authentication Protocol |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Type
- 3
- Length
- 4
- Authentication Protocol
- C227 (Hex) for Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- 3.3. EAP Usage Within IEEE 802
- The encapsulation of EAP over IEEE 802 is defined in [IEEE-802.1X].
- The IEEE 802 encapsulation of EAP does not involve PPP, and IEEE
- 802.1X does not include support for link or network layer
- negotiations. As a result, within IEEE 802.1X, it is not possible to
- negotiate non-EAP authentication mechanisms, such as PAP or CHAP
- [RFC1994].
- 3.4. Lower Layer Indications
- The reliability and security of lower layer indications is dependent
- on the lower layer. Since EAP is media independent, the presence or
- absence of lower layer security is not taken into account in the
- processing of EAP messages.
- To improve reliability, if a peer receives a lower layer success
- indication as defined in Section 7.2, it MAY conclude that a Success
- packet has been lost, and behave as if it had actually received a
- Success packet. This includes choosing to ignore the Success in some
- circumstances as described in Section 4.2.
- A discussion of some reliability and security issues with lower layer
- indications in PPP, IEEE 802 wired networks, and IEEE 802.11 wireless
- LANs can be found in the Security Considerations, Section 7.12.
- After EAP authentication is complete, the peer will typically
- transmit and receive data via the authenticator. It is desirable to
- provide assurance that the entities transmitting data are the same
- ones that successfully completed EAP authentication. To accomplish
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 19]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- this, it is necessary for the lower layer to provide per-packet
- integrity, authentication and replay protection, and to bind these
- per-packet services to the keys derived during EAP authentication.
- Otherwise, it is possible for subsequent data traffic to be modified,
- spoofed, or replayed.
- Where keying material for the lower layer ciphersuite is itself
- provided by EAP, ciphersuite negotiation and key activation are
- controlled by the lower layer. In PPP, ciphersuites are negotiated
- within ECP so that it is not possible to use keys derived from EAP
- authentication until the completion of ECP. Therefore, an initial
- EAP exchange cannot be protected by a PPP ciphersuite, although EAP
- re-authentication can be protected.
- In IEEE 802 media, initial key activation also typically occurs after
- completion of EAP authentication. Therefore an initial EAP exchange
- typically cannot be protected by the lower layer ciphersuite,
- although an EAP re-authentication or pre-authentication exchange can
- be protected.
- 4. EAP Packet Format
- A summary of the EAP packet format is shown below. The fields are
- transmitted from left to right.
- 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 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
- Code
- The Code field is one octet and identifies the Type of EAP packet.
- EAP Codes are assigned as follows:
- 1 Request
- 2 Response
- 3 Success
- 4 Failure
- Since EAP only defines Codes 1-4, EAP packets with other codes
- MUST be silently discarded by both authenticators and peers.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 20]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 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, in
- octets, of the EAP packet including the Code, Identifier, Length,
- and Data fields. Octets outside the range of the Length field
- should be treated as Data Link Layer padding and MUST be ignored
- upon reception. A message with the Length field set to a value
- larger than the number of received octets MUST be silently
- discarded.
- Data
- The Data field is zero or more octets. The format of the Data
- field is determined by the Code field.
- 4.1. Request and Response
- Description
- The Request packet (Code field set to 1) is sent by the
- authenticator to the peer. Each Request has a Type field which
- serves to indicate what is being requested. Additional Request
- packets MUST be sent until a valid Response packet is received, an
- optional retry counter expires, or a lower layer failure
- indication is received.
- Retransmitted Requests MUST be sent with the same Identifier value
- in order to distinguish them from new Requests. The content of
- the data field is dependent on the Request Type. The peer MUST
- send a Response packet in reply to a valid Request packet.
- Responses MUST only be sent in reply to a valid Request and never
- be retransmitted on a timer.
- If a peer receives a valid duplicate Request for which it has
- already sent a Response, it MUST resend its original Response
- without reprocessing the Request. Requests MUST be processed in
- the order that they are received, and MUST be processed to their
- completion before inspecting the next Request.
- A summary of the Request and Response packet format follows. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 21]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 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 | Type-Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
- Code
- 1 for Request
- 2 for Response
- Identifier
- The Identifier field is one octet. The Identifier field MUST be
- the same if a Request packet is retransmitted due to a timeout
- while waiting for a Response. Any new (non-retransmission)
- Requests MUST modify the Identifier field.
- The Identifier field of the Response MUST match that of the
- currently outstanding Request. An authenticator receiving a
- Response whose Identifier value does not match that of the
- currently outstanding Request MUST silently discard the Response.
- In order to avoid confusion between new Requests and
- retransmissions, the Identifier value chosen for each new Request
- need only be different from the previous Request, but need not be
- unique within the conversation. One way to achieve this is to
- start the Identifier at an initial value and increment it for each
- new Request. Initializing the first Identifier with a random
- number rather than starting from zero is recommended, since it
- makes sequence attacks somewhat more difficult.
- Since the Identifier space is unique to each session,
- authenticators are not restricted to only 256 simultaneous
- authentication conversations. Similarly, with re-authentication,
- an EAP conversation might continue over a long period of time, and
- is not limited to only 256 roundtrips.
- Implementation Note: The authenticator is responsible for
- retransmitting Request messages. If the Request message is obtained
- from elsewhere (such as from a backend authentication server), then
- the authenticator will need to save a copy of the Request in order to
- accomplish this. The peer is responsible for detecting and handling
- duplicate Request messages before processing them in any way,
- including passing them on to an outside party. The authenticator is
- also responsible for discarding Response messages with a non-matching
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 22]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Identifier value before acting on them in any way, including passing
- them on to the backend authentication server for verification. Since
- the authenticator can retransmit before receiving a Response from the
- peer, the authenticator can receive multiple Responses, each with a
- matching Identifier. Until a new Request is received by the
- authenticator, the Identifier value is not updated, so that the
- authenticator forwards Responses to the backend authentication
- server, one at a time.
- Length
- The Length field is two octets and indicates the length of the EAP
- packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Type-Data
- fields. Octets outside the range of the Length field should be
- treated as Data Link Layer padding and MUST be ignored upon
- reception. A message with the Length field set to a value larger
- than the number of received octets MUST be silently discarded.
- Type
- The Type field is one octet. This field indicates the Type of
- Request or Response. A single Type MUST be specified for each EAP
- Request or Response. An initial specification of Types follows in
- Section 5 of this document.
- The Type field of a Response MUST either match that of the
- Request, or correspond to a legacy or Expanded Nak (see Section
- 5.3) indicating that a Request Type is unacceptable to the peer.
- A peer MUST NOT send a Nak (legacy or expanded) in response to a
- Request, after an initial non-Nak Response has been sent. An EAP
- server receiving a Response not meeting these requirements MUST
- silently discard it.
- Type-Data
- The Type-Data field varies with the Type of Request and the
- associated Response.
- 4.2. Success and Failure
- The Success packet is sent by the authenticator to the peer after
- completion of an EAP authentication method (Type 4 or greater) to
- indicate that the peer has authenticated successfully to the
- authenticator. The authenticator MUST transmit an EAP packet with
- the Code field set to 3 (Success). If the authenticator cannot
- authenticate the peer (unacceptable Responses to one or more
- Requests), then after unsuccessful completion of the EAP method in
- progress, the implementation MUST transmit an EAP packet with the
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 23]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Code field set to 4 (Failure). An authenticator MAY wish to issue
- multiple Requests before sending a Failure response in order to allow
- for human typing mistakes. Success and Failure packets MUST NOT
- contain additional data.
- Success and Failure packets MUST NOT be sent by an EAP authenticator
- if the specification of the given method does not explicitly permit
- the method to finish at that point. A peer EAP implementation
- receiving a Success or Failure packet where sending one is not
- explicitly permitted MUST silently discard it. By default, an EAP
- peer MUST silently discard a "canned" Success packet (a Success
- packet sent immediately upon connection). This ensures that a rogue
- authenticator will not be able to bypass mutual authentication by
- sending a Success packet prior to conclusion of the EAP method
- conversation.
- Implementation Note: Because the Success and Failure packets are not
- acknowledged, they are not retransmitted by the authenticator, and
- may be potentially lost. A peer MUST allow for this circumstance as
- described in this note. See also Section 3.4 for guidance on the
- processing of lower layer success and failure indications.
- As described in Section 2.1, only a single EAP authentication method
- is allowed within an EAP conversation. EAP methods may implement
- result indications. After the authenticator sends a failure result
- indication to the peer, regardless of the response from the peer, it
- MUST subsequently send a Failure packet. After the authenticator
- sends a success result indication to the peer and receives a success
- result indication from the peer, it MUST subsequently send a Success
- packet.
- On the peer, once the method completes unsuccessfully (that is,
- either the authenticator sends a failure result indication, or the
- peer decides that it does not want to continue the conversation,
- possibly after sending a failure result indication), the peer MUST
- terminate the conversation and indicate failure to the lower layer.
- The peer MUST silently discard Success packets and MAY silently
- discard Failure packets. As a result, loss of a Failure packet need
- not result in a timeout.
- On the peer, after success result indications have been exchanged by
- both sides, a Failure packet MUST be silently discarded. The peer
- MAY, in the event that an EAP Success is not received, conclude that
- the EAP Success packet was lost and that authentication concluded
- successfully.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 24]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- If the authenticator has not sent a result indication, and the peer
- is willing to continue the conversation, the peer waits for a Success
- or Failure packet once the method completes, and MUST NOT silently
- discard either of them. In the event that neither a Success nor
- Failure packet is received, the peer SHOULD terminate the
- conversation to avoid lengthy timeouts in case the lost packet was an
- EAP Failure.
- If the peer attempts to authenticate to the authenticator and fails
- to do so, the authenticator MUST send a Failure packet and MUST NOT
- grant access by sending a Success packet. However, an authenticator
- MAY omit having the peer authenticate to it in situations where
- limited access is offered (e.g., guest access). In this case, the
- authenticator MUST send a Success packet.
- Where the peer authenticates successfully to the authenticator, but
- the authenticator does not send a result indication, the
- authenticator MAY deny access by sending a Failure packet where the
- peer is not currently authorized for network access.
- A summary of the Success and Failure packet format is shown below.
- The fields are transmitted from left to right.
- 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 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Code
- 3 for Success
- 4 for Failure
- Identifier
- The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching replies to
- Responses. The Identifier field MUST match the Identifier field
- of the Response packet that it is sent in response to.
- Length
- 4
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 25]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 4.3. Retransmission Behavior
- Because the authentication process will often involve user input,
- some care must be taken when deciding upon retransmission strategies
- and authentication timeouts. By default, where EAP is run over an
- unreliable lower layer, the EAP retransmission timer SHOULD be
- dynamically estimated. A maximum of 3-5 retransmissions is
- suggested.
- When run over a reliable lower layer (e.g., EAP over ISAKMP/TCP, as
- within [PIC]), the authenticator retransmission timer SHOULD be set
- to an infinite value, so that retransmissions do not occur at the EAP
- layer. The peer may still maintain a timeout value so as to avoid
- waiting indefinitely for a Request.
- Where the authentication process requires user input, the measured
- round trip times may be determined by user responsiveness rather than
- network characteristics, so that dynamic RTO estimation may not be
- helpful. Instead, the retransmission timer SHOULD be set so as to
- provide sufficient time for the user to respond, with longer timeouts
- required in certain cases, such as where Token Cards (see Section
- 5.6) are involved.
- In order to provide the EAP authenticator with guidance as to the
- appropriate timeout value, a hint can be communicated to the
- authenticator by the backend authentication server (such as via the
- RADIUS Session-Timeout attribute).
- In order to dynamically estimate the EAP retransmission timer, the
- algorithms for the estimation of SRTT, RTTVAR, and RTO described in
- [RFC2988] are RECOMMENDED, including use of Karn's algorithm, with
- the following potential modifications:
- [a] In order to avoid synchronization behaviors that can occur with
- fixed timers among distributed systems, the retransmission timer
- is calculated with a jitter by using the RTO value and randomly
- adding a value drawn between -RTOmin/2 and RTOmin/2. Alternative
- calculations to create jitter MAY be used. These MUST be
- pseudo-random. For a discussion of pseudo-random number
- generation, see [RFC1750].
- [b] When EAP is transported over a single link (as opposed to over
- the Internet), smaller values of RTOinitial, RTOmin, and RTOmax
- MAY be used. Recommended values are RTOinitial=1 second,
- RTOmin=200ms, and RTOmax=20 seconds.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 26]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [c] When EAP is transported over a single link (as opposed to over
- the Internet), estimates MAY be done on a per-authenticator
- basis, rather than a per-session basis. This enables the
- retransmission estimate to make the most use of information on
- link-layer behavior.
- [d] An EAP implementation MAY clear SRTT and RTTVAR after backing off
- the timer multiple times, as it is likely that the current SRTT
- and RTTVAR are bogus in this situation. Once SRTT and RTTVAR are
- cleared, they should be initialized with the next RTT sample
- taken as described in [RFC2988] equation 2.2.
- 5. Initial EAP Request/Response Types
- This section defines the initial set of EAP Types used in Request/
- Response exchanges. More Types may be defined in future documents.
- The Type field is one octet and identifies the structure of an EAP
- Request or Response packet. The first 3 Types are considered special
- case Types.
- The remaining Types define authentication exchanges. Nak (Type 3) or
- Expanded Nak (Type 254) are valid only for Response packets, they
- MUST NOT be sent in a Request.
- All EAP implementations MUST support Types 1-4, which are defined in
- this document, and SHOULD support Type 254. Implementations MAY
- support other Types defined here or in future RFCs.
- 1 Identity
- 2 Notification
- 3 Nak (Response only)
- 4 MD5-Challenge
- 5 One Time Password (OTP)
- 6 Generic Token Card (GTC)
- 254 Expanded Types
- 255 Experimental use
- EAP methods MAY support authentication based on shared secrets. If
- the shared secret is a passphrase entered by the user,
- implementations MAY support entering passphrases with non-ASCII
- characters. In this case, the input should be processed using an
- appropriate stringprep [RFC3454] profile, and encoded in octets using
- UTF-8 encoding [RFC2279]. A preliminary version of a possible
- stringprep profile is described in [SASLPREP].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 27]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 5.1. Identity
- Description
- The Identity Type is used to query the identity of the peer.
- Generally, the authenticator will issue this as the initial
- Request. An optional displayable message MAY be included to
- prompt the peer in the case where there is an expectation of
- interaction with a user. A Response of Type 1 (Identity) SHOULD
- be sent in Response to a Request with a Type of 1 (Identity).
- Some EAP implementations piggy-back various options into the
- Identity Request after a NUL-character. By default, an EAP
- implementation SHOULD NOT assume that an Identity Request or
- Response can be larger than 1020 octets.
- It is RECOMMENDED that the Identity Response be used primarily for
- routing purposes and selecting which EAP method to use. EAP
- Methods SHOULD include a method-specific mechanism for obtaining
- the identity, so that they do not have to rely on the Identity
- Response. Identity Requests and Responses are sent in cleartext,
- so an attacker may snoop on the identity, or even modify or spoof
- identity exchanges. To address these threats, it is preferable
- for an EAP method to include an identity exchange that supports
- per-packet authentication, integrity and replay protection, and
- confidentiality. The Identity Response may not be the appropriate
- identity for the method; it may have been truncated or obfuscated
- so as to provide privacy, or it may have been decorated for
- routing purposes. Where the peer is configured to only accept
- authentication methods supporting protected identity exchanges,
- the peer MAY provide an abbreviated Identity Response (such as
- omitting the peer-name portion of the NAI [RFC2486]). For further
- discussion of identity protection, see Section 7.3.
- Implementation Note: The peer MAY obtain the Identity via user input.
- It is suggested that the authenticator retry the Identity Request in
- the case of an invalid Identity or authentication failure to allow
- for potential typos on the part of the user. It is suggested that
- the Identity Request be retried a minimum of 3 times before
- terminating the authentication. The Notification Request MAY be used
- to indicate an invalid authentication attempt prior to transmitting a
- new Identity Request (optionally, the failure MAY be indicated within
- the message of the new Identity Request itself).
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 28]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Type
- 1
- Type-Data
- This field MAY contain a displayable message in the Request,
- containing UTF-8 encoded ISO 10646 characters [RFC2279]. Where
- the Request contains a null, only the portion of the field prior
- to the null is displayed. If the Identity is unknown, the
- Identity Response field should be zero bytes in length. The
- Identity Response field MUST NOT be null terminated. In all
- cases, the length of the Type-Data field is derived from the
- Length field of the Request/Response packet.
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: None
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: N/A
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.2. Notification
- Description
- The Notification Type is optionally used to convey a displayable
- message from the authenticator to the peer. An authenticator MAY
- send a Notification Request to the peer at any time when there is
- no outstanding Request, prior to completion of an EAP
- authentication method. The peer MUST respond to a Notification
- Request with a Notification Response unless the EAP authentication
- method specification prohibits the use of Notification messages.
- In any case, a Nak Response MUST NOT be sent in response to a
- Notification Request. Note that the default maximum length of a
- Notification Request is 1020 octets. By default, this leaves at
- most 1015 octets for the human readable message.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 29]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- An EAP method MAY indicate within its specification that
- Notification messages must not be sent during that method. In
- this case, the peer MUST silently discard Notification Requests
- from the point where an initial Request for that Type is answered
- with a Response of the same Type.
- The peer SHOULD display this message to the user or log it if it
- cannot be displayed. The Notification Type is intended to provide
- an acknowledged notification of some imperative nature, but it is
- not an error indication, and therefore does not change the state
- of the peer. Examples include a password with an expiration time
- that is about to expire, an OTP sequence integer which is nearing
- 0, an authentication failure warning, etc. In most circumstances,
- Notification should not be required.
- Type
- 2
- Type-Data
- The Type-Data field in the Request contains a displayable message
- greater than zero octets in length, containing UTF-8 encoded ISO
- 10646 characters [RFC2279]. The length of the message is
- determined by the Length field of the Request packet. The message
- MUST NOT be null terminated. A Response MUST be sent in reply to
- the Request with a Type field of 2 (Notification). The Type-Data
- field of the Response is zero octets in length. The Response
- should be sent immediately (independent of how the message is
- displayed or logged).
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: None
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: N/A
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 30]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 5.3. Nak
- 5.3.1. Legacy Nak
- Description
- The legacy Nak Type is valid only in Response messages. It is
- sent in reply to a Request where the desired authentication Type
- is unacceptable. Authentication Types are numbered 4 and above.
- The Response contains one or more authentication Types desired by
- the Peer. Type zero (0) is used to indicate that the sender has
- no viable alternatives, and therefore the authenticator SHOULD NOT
- send another Request after receiving a Nak Response containing a
- zero value.
- Since the legacy Nak Type is valid only in Responses and has very
- limited functionality, it MUST NOT be used as a general purpose
- error indication, such as for communication of error messages, or
- negotiation of parameters specific to a particular EAP method.
- Code
- 2 for Response.
- Identifier
- The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching Responses
- with Requests. The Identifier field of a legacy Nak Response MUST
- match the Identifier field of the Request packet that it is sent
- in response to.
- Length
- >=6
- Type
- 3
- Type-Data
- Where a peer receives a Request for an unacceptable authentication
- Type (4-253,255), or a peer lacking support for Expanded Types
- receives a Request for Type 254, a Nak Response (Type 3) MUST be
- sent. The Type-Data field of the Nak Response (Type 3) MUST
- contain one or more octets indicating the desired authentication
- Type(s), one octet per Type, or the value zero (0) to indicate no
- proposed alternative. A peer supporting Expanded Types that
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 31]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- receives a Request for an unacceptable authentication Type (4-253,
- 255) MAY include the value 254 in the Nak Response (Type 3) to
- indicate the desire for an Expanded authentication Type. If the
- authenticator can accommodate this preference, it will respond
- with an Expanded Type Request (Type 254).
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: None
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: N/A
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.3.2. Expanded Nak
- Description
- The Expanded Nak Type is valid only in Response messages. It MUST
- be sent only in reply to a Request of Type 254 (Expanded Type)
- where the authentication Type is unacceptable. The Expanded Nak
- Type uses the Expanded Type format itself, and the Response
- contains one or more authentication Types desired by the peer, all
- in Expanded Type format. Type zero (0) is used to indicate that
- the sender has no viable alternatives. The general format of the
- Expanded Type is described in Section 5.7.
- Since the Expanded Nak Type is valid only in Responses and has
- very limited functionality, it MUST NOT be used as a general
- purpose error indication, such as for communication of error
- messages, or negotiation of parameters specific to a particular
- EAP method.
- Code
- 2 for Response.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 32]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Identifier
- The Identifier field is one octet and aids in matching Responses
- with Requests. The Identifier field of an Expanded Nak Response
- MUST match the Identifier field of the Request packet that it is
- sent in response to.
- Length
- >=20
- Type
- 254
- Vendor-Id
- 0 (IETF)
- Vendor-Type
- 3 (Nak)
- Vendor-Data
- The Expanded Nak Type is only sent when the Request contains an
- Expanded Type (254) as defined in Section 5.7. The Vendor-Data
- field of the Nak Response MUST contain one or more authentication
- Types (4 or greater), all in expanded format, 8 octets per Type,
- or the value zero (0), also in Expanded Type format, to indicate
- no proposed alternative. The desired authentication Types may
- include a mixture of Vendor-Specific and IETF Types. For example,
- an Expanded Nak Response indicating a preference for OTP (Type 5),
- and an MIT (Vendor-Id=20) Expanded Type of 6 would appear as
- follows:
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 33]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 2 | Identifier | Length=28 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type=254 | 0 (IETF) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 3 (Nak) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type=254 | 0 (IETF) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 5 (OTP) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type=254 | 20 (MIT) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 6 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- An Expanded Nak Response indicating a no desired alternative would
- appear as follows:
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 2 | Identifier | Length=20 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type=254 | 0 (IETF) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 3 (Nak) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type=254 | 0 (IETF) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | 0 (No alternative) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: None
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: N/A
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 34]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.4. MD5-Challenge
- Description
- The MD5-Challenge Type is analogous to the PPP CHAP protocol
- [RFC1994] (with MD5 as the specified algorithm). The Request
- contains a "challenge" message to the peer. A Response MUST be
- sent in reply to the Request. The Response MAY be either of Type
- 4 (MD5-Challenge), Nak (Type 3), or Expanded Nak (Type 254). The
- Nak reply indicates the peer's desired authentication Type(s).
- EAP peer and EAP server implementations MUST support the MD5-
- Challenge mechanism. An authenticator that supports only pass-
- through MUST allow communication with a backend authentication
- server that is capable of supporting MD5-Challenge, although the
- EAP authenticator implementation need not support MD5-Challenge
- itself. However, if the EAP authenticator can be configured to
- authenticate peers locally (e.g., not operate in pass-through),
- then the requirement for support of the MD5-Challenge mechanism
- applies.
- Note that the use of the Identifier field in the MD5-Challenge
- Type is different from that described in [RFC1994]. EAP allows
- for retransmission of MD5-Challenge Request packets, while
- [RFC1994] states that both the Identifier and Challenge fields
- MUST change each time a Challenge (the CHAP equivalent of the
- MD5-Challenge Request packet) is sent.
- Note: [RFC1994] treats the shared secret as an octet string, and
- does not specify how it is entered into the system (or if it is
- handled by the user at all). EAP MD5-Challenge implementations
- MAY support entering passphrases with non-ASCII characters. See
- Section 5 for instructions how the input should be processed and
- encoded into octets.
- Type
- 4
- Type-Data
- The contents of the Type-Data field is summarized below. For
- reference on the use of these fields, see the PPP Challenge
- Handshake Authentication Protocol [RFC1994].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 35]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Value-Size | Value ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Name ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: Password or pre-shared key.
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: No
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.5. One-Time Password (OTP)
- Description
- The One-Time Password system is defined in "A One-Time Password
- System" [RFC2289] and "OTP Extended Responses" [RFC2243]. The
- Request contains an OTP challenge in the format described in
- [RFC2289]. A Response MUST be sent in reply to the Request. The
- Response MUST be of Type 5 (OTP), Nak (Type 3), or Expanded Nak
- (Type 254). The Nak Response indicates the peer's desired
- authentication Type(s). The EAP OTP method is intended for use
- with the One-Time Password system only, and MUST NOT be used to
- provide support for cleartext passwords.
- Type
- 5
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 36]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Type-Data
- The Type-Data field contains the OTP "challenge" as a displayable
- message in the Request. In the Response, this field is used for
- the 6 words from the OTP dictionary [RFC2289]. The messages MUST
- NOT be null terminated. The length of the field is derived from
- the Length field of the Request/Reply packet.
- Note: [RFC2289] does not specify how the secret pass-phrase is
- entered by the user, or how the pass-phrase is converted into
- octets. EAP OTP implementations MAY support entering passphrases
- with non-ASCII characters. See Section 5 for instructions on how
- the input should be processed and encoded into octets.
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: One-Time Password
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: Yes
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: No
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.6. Generic Token Card (GTC)
- Description
- The Generic Token Card Type is defined for use with various Token
- Card implementations which require user input. The Request
- contains a displayable message and the Response contains the Token
- Card information necessary for authentication. Typically, this
- would be information read by a user from the Token card device and
- entered as ASCII text. A Response MUST be sent in reply to the
- Request. The Response MUST be of Type 6 (GTC), Nak (Type 3), or
- Expanded Nak (Type 254). The Nak Response indicates the peer's
- desired authentication Type(s). The EAP GTC method is intended
- for use with the Token Cards supporting challenge/response
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 37]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- authentication and MUST NOT be used to provide support for
- cleartext passwords in the absence of a protected tunnel with
- server authentication.
- Type
- 6
- Type-Data
- The Type-Data field in the Request contains a displayable message
- greater than zero octets in length. The length of the message is
- determined by the Length field of the Request packet. The message
- MUST NOT be null terminated. A Response MUST be sent in reply to
- the Request with a Type field of 6 (Generic Token Card). The
- Response contains data from the Token Card required for
- authentication. The length of the data is determined by the
- Length field of the Response packet.
- EAP GTC implementations MAY support entering a response with non-
- ASCII characters. See Section 5 for instructions how the input
- should be processed and encoded into octets.
- Security Claims (see Section 7.2):
- Auth. mechanism: Hardware token.
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: No
- Integrity protection: No
- Replay protection: No
- Confidentiality: No
- Key derivation: No
- Key strength: N/A
- Dictionary attack prot.: No
- Fast reconnect: No
- Crypt. binding: N/A
- Session independence: N/A
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- 5.7. Expanded Types
- Description
- Since many of the existing uses of EAP are vendor-specific, the
- Expanded method Type is available to allow vendors to support
- their own Expanded Types not suitable for general usage.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 38]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- The Expanded Type is also used to expand the global Method Type
- space beyond the original 255 values. A Vendor-Id of 0 maps the
- original 255 possible Types onto a space of 2^32-1 possible Types.
- (Type 0 is only used in a Nak Response to indicate no acceptable
- alternative).
- An implementation that supports the Expanded attribute MUST treat
- EAP Types that are less than 256 equivalently, whether they appear
- as a single octet or as the 32-bit Vendor-Type within an Expanded
- Type where Vendor-Id is 0. Peers not equipped to interpret the
- Expanded Type MUST send a Nak as described in Section 5.3.1, and
- negotiate a more suitable authentication method.
- A summary of the Expanded Type format is shown below. The fields
- are transmitted from left to right.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Vendor-Id |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Vendor-Type |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Vendor data...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Type
- 254 for Expanded Type
- Vendor-Id
- The Vendor-Id is 3 octets and represents the SMI Network
- Management Private Enterprise Code of the Vendor in network byte
- order, as allocated by IANA. A Vendor-Id of zero is reserved for
- use by the IETF in providing an expanded global EAP Type space.
- Vendor-Type
- The Vendor-Type field is four octets and represents the vendor-
- specific method Type.
- If the Vendor-Id is zero, the Vendor-Type field is an extension
- and superset of the existing namespace for EAP Types. The first
- 256 Types are reserved for compatibility with single-octet EAP
- Types that have already been assigned or may be assigned in the
- future. Thus, EAP Types from 0 through 255 are semantically
- identical, whether they appear as single octet EAP Types or as
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 39]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Vendor-Types when Vendor-Id is zero. There is one exception to
- this rule: Expanded Nak and Legacy Nak packets share the same
- Type, but must be treated differently because they have a
- different format.
- Vendor-Data
- The Vendor-Data field is defined by the vendor. Where a Vendor-Id
- of zero is present, the Vendor-Data field will be used for
- transporting the contents of EAP methods of Types defined by the
- IETF.
- 5.8. Experimental
- Description
- The Experimental Type has no fixed format or content. It is
- intended for use when experimenting with new EAP Types. This Type
- is intended for experimental and testing purposes. No guarantee
- is made for interoperability between peers using this Type, as
- outlined in [RFC3692].
- Type
- 255
- Type-Data
- Undefined
- 6. IANA Considerations
- This section provides guidance to the Internet Assigned Numbers
- Authority (IANA) regarding registration of values related to the EAP
- protocol, in accordance with BCP 26, [RFC2434].
- There are two name spaces in EAP that require registration: Packet
- Codes and method Types.
- EAP is not intended as a general-purpose protocol, and allocations
- SHOULD NOT be made for purposes unrelated to authentication.
- The following terms are used here with the meanings defined in BCP
- 26: "name space", "assigned value", "registration".
- The following policies are used here with the meanings defined in BCP
- 26: "Private Use", "First Come First Served", "Expert Review",
- "Specification Required", "IETF Consensus", "Standards Action".
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 40]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- For registration requests where a Designated Expert should be
- consulted, the responsible IESG area director should appoint the
- Designated Expert. The intention is that any allocation will be
- accompanied by a published RFC. But in order to allow for the
- allocation of values prior to the RFC being approved for publication,
- the Designated Expert can approve allocations once it seems clear
- that an RFC will be published. The Designated expert will post a
- request to the EAP WG mailing list (or a successor designated by the
- Area Director) for comment and review, including an Internet-Draft.
- Before a period of 30 days has passed, the Designated Expert will
- either approve or deny the registration request and publish a notice
- of the decision to the EAP WG mailing list or its successor, as well
- as informing IANA. A denial notice must be justified by an
- explanation, and in the cases where it is possible, concrete
- suggestions on how the request can be modified so as to become
- acceptable should be provided.
- 6.1. Packet Codes
- Packet Codes have a range from 1 to 255, of which 1-4 have been
- allocated. Because a new Packet Code has considerable impact on
- interoperability, a new Packet Code requires Standards Action, and
- should be allocated starting at 5.
- 6.2. Method Types
- The original EAP method Type space has a range from 1 to 255, and is
- the scarcest resource in EAP, and thus must be allocated with care.
- Method Types 1-45 have been allocated, with 20 available for re-use.
- Method Types 20 and 46-191 may be allocated on the advice of a
- Designated Expert, with Specification Required.
- Allocation of blocks of method Types (more than one for a given
- purpose) should require IETF Consensus. EAP Type Values 192-253 are
- reserved and allocation requires Standards Action.
- Method Type 254 is allocated for the Expanded Type. Where the
- Vendor-Id field is non-zero, the Expanded Type is used for functions
- specific only to one vendor's implementation of EAP, where no
- interoperability is deemed useful. When used with a Vendor-Id of
- zero, method Type 254 can also be used to provide for an expanded
- IETF method Type space. Method Type values 256-4294967295 may be
- allocated after Type values 1-191 have been allocated, on the advice
- of a Designated Expert, with Specification Required.
- Method Type 255 is allocated for Experimental use, such as testing of
- new EAP methods before a permanent Type is allocated.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 41]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 7. Security Considerations
- This section defines a generic threat model as well as the EAP method
- security claims mitigating those threats.
- It is expected that the generic threat model and corresponding
- security claims will used to define EAP method requirements for use
- in specific environments. An example of such a requirements analysis
- is provided in [IEEE-802.11i-req]. A security claims section is
- required in EAP method specifications, so that EAP methods can be
- evaluated against the requirements.
- 7.1. Threat Model
- EAP was developed for use with PPP [RFC1661] and was later adapted
- for use in wired IEEE 802 networks [IEEE-802] in [IEEE-802.1X].
- Subsequently, EAP has been proposed for use on wireless LAN networks
- and over the Internet. In all these situations, it is possible for
- an attacker to gain access to links over which EAP packets are
- transmitted. For example, attacks on telephone infrastructure are
- documented in [DECEPTION].
- An attacker with access to the link may carry out a number of
- attacks, including:
- [1] An attacker may try to discover user identities by snooping
- authentication traffic.
- [2] An attacker may try to modify or spoof EAP packets.
- [3] An attacker may launch denial of service attacks by spoofing
- lower layer indications or Success/Failure packets, by replaying
- EAP packets, or by generating packets with overlapping
- Identifiers.
- [4] An attacker may attempt to recover the pass-phrase by mounting
- an offline dictionary attack.
- [5] An attacker may attempt to convince the peer to connect to an
- untrusted network by mounting a man-in-the-middle attack.
- [6] An attacker may attempt to disrupt the EAP negotiation in order
- cause a weak authentication method to be selected.
- [7] An attacker may attempt to recover keys by taking advantage of
- weak key derivation techniques used within EAP methods.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 42]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [8] An attacker may attempt to take advantage of weak ciphersuites
- subsequently used after the EAP conversation is complete.
- [9] An attacker may attempt to perform downgrading attacks on lower
- layer ciphersuite negotiation in order to ensure that a weaker
- ciphersuite is used subsequently to EAP authentication.
- [10] An attacker acting as an authenticator may provide incorrect
- information to the EAP peer and/or server via out-of-band
- mechanisms (such as via a AAA or lower layer protocol). This
- includes impersonating another authenticator, or providing
- inconsistent information to the peer and EAP server.
- Depending on the lower layer, these attacks may be carried out
- without requiring physical proximity. Where EAP is used over
- wireless networks, EAP packets may be forwarded by authenticators
- (e.g., pre-authentication) so that the attacker need not be within
- the coverage area of an authenticator in order to carry out an attack
- on it or its peers. Where EAP is used over the Internet, attacks may
- be carried out at an even greater distance.
- 7.2. Security Claims
- In order to clearly articulate the security provided by an EAP
- method, EAP method specifications MUST include a Security Claims
- section, including the following declarations:
- [a] Mechanism. This is a statement of the authentication technology:
- certificates, pre-shared keys, passwords, token cards, etc.
- [b] Security claims. This is a statement of the claimed security
- properties of the method, using terms defined in Section 7.2.1:
- mutual authentication, integrity protection, replay protection,
- confidentiality, key derivation, dictionary attack resistance,
- fast reconnect, cryptographic binding. The Security Claims
- section of an EAP method specification SHOULD provide
- justification for the claims that are made. This can be
- accomplished by including a proof in an Appendix, or including a
- reference to a proof.
- [c] Key strength. If the method derives keys, then the effective key
- strength MUST be estimated. This estimate is meant for potential
- users of the method to determine if the keys produced are strong
- enough for the intended application.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 43]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- The effective key strength SHOULD be stated as a number of bits,
- defined as follows: If the effective key strength is N bits, the
- best currently known methods to recover the key (with non-
- negligible probability) require, on average, an effort comparable
- to 2^(N-1) operations of a typical block cipher. The statement
- SHOULD be accompanied by a short rationale, explaining how this
- number was derived. This explanation SHOULD include the
- parameters required to achieve the stated key strength based on
- current knowledge of the algorithms.
- (Note: Although it is difficult to define what "comparable
- effort" and "typical block cipher" exactly mean, reasonable
- approximations are sufficient here. Refer to e.g. [SILVERMAN]
- for more discussion.)
- The key strength depends on the methods used to derive the keys.
- For instance, if keys are derived from a shared secret (such as a
- password or a long-term secret), and possibly some public
- information such as nonces, the effective key strength is limited
- by the strength of the long-term secret (assuming that the
- derivation procedure is computationally simple). To take another
- example, when using public key algorithms, the strength of the
- symmetric key depends on the strength of the public keys used.
- [d] Description of key hierarchy. EAP methods deriving keys MUST
- either provide a reference to a key hierarchy specification, or
- describe how Master Session Keys (MSKs) and Extended Master
- Session Keys (EMSKs) are to be derived.
- [e] Indication of vulnerabilities. In addition to the security
- claims that are made, the specification MUST indicate which of
- the security claims detailed in Section 7.2.1 are NOT being made.
- 7.2.1. Security Claims Terminology for EAP Methods
- These terms are used to describe the security properties of EAP
- methods:
- Protected ciphersuite negotiation
- This refers to the ability of an EAP method to negotiate the
- ciphersuite used to protect the EAP conversation, as well as to
- integrity protect the negotiation. It does not refer to the
- ability to negotiate the ciphersuite used to protect data.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 44]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Mutual authentication
- This refers to an EAP method in which, within an interlocked
- exchange, the authenticator authenticates the peer and the peer
- authenticates the authenticator. Two independent one-way methods,
- running in opposite directions do not provide mutual
- authentication as defined here.
- Integrity protection
- This refers to providing data origin authentication and protection
- against unauthorized modification of information for EAP packets
- (including EAP Requests and Responses). When making this claim, a
- method specification MUST describe the EAP packets and fields
- within the EAP packet that are protected.
- Replay protection
- This refers to protection against replay of an EAP method or its
- messages, including success and failure result indications.
- Confidentiality
- This refers to encryption of EAP messages, including EAP Requests
- and Responses, and success and failure result indications. A
- method making this claim MUST support identity protection (see
- Section 7.3).
- Key derivation
- This refers to the ability of the EAP method to derive exportable
- keying material, such as the Master Session Key (MSK), and
- Extended Master Session Key (EMSK). The MSK is used only for
- further key derivation, not directly for protection of the EAP
- conversation or subsequent data. Use of the EMSK is reserved.
- Key strength
- If the effective key strength is N bits, the best currently known
- methods to recover the key (with non-negligible probability)
- require, on average, an effort comparable to 2^(N-1) operations of
- a typical block cipher.
- Dictionary attack resistance
- Where password authentication is used, passwords are commonly
- selected from a small set (as compared to a set of N-bit keys),
- which raises a concern about dictionary attacks. A method may be
- said to provide protection against dictionary attacks if, when it
- uses a password as a secret, the method does not allow an offline
- attack that has a work factor based on the number of passwords in
- an attacker's dictionary.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 45]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Fast reconnect
- The ability, in the case where a security association has been
- previously established, to create a new or refreshed security
- association more efficiently or in a smaller number of round-
- trips.
- Cryptographic binding
- The demonstration of the EAP peer to the EAP server that a single
- entity has acted as the EAP peer for all methods executed within a
- tunnel method. Binding MAY also imply that the EAP server
- demonstrates to the peer that a single entity has acted as the EAP
- server for all methods executed within a tunnel method. If
- executed correctly, binding serves to mitigate man-in-the-middle
- vulnerabilities.
- Session independence
- The demonstration that passive attacks (such as capture of the EAP
- conversation) or active attacks (including compromise of the MSK
- or EMSK) does not enable compromise of subsequent or prior MSKs or
- EMSKs.
- Fragmentation
- This refers to whether an EAP method supports fragmentation and
- reassembly. As noted in Section 3.1, EAP methods should support
- fragmentation and reassembly if EAP packets can exceed the minimum
- MTU of 1020 octets.
- Channel binding
- The communication within an EAP method of integrity-protected
- channel properties such as endpoint identifiers which can be
- compared to values communicated via out of band mechanisms (such
- as via a AAA or lower layer protocol).
- Note: This list of security claims is not exhaustive. Additional
- properties, such as additional denial-of-service protection, may be
- relevant as well.
- 7.3. Identity Protection
- An Identity exchange is optional within the EAP conversation.
- Therefore, it is possible to omit the Identity exchange entirely, or
- to use a method-specific identity exchange once a protected channel
- has been established.
- However, where roaming is supported as described in [RFC2607], it may
- be necessary to locate the appropriate backend authentication server
- before the authentication conversation can proceed. The realm
- portion of the Network Access Identifier (NAI) [RFC2486] is typically
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 46]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- included within the EAP-Response/Identity in order to enable the
- authentication exchange to be routed to the appropriate backend
- authentication server. Therefore, while the peer-name portion of the
- NAI may be omitted in the EAP-Response/Identity where proxies or
- relays are present, the realm portion may be required.
- It is possible for the identity in the identity response to be
- different from the identity authenticated by the EAP method. This
- may be intentional in the case of identity privacy. An EAP method
- SHOULD use the authenticated identity when making access control
- decisions.
- 7.4. Man-in-the-Middle Attacks
- Where EAP is tunneled within another protocol that omits peer
- authentication, there exists a potential vulnerability to a man-in-
- the-middle attack. For details, see [BINDING] and [MITM].
- As noted in Section 2.1, EAP does not permit untunneled sequences of
- authentication methods. Were a sequence of EAP authentication
- methods to be permitted, the peer might not have proof that a single
- entity has acted as the authenticator for all EAP methods within the
- sequence. For example, an authenticator might terminate one EAP
- method, then forward the next method in the sequence to another party
- without the peer's knowledge or consent. Similarly, the
- authenticator might not have proof that a single entity has acted as
- the peer for all EAP methods within the sequence.
- Tunneling EAP within another protocol enables an attack by a rogue
- EAP authenticator tunneling EAP to a legitimate server. Where the
- tunneling protocol is used for key establishment but does not require
- peer authentication, an attacker convincing a legitimate peer to
- connect to it will be able to tunnel EAP packets to a legitimate
- server, successfully authenticating and obtaining the key. This
- allows the attacker to successfully establish itself as a man-in-
- the-middle, gaining access to the network, as well as the ability to
- decrypt data traffic between the legitimate peer and server.
- This attack may be mitigated by the following measures:
- [a] Requiring mutual authentication within EAP tunneling mechanisms.
- [b] Requiring cryptographic binding between the EAP tunneling
- protocol and the tunneled EAP methods. Where cryptographic
- binding is supported, a mechanism is also needed to protect
- against downgrade attacks that would bypass it. For further
- details on cryptographic binding, see [BINDING].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 47]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [c] Limiting the EAP methods authorized for use without protection,
- based on peer and authenticator policy.
- [d] Avoiding the use of tunnels when a single, strong method is
- available.
- 7.5. Packet Modification Attacks
- While EAP methods may support per-packet data origin authentication,
- integrity, and replay protection, support is not provided within the
- EAP layer.
- Since the Identifier is only a single octet, it is easy to guess,
- allowing an attacker to successfully inject or replay EAP packets.
- An attacker may also modify EAP headers (Code, Identifier, Length,
- Type) within EAP packets where the header is unprotected. This could
- cause packets to be inappropriately discarded or misinterpreted.
- To protect EAP packets against modification, spoofing, or replay,
- methods supporting protected ciphersuite negotiation, mutual
- authentication, and key derivation, as well as integrity and replay
- protection, are recommended. See Section 7.2.1 for definitions of
- these security claims.
- Method-specific MICs may be used to provide protection. If a per-
- packet MIC is employed within an EAP method, then peers,
- authentication servers, and authenticators not operating in pass-
- through mode MUST validate the MIC. MIC validation failures SHOULD
- be logged. Whether a MIC validation failure is considered a fatal
- error or not is determined by the EAP method specification.
- It is RECOMMENDED that methods providing integrity protection of EAP
- packets include coverage of all the EAP header fields, including the
- Code, Identifier, Length, Type, and Type-Data fields.
- Since EAP messages of Types Identity, Notification, and Nak do not
- include their own MIC, it may be desirable for the EAP method MIC to
- cover information contained within these messages, as well as the
- header of each EAP message.
- To provide protection, EAP also may be encapsulated within a
- protected channel created by protocols such as ISAKMP [RFC2408], as
- is done in [IKEv2] or within TLS [RFC2246]. However, as noted in
- Section 7.4, EAP tunneling may result in a man-in-the-middle
- vulnerability.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 48]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Existing EAP methods define message integrity checks (MICs) that
- cover more than one EAP packet. For example, EAP-TLS [RFC2716]
- defines a MIC over a TLS record that could be split into multiple
- fragments; within the FINISHED message, the MIC is computed over
- previous messages. Where the MIC covers more than one EAP packet, a
- MIC validation failure is typically considered a fatal error.
- Within EAP-TLS [RFC2716], a MIC validation failure is treated as a
- fatal error, since that is what is specified in TLS [RFC2246].
- However, it is also possible to develop EAP methods that support
- per-packet MICs, and respond to verification failures by silently
- discarding the offending packet.
- In this document, descriptions of EAP message handling assume that
- per-packet MIC validation, where it occurs, is effectively performed
- as though it occurs before sending any responses or changing the
- state of the host which received the packet.
- 7.6. Dictionary Attacks
- Password authentication algorithms such as EAP-MD5, MS-CHAPv1
- [RFC2433], and Kerberos V [RFC1510] are known to be vulnerable to
- dictionary attacks. MS-CHAPv1 vulnerabilities are documented in
- [PPTPv1]; MS-CHAPv2 vulnerabilities are documented in [PPTPv2];
- Kerberos vulnerabilities are described in [KRBATTACK], [KRBLIM], and
- [KERB4WEAK].
- In order to protect against dictionary attacks, authentication
- methods resistant to dictionary attacks (as defined in Section 7.2.1)
- are recommended.
- If an authentication algorithm is used that is known to be vulnerable
- to dictionary attacks, then the conversation may be tunneled within a
- protected channel in order to provide additional protection.
- However, as noted in Section 7.4, EAP tunneling may result in a man-
- in-the-middle vulnerability, and therefore dictionary attack
- resistant methods are preferred.
- 7.7. Connection to an Untrusted Network
- With EAP methods supporting one-way authentication, such as EAP-MD5,
- the peer does not authenticate the authenticator, making the peer
- vulnerable to attack by a rogue authenticator. Methods supporting
- mutual authentication (as defined in Section 7.2.1) address this
- vulnerability.
- In EAP there is no requirement that authentication be full duplex or
- that the same protocol be used in both directions. It is perfectly
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 49]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- acceptable for different protocols to be used in each direction.
- This will, of course, depend on the specific protocols negotiated.
- However, in general, completing a single unitary mutual
- authentication is preferable to two one-way authentications, one in
- each direction. This is because separate authentications that are
- not bound cryptographically so as to demonstrate they are part of the
- same session are subject to man-in-the-middle attacks, as discussed
- in Section 7.4.
- 7.8. Negotiation Attacks
- In a negotiation attack, the attacker attempts to convince the peer
- and authenticator to negotiate a less secure EAP method. EAP does
- not provide protection for Nak Response packets, although it is
- possible for a method to include coverage of Nak Responses within a
- method-specific MIC.
- Within or associated with each authenticator, it is not anticipated
- that a particular named peer will support a choice of methods. This
- would make the peer vulnerable to attacks that negotiate the least
- secure method from among a set. Instead, for each named peer, there
- SHOULD be an indication of exactly one method used to authenticate
- that peer name. If a peer needs to make use of different
- authentication methods under different circumstances, then distinct
- identities SHOULD be employed, each of which identifies exactly one
- authentication method.
- 7.9. Implementation Idiosyncrasies
- The interaction of EAP with lower layers such as PPP and IEEE 802 are
- highly implementation dependent.
- For example, upon failure of authentication, some PPP implementations
- do not terminate the link, instead limiting traffic in Network-Layer
- Protocols to a filtered subset, which in turn allows the peer the
- opportunity to update secrets or send mail to the network
- administrator indicating a problem. Similarly, while an
- authentication failure will result in denied access to the controlled
- port in [IEEE-802.1X], limited traffic may be permitted on the
- uncontrolled port.
- In EAP there is no provision for retries of failed authentication.
- However, in PPP the LCP state machine can renegotiate the
- authentication protocol at any time, thus allowing a new attempt.
- Similarly, in IEEE 802.1X the Supplicant or Authenticator can re-
- authenticate at any time. It is recommended that any counters used
- for authentication failure not be reset until after successful
- authentication, or subsequent termination of the failed link.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 50]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 7.10. Key Derivation
- It is possible for the peer and EAP server to mutually authenticate
- and derive keys. In order to provide keying material for use in a
- subsequently negotiated ciphersuite, an EAP method supporting key
- derivation MUST export a Master Session Key (MSK) of at least 64
- octets, and an Extended Master Session Key (EMSK) of at least 64
- octets. EAP Methods deriving keys MUST provide for mutual
- authentication between the EAP peer and the EAP Server.
- The MSK and EMSK MUST NOT be used directly to protect data; however,
- they are of sufficient size to enable derivation of a AAA-Key
- subsequently used to derive Transient Session Keys (TSKs) for use
- with the selected ciphersuite. Each ciphersuite is responsible for
- specifying how to derive the TSKs from the AAA-Key.
- The AAA-Key is derived from the keying material exported by the EAP
- method (MSK and EMSK). This derivation occurs on the AAA server. In
- many existing protocols that use EAP, the AAA-Key and MSK are
- equivalent, but more complicated mechanisms are possible (see
- [KEYFRAME] for details).
- EAP methods SHOULD ensure the freshness of the MSK and EMSK, even in
- cases where one party may not have a high quality random number
- generator. A RECOMMENDED method is for each party to provide a nonce
- of at least 128 bits, used in the derivation of the MSK and EMSK.
- EAP methods export the MSK and EMSK, but not Transient Session Keys
- so as to allow EAP methods to be ciphersuite and media independent.
- Keying material exported by EAP methods MUST be independent of the
- ciphersuite negotiated to protect data.
- Depending on the lower layer, EAP methods may run before or after
- ciphersuite negotiation, so that the selected ciphersuite may not be
- known to the EAP method. By providing keying material usable with
- any ciphersuite, EAP methods can used with a wide range of
- ciphersuites and media.
- In order to preserve algorithm independence, EAP methods deriving
- keys SHOULD support (and document) the protected negotiation of the
- ciphersuite used to protect the EAP conversation between the peer and
- server. This is distinct from the ciphersuite negotiated between the
- peer and authenticator, used to protect data.
- The strength of Transient Session Keys (TSKs) used to protect data is
- ultimately dependent on the strength of keys generated by the EAP
- method. If an EAP method cannot produce keying material of
- sufficient strength, then the TSKs may be subject to a brute force
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 51]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- attack. In order to enable deployments requiring strong keys, EAP
- methods supporting key derivation SHOULD be capable of generating an
- MSK and EMSK, each with an effective key strength of at least 128
- bits.
- Methods supporting key derivation MUST demonstrate cryptographic
- separation between the MSK and EMSK branches of the EAP key
- hierarchy. Without violating a fundamental cryptographic assumption
- (such as the non-invertibility of a one-way function), an attacker
- recovering the MSK or EMSK MUST NOT be able to recover the other
- quantity with a level of effort less than brute force.
- Non-overlapping substrings of the MSK MUST be cryptographically
- separate from each other, as defined in Section 7.2.1. That is,
- knowledge of one substring MUST NOT help in recovering some other
- substring without breaking some hard cryptographic assumption. This
- is required because some existing ciphersuites form TSKs by simply
- splitting the AAA-Key to pieces of appropriate length. Likewise,
- non-overlapping substrings of the EMSK MUST be cryptographically
- separate from each other, and from substrings of the MSK.
- The EMSK is reserved for future use and MUST remain on the EAP peer
- and EAP server where it is derived; it MUST NOT be transported to, or
- shared with, additional parties, or used to derive any other keys.
- (This restriction will be relaxed in a future document that specifies
- how the EMSK can be used.)
- Since EAP does not provide for explicit key lifetime negotiation, EAP
- peers, authenticators, and authentication servers MUST be prepared
- for situations in which one of the parties discards the key state,
- which remains valid on another party.
- This specification does not provide detailed guidance on how EAP
- methods derive the MSK and EMSK, how the AAA-Key is derived from the
- MSK and/or EMSK, or how the TSKs are derived from the AAA-Key.
- The development and validation of key derivation algorithms is
- difficult, and as a result, EAP methods SHOULD re-use well
- established and analyzed mechanisms for key derivation (such as those
- specified in IKE [RFC2409] or TLS [RFC2246]), rather than inventing
- new ones. EAP methods SHOULD also utilize well established and
- analyzed mechanisms for MSK and EMSK derivation. Further details on
- EAP Key Derivation are provided within [KEYFRAME].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 52]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 7.11. Weak Ciphersuites
- If after the initial EAP authentication, data packets are sent
- without per-packet authentication, integrity, and replay protection,
- an attacker with access to the media can inject packets, "flip bits"
- within existing packets, replay packets, or even hijack the session
- completely. Without per-packet confidentiality, it is possible to
- snoop data packets.
- To protect against data modification, spoofing, or snooping, it is
- recommended that EAP methods supporting mutual authentication and key
- derivation (as defined by Section 7.2.1) be used, along with lower
- layers providing per-packet confidentiality, authentication,
- integrity, and replay protection.
- Additionally, if the lower layer performs ciphersuite negotiation, it
- should be understood that EAP does not provide by itself integrity
- protection of that negotiation. Therefore, in order to avoid
- downgrading attacks which would lead to weaker ciphersuites being
- used, clients implementing lower layer ciphersuite negotiation SHOULD
- protect against negotiation downgrading.
- This can be done by enabling users to configure which ciphersuites
- are acceptable as a matter of security policy, or the ciphersuite
- negotiation MAY be authenticated using keying material derived from
- the EAP authentication and a MIC algorithm agreed upon in advance by
- lower-layer peers.
- 7.12. Link Layer
- There are reliability and security issues with link layer indications
- in PPP, IEEE 802 LANs, and IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs:
- [a] PPP. In PPP, link layer indications such as LCP-Terminate (a
- link failure indication) and NCP (a link success indication) are
- not authenticated or integrity protected. They can therefore be
- spoofed by an attacker with access to the link.
- [b] IEEE 802. IEEE 802.1X EAPOL-Start and EAPOL-Logoff frames are
- not authenticated or integrity protected. They can therefore be
- spoofed by an attacker with access to the link.
- [c] IEEE 802.11. In IEEE 802.11, link layer indications include
- Disassociate and Deauthenticate frames (link failure
- indications), and the first message of the 4-way handshake (link
- success indication). These messages are not authenticated or
- integrity protected, and although they are not forwardable, they
- are spoofable by an attacker within range.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 53]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- In IEEE 802.11, IEEE 802.1X data frames may be sent as Class 3
- unicast data frames, and are therefore forwardable. This implies
- that while EAPOL-Start and EAPOL-Logoff messages may be authenticated
- and integrity protected, they can be spoofed by an authenticated
- attacker far from the target when "pre-authentication" is enabled.
- In IEEE 802.11, a "link down" indication is an unreliable indication
- of link failure, since wireless signal strength can come and go and
- may be influenced by radio frequency interference generated by an
- attacker. To avoid unnecessary resets, it is advisable to damp these
- indications, rather than passing them directly to the EAP. Since EAP
- supports retransmission, it is robust against transient connectivity
- losses.
- 7.13. Separation of Authenticator and Backend Authentication Server
- It is possible for the EAP peer and EAP server to mutually
- authenticate and derive a AAA-Key for a ciphersuite used to protect
- subsequent data traffic. This does not present an issue on the peer,
- since the peer and EAP client reside on the same machine; all that is
- required is for the client to derive the AAA-Key from the MSK and
- EMSK exported by the EAP method, and to subsequently pass a Transient
- Session Key (TSK) to the ciphersuite module.
- However, in the case where the authenticator and authentication
- server reside on different machines, there are several implications
- for security.
- [a] Authentication will occur between the peer and the authentication
- server, not between the peer and the authenticator. This means
- that it is not possible for the peer to validate the identity of
- the authenticator that it is speaking to, using EAP alone.
- [b] As discussed in [RFC3579], the authenticator is dependent on the
- AAA protocol in order to know the outcome of an authentication
- conversation, and does not look at the encapsulated EAP packet
- (if one is present) to determine the outcome. In practice, this
- implies that the AAA protocol spoken between the authenticator
- and authentication server MUST support per-packet authentication,
- integrity, and replay protection.
- [c] After completion of the EAP conversation, where lower layer
- security services such as per-packet confidentiality,
- authentication, integrity, and replay protection will be enabled,
- a secure association protocol SHOULD be run between the peer and
- authenticator in order to provide mutual authentication between
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 54]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- the peer and authenticator, guarantee liveness of transient
- session keys, provide protected ciphersuite and capabilities
- negotiation for subsequent data, and synchronize key usage.
- [d] A AAA-Key derived from the MSK and/or EMSK negotiated between the
- peer and authentication server MAY be transmitted to the
- authenticator. Therefore, a mechanism needs to be provided to
- transmit the AAA-Key from the authentication server to the
- authenticator that needs it. The specification of the AAA-key
- derivation, transport, and wrapping mechanisms is outside the
- scope of this document. Further details on AAA-Key Derivation
- are provided within [KEYFRAME].
- 7.14. Cleartext Passwords
- This specification does not define a mechanism for cleartext password
- authentication. The omission is intentional. Use of cleartext
- passwords would allow the password to be captured by an attacker with
- access to a link over which EAP packets are transmitted.
- Since protocols encapsulating EAP, such as RADIUS [RFC3579], may not
- provide confidentiality, EAP packets may be subsequently encapsulated
- for transport over the Internet where they may be captured by an
- attacker.
- As a result, cleartext passwords cannot be securely used within EAP,
- except where encapsulated within a protected tunnel with server
- authentication. Some of the same risks apply to EAP methods without
- dictionary attack resistance, as defined in Section 7.2.1. For
- details, see Section 7.6.
- 7.15. Channel Binding
- It is possible for a compromised or poorly implemented EAP
- authenticator to communicate incorrect information to the EAP peer
- and/or server. This may enable an authenticator to impersonate
- another authenticator or communicate incorrect information via out-
- of-band mechanisms (such as via a AAA or lower layer protocol).
- Where EAP is used in pass-through mode, the EAP peer typically does
- not verify the identity of the pass-through authenticator, it only
- verifies that the pass-through authenticator is trusted by the EAP
- server. This creates a potential security vulnerability.
- Section 4.3.7 of [RFC3579] describes how an EAP pass-through
- authenticator acting as a AAA client can be detected if it attempts
- to impersonate another authenticator (such by sending incorrect NAS-
- Identifier [RFC2865], NAS-IP-Address [RFC2865] or NAS-IPv6-Address
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 55]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [RFC3162] attributes via the AAA protocol). However, it is possible
- for a pass-through authenticator acting as a AAA client to provide
- correct information to the AAA server while communicating misleading
- information to the EAP peer via a lower layer protocol.
- For example, it is possible for a compromised authenticator to
- utilize another authenticator's Called-Station-Id or NAS-Identifier
- in communicating with the EAP peer via a lower layer protocol, or for
- a pass-through authenticator acting as a AAA client to provide an
- incorrect peer Calling-Station-Id [RFC2865][RFC3580] to the AAA
- server via the AAA protocol.
- In order to address this vulnerability, EAP methods may support a
- protected exchange of channel properties such as endpoint
- identifiers, including (but not limited to): Called-Station-Id
- [RFC2865][RFC3580], Calling-Station-Id [RFC2865][RFC3580], NAS-
- Identifier [RFC2865], NAS-IP-Address [RFC2865], and NAS-IPv6-Address
- [RFC3162].
- Using such a protected exchange, it is possible to match the channel
- properties provided by the authenticator via out-of-band mechanisms
- against those exchanged within the EAP method. Where discrepancies
- are found, these SHOULD be logged; additional actions MAY also be
- taken, such as denying access.
- 7.16. Protected Result Indications
- Within EAP, Success and Failure packets are neither acknowledged nor
- integrity protected. Result indications improve resilience to loss
- of Success and Failure packets when EAP is run over lower layers
- which do not support retransmission or synchronization of the
- authentication state. In media such as IEEE 802.11, which provides
- for retransmission, as well as synchronization of authentication
- state via the 4-way handshake defined in [IEEE-802.11i], additional
- resilience is typically of marginal benefit.
- Depending on the method and circumstances, result indications can be
- spoofable by an attacker. A method is said to provide protected
- result indications if it supports result indications, as well as the
- "integrity protection" and "replay protection" claims. A method
- supporting protected result indications MUST indicate which result
- indications are protected, and which are not.
- Protected result indications are not required to protect against
- rogue authenticators. Within a mutually authenticating method,
- requiring that the server authenticate to the peer before the peer
- will accept a Success packet prevents an attacker from acting as a
- rogue authenticator.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 56]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- However, it is possible for an attacker to forge a Success packet
- after the server has authenticated to the peer, but before the peer
- has authenticated to the server. If the peer were to accept the
- forged Success packet and attempt to access the network when it had
- not yet successfully authenticated to the server, a denial of service
- attack could be mounted against the peer. After such an attack, if
- the lower layer supports failure indications, the authenticator can
- synchronize state with the peer by providing a lower layer failure
- indication. See Section 7.12 for details.
- If a server were to authenticate the peer and send a Success packet
- prior to determining whether the peer has authenticated the
- authenticator, an idle timeout can occur if the authenticator is not
- authenticated by the peer. Where supported by the lower layer, an
- authenticator sensing the absence of the peer can free resources.
- In a method supporting result indications, a peer that has
- authenticated the server does not consider the authentication
- successful until it receives an indication that the server
- successfully authenticated it. Similarly, a server that has
- successfully authenticated the peer does not consider the
- authentication successful until it receives an indication that the
- peer has authenticated the server.
- In order to avoid synchronization problems, prior to sending a
- success result indication, it is desirable for the sender to verify
- that sufficient authorization exists for granting access, though, as
- discussed below, this is not always possible.
- While result indications may enable synchronization of the
- authentication result between the peer and server, this does not
- guarantee that the peer and authenticator will be synchronized in
- terms of their authorization or that timeouts will not occur. For
- example, the EAP server may not be aware of an authorization decision
- made by a AAA proxy; the AAA server may check authorization only
- after authentication has completed successfully, to discover that
- authorization cannot be granted, or the AAA server may grant access
- but the authenticator may be unable to provide it due to a temporary
- lack of resources. In these situations, synchronization may only be
- achieved via lower layer result indications.
- Success indications may be explicit or implicit. For example, where
- a method supports error messages, an implicit success indication may
- be defined as the reception of a specific message without a preceding
- error message. Failures are typically indicated explicitly. As
- described in Section 4.2, a peer silently discards a Failure packet
- received at a point where the method does not explicitly permit this
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 57]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- to be sent. For example, a method providing its own error messages
- might require the peer to receive an error message prior to accepting
- a Failure packet.
- Per-packet authentication, integrity, and replay protection of result
- indications protects against spoofing. Since protected result
- indications require use of a key for per-packet authentication and
- integrity protection, methods supporting protected result indications
- MUST also support the "key derivation", "mutual authentication",
- "integrity protection", and "replay protection" claims.
- Protected result indications address some denial-of-service
- vulnerabilities due to spoofing of Success and Failure packets,
- though not all. EAP methods can typically provide protected result
- indications only in some circumstances. For example, errors can
- occur prior to key derivation, and so it may not be possible to
- protect all failure indications. It is also possible that result
- indications may not be supported in both directions or that
- synchronization may not be achieved in all modes of operation.
- For example, within EAP-TLS [RFC2716], in the client authentication
- handshake, the server authenticates the peer, but does not receive a
- protected indication of whether the peer has authenticated it. In
- contrast, the peer authenticates the server and is aware of whether
- the server has authenticated it. In the session resumption
- handshake, the peer authenticates the server, but does not receive a
- protected indication of whether the server has authenticated it. In
- this mode, the server authenticates the peer and is aware of whether
- the peer has authenticated it.
- 8. Acknowledgements
- This protocol derives much of its inspiration from Dave Carrel's AHA
- document, as well as the PPP CHAP protocol [RFC1994]. Valuable
- feedback was provided by Yoshihiro Ohba of Toshiba America Research,
- Jari Arkko of Ericsson, Sachin Seth of Microsoft, Glen Zorn of Cisco
- Systems, Jesse Walker of Intel, Bill Arbaugh, Nick Petroni and Bryan
- Payne of the University of Maryland, Steve Bellovin of AT&T Research,
- Paul Funk of Funk Software, Pasi Eronen of Nokia, Joseph Salowey of
- Cisco, Paul Congdon of HP, and members of the EAP working group.
- The use of Security Claims sections for EAP methods, as required by
- Section 7.2 and specified for each EAP method described in this
- document, was inspired by Glen Zorn through [EAP-EVAL].
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 58]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 9. References
- 9.1. Normative References
- [RFC1661] Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)",
- STD 51, RFC 1661, July 1994.
- [RFC1994] Simpson, W., "PPP Challenge Handshake
- Authentication Protocol (CHAP)", RFC 1994, August
- 1996.
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to
- Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
- March 1997.
- [RFC2243] Metz, C., "OTP Extended Responses", RFC 2243,
- November 1997.
- [RFC2279] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of
- ISO 10646", RFC 2279, January 1998.
- [RFC2289] Haller, N., Metz, C., Nesser, P. and M. Straw, "A
- One-Time Password System", RFC 2289, February
- 1998.
- [RFC2434] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for
- Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",
- BCP 26, RFC 2434, October 1998.
- [RFC2988] Paxson, V. and M. Allman, "Computing TCP's
- Retransmission Timer", RFC 2988, November 2000.
- [IEEE-802] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
- "Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Overview
- and Architecture", IEEE Standard 802, 1990.
- [IEEE-802.1X] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
- "Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Port-Based
- Network Access Control", IEEE Standard 802.1X,
- September 2001.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 59]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- 9.2. Informative References
- [RFC793] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD
- 7, RFC 793, September 1981.
- [RFC1510] Kohl, J. and B. Neuman, "The Kerberos Network
- Authentication Service (V5)", RFC 1510, September
- 1993.
- [RFC1750] Eastlake, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller,
- "Randomness Recommendations for Security", RFC
- 1750, December 1994.
- [RFC2246] Dierks, T., Allen, C., Treese, W., Karlton, P.,
- Freier, A. and P. Kocher, "The TLS Protocol
- Version 1.0", RFC 2246, January 1999.
- [RFC2284] Blunk, L. and J. Vollbrecht, "PPP Extensible
- Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 2284, March
- 1998.
- [RFC2486] Aboba, B. and M. Beadles, "The Network Access
- Identifier", RFC 2486, January 1999.
- [RFC2408] Maughan, D., Schneider, M. and M. Schertler,
- "Internet Security Association and Key Management
- Protocol (ISAKMP)", RFC 2408, November 1998.
- [RFC2409] Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key
- Exchange (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998.
- [RFC2433] Zorn, G. and S. Cobb, "Microsoft PPP CHAP
- Extensions", RFC 2433, October 1998.
- [RFC2607] Aboba, B. and J. Vollbrecht, "Proxy Chaining and
- Policy Implementation in Roaming", RFC 2607, June
- 1999.
- [RFC2661] Townsley, W., Valencia, A., Rubens, A., Pall, G.,
- Zorn, G. and B. Palter, "Layer Two Tunneling
- Protocol "L2TP"", RFC 2661, August 1999.
- [RFC2716] Aboba, B. and D. Simon, "PPP EAP TLS
- Authentication Protocol", RFC 2716, October 1999.
- [RFC2865] Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A. and W.
- Simpson, "Remote Authentication Dial In User
- Service (RADIUS)", RFC 2865, June 2000.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 60]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [RFC2960] Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,
- Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla,
- M., Zhang, L. and V. Paxson, "Stream Control
- Transmission Protocol", RFC 2960, October 2000.
- [RFC3162] Aboba, B., Zorn, G. and D. Mitton, "RADIUS and
- IPv6", RFC 3162, August 2001.
- [RFC3454] Hoffman, P. and M. Blanchet, "Preparation of
- Internationalized Strings ("stringprep")", RFC
- 3454, December 2002.
- [RFC3579] Aboba, B. and P. Calhoun, "RADIUS (Remote
- Authentication Dial In User Service) Support For
- Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC
- 3579, September 2003.
- [RFC3580] Congdon, P., Aboba, B., Smith, A., Zorn, G. and J.
- Roese, "IEEE 802.1X Remote Authentication Dial In
- User Service (RADIUS) Usage Guidelines", RFC 3580,
- September 2003.
- [RFC3692] Narten, T., "Assigning Experimental and Testing
- Numbers Considered Useful", BCP 82, RFC 3692,
- January 2004.
- [DECEPTION] Slatalla, M. and J. Quittner, "Masters of
- Deception", Harper-Collins, New York, 1995.
- [KRBATTACK] Wu, T., "A Real-World Analysis of Kerberos
- Password Security", Proceedings of the 1999 ISOC
- Network and Distributed System Security Symposium,
- http://www.isoc.org/isoc/conferences/ndss/99/
- proceedings/papers/wu.pdf.
- [KRBLIM] Bellovin, S. and M. Merrit, "Limitations of the
- Kerberos authentication system", Proceedings of
- the 1991 Winter USENIX Conference, pp. 253-267,
- 1991.
- [KERB4WEAK] Dole, B., Lodin, S. and E. Spafford, "Misplaced
- trust: Kerberos 4 session keys", Proceedings of
- the Internet Society Network and Distributed
- System Security Symposium, pp. 60-70, March 1997.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 61]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [PIC] Aboba, B., Krawczyk, H. and Y. Sheffer, "PIC, A
- Pre-IKE Credential Provisioning Protocol", Work in
- Progress, October 2002.
- [IKEv2] Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2)
- Protocol", Work in Progress, January 2004.
- [PPTPv1] Schneier, B. and Mudge, "Cryptanalysis of
- Microsoft's Point-to- Point Tunneling Protocol",
- Proceedings of the 5th ACM Conference on
- Communications and Computer Security, ACM Press,
- November 1998.
- [IEEE-802.11] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
- "Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and
- Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications", IEEE
- Standard 802.11, 1999.
- [SILVERMAN] Silverman, Robert D., "A Cost-Based Security
- Analysis of Symmetric and Asymmetric Key Lengths",
- RSA Laboratories Bulletin 13, April 2000 (Revised
- November 2001),
- http://www.rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/bulletins/
- bulletin13.html.
- [KEYFRAME] Aboba, B., "EAP Key Management Framework", Work in
- Progress, October 2003.
- [SASLPREP] Zeilenga, K., "SASLprep: Stringprep profile for
- user names and passwords", Work in Progress, March
- 2004.
- [IEEE-802.11i] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
- "Unapproved Draft Supplement to Standard for
- Telecommunications and Information Exchange
- Between Systems - LAN/MAN Specific Requirements -
- Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC)
- and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications:
- Specification for Enhanced Security", IEEE Draft
- 802.11i (work in progress), 2003.
- [DIAM-EAP] Eronen, P., Hiller, T. and G. Zorn, "Diameter
- Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- Application", Work in Progress, February 2004.
- [EAP-EVAL] Zorn, G., "Specifying Security Claims for EAP
- Authentication Types", Work in Progress, October
- 2002.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 62]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- [BINDING] Puthenkulam, J., "The Compound Authentication
- Binding Problem", Work in Progress, October 2003.
- [MITM] Asokan, N., Niemi, V. and K. Nyberg, "Man-in-the-
- Middle in Tunneled Authentication Protocols", IACR
- ePrint Archive Report 2002/163, October 2002,
- <http://eprint.iacr.org/2002/163>.
- [IEEE-802.11i-req] Stanley, D., "EAP Method Requirements for Wireless
- LANs", Work in Progress, February 2004.
- [PPTPv2] Schneier, B. and Mudge, "Cryptanalysis of
- Microsoft's PPTP Authentication Extensions (MS-
- CHAPv2)", CQRE 99, Springer-Verlag, 1999, pp.
- 192-203.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 63]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Appendix A. Changes from RFC 2284
- This section lists the major changes between [RFC2284] and this
- document. Minor changes, including style, grammar, spelling, and
- editorial changes are not mentioned here.
- o The Terminology section (Section 1.2) has been expanded, defining
- more concepts and giving more exact definitions.
- o The concepts of Mutual Authentication, Key Derivation, and Result
- Indications are introduced and discussed throughout the document
- where appropriate.
- o In Section 2, it is explicitly specified that more than one
- exchange of Request and Response packets may occur as part of the
- EAP authentication exchange. How this may be used and how it may
- not be used is specified in detail in Section 2.1.
- o Also in Section 2, some requirements have been made explicit for
- the authenticator when acting in pass-through mode.
- o An EAP multiplexing model (Section 2.2) has been added to
- illustrate a typical implementation of EAP. There is no
- requirement that an implementation conform to this model, as long
- as the on-the-wire behavior is consistent with it.
- o As EAP is now in use with a variety of lower layers, not just PPP
- for which it was first designed, Section 3 on lower layer behavior
- has been added.
- o In the description of the EAP Request and Response interaction
- (Section 4.1), both the behavior on receiving duplicate requests,
- and when packets should be silently discarded has been more
- exactly specified. The implementation notes in this section have
- been substantially expanded.
- o In Section 4.2, it has been clarified that Success and Failure
- packets must not contain additional data, and the implementation
- note has been expanded. A subsection giving requirements on
- processing of success and failure packets has been added.
- o Section 5 on EAP Request/Response Types lists two new Type values:
- the Expanded Type (Section 5.7), which is used to expand the Type
- value number space, and the Experimental Type. In the Expanded
- Type number space, the new Expanded Nak (Section 5.3.2) Type has
- been added. Clarifications have been made in the description of
- most of the existing Types. Security claims summaries have been
- added for authentication methods.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 64]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- o In Sections 5, 5.1, and 5.2, a requirement has been added such
- that fields with displayable messages should contain UTF-8 encoded
- ISO 10646 characters.
- o It is now required in Section 5.1 that if the Type-Data field of
- an Identity Request contains a NUL-character, only the part before
- the null is displayed. RFC 2284 prohibits the null termination of
- the Type-Data field of Identity messages. This rule has been
- relaxed for Identity Request messages and the Identity Request
- Type-Data field may now be null terminated.
- o In Section 5.5, support for OTP Extended Responses [RFC2243] has
- been added to EAP OTP.
- o An IANA Considerations section (Section 6) has been added, giving
- registration policies for the numbering spaces defined for EAP.
- o The Security Considerations (Section 7) have been greatly
- expanded, giving a much more comprehensive coverage of possible
- threats and other security considerations.
- o In Section 7.5, text has been added on method-specific behavior,
- providing guidance on how EAP method-specific integrity checks
- should be processed. Where possible, it is desirable for a
- method-specific MIC to be computed over the entire EAP packet,
- including the EAP layer header (Code, Identifier, Length) and EAP
- method layer header (Type, Type-Data).
- o In Section 7.14 the security risks involved in use of cleartext
- passwords with EAP are described.
- o In Section 7.15 text has been added relating to detection of rogue
- NAS behavior.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 65]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Authors' Addresses
- Bernard Aboba
- Microsoft Corporation
- One Microsoft Way
- Redmond, WA 98052
- USA
- Phone: +1 425 706 6605
- Fax: +1 425 936 6605
- EMail: bernarda@microsoft.com
- Larry J. Blunk
- Merit Network, Inc
- 4251 Plymouth Rd., Suite 2000
- Ann Arbor, MI 48105-2785
- USA
- Phone: +1 734-647-9563
- Fax: +1 734-647-3185
- EMail: ljb@merit.edu
- John R. Vollbrecht
- Vollbrecht Consulting LLC
- 9682 Alice Hill Drive
- Dexter, MI 48130
- USA
- EMail: jrv@umich.edu
- James Carlson
- Sun Microsystems, Inc
- 1 Network Drive
- Burlington, MA 01803-2757
- USA
- Phone: +1 781 442 2084
- Fax: +1 781 442 1677
- EMail: james.d.carlson@sun.com
- Henrik Levkowetz
- ipUnplugged AB
- Arenavagen 33
- Stockholm S-121 28
- SWEDEN
- Phone: +46 708 32 16 08
- EMail: henrik@levkowetz.com
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 66]
- RFC 3748 EAP June 2004
- Full Copyright Statement
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). This document is subject
- to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and
- except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.
- This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
- "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
- OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
- ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
- INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
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- Intellectual Property
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
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- Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
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- Acknowledgement
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
- Internet Society.
- Aboba, et al. Standards Track [Page 67]
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