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- Network Working Group H. Haverinen, Ed.
- Request for Comments: 4186 Nokia
- Category: Informational J. Salowey, Ed.
- Cisco Systems
- January 2006
- Extensible Authentication Protocol Method for
- Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM)
- Subscriber Identity Modules (EAP-SIM)
- Status of This Memo
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
- memo is unlimited.
- Copyright Notice
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
- IESG Note
- The EAP-SIM protocol was developed by 3GPP. The documentation of
- EAP-SIM is provided as information to the Internet community. While
- the EAP WG has verified that EAP-SIM is compatible with EAP, as
- defined in RFC 3748, no other review has been done, including
- validation of the security claims. The IETF has also not reviewed
- the security of the cryptographic algorithms.
- Abstract
- This document specifies an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- mechanism for authentication and session key distribution using the
- Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) Subscriber Identity
- Module (SIM). GSM is a second generation mobile network standard.
- The EAP-SIM mechanism specifies enhancements to GSM authentication
- and key agreement whereby multiple authentication triplets can be
- combined to create authentication responses and session keys of
- greater strength than the individual GSM triplets. The mechanism
- also includes network authentication, user anonymity support, result
- indications, and a fast re-authentication procedure.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 1]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction ....................................................4
- 2. Terms ...........................................................5
- 3. Overview ........................................................8
- 4. Operation ......................................................10
- 4.1. Version Negotiation .......................................10
- 4.2. Identity Management .......................................11
- 4.2.1. Format, Generation and Usage of Peer Identities ....11
- 4.2.2. Communicating the Peer Identity to the Server ......17
- 4.2.3. Choice of Identity for the EAP-Response/Identity ...19
- 4.2.4. Server Operation in the Beginning of
- EAP-SIM Exchange ...................................19
- 4.2.5. Processing of EAP-Request/SIM/Start by the Peer ....20
- 4.2.6. Attacks Against Identity Privacy ...................21
- 4.2.7. Processing of AT_IDENTITY by the Server ............22
- 4.3. Message Sequence Examples (Informative) ...................23
- 4.3.1. Full Authentication ................................24
- 4.3.2. Fast Re-authentication .............................25
- 4.3.3. Fall Back to Full Authentication ...................26
- 4.3.4. Requesting the Permanent Identity 1 ................27
- 4.3.5. Requesting the Permanent Identity 2 ................28
- 4.3.6. Three EAP-SIM/Start Roundtrips .....................28
- 5. Fast Re-Authentication .........................................30
- 5.1. General ...................................................30
- 5.2. Comparison to UMTS AKA ....................................31
- 5.3. Fast Re-authentication Identity ...........................31
- 5.4. Fast Re-authentication Procedure ..........................33
- 5.5. Fast Re-authentication Procedure when Counter Is
- Too Small .................................................36
- 6. EAP-SIM Notifications ..........................................37
- 6.1. General ...................................................37
- 6.2. Result Indications ........................................39
- 6.3. Error Cases ...............................................40
- 6.3.1. Peer Operation .....................................40
- 6.3.2. Server Operation ...................................41
- 6.3.3. EAP-Failure ........................................42
- 6.3.4. EAP-Success ........................................42
- 7. Key Generation .................................................43
- 8. Message Format and Protocol Extensibility ......................45
- 8.1. Message Format ............................................45
- 8.2. Protocol Extensibility ....................................47
- 9. Messages .......................................................48
- 9.1. EAP-Request/SIM/Start .....................................48
- 9.2. EAP-Response/SIM/Start ....................................49
- 9.3. EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge .................................49
- 9.4. EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge ................................50
- 9.5. EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication .........................51
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 2]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 9.6. EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication ........................51
- 9.7. EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error .............................52
- 9.8. EAP-Request/SIM/Notification ..............................52
- 9.9. EAP-Response/SIM/Notification .............................53
- 10. Attributes ....................................................53
- 10.1. Table of Attributes ......................................53
- 10.2. AT_VERSION_LIST ..........................................54
- 10.3. AT_SELECTED_VERSION ......................................55
- 10.4. AT_NONCE_MT ..............................................55
- 10.5. AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ ......................................56
- 10.6. AT_ANY_ID_REQ ............................................56
- 10.7. AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ .......................................57
- 10.8. AT_IDENTITY ..............................................57
- 10.9. AT_RAND ..................................................58
- 10.10. AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM .......................................59
- 10.11. AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID .......................................59
- 10.12. AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, and AT_PADDING .....................60
- 10.13. AT_RESULT_IND ...........................................62
- 10.14. AT_MAC ..................................................62
- 10.15. AT_COUNTER ..............................................63
- 10.16. AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL ....................................63
- 10.17. AT_NONCE_S ..............................................64
- 10.18. AT_NOTIFICATION .........................................64
- 10.19. AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE ....................................65
- 11. IANA Considerations ...........................................66
- 12. Security Considerations .......................................66
- 12.1. A3 and A8 Algorithms .....................................66
- 12.2. Identity Protection ......................................66
- 12.3. Mutual Authentication and Triplet Exposure ...............67
- 12.4. Flooding the Authentication Centre .......................69
- 12.5. Key Derivation ...........................................69
- 12.6. Cryptographic Separation of Keys and Session
- Independence .............................................70
- 12.7. Dictionary Attacks .......................................71
- 12.8. Credentials Re-use .......................................71
- 12.9. Integrity and Replay Protection, and Confidentiality .....72
- 12.10. Negotiation Attacks .....................................73
- 12.11. Protected Result Indications ............................73
- 12.12. Man-in-the-Middle Attacks ...............................74
- 12.13. Generating Random Numbers ...............................74
- 13. Security Claims ...............................................74
- 14. Acknowledgements and Contributions ............................75
- 14.1. Contributors .............................................75
- 14.2. Acknowledgements .........................................75
- 14.2.1. Contributors' Addresses ...........................77
- 15. References ....................................................78
- 15.1. Normative References .....................................78
- 15.2. Informative References ...................................79
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 3]
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- Appendix A. Test Vectors .........................................81
- A.1. EAP-Request/Identity .....................................81
- A.2. EAP-Response/Identity ....................................81
- A.3. EAP-Request/SIM/Start ....................................82
- A.4. EAP-Response/SIM/Start ...................................82
- A.5. EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge ................................83
- A.6. EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge ...............................86
- A.7. EAP-Success ..............................................86
- A.8. Fast Re-authentication ...................................86
- A.9. EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication ........................87
- A.10. EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication ......................89
- Appendix B. Pseudo-Random Number Generator .......................90
- 1. Introduction
- This document specifies an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
- [RFC3748] mechanism for authentication and session key distribution
- using the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) Subscriber
- Identity Module (SIM).
- GSM is a second generation mobile network standard. Second
- generation mobile networks and third generation mobile networks use
- different authentication and key agreement mechanisms. EAP-AKA
- [EAP-AKA] specifies an EAP method that is based on the Authentication
- and Key Agreement (AKA) mechanism used in 3rd generation mobile
- networks.
- GSM authentication is based on a challenge-response mechanism. The
- A3/A8 authentication and key derivation algorithms that run on the
- SIM can be given a 128-bit random number (RAND) as a challenge. The
- SIM runs operator-specific algorithms, which take the RAND and a
- secret key Ki (stored on the SIM) as input, and produce a 32-bit
- response (SRES) and a 64-bit long key Kc as output. The Kc key is
- originally intended to be used as an encryption key over the air
- interface, but in this protocol, it is used for deriving keying
- material and is not directly used. Hence, the secrecy of Kc is
- critical to the security of this protocol. For more information
- about GSM authentication, see [GSM-03.20]. See Section 12.1 for more
- discussion about the GSM algorithms used in EAP-SIM.
- The lack of mutual authentication is a weakness in GSM
- authentication. The derived 64-bit cipher key (Kc) is not strong
- enough for data networks in which stronger and longer keys are
- required. Hence, in EAP-SIM, several RAND challenges are used for
- generating several 64-bit Kc keys, which are combined to constitute
- stronger keying material. In EAP-SIM, the client issues a random
- number NONCE_MT to the network in order to contribute to key
- derivation, and to prevent replays of EAP-SIM requests from previous
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 4]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- exchanges. The NONCE_MT can be conceived as the client's challenge
- to the network. EAP-SIM also extends the combined RAND challenges
- and other messages with a message authentication code in order to
- provide message integrity protection along with mutual
- authentication.
- EAP-SIM specifies optional support for protecting the privacy of
- subscriber identity using the same concept as the GSM, which uses
- pseudonyms/temporary identifiers. It also specifies an optional fast
- re-authentication procedure.
- The security of EAP-SIM builds on underlying GSM mechanisms. The
- security properties of EAP-SIM are documented in Section 11 of this
- document. Implementers and users of EAP-SIM are advised to carefully
- study the security considerations in Section 11 in order to determine
- whether the security properties are sufficient for the environment in
- question, especially as the secrecy of Kc keys is essential to the
- security of EAP-SIM. In brief, EAP-SIM is in no sense weaker than
- the GSM mechanisms. In some cases EAP-SIM provides better security
- properties than the underlying GSM mechanisms, particularly if the
- SIM credentials are only used for EAP-SIM and are not re-used from
- GSM/GPRS. Many of the security features of EAP-SIM rely upon the
- secrecy of the Kc values in the SIM triplets, so protecting these
- values is key to the security of the EAP-SIM protocol.
- The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) has specified an
- enhanced Authentication and Key Agreement (AKA) architecture for the
- Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS). The 3rd
- generation AKA mechanism includes mutual authentication, replay
- protection, and derivation of longer session keys. EAP-AKA [EAP-AKA]
- specifies an EAP method that is based on the 3rd generation AKA.
- EAP-AKA, which is a more secure protocol, may be used instead of
- EAP-SIM, if 3rd generation identity modules and 3G network
- infrastructures are available.
- 2. Terms
- 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].
- The terms and abbreviations "authenticator", "backend authentication
- server", "EAP server", "peer", "Silently Discard", "Master Session
- Key (MSK)", and "Extended Master Session Key (EMSK)" in this document
- are to be interpreted as described in [RFC3748].
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 5]
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- This document frequently uses the following terms and abbreviations:
- AAA protocol
- Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting protocol
- AuC
- Authentication Centre. The GSM network element that provides
- the authentication triplets for authenticating
- the subscriber.
- Authentication vector
- GSM triplets can be alternatively called authentication
- vectors.
- EAP
- Extensible Authentication Protocol
- Fast re-authentication
- An EAP-SIM authentication exchange that is based on keys
- derived upon a preceding full authentication exchange.
- The GSM authentication and key exchange algorithms are not
- used in the fast re-authentication procedure.
- Fast Re-authentication Identity
- A fast re-authentication identity of the peer, including an NAI
- realm portion in environments where a realm is used. Used on
- fast re-authentication only.
- Fast Re-authentication Username
- The username portion of fast re-authentication identity,
- i.e., not including any realm portions.
- Full authentication
- An EAP-SIM authentication exchange based on the GSM
- authentication and key agreement algorithms.
- GSM
- Global System for Mobile communications.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 6]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- GSM Triplet
- The tuple formed by the three GSM authentication values RAND,
- Kc, and SRES.
- IMSI
- International Mobile Subscriber Identifier, used in GSM to
- identify subscribers.
- MAC
- Message Authentication Code
- NAI
- Network Access Identifier
- Nonce
- A value that is used at most once or that is never repeated
- within the same cryptographic context. In general, a nonce can
- be predictable (e.g., a counter) or unpredictable (e.g., a
- random value). Since some cryptographic properties may depend
- on the randomness of the nonce, attention should be paid to
- whether a nonce is required to be random or not. In this
- document, the term nonce is only used to denote random nonces,
- and it is not used to denote counters.
- Permanent Identity
- The permanent identity of the peer, including an NAI realm
- portion in environments where a realm is used. The permanent
- identity is usually based on the IMSI. Used on full
- authentication only.
- Permanent Username
- The username portion of permanent identity, i.e., not including
- any realm portions.
- Pseudonym Identity
- A pseudonym identity of the peer, including an NAI realm
- portion in environments where a realm is used. Used on
- full authentication only.
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Pseudonym Username
- The username portion of pseudonym identity, i.e., not including
- any realm portions.
- SIM
- Subscriber Identity Module. The SIM is traditionally a smart
- card distributed by a GSM operator.
- 3. Overview
- Figure 1 shows an overview of the EAP-SIM full authentication
- procedure, wherein optional protected success indications are not
- used. The authenticator typically communicates with an EAP server
- that is located on a backend authentication server using an AAA
- protocol. The authenticator shown in the figure is often simply
- relaying EAP messages to and from the EAP server, but these backend
- AAA communications are not shown.
- Peer Authenticator
- | EAP-Request/Identity |
- |<---------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/Identity |
- |--------------------------------------------------------->|
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start (AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<---------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start (AT_NONCE_MT, AT_SELECTED_VERSION)|
- |--------------------------------------------------------->|
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge (AT_RAND, AT_MAC) |
- |<---------------------------------------------------------|
- +-------------------------------------+ |
- | Peer runs GSM algorithms, verifies | |
- | AT_MAC and derives session keys | |
- +-------------------------------------+ |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge (AT_MAC) |
- |--------------------------------------------------------->|
- | |
- | EAP-Success |
- |<---------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- Figure 1: EAP-SIM full authentication procedure
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The first EAP Request issued by the authenticator is
- EAP-Request/Identity. On full authentication, the peer's response
- includes either the user's International Mobile Subscriber Identity
- (IMSI) or a temporary identity (pseudonym) if identity privacy is in
- effect, as specified in Section 4.2.
- Following the peer's EAP-Response/Identity packet, the peer receives
- EAP Requests of Type 18 (SIM) from the EAP server and sends the
- corresponding EAP Responses. The EAP packets that are of the Type
- SIM also have a Subtype field. On full authentication, the first
- EAP-Request/SIM packet is of the Subtype 10 (Start). EAP-SIM packets
- encapsulate parameters in attributes, encoded in a Type, Length,
- Value format. The packet format and the use of attributes are
- specified in Section 8.
- The EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet contains the list of EAP-SIM
- versions supported by the EAP server in the AT_VERSION_LIST
- attribute. This packet may also include attributes for requesting
- the subscriber identity, as specified in Section 4.2.
- The peer responds to a EAP-Request/SIM/Start with the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start packet, which includes the AT_NONCE_MT
- attribute that contains a random number NONCE_MT, chosen by the peer,
- and the AT_SELECTED_VERSION attribute that contains the version
- number selected by the peer. The version negotiation is protected by
- including the version list and the selected version in the
- calculation of keying material (Section 7).
- After receiving the EAP Response/SIM/Start, the EAP server obtains n
- GSM triplets for use in authenticating the subscriber, where n = 2 or
- n = 3. From the triplets, the EAP server derives the keying
- material, as specified in Section 7. The triplets may be obtained by
- contacting an Authentication Centre (AuC) on the GSM network; per GSM
- specifications, between 1 and 5 triplets may be obtained at a time.
- Triplets may be stored in the EAP server for use at a later time, but
- triplets MUST NOT be re-used, except in some error cases that are
- specified in Section 10.9.
- The next EAP Request the EAP Server issues is of the type SIM and
- subtype Challenge (11). It contains the RAND challenges and a
- message authentication code attribute AT_MAC to cover the challenges.
- The AT_MAC attribute is a general message authentication code
- attribute that is used in many EAP-SIM messages.
- On receipt of the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message, the peer runs
- the GSM authentication algorithm and calculates a copy of the message
- authentication code. The peer then verifies that the calculated MAC
- equals the received MAC. If the MAC's do not match, then the peer
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- sends the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet and the authentication
- exchange terminates.
- Since the RANDs given to a peer are accompanied by the message
- authentication code AT_MAC, and since the peer's NONCE_MT value
- contributes to AT_MAC, the peer is able to verify that the EAP-SIM
- message is fresh (i.e., not a replay) and that the sender possesses
- valid GSM triplets for the subscriber.
- If all checks out, the peer responds with the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge, containing the AT_MAC attribute that
- covers the peer's SRES response values (Section 9.4). The EAP server
- verifies that the MAC is correct. Because protected success
- indications are not used in this example, the EAP server sends the
- EAP-Success packet, indicating that the authentication was
- successful. (Protected success indications are discussed in
- Section 6.2.) The EAP server may also include derived keying
- material in the message it sends to the authenticator. The peer has
- derived the same keying material, so the authenticator does not
- forward the keying material to the peer along with EAP-Success.
- EAP-SIM also includes a separate fast re-authentication procedure
- that does not make use of the A3/A8 algorithms or the GSM
- infrastructure. Fast re-authentication is based on keys derived on
- full authentication. If the peer has maintained state information
- for fast re-authentication and wants to use fast re-authentication,
- then the peer indicates this by using a specific fast
- re-authentication identity instead of the permanent identity or a
- pseudonym identity. The fast re-authentication procedure is
- described in Section 5.
- 4. Operation
- 4.1. Version Negotiation
- EAP-SIM includes version negotiation so as to allow future
- developments in the protocol. The version negotiation is performed
- on full authentication and it uses two attributes, AT_VERSION_LIST,
- which the server always includes in EAP-Request/SIM/Start, and
- AT_SELECTED_VERSION, which the peer includes in
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start on full authentication.
- AT_VERSION_LIST includes the EAP-SIM versions supported by the
- server. If AT_VERSION_LIST does not include a version that is
- implemented by the peer and allowed in the peer's security policy,
- then the peer MUST send the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet
- (Section 9.7) to the server with the error code "unsupported
- version". If a suitable version is included, then the peer includes
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- the AT_SELECTED_VERSION attribute, containing the selected version in
- the EAP-Response/SIM/Start packet. The peer MUST only indicate a
- version that is included in the AT_VERSION_LIST. If several versions
- are acceptable, then the peer SHOULD choose the version that occurs
- first in the version list.
- The version number list of AT_VERSION_LIST and the selected version
- of AT_SELECTED_VERSION are included in the key derivation procedure
- (Section 7). If an attacker modifies either one of these attributes,
- then the peer and the server derive different keying material.
- Because K_aut keys are different, the server and peer calculate
- different AT_MAC values. Hence, the peer detects that AT_MAC,
- included in EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge, is incorrect and sends the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet. The authentication procedure
- terminates.
- 4.2. Identity Management
- 4.2.1. Format, Generation and Usage of Peer Identities
- 4.2.1.1. General
- In the beginning of EAP authentication, the Authenticator or the EAP
- server usually issues the EAP-Request/Identity packet to the peer.
- The peer responds with the EAP-Response/Identity, which contains the
- user's identity. The formats of these packets are specified in
- [RFC3748].
- GSM subscribers are identified with the International Mobile
- Subscriber Identity (IMSI) [GSM-03.03]. The IMSI is a string of not
- more than 15 digits. It is composed of a three digit Mobile Country
- Code (MCC), a two or three digit Mobile Network Code (MNC), and a
- Mobile Subscriber Identification Number (MSIN) of no more than 10
- digits. MCC and MNC uniquely identify the GSM operator and help
- identify the AuC from which the authentication vectors need to be
- retrieved for this subscriber.
- Internet AAA protocols identify users with the Network Access
- Identifier (NAI) [RFC4282]. When used in a roaming environment, the
- NAI is composed of a username and a realm, separated with "@"
- (username@realm). The username portion identifies the subscriber
- within the realm.
- This section specifies the peer identity format used in EAP-SIM. In
- this document, the term "identity" or "peer identity" refers to the
- whole identity string that is used to identify the peer. The peer
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- identity may include a realm portion. "Username" refers to the
- portion of the peer identity that identifies the user, i.e., the
- username does not include the realm portion.
- 4.2.1.2. Identity Privacy Support
- EAP-SIM includes optional identity privacy (anonymity) support that
- can be used to hide the cleartext permanent identity and thereby make
- the subscriber's EAP exchanges untraceable to eavesdroppers. Because
- the permanent identity never changes, revealing it would help
- observers to track the user. The permanent identity is usually based
- on the IMSI, which may further help the tracking, because the same
- identifier may be used in other contexts as well. Identity privacy
- is based on temporary identities, or pseudonyms, which are equivalent
- to but separate from the Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identities
- (TMSI) that are used on cellular networks. Please see Section 12.2
- for security considerations regarding identity privacy.
- 4.2.1.3. Username Types in EAP-SIM identities
- There are three types of usernames in EAP-SIM peer identities:
- (1) Permanent usernames. For example,
- 1123456789098765@myoperator.com might be a valid permanent identity.
- In this example, 1123456789098765 is the permanent username.
- (2) Pseudonym usernames. For example, 3s7ah6n9q@myoperator.com might
- be a valid pseudonym identity. In this example, 3s7ah6n9q is the
- pseudonym username.
- (3) Fast re-authentication usernames. For example,
- 53953754@myoperator.com might be a valid fast re-authentication
- identity. In this case, 53953754 is the fast re-authentication
- username. Unlike permanent usernames and pseudonym usernames, fast
- re-authentication usernames are one-time identifiers, which are not
- re-used across EAP exchanges.
- The first two types of identities are used only on full
- authentication and the last one only on fast re-authentication. When
- the optional identity privacy support is not used, the non-pseudonym
- permanent identity is used on full authentication. The fast
- re-authentication exchange is specified in Section 5.
- 4.2.1.4. Username Decoration
- In some environments, the peer may need to decorate the identity by
- prepending or appending the username with a string, in order to
- indicate supplementary AAA routing information in addition to the NAI
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- realm. (The usage of an NAI realm portion is not considered
- decoration.) Username decoration is out of the scope of this
- document. However, it should be noted that username decoration might
- prevent the server from recognizing a valid username. Hence,
- although the peer MAY use username decoration in the identities that
- the peer includes in EAP-Response/Identity, and although the EAP
- server MAY accept a decorated peer username in this message, the peer
- or the EAP server MUST NOT decorate any other peer identities that
- are used in various EAP-SIM attributes. Only the identity used in
- the EAP-Response/Identity may be decorated.
- 4.2.1.5. NAI Realm Portion
- The peer MAY include a realm portion in the peer identity, as per the
- NAI format. The use of a realm portion is not mandatory.
- If a realm is used, the realm MAY be chosen by the subscriber's home
- operator and it MAY be a configurable parameter in the EAP-SIM peer
- implementation. In this case, the peer is typically configured with
- the NAI realm of the home operator. Operators MAY reserve a specific
- realm name for EAP-SIM users. This convention makes it easy to
- recognize that the NAI identifies a GSM subscriber. Such a reserved
- NAI realm may be a useful hint as to the first authentication method
- to use during method negotiation. When the peer is using a pseudonym
- username instead of the permanent username, the peer selects the
- realm name portion similarly as it select the realm portion when
- using the permanent username.
- If no configured realm name is available, the peer MAY derive the
- realm name from the MCC and MNC portions of the IMSI. A RECOMMENDED
- way to derive the realm from the IMSI using the realm 3gppnetwork.org
- is specified in [3GPP-TS-23.003].
- Some old implementations derive the realm name from the IMSI by
- concatenating "mnc", the MNC digits of IMSI, ".mcc", the MCC digits
- of IMSI, and ".owlan.org". For example, if the IMSI is
- 123456789098765, and the MNC is three digits long, then the derived
- realm name is "mnc456.mcc123.owlan.org". As there are no DNS servers
- running at owlan.org, these realm names can only be used with
- manually configured AAA routing. New implementations SHOULD use the
- mechanism specified in [3GPP-TS-23.003] instead of owlan.org.
- The IMSI is a string of digits without any explicit structure, so the
- peer may not be able to determine the length of the MNC portion. If
- the peer is not able to determine whether the MNC is two or three
- digits long, the peer MAY use a 3-digit MNC. If the correct length
- of the MNC is two, then the MNC used in the realm name includes the
- first digit of the MSIN. Hence, when configuring AAA networks for
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- operators that have 2-digit MNCs, the network SHOULD also be prepared
- for realm names with incorrect, 3-digit MNCs.
- 4.2.1.6. Format of the Permanent Username
- The non-pseudonym permanent username SHOULD be derived from the IMSI.
- In this case, the permanent username MUST be of the format "1" |
- IMSI, where the character "|" denotes concatenation. In other words,
- the first character of the username is the digit one (ASCII value 31
- hexadecimal), followed by the IMSI. The IMSI is encoded as an ASCII
- string that consists of not more than 15 decimal digits (ASCII values
- between 30 and 39 hexadecimal), one character per IMSI digit, in the
- order specified in [GSM-03.03]. For example, a permanent username
- derived from the IMSI 295023820005424 would be encoded as the ASCII
- string "1295023820005424" (byte values in hexadecimal notation: 31 32
- 39 35 30 32 33 38 32 30 30 30 35 34 32 34).
- The EAP server MAY use the leading "1" as a hint to try EAP-SIM as
- the first authentication method during method negotiation, rather
- than, for example EAP/AKA. The EAP-SIM server MAY propose EAP-SIM,
- even if the leading character was not "1".
- Alternatively, an implementation MAY choose a permanent username that
- is not based on the IMSI. In this case, the selection of the
- username, its format, and its processing is out of the scope of this
- document. In this case, the peer implementation MUST NOT prepend any
- leading characters to the username.
- 4.2.1.7. Generating Pseudonyms and Fast Re-authentication Identities by
- the Server
- Pseudonym usernames and fast re-authentication identities are
- generated by the EAP server. The EAP server produces pseudonym
- usernames and fast re-authentication identities in an
- implementation-dependent manner. Only the EAP server needs to be
- able to map the pseudonym username to the permanent identity, or to
- recognize a fast re-authentication identity.
- EAP-SIM includes no provisions to ensure that the same EAP server
- that generated a pseudonym username will be used on the
- authentication exchange when the pseudonym username is used. It is
- recommended that the EAP servers implement some centralized mechanism
- to allow all EAP servers of the home operator to map pseudonyms
- generated by other severs to the permanent identity. If no such
- mechanism is available, then the EAP server failing to understand a
- pseudonym issued by another server can request the that peer send the
- permanent identity.
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- When issuing a fast re-authentication identity, the EAP server may
- include a realm name in the identity to make the fast
- re-authentication request be forwarded to the same EAP server.
- When generating fast re-authentication identities, the server SHOULD
- choose a fresh, new fast re-authentication identity that is different
- from the previous ones that were used after the same full
- authentication exchange. A full authentication exchange and the
- associated fast re-authentication exchanges are referred to here as
- the same "full authentication context". The fast re-authentication
- identity SHOULD include a random component. This random component
- works as a full authentication context identifier. A
- context-specific fast re-authentication identity can help the server
- to detect whether its fast re-authentication state information
- matches that of its peer (in other words, whether the state
- information is from the same full authentication exchange). The
- random component also makes the fast re-authentication identities
- unpredictable, so an attacker cannot initiate a fast
- re-authentication exchange to get the server's EAP-Request/SIM/
- Re-authentication packet.
- Transmitting pseudonyms and fast re-authentication identities from
- the server to the peer is discussed in Section 4.2.1.8. The
- pseudonym is transmitted as a username, without an NAI realm, and the
- fast re-authentication identity is transmitted as a complete NAI,
- including a realm portion if a realm is required. The realm is
- included in the fast re-authentication identity to allow the server
- to include a server-specific realm.
- Regardless of the construction method, the pseudonym username MUST
- conform to the grammar specified for the username portion of an NAI.
- The fast re-authentication identity also MUST conform to the NAI
- grammar. The EAP servers that the subscribers of an operator can use
- MUST ensure that the pseudonym usernames and the username portions
- used in fast re-authentication identities they generate are unique.
- In any case, it is necessary that permanent usernames, pseudonym
- usernames, and fast re-authentication usernames are separate and
- recognizable from each other. It is also desirable that EAP-SIM and
- EAP-AKA [EAP-AKA] usernames be distinguishable from each other as an
- aid for the server on which method to offer.
- In general, it is the task of the EAP server and the policies of its
- administrator to ensure sufficient separation of the usernames.
- Pseudonym usernames and fast re-authentication usernames are both
- produced and used by the EAP server. The EAP server MUST compose
- pseudonym usernames and fast re-authentication usernames so that it
- can determine if an NAI username is an EAP-SIM pseudonym username or
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 15]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- an EAP-SIM fast re-authentication username. For instance, when the
- usernames have been derived from the IMSI, the server could use
- different leading characters in the pseudonym usernames and fast
- re-authentication usernames (e.g., the pseudonym could begin with a
- leading "3" character). When mapping a fast re-authentication
- identity to a permanent identity, the server SHOULD only examine the
- username portion of the fast re-authentication identity and ignore
- the realm portion of the identity.
- Because the peer may fail to save a pseudonym username sent in an
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge, for example due to malfunction, the EAP
- server SHOULD maintain at least the most recently used pseudonym
- username in addition to the most recently issued pseudonym username.
- If the authentication exchange is not completed successfully, then
- the server SHOULD NOT overwrite the pseudonym username that was
- issued during the most recent successful authentication exchange.
- 4.2.1.8. Transmitting Pseudonyms and Fast Re-authentication Identities
- to the Peer
- The server transmits pseudonym usernames and fast re-authentication
- identities to the peer in cipher, using the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- The EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message MAY include an encrypted
- pseudonym username and/or an encrypted fast re-authentication
- identity in the value field of the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute. Because
- identity privacy support and fast re-authentication are optional
- implementations, the peer MAY ignore the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute and
- always use the permanent identity. On fast re-authentication
- (discussed in Section 5), the server MAY include a new, encrypted
- fast re-authentication identity in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication message.
- On receipt of the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge, the peer MAY decrypt the
- encrypted data in AT_ENCR_DATA. If the authentication exchange is
- successful, and the encrypted data includes a pseudonym username,
- then the peer may use the obtained pseudonym username on the next
- full authentication. If a fast re-authentication identity is
- included, then the peer MAY save it together with other fast
- re-authentication state information, as discussed in Section 5, for
- the next fast re-authentication. If the authentication exchange does
- not complete successfully, the peer MUST ignore the received
- pseudonym username and the fast re-authentication identity.
- If the peer does not receive a new pseudonym username in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message, the peer MAY use an old pseudonym
- username instead of the permanent username on the next full
- authentication. The username portions of fast re-authentication
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 16]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- identities are one-time usernames, which the peer MUST NOT re-use.
- When the peer uses a fast re-authentication identity in an EAP
- exchange, the peer MUST discard the fast re-authentication identity
- and not re-use it in another EAP authentication exchange, even if the
- authentication exchange was not completed.
- 4.2.1.9. Usage of the Pseudonym by the Peer
- When the optional identity privacy support is used on full
- authentication, the peer MAY use a pseudonym username received as
- part of a previous full authentication sequence as the username
- portion of the NAI. The peer MUST NOT modify the pseudonym username
- received in AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM. However, as discussed above, the peer
- MAY need to decorate the username in some environments by appending
- or prepending the username with a string that indicates supplementary
- AAA routing information.
- When using a pseudonym username in an environment where a realm
- portion is used, the peer concatenates the received pseudonym
- username with the "@" character and an NAI realm portion. The
- selection of the NAI realm is discussed above. The peer can select
- the realm portion similarly, regardless of whether it uses the
- permanent username or a pseudonym username.
- 4.2.1.10. Usage of the Fast Re-authentication Identity by the Peer
- On fast re-authentication, the peer uses the fast re-authentication
- identity that was received as part of the previous authentication
- sequence. A new re-authentication identity may be delivered as part
- of both full authentication and fast re-authentication. The peer
- MUST NOT modify the username part of the fast re-authentication
- identity received in AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID, except in cases when username
- decoration is required. Even in these cases, the "root" fast
- re-authentication username must not be modified, but it may be
- appended or prepended with another string.
- 4.2.2. Communicating the Peer Identity to the Server
- 4.2.2.1. General
- The peer identity MAY be communicated to the server with the
- EAP-Response/Identity message. This message MAY contain the
- permanent identity, a pseudonym identity, or a fast re-authentication
- identity. If the peer uses the permanent identity or a pseudonym
- identity, which the server is able to map to the permanent identity,
- then the authentication proceeds as discussed in the overview of
- Section 3. If the peer uses a fast re-authentication identity, and
- if the fast re-authentication identity matches with a valid fast
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 17]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- re-authentication identity maintained by the server, and if the
- server agrees to use fast re-authentication, then a fast
- re-authentication exchange is performed, as described in Section 5.
- The peer identity can also be transmitted from the peer to the server
- using EAP-SIM messages instead of the EAP-Response/Identity. In this
- case, the server includes an identity-requesting attribute
- (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ or AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ) in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start message, and the peer includes the AT_IDENTITY
- attribute, which contains the peer's identity, in the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start message. The AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute is a
- general identity-requesting attribute, which the server uses if it
- does not specify which kind of an identity the peer should return in
- AT_IDENTITY. The server uses the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ attribute to
- request either the permanent identity or a pseudonym identity. The
- server uses the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute to request that the
- peer send its permanent identity.
- The identity format in the AT_IDENTITY attribute is the same as in
- the EAP-Response/Identity packet (except that identity decoration is
- not allowed). The AT_IDENTITY attribute contains a permanent
- identity, a pseudonym identity, or a fast re-authentication identity.
- Please note that the EAP-SIM peer and the EAP-SIM server only process
- the AT_IDENTITY attribute; entities that only pass through EAP
- packets do not process this attribute. Hence, the authenticator and
- other intermediate AAA elements (such as possible AAA proxy servers)
- will continue to refer to the peer with the original identity from
- the EAP-Response/Identity packet unless the identity authenticated in
- the AT_IDENTITY attribute is communicated to them in another way
- within the AAA protocol.
- 4.2.2.2. Relying on EAP-Response/Identity Discouraged
- The EAP-Response/Identity packet is not method-specific, so in many
- implementations it may be handled by an EAP Framework. This
- introduces an additional layer of processing between the EAP peer and
- EAP server. The extra layer of processing may cache identity
- responses or add decorations to the identity. A modification of the
- identity response will cause the EAP peer and EAP server to use
- different identities in the key derivation, which will cause the
- protocol to fail.
- For this reason, it is RECOMMENDED that the EAP peer and server use
- the method-specific identity attributes in EAP-SIM, and the server is
- strongly discouraged from relying upon the EAP-Response/Identity.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 18]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- In particular, if the EAP server receives a decorated identity in
- EAP-Response/Identity, then the EAP server MUST use the
- identity-requesting attributes to request that the peer send an
- unmodified and undecorated copy of the identity in AT_IDENTITY.
- 4.2.3. Choice of Identity for the EAP-Response/Identity
- If EAP-SIM peer is started upon receiving an EAP-Request/Identity
- message, then the peer MAY use an EAP-SIM identity in the EAP-
- Response/Identity packet. In this case, the peer performs the
- following steps.
- If the peer has maintained fast re-authentication state information
- and wants to use fast re-authentication, then the peer transmits the
- fast re-authentication identity in EAP-Response/Identity.
- Else, if the peer has a pseudonym username available, then the peer
- transmits the pseudonym identity in EAP-Response/Identity.
- In other cases, the peer transmits the permanent identity in
- EAP-Response/Identity.
- 4.2.4. Server Operation in the Beginning of EAP-SIM Exchange
- As discussed in Section 4.2.2.2, the server SHOULD NOT rely on an
- identity string received in EAP-Response/Identity. Therefore, the
- RECOMMENDED way to start an EAP-SIM exchange is to ignore any
- received identity strings. The server SHOULD begin the EAP-SIM
- exchange by issuing the EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet with an
- identity-requesting attribute to indicate that the server wants the
- peer to include an identity in the AT_IDENTITY attribute of the EAP-
- Response/SIM/Start message. Three methods to request an identity
- from the peer are discussed below.
- If the server chooses not to ignore the contents of EAP-
- Response/Identity, then the server may have already received an EAP-
- SIM identity in this packet. However, if the EAP server has not
- received any EAP-SIM peer identity (permanent identity, pseudonym
- identity, or fast re-authentication identity) from the peer when
- sending the first EAP-SIM request, or if the EAP server has received
- an EAP-Response/Identity packet but the contents do not appear to be
- a valid permanent identity, pseudonym identity or a re-authentication
- identity, then the server MUST request an identity from the peer
- using one of the methods below.
- The server sends the EAP-Request/SIM/Start message with the
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute to indicate that the server wants the
- peer to include the permanent identity in the AT_IDENTITY attribute
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 19]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- of the EAP-Response/SIM/Start message. This is done in the following
- cases:
- o The server does not support fast re-authentication or identity
- privacy.
- o The server decided to process a received identity, and the server
- recognizes the received identity as a pseudonym identity but the
- server is not able to map the pseudonym identity to a permanent
- identity.
- The server issues the EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet with the
- AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ attribute to indicate that the server wants the
- peer to include a full authentication identity (pseudonym identity or
- permanent identity) in the AT_IDENTITY attribute of the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start message. This is done in the following cases:
- o The server does not support fast re-authentication and the server
- supports identity privacy.
- o The server decided to process a received identity, and the server
- recognizes the received identity as a re-authentication identity
- but the server is not able to map the re-authentication identity
- to a permanent identity.
- The server issues the EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet with the
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute to indicate that the server wants the peer to
- include an identity in the AT_IDENTITY attribute of the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start message, and the server does not indicate any
- preferred type for the identity. This is done in other cases, such
- as when the server ignores a received EAP-Response/Identity, the
- server does not have any identity, or the server does not recognize
- the format of a received identity.
- 4.2.5. Processing of EAP-Request/SIM/Start by the Peer
- Upon receipt of an EAP-Request/SIM/Start message, the peer MUST
- perform the following steps.
- If the EAP-Request/SIM/Start does not include an identity request
- attribute, then the peer responds with EAP-Response/SIM/Start without
- AT_IDENTITY. The peer includes the AT_SELECTED_VERSION and
- AT_NONCE_MT attributes, because the exchange is a full authentication
- exchange.
- If the EAP-Request/SIM/Start includes AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, and if the
- peer does not have a pseudonym available, then the peer MUST respond
- with EAP-Response/SIM/Start and include the permanent identity in
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 20]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- AT_IDENTITY. If the peer has a pseudonym available, then the peer
- MAY refuse to send the permanent identity; hence, in this case the
- peer MUST either respond with EAP-Response/SIM/Start and include the
- permanent identity in AT_IDENTITY or respond with EAP-Response/SIM/
- Client-Error packet with the code "unable to process packet".
- If the EAP-Request/SIM/Start includes AT_FULL_AUTH_ID_REQ, and if the
- peer has a pseudonym available, then the peer SHOULD respond with
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start and include the pseudonym identity in
- AT_IDENTITY. If the peer does not have a pseudonym when it receives
- this message, then the peer MUST respond with EAP-Response/SIM/Start
- and include the permanent identity in AT_IDENTITY. The Peer MUST NOT
- use a re-authentication identity in the AT_IDENTITY attribute.
- If the EAP-Request/SIM/Start includes AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and if the peer
- has maintained fast re-authentication state information and the peer
- wants to use fast re-authentication, then the peer responds with
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start and includes the fast re-authentication
- identity in AT_IDENTITY. Else, if the peer has a pseudonym identity
- available, then the peer responds with EAP-Response/SIM/Start and
- includes the pseudonym identity in AT_IDENTITY. Else, the peer
- responds with EAP-Response/SIM/Start and includes the permanent
- identity in AT_IDENTITY.
- An EAP-SIM exchange may include several EAP/SIM/Start rounds. The
- server may issue a second EAP-Request/SIM/Start if it was not able to
- recognize the identity that the peer used in the previous AT_IDENTITY
- attribute. At most, three EAP/SIM/Start rounds can be used, so the
- peer MUST NOT respond to more than three EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- messages within an EAP exchange. The peer MUST verify that the
- sequence of EAP-Request/SIM/Start packets that the peer receives
- comply with the sequencing rules defined in this document. That is,
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ can only be used in the first EAP-Request/SIM/Start; in
- other words, AT_ANY_ID_REQ MUST NOT be used in the second or third
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start. AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ MUST NOT be used if the
- previous EAP-Request/SIM/Start included AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ. The
- peer operation, in cases when it receives an unexpected attribute or
- an unexpected message, is specified in Section 6.3.1.
- 4.2.6. Attacks Against Identity Privacy
- The section above specifies two possible ways the peer can operate
- upon receipt of AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ. This is because a received
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ does not necessarily originate from the valid
- network, but an active attacker may transmit an EAP-Request/SIM/
- Start packet with an AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute to the peer, in an
- effort to find out the true identity of the user. If the peer does
- not want to reveal its permanent identity, then the peer sends the
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 21]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet with the error code "unable to
- process packet", and the authentication exchange terminates.
- Basically, there are two different policies that the peer can employ
- with regard to AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ. A "conservative" peer assumes
- that the network is able to maintain pseudonyms robustly. Therefore,
- if a conservative peer has a pseudonym username, the peer responds
- with EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error to the EAP packet with
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, because the peer believes that the valid network
- is able to map the pseudonym identity to the peer's permanent
- identity. (Alternatively, the conservative peer may accept
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ in certain circumstances, for example, if the
- pseudonym was received a long time ago.) The benefit of this policy
- is that it protects the peer against active attacks on anonymity. On
- the other hand, a "liberal" peer always accepts the
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ and responds with the permanent identity. The
- benefit of this policy is that it works even if the valid network
- sometimes loses pseudonyms and is not able to map them to the
- permanent identity.
- 4.2.7. Processing of AT_IDENTITY by the Server
- When the server receives an EAP-Response/SIM/Start message with the
- AT_IDENTITY (in response to the server's identity requesting
- attribute), the server MUST operate as follows.
- If the server used AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, and if the AT_IDENTITY does
- not contain a valid permanent identity, then the server sends
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification with AT_NOTIFICATION code "General
- failure" (16384), and the EAP exchange terminates. If the server
- recognizes the permanent identity and is able to continue, then the
- server proceeds with full authentication by sending EAP-Request/SIM/
- Challenge.
- If the server used AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ, and if AT_IDENTITY contains a
- valid permanent identity or a pseudonym identity that the server can
- map to a valid permanent identity, then the server proceeds with full
- authentication by sending EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge. If AT_IDENTITY
- contains a pseudonym identity that the server is not able to map to a
- valid permanent identity, or an identity that the server is not able
- to recognize or classify, then the server sends EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- with AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ.
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and if the AT_IDENTITY contains a
- valid permanent identity or a pseudonym identity that the server can
- map to a valid permanent identity, then the server proceeds with full
- authentication by sending EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 22]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and if AT_IDENTITY contains a valid
- fast re-authentication identity and the server agrees on using
- re-authentication, then the server proceeds with fast
- re-authentication by sending EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication
- (Section 5).
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and if the peer sent an
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start with only AT_IDENTITY (indicating
- re-authentication), but the server is not able to map the identity to
- a permanent identity, then the server sends EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- with AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ.
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and if AT_IDENTITY contains a valid
- fast re-authentication identity that the server is able to map to a
- permanent identity, and if the server does not want to use fast
- re-authentication, then the server sends EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- without any identity requesting attributes.
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and AT_IDENTITY contains an
- identity that the server recognizes as a pseudonym identity but the
- server is not able to map the pseudonym identity to a permanent
- identity, then the server sends EAP-Request/SIM/Start with
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ.
- If the server used AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and AT_IDENTITY contains an
- identity that the server is not able to recognize or classify, then
- the server sends EAP-Request/SIM/Start with AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ.
- 4.3. Message Sequence Examples (Informative)
- This section contains non-normative message sequence examples to
- illustrate how the peer identity can be communicated to the server.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 23]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 4.3.1. Full Authentication
- This case for full authentication is illustrated below in Figure 2.
- In this case, AT_IDENTITY contains either the permanent identity or a
- pseudonym identity. The same sequence is also used in case the
- server uses the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ in EAP-Request/SIM/Start.
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not have a |
- | | Subscriber identity available|
- | | When starting EAP-SIM |
- | +------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 2: Requesting any identity, full authentication
- If the peer uses its full authentication identity and the AT_IDENTITY
- attribute contains a valid permanent identity or a valid pseudonym
- identity that the EAP server is able to map to the permanent
- identity, then the full authentication sequence proceeds as usual
- with the EAP Server issuing the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 24]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 4.3.2. Fast Re-authentication
- The case when the server uses the AT_ANY_ID_REQ and the peer wants to
- perform fast re-authentication is illustrated below in Figure 3.
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not have a |
- | | Subscriber identity available|
- | | When starting EAP-SIM |
- | +------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY containing a fast re-auth. identity) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 3: Requesting any identity, fast re-authentication
- On fast re-authentication, if the AT_IDENTITY attribute contains a
- valid fast re-authentication identity and the server agrees on using
- fast re-authentication, then the server proceeds with the fast
- re-authentication sequence and issues the EAP-Request/SIM/
- Re-authentication packet, as specified in Section 5.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 25]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 4.3.3. Fall Back to Full Authentication
- Figure 4 illustrates cases in which the server does not recognize the
- fast re-authentication identity the peer used in AT_IDENTITY, and
- issues a second EAP-Request/SIM/Start message.
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not have a |
- | | Subscriber identity available|
- | | When starting EAP-SIM |
- | +------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY containing a fast re-auth. identity) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not recognize |
- | | The fast re-auth. |
- | | Identity |
- | +------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY with a full-auth. identity, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 4: Fall back to full authentication
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 26]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 4.3.4. Requesting the Permanent Identity 1
- Figure 5 illustrates the case in which the EAP server fails to map
- the pseudonym identity included in the EAP-Response/Identity packet
- to a valid permanent identity.
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | EAP-Request/Identity |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/Identity |
- | (Includes a pseudonym) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server fails to map the |
- | | Pseudonym to a permanent id. |
- | +------------------------------+
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY with permanent identity, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 5: Requesting the permanent identity
- If the server recognizes the permanent identity, then the
- authentication sequence proceeds as usual with the EAP Server issuing
- the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 27]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 4.3.5. Requesting the Permanent Identity 2
- Figure 6 illustrates the case in which the EAP server fails to map
- the pseudonym included in the AT_IDENTITY attribute to a valid
- permanent identity.
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not have a |
- | | Subscriber identity available|
- | | When starting EAP-SIM |
- | +------------------------------+
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- |EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- |(AT_IDENTITY with a pseudonym identity, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | +-------------------------------+
- | | Server fails to map the |
- | | Pseudonym in AT_IDENTITY |
- | | to a valid permanent identity |
- | +-------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY with permanent identity, |
- | AT_NONCE_MT, AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 6: Requesting a permanent identity (two EAP-SIM Start rounds)
- 4.3.6. Three EAP-SIM/Start Roundtrips
- In the worst case, there are three EAP/SIM/Start round trips before
- the server obtains an acceptable identity. This case is illustrated
- in Figure 7.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 28]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not have a |
- | | Subscriber identity available|
- | | When starting EAP-SIM |
- | +------------------------------+
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (Includes AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY with fast re-auth. identity) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | +------------------------------+
- | | Server does not accept |
- | | The fast re-auth. |
- | | Identity |
- | +------------------------------+
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- : :
- : :
- : :
- : :
- |EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- |(AT_IDENTITY with a pseudonym identity, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | +-------------------------------+
- | | Server fails to map the |
- | | Pseudonym in AT_IDENTITY |
- | | to a valid permanent identity |
- | +-------------------------------+
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY with permanent identity, AT_NONCE_MT, |
- | AT_SELECTED_VERSION) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- Figure 7: Three EAP-SIM Start rounds
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 29]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- After the last EAP-Response/SIM/Start message, the full
- authentication sequence proceeds as usual. If the EAP Server
- recognizes the permanent identity and is able to proceed, the server
- issues the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message.
- 5. Fast Re-Authentication
- 5.1. General
- In some environments, EAP authentication may be performed frequently.
- Because the EAP-SIM full authentication procedure makes use of the
- GSM SIM A3/A8 algorithms, and therefore requires 2 or 3 fresh
- triplets from the Authentication Centre, the full authentication
- procedure is not very well suited for frequent use. Therefore,
- EAP-SIM includes a more inexpensive fast re-authentication procedure
- that does not make use of the SIM A3/A8 algorithms and does not need
- new triplets from the Authentication Centre. Re-authentication can
- be performed in fewer roundtrips than the full authentication.
- Fast re-authentication is optional to implement for both the EAP-SIM
- server and peer. On each EAP authentication, either one of the
- entities may also fall back on full authentication if it does not
- want to use fast re-authentication.
- Fast re-authentication is based on the keys derived on the preceding
- full authentication. The same K_aut and K_encr keys that were used
- in full authentication are used to protect EAP-SIM packets and
- attributes, and the original Master Key from full authentication is
- used to generate a fresh Master Session Key, as specified in Section
- 7.
- The fast re-authentication exchange makes use of an unsigned 16-bit
- counter, included in the AT_COUNTER attribute. The counter has three
- goals: 1) it can be used to limit the number of successive
- reauthentication exchanges without full authentication 2) it
- contributes to the keying material, and 3) it protects the peer and
- the server from replays. On full authentication, both the server and
- the peer initialize the counter to one. The counter value of at
- least one is used on the first fast re-authentication. On subsequent
- fast re-authentications, the counter MUST be greater than on any of
- the previous re-authentications. For example, on the second fast
- re-authentication, the counter value is two or greater. The
- AT_COUNTER attribute is encrypted.
- Both the peer and the EAP server maintain a copy of the counter. The
- EAP server sends its counter value to the peer in the fast
- re-authentication request. The peer MUST verify that its counter
- value is less than or equal to the value sent by the EAP server.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 30]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The server includes an encrypted server random nonce (AT_NONCE_S) in
- the fast re-authentication request. The AT_MAC attribute in the
- peer's response is calculated over NONCE_S to provide a
- challenge/response authentication scheme. The NONCE_S also
- contributes to the new Master Session Key.
- Both the peer and the server SHOULD have an upper limit for the
- number of subsequent fast re-authentications allowed before a full
- authentication needs to be performed. Because a 16-bit counter is
- used in fast re-authentication, the theoretical maximum number of
- re-authentications is reached when the counter value reaches FFFF
- hexadecimal.
- In order to use fast re-authentication, the peer and the EAP server
- need to store the following values: Master Key, latest counter value
- and the next fast re-authentication identity. K_aut, K_encr may
- either be stored or derived again from MK. The server may also need
- to store the permanent identity of the user.
- 5.2. Comparison to UMTS AKA
- When analyzing the fast re-authentication exchange, it may be helpful
- to compare it with the UMTS Authentication and Key Agreement (AKA)
- exchange, which it resembles closely. The counter corresponds to the
- UMTS AKA sequence number, NONCE_S corresponds to RAND, AT_MAC in
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication corresponds to AUTN, the AT_MAC in
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication corresponds to RES,
- AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL corresponds to AUTS, and encrypting the counter
- corresponds to the usage of the Anonymity Key. Also, the key
- generation on fast re-authentication, with regard to random or fresh
- material, is similar to UMTS AKA -- the server generates the NONCE_S
- and counter values, and the peer only verifies that the counter value
- is fresh.
- It should also be noted that encrypting the AT_NONCE_S, AT_COUNTER,
- or AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL attributes is not important to the security
- of the fast re-authentication exchange.
- 5.3. Fast Re-authentication Identity
- The fast re-authentication procedure makes use of separate
- re-authentication user identities. Pseudonyms and the permanent
- identity are reserved for full authentication only. If a
- re-authentication identity is lost and the network does not recognize
- it, the EAP server can fall back on full authentication.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 31]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- If the EAP server supports fast re-authentication, it MAY include the
- skippable AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID attribute in the encrypted data of
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge message (Section 9.3). This attribute
- contains a new fast re-authentication identity for the next fast
- re-authentication. The attribute also works as a capability flag
- that, indicating that the server supports fast re-authentication, and
- that the server wants to continue using fast re-authentication within
- the current context. The peer MAY ignore this attribute, in which
- case it MUST use full authentication next time. If the peer wants to
- use re-authentication, it uses this fast re-authentication identity
- on next authentication. Even if the peer has a fast
- re-authentication identity, the peer MAY discard the fast
- re-authentication identity and use a pseudonym or the permanent
- identity instead, in which case full authentication MUST be
- performed. If the EAP server does not include the AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID
- in the encrypted data of EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge or
- EAP-Request/SIM/ Re-authentication, then the peer MUST discard its
- current fast re-authentication state information and perform a full
- authentication next time.
- In environments where a realm portion is needed in the peer identity,
- the fast re-authentication identity received in AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID
- MUST contain both a username portion and a realm portion, as per the
- NAI format. The EAP Server can choose an appropriate realm part in
- order to have the AAA infrastructure route subsequent fast
- re-authentication related requests to the same AAA server. For
- example, the realm part MAY include a portion that is specific to the
- AAA server. Hence, it is sufficient to store the context required
- for fast re-authentication in the AAA server that performed the full
- authentication.
- The peer MAY use the fast re-authentication identity in the
- EAP-Response/Identity packet or, in response to the server's
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute, the peer MAY use the fast re-authentication
- identity in the AT_IDENTITY attribute of the EAP-Response/SIM/Start
- packet.
- The peer MUST NOT modify the username portion of the fast
- re-authentication identity, but the peer MAY modify the realm portion
- or replace it with another realm portion. The peer might need to
- modify the realm in order to influence the AAA routing, for example,
- to make sure that the correct server is reached. It should be noted
- that sharing the same fast re-authentication key among several
- servers may have security risks, so changing the realm portion of the
- NAI in order to change the EAP server is not desirable.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 32]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Even if the peer uses a fast re-authentication identity, the server
- may want to fall back on full authentication, for example because the
- server does not recognize the fast re-authentication identity or does
- not want to use fast re-authentication. In this case, the server
- starts the full authentication procedure by issuing an
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet. This packet always starts a full
- authentication sequence if it does not include the AT_ANY_ID_REQ
- attribute. If the server was not able to recover the peer's identity
- from the fast re-authentication identity, the server includes either
- the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ or the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute in this
- EAP request.
- 5.4. Fast Re-authentication Procedure
- Figure 8 illustrates the fast re-authentication procedure. In this
- example, the optional protected success indication is not used.
- Encrypted attributes are denoted with '*'. The peer uses its
- re-authentication identity in the EAP-Response/Identity packet. As
- discussed above, an alternative way to communicate the
- re-authentication identity to the server is for the peer to use the
- AT_IDENTITY attribute in the EAP-Response/SIM/Start message. This
- latter case is not illustrated in the figure below, and it is only
- possible when the server requests that the peer send its identity by
- including the AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute in the EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- packet.
- If the server recognizes the identity as a valid fast
- re-authentication identity, and if the server agrees to use fast
- re-authentication, then the server sends the EAP-Request/SIM/
- Re-authentication packet to the peer. This packet MUST include the
- encrypted AT_COUNTER attribute, with a fresh counter value, the
- encrypted AT_NONCE_S attribute that contains a random number chosen
- by the server, the AT_ENCR_DATA and the AT_IV attributes used for
- encryption, and the AT_MAC attribute that contains a message
- authentication code over the packet. The packet MAY also include an
- encrypted AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID attribute that contains the next fast
- re-authentication identity.
- Fast re-authentication identities are one-time identities. If the
- peer does not receive a new fast re-authentication identity, it MUST
- use either the permanent identity or a pseudonym identity on the next
- authentication to initiate full authentication.
- The peer verifies that AT_MAC is correct, and that the counter value
- is fresh (greater than any previously used value). The peer MAY save
- the next fast re-authentication identity from the encrypted
- AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID for next time. If all checks are successful, the
- peer responds with the EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication packet,
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 33]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- including the AT_COUNTER attribute with the same counter value and
- AT_MAC attribute.
- The server verifies the AT_MAC attribute and also verifies that the
- counter value is the same that it used in the EAP-Request/SIM/
- Re-authentication packet. If these checks are successful, the
- re-authentication has succeeded and the server sends the EAP-Success
- packet to the peer.
- If protected success indications (Section 6.2) were used, the
- EAP-Success packet would be preceded by an EAP-SIM notification
- round.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 34]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Peer Authenticator
- | |
- | EAP-Request/Identity |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/Identity |
- | (Includes a fast re-authentication identity) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | +--------------------------------+
- | | Server recognizes the identity |
- | | and agrees to use fast |
- | | re-authentication |
- | +--------------------------------+
- | |
- : :
- : :
- : :
- : :
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication |
- | (AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, *AT_COUNTER, |
- | *AT_NONCE_S, *AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID, AT_MAC) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- +-----------------------------------------------+ |
- | Peer verifies AT_MAC and the freshness of | |
- | the counter. Peer MAY store the new fast re- | |
- | authentication identity for next re-auth. | |
- +-----------------------------------------------+ |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication |
- | (AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, *AT_COUNTER with same value, |
- | AT_MAC) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | +--------------------------------+
- | | Server verifies AT_MAC and |
- | | the counter |
- | +--------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Success |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- Figure 8: Fast Re-authentication
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 35]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 5.5. Fast Re-authentication Procedure when Counter Is Too Small
- If the peer does not accept the counter value of EAP-Request/SIM/
- Re-authentication, it indicates the counter synchronization problem
- by including the encrypted AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL in EAP-Response/SIM/
- Re-authentication. The server responds with EAP-Request/SIM/Start to
- initiate a normal full authentication procedure. This is illustrated
- in Figure 9. Encrypted attributes are denoted with '*'.
- Peer Authenticator
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_IDENTITY) |
- | (Includes a fast re-authentication identity) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication |
- | (AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, *AT_COUNTER, |
- | *AT_NONCE_S, *AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID, AT_MAC) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- +-----------------------------------------------+ |
- | AT_MAC is valid but the counter is not fresh. | |
- +-----------------------------------------------+ |
- | |
- | EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication |
- | (AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, *AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL, |
- | *AT_COUNTER, AT_MAC) |
- |------------------------------------------------------>|
- | +----------------------------------------------+
- | | Server verifies AT_MAC but detects |
- | | That peer has included AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL |
- | +----------------------------------------------+
- | |
- | EAP-Request/SIM/Start |
- | (AT_VERSION_LIST) |
- |<------------------------------------------------------|
- +---------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Normal full authentication follows. |
- +---------------------------------------------------------------+
- | |
- Figure 9: Fast Re-authentication, counter is not fresh
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 36]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- In the figure above, the first three messages are similar to the
- basic fast re-authentication case. When the peer detects that the
- counter value is not fresh, it includes the AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL
- attribute in EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication. This attribute
- doesn't contain any data, but it is a request for the server to
- initiate full authentication. In this case, the peer MUST ignore the
- contents of the server's AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID attribute.
- On receipt of AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL, the server verifies AT_MAC and
- verifies that AT_COUNTER contains the same counter value as in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication packet. If not, the server
- terminates the authentication exchange by sending the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification with AT_NOTIFICATION code "General
- failure" (16384). If all checks on the packet are successful, the
- server transmits a new EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet and the full
- authentication procedure is performed as usual. Since the server
- already knows the subscriber identity, it MUST NOT include
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ, AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ, or AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start.
- It should be noted that in this case, peer identity is only
- transmitted in the AT_IDENTITY attribute at the beginning of the
- whole EAP exchange. The fast re-authentication identity used in this
- AT_IDENTITY attribute will be used in key derivation (see Section 7).
- 6. EAP-SIM Notifications
- 6.1. General
- EAP-SIM does not prohibit the use of the EAP Notifications as
- specified in [RFC3748]. EAP Notifications can be used at any time in
- the EAP-SIM exchange. It should be noted that EAP-SIM does not
- protect EAP Notifications. EAP-SIM also specifies method-specific
- EAP-SIM notifications that are protected in some cases.
- The EAP server can use EAP-SIM notifications to convey notifications
- and result indications (Section 6.2) to the peer.
- The server MUST use notifications in cases discussed in
- Section 6.3.2. When the EAP server issues an
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification packet to the peer, the peer MUST
- process the notification packet. The peer MAY show a notification
- message to the user and the peer MUST respond to the EAP server with
- an EAP-Response/SIM/Notification packet, even if the peer did not
- recognize the notification code.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 37]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- An EAP-SIM full authentication exchange or a fast re-authentication
- exchange MUST NOT include more than one EAP-SIM notification round.
- The notification code is a 16-bit number. The most significant bit
- is called the Success bit (S bit). The S bit specifies whether the
- notification implies failure. The code values with the S bit set to
- zero (code values 0...32767) are used on unsuccessful cases. The
- receipt of a notification code from this range implies a failed EAP
- exchange, so the peer can use the notification as a failure
- indication. After receiving the EAP-Response/SIM/Notification for
- these notification codes, the server MUST send the EAP-Failure
- packet.
- The receipt of a notification code with the S bit set to one (values
- 32768...65536) does not imply failure. Notification code "Success"
- (32768) has been reserved as a general notification code to indicate
- successful authentication.
- The second most significant bit of the notification code is called
- the Phase bit (P bit). It specifies at which phase of the EAP-SIM
- exchange the notification can be used. If the P bit is set to zero,
- the notification can only be used after a successful
- EAP/SIM/Challenge round in full authentication or a successful
- EAP/SIM/Re-authentication round in reauthentication. A
- re-authentication round is considered successful only if the peer has
- successfully verified AT_MAC and AT_COUNTER attributes, and does not
- include the AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL attribute in
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication.
- If the P bit is set to one, the notification can only by used before
- the EAP/SIM/Challenge round in full authentication, or before the
- EAP/SIM/Re-authentication round in reauthentication. These
- notifications can only be used to indicate various failure cases. In
- other words, if the P bit is set to one, then the S bit MUST be set
- to zero.
- Section 9.8 and Section 9.9 specify what other attributes must be
- included in the notification packets.
- Some of the notification codes are authorization related and, hence,
- are not usually considered part of the responsibility of an EAP
- method. However, they are included as part of EAP-SIM because there
- are currently no other ways to convey this information to the user in
- a localizable way, and the information is potentially useful for the
- user. An EAP-SIM server implementation may decide never to send
- these EAP-SIM notifications.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 38]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 6.2. Result Indications
- As discussed in Section 6.3, the server and the peer use explicit
- error messages in all error cases. If the server detects an error
- after successful authentication, the server uses an EAP-SIM
- notification to indicate failure to the peer. In this case, the
- result indication is integrity and replay protected.
- By sending an EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge packet or an
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication packet (without
- AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL), the peer indicates that it has successfully
- authenticated the server and that the peer's local policy accepts the
- EAP exchange. In other words, these packets are implicit success
- indications from the peer to the server.
- EAP-SIM also supports optional protected success indications from the
- server to the peer. If the EAP server wants to use protected success
- indications, it includes the AT_RESULT_IND attribute in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge or the EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication
- packet. This attribute indicates that the EAP server would like to
- use result indications in both successful and unsuccessful cases. If
- the peer also wants this, the peer includes AT_RESULT_IND in
- EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge or EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication.
- The peer MUST NOT include AT_RESULT_IND if it did not receive
- AT_RESULT_IND from the server. If both the peer and the server used
- AT_RESULT_IND, then the EAP exchange is not complete yet, but an
- EAP-SIM notification round will follow. The following EAP-SIM
- notification may indicate either failure or success.
- Success indications with the AT_NOTIFICATION code "Success" (32768)
- can only be used if both the server and the peer indicate they want
- to use them with AT_RESULT_IND. If the server did not include
- AT_RESULT_IND in the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge or
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication packet, or if the peer did not
- include AT_RESULT_IND in the corresponding response packet, then the
- server MUST NOT use protected success indications.
- Because the server uses the AT_NOTIFICATION code "Success" (32768) to
- indicate that the EAP exchange has completed successfully, the EAP
- exchange cannot fail when the server processes the EAP-SIM response
- to this notification. Hence, the server MUST ignore the contents of
- the EAP-SIM response it receives from the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification with this code. Regardless of the
- contents of the EAP-SIM response, the server MUST send EAP-Success as
- the next packet.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 39]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 6.3. Error Cases
- This section specifies the operation of the peer and the server in
- error cases. The subsections below require the EAP-SIM peer and
- server to send an error packet (EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error from
- the peer or EAP-Request/SIM/Notification from the server) in error
- cases. However, implementations SHOULD NOT rely upon the correct
- error reporting behavior of the peer, authenticator, or the server.
- It is possible for error and other messages to be lost in transit or
- for a malicious participant to attempt to consume resources by not
- issuing error messages. Both the peer and the EAP server SHOULD have
- a mechanism to clean up state, even if an error message or
- EAP-Success is not received after a timeout period.
- 6.3.1. Peer Operation
- In general, if an EAP-SIM peer detects an error in a received EAP-SIM
- packet, the EAP-SIM implementation responds with the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet. In response to the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error, the EAP server MUST issue the
- EAP-Failure packet and the authentication exchange terminates.
- By default, the peer uses the client error code 0, "unable to process
- packet". This error code is used in the following cases:
- o EAP exchange is not acceptable according to the peer's local
- policy.
- o the peer is not able to parse the EAP request, i.e., the EAP
- request is malformed.
- o the peer encountered a malformed attribute.
- o wrong attribute types or duplicate attributes have been included
- in the EAP request.
- o a mandatory attribute is missing.
- o unrecognized, non-skippable attribute.
- o unrecognized or unexpected EAP-SIM Subtype in the EAP request.
- o A RAND challenge repeated in AT_RAND.
- o invalid AT_MAC. The peer SHOULD log this event.
- o invalid pad bytes in AT_PADDING.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 40]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- o the peer does not want to process AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ.
- Separate error codes have been defined for the following error cases
- in Section 10.19:
- As specified in Section 4.1, when processing the AT_VERSION_LIST
- attribute, which lists the EAP-SIM versions supported by the server,
- if the attribute does not include a version that is implemented by
- the peer and allowed in the peer's security policy, then the peer
- MUST send the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet with the error
- code "unsupported version".
- If the number of RAND challenges is smaller than what is required by
- peer's local policy when processing the AT_RAND attribute, the peer
- MUST send the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet with the error
- code "insufficient number of challenges".
- If the peer believes that the RAND challenges included in AT_RAND are
- not fresh e.g., because it is capable of remembering some previously
- used RANDs, the peer MUST send the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error
- packet with the error code "RANDs are not fresh".
- 6.3.2. Server Operation
- If an EAP-SIM server detects an error in a received EAP-SIM response,
- the server MUST issue the EAP-Request/SIM/Notification packet with an
- AT_NOTIFICATION code that implies failure. By default, the server
- uses one of the general failure codes ("General failure after
- authentication" (0), or "General failure" (16384)). The choice
- between these two codes depends on the phase of the EAP-SIM exchange,
- see Section 6. When the server issues an EAP-
- Request/SIM/Notification that implies failure, the error cases
- include the following:
- o the server is not able to parse the peer's EAP response
- o the server encounters a malformed attribute, a non-recognized
- non-skippable attribute, or a duplicate attribute
- o a mandatory attribute is missing or an invalid attribute was
- included
- o unrecognized or unexpected EAP-SIM Subtype in the EAP Response
- o invalid AT_MAC. The server SHOULD log this event.
- o invalid AT_COUNTER
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 41]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 6.3.3. EAP-Failure
- The EAP-SIM server sends EAP-Failure in two cases:
- 1) In response to an EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet the server
- has received from the peer, or
- 2) Following an EAP-SIM notification round, when the AT_NOTIFICATION
- code implies failure.
- The EAP-SIM server MUST NOT send EAP-Failure in cases other than
- these two. However, it should be noted that even though the EAP-SIM
- server would not send an EAP-Failure, an authorization decision that
- happens outside EAP-SIM, such as in the AAA server or in an
- intermediate AAA proxy, may result in a failed exchange.
- The peer MUST accept the EAP-Failure packet in case 1) and case 2),
- above. The peer SHOULD silently discard the EAP-Failure packet in
- other cases.
- 6.3.4. EAP-Success
- On full authentication, the server can only send EAP-Success after
- the EAP/SIM/Challenge round. The peer MUST silently discard any
- EAP-Success packets if they are received before the peer has
- successfully authenticated the server and sent the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge packet.
- If the peer did not indicate that it wants to use protected success
- indications with AT_RESULT_IND (as discussed in Section 6.2) on full
- authentication, then the peer MUST accept EAP-Success after a
- successful EAP/SIM/Challenge round.
- If the peer indicated that it wants to use protected success
- indications with AT_RESULT_IND (as discussed in Section 6.2), then
- the peer MUST NOT accept EAP-Success after a successful
- EAP/SIM/Challenge round. In this case, the peer MUST only accept
- EAP-Success after receiving an EAP-SIM Notification with the
- AT_NOTIFICATION code "Success" (32768).
- On fast re-authentication, EAP-Success can only be sent after the
- EAP/SIM/Re-authentication round. The peer MUST silently discard any
- EAP-Success packets if they are received before the peer has
- successfully authenticated the server and sent the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication packet.
- If the peer did not indicate that it wants to use protected success
- indications with AT_RESULT_IND (as discussed in Section 6.2) on fast
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 42]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- re-authentication, then the peer MUST accept EAP-Success after a
- successful EAP/SIM/Re-authentication round.
- If the peer indicated that it wants to use protected success
- indications with AT_RESULT_IND (as discussed in Section 6.2), then
- the peer MUST NOT accept EAP-Success after a successful EAP/SIM/Re-
- authentication round. In this case, the peer MUST only accept
- EAP-Success after receiving an EAP-SIM Notification with the
- AT_NOTIFICATION code "Success" (32768).
- If the peer receives an EAP-SIM notification (Section 6) that
- indicates failure, then the peer MUST no longer accept the
- EAP-Success packet, even if the server authentication was
- successfully completed.
- 7. Key Generation
- This section specifies how keying material is generated.
- On EAP-SIM full authentication, a Master Key (MK) is derived from the
- underlying GSM authentication values (Kc keys), the NONCE_MT, and
- other relevant context as follows.
- MK = SHA1(Identity|n*Kc| NONCE_MT| Version List| Selected Version)
- In the formula above, the "|" character denotes concatenation.
- "Identity" denotes the peer identity string without any terminating
- null characters. It is the identity from the last AT_IDENTITY
- attribute sent by the peer in this exchange, or, if AT_IDENTITY was
- not used, it is the identity from the EAP-Response/Identity packet.
- The identity string is included as-is, without any changes. As
- discussed in Section 4.2.2.2, relying on EAP-Response/Identity for
- conveying the EAP-SIM peer identity is discouraged, and the server
- SHOULD use the EAP-SIM method-specific identity attributes.
- The notation n*Kc in the formula above denotes the n Kc values
- concatenated. The Kc keys are used in the same order as the RAND
- challenges in AT_RAND attribute. NONCE_MT denotes the NONCE_MT value
- (not the AT_NONCE_MT attribute, but only the nonce value). The
- Version List includes the 2-byte-supported version numbers from
- AT_VERSION_LIST, in the same order as in the attribute. The Selected
- Version is the 2-byte selected version from AT_SELECTED_VERSION.
- Network byte order is used, just as in the attributes. The hash
- function SHA-1 is specified in [SHA-1]. If several EAP/SIM/Start
- roundtrips are used in an EAP-SIM exchange, then the NONCE_MT,
- Version List and Selected version from the last EAP/SIM/Start round
- are used, and the previous EAP/SIM/Start rounds are ignored.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 43]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The Master Key is fed into a Pseudo-Random number Function (PRF)
- which generates separate Transient EAP Keys (TEKs) for protecting
- EAP-SIM packets, as well as a Master Session Key (MSK) for link layer
- security, and an Extended Master Session Key (EMSK) for other
- purposes. On fast re-authentication, the same TEKs MUST be used for
- protecting EAP packets, but a new MSK and a new EMSK MUST be derived
- from the original MK and from new values exchanged in the fast
- re-authentication.
- EAP-SIM requires two TEKs for its own purposes; the authentication
- key K_aut is to be used with the AT_MAC attribute, and the encryption
- key K_encr is to be used with the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute. The same
- K_aut and K_encr keys are used in full authentication and subsequent
- fast re-authentications.
- Key derivation is based on the random number generation specified in
- NIST Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) Publication
- 186-2 [PRF]. The pseudo-random number generator is specified in the
- change notice 1 (2001 October 5) of [PRF] (Algorithm 1). As
- specified in the change notice (page 74), when Algorithm 1 is used as
- a general-purpose pseudo-random number generator, the "mod q" term in
- step 3.3 is omitted. The function G used in the algorithm is
- constructed via the Secure Hash Standard, as specified in Appendix
- 3.3 of the standard. It should be noted that the function G is very
- similar to SHA-1, but the message padding is different. Please refer
- to [PRF] for full details. For convenience, the random number
- algorithm with the correct modification is cited in Appendix B.
- 160-bit XKEY and XVAL values are used, so b = 160. On each full
- authentication, the Master Key is used as the initial secret seed-key
- XKEY. The optional user input values (XSEED_j) in step 3.1 are set
- to zero.
- On full authentication, the resulting 320-bit random numbers (x_0,
- x_1, ..., x_m-1) are concatenated and partitioned into suitable-sized
- chunks and used as keys in the following order: K_encr (128 bits),
- K_aut (128 bits), Master Session Key (64 bytes), Extended Master
- Session Key (64 bytes).
- On fast re-authentication, the same pseudo-random number generator
- can be used to generate a new Master Session Key and a new Extended
- Master Session Key. The seed value XKEY' is calculated as follows:
- XKEY' = SHA1(Identity|counter|NONCE_S| MK)
- In the formula above, the Identity denotes the fast re-authentication
- identity, without any terminating null characters, from the
- AT_IDENTITY attribute of the EAP-Response/SIM/Start packet, or, if
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 44]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start was not used on fast re-authentication, it
- denotes the identity string from the EAP-Response/Identity packet.
- The counter denotes the counter value from the AT_COUNTER attribute
- used in the EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication packet. The counter
- is used in network byte order. NONCE_S denotes the 16-byte NONCE_S
- value from the AT_NONCE_S attribute used in the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication packet. The MK is the Master Key
- derived on the preceding full authentication.
- On fast re-authentication, the pseudo-random number generator is run
- with the new seed value XKEY', and the resulting 320-bit random
- numbers (x_0, x_1, ..., x_m-1) are concatenated and partitioned into
- two 64-byte chunks and used as the new 64-byte Master Session Key and
- the new 64-byte Extended Master Session Key. Note that because
- K_encr and K_aut are not derived on fast re-authentication, the
- Master Session Key and the Extended Master Session key are obtained
- from the beginning of the key stream (x_0, x_1, ...).
- The first 32 bytes of the MSK can be used as the Pairwise Master Key
- (PMK) for IEEE 802.11i.
- When the RADIUS attributes specified in [RFC2548] are used to
- transport keying material, then the first 32 bytes of the MSK
- correspond to MS-MPPE-RECV-KEY and the second 32 bytes to
- MS-MPPE-SEND-KEY. In this case, only 64 bytes of keying material
- (the MSK) are used.
- When generating the initial Master Key, the hash function is used as
- a mixing function to combine several session keys (Kc's) generated by
- the GSM authentication procedure and the random number NONCE_MT into
- a single session key. There are several reasons for this. The
- current GSM session keys are, at most, 64 bits, so two or more of
- them are needed to generate a longer key. By using a one-way
- function to combine the keys, we are assured that, even if an
- attacker managed to learn one of the EAP-SIM session keys, it
- wouldn't help him in learning the original GSM Kc's. In addition,
- since we include the random number NONCE_MT in the calculation, the
- peer is able to verify that the EAP-SIM packets it receives from the
- network are fresh and not replays (also see Section 11).
- 8. Message Format and Protocol Extensibility
- 8.1. Message Format
- As specified in [RFC3748], EAP packets begin with the Code,
- Identifiers, Length, and Type fields, which are followed by EAP-
- method-specific Type-Data. The Code field in the EAP header is set
- to 1 for EAP requests, and to 2 for EAP Responses. The usage of the
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 45]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Length and Identifier fields in the EAP header are also specified in
- [RFC3748]. In EAP-SIM, the Type field is set to 18.
- In EAP-SIM, the Type-Data begins with an EAP-SIM header that consists
- of a 1-octet Subtype field and a 2-octet reserved field. The Subtype
- values used in EAP-SIM are defined in the IANA considerations section
- of the EAP-AKA specification [EAP-AKA]. The formats of the EAP
- header and the EAP-SIM header are shown below.
- 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 | Subtype | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The rest of the Type-Data that immediately follows the EAP-SIM header
- consists of attributes that are encoded in Type, Length, Value
- format. The figure below shows the generic format of an attribute.
- 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 | Value...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Attribute Type
- Indicates the particular type of attribute. The attribute type
- values are listed in the IANA considerations section of the
- EAP-AKA specification [EAP-AKA].
- Length
- Indicates the length of this attribute in multiples of four
- bytes. The maximum length of an attribute is 1024 bytes. The
- length includes the Attribute Type and Length bytes.
- Value
- The particular data associated with this attribute. This field
- is always included and it may be two or more bytes in length.
- The type and length fields determine the format and length
- of the value field.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 46]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Attributes numbered within the range 0 through 127 are called
- non-skippable attributes. When an EAP-SIM peer encounters a
- non-skippable attribute that the peer does not recognize, the peer
- MUST send the EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet, which terminates
- the authentication exchange. If an EAP-SIM server encounters a
- non-skippable attribute that the server does not recognize, then the
- server sends the EAP-Request/SIM/Notification packet with an
- AT_NOTIFICATION code, which implies general failure ("General failure
- after authentication" (0), or "General failure" (16384), depending on
- the phase of the exchange), which terminates the authentication
- exchange.
- Attributes within the range of 128 through 255 are called skippable
- attributes. When a skippable attribute is encountered and is not
- recognized, it is ignored. The rest of the attributes and message
- data MUST still be processed. The Length field of the attribute is
- used to skip the attribute value in searching for the next attribute.
- Unless otherwise specified, the order of the attributes in an EAP-SIM
- message is insignificant and an EAP-SIM implementation should not
- assume a certain order to be used.
- Attributes can be encapsulated within other attributes. In other
- words, the value field of an attribute type can be specified to
- contain other attributes.
- 8.2. Protocol Extensibility
- EAP-SIM can be extended by specifying new attribute types. If
- skippable attributes are used, it is possible to extend the protocol
- without breaking old implementations.
- However, any new attributes added to the EAP-Request/SIM/Start or
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start packets would not be integrity-protected.
- Therefore, these messages MUST NOT be extended in the current version
- of EAP-SIM. If the list of supported EAP-SIM versions in the
- AT_VERSION_LIST does not include versions other than 1, then the
- server MUST NOT include attributes other than those specified in this
- document in the EAP-Request/SIM/Start message. Note that future
- versions of this protocol might specify new attributes for
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start and still support version 1 of the protocol.
- In this case, the server might send an EAP-Request/SIM/Start message
- that includes new attributes and indicates support for protocol
- version 1 and other versions in the AT_VERSION_LIST attribute. If
- the peer selects version 1, then the peer MUST ignore any other
- attributes included in EAP-Request/SIM/Start, other than those
- specified in this document. If the selected EAP-SIM version in
- peer's AT_SELECTED_VERSION is 1, then the peer MUST NOT include other
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 47]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- attributes aside from those specified in this document in the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start message.
- When specifying new attributes, it should be noted that EAP-SIM does
- not support message fragmentation. Hence, the sizes of the new
- extensions MUST be limited so that the maximum transfer unit (MTU) of
- the underlying lower layer is not exceeded. According to [RFC3748],
- lower layers must provide an EAP MTU of 1020 bytes or greater, so any
- extensions to EAP-SIM SHOULD NOT exceed the EAP MTU of 1020 bytes.
- Because EAP-SIM supports version negotiation, new versions of the
- protocol can also be specified by using a new version number.
- 9. Messages
- This section specifies the messages used in EAP-SIM. It specifies
- when a message may be transmitted or accepted, which attributes are
- allowed in a message, which attributes are required in a message, and
- other message-specific details. The general message format is
- specified in Section 8.1.
- 9.1. EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- In full authentication the first SIM-specific EAP Request is
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start. The EAP/SIM/Start roundtrip is used for two
- purposes. In full authentication this packet is used to request the
- peer to send the AT_NONCE_MT attribute to the server. In addition,
- as specified in Section 4.2, the Start round trip may be used by the
- server for obtaining the peer identity. As discussed in Section 4.2,
- several Start rounds may be required to obtain a valid peer identity.
- The server MUST always include the AT_VERSION_LIST attribute.
- The server MAY include one of the following identity-requesting
- attributes: AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ, AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ, or
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ. These three attributes are mutually exclusive, so the
- server MUST NOT include more than one of the attributes.
- If the server has received a response from the peer, it MUST NOT
- issue a new EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet if it has previously issued
- an EAP-Request/SIM/Start message either without any identity
- requesting attributes or with the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute.
- If the server has received a response from the peer, it MUST NOT
- issue a new EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet with the AT_ANY_ID_REQ or
- AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ attributes if it has previously issued an
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start message with the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ attribute.
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- If the server has received a response from the peer, it MUST NOT
- issue a new EAP-Request/SIM/Start packet with the AT_ANY_ID_REQ
- attribute if the server has previously issued an
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start message with the AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute.
- This message MUST NOT include AT_MAC, AT_IV, or AT_ENCR_DATA.
- 9.2. EAP-Response/SIM/Start
- The peer sends EAP-Response/SIM/Start in response to a valid
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start from the server.
- If and only if the server's EAP-Request/SIM/Start includes one of the
- identity-requesting attributes, then the peer MUST include the
- AT_IDENTITY attribute. The usage of AT_IDENTITY is defined in
- Section 4.2.
- The AT_NONCE_MT attribute MUST NOT be included if the AT_IDENTITY
- with a fast re-authentication identity is present for fast
- re-authentication. AT_NONCE_MT MUST be included in all other cases
- (full authentication).
- The AT_SELECTED_VERSION attribute MUST NOT be included if the
- AT_IDENTITY attribute with a fast re-authentication identity is
- present for fast re-authentication. In all other cases,
- AT_SELECTED_VERSION MUST be included (full authentication). This
- attribute is used in version negotiation, as specified in
- Section 4.1.
- This message MUST NOT include AT_MAC, AT_IV, or AT_ENCR_DATA.
- 9.3. EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge
- The server sends the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge after receiving a
- valid EAP-Response/SIM/Start that contains AT_NONCE_MT and
- AT_SELECTED_VERSION, and after successfully obtaining the subscriber
- identity.
- The AT_RAND attribute MUST be included.
- The AT_RESULT_IND attribute MAY be included. The usage of this
- attribute is discussed in Section 6.2.
- The AT_MAC attribute MUST be included. For
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge, the MAC code is calculated over the
- following data:
- EAP packet| NONCE_MT
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The EAP packet is represented as specified in Section 8.1. It is
- followed by the 16-byte NONCE_MT value from the peer's AT_NONCE_MT
- attribute.
- The EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge packet MAY include encrypted attributes
- for identity privacy and for communicating the next fast
- re-authentication identity. In this case, the AT_IV and AT_ENCR_DATA
- attributes are included (Section 10.12).
- The plaintext of the AT_ENCR_DATA value field consists of nested
- attributes. The nested attributes MAY include AT_PADDING (as
- specified in Section 10.12). If the server supports identity privacy
- and wants to communicate a pseudonym to the peer for the next full
- authentication, then the nested encrypted attributes include the
- AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM attribute. If the server supports
- re-authentication and wants to communicate a fast re-authentication
- identity to the peer, then the nested encrypted attributes include
- the AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID attribute.
- When processing this message, the peer MUST process AT_RAND before
- processing other attributes. Only if AT_RAND is verified to be
- valid, the peer derives keys and verifies AT_MAC. The operation in
- case an error occurs is specified in Section 6.3.1.
- 9.4. EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge
- The peer sends EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge in response to a valid
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge.
- Sending this packet indicates that the peer has successfully
- authenticated the server and that the EAP exchange will be accepted
- by the peer's local policy. Hence, if these conditions are not met,
- then the peer MUST NOT send EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge, but the peer
- MUST send EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error.
- The AT_MAC attribute MUST be included. For EAP-
- Response/SIM/Challenge, the MAC code is calculated over the following
- data:
- EAP packet| n*SRES
- The EAP packet is represented as specified in Section 8.1. The EAP
- packet bytes are immediately followed by the two or three SRES values
- concatenated, denoted above with the notation n*SRES. The SRES
- values are used in the same order as the corresponding RAND
- challenges in the server's AT_RAND attribute.
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The AT_RESULT_IND attribute MAY be included if it was included in
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge. The usage of this attribute is discussed
- in Section 6.2.
- Later versions of this protocol MAY make use of the AT_ENCR_DATA and
- AT_IV attributes in this message to include encrypted (skippable)
- attributes. The EAP server MUST process EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge
- messages that include these attributes even if the server did not
- implement these optional attributes.
- 9.5. EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication
- The server sends the EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication message if it
- wants to use fast re-authentication, and if it has received a valid
- fast re-authentication identity in EAP-Response/Identity or
- EAP-Response/SIM/Start.
- AT_MAC MUST be included. No message-specific data is included in the
- MAC calculation. See Section 10.14.
- The AT_RESULT_IND attribute MAY be included. The usage of this
- attribute is discussed in Section 6.2.
- The AT_IV and AT_ENCR_DATA attributes MUST be included. The
- plaintext consists of the following nested encrypted attributes,
- which MUST be included: AT_COUNTER and AT_NONCE_S. In addition, the
- nested encrypted attributes MAY include the following attributes:
- AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID and AT_PADDING.
- 9.6. EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication
- The client sends the EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication packet in
- response to a valid EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication.
- The AT_MAC attribute MUST be included. For
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication, the MAC code is calculated over
- the following data:
- EAP packet| NONCE_S
- The EAP packet is represented as specified in Section 8.1. It is
- followed by the 16-byte NONCE_S value from the server's AT_NONCE_S
- attribute.
- The AT_IV and AT_ENCR_DATA attributes MUST be included. The nested
- encrypted attributes MUST include the AT_COUNTER attribute. The
- AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL attribute MAY be included in the nested
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- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- encrypted attributes, and it is included in cases specified in
- Section 5. The AT_PADDING attribute MAY be included.
- The AT_RESULT_IND attribute MAY be included if it was included in
- EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication. The usage of this attribute is
- discussed in Section 6.2.
- Sending this packet without AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL indicates that the
- peer has successfully authenticated the server and that the EAP
- exchange will be accepted by the peer's local policy. Hence, if
- these conditions are not met, then the peer MUST NOT send
- EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication, but the peer MUST send
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error.
- 9.7. EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error
- The peer sends EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error in error cases, as
- specified in Section 6.3.1.
- The AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE attribute MUST be included.
- The AT_MAC, AT_IV, or AT_ENCR_DATA attributes MUST NOT be used with
- this packet.
- 9.8. EAP-Request/SIM/Notification
- The usage of this message is specified in Section 6. The
- AT_NOTIFICATION attribute MUST be included.
- The AT_MAC attribute MUST be included if the P bit of the
- notification code in AT_NOTIFICATION is set to zero, and MUST NOT be
- included in cases when the P bit is set to one. The P bit is
- discussed in Section 6.
- No message-specific data is included in the MAC calculation. See
- Section 10.14.
- If EAP-Request/SIM/Notification is used on a fast re-authentication
- exchange, and if the P bit in AT_NOTIFICATION is set to zero, then
- AT_COUNTER is used for replay protection. In this case, the
- AT_ENCR_DATA and AT_IV attributes MUST be included, and the
- encapsulated plaintext attributes MUST include the AT_COUNTER
- attribute. The counter value included in AT_COUNTER MUST be the same
- as in the EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication packet on the same fast
- re-authentication exchange.
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- 9.9. EAP-Response/SIM/Notification
- The usage of this message is specified in Section 6. This packet is
- an acknowledgement of EAP-Request/SIM/Notification.
- The AT_MAC attribute MUST be included in cases when the P bit of the
- notification code in AT_NOTIFICATION of EAP-Request/SIM/Notification
- is set to zero, and MUST NOT be included in cases when the P bit is
- set to one. The P bit is discussed in Section 6.
- No message-specific data is included in the MAC calculation, see
- Section 10.14.
- If EAP-Request/SIM/Notification is used on a fast re-authentication
- exchange, and if the P bit in AT_NOTIFICATION is set to zero, then
- AT_COUNTER is used for replay protection. In this case, the
- AT_ENCR_DATA and AT_IV attributes MUST be included, and the
- encapsulated plaintext attributes MUST include the AT_COUNTER
- attribute. The counter value included in AT_COUNTER MUST be the same
- as in the EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication packet on the same fast
- re-authentication exchange.
- 10. Attributes
- This section specifies the format of message attributes. The
- attribute type numbers are specified in the IANA considerations
- section of the EAP-AKA specification [EAP-AKA].
- 10.1. Table of Attributes
- The following table provides a guide to which attributes may be found
- in which kinds of messages, and in what quantity. Messages are
- denoted with numbers in parentheses as follows: (1)
- EAP-Request/SIM/Start, (2) EAP-Response/SIM/Start, (3)
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge, (4) EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge, (5)
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification, (6) EAP-Response/SIM/Notification, (7)
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error, (8) EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication,
- and (9) EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication. The column denoted with
- "Encr" indicates whether the attribute is a nested attribute that
- MUST be included within AT_ENCR_DATA, and the column denoted with
- "Skip" indicates whether the attribute is a skippable attribute.
- "0" indicates that the attribute MUST NOT be included in the message,
- "1" indicates that the attribute MUST be included in the message,
- "0-1" indicates that the attribute is sometimes included in the
- message, and "0*" indicates that the attribute is not included in the
- message in cases specified in this document, but MAY be included in
- future versions of the protocol.
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- Attribute (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) Encr Skip
- AT_VERSION_LIST 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_SELECTED_VERSION 0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_NONCE_MT 0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_IDENTITY 0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_RAND 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM 0 0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Y Y
- AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID 0 0 0-1 0 0 0 0 0-1 0 Y Y
- AT_IV 0 0 0-1 0* 0-1 0-1 0 1 1 N Y
- AT_ENCR_DATA 0 0 0-1 0* 0-1 0-1 0 1 1 N Y
- AT_PADDING 0 0 0-1 0* 0-1 0-1 0 0-1 0-1 Y N
- AT_RESULT_IND 0 0 0-1 0-1 0 0 0 0-1 0-1 N Y
- AT_MAC 0 0 1 1 0-1 0-1 0 1 1 N N
- AT_COUNTER 0 0 0 0 0-1 0-1 0 1 1 Y N
- AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-1 Y N
- AT_NONCE_S 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Y N
- AT_NOTIFICATION 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 N N
- AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 N N
- It should be noted that attributes AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ,
- AT_ANY_ID_REQ, and AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ are mutually exclusive; only
- one of them can be included at the same time. If one of the
- attributes AT_IV and AT_ENCR_DATA is included, then both of the
- attributes MUST be included.
- 10.2. AT_VERSION_LIST
- The format of the AT_VERSION_LIST attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_VERSION_L..| Length | Actual Version List Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Supported Version 1 | Supported Version 2 |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- . .
- . .
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Supported Version N | Padding |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- This attribute is used in version negotiation, as specified in
- Section 4.1. The attribute contains the version numbers supported by
- the EAP-SIM server. The server MUST only include versions that it
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- implements and that are allowed in its security policy. The server
- SHOULD list the versions in the order of preference, with the most
- preferred versions listed first. At least one version number MUST be
- included. The version number for the protocol described in this
- document is one (0001 hexadecimal).
- The value field of this attribute begins with 2-byte Actual Version
- List Length, which specifies the length of the Version List in bytes,
- not including the Actual Version List Length attribute length. This
- field is followed by the list of the versions supported by the
- server, which each have a length of 2 bytes. For example, if there
- is only one supported version, then the Actual Version List Length is
- 2. Because the length of the attribute must be a multiple of 4
- bytes, the sender pads the value field with zero bytes when
- necessary.
- 10.3. AT_SELECTED_VERSION
- The format of the AT_SELECTED_VERSION attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_SELECTED...| Length = 1 | Selected Version |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- This attribute is used in version negotiation, as specified in
- Section 4.1. The value field of this attribute contains a two-byte
- version number, which indicates the EAP-SIM version that the peer
- wants to use.
- 10.4. AT_NONCE_MT
- The format of the AT_NONCE_MT attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_NONCE_MT | Length = 5 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- | NONCE_MT |
- | |
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 55]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The value field of the NONCE_MT attribute contains two reserved bytes
- followed by a random number freshly generated by the peer (16 bytes
- long) for this EAP-SIM authentication exchange. The random number is
- used as a seed value for the new keying material. The reserved bytes
- are set to zero upon sending and ignored upon reception.
- The peer MUST NOT re-use the NONCE_MT value from a previous EAP-SIM
- authentication exchange. If an EAP-SIM exchange includes several
- EAP/SIM/Start rounds, then the peer SHOULD use the same NONCE_MT
- value in all EAP-Response/SIM/Start packets. The peer SHOULD use a
- good source of randomness to generate NONCE_MT. Please see [RFC4086]
- for more information about generating random numbers for security
- applications.
- 10.5. AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ
- The format of the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_PERM..._REQ | Length = 1 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The use of the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ is defined in Section 4.2. The
- value field contains only two reserved bytes, which are set to zero
- on sending and ignored on reception.
- 10.6. AT_ANY_ID_REQ
- The format of the AT_ANY_ID_REQ attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_ANY_ID_REQ | Length = 1 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The use of the AT_ANY_ID_REQ is defined in Section 4.2. The value
- field contains only two reserved bytes, which are set to zero on
- sending and ignored on reception.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 56]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 10.7. AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ
- The format of the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_FULLAUTH_...| Length = 1 | Reserved |
- +---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
- The use of the AT_FULLAUTH_ID_REQ is defined in Section 4.2. The
- value field contains only two reserved bytes, which are set to zero
- on sending and ignored on reception.
- 10.8. AT_IDENTITY
- The format of the AT_IDENTITY attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_IDENTITY | Length | Actual Identity Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- . Identity (optional) .
- . .
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The use of the AT_IDENTITY is defined in Section 4.2. The value
- field of this attribute begins with a 2-byte actual identity length,
- which specifies the length of the identity in bytes. This field is
- followed by the subscriber identity of the indicated actual length.
- The identity is the permanent identity, a pseudonym identity, or a
- fast re-authentication identity. The identity format is specified in
- Section 4.2.1. The same identity format is used in the AT_IDENTITY
- attribute and the EAP-Response/Identity packet, with the exception
- that the peer MUST NOT decorate the identity it includes in
- AT_IDENTITY. The identity does not include any terminating null
- characters. Because the length of the attribute must be a multiple
- of 4 bytes, the sender pads the identity with zero bytes when
- necessary.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 57]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 10.9. AT_RAND
- The format of the AT_RAND attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_RAND | Length | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- . n*RAND .
- . .
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute contains two reserved bytes
- followed by n GSM RANDs, each 16 bytes long. The value of n can be
- determined by the attribute length. The reserved bytes are set to
- zero upon sending and ignored upon reception.
- The number of RAND challenges (n) MUST be two or three. The peer
- MUST verify that the number of RAND challenges is sufficient
- according to the peer's policy. The server MUST use different RAND
- values. In other words, a RAND value can only be included once in
- AT_RAND. When processing the AT_RAND attribute, the peer MUST check
- that the RANDs are different.
- The EAP server MUST obtain fresh RANDs for each EAP-SIM full
- authentication exchange. More specifically, the server MUST consider
- RANDs it included in AT_RAND to be consumed if the server receives an
- EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge packet with a valid AT_MAC, or an
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error with the code "insufficient number of
- challenges" or "RANDs are not fresh". However, in other cases (if
- the server does not receive a response to its
- EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge packet, or if the server receives a
- response other than the cases listed above), the server does not need
- to consider the RANDs to be consumed, and the server MAY re-use the
- RANDs in the AT_RAND attribute of the next full authentication
- attempt.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 58]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 10.10. AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM
- The format of the AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_NEXT_PSEU..| Length | Actual Pseudonym Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- . Next Pseudonym .
- . .
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute begins with the 2-byte actual
- pseudonym length, which specifies the length of the following
- pseudonym in bytes. This field is followed by a pseudonym username
- that the peer can use in the next authentication. The username MUST
- NOT include any realm portion. The username does not include any
- terminating null characters. Because the length of the attribute
- must be a multiple of 4 bytes, the sender pads the pseudonym with
- zero bytes when necessary. The username encoding MUST follow the
- UTF-8 transformation format [RFC3629]. This attribute MUST always be
- encrypted by encapsulating it within the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- 10.11. AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID
- The format of the AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_NEXT_REAU..| Length | Actual Re-Auth Identity Length|
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- . Next Fast Re-authentication Username .
- . .
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute begins with the 2-byte actual
- re-authentication identity length which specifies the length of the
- following fast re-authentication identity in bytes. This field is
- followed by a fast re-authentication identity that the peer can use
- in the next fast re-authentication, as described in Section 5. In
- environments where a realm portion is required, the fast
- re-authentication identity includes both a username portion and a
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 59]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- realm name portion. The fast re-authentication identity does not
- include any terminating null characters. Because the length of the
- attribute must be a multiple of 4 bytes, the sender pads the fast
- re-authentication identity with zero bytes when necessary. The
- identity encoding MUST follow the UTF-8 transformation format
- [RFC3629]. This attribute MUST always be encrypted by encapsulating
- it within the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- 10.12. AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, and AT_PADDING
- AT_IV and AT_ENCR_DATA attributes can be used to transmit encrypted
- information between the EAP-SIM peer and server.
- The value field of AT_IV contains two reserved bytes followed by a
- 16-byte initialization vector required by the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- The reserved bytes are set to zero when sending and ignored on
- reception. The AT_IV attribute MUST be included if and only if the
- AT_ENCR_DATA is included. Section 6.3 specifies the operation if a
- packet that does not meet this condition is encountered.
- The sender of the AT_IV attribute chooses the initialization vector
- at random. The sender MUST NOT re-use the initialization vector
- value from previous EAP-SIM packets. The sender SHOULD use a good
- source of randomness to generate the initialization vector. Please
- see [RFC4086] for more information about generating random numbers
- for security applications. The format of AT_IV is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_IV | Length = 5 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- | Initialization Vector |
- | |
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute consists of two
- reserved bytes followed by cipher text bytes encrypted using the
- Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) [AES] with a 128-bit key in the
- Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode of operation using the
- initialization vector from the AT_IV attribute. The reserved bytes
- are set to zero when sending and ignored on reception. Please see
- [CBC] for a description of the CBC mode. The format of the
- AT_ENCR_DATA attribute is shown below.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 60]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_ENCR_DATA | Length | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- . Encrypted Data .
- . .
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The derivation of the encryption key (K_encr) is specified in Section
- 7.
- The plaintext consists of nested EAP-SIM attributes.
- The encryption algorithm requires the length of the plaintext to be a
- multiple of 16 bytes. The sender may need to include the AT_PADDING
- attribute as the last attribute within AT_ENCR_DATA. The AT_PADDING
- attribute is not included if the total length of other nested
- attributes within the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute is a multiple of 16
- bytes. As usual, the Length of the Padding attribute includes the
- Attribute Type and Attribute Length fields. The length of the
- Padding attribute is 4, 8, or 12 bytes. It is chosen so that the
- length of the value field of the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute becomes a
- multiple of 16 bytes. The actual pad bytes in the value field are
- set to zero (00 hexadecimal) on sending. The recipient of the
- message MUST verify that the pad bytes are set to zero. If this
- verification fails on the peer, then it MUST send the
- EAP-Response/SIM/Client-Error packet with the error code "unable to
- process packet" to terminate the authentication exchange. If this
- verification fails on the server, then the server sends the peer the
- EAP-Request/SIM/Notification packet with an AT_NOTIFICATION code that
- implies failure to terminate the authentication exchange. The format
- of the AT_PADDING attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_PADDING | Length | Padding... |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |
- | |
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 61]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 10.13. AT_RESULT_IND
- The format of the AT_RESULT_IND attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_RESULT_...| Length = 1 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute consists of two reserved bytes,
- which are set to zero upon sending and ignored upon reception. This
- attribute is always sent unencrypted, so it MUST NOT be encapsulated
- within the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- 10.14. AT_MAC
- The AT_MAC attribute is used for EAP-SIM message authentication.
- Section 8 specifies in which messages AT_MAC MUST be included.
- The value field of the AT_MAC attribute contains two reserved bytes
- followed by a keyed message authentication code (MAC). The MAC is
- calculated over the whole EAP packet and concatenated with optional
- message-specific data, with the exception that the value field of the
- MAC attribute is set to zero when calculating the MAC. The EAP
- packet includes the EAP header that begins with the Code field, the
- EAP-SIM header that begins with the Subtype field, and all the
- attributes, as specified in Section 8.1. The reserved bytes in
- AT_MAC are set to zero when sending and ignored on reception. The
- contents of the message-specific data that may be included in the MAC
- calculation are specified separately for each EAP-SIM message in
- Section 9.
- The format of the AT_MAC attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_MAC | Length = 5 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- | MAC |
- | |
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 62]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The MAC algorithm is an HMAC-SHA1-128 [RFC2104] keyed hash value.
- (The HMAC-SHA1-128 value is obtained from the 20-byte HMAC-SHA1 value
- by truncating the output to the first 16 bytes. Hence, the length of
- the MAC is 16 bytes. The derivation of the authentication key
- (K_aut) used in the calculation of the MAC is specified in Section 7.
- When the AT_MAC attribute is included in an EAP-SIM message, the
- recipient MUST process the AT_MAC attribute before looking at any
- other attributes, except when processing EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge.
- The processing of EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge is specified in Section
- 9.3. If the message authentication code is invalid, then the
- recipient MUST ignore all other attributes in the message and operate
- as specified in Section 6.3.
- 10.15. AT_COUNTER
- The format of the AT_COUNTER attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_COUNTER | Length = 1 | Counter |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of the AT_COUNTER attribute consists of a 16-bit
- unsigned integer counter value, represented in network byte order.
- This attribute MUST always be encrypted by encapsulating it within
- the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- 10.16. AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL
- The format of the AT_COUNTER_TOO_SMALL attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_COUNTER...| Length = 1 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute consists of two reserved bytes,
- which are set to zero upon sending and ignored upon reception. This
- attribute MUST always be encrypted by encapsulating it within the
- AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 63]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 10.17. AT_NONCE_S
- The format of the AT_NONCE_S attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | AT_NONCE_S | Length = 5 | Reserved |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- | |
- | NONCE_S |
- | |
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of the AT_NONCE_S attribute contains two reserved
- bytes followed by a random number freshly generated by the server (16
- bytes) for this EAP-SIM fast re-authentication. The random number is
- used as a challenge for the peer and also as a seed value for the new
- keying material. The reserved bytes are set to zero upon sending and
- ignored upon reception. This attribute MUST always be encrypted by
- encapsulating it within the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute.
- The server MUST NOT re-use the NONCE_S value from any previous
- EAP-SIM fast re-authentication exchange. The server SHOULD use a
- good source of randomness to generate NONCE_S. Please see [RFC4086]
- for more information about generating random numbers for security
- applications.
- 10.18. AT_NOTIFICATION
- The format of the AT_NOTIFICATION attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_NOTIFICATION| Length = 1 |S|P| Notification Code |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute contains a two-byte notification
- code. The first and second bit (S and P) of the notification code
- are interpreted as described in Section 6.
- The notification code values listed below have been reserved. The
- descriptions below illustrate the semantics of the notifications.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 64]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The peer implementation MAY use different wordings when presenting
- the notifications to the user. The "requested service" depends on
- the environment where EAP-SIM is applied.
- 0 - General failure after authentication. (Implies failure, used
- after successful authentication.)
- 16384 - General failure. (Implies failure, used before
- authentication.)
- 32768 - Success. User has been successfully authenticated. (Does
- not imply failure, used after successful authentication). The usage
- of this code is discussed in Section 6.2.
- 1026 - User has been temporarily denied access to the requested
- service. (Implies failure, used after successful authentication.)
- 1031 - User has not subscribed to the requested service. (Implies
- failure, used after successful authentication.)
- 10.19. AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE
- The format of the AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE attribute is shown below.
- 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
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |AT_CLIENT_ERR..| Length = 1 | Client Error Code |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- The value field of this attribute contains a two-byte client error
- code. The following error code values have been reserved.
- 0 "unable to process packet": a general error code
- 1 "unsupported version": the peer does not support any of
- the versions listed in AT_VERSION_LIST
- 2 "insufficient number of challenges": the peer's policy
- requires more triplets than the server included in AT_RAND
- 3 "RANDs are not fresh": the peer believes that the RAND
- challenges included in AT_RAND were not fresh
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 65]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 11. IANA Considerations
- IANA has assigned the EAP type number 18 for this protocol.
- EAP-SIM shares most of the protocol design, such as attributes and
- message Subtypes, with EAP-AKA [EAP-AKA]. EAP-SIM protocol numbers
- should be administered in the same IANA registry as EAP-AKA. The
- initial values are listed in [EAP-AKA] for both protocols, so this
- document does not require any new registries or parameter allocation.
- As a common registry is used for EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA, the protocol
- number allocation policy for both protocols is specified in
- [EAP-AKA].
- 12. Security Considerations
- The EAP specification [RFC3748] describes the security
- vulnerabilities of EAP, which does not include its own security
- mechanisms. This section discusses the claimed security properties
- of EAP-SIM, as well as vulnerabilities and security recommendations.
- 12.1. A3 and A8 Algorithms
- The GSM A3 and A8 algorithms are used in EAP-SIM. [GSM-03.20]
- specifies the general GSM authentication procedure and the external
- interface (inputs and outputs) of the A3 and A8 algorithms. The
- operation of these functions falls completely within the domain of an
- individual operator, and therefore, the functions are specified by
- each operator rather than being fully standardised. The GSM-MILENAGE
- algorithm, specified publicly in [3GPP-TS-55.205], is an example
- algorithm set for A3 and A8 algorithms.
- The security of the A3 and A8 algorithms is important to the security
- of EAP-SIM. Some A3/A8 algorithms have been compromised; see [GSM-
- Cloning] for discussion about the security of COMP-128 version 1.
- Note that several revised versions of the COMP-128 A3/A8 algorithm
- have been devised after the publication of these weaknesses and that
- the publicly specified GSM-MILENAGE algorithm is not vulnerable to
- any known attacks.
- 12.2. Identity Protection
- EAP-SIM includes optional identity privacy support that protects the
- privacy of the subscriber identity against passive eavesdropping.
- This document only specifies a mechanism to deliver pseudonyms from
- the server to the peer as part of an EAP-SIM exchange. Hence, a peer
- that has not yet performed any EAP-SIM exchanges does not typically
- have a pseudonym available. If the peer does not have a pseudonym
- available, then the privacy mechanism cannot be used, but the
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 66]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- permanent identity will have to be sent in the clear. The terminal
- SHOULD store the pseudonym in a non-volatile memory so that it can be
- maintained across reboots. An active attacker that impersonates the
- network may use the AT_PERMANENT_ID_REQ attribute to attempt to learn
- the subscriber's permanent identity. However, as discussed in
- Section 4.2.2, the terminal can refuse to send the cleartext
- permanent identity if it believes that the network should be able to
- recognize the pseudonym.
- If the peer and server cannot guarantee that the pseudonym will be
- maintained reliably, and identity privacy is required, then
- additional protection from an external security mechanism (such as
- Protected Extensible Authentication Protocol (PEAP) [PEAP]) may be
- used. If an external security mechanism is in use, the identity
- privacy features of EAP-SIM may not be useful. The security
- considerations of using an external security mechanism with EAP-SIM
- are beyond the scope of this document.
- 12.3. Mutual Authentication and Triplet Exposure
- EAP-SIM provides mutual authentication. The peer believes that the
- network is authentic because the network can calculate a correct
- AT_MAC value in the EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge packet. To calculate
- AT_MAC it is sufficient to know the RAND and Kc values from the GSM
- triplets (RAND, SRES, Kc) used in the authentication. Because the
- network selects the RAND challenges and the triplets, an attacker
- that knows n (2 or 3) GSM triplets for the subscriber is able to
- impersonate a valid network to the peer. (Some peers MAY employ an
- implementation-specific counter-measure against impersonating a valid
- network by re-using a previously used RAND; see below.) In other
- words, the security of EAP-SIM is based on the secrecy of Kc keys,
- which are considered secret intermediate results in the EAP-SIM
- cryptographic calculations.
- Given physical access to the SIM card, it is easy to obtain any
- number of GSM triplets.
- Another way to obtain triplets is to mount an attack on the peer
- platform via a virus or other malicious piece of software. The peer
- SHOULD be protected against triplet querying attacks by malicious
- software. Care should be taken not to expose Kc keys to attackers
- when they are stored or handled by the peer, or transmitted between
- subsystems of the peer. Steps should be taken to limit the
- transport, storage, and handling of these values outside a protected
- environment within the peer. However, the virus protection of the
- peer and the security capabilities of the peer's operating system are
- outside the scope of this document.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 67]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The EAP-SIM server typically obtains the triplets from the Home
- Location Register (HLR). An attacker might try to obtain triplets by
- attacking against the network used between the EAP-SIM server and the
- HLR. Care should be taken not to expose Kc keys to attackers when
- they are stored or handled by the EAP-SIM server, or transmitted
- between the EAP server and the HLR. Steps should be taken to limit
- the transport, storage, and handling of these values outside a
- protected environment. However, the protection of the communications
- between the EAP-SIM server and the HLR is outside the scope of this
- document.
- If the same SIM credentials are also used for GSM traffic, the
- triplets could be revealed in the GSM network; see Section 12.8.
- In GSM, the network is allowed to re-use the RAND challenge in
- consecutive authentication exchanges. This is not allowed in
- EAP-SIM. The EAP-SIM server is mandated to use fresh triplets (RAND
- challenges) in consecutive authentication exchanges, as specified in
- Section 3. EAP-SIM does not mandate any means for the peer to check
- if the RANDs are fresh, so the security of the scheme leans on the
- secrecy of the triplets. However, the peer MAY employ
- implementation-specific mechanisms to remember some of the previously
- used RANDs, and the peer MAY check the freshness of the server's
- RANDs. The operation in cases when the peer detects that the RANDs
- are not fresh is specified in Section 6.3.1.
- Preventing the re-use of authentication vectors has been taken into
- account in the design of the UMTS Authentication and Key Agreement
- (AKA), which is used in EAP-AKA [EAP-AKA]. In cases when the triplet
- re-use properties of EAP-SIM are not considered sufficient, it is
- advised to use EAP-AKA.
- Note that EAP-SIM mutual authentication is done with the EAP server.
- In general, EAP methods do not authenticate the identity or services
- provided by the EAP authenticator (if distinct from the EAP server)
- unless they provide the so-called channel bindings property. The
- vulnerabilities related to this have been discussed in [RFC3748],
- [EAP-Keying], [Service-Identity].
- EAP-SIM does not provide the channel bindings property, so it only
- authenticates the EAP server. However, ongoing work such as
- [Service-Identity] may provide such support as an extension to
- popular EAP methods such as EAP-TLS, EAP-SIM, or EAP-AKA.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 68]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 12.4. Flooding the Authentication Centre
- The EAP-SIM server typically obtains authentication vectors from the
- Authentication Centre (AuC). EAP-SIM introduces a new usage for the
- AuC. The protocols between the EAP-SIM server and the AuC are out of
- the scope of this document. However, it should be noted that a
- malicious EAP-SIM peer may generate a lot of protocol requests to
- mount a denial of service attack. The EAP-SIM server implementation
- SHOULD take this into account and SHOULD take steps to limit the
- traffic that it generates towards the AuC, preventing the attacker
- from flooding the AuC and from extending the denial of service attack
- from EAP-SIM to other users of the AuC.
- 12.5. Key Derivation
- EAP-SIM supports key derivation. The key hierarchy is specified in
- Section 7. EAP-SIM combines several GSM triplets in order to
- generate stronger keying material and stronger AT_MAC values. The
- actual strength of the resulting keys depends, among other things, on
- operator-specific parameters including authentication algorithms, the
- strength of the Ki key, and the quality of the RAND challenges. For
- example, some SIM cards generate Kc keys with 10 bits set to zero.
- Such restrictions may prevent the concatenation technique from
- yielding strong session keys. Because the strength of the Ki key is
- 128 bits, the ultimate strength of any derived secret key material is
- never more than 128 bits.
- It should also be noted that a security policy that allows n=2 to be
- used may compromise the security of a future policy that requires
- three triplets, because adversaries may be able to exploit the
- messages exchanged when the weaker policy is applied.
- There is no known way to obtain complete GSM triplets by mounting an
- attack against EAP-SIM. A passive eavesdropper can learn n*RAND and
- AT_MAC and may be able to link this information to the subscriber
- identity. An active attacker that impersonates a GSM subscriber can
- easily obtain n*RAND and AT_MAC values from the EAP server for any
- given subscriber identity. However, calculating the Kc and SRES
- values from AT_MAC would require the attacker to reverse the keyed
- message authentication code function HMAC-SHA1-128.
- As EAP-SIM does not expose any values calculated from an individual
- GSM Kc keys, it is not possible to mount a brute force attack on only
- one of the Kc keys in EAP-SIM. Therefore, when considering brute
- force attacks on the values exposed in EAP-SIM, the effective length
- of EAP-SIM session keys is not compromised by the fact that they are
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 69]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- combined from several shorter keys, i.e., the effective length of 128
- bits may be achieved. For additional considerations, see Section
- 12.8.
- 12.6. Cryptographic Separation of Keys and Session Independence
- The EAP Transient Keys used to protect EAP-SIM packets (K_encr,
- K_aut), the Master Session Key, and the Extended Master Session Key
- are cryptographically separate in EAP-SIM. An attacker cannot derive
- any non-trivial information about any of these keys based on the
- other keys. An attacker also cannot calculate the pre-shared secret
- (Ki) from the GSM Kc keys, from EAP-SIM K_encr, from EAP-SIM K_aut,
- from the Master Session Key, or from the Extended Master Session Key.
- Each EAP-SIM exchange generates fresh keying material, and the keying
- material exported from the method upon separate EAP-SIM exchanges is
- cryptographically separate. The EAP-SIM peer contributes to the
- keying material with the NONCE_MT parameter, which must be chosen
- freshly for each full authentication exchange. The EAP server is
- mandated to choose the RAND challenges freshly for each full
- authentication exchange. If either the server or the peer chooses
- its random value (NONCE_MT or RAND challenges) freshly, even if the
- other entity re-used its value from a previous exchange, then the EAP
- Transient Keys, the Master Session Key, and the Extended Master
- Session Key will be different and cryptographically separate from the
- corresponding values derived upon the previous full authentication
- exchange.
- On fast re-authentication, freshness of the Master Session Key and
- the Extended Master Session Key is provided with a counter
- (AT_COUNTER). The same EAP Transient Keys (K_encr, K_aut) that were
- used in the full authentication exchange are used to protect the EAP
- negotiation. However, replay and integrity protection across all the
- fast re-authentication exchanges that use the same EAP Transient Keys
- is provided with AT_COUNTER.
- [RFC3748] defines session independence as the "demonstration that
- passive attacks (such as capture of the EAP conversation) or active
- attacks (including compromise of the MSK or EMSK) do not enable
- compromise of subsequent or prior MSKs or EMSKs". Because the MSKs
- and EMSKs are separate between EAP exchanges, EAP-SIM supports this
- security claim.
- It should be noted that [Patel-2003], which predates [RFC3748], uses
- a slightly different meaning for session independence. The EAP-SIM
- protocol does not allow the peer to ensure that different Kc key
- values would be used in different exchanges. Only the server is able
- to ensure that fresh RANDs, and therefore, fresh Kc keys are used.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 70]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Hence, the peer cannot guarantee EAP-SIM sessions to be independent
- with regard to the internal Kc values. However, in EAP-SIM, the Kc
- keys are considered to be secret intermediate results, which are not
- exported outside the method. See Section 12.3 for more information
- about RAND re-use.
- 12.7. Dictionary Attacks
- Because EAP-SIM is not a password protocol, it is not vulnerable to
- dictionary attacks. (The pre-shared symmetric secret stored on the
- SIM card is not a passphrase, nor is it derived from a passphrase.)
- 12.8. Credentials Re-use
- EAP-SIM cannot prevent attacks over the GSM or GPRS radio networks.
- If the same SIM credentials are also used in GSM or GPRS, it is
- possible to mount attacks over the cellular interface.
- A passive attacker can eavesdrop GSM or GPRS traffic and obtain RAND,
- SRES pairs. He can then use a brute force attack or other
- cryptanalysis techniques to obtain the 64-bit Kc keys used to encrypt
- the GSM or GPRS data. This makes it possible to attack each 64-bit
- key separately.
- An active attacker can mount a "rogue GSM/GPRS base station attack",
- replaying previously seen RAND challenges to obtain SRES values. He
- can then use a brute force attack to obtain the Kc keys. If
- successful, the attacker can impersonate a valid network or decrypt
- previously seen traffic, because EAP-SIM does not provide perfect
- forward secrecy (PFS).
- Due to several weaknesses in the GSM encryption algorithms, the
- effective key strength of the Kc keys is much less than the expected
- 64 bits (no more than 40 bits if the A5/1 GSM encryption algorithm is
- used; as documented in [Barkan-2003], an active attacker can force
- the peer to use the weaker A5/2 algorithm that can be broken in less
- than a second).
- Because the A5 encryption algorithm is not used in EAP-SIM, and
- because EAP-SIM does not expose any values calculated from individual
- Kc keys, it should be noted that these attacks are not possible if
- the SIM credentials used in EAP-SIM are not shared in GSM/GPRS.
- At the time this document was written, the 3rd Generation Partnership
- Project (3GPP) has started to work on fixes to these A5
- vulnerabilities. One of the solution proposals discussed in 3GPP is
- integrity-protected A5 version negotiation, which would require the
- base station to prove knowledge of the Kc key before the terminal
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 71]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- sends any values calculated from the Kc to the network. Another
- proposal is so-called special RANDs, where some bits of the RAND
- challenge would be used for cryptographic separation by indicating
- the allowed use of the triplet, such as the allowed A5 algorithm in
- GSM or the fact that the triplet is intended for EAP-SIM. This is
- currently a work in progress, and the mechanisms have not been
- selected yet.
- 12.9. Integrity and Replay Protection, and Confidentiality
- AT_MAC, AT_IV, AT_ENCR_DATA, and AT_COUNTER attributes are used to
- provide integrity, replay and confidentiality protection for EAP-SIM
- requests and responses. Integrity protection with AT_MAC includes
- the EAP header. These attributes cannot be used during the
- EAP/SIM/Start roundtrip. However, the protocol values (user identity
- string, NONCE_MT, and version negotiation parameters) are
- (implicitly) protected by later EAP-SIM messages by including them in
- key derivation.
- Integrity protection (AT_MAC) is based on a keyed message
- authentication code. Confidentiality (AT_ENCR_DATA and AT_IV) is
- based on a block cipher.
- Confidentiality protection is applied only to a part of the protocol
- fields. The table of attributes in Section 10.1 summarizes which
- fields are confidentiality-protected. It should be noted that the
- error and notification code attributes AT_CLIENT_ERROR_CODE and
- AT_NOTIFICATION are not confidential, but they are transmitted in the
- clear. Identity protection is discussed in Section 12.2.
- On full authentication, replay protection of the EAP exchange is
- provided by the RAND values from the underlying GSM authentication
- scheme and the use of the NONCE_MT value. Protection against replays
- of EAP-SIM messages is also based on the fact that messages that can
- include AT_MAC can only be sent once with a certain EAP-SIM Subtype,
- and on the fact that a different K_aut key will be used for
- calculating AT_MAC in each full authentication exchange.
- On fast re-authentication, a counter included in AT_COUNTER and a
- server random nonce is used to provide replay protection. The
- AT_COUNTER attribute is also included in EAP-SIM notifications if it
- is used after successful authentication in order to provide replay
- protection between re-authentication exchanges.
- Because EAP-SIM is not a tunneling method, EAP-Request/Notification,
- EAP-Response/Notification, EAP-Success, or EAP-Failure packets are
- not confidential, integrity-protected, or replay-protected in
- EAP-SIM. On physically insecure networks, this may enable an
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 72]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- attacker to send false notifications to the peer and to mount denial
- of service attacks by spoofing these packets. As discussed in
- Section 6.3, the peer will only accept EAP-Success after the peer
- successfully authenticates the server. Hence, the attacker cannot
- force the peer to believe successful mutual authentication has
- occurred until the peer successfully authenticates the server or
- after the peer fails to authenticate the server.
- The security considerations of EAP-SIM result indications are covered
- in Section 12.11
- An eavesdropper will see the EAP-Request/Notification,
- EAP-Response/Notification, EAP-Success, and EAP-Failure packets sent
- in the clear. With EAP-SIM, confidential information MUST NOT be
- transmitted in EAP Notification packets.
- 12.10. Negotiation Attacks
- EAP-SIM does not protect the EAP-Response/Nak packet. Because
- EAP-SIM does not protect the EAP method negotiation, EAP method
- downgrading attacks may be possible, especially if the user uses the
- same identity with EAP-SIM and other EAP methods.
- EAP-SIM includes a version negotiation procedure. In EAP-SIM the
- keying material derivation includes the version list and selected
- version to ensure that the protocol cannot be downgraded and that the
- peer and server use the same version of EAP-SIM.
- EAP-SIM does not support ciphersuite negotiation.
- 12.11. Protected Result Indications
- EAP-SIM supports optional protected success indications and
- acknowledged failure indications. If a failure occurs after
- successful authentication, then the EAP-SIM failure indication is
- integrity- and replay-protected.
- Even if an EAP-Failure packet is lost when using EAP-SIM over an
- unreliable medium, then the EAP-SIM failure indications will help
- ensure that the peer and EAP server will know the other party's
- authentication decision. If protected success indications are used,
- then the loss of Success packet will also be addressed by the
- acknowledged, integrity- and replay-protected EAP-SIM success
- indication. If the optional success indications are not used, then
- the peer may end up believing that the server succeeded
- authentication, when it actually failed. Since access will not be
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 73]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- granted in this case, protected result indications are not needed
- unless the client is not able to realize it does not have access for
- an extended period of time.
- 12.12. Man-in-the-Middle Attacks
- In order to avoid man-in-the-middle attacks and session hijacking,
- user data SHOULD be integrity-protected on physically insecure
- networks. The EAP-SIM Master Session Key, or keys derived from it,
- MAY be used as the integrity protection keys, or, if an external
- security mechanism such as PEAP is used, then the link integrity
- protection keys MAY be derived by the external security mechanism.
- There are man-in-the-middle attacks associated with the use of any
- EAP method within a tunneled protocol. For instance, an early
- version of PEAP [PEAP-02] was vulnerable to this attack. This
- specification does not address these attacks. If EAP-SIM is used
- with a tunneling protocol, there should be cryptographic binding
- provided between the protocol and EAP-SIM to prevent
- man-in-the-middle attacks through rogue authenticators being able to
- setup one-way authenticated tunnels. For example, newer versions of
- PEAP include such cryptographic binding. The EAP-SIM Master Session
- Key MAY be used to provide the cryptographic binding. However, the
- mechanism by which the binding is provided depends on the tunneling
- protocol and is beyond the scope of this document.
- 12.13. Generating Random Numbers
- An EAP-SIM implementation SHOULD use a good source of randomness to
- generate the random numbers required in the protocol. Please see
- [RFC4086] for more information on generating random numbers for
- security applications.
- 13. Security Claims
- This section provides the security claims required by [RFC3748].
- Auth. mechanism: EAP-SIM is based on the GSM SIM mechanism, which is
- a challenge/response authentication and key agreement mechanism based
- on a symmetric 128-bit pre-shared secret. EAP-SIM also makes use of
- a peer challenge to provide mutual authentication.
- Ciphersuite negotiation: No
- Mutual authentication: Yes (Section 12.3)
- Integrity protection: Yes (Section 12.9)
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 74]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Replay protection: Yes (Section 12.9)
- Confidentiality: Yes, except method-specific success and failure
- indications (Section 12.2, Section 12.9)
- Key derivation: Yes
- Key strength: EAP-SIM supports key derivation with 128-bit effective
- key strength (Section 12.5). However, as discussed in Section 11, if
- the same credentials are used in GSM/GPRS and in EAP-SIM, then the
- key strength may be reduced considerably, basically to the same level
- as in GSM, by mounting attacks over GSM/GPRS. For example an active
- attack using a false GSM/GPRS base station reduces the effective key
- strength to almost zero.
- Description of key hierarchy: Please see Section 7.
- Dictionary attack protection: N/A (Section 12.7)
- Fast reconnect: Yes
- Cryptographic binding: N/A
- Session independence: Yes (Section 12.6)
- Fragmentation: No
- Channel binding: No
- Indication of vulnerabilities: Vulnerabilities are discussed in
- Section 12.
- 14. Acknowledgements and Contributions
- 14.1. Contributors
- In addition to the editors, Nora Dabbous, Jose Puthenkulam, and
- Prasanna Satarasinghe were significant contributors to this document.
- Pasi Eronen and Jukka-Pekka Honkanen contributed Appendix A.
- 14.2. Acknowledgements
- Juha Ala-Laurila, N. Asokan, Jan-Erik Ekberg, Patrik Flykt,
- Jukka-Pekka Honkanen, Antti Kuikka, Jukka Latva, Lassi Lehtinen, Jyri
- Rinnemaa, Timo Takamaki, and Raimo Vuonnala contributed many original
- ideas and concepts to this protocol.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 75]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- N. Asokan, Pasi Eronen, and Jukka-Pekka Honkanen contributed and
- helped in innumerable ways during the development of the protocol.
- Valtteri Niemi and Kaisa Nyberg contributed substantially to the
- design of the key derivation and the fast re-authentication
- procedure, and have also provided their cryptographic expertise in
- many discussions related to this protocol.
- Simon Blake-Wilson provided very helpful comments on key derivation
- and version negotiation.
- Thanks to Greg Rose for his very valuable comments to an early
- version of this specification [S3-020125], and for reviewing and
- providing very useful comments on version 12.
- Thanks to Bernard Aboba, Vladimir Alperovich, Florent Bersani,
- Jacques Caron, Gopal Dommety, Augustin Farrugia, Mark Grayson, Max de
- Groot, Prakash Iyer, Nishi Kant, Victor Lortz, Jouni Malinen, Sarvar
- Patel, Tom Porcher, Michael Richardson, Stefan Schroeder, Uma
- Shankar, Jesse Walker, and Thomas Wieland for their contributions and
- critiques. Special thanks to Max for proposing improvements to the
- MAC calculation.
- Thanks to Glen Zorn for reviewing this document and for providing
- very useful comments on the protocol.
- Thanks to Sarvar Patel for his review of the protocol [Patel-2003].
- Thanks to Bernard Aboba for reviewing this document for RFC 3748
- compliance.
- The identity privacy support is based on the identity privacy support
- of [EAP-SRP]. The attribute format is based on the extension format
- of Mobile IPv4 [RFC3344].
- This protocol has been partly developed in parallel with EAP-AKA
- [EAP-AKA], and hence this specification incorporates many ideas from
- Jari Arkko.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 76]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 14.2.1. Contributors' Addresses
- Nora Dabbous
- Gemplus
- 34 rue Guynemer
- 92447 Issy les Moulineaux
- France
- Phone: +33 1 4648 2000
- EMail: nora.dabbous@gemplus.com
- Jose Puthenkulam
- Intel Corporation
- 2111 NE 25th Avenue, JF2-58
- Hillsboro, OR 97124
- USA
- Phone: +1 503 264 6121
- EMail: jose.p.puthenkulam@intel.com
- Prasanna Satarasinghe
- Transat Technologies
- 180 State Street, Suite 240
- Southlake, TX 76092
- USA
- Phone: + 1 817 4814412
- EMail: prasannas@transat-tech.com
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 77]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 15. References
- 15.1. Normative References
- [GSM-03.20] European Telecommunications Standards Institute,
- "GSM Technical Specification GSM 03.20 (ETS 300
- 534): "Digital cellular telecommunication system
- (Phase 2); Security related network functions"",
- August 1997.
- [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to
- Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
- March 1997.
- [GSM-03.03] European Telecommunications Standards Institute,
- "GSM Technical Specification GSM 03.03 (ETS 300
- 523): "Digital cellular telecommunication system
- (Phase 2); Numbering, addressing and
- identification"", April 1997.
- [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC:
- Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC
- 2104, February 1997.
- [RFC4282] Aboba, B., Beadles, M., Arkko, J., and P. Eronen,
- "The Network Access Identifier", RFC 4282,
- December 2005.
- [AES] National Institute of Standards and Technology,
- "Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS)
- Publication 197, "Advanced Encryption Standard
- (AES)"", November 2001.
- http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips197/
- fips-197.pdf
- [CBC] National Institute of Standards and Technology,
- "NIST Special Publication 800-38A, "Recommendation
- for Block Cipher Modes of Operation - Methods and
- Techniques"", December 2001.
- http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/
- 800-38a/sp800-38a.pdf
- [SHA-1] National Institute of Standards and Technology,
- U.S. Department of Commerce, "Federal Information
- Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 180-1,
- "Secure Hash Standard"", April 1995.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 78]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- [PRF] National Institute of Standards and Technology,
- "Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS)
- Publication 186-2 (with change notice); Digital
- Signature Standard (DSS)", January 2000.
- Available on-line at:
- http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/
- fips/fips186-2/fips186-2-change1.pdf
- [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of
- ISO 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
- [RFC3748] Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J.,
- and H. Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication
- Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3748, June 2004.
- [EAP-AKA] Arkko, J. and H. Haverinen, "Extensible
- Authentication Protocol Method for 3rd Generation
- Authentication and Key Agreement (EAP-AKA)", RFC
- 4187, January 2006.
- 15.2. Informative References
- [3GPP-TS-23.003] 3rd Generation Partnership Project, "3GPP
- Technical Specification 3GPP TS 23.003 V6.8.0:
- "3rd Generation Parnership Project; Technical
- Specification Group Core Network; Numbering,
- addressing and identification (Release 6)"",
- December 2005.
- [3GPP-TS-55.205] 3rd Generation Partnership Project, "3GPP
- Technical Specification 3GPP TS 55.205 V 6.0.0:
- "3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical
- Specification Group Services and System Aspects;
- Specification of the GSM-MILENAGE Algorithms: An
- example algorithm set for the GSM Authentication
- and Key Generation functions A3 and A8 (Release
- 6)"", December 2002.
- [PEAP] Palekar, A., Simon, D., Zorn, G., Salowey, J.,
- Zhou, H., and S. Josefsson, "Protected EAP
- Protocol (PEAP) Version 2", Work in Progress,
- October 2004.
- [PEAP-02] Anderson, H., Josefsson, S., Zorn, G., Simon, D.,
- and A. Palekar, "Protected EAP Protocol (PEAP)",
- Work in Progress, February 2002.
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 79]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- [EAP-Keying] Aboba, B., Simon, D., Arkko, J., Eronen, P., and
- H. Levkowetz, "Extensible Authentication Protocol
- (EAP) Key Management Framework", Work in Progress,
- October 2005.
- [Service-Identity] Arkko, J. and P. Eronen, "Authenticated Service
- Information for the Extensible Authentication
- Protocol (EAP)", Work in Progress, October 2004.
- [RFC4086] Eastlake, D., 3rd, Schiller, J., and S. Crocker,
- "Randomness Requirements for Security", BCP 106,
- RFC 4086, June 2005.
- [S3-020125] Qualcomm, "Comments on draft EAP/SIM, 3rd
- Generation Partnership Project document 3GPP TSG
- SA WG3 Security S3#22, S3-020125", February 2002.
- [RFC3344] Perkins, C., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4", RFC
- 3344, August 2002.
- [RFC2548] Zorn, G., "Microsoft Vendor-specific RADIUS
- Attributes ", RFC 2548, March 1999.
- [EAP-SRP] Carlson, J., Aboba, B., and H. Haverinen, "EAP
- SRP-SHA1 Authentication Protocol", Work in
- Progress, July 2001.
- [GSM-Cloning] Wagner, D., "GSM Cloning". Web page about
- COMP-128 version 1 vulnerabilities, available at
- http://www.isaac.cs.berkeley.edu/isaac/gsm.html
- [Barkan-2003] Barkan, E., Biham, E., and N. Keller, "Instant
- Ciphertext-Only Cryptanalysis of GSM Encrypted
- Communications". available on-line at
- http://cryptome.org/gsm-crack-bbk.pdf
- [Patel-2003] Patel, S., "Analysis of EAP-SIM Session Key
- Agreement". Posted to the EAP mailing list 29
- May,2003. http://
- mail.frascone.com/pipermail/public/eap/2003-May/
- 001267.html
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 80]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Appendix A. Test Vectors
- Test vectors for the NIST FIPS 186-2 pseudo-random number generator
- [PRF] are available at the following URL:
- http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/dss/Examples-1024bit.pdf
- The following examples show the contents of EAP-SIM packets on full
- authentication and fast re-authentication.
- A.1. EAP-Request/Identity
- The first packet is a plain Identity Request:
- 01 ; Code: Request
- 00 ; Identifier: 0
- 00 05 ; Length: 5 octets
- 01 ; Type: Identity
- A.2. EAP-Response/Identity
- The client's identity is "1244070100000001@eapsim.foo", so it
- responds with the following packet:
- 02 ; Code: Response
- 00 ; Identifier: 0
- 00 20 ; Length: 32 octets
- 01 ; Type: Identity
- 31 32 34 34 ; "1244070100000001@eapsim.foo"
- 30 37 30 31
- 30 30 30 30
- 30 30 30 31
- 40 65 61 70
- 73 69 6d 2e
- 66 6f 6f
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 81]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- A.3. EAP-Request/SIM/Start
- The server's first packet looks like this:
- 01 ; Code: Request
- 01 ; Identifier: 1
- 00 10 ; Length: 16 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0a ; EAP-SIM subtype: Start
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 0f ; Attribute type: AT_VERSION_LIST
- 02 ; Attribute length: 8 octets (2*4)
- 00 02 ; Actual version list length: 2 octets
- 00 01 ; Version: 1
- 00 00 ; (attribute padding)
- A.4. EAP-Response/SIM/Start
- The client selects a nonce and responds with the following packet:
- 02 ; Code: Response
- 01 ; Identifier: 1
- 00 20 ; Length: 32 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0a ; EAP-SIM subtype: Start
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 07 ; Attribute type: AT_NONCE_MT
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 01 23 45 67 ; NONCE_MT value
- 89 ab cd ef
- fe dc ba 98
- 76 54 32 10
- 10 ; Attribute type: AT_SELECTED_VERSION
- 01 ; Attribute length: 4 octets (1*4)
- 00 01 ; Version: 1
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 82]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- A.5. EAP-Request/SIM/Challenge
- Next, the server selects three authentication triplets
- (RAND1,SRES1,Kc1) = (10111213 14151617 18191a1b 1c1d1e1f,
- d1d2d3d4,
- a0a1a2a3 a4a5a6a7)
- (RAND2,SRES2,Kc2) = (20212223 24252627 28292a2b 2c2d2e2f,
- e1e2e3e4,
- b0b1b2b3 b4b5b6b7)
- (RAND3,SRES3,Kc3) = (30313233 34353637 38393a3b 3c3d3e3f,
- f1f2f3f4,
- c0c1c2c3 c4c5c6c7)
- Next, the MK is calculated as specified in Section 7*.
- MK = e576d5ca 332e9930 018bf1ba ee2763c7 95b3c712
- And the other keys are derived using the PRNG:
- K_encr = 536e5ebc 4465582a a6a8ec99 86ebb620
- K_aut = 25af1942 efcbf4bc 72b39434 21f2a974
- MSK = 39d45aea f4e30601 983e972b 6cfd46d1
- c3637733 65690d09 cd44976b 525f47d3
- a60a985e 955c53b0 90b2e4b7 3719196a
- 40254296 8fd14a88 8f46b9a7 886e4488
- EMSK = 5949eab0 fff69d52 315c6c63 4fd14a7f
- 0d52023d 56f79698 fa6596ab eed4f93f
- bb48eb53 4d985414 ceed0d9a 8ed33c38
- 7c9dfdab 92ffbdf2 40fcecf6 5a2c93b9
- Next, the server selects a pseudonym and a fast re-authentication
- identity (in this case, "w8w49PexCazWJ&xCIARmxuMKht5S1sxR
- DqXSEFBEg3DcZP9cIxTe5J4OyIwNGVzxeJOU1G" and
- "Y24fNSrz8BP274jOJaF17WfxI8YO7QX0
- 0pMXk9XMMVOw7broaNhTczuFq53aEpOkk3L0dm@eapsim.foo", respectively).
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 83]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The following plaintext will be encrypted and stored in the
- AT_ENCR_DATA attribute:
- 84 ; Attribute type: AT_NEXT_PSEUDONYM
- 13 ; Attribute length: 76 octets (19*4)
- 00 46 ; Actual pseudonym length: 70 octets
- 77 38 77 34 39 50 65 78 43 61 7a 57 4a 26 78 43
- 49 41 52 6d 78 75 4d 4b 68 74 35 53 31 73 78 52
- 44 71 58 53 45 46 42 45 67 33 44 63 5a 50 39 63
- 49 78 54 65 35 4a 34 4f 79 49 77 4e 47 56 7a 78
- 65 4a 4f 55 31 47
- 00 00 ; (attribute padding)
- 85 ; Attribute type: AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID
- 16 ; Attribute length: 88 octets (22*4)
- 00 51 ; Actual re-auth identity length: 81 octets
- 59 32 34 66 4e 53 72 7a 38 42 50 32 37 34 6a 4f
- 4a 61 46 31 37 57 66 78 49 38 59 4f 37 51 58 30
- 30 70 4d 58 6b 39 58 4d 4d 56 4f 77 37 62 72 6f
- 61 4e 68 54 63 7a 75 46 71 35 33 61 45 70 4f 6b
- 6b 33 4c 30 64 6d 40 65 61 70 73 69 6d 2e 66 6f
- 6f
- 00 00 00 ; (attribute padding)
- 06 ; Attribute type: AT_PADDING
- 03 ; Attribute length: 12 octets (3*4)
- 00 00 00 00
- 00 00 00 00
- 00 00
- The EAP packet looks like this:
- 01 ; Code: Request
- 02 ; Identifier: 2
- 01 18 ; Length: 280 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0b ; EAP-SIM subtype: Challenge
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 01 ; Attribute type: AT_RAND
- 0d ; Attribute length: 52 octets (13*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 10 11 12 13 ; first RAND
- 14 15 16 17
- 18 19 1a 1b
- 1c 1d 1e 1f
- 20 21 22 23 ; second RAND
- 24 25 26 27
- 28 29 2a 2b
- 2c 2d 2e 2f
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 84]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 30 31 32 33 ; third RAND
- 34 35 36 37
- 38 39 3a 3b
- 3c 3d 3e 3f
- 81 ; Attribute type: AT_IV
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 9e 18 b0 c2 ; IV value
- 9a 65 22 63
- c0 6e fb 54
- dd 00 a8 95
- 82 ; Attribute type: AT_ENCR_DATA
- 2d ; Attribute length: 180 octets (45*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 55 f2 93 9b bd b1 b1 9e a1 b4 7f c0 b3 e0 be 4c
- ab 2c f7 37 2d 98 e3 02 3c 6b b9 24 15 72 3d 58
- ba d6 6c e0 84 e1 01 b6 0f 53 58 35 4b d4 21 82
- 78 ae a7 bf 2c ba ce 33 10 6a ed dc 62 5b 0c 1d
- 5a a6 7a 41 73 9a e5 b5 79 50 97 3f c7 ff 83 01
- 07 3c 6f 95 31 50 fc 30 3e a1 52 d1 e1 0a 2d 1f
- 4f 52 26 da a1 ee 90 05 47 22 52 bd b3 b7 1d 6f
- 0c 3a 34 90 31 6c 46 92 98 71 bd 45 cd fd bc a6
- 11 2f 07 f8 be 71 79 90 d2 5f 6d d7 f2 b7 b3 20
- bf 4d 5a 99 2e 88 03 31 d7 29 94 5a ec 75 ae 5d
- 43 c8 ed a5 fe 62 33 fc ac 49 4e e6 7a 0d 50 4d
- 0b ; Attribute type: AT_MAC
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- fe f3 24 ac ; MAC value
- 39 62 b5 9f
- 3b d7 82 53
- ae 4d cb 6a
- The MAC is calculated over the EAP packet above (with MAC value set
- to zero), followed by the NONCE_MT value (a total of 296 bytes).
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 85]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- A.6. EAP-Response/SIM/Challenge
- The client's response looks like this:
- 02 ; Code: Response
- 02 ; Identifier: 2
- 00 1c ; Length: 28 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0b ; EAP-SIM subtype: Challenge
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 0b ; Attribute type: AT_MAC
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- f5 6d 64 33 ; MAC value
- e6 8e d2 97
- 6a c1 19 37
- fc 3d 11 54
- The MAC is calculated over the EAP packet above (with MAC value set
- to zero), followed by the SRES values (a total of 40 bytes).
- A.7. EAP-Success
- The last packet is an EAP-Success:
- 03 ; Code: Success
- 02 ; Identifier: 2
- 00 04 ; Length: 4 octets
- A.8. Fast Re-authentication
- When performing fast re-authentication, the EAP-Request/Identity
- packet is the same as usual. The EAP-Response/Identity contains the
- fast re-authentication identity (from AT_ENCR_DATA attribute above):
- 02 ; Code: Response
- 00 ; Identifier: 0
- 00 56 ; Length: 86 octets
- 01 ; Type: Identity
- 59 32 34 66 4e 53 72 7a 38 42 50 32 37 34 6a 4f
- 4a 61 46 31 37 57 66 78 49 38 59 4f 37 51 58 30
- 30 70 4d 58 6b 39 58 4d 4d 56 4f 77 37 62 72 6f
- 61 4e 68 54 63 7a 75 46 71 35 33 61 45 70 4f 6b
- 6b 33 4c 30 64 6d 40 65 61 70 73 69 6d 2e 66 6f
- 6f
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 86]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- A.9. EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication
- The server recognizes the reauthentication identity, so it will
- respond with EAP-Request/SIM/Re-authentication. It retrieves the
- associated counter value, generates a nonce, and picks a new
- reauthentication identity (in this case,
- "uta0M0iyIsMwWp5TTdSdnOLvg2XDVf21OYt1vnfiMcs5dnIDHOIFVavIRzMR
- yzW6vFzdHW@eapsim.foo").
- The following plaintext will be encrypted and stored in the
- AT_ENCR_DATA attribute. Note that AT_PADDING is not used because the
- length of the plaintext is a multiple of 16 bytes.
- 13 ; Attribute type: AT_COUNTER
- 01 ; Attribute length: 4 octets (1*4)
- 00 01 ; Counter value
- 15 ; Attribute type: AT_NONCE_S
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 01 23 45 67 ; NONCE_S value
- 89 ab cd ef
- fe dc ba 98
- 76 54 32 10
- 85 ; Attribute type: AT_NEXT_REAUTH_ID
- 16 ; Attribute length: 88 octets (22*4)
- 00 51 ; Actual re-auth identity length: 81 octets
- 75 74 61 30 4d 30 69 79 49 73 4d 77 57 70 35 54
- 54 64 53 64 6e 4f 4c 76 67 32 58 44 56 66 32 31
- 4f 59 74 31 76 6e 66 69 4d 63 73 35 64 6e 49 44
- 48 4f 49 46 56 61 76 49 52 7a 4d 52 79 7a 57 36
- 76 46 7a 64 48 57 40 65 61 70 73 69 6d 2e 66 6f
- 6f
- 00 00 00 ; (attribute padding)
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 87]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The EAP packet looks like this:
- 01 ; Code: Request
- 01 ; Identifier: 1
- 00 a4 ; Length: 164 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0d ; EAP-SIM subtype: Re-authentication
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 81 ; Attribute type: AT_IV
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- d5 85 ac 77 ; IV value
- 86 b9 03 36
- 65 7c 77 b4
- 65 75 b9 c4
- 82 ; Attribute type: AT_ENCR_DATA
- 1d ; Attribute length: 116 octets (29*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 68 62 91 a9 d2 ab c5 8c aa 32 94 b6 e8 5b 44 84
- 6c 44 e5 dc b2 de 8b 9e 80 d6 9d 49 85 8a 5d b8
- 4c dc 1c 9b c9 5c 01 b9 6b 6e ca 31 34 74 ae a6
- d3 14 16 e1 9d aa 9d f7 0f 05 00 88 41 ca 80 14
- 96 4d 3b 30 a4 9b cf 43 e4 d3 f1 8e 86 29 5a 4a
- 2b 38 d9 6c 97 05 c2 bb b0 5c 4a ac e9 7d 5e af
- f5 64 04 6c 8b d3 0b c3 9b e5 e1 7a ce 2b 10 a6
- 0b ; Attribute type: AT_MAC
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 48 3a 17 99 ; MAC value
- b8 3d 7c d3
- d0 a1 e4 01
- d9 ee 47 70
- The MAC is calculated over the EAP packet above (with MAC value set
- to zero; a total of 164 bytes).
- Finally, the server derives new keys. The XKEY' is calculated as
- described in Section 7*:
- XKEY' = 863dc120 32e08343 c1a2308d b48377f6 801f58d4
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 88]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- The new MSK and EMSK are derived using the PRNG (note that K_encr and
- K_aut stay the same).
- MSK = 6263f614 973895e1 335f7e30 cff028ee
- 2176f519 002c9abe 732fe0ef 00cf167c
- 756d9e4c ed6d5ed6 40eb3fe3 8565ca07
- 6e7fb8a8 17cfe8d9 adbce441 d47c4f5e
- EMSK = 3d8ff786 3a630b2b 06e2cf20 9684c13f
- 6b82f992 f2b06f1b 54bf51ef 237f2a40
- 1ef5e0d7 e098a34c 533eaebf 34578854
- b7721526 20a777f0 e0340884 a294fb73
- A.10. EAP-Response/SIM/Re-authentication
- The client's response includes the counter as well. The following
- plaintext will be encrypted and stored in the AT_ENCR_DATA attribute:
- 13 ; Attribute type: AT_COUNTER
- 01 ; Attribute length: 4 octets (1*4)
- 00 01 ; Counter value
- 06 ; Attribute type: AT_PADDING
- 03 ; Attribute length: 12 octets (3*4)
- 00 00 00 00
- 00 00 00 00
- 00 00
- The EAP packet looks like this:
- 02 ; Code: Response
- 01 ; Identifier: 1
- 00 44 ; Length: 68 octets
- 12 ; Type: EAP-SIM
- 0d ; EAP-SIM subtype: Re-authentication
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- 81 ; Attribute type: AT_IV
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- cd f7 ff a6 ; IV value
- 5d e0 4c 02
- 6b 56 c8 6b
- 76 b1 02 ea
- 82 ; Attribute type: AT_ENCR_DATA
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- b6 ed d3 82
- 79 e2 a1 42
- 3c 1a fc 5c
- 45 5c 7d 56
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 89]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- 0b ; Attribute type: AT_MAC
- 05 ; Attribute length: 20 octets (5*4)
- 00 00 ; (reserved)
- fa f7 6b 71 ; MAC value
- fb e2 d2 55
- b9 6a 35 66
- c9 15 c6 17
- The MAC is calculated over the EAP packet above (with MAC value set
- to zero), followed by the NONCE_S value (a total of 84 bytes).
- The next packet will be EAP-Success:
- 03 ; Code: Success
- 01 ; Identifier: 1
- 00 04 ; Length: 4 octets
- Appendix B. Pseudo-Random Number Generator
- The "|" character denotes concatenation, and "^" denotes
- exponentiation.
- Step 1: Choose a new, secret value for the seed-key, XKEY
- Step 2: In hexadecimal notation let
- t = 67452301 EFCDAB89 98BADCFE 10325476 C3D2E1F0
- This is the initial value for H0|H1|H2|H3|H4
- in the FIPS SHS [SHA-1]
- Step 3: For j = 0 to m - 1 do
- 3.1 XSEED_j = 0 /* no optional user input */
- 3.2 For i = 0 to 1 do
- a. XVAL = (XKEY + XSEED_j) mod 2^b
- b. w_i = G(t, XVAL)
- c. XKEY = (1 + XKEY + w_i) mod 2^b
- 3.3 x_j = w_0|w_1
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 90]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Authors' Addresses
- Henry Haverinen (editor)
- Nokia Enterprise Solutions
- P.O. Box 12
- FIN-40101 Jyvaskyla
- Finland
- EMail: henry.haverinen@nokia.com
- Joseph Salowey (editor)
- Cisco Systems
- 2901 Third Avenue
- Seattle, WA 98121
- USA
- Phone: +1 206 256 3380
- EMail: jsalowey@cisco.com
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 91]
- RFC 4186 EAP-SIM Authentication January 2006
- Full Copyright Statement
- Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
- 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
- INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
- WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
- Intellectual Property
- The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
- Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
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- might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
- made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
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- Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
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- copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
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- ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
- Acknowledgement
- Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
- Administrative Support Activity (IASA).
- Haverinen & Salowey Informational [Page 92]
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