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Revision: 1.15
Committed: Fri Apr 24 21:55:29 2015 UTC (9 years, 1 month ago) by root
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Changes since 1.14: +7 -15 lines
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135     .IX Title "GVPE.PROTOCOL 7"
136 root 1.15 .TH GVPE.PROTOCOL 7 "2015-01-29" "2.25" "GNU Virtual Private Ethernet"
137 root 1.12 .\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
138     .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
139     .if n .ad l
140     .nh
141     .SH "The GNU-VPE Protocols"
142     .IX Header "The GNU-VPE Protocols"
143     .SH "Overview"
144     .IX Header "Overview"
145 root 1.14 \&\s-1GVPE\s0 can make use of a number of protocols. One of them is the \s-1GNU VPE\s0
146 root 1.12 protocol which is used to authenticate tunnels and send encrypted data
147     packets. This protocol is described in more detail the second part of this
148     document.
149     .PP
150     The first part of this document describes the transport protocols which
151 root 1.14 are used by \s-1GVPE\s0 to send its data packets over the network.
152 root 1.12 .SH "PART 1: Transport protocols"
153     .IX Header "PART 1: Transport protocols"
154     \&\s-1GVPE\s0 offers a wide range of transport protocols that can be used to
155     interchange data between nodes. Protocols differ in their overhead, speed,
156     reliability, and robustness.
157     .PP
158     The following sections describe each transport protocol in more
159     detail. They are sorted by overhead/efficiency, the most efficient
160     transport is listed first:
161 root 1.14 .SS "\s-1RAW IP\s0"
162 root 1.12 .IX Subsection "RAW IP"
163     This protocol is the best choice, performance-wise, as the minimum
164     overhead per packet is only 38 bytes.
165     .PP
166     It works by sending the \s-1VPN\s0 payload using raw \s-1IP\s0 frames (using the
167     protocol set by \f(CW\*(C`ip\-proto\*(C'\fR).
168     .PP
169     Using raw \s-1IP\s0 frames has the drawback that many firewalls block \*(L"unknown\*(R"
170     protocols, so this transport only works if you have full \s-1IP\s0 connectivity
171     between nodes.
172     .SS "\s-1ICMP\s0"
173     .IX Subsection "ICMP"
174     This protocol offers very low overhead (minimum 42 bytes), and can
175     sometimes tunnel through firewalls when other protocols can not.
176     .PP
177     It works by prepending an \s-1ICMP\s0 header with type \f(CW\*(C`icmp\-type\*(C'\fR and a code
178     of \f(CW255\fR. The default \f(CW\*(C`icmp\-type\*(C'\fR is \f(CW\*(C`echo\-reply\*(C'\fR, so the resulting
179     packets look like echo replies, which looks rather strange to network
180     administrators.
181     .PP
182     This transport should only be used if other transports (i.e. raw \s-1IP\s0) are
183     not available or undesirable (due to their overhead).
184     .SS "\s-1UDP\s0"
185     .IX Subsection "UDP"
186     This is a good general choice for the transport protocol as \s-1UDP\s0 packets
187     tunnel well through most firewalls and routers, and the overhead per
188     packet is moderate (minimum 58 bytes).
189     .PP
190 root 1.14 It should be used if \s-1RAW IP\s0 is not available.
191 root 1.12 .SS "\s-1TCP\s0"
192     .IX Subsection "TCP"
193     This protocol is a very bad choice, as it not only has high overhead (more
194 root 1.14 than 60 bytes), but the transport also retries on its own, which leads
195 root 1.12 to congestion when the link has moderate packet loss (as both the \s-1TCP\s0
196     transport and the tunneled traffic will retry, increasing congestion more
197     and more). It also has high latency and is quite inefficient.
198     .PP
199     It's only useful when tunneling through firewalls that block better
200     protocols. If a node doesn't have direct internet access but a \s-1HTTP\s0 proxy
201     that supports the \s-1CONNECT\s0 method it can be used to tunnel through a web
202     proxy. For this to work, the \f(CW\*(C`tcp\-port\*(C'\fR should be \f(CW443\fR (\f(CW\*(C`https\*(C'\fR), as
203     most proxies do not allow connections to other ports.
204     .PP
205     It is an abuse of the usage a proxy was designed for, so make sure you are
206 root 1.14 allowed to use it for \s-1GVPE.\s0
207 root 1.12 .PP
208     This protocol also has server and client sides. If the \f(CW\*(C`tcp\-port\*(C'\fR is
209     set to zero, other nodes cannot connect to this node directly. If the
210     \&\f(CW\*(C`tcp\-port\*(C'\fR is non-zero, the node can act both as a client as well as a
211     server.
212     .SS "\s-1DNS\s0"
213     .IX Subsection "DNS"
214     \&\fB\s-1WARNING:\s0\fR Parsing and generating \s-1DNS\s0 packets is rather tricky. The code
215     almost certainly contains buffer overflows and other, likely exploitable,
216     bugs. You have been warned.
217     .PP
218     This is the worst choice of transport protocol with respect to overhead
219     (overhead can be 2\-3 times higher than the transferred data), and latency
220     (which can be many seconds). Some \s-1DNS\s0 servers might not be prepared to
221     handle the traffic and drop or corrupt packets. The client also has to
222     constantly poll the server for data, so the client will constantly create
223     traffic even if it doesn't need to transport packets.
224     .PP
225     In addition, the same problems as the \s-1TCP\s0 transport also plague this
226     protocol.
227     .PP
228     Its only use is to tunnel through firewalls that do not allow direct
229     internet access. Similar to using a \s-1HTTP\s0 proxy (as the \s-1TCP\s0 transport
230     does), it uses a local \s-1DNS\s0 server/forwarder (given by the \f(CW\*(C`dns\-forw\-host\*(C'\fR
231     configuration value) as a proxy to send and receive data as a client,
232     and an \f(CW\*(C`NS\*(C'\fR record pointing to the \s-1GVPE\s0 server (as given by the
233     \&\f(CW\*(C`dns\-hostname\*(C'\fR directive).
234     .PP
235     The only good side of this protocol is that it can tunnel through most
236     firewalls mostly undetected, iff the local \s-1DNS\s0 server/forwarder is sane
237     (which is true for most routers, wireless \s-1LAN\s0 gateways and nameservers).
238     .PP
239     Fine-tuning needs to be done by editing \f(CW\*(C`src/vpn_dns.C\*(C'\fR directly.
240     .SH "PART 2: The GNU VPE protocol"
241     .IX Header "PART 2: The GNU VPE protocol"
242     This section, unfortunately, is not yet finished, although the protocol
243     is stable (until bugs in the cryptography are found, which will likely
244     completely change the following description). Nevertheless, it should give
245     you some overview over the protocol.
246     .SS "Anatomy of a \s-1VPN\s0 packet"
247     .IX Subsection "Anatomy of a VPN packet"
248     The exact layout and field lengths of a \s-1VPN\s0 packet is determined at
249     compile time and doesn't change. The same structure is used for all
250 root 1.14 transport protocols, be it \s-1RAWIP\s0 or \s-1TCP.\s0
251 root 1.12 .PP
252     .Vb 3
253     \& +\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+
254     \& | HMAC | TYPE | SRCDST | DATA |
255     \& +\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+
256     .Ve
257     .PP
258     The \s-1HMAC\s0 field is present in all packets, even if not used (e.g. in auth
259 root 1.14 request packets), in which case it is set to all zeroes. The \s-1MAC\s0 itself is
260     calculated over the \s-1TYPE, SRCDST\s0 and \s-1DATA\s0 fields in all cases.
261 root 1.12 .PP
262     The \s-1TYPE\s0 field is a single byte and determines the purpose of the packet
263 root 1.14 (e.g. \s-1RESET, COMPRESSED/UNCOMPRESSED DATA, PING, AUTH REQUEST/RESPONSE,
264     CONNECT REQUEST/INFO\s0 etc.).
265 root 1.12 .PP
266     \&\s-1SRCDST\s0 is a three byte field which contains the source and destination
267     node IDs (12 bits each).
268     .PP
269     The \s-1DATA\s0 portion differs between each packet type, naturally, and is the
270     only part that can be encrypted. Data packets contain more fields, as
271     shown:
272     .PP
273     .Vb 3
274 root 1.15 \& +\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+
275     \& | HMAC | TYPE | SRCDST | SEQNO | DATA |
276     \& +\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+
277 root 1.12 .Ve
278     .PP
279     \&\s-1SEQNO\s0 is a 32\-bit sequence number. It is negotiated at every connection
280 root 1.13 initialization and starts at some random 31 bit value. \s-1GVPE\s0 currently uses
281 root 1.12 a sliding window of 512 packets/sequence numbers to detect reordering,
282     duplication and replay attacks.
283     .PP
284 root 1.15 The encryption is done on \s-1SEQNO+DATA\s0 in \s-1CTR\s0 mode with \s-1IV\s0 generated from
285     the seqno (for \s-1AES:\s0 seqno || seqno || seqno || (u32)0), which ensures
286     uniqueness for a given key.
287 root 1.13 .SS "The authentication/key exchange protocol"
288     .IX Subsection "The authentication/key exchange protocol"
289 root 1.12 Before nodes can exchange packets, they need to establish authenticity of
290     the other side and a key. Every node has a private \s-1RSA\s0 key and the public
291     \&\s-1RSA\s0 keys of all other nodes.
292     .PP
293 root 1.13 When a node wants to establish a connection to another node, it sends an
294 root 1.14 RSA-OEAP-encrypted challenge and an \s-1ECDH \s0(curve25519) key. The other node
295     replies with its own \s-1ECDH\s0 key and a \s-1HKDF\s0 of the challenge and both \s-1ECDH\s0
296     keys to prove its identity.
297 root 1.13 .PP
298     The remote node enganges in exactly the same protocol. When both nodes
299     have exchanged their challenge and verified the response, they calculate a
300     cipher key and a \s-1HMAC\s0 key and start exchanging data packets.
301     .PP
302     In detail, the challenge consist of:
303     .PP
304     .Vb 1
305     \& RSA\-OAEP (SEQNO MAC CIPHER SALT EXTRA\-AUTH) ECDH1
306     .Ve
307     .PP
308     That is, it encrypts (with the public key of the remote node) an initial
309     sequence number for data packets, key material for the \s-1HMAC\s0 key, key
310 root 1.14 material for the cipher key, a salt used by the \s-1HKDF \s0(as shown later) and
311 root 1.13 some extra random bytes that are unused except for authentication. It also
312     sends the public key of a curve25519 exchange.
313     .PP
314 root 1.14 The remote node decrypts the \s-1RSA\s0 data, generates its own \s-1ECDH\s0 key (\s-1ECDH2\s0),
315     and replies with:
316 root 1.13 .PP
317     .Vb 1
318     \& HKDF\-Expand (HKDF\-Extract (ECDH2, RSA), ECDH1, AUTH_DIGEST_SIZE) ECDH2
319     .Ve
320     .PP
321 root 1.14 That is, it extracts from the decrypted \s-1RSA\s0 challenge, using its \s-1ECDH\s0
322 root 1.13 key as salt, and then expands using the requesting node's \s-1ECDH1\s0 key. The
323 root 1.14 resulting hash is returned as a proof that the node could decrypt the \s-1RSA\s0
324 root 1.13 challenge data, together with the \s-1ECDH\s0 key.
325     .PP
326     After both nodes have done this to each other, they calculate the shared
327 root 1.14 \&\s-1ECDH\s0 secret, cipher and \s-1HMAC\s0 keys for the session (each node generates two
328     cipher and \s-1HMAC\s0 keys, one for sending and one for receiving).
329 root 1.13 .PP
330     The \s-1HMAC\s0 key for sending is generated as follow:
331     .PP
332     .Vb 1
333     \& HMAC_KEY = HKDF\-Expand (HKDF\-Extract (REMOTE_SALT, MAC ECDH_SECRET), info, HMAC_MD_SIZE)
334     .Ve
335     .PP
336 root 1.14 It extracts from \s-1MAC\s0 and \s-1ECDH_SECRET\s0 using the \fIremote\fR \s-1SALT,\s0 then
337 root 1.13 expands using a static info string.
338     .PP
339     The cipher key is generated in the same way, except using the \s-1CIPHER\s0 part
340     of the original challenge.
341     .PP
342     The result of this process is to authenticate each node to the other
343 root 1.14 node, while exchanging keys using both \s-1RSA\s0 and \s-1ECDH,\s0 the latter providing
344 root 1.13 perfect forward secrecy.
345     .PP
346     The protocol has been overdesigned where this was possible without
347     increasing implementation complexity, in an attempt to protect against
348     implementation or protocol failures. For example, if the \s-1ECDH\s0 challenge
349 root 1.14 was found to be flawed, perfect forward secrecy would be lost, but the
350     data would likely still be protected. Likewise, standard algorithms and
351 root 1.13 implementations are used where possible.
352 root 1.12 .SS "Retrying"
353     .IX Subsection "Retrying"
354     When there is no response to an auth request, the node will send auth
355     requests in bursts with an exponential back-off. After some time it will
356     resort to \s-1PING\s0 packets, which are very small (8 bytes + protocol header)
357     and lightweight (no \s-1RSA\s0 operations required). A node that receives ping
358     requests from an unconnected peer will respond by trying to create a
359     connection.
360     .PP
361     In addition to the exponential back-off, there is a global rate-limit on
362     a per-IP base. It allows long bursts but will limit total packet rate to
363     something like one control packet every ten seconds, to avoid accidental
364     floods due to protocol problems (like a \s-1RSA\s0 key file mismatch between two
365     nodes).
366     .PP
367     The intervals between retries are limited by the \f(CW\*(C`max\-retry\*(C'\fR
368     configuration value. A node with \f(CW\*(C`connect\*(C'\fR = \f(CW\*(C`always\*(C'\fR will always retry,
369     a node with \f(CW\*(C`connect\*(C'\fR = \f(CW\*(C`ondemand\*(C'\fR will only try (and re-try) to connect
370     as long as there are packets in the queue, usually this limits the retry
371     period to \f(CW\*(C`max\-ttl\*(C'\fR seconds.
372     .PP
373     Sending packets over the \s-1VPN\s0 will reset the retry intervals as well, which
374     means as long as somebody is trying to send packets to a given node, \s-1GVPE\s0
375     will try to connect every few seconds.
376     .SS "Routing and Protocol translation"
377     .IX Subsection "Routing and Protocol translation"
378     The \s-1GVPE\s0 routing algorithm is easy: there isn't much routing to speak
379     of: When routing packets to another node, \s-1GVPE\s0 tries the following
380     options, in order:
381     .IP "If the two nodes should be able to reach each other directly (common protocol, port known), then \s-1GVPE\s0 will send the packet directly to the other node." 4
382     .IX Item "If the two nodes should be able to reach each other directly (common protocol, port known), then GVPE will send the packet directly to the other node."
383     .PD 0
384     .ie n .IP "If this isn't possible (e.g. because the node doesn't have a \*(C`hostname\*(C' or known port), but the nodes speak a common protocol and a router is available, then \s-1GVPE\s0 will ask a router to ""mediate"" between both nodes (see below)." 4
385     .el .IP "If this isn't possible (e.g. because the node doesn't have a \f(CW\*(C`hostname\*(C'\fR or known port), but the nodes speak a common protocol and a router is available, then \s-1GVPE\s0 will ask a router to ``mediate'' between both nodes (see below)." 4
386     .IX Item "If this isn't possible (e.g. because the node doesn't have a hostname or known port), but the nodes speak a common protocol and a router is available, then GVPE will ask a router to mediate between both nodes (see below)."
387     .ie n .IP "If a direct connection isn't possible (no common protocols) or forbidden (\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C') and there are any routers, then \s-1GVPE\s0 will try to send packets to the router with the highest priority that is connected already \fIand\fR is able (as specified by the config file) to connect directly to the target node." 4
388     .el .IP "If a direct connection isn't possible (no common protocols) or forbidden (\f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C'\fR) and there are any routers, then \s-1GVPE\s0 will try to send packets to the router with the highest priority that is connected already \fIand\fR is able (as specified by the config file) to connect directly to the target node." 4
389     .IX Item "If a direct connection isn't possible (no common protocols) or forbidden (deny-direct) and there are any routers, then GVPE will try to send packets to the router with the highest priority that is connected already and is able (as specified by the config file) to connect directly to the target node."
390     .IP "If no such router exists, then \s-1GVPE\s0 will simply send the packet to the node with the highest priority available." 4
391     .IX Item "If no such router exists, then GVPE will simply send the packet to the node with the highest priority available."
392     .IP "Failing all that, the packet will be dropped." 4
393     .IX Item "Failing all that, the packet will be dropped."
394     .PD
395     .PP
396 root 1.14 A host can usually declare itself unreachable directly by setting its
397 root 1.12 port number(s) to zero. It can declare other hosts as unreachable by using
398     a config-file that disables all protocols for these other hosts. Another
399     option is to disable all protocols on that host in the other config files.
400     .PP
401     If two hosts cannot connect to each other because their \s-1IP\s0 address(es)
402     are not known (such as dial-up hosts), one side will send a \fImediated\fR
403     connection request to a router (routers must be configured to act as
404     routers!), which will send both the originating and the destination host
405     a connection info request with protocol information and \s-1IP\s0 address of the
406     other host (if known). Both hosts will then try to establish a direct
407     connection to the other peer, which is usually possible even when both
408     hosts are behind a \s-1NAT\s0 gateway.
409     .PP
410     Routing via other nodes works because the \s-1SRCDST\s0 field is not encrypted,
411     so the router can just forward the packet to the destination host. Since
412 root 1.14 each host uses its own private key, the router will not be able to
413 root 1.12 decrypt or encrypt packets, it will just act as a simple router and
414     protocol translator.