IP Security Remote Access BOF (ipsra) Tuesday, March 28 at 1300-1515 ============================== CHAIRS: Paul Hoffman Sara Bitan DESCRIPTION: The work of the IPSec working group is almost concluded at the time this charter is being written. The IPSEC working group has produced three proposed-standard protocols: AH, ESP, and IKE. When the IPSec WG considered requirements for the protocols it produced, inadequate attention was given to the support for so-called "road warriors"-- remote users that use personal portable computing devices, or who use internet "kiosks" to access private networks on the other side of an IPSEC gateway. Such users will typically connect to the Internet at a point most convenient to them at the time of connection: o Dial-in to a local ISP o Wireless or wired LAN access at a conference, hotel or airport There are some fundamental differences (that are relevant to IPSec usage) between these remote access scenarios and scenarios where both parties reside in fixed locations: - The authenticated entity must be a human user, i.e. human interaction is required during the authentication process. - In each session the remote access entity interacts with at least two access points- the internet access point and the organization entry point. The authentication must be established between the remote access entity and the entry point to its organization (and not into the ISP). - The remote access entity wishes to connect to its organization's distributed network. This network might be large and complex and with multiple remote access entry points. Although the user physical location is not changing during the remote access session, the user might use different entry points during the same session. - In the above scenario, the entry points don't have information on all the entities that are allowed to access the network. When the remote access begins the entry point should obtain information on the remote access entity that will enable it to grant secure access to the network. This information might be credentials supplied by the remote access entity itself, or information supplied by some other server. - Several human users can share the same physical machine. - The remote access entity doesn't have its configuration information. This information must be transported securely to the remote access implementation after the entity's identity has been authenticated. - There are systers that rely on different identities for access control - example are IP address, NT users names and others. Most of the time the user's remote access implementation won't have this information available to it before the connection begins. Organizations will not change their access control systems. Hence this information must be conveyed securely to the remote access's implementation after the authentication. IKE supports four authentication methods; one method is based on pre-shared secrets, while the other three are all public-key variants, with various desirable properties. The use of pre-shared secrets scales very badly, requiring O(N**2) keys to be managed to provide effective security. The authentication methods based on public-key technology assume, to a certain extent, that the organization involved has deployed its own public-key infrastructure for authentication of individual human users. This assumption is taking much longer to reach fruition than one would hope. Most organizations have legacy authentication systems that are adequate for providing authentication of individual human users (OTP, username/password, hardware authentication tokens, etc). Most organizations insist on the ability to continue to to support such legacy authentication mechanisms as they deploy an IPSEC infrastructure at the perimeter of their networks. The goals of this working group are : - to define a standard mechanism to accomplish human user authentication to an IPSec device running IKE, using legacy authentication mechanisms. One of the goals of introducing this mechanism is to allow for an easy migration path to PKI. The mechanism will be published as a standards-track protocol document. - to define a standard mechanism to convey user configuration information from user's own private network to its local IPSec implementation. This mechanism will be published as a standards-track protocol document. - to provide a standard mechanism to convey user information required for access control (e.g. NT user names) from the user's own private network to its local IPSec implementation, while answering the special requirements of remote access users. This mechanism will be published as a standards-track protocol document. The WG strongly prefers mechanisms that require no changes to AH, ESP or IKE protocols. If such changes are deemed necessary, the IPSec WG is contracted to carry out such changes. Persuing this approach is most likely to produce mechanisms that are easy to implement and deploy. AGENDA: Agenda bashing, 5 min Charter status, 10 min Requirements draft proposals, 30 min Remote access key exchange proposals, 45 min Remote access configuration setup proposals, 15 min