draft-ietf-6man-addr-select-opt-12

[フレーム]

6man Working Group A. Matsumoto
Internet-Draft T. Fujisaki
Intended status: Standards Track NTT
Expires: March 25, 2014 T. Chown
 University of Southampton
 September 21, 2013
 Distributing Address Selection Policy using DHCPv6
 draft-ietf-6man-addr-select-opt-12.txt
Abstract
 RFC 6724 defines default address selection mechanisms for IPv6 that
 allow nodes to select an appropriate address when faced with multiple
 source and/or destination addresses to choose between. RFC 6724
 allows for the future definition of methods to administratively
 configure the address selection policy information. This document
 defines a new DHCPv6 option for such configuration, allowing a site
 administrator to distribute address selection policy overriding the
 default address selection parameters and policy table, and thus to
 control the address selection behavior of nodes in their site.
Status of This Memo
 This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
 provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
 Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
 Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
 working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
 Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
 Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
 and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
 time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
 material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
 This Internet-Draft will expire on March 25, 2014.
Copyright Notice
 Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors. All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
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 publication of this document. Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
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 This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
 Contributions published or made publicly available before November
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 material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
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 Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
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 than English.
1. Introduction
 [RFC6724] describes default algorithms for selecting an address when
 a node has multiple destination and/or source addresses to choose
 from by using an address selection policy. This specification
 defines a new DHCPv6 option for configuring the default policy table.
 Some problems were identified with the default address selection
 policy as originally defined in [RFC3484]. As a result, RFC 3484 was
 updated and obsoleted by [RFC6724]. While this update corrected a
 number of issues identifed from operational experience, it is
 unlikely that any default policy will suit all scenarios, and thus
 mechanisms to control the source address selection policy will be
 necessary. Requirements for those mechanisms are described in
 [RFC5221], while solutions are discussed in
 [I-D.ietf-6man-addr-select-considerations]. Those documents have
 helped shape the improvements in the default address selection
 algorithm in [RFC6724] as well as the requirements for the DHCPv6
 option defined in this specification.
 This option's concept is to serve as a hint for a node about how to
 behave in the network. Ultimately, while the node's administrator
 can control how to deal with the received policy information, the
 implementation SHOULD follow the method described below uniformly, to
 ease troubleshooting and to reduce operational costs.
1.1. Conventions Used in This Document
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 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
1.2. Terminology
 This document uses the terminology defined in [RFC2460] and the
 DHCPv6 specification defined in [RFC3315]
2. Address Selection options
 The Address Selection option provides the address selection policy
 table, and some other configuration parameters.
 An Address Selection option contains zero or more policy table
 options. Multiple policy table options in an Address Selection
 option constitute a single policy table. When an Address Selection
 option does not contain a policy table option, it may be used to just
 convey the A and P flags.
 The format of the Address Selection option is given 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OPTION_ADDRSEL | option-len |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reserved |A|P| |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ POLICY TABLE OPTIONS |
 | (variable length) |
 | |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 1: Address Selection option format
 option-code: OPTION_ADDRSEL (TBD).
 option-len: The total length of the Reserved field, A, P flags, and
 POLICY TABLE OPTIONS in octets.
 Reserved: Reserved field. The server MUST set this value to zero
 and the client MUST ignore its content.
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 A: Automatic Row Addition flag. This flag toggles the Automatic
 Row Addition flag at client hosts, which is described in section
 2.1 of [RFC6724]. If this flag is set to 1, it does not change
 client host behavior, that is, a client MAY automatically add
 additional site-specific rows to the policy table. If set to 0,
 the Automatic Row Addition flag is disabled, and a client SHOULD
 NOT automatically add rows to the policy table. If the option
 contains a POLICY TABLE option, this flag is meaningless, and
 automatic row addition SHOULD NOT be performed against the
 distributed policy table. This flag SHOULD be set to 0 only
 when the Automatic Row Addition at client hosts is harmful for
 site-specific reasons.
 P: Privacy Preference flag. This flag toggles the Privacy
 Preference flag on client hosts, which is described in section 5
 of [RFC6724]. If this flag is set to 1, it does not change
 client host behavior, that is, a client will prefer temporary
 addresses [RFC4941]. If set to 0, the Privacy Preference flag
 is disabled, and a client will prefer public addresses. This
 flag SHOULD be set to 0 only when the temporary addresses should
 not be preferred for site-specific reasons.
 POLICY TABLE OPTIONS: Zero or more Address Selection Policy Table
 options, as described below. This option corresponds to a row
 in the policy table defined in section 2.1 of [RFC6724].
 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
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OPTION_ADDRSEL_TABLE | option-len |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | label | precedence | prefix-len | |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |
 | |
 | prefix (variable length) |
 | |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 2: Address Selection Policy Table option format
 option-code: OPTION_ADDRSEL_TABLE (TBD).
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 option-len: The total length of the label field, precedence field,
 prefix-len field, and prefix field.
 label: An 8-bit unsigned integer; this value is for correlation of
 source address prefixes and destination address prefixes. This
 field is used to deliver a label value in the [RFC6724] policy
 table.
 precedence: An 8-bit unsigned integer; this value is used for
 sorting destination addresses. This field is used to to deliver
 a precedence value in [RFC6724] policy table.
 prefix-len: An 8-bit unsigned integer; the number of leading bits in
 the prefix that are valid. The value ranges from 0 to 128. If
 an option with a prefix length greater than 128 is included, the
 whole Address Selection option MUST be ignored.
 prefix: A variable-length field containing an IP address or the
 prefix of an IP address. An IPv4-mapped address [RFC4291] must
 be used to represent an IPv4 address as a prefix value. This
 field is padded with zeros up to the nearest octet boundary when
 prefix-len is not divisible by 8. This can be expressed using
 the following equation: (prefix-len + 7)/8 So the length of this
 field should be between 0 and 16 bytes. For example, the prefix
 2001:db8::/60 would be encoded with an prefix-len of 60, the
 prefix would be 8 octets and would contains octets 20 01 0d b8
 00 00 00 00.
3. Processing the Address Selection option
 This section describes how to process a received Address Selection
 option at the DHCPv6 client.
 This option's concept is to serve as a hint for a node about how to
 behave in the network. Ultimately, while the node's administrator
 can control how to deal with the received policy information, the
 implementation SHOULD follow the method described below uniformly, to
 ease troubleshooting and to reduce operational costs.
3.1. Handling local configurations
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 [RFC6724] defines two flags (A, P) and the default policy table.
 Also, users are usually able to configure the flags and the policy
 table to satisfy their own requirements.
 The client implementation SHOULD provide the following choices to the
 user.
 (a) replace the existing flags and active policy table with the
 DHCPv6 distributed flags and policy table.
 (b) preserve the existing flags and active policy table, whether
 this be the default policy table, or user configured policy.
 Choice (a) SHOULD be the default, i.e. that the policy table is not
 explictly configured by the user.
3.2. Handling stale distributed flags and policy table
 When the information from the DHCP server goes stale, the flags and
 the policy table received from the DHCP server SHOULD be deprecated.
 The received information can be considered stale in several cases,
 e.g., when the interface goes down, the DHCP server does not respond
 for a certain amount of time, and the Information Refresh Time is
 expired.
3.3. Handling multiple interfaces
 The policy table, and other parameters specified in this document,
 are node-global information by their nature. One reason being that
 the outbound interface is usually chosen after destination address
 selection. So a host cannot make use of multiple address selection
 policies even if they are stored per interface.
 The policy table is defined as a whole, so the slightest addition/
 deletion from the policy table brings a change in the semantics of
 the policy.
 It also should be noted that the absence of a DHCP-distributed policy
 from a certain network interface should not infer that the network
 administrator does not care about address selection policy at all,
 because it may mean there is a preference to use the default address
 selection policy. So, it should be safe to assume that the default
 address selection policy should be used where no overriding policy is
 provided.
 Under the above assumptions, we can specify how to handle received
 policy as follows.
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 In the absence of distributed policy for a certain network interface,
 the default address selection policy SHOULD be used. A node should
 use Address Selection options by default in any of the following two
 cases:
 1: A single-homed host SHOULD use default address selection options,
 where the host belongs exclusively to one administrative network
 domain, usually through one active network interface.
 2: Hosts that use advanced heuristics to deal with multiple received
 policies that are defined outside the scope of this document
 SHOULD use Address Selection options.
 Implementations MAY provide configuration options to enable this
 protocol on a per interface basis.
 Implementations MAY store distributed address selection policies per
 interface. They can be used effectively on implementations that
 adopt per-application interface selection.
4. Implementation Considerations
 o The value 'label' is passed as an unsigned integer, but there is
 no special meaning for the value, that is whether it is a large or
 small number. It is used to select a preferred source address
 prefix corresponding to a destination address prefix by matching
 the same label value within the DHCP message. DHCPv6 clients
 SHOULD convert this label to a representation appropriate for the
 local implementation (e.g., string).
 o The maximum number of address selection rules that may be conveyed
 in one DHCPv6 message depends on the prefix length of each rule
 and the maximum DHCPv6 message size defined in [RFC3315]. It is
 possible to carry over 3,000 rules in one DHCPv6 message (maximum
 UDP message size). However, it should not be expected that DHCP
 clients, servers and relay agents can handle UDP fragmentation.
 Network adiministrators SHOULD consider local limitations to the
 maximum DHCPv6 message size that can be reliably transported via
 their specific local infrastructure to end nodes; and therefore
 they SHOULD consider the number of options, the total size of the
 options, and the resulting DHCPv6 message size, when defining
 their policy table.
5. Security Considerations
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 A rogue DHCPv6 server could issue bogus address selection policies to
 a client. This might lead to incorrect address selection by the
 client, and the affected packets might be blocked at an outgoing ISP
 because of ingress filtering, incur additional network charges, or be
 misdirected to an attacker's machine. Alternatively, an IPv6
 transition mechanism might be preferred over native IPv6, even if it
 is available. To guard against such attacks, a legitimate DHCPv6
 server should communicate through a secure, trusted channel, such as
 a channel protected by IPsec, SEND and DHCP authentication, as
 described in section 21 of [RFC3315]. A commonly used alternative
 mitigation is to employ DHCP snooping at Layer 2.
 Another threat surrounds the potential privacy concern as described
 in the security considerations section of [RFC6724], whereby an
 attacker can send packets with different source addresses to a
 destination to solicit different source addresses in the responses
 from that destination. This issue will not be modified by the
 introduction of this option, regardless of whether the host is
 multihomed or not.
6. IANA Considerations
 IANA is requested to assign option codes to OPTION_ADDRSEL and
 OPTION_ADDRSEL_TABLE from the "DHCP Option Codes" registry (http://
 www.iana.org/assignments/dhcpv6-parameters/dhcpv6-parameters.xml).
7. References
7.1. Normative References
 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC3315] Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C.,
 and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for
 IPv6 (DHCPv6)", RFC 3315, July 2003.
 [RFC6724] Thaler, D., Draves, R., Matsumoto, A., and T. Chown,
 "Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6
 (IPv6)", RFC 6724, September 2012.
7.2. Informative References
 [I-D.ietf-6man-addr-select-considerations]
 Chown, T. and A. Matsumoto, "Considerations for IPv6
 Address Selection Policy Changes", draft-ietf-6man-addr-
 select-considerations-05 (work in progress), April 2013.
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Internet-Draft DHCPv6 Address Selection Policy Opt September 2013
 [RFC2460] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, December 1998.
 [RFC3484] Draves, R., "Default Address Selection for Internet
 Protocol version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 3484, February 2003.
 [RFC4291] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
 Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
 [RFC4941] Narten, T., Draves, R., and S. Krishnan, "Privacy
 Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in
 IPv6", RFC 4941, September 2007.
 [RFC5220] Matsumoto, A., Fujisaki, T., Hiromi, R., and K. Kanayama,
 "Problem Statement for Default Address Selection in Multi-
 Prefix Environments: Operational Issues of RFC 3484
 Default Rules", RFC 5220, July 2008.
 [RFC5221] Matsumoto, A., Fujisaki, T., Hiromi, R., and K. Kanayama,
 "Requirements for Address Selection Mechanisms", RFC 5221,
 July 2008.
Appendix A. Acknowledgements
 Authors would like to thank to Dave Thaler, Pekka Savola, Remi Denis-
 Courmont, Francois-Xavier Le Bail, Ole Troan, Bob Hinden, Dmitry
 Anipko, Ray Hunter, Rui Paulo, Brian E Carpenter, Tom Petch, and the
 members of 6man's address selection design team for their invaluable
 contributions to this document.
Appendix B. Examples
 [RFC5220] gives several cases where address selection problems
 happen. This section contains some examples for solving those cases
 by using the DHCP option defined in this text to update the hosts'
 policy table in a network accordingly. There is also some discussion
 of example policy tables in sections 10.3 to 10.7 of RFC 6724.
B.1. Ingress Filtering Problem
 In the case described in section 2.1.2 of [RFC5220], the following
 policy table should be distributed, when Router performs static
 routing and directs the default route to ISP1 as per Figure 2. By
 putting the same label value to all IPv6 addresses (::/0) and the
 local subnet (2001:db8:1000:1::/64), a host picks a source address in
 this subnet to send a packet via the default route.
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 Prefix Precedence Label
 ::1/128 50 0
 ::/0 40 1
 2001:db8:1000:1::/64 45 1
 2001:db8:8000:1::/64 45 14
 ::ffff:0:0/96 35 4
 2002::/16 30 2
 2001::/32 5 5
 fc00::/7 3 13
 ::/96 1 3
 fec0::/10 1 11
 3ffe::/16 1 12
B.2. Half-Closed Network Problem
 In the case described in section 2.1.3 of [RFC5220], the following
 policy table should be distributed. By splitting the closed network
 prefix (2001:db8:8000::/36) from all IPv6 addresses (::/0) and giving
 different labels, the closed network prefix will only be used when
 packets are destined for the closed network.
 Prefix Precedence Label
 ::1/128 50 0
 ::/0 40 1
 2001:db8:8000::/36 45 14
 ::ffff:0:0/96 35 4
 2002::/16 30 2
 2001::/32 5 5
 fc00::/7 3 13
 ::/96 1 3
 fec0::/10 1 11
 3ffe::/16 1 12
B.3. IPv4 or IPv6 Prioritization
 In the case described in section 2.2.1 of [RFC5220], the following
 policy table should be distributed to prioritize IPv6. This case is
 also described in [RFC6724]
 Prefix Precedence Label
 ::1/128 50 0
 ::/0 40 1
 ::ffff:0:0/96 100 4
 2002::/16 30 2
 2001::/32 5 5
 fc00::/7 3 13
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 ::/96 1 3
 fec0::/10 1 11
 3ffe::/16 1 12
B.4. ULA or Global Prioritization
 In the case described in section 2.2.3 of [RFC5220], the following
 policy table should be distributed, or Automatic Row Addition flag
 should be set to 1. By splitting the ULA in this site
 (fc12:3456:789a::/48) from all IPv6 addresses (::/0) and giving it
 higher precendence, the ULA will be used to connect to servers in the
 same site.
 Prefix Precedence Label
 ::1/128 50 0
 fc12:3456:789a::/48 45 14
 ::/0 40 1
 ::ffff:0:0/96 35 4
 2002::/16 30 2
 2001::/32 5 5
 fc00::/7 3 13
 ::/96 1 3
 fec0::/10 1 11
 3ffe::/16 1 12
Authors' Addresses
 Arifumi Matsumoto
 NTT NT Lab
 3-9-11 Midori-Cho
 Musashino-shi, Tokyo 180-8585
 Japan
 Phone: +81 422 59 3334
 Email: arifumi@nttv6.net
 Tomohiro Fujisaki
 NTT NT Lab
 3-9-11 Midori-Cho
 Musashino-shi, Tokyo 180-8585
 Japan
 Phone: +81 422 59 7351
 Email: fujisaki@nttv6.net
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 Tim Chown
 University of Southampton
 Southampton, Hampshire SO17 1BJ
 United Kingdom
 Email: tjc@ecs.soton.ac.uk
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