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RFC1492 - An Access Control Protocol, Sometimes Called TACACS

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group C. Finseth

Request for Comments: 1492 University of Minnesota

July 1993

An Access Control Protocol, Sometimes Called TACACS

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does

not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is

unlimited.

Background

There used to be a network called ARPANET. This network consisted of

end nodes (hosts), routing nodes (IMPs) and links. There were (at

least) two types of IMPs: those that connected dedicated lines only

and those that could accept dial up lines. The latter were called

"TIPs."

People being what they were, there was a desire to control who could

use the dial up lines. Someone invented a protocol, called "TACACS"

(Terminal Access Controller Access Control System?), which allowed a

TIP to accept a username and passWord and send a query to a TACACS

authentication server, sometimes called a TACACS daemon or simply

TACACSD. This server was normally a program running on a host. The

host would determine whether to accept or deny the request and sent a

response back. The TIP would then allow access or not, based upon

the response.

While TIPs are -- shall we say? -- no longer a major presence on the

Internet, terminal servers are. Cisco Systems terminal servers

implement an extended version of this TACACS protocol. Thus, the

access control decision is delegated to a host. In this way, the

process of making the decision is "opened up" and the algorithms and

data used to make the decision are under the complete control of

whoever is running the TACACS daemon. For example, "anyone with a

first name of Joe can only login after 10:00 PM Mon-Fri, unless his

last name is Smith or there is a Susan already logged in."

The extensions to the protocol provide for more types of

authentication requests and more types of response codes than were in

the original specification.

The original TACACS protocol specification does exist. However, due

to copyright issues, I was not able to oBTain a copy of this document

and this lack of access is the main reason for the writing of this

document. This version of the specification was developed with the

assistance of Cisco Systems, who has an implementation of the TACACS

protocol that is believed to be compatible with the original

specification. To be precise, the Cisco Systems implementation

supports both the simple (non-extended) and extended versions. It is

the simple version that would be compatible with the original.

Please keep in mind that this is an informational RFCand does not

specify a standard, and that more information may be uncovered in the

future (i.e., the original specification may become available) that

could cause parts of this document to be known to be incorrect.

This RFCdocuments the extended TACACS protocol use by the Cisco

Systems terminal servers. This same protocol is used by the

University of Minnesota's distributed authentication system.

1. Protocol Semantics

This section will describe the requests and responses. The following

two sections will describe two different ways of encoding the

protocol.

A request/response pair is the basic unit of interaction. In this

pair, the client sends a request and the server replies with a

response. All requests must be acknowledged with a response. This

requirement implies that all requests can be denied, although it is

probably futile to attempt to deny a "logout" request.

1.1 Connections

In some cases, a string of request/response pairs forms a larger

unit, called a "connection."

There are three types of connections:

1) Authenticate only, no connection:

client: sends an AUTH packet

server: responds with a REPLY

2) Login connection:

client: sends a LOGIN packet

server: responds with a REPLY

repeat zero or more times:

client: sends a CONNECT packet

server: responds with a REPLY

client: sends a LOGOUT packet

server: responds with a REPLY

3) SLIP connection:

client: sends a LOGIN packet

server: responds with a REPLY

repeat zero or more times:

client: sends a CONNECT packet

server: responds with a REPLY

client: sends a SLIPADDR packet

server: responds with a REPLY

repeat zero or more times:

client: sends a CONNECT packet

server: responds with a REPLY

client: sends a SLIPON packet

server: responds with a REPLY

client: sends a LOGOUT packet (immediate)

server: responds with a REPLY

client: sends a SLIPOFF packet

server: responds with a REPLY

1.2 Requests

This section lists the requests supported by the protocol. The

responses are described in the later encodings sections.

AUTH(username, password, line, style)

This request asks for an authentication. The parameters are:

- the username

- the password

- an indication of which line the request is for, and

- a style of authentication

The username is a string that identifies the user. In principle,

it can be of any length and contain any characters. In practice,

it should be no longer than 128 characters and should contain only

the ASCII characters "!" (33 decimal) through "~" (126 decimal),

inclusive.

The password is a string that is used to authenticate the user

identified by the username. In principle, it can be of any length

and contain any characters. In practice, it should be no longer

than 128 characters and should contain only the ASCII characters

"!" (33 decimal) through "~" (126 decimal), inclusive.

The line is a non-negative decimal integer. If the client

supports multiple physical access channels, this value identifies

the particular channel. By convention, lines are numbered

starting from one, although this should be taken with a grain of

salt. For example, Cisco Systems' implementation uses zero to

designate the console port, then continues with one for the "main"

serial lines. Clients that support only one channel should use

line zero.

The authentication style is a possibly empty string. It

identifies the particular style of authentication to be performed.

Its syntax and semantics are local.

Example:

AUTH("fin@unet.umn.edu", "fake-password", 0, "staff")

This specifies a username of "fin@unet.umn.edu" (which happens to

be my e-mail address), a password, an indication that no line is

associated with this request, and a style of "staff". The

semantics for this style might be that I am required to be a staff

member (in addition, of course, to supplying a valid username and

password). The server would presumably consult an external

database to verify the staff status.

As a local option, the implementation may choose to encode the

style information by using alternate port numbers. E.g. port 4001

would mean style 1, 4002 would be style 2, etc.

Note that the AUTH request type cannot be sent using the UDP

encoding.

LOGIN(username, password, line) returns (result1, result2, result3)

This request asks for an authentication and signals that -- if the

authentication sUCceeds -- a login connection is starting. The

parameters are:

- the username

- the password

- an indication of which line the request is for

The meanings of the input fields are the same as the AUTH request.

If the request is successful, this request returns three result

values in addition to the success status. The result values are

non-negative integers. Their interpretation is local. For

example, Cisco Systems terminal servers interpret result3 to be

the identifier of a local access list to use for additional

validation.

CONNECT(username, password, line, destinationIP, destinationPort)

returns (result1, result2, result3)

This request can only be issued when the username and line specify

an already-existing connection. As such, no authentication is

required and the password will in general be the empty string. It

asks, in the context of that connection, whether a TCP connection

can be opened to the specified destination IP address and port.

The return values are as for LOGIN.

SUPERUSER(username, password, line)

This request can only be issued when the username and line specify

an already-existing connection. As such, no authentication is

required and the password will in general be the empty string. It

asks, in the context of that connection, whether the user can go

into "super-user" or "enable" mode on the terminal server.

As an example of the flexibility inherint in this whole scheme,

the TACACSD supplied by Cisco Systems ignores the username part

and instead checks wether the password matches that of the special

user "$enable$".

LOGOUT(username, password, line, reason)

This request can only be issued when the username and line specify

an already-existing connection. As such, no authentication is

required and the password will in general be the empty string. It

indicates that the connection should be terminated (but see

SLIPON). It must be acknowledged, but the success/fail status of

the acknowledgment is irrelevant. The reason value indicates why

the connection is terminating. A null reason value is supplied

when the connection is going into SLIP mode.

SLIPON(username, password, line, SLIPaddress) returns (result1,

result2, result3)

This request can only be issued when the username and line specify

an already-existing connection. As such, no authentication is

required and the password will in general be the empty string. It

asks, in the context of that connection, whether the specified

SLIPaddress can be used for the remote end of the connection.

If the server replies with a success, the client can proceed to a

SLIPON request. (It need not do so right away, however.)

Note that semantics of "username" can get hairy. For example, the

Cisco Systems implementation encodes information in this way:

- If the user just requested the default address be assigned, this

field holds the username in lower case.

- If the user requested a specific IP address or host name for the

SLIP connection, this field contains the requested host name in

UPPER case.

If the server replies with a success, the client will immediately

send a LOGOUT request. However, the connection will remain

established until a SLIPOFF request is sent. No other

authentication requests will be sent for that connection.

SLIPaddress specifies the IP address used by the remote host. If

a SLIPADDR request has been made, it will be that address.

Otherwise, it will be the default address assigned by the client

(e.g., Cisco terminal server).

The return values are as for LOGIN.

SLIPOFF(username, password, line, reason)

This request can only be issued when the username and line specify

an already-existing connection that is in "SLIP" mode. As such,

no authentication is required and the password will in general be

the empty string. It indicates that the connection should be

terminated. It must be acknowledged, but the success/fail status

of the acknowledgment is irrelevant. The reason value indicates

why the connection is terminating.

2.0 UDP Encoding: TACACS

This section describes the UDP encoding of the requests that have

just been described. It also describes the responses. This UDP

encoding forms the basis of the historical TACACS protocol.

This protocol uses port 49. This assignment continues to be

confirmed by the IANA in the Assigned Numbers RFCs. (I can't say

that it was assigned by the IANA as the assignment preceded the

organization.)

The basic packet format is shown here. All multi-bytes values are in

network byte order. Unless otherwise specified, all values given are

in decimal. Unused fields should be set to zero, but the recipient

should not depend on that setting.

As was mentioned earlier, there are both simple and extended forms,

of which the simple form is a proper subset of the extended form. A

server should support both. I will describe both forms in parallel.

Simple Form

The fields are:

offset length field

0 1 version

1 1 type

2 2 nonce value

4 1 username length (to server) / response (to client)

5 1 password length (to server) / reason (to client)

in the usual packet layout format:

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Version : Type : Nonce :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: User len/Resp : PW len/Reason : data... :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Extended Form

The fields are:

offset length field

0 1 version

1 1 type

2 2 nonce value

4 1 username length

5 1 password length

6 1 response

7 1 reason

8 4 result1

12 4 destination host, IP address

16 2 destination port

18 2 line

20 4 result2

24 2 result3

26 varies data: username + password

in the usual packet layout format:

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Version : Type : Nonce :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: User len : Password len : Response : Reason :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Result 1 :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Destination Address :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Dest Port : Line :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Result 2 :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

: Result 3 : data... :

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

2.1 Fields

The VERSION field specifies the version number. It must be zero for

simple or 128 (80 hexadecimal) for extended.

The TYPE field encodes the request type. Values are:

LOGIN 1

RESPONSE 2 (server to client only)

CHANGE 3

FOLLOW 4

CONNECT 5

SUPERUSER 6

LOGOUT 7

RELOAD 8

SLIPON 9

SLIPOFF 10

SLIPADDR 11

Other values below 128 are reserved for future use. Values from 128

to 255 are reserved for local use.

Note that the semantics of the CHANGE, FOLLOW, RELOAD requests have

not been determined.

The NONCE field is set by the client to an arbitrary value. Its

purpose is to allow clients that may have multiple outstanding

requests to determine which request a response is for. The server

must copy this value to the reply unaltered.

The USERNAME LENGTH field is set by the client to the length of the

username in characters. Legal values are 0 to 255, inclusive. The

server must copy this value to the reply unaltered.

The PASSWORD LENGTH is set by the client to the length of the

password in characters. Legal values are 0 to 255, inclusive. The

server must copy this value to the reply unaltered.

The RESPONSE field should be set by the client to zero. The server

sets the value to one of:

value meaning

1 accepted

2 rejected

Other values below 128 are reserved for future use. Values from 128

to 255 are reserved for local use.

The REASON field should be set by the client to zero, except for

LOGOUT and SLIPOFF requests, which may use values of 4, 5, or 6. The

server sets the value to one of:

value meaning notes

0 none used for ACCEPTED or if the server

is ornery

1 eXPiring

2 password

3 denied

4 quit user quit normally

5 idle idle timeout

6 drop carrier dropped

7 bad too many bad passwords

The values from 4 to 6 will only be used for reasons for LOGOUT or

SLIPOFF requests: they will not be returned by the server. Other

values below 128 are reserved for future use. Values from 128 to 255

are reserved for local use.

The RESULT1 field should be set by the client to zero. For LOGIN or

CONNECT requests, it is set by the server as specified in the request

description. For all other requests, it should be set by the server

to zero.

The DESTINATION HOST field is set by the client. On CONNECT, SLIPON,

and SLIPOFF requests it specifies an IP address. It should be set to

zero on all other requests. For SLIPON and SLIPOFF request, this

value should be the IP address assigned to the line. For CONNECT

requests, this value is the IP address of the host that the user is

attempting to connect to. The server copies this value to the reply.

The DESTINATION PORT field is set by the client. On CONNECT requests

it specifies the port number that the user is attempting to connect

to. It should be set to zero on all other requests. The server

copies this value to the reply.

The LINE field is set by the client to the line number that the

request is for. The server copies this value to the reply.

The RESULT2 field should be set by the client to zero. For LOGIN or

CONNECT requests, it is set by the server as specified in the request

description. For all other requests, it should be set by the server

to zero.

The RESULT3 field should be set by the client to zero. For LOGIN or

CONNECT requests, it is set by the server as specified in the request

description. For all other requests, it should be set by the server

to zero.

The DATA field contains just the text of the username and password,

with no separator characters (you use username length and password

length to sort them out). The server does not copy the values to the

reply. (However, the server does copy the username length and

password length fields to the reply.) The username data may be in

upper case: comparisons should be case-insensitive.

2.2 What a Client Does

The client must format and send a UDP request to port 49. It

constructs the request by following these steps:

- set the version to 128

- set the type to that of the request

- set the nonce to a unique value that is different from all

outstanding requests

- set the username length

- set the password length

- set the response to zero

- set the reason to zero (except for LOGOUT and SLIPOFF)

- set the result1 to zero

- if CONNECT, SLIPON, or SLIPOFF, set the destination address

to the IP address, otherwise set it to zero

- if CONNECT, set the destination port to the port, otherwise

set it to zero

- set the line

- set the result2 to zero

- set the result3 to zero

- copy the username to the location just after result3

- copy the password to the location just after the end of the

username

Send the request. Wait for a reasonable (and hopefully configurable)

period of time. If no response has been received, retry a reasonable

(and hopefully configurable) number of times. Reasonable default

wait times are 5 seconds and retries are 2.

If a response has been received, use the nonce value (and as many

other fields as you like) to match it to an outstanding request. If

there is no matching outstanding request, take appropriate (and

hopefully configurable) action such as discarding and/or logging the

packet.

If the response matches an outstanding request, examine the response

and reason codes and take whatever action you deem correct. For

responses to LOGIN and CONNECT requests, also incorporate the

result1, result2, and result3 values as you deem correct.

2.3 What a Server Does

Upon receipt of a UDP format request, the server examines the data in

the request packet and determines its response. It constructs the

reply by following these steps:

- set the version to 128

- set the type to RESPONSE (2)

- copy the nonce value

- copy the username length value

- copy the password length value

- set the response value to the desired response

- set the reason value to the desired reason

- if LOGIN or CONNECT, set the result1 else zero the result1

- copy the destination host value

- copy the destination port value

- copy the line value

- if LOGIN or CONNECT, set the result2 else zero the result2

- if LOGIN or CONNECT, set the result3 else zero the result3

- do NOT copy the username or password data

(As always, be liberal in what you expect and conservative in what

you send.) Send the response. Do not attempt to retry, as you have

no basis for determining whether a retry is required. Any retries

are up to the client. This, of course, implies that requests are

idempotent. They aren't, of course, so the retries must be

considered when trying to assemble requests into connections.

3.0 TCP Encoding

This section describes the TCP encoding of the requests and

responses. This encoding is not compatible with the historical

TACACS protocol. However, it is somewhat more "modern" in that it

has been updated to provide for current feature needs.

This protocol does not use a reserved port. Instead, it must be

possible to configure the ports used by both the the client and

server.

The basic request format is shown here. The request consists of four

lines of ASCII text. All numeric values are expressed in ASCII as

decimal integers.

<version> <type> <parameters>

<username>

<password>

<line>

Each line in the example corresponds to one line of text. That is,

the lines are separated with <CR>/<LF> (13/10 decimal) pairs. In no

event may "bare" <CR> or <LF> characters appear within a field. In

addition, <NUL> (0 decimal) characters may not be sent.

The <version> and <type> fields are separated with one or more

<SPACE> (32 decimal) or <TAB> (9 decimal) characters.

The <parameters> field is optional. If present, it is separated from

the <type> field and internal parameters separated from each other by

or more <SPACE> or <TAB> characters. Any trailing <SPACE> or <TAB>

characters present on this line should be ignored by the server: they

should not be taken to imply a trailing empty field.

In theory there are no line length limits. In practice, lines should

not exceed 255 characters (counting the <CR> and <LF>) and probably

should be 80 characters or less.

3.1 Fields

The VERSION field specifies the version number. It must be 1. Other

values below 128 are reserved for future use. Values from 128 to 255

are reserved for local use.

The TYPE field encodes the request type. Values are:

AUTH

LOGIN

CONNECT

SUPERUSER

LOGOUT

SLIPON

SLIPOFF

I.e., the keyword simply encodes itself. It must be in upper case.

Keywords that begin with the letter "X" are reserved for local use.

The USERNAME field contains the text of the username. Leading and

trailing <SPACE> or <TAB> characters are considered significant. The

username data may be in upper case: comparisons should be case-

insensitive.

The PASSWORD field contains the text of the password. Leading and

trailing <SPACE> or <TAB> characters are considered significant.

The LINE field is set by the client to the line number that the

request is for.

3.2 Responses

Appendix E of STD 10, RFC821 describes the general theory of reply

codes. The this protocol follows the format described in that

document. In a nutshell, replies are of the form:

<number> <text>

Where <number> is a three-digit decimal value and <text> is an

arbitrary text string, presumably containing only printing text

characters (<SP> (32 decimal) through "~" (126 decimal)). At least

one <SP> (32 decimal) character separates the number from the text.

A <CR>/<LF> sequence follows the text.

The three digit codes completely determine the response. The text

should be considered an explanatory comment for human understanding.

However, even without knowing all values, the first digit can be used

to determine the overall nature of the response. The encodings are:

1 Positive Preliminary: the request is acceptable,

but no action will be taken until an additional

request is made (not used in this version of the

protocol)

2 Positive Completion

3 Positive Intermediate: the request is acceptable

so far, but has not been completely transferred

(not used in this version of the protocol)

4 Transient Negative: the request is not acceptable

for now. It is acceptable to retry, as another

instance may have a different result.

5 Permanent Negative: the request is not acceptable

The text portion is optional (i.e., may be the empty string) and it

describes the meaning of the message in human readable form.

While different server implementations will result in different

messages, the following are suggested:

201 accepted: # # #

202 accepted, password is expiring: # # #

401 no response; retry

501 invalid format

502 access denied

The ": # # #" in the first two messages is the suggested way of

returning the three result codes for LOGIN and CONNECT requests.

3.3 What a Client Does

The client opens a TCP connection to the locally-configured address

and port. It sends the request by sending:

- the character "1"

- one or more <SPACE> or <TAB> characters

- the request type as an ASCII string

- if an AUTH, send one or more <SPACE> or <TAB> characters

and the authentication style

- if a CONNECT, SLIPON, or SLIPOFF, send one or more <SPACE>

or <TAB> characters and the IP address in dotted decimal

notation

- if a CONNECT, send one or more <SPACE> or <TAB> characters

and the port number in decimal

- a <CR>/<LF>

- the username (or hostname for SLIPADDR)

- a <CR>/<LF>

- the password

- a <CR>/<LF>

- the line

- a <CR>/<LF>

Then read one line from the connection and close the connection.

This encoding lets TCP take care of waiting, retries, and matching up

requests and responses.

Examine the response line and take whatever action you deem correct.

3.4 What the Server Does

The server waits on the locally-specified port for requests. When

one is made, it reads four lines of input.

It examines the first line for a valid version number and request.

It also records any optional parameters.

It uses the username, password, and line number along with any other

information it deems fit to determine its response.

It then sends exactly one line of response, terminated by a

<CR>/<LF>, and closes the connection.

4.0 Pros and Cons

Advantages to using the UDP format:

- lower overhead

- compatible with historical standard

- some existing equipment supports it

Advantages to using the TCP format:

- easier to implement, especially on machines with no or

poor UDP support

- simpler, cleaner syntax

- potentially wider range of error codes, and support for

temporary and negotiated authentication sequences

5.0 Security Notes

While the protocol itself has been described, there are a number of

other considerations worth mentioning.

First, the protocol carries the username and password in clear text

in either a single UDP packet or a TCP stream. As such, if an

attacker is capable of monitoring that data, the attacker could

capture username/password pairs. Implementations can take several

steps to minimize this danger:

- Use point-to-point links where possible.

- Physically secure the transmission medium.

- If packets must traverse multiple network segments, use a secure

routing subsystem. This implies:

- Tight control over router configurations.

- Tight control over routing protocols.

- Avoid use of bridges, as they can be silently fooled into

duplicating packets.

Second, this protocol potentially opens up a new way of probing

usernames and passwords. Thus, implementations may wish to have

servers:

- limit responses to a controlled list of clients,

- throttle the rate of responding to requests,

- log all failures (and possibly successes, too).

Third, this protocol essentially allows clients to offload

accept/reject decisions to servers. While an obvious implementation

would simply use the server's native login mechanism to make the

determination, there is no reason to limit implementations to that

mechanism. Servers could:

- use alternate lists of accounts (e.g., password files),

- use alternate mechanisms for accessing the accounts (e.g.,

a database, NIS),

- use alternate algorithms (e.g., SecureID cards),

- translate the request to another protocol and use that

protocol to make the determination (e.g., Kerberos).

Fourth, the use of a "fanout" server (described in the next section)

allows for:

- centralized logging of usage for attack analysis

- centralized policy:

- ability to block selected specific users

- ability to block selected user names (e.g., don't

allow "root" or "guest")

- ability to block poor passwords (e.g., none or weak)

6.0 Case Study

This section presents the basic steps used by the implementation at

the University of Minnesota. Two examples will be used. The first

is a basic terminal login. The second is a database access

verification.

Usernames are in one of three forms:

First.M.Last-#@umn.edu

First.M.Last-#

user@host

A name in the first form is converted to one in the second.

A name in the second form is looked up in the University-wide

Directory system. If found, the associated electronic mail address

is treated as if the third form was entered.

The third form specifics the name of a computer whose manager has

agreed to perform validations and the name of an account on that

computer.

The system that we use allows for many requesting clients (typically

modem pools). Further, each client can support multiple distinct

pools of users. For example, lines 1-20 could be general access, but

lines 21-25 could be 800-numbers with a restricted set of valid

users. The system supports this distinction by specifying which

validation computers are legal for each modem pool.

6.1 Terminal Login

On the Cisco Terminal Server:

- accept a connection

- request a username and password

- pack the request into a UDP TACACS packet and send to the central

fanout

Central Fanout:

- accept a request

- if the request is not in a valid format, return "nope"

- log the request

- if the source IP address is not in a list of valid clients,

status = "nope"

- else if the username contains invalid characters, status = "nope"

- else

if the username is of the form First.M.Last-#@umn.edu,

convert to First.M.Last-#

if the username is of the form First.M.Last-#,

look up the name in the directory

if the name is not found, status = "nope"

otherwise, use the e-mail address as the username

if the user is on a special "blocked" list, status = "nope"

and send mail warning that access to a blocked

account was attempted

split the username into user and host parts

if the host is not on a list of known servers,

status = "nope"

else if the host is not allowed to validate this type of

request for this pool, status = "nope"

now format a request for validation of the user and send it

to the specified host

if no response, status = "nope"

otherwise set the status to the returned status

- log what response is going to be returned

- return the response

Validation Host:

This machine can run a "stripped down" version of the central fanout.

It need perform no special validation or logging, with one exception.

- accept a request

- if the request is not in a valid format, return "nope"

- if the request is not from the central fanout, return "nope"

- figure the return status

- return the response

6.2 Database Access Verification

In this example, assume that a database is only to be accessed by

faculty and staff.

Mainframe:

- the user is on the mainframe and makes a request

- the program requests username and password

- the program packs the request into a UDP TACACS packet and send to

the central fanout

Central Fanout:

- accept a request

- if the request is not in a valid format, return "nope"

- log the request

- if the source IP address is not in a list of valid clients,

status = "nope"

- else if the username contains invalid characters, status = "nope"

- else

if the username is of the form First.M.Last-#@umn.edu,

convert to First.M.Last-#

if the username is of the form First.M.Last-#,

look up the name in the directory

if the name is not found, status = "nope"

otherwise, use the e-mail address as the username

and obtain the staff status from the directory

if the user is on a special "blocked" list, status = "nope"

and send mail warning that access to a blocked

account was attempted

split the username into user and host parts

if the host is not on a list of known servers,

status = "nope"

else if the host is not allowed to validate this type of

request for this pool, status = "nope"

now format a request for validation of the user and send it

to the specified host

if no response or status is "nope", status = "nope"

else if the user originally gave a user@host mail address,

do a directory lookup and obtain the staff status

set the status to the staff status

- log what response is going to be returned

- return the response

Note that the validation host is unchanged.

References

[RFC821] Postel, J. "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC821,

USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1982.

[RFC1340] Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers," STD 2, RFC

1340, USC/Information Sciences Institute, July 1992.

Anderson, Brian; Ruth, Greg; Ditmars, Peter; Eisner, Sharon;

Delsignore, John (1985) TAC Access Control System Protocols, Second

Edition: August 16 1985. BBN Tech Memo CC-0045.

Cisco Systems, Inc. (September 1992) Communications Server

Configuration and Reference. Menlo Park, California.

Security Considerations

Security issues are the main topic of this memo.

Author's Address

Craig A. Finseth

Networking Services

Computer and Information Services

University of Minnesota

130 Lind Hall

207 Church St SE

Minneapolis MN 55455-0134

Phone: +1 612 624 3375

Fax: +1 612 626 1002

EMail: Craig.A.Finseth-1@umn.edu, or

fin@unet.umn.edu

 
 
 
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