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RFC2829 - Authentication Methods for LDAP

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group M. Wahl

Request for Comments: 2829 Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Category: Standards Track H. Alvestrand

EDB Maxware

J. Hodges

Oblix, Inc.

R. Morgan

University of Washington

May 2000

Authentication Methods for LDAP

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This document specifies particular combinations of security

mechanisms which are required and recommended in LDAP [1]

implementations.

1. IntrodUCtion

LDAP version 3 is a powerful Access protocol for Directories.

It offers means of searching, fetching and manipulating directory

content, and ways to access a rich set of security functions.

In order to function for the best of the Internet, it is vital that

these security functions be interoperable; therefore there has to be

a minimum subset of security functions that is common to all

implementations that claim LDAPv3 conformance.

Basic threats to an LDAP directory service include:

(1) Unauthorized access to data via data-fetching operations,

(2) Unauthorized access to reusable client authentication

information by monitoring others' access,

(3) Unauthorized access to data by monitoring others' access,

(4) Unauthorized modification of data,

(5) Unauthorized modification of configuration,

(6) Unauthorized or excessive use of resources (denial of

service), and

(7) Spoofing of directory: Tricking a client into believing that

information came from the directory when in fact it did not,

either by modifying data in transit or misdirecting the

client's connection.

Threats (1), (4), (5) and (6) are due to hostile clients. Threats

(2), (3) and (7) are due to hostile agents on the path between client

and server, or posing as a server.

The LDAP protocol suite can be protected with the following security

mechanisms:

(1) Client authentication by means of the SASL [2] mechanism

set, possibly backed by the TLS credentials exchange

mechanism,

(2) Client authorization by means of access control based on the

requestor's authenticated identity,

(3) Data integrity protection by means of the TLS protocol or

data-integrity SASL mechanisms,

(4) Protection against snooping by means of the TLS protocol or

data-encrypting SASL mechanisms,

(5) Resource limitation by means of administrative limits on

service controls, and

(6) Server authentication by means of the TLS protocol or SASL

mechanism.

At the moment, imposition of access controls is done by means outside

the scope of the LDAP protocol.

In this document, the term "user" represents any application which is

an LDAP client using the directory to retrieve or store information.

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 [3].

2. Example deployment scenarios

The following scenarios are typical for LDAP directories on the

Internet, and have different security requirements. (In the

following, "sensitive" means data that will cause real damage to the

owner if revealed; there may be data that is protected but not

sensitive). This is not intended to be a comprehensive list, other

scenarios are possible, especially on physically protected networks.

(1) A read-only directory, containing no sensitive data,

accessible to "anyone", and TCP connection hijacking or IP

spoofing is not a problem. This directory requires no

security functions except administrative service limits.

(2) A read-only directory containing no sensitive data; read

access is granted based on identity. TCP connection

hijacking is not currently a problem. This scenario requires

a secure authentication function.

(3) A read-only directory containing no sensitive data; and the

client needs to ensure that the directory data is

authenticated by the server and not modified while being

returned from the server.

(4) A read-write directory, containing no sensitive data; read

access is available to "anyone", update access to properly

authorized persons. TCP connection hijacking is not

currently a problem. This scenario requires a secure

authentication function.

(5) A directory containing sensitive data. This scenario

requires session confidentiality protection AND secure

authentication.

3. Authentication and Authorization: Definitions and Concepts

This section defines basic terms, concepts, and interrelationships

regarding authentication, authorization, credentials, and identity.

These concepts are used in describing how various security approaches

are utilized in client authentication and authorization.

3.1. Access Control Policy

An access control policy is a set of rules defining the protection of

resources, generally in terms of the capabilities of persons or other

entities accessing those resources. A common eXPression of an access

control policy is an access control list. Security objects and

mechanisms, such as those described here, enable the expression of

access control policies and their enforcement. Access control

policies are typically expressed in terms of access control

attributes as described below.

3.2. Access Control Factors

A request, when it is being processed by a server, may be associated

with a wide variety of security-related factors (section 4.2 of [1]).

The server uses these factors to determine whether and how to process

the request. These are called access control factors (ACFs). They

might include source IP address, encryption strength, the type of

operation being requested, time of day, etc. Some factors may be

specific to the request itself, others may be associated with the

connection via which the request is transmitted, others (e.g. time of

day) may be "environmental".

Access control policies are expressed in terms of access control

factors. E.g., a request having ACFs i,j,k can perform operation Y

on resource Z. The set of ACFs that a server makes available for such

expressions is implementation-specific.

3.3. Authentication, Credentials, Identity

Authentication credentials are the evidence supplied by one party to

another, asserting the identity of the supplying party (e.g. a user)

who is attempting to establish an association with the other party

(typically a server). Authentication is the process of generating,

transmitting, and verifying these credentials and thus the identity

they assert. An authentication identity is the name presented in a

credential.

There are many forms of authentication credentials -- the form used

depends upon the particular authentication mechanism negotiated by

the parties. For example: X.509 certificates, Kerberos tickets,

simple identity and password pairs. Note that an authentication

mechanism may constrain the form of authentication identities used

with it.

3.4. Authorization Identity

An authorization identity is one kind of access control factor. It

is the name of the user or other entity that requests that operations

be performed. Access control policies are often expressed in terms

of authorization identities; e.g., entity X can perform operation Y

on resource Z.

The authorization identity bound to an association is often exactly

the same as the authentication identity presented by the client, but

it may be different. SASL allows clients to specify an authorization

identity distinct from the authentication identity asserted by the

client's credentials. This permits agents such as proxy servers to

authenticate using their own credentials, yet request the access

privileges of the identity for which they are proxying [2]. Also,

the form of authentication identity supplied by a service like TLS

may not correspond to the authorization identities used to express a

server's access control policy, requiring a server-specific mapping

to be done. The method by which a server composes and validates an

authorization identity from the authentication credentials supplied

by a client is implementation-specific.

4. Required security mechanisms

It is clear that allowing any implementation, faced with the above

requirements, to pick and choose among the possible alternatives is

not a strategy that is likely to lead to interoperability. In the

absence of mandates, clients will be written that do not support any

security function supported by the server, or worse, support only

mechanisms like cleartext passwords that provide clearly inadequate

security.

Active intermediary attacks are the most difficult for an attacker to

perform, and for an implementation to protect against. Methods that

protect only against hostile client and passive eavesdropping attacks

are useful in situations where the cost of protection against active

intermediary attacks is not justified based on the perceived risk of

active intermediary attacks.

Given the presence of the Directory, there is a strong desire to see

mechanisms where identities take the form of a Distinguished Name and

authentication data can be stored in the directory; this means that

either this data is useless for faking authentication (like the Unix

"/etc/passwd" file format used to be), or its content is never passed

across the wire unprotected - that is, it's either updated outside

the protocol or it is only updated in sessions well protected against

snooping. It is also desirable to allow authentication methods to

carry authorization identities based on existing forms of user

identities for backwards compatibility with non-LDAP-based

authentication services.

Therefore, the following implementation conformance requirements are

in place:

(1) For a read-only, public directory, anonymous authentication,

described in section 5, can be used.

(2) Implementations providing password-based authenticated

access MUST support authentication using the DIGEST-MD5 SASL

mechanism [4], as described in section 6.1. This provides

client authentication with protection against passive

eavesdropping attacks, but does not provide protection

against active intermediary attacks.

(3) For a directory needing session protection and

authentication, the Start TLS extended operation [5], and

either the simple authentication choice or the SASL EXTERNAL

mechanism, are to be used together. Implementations SHOULD

support authentication with a password as described in

section 6.2, and SHOULD support authentication with a

certificate as described in section 7.1. Together, these

can provide integrity and disclosure protection of

transmitted data, and authentication of client and server,

including protection against active intermediary attacks.

If TLS is negotiated, the client MUST discard all information about

the server fetched prior to the TLS negotiation. In particular, the

value of supportedSASLMechanisms MAY be different after TLS has been

negotiated (specifically, the EXTERNAL mechanism or the proposed

PLAIN mechanism are likely to only be listed after a TLS negotiation

has been performed).

If a SASL security layer is negotiated, the client MUST discard all

information about the server fetched prior to SASL. In particular,

if the client is configured to support multiple SASL mechanisms, it

SHOULD fetch supportedSASLMechanisms both before and after the SASL

security layer is negotiated and verify that the value has not

changed after the SASL security layer was negotiated. This detects

active attacks which remove supported SASL mechanisms from the

supportedSASLMechanisms list, and allows the client to ensure that it

is using the best mechanism supported by both client and server

(additionally, this is a SHOULD to allow for environments where the

supported SASL mechanisms list is provided to the client through a

different trusted source, e.g. as part of a digitally signed object).

5. Anonymous authentication

Directory operations which modify entries or access protected

attributes or entries generally require client authentication.

Clients which do not intend to perform any of these operations

typically use anonymous authentication.

LDAP implementations MUST support anonymous authentication, as

defined in section 5.1.

LDAP implementations MAY support anonymous authentication with TLS,

as defined in section 5.2.

While there MAY be access control restrictions to prevent access to

directory entries, an LDAP server SHOULD allow an anonymously-bound

client to retrieve the supportedSASLMechanisms attribute of the root

DSE.

An LDAP server MAY use other information about the client provided by

the lower layers or external means to grant or deny access even to

anonymously authenticated clients.

5.1. Anonymous authentication procedure

An LDAP client which has not successfully completed a bind operation

on a connection is anonymously authenticated.

An LDAP client MAY also specify anonymous authentication in a bind

request by using a zero-length OCTET STRING with the simple

authentication choice.

5.2. Anonymous authentication and TLS

An LDAP client MAY use the Start TLS operation [5] to negotiate the

use of TLS security [6]. If the client has not bound beforehand,

then until the client uses the EXTERNAL SASL mechanism to negotiate

the recognition of the client's certificate, the client is

anonymously authenticated.

Recommendations on TLS ciphersuites are given in section 10.

An LDAP server which requests that clients provide their certificate

during TLS negotiation MAY use a local security policy to determine

whether to successfully complete TLS negotiation if the client did

not present a certificate which could be validated.

6. Password-based authentication

LDAP implementations MUST support authentication with a password

using the DIGEST-MD5 SASL mechanism for password protection, as

defined in section 6.1.

LDAP implementations SHOULD support authentication with the "simple"

password choice when the connection is protected against

eavesdropping using TLS, as defined in section 6.2.

6.1. Digest authentication

An LDAP client MAY determine whether the server supports this

mechanism by performing a search request on the root DSE, requesting

the supportedSASLMechanisms attribute, and checking whether the

string "DIGEST-MD5" is present as a value of this attribute.

In the first stage of authentication, when the client is performing

an "initial authentication" as defined in section 2.1 of [4], the

client sends a bind request in which the version number is 3, the

authentication choice is sasl, the sasl mechanism name is "DIGEST-

MD5", and the credentials are absent. The client then waits for a

response from the server to this request.

The server will respond with a bind response in which the resultCode

is saslBindInProgress, and the serverSaslCreds field is present. The

contents of this field is a string defined by "digest-challenge" in

section 2.1.1 of [4]. The server SHOULD include a realm indication

and MUST indicate support for UTF-8.

The client will send a bind request with a distinct message id, in

which the version number is 3, the authentication choice is sasl, the

sasl mechanism name is "DIGEST-MD5", and the credentials contain the

string defined by "digest-response" in section 2.1.2 of [4]. The

serv-type is "ldap".

The server will respond with a bind response in which the resultCode

is either success, or an error indication. If the authentication is

successful and the server does not support subsequent authentication,

then the credentials field is absent. If the authentication is

successful and the server supports subsequent authentication, then

the credentials field contains the string defined by "response-auth"

in section 2.1.3 of [4]. Support for subsequent authentication is

OPTIONAL in clients and servers.

6.2. "simple" authentication choice under TLS encryption

A user who has a directory entry containing a userPassword attribute

MAY authenticate to the directory by performing a simple password

bind sequence following the negotiation of a TLS ciphersuite

providing connection confidentiality [6].

The client will use the Start TLS operation [5] to negotiate the use

of TLS security [6] on the connection to the LDAP server. The client

need not have bound to the directory beforehand.

For this authentication procedure to be successful, the client and

server MUST negotiate a ciphersuite which contains a bulk encryption

algorithm of appropriate strength. Recommendations on cipher suites

are given in section 10.

Following the successful completion of TLS negotiation, the client

MUST send an LDAP bind request with the version number of 3, the name

field containing the name of the user's entry, and the "simple"

authentication choice, containing a password.

The server will, for each value of the userPassword attribute in the

named user's entry, compare these for case-sensitive equality with

the client's presented password. If there is a match, then the

server will respond with resultCode success, otherwise the server

will respond with resultCode invalidCredentials.

6.3. Other authentication choices with TLS

It is also possible, following the negotiation of TLS, to perform a

SASL authentication which does not involve the exchange of plaintext

reusable passwords. In this case the client and server need not

negotiate a ciphersuite which provides confidentiality if the only

service required is data integrity.

7. Certificate-based authentication

LDAP implementations SHOULD support authentication via a client

certificate in TLS, as defined in section 7.1.

7.1. Certificate-based authentication with TLS

A user who has a public/private key pair in which the public key has

been signed by a Certification Authority may use this key pair to

authenticate to the directory server if the user's certificate is

requested by the server. The user's certificate subject field SHOULD

be the name of the user's directory entry, and the Certification

Authority must be sufficiently trusted by the directory server to

have issued the certificate in order that the server can process the

certificate. The means by which servers validate certificate paths

is outside the scope of this document.

A server MAY support mappings for certificates in which the subject

field name is different from the name of the user's directory entry.

A server which supports mappings of names MUST be capable of being

configured to support certificates for which no mapping is required.

The client will use the Start TLS operation [5] to negotiate the use

of TLS security [6] on the connection to the LDAP server. The client

need not have bound to the directory beforehand.

In the TLS negotiation, the server MUST request a certificate. The

client will provide its certificate to the server, and MUST perform a

private key-based encryption, proving it has the private key

associated with the certificate.

As deployments will require protection of sensitive data in transit,

the client and server MUST negotiate a ciphersuite which contains a

bulk encryption algorithm of appropriate strength. Recommendations

of cipher suites are given in section 10.

The server MUST verify that the client's certificate is valid. The

server will normally check that the certificate is issued by a known

CA, and that none of the certificates on the client's certificate

chain are invalid or revoked. There are several procedures by which

the server can perform these checks.

Following the successful completion of TLS negotiation, the client

will send an LDAP bind request with the SASL "EXTERNAL" mechanism.

8. Other mechanisms

The LDAP "simple" authentication choice is not suitable for

authentication on the Internet where there is no network or transport

layer confidentiality.

As LDAP includes native anonymous and plaintext authentication

methods, the "ANONYMOUS" and "PLAIN" SASL mechanisms are not used

with LDAP. If an authorization identity of a form different from a

DN is requested by the client, a mechanism that protects the password

in transit SHOULD be used.

The following SASL-based mechanisms are not considered in this

document: KERBEROS_V4, GSSAPI and SKEY.

The "EXTERNAL" SASL mechanism can be used to request the LDAP server

make use of security credentials exchanged by a lower layer. If a TLS

session has not been established between the client and server prior

to making the SASL EXTERNAL Bind request and there is no other

external source of authentication credentials (e.g. IP-level

security [8]), or if, during the process of establishing the TLS

session, the server did not request the client's authentication

credentials, the SASL EXTERNAL bind MUST fail with a result code of

inappropriateAuthentication. Any client authentication and

authorization state of the LDAP association is lost, so the LDAP

association is in an anonymous state after the failure.

9. Authorization Identity

The authorization identity is carried as part of the SASL credentials

field in the LDAP Bind request and response.

When the "EXTERNAL" mechanism is being negotiated, if the credentials

field is present, it contains an authorization identity of the

authzId form described below.

Other mechanisms define the location of the authorization identity in

the credentials field.

The authorization identity is a string in the UTF-8 character set,

corresponding to the following ABNF [7]:

; Specific predefined authorization (authz) id schemes are

; defined below -- new schemes may be defined in the future.

authzId = dnAuthzId / uAuthzId

; distinguished-name-based authz id.

dnAuthzId = "dn:" dn

dn = utf8string ; with syntax defined in RFC2253

; unspecified userid, UTF-8 encoded.

uAuthzId = "u:" userid

userid = utf8string ; syntax unspecified

A utf8string is defined to be the UTF-8 encoding of one or more ISO

10646 characters.

All servers which support the storage of authentication credentials,

such as passwords or certificates, in the directory MUST support the

dnAuthzId choice.

The uAuthzId choice allows for compatibility with client applications

which wish to authenticate to a local directory but do not know their

own Distinguished Name or have a directory entry. The format of the

string is defined as only a sequence of UTF-8 encoded ISO 10646

characters, and further interpretation is subject to prior agreement

between the client and server.

For example, the userid could identify a user of a specific directory

service, or be a login name or the local-part of an RFC822 email

address. In general a uAuthzId MUST NOT be assumed to be globally

unique.

Additional authorization identity schemes MAY be defined in future

versions of this document.

10. TLS Ciphersuites

The following ciphersuites defined in [6] MUST NOT be used for

confidentiality protection of passwords or data:

TLS_NULL_WITH_NULL_NULL

TLS_RSA_WITH_NULL_MD5

TLS_RSA_WITH_NULL_SHA

The following ciphersuites defined in [6] can be cracked easily (less

than a week of CPU time on a standard CPU in 1997). The client and

server SHOULD carefully consider the value of the password or data

being protected before using these ciphersuites:

TLS_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_RC4_40_MD5

TLS_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_RC2_CBC_40_MD5

TLS_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DH_DSS_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DH_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DHE_DSS_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DHE_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DH_anon_EXPORT_WITH_RC4_40_MD5

TLS_DH_anon_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

The following ciphersuites are vulnerable to man-in-the-middle

attacks, and SHOULD NOT be used to protect passwords or sensitive

data, unless the network configuration is such that the danger of a

man-in-the-middle attack is tolerable:

TLS_DH_anon_EXPORT_WITH_RC4_40_MD5

TLS_DH_anon_WITH_RC4_128_MD5

TLS_DH_anon_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA

TLS_DH_anon_WITH_DES_CBC_SHA

TLS_DH_anon_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA

A client or server that supports TLS MUST support at least

TLS_DHE_DSS_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA.

11. SASL service name for LDAP

For use with SASL [2], a protocol must specify a service name to be

used with various SASL mechanisms, such as GSSAPI. For LDAP, the

service name is "ldap", which has been registered with the IANA as a

GSSAPI service name.

12. Security Considerations

Security issues are discussed throughout this memo; the

(unsurprising) conclusion is that mandatory security is important,

and that session encryption is required when snooping is a problem.

Servers are encouraged to prevent modifications by anonymous users.

Servers may also wish to minimize denial of service attacks by timing

out idle connections, and returning the unwillingToPerform result

code rather than performing computationally expensive operations

requested by unauthorized clients.

A connection on which the client has not performed the Start TLS

operation or negotiated a suitable SASL mechanism for connection

integrity and encryption services is subject to man-in-the-middle

attacks to view and modify information in transit.

Additional security considerations relating to the EXTERNAL mechanism

to negotiate TLS can be found in [2], [5] and [6].

13. Acknowledgements

This document is a product of the LDAPEXT Working Group of the IETF.

The contributions of its members is greatly appreciated.

14. Bibliography

[1] Wahl, M., Howes, T. and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access

Protocol (v3)", RFC2251, December 1997.

[2] Myers, J., "Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)", RFC

2222, October 1997.

[3] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement

Levels", BCP 14, RFC2119, March 1997.

[4] Leach, P. and C. Newman, "Using Digest Authentication as a SASL

Mechanism", RFC2831, May 2000.

[5] Hodges, J., Morgan, R. and M. Wahl, "Lightweight Directory Access

Protocol (v3): Extension for Transport Layer Security", RFC2830,

May 2000.

[6] Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0", RFC

2246, January 1999.

[7] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax

Specifications: ABNF", RFC2234, November 1997.

[8] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the Internet

Protocol", RFC2401, November 1998.

15. Authors' Addresses

Mark Wahl

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

8911 Capital of Texas Hwy #4140

Austin TX 78759

USA

EMail: M.Wahl@innosoft.com

Harald Tveit Alvestrand

EDB Maxware

Pirsenteret

N-7462 Trondheim, Norway

Phone: +47 73 54 57 97

EMail: Harald@Alvestrand.no

Jeff Hodges

Oblix, Inc.

18922 Forge Drive

Cupertino, CA 95014

USA

Phone: +1-408-861-6656

EMail: JHodges@oblix.com

RL "Bob" Morgan

Computing and Communications

University of Washington

Seattle, WA 98105

USA

Phone: +1-206-221-3307

EMail: rlmorgan@washington.edu

16. Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to

others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it

or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published

and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any

kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are

included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this

document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing

the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other

Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of

developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for

copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be

followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than

English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be

revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING

TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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