Re: [dhcwg] draft-pruss-dhcp-auth-dsl-00.txt

Richard Pruss <ric@cisco.com> Mon, 05 March 2007 02:02 UTC

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Date: Mon, 05 Mar 2007 12:02:06 +1000
From: Richard Pruss <ric@cisco.com>
Organization: Cisco Systems
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To: Yoshihiro Ohba <yohba@tari.toshiba.com>
Subject: Re: [dhcwg] draft-pruss-dhcp-auth-dsl-00.txt
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On one hand;
a) we can authenticate before allocating an subscriber IP address, host
configuration and network edge configuration and security authorizations.

Or.
b1)On the other we can allocate a temporary subscriber IP address, host
configuration for a temporary context and network edge configuration for
a totally unknown user and security authorizations for someone who know
nothing about and somehow secure the layer 2 multi-point network they
are on from the inevitable abuse.
b2)Then you can renew the DHCP lease every 60 seconds putting an extra
load on everything involved.
b3) You authenticate with PANA
b4) You remove all the network edge configuration for now known user and
security authorizations and install new network edge configuration and
security authorizations.
b5) You wait for the user to renew.
b6) You reject that.
b7) Wait for the user to discover
b8) You allocating an subscriber IP address and host configuration based
on what you installed in B4 and the MAC address in DHCP Discover.

I think the elegance of approach a) verses b1-7) is pretty clear,
Ric

Yoshihiro Ohba wrote:
> Before authentication, it is possible for the NAS to assign a
> temporary IP address (for which IP forwarding is restricted) to the
> subscriber device using DHCP.  Once PANA authentication succeeds, the
> NAS has obtained subscriber-specific client configuration information
> and other authorization parameters from the AAA infrastructure.  After
> that, DHCP reconfiguration can be made using the subscriber-specific
> client configuration information to allow the subscriber device to
> change its IP address from the temporary one to the fully authorized
> one.  Please refer to draft-morand-pana-panaoverdsl for more
> information.
>
> Yoshihiro Ohba
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 05, 2007 at 09:04:17AM +1000, Richard Pruss wrote:
>   
>> Possibly it would help you understand if you though of why the NAS
>> authenticates the subscriber; from section 3.1 of the draft
>> "
>> The NAS obtains per-subscriber client
>> configuration information either locally or from the AAA
>> infrastructure (which itself may consult external DHCP servers if
>> necessary) after authentication is successfully completed.
>> "
>> In wholesale DSL networks it is common to use the @domain portion of the
>> username to find retail ISP of the subscriber, they are then
>> authenticated by that ISP's AAA. This authentication returns
>> authorizations which in conjunction with the wholesale configuration in
>> the NAS determines the subscriber IP address, host configuration and
>> network edge configuration and security authorizations which is all
>> closely coupled to the retail domain.
>> From this perspective, PANA happens to late as the host already has it's
>> IP address, it would be in the correct IP forwarding context, the
>> network would already need to have some mechanisms for securing the
>> domain from layer 3 attacks independent of PANA and so on.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Ric
>>
>> Yoshihiro Ohba wrote:
>>     
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Let me ask the same fundamental question that I asked before for a
>>> similar draft related to DHCP and authentication.
>>>
>>> Is this WG chartered for developing a solution for network access
>>> authentication and authorization other than developing authentication
>>> mechanisms for DHCP?
>>>
>>> I am asking this because Introduction of
>>> draft-pruss-dhcp-auth-dsl-00.txt says:
>>>
>>> "
>>>    This document defines DHCP Options and procedures that allow for a
>>>    CHAP-based authentication exchange to occur in DHCP in order to
>>>    enable smooth migration from PPP sessions to IP sessions in a DSL
>>>    Broadband network environment.  Primary goals are integration of
>>>    authentication in such a way that it will operate seamlessly with
>>>    existing RADIUS-based AAA infrastructure and ATM or Ethernet based
>>>    DSL Networks.  As such, only the termination points of PPP in the DSL
>>>    network are affected, both of which are devices that would logically
>>>    need to be updated in any transition from PPP to IP sessions.
>>> "
>>>
>>> Also, I fail to see a reason for IETF to work on combining DHCP and
>>> network access authentication even as experimental and for the purpose
>>> of the primary goals stated above.  I believe that the primary goals
>>> can be achieved by simply using PANA running EAP-MD5 between HGW and
>>> NAS.  In this case, NAS is acting as EAP authenticator co-located with
>>> EAP server for EAP-MD5, where the EAP server is acting as a protocol
>>> translator that converts credentials carried in EAP-MD5 into RADIUS
>>> attributes or field (i.e., CHAP-Password and CHAP-Challenge or RADIUS
>>> Request Authenticator field) used for carrying CHAP credentials, and
>>> vise versa.  If an algorithm other than MD5 is used for CHAP, it is
>>> also possible to define an experimental EAP method to interwork with
>>> non-MD5 CHAP algorithms and again let the EAP server on the NAS act as
>>> a protocol translator.  I think these workarounds are sufficient to
>>> work with existing RADIUS-based AAA infrastructure and ATM or Ethernet
>>> based DSL Networks and still allows smooth migration from PPP session
>>> to IP session with EAP.
>>>
>>> The bottomline is, host configuration and network access
>>> authentication are two different problems that are better solved by
>>> separate protocols.
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Yoshihiro Ohba
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> dhcwg mailing list
>>> dhcwg@ietf.org
>>> https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dhcwg
>>>
>>>   
>>>       
>
>   

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