Internet-Draft | Enhanced Use of PPKs in IKEv2 | November 2024 |
Smyslov | Expires 25 May 2025 | [Page] |
An Internet Key Exchange protocol version 2 (IKEv2) extension defined in RFC8784 allows IPsec traffic to be protected against someone storing VPN communications today and decrypting them later, when (and if) cryptographically relevant quantum computers are available. The protection is achieved by means of Post-quantum Preshared Key (PPK) which is mixed into the session keys calculation. However, this protection doesn't cover an initial IKEv2 SA, which might be unacceptable in some scenarios. This specification defines an alternative way to get protection against quantum computers, which is similar to the solution defined in RFC8784, but protects the initial IKEv2 SA too.¶
Besides, RFC8784 assumes that PPKs are static and thus they are only used when an initial IKEv2 Security Association (SA) is created. If a fresh PPK is available before the IKE SA expired, then the only way to use it is to delete the current IKE SA and create a new one from scratch, which is inefficient. This specification also defines a way to use PPKs in active IKEv2 SA for creating additional IPsec SAs and for rekey operations.¶
This draft updates RFC8784 by extending use of PPKs.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 25 May 2025.¶
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The Internet Key Exchange protocol version 2, defined in [RFC7296], is used in the IPsec architecture for performing authenticated key exchange. Extension to IKEv2 for mixing preshared keys for post-quantum security defined in [RFC8784] allows today's IPsec traffic to be protected against future quantum computers. The protection is achieved by means of using a Post-quantum Preshared Key (PPK) which is mixed into the session keys calculation. At the time this extension was being developed, it was a consensus in the IPsecME WG that it is the IPsec traffic that mostly needs to have such a protection. It was believed that information transferred over IKE SA (including peers' identities) is less important and extending the protection to also cover initial IKE SA would require serious modifications to core IKEv2 protocol. One of the goals was to minimize such changes. It was also decided that immediate rekey of initial IKE SA would add this protection to the new IKE SA (albeit it wouldn't provide identity protection of the peers).¶
However, in some situations it is desirable to have this protection for IKE SA from the very beginning, when an initial IKE SA is created. An example of such situation is Group Key Management protocol using IKEv2, defined in [I-D.ietf-ipsecme-g-ikev2]. In this protocol group policy and session keys are transferred from Group Controller/Key Server (GCKS) to Group Members (GM) immediately once an initial IKE SA is created. While session keys are additionally protected with a key derived from SK_d (and thus are immune to quantum computers if PPKs [RFC8784] are employed), the other sensitive data, including group policy, is not.¶
Another issue with using PPKs as it is defined in [RFC8784] is that this approach assumes that PPKs are static entities, which are changed very infrequently. For this reason PPKs are only used once - when an initial IKE SA is established. This restriction makes it difficult to use PPKs as defined in [RFC8784] when they are changed relatively frequently, for example as a result of Quantum Key Distribution (QKD). If a fresh PPK becomes available before the IKE SA is expired, there is no way to use it except for deleting this IKE SA and re-creating a new once from scratch using the fresh PPK.¶
Some time after the protocol extension for mixing preshared keys in IKEv2 for post-quantum security was defined in [RFC8784], a new IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange for IKEv2 [RFC9242] was developed. While the primary motivation for developing this exchange was to allow multiple key exchanges to be used in IKEv2 (which is defined in [RFC9370]), the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange itself can be used for other purposes too.¶
This specification defines the use of PPKs in the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange of IKEv2 for post-quantum security, which allows getting full protection against quantum computers for initial IKE SA.¶
This specification also defines the use of PPKs in the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange for creating additional IPsec SAs and for rekey of IKE and IPsec SAs. This allows to leverage fresh PPKs without the need to delete IKE SA and create it from scratch.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
The approach defined in RFC 8784 is reffered to as "using PPKs in the IKE_AUTH exchange" or simply "using PPKs in IKE_AUTH" throughout this document.¶
The IKE initiator which supports the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange and wants to use PPK to protect initial IKE SA includes the INTERMEDIATE_EXCHANGE_SUPPORTED notification and a notification of type USE_PPK_INT in the IKE_SA_INIT request. If the responder supports the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange and is willing to use PPK for initial IKE SA protection, it includes both these notifications in the IKE_SA_INIT response.¶
Initiator Responder ------------------------------------------------------------------ HDR, SAi1, KEi, Ni, N(INTERMEDIATE_EXCHANGE_SUPPORTED), N(USE_PPK_INT) ---> <--- HDR, SAr1, KEr, Nr, [CERTREQ,] N(INTERMEDIATE_EXCHANGE_SUPPORTED), N(USE_PPK_INT)¶
The USE_PPK_INT is a Status Type IKEv2 notification. Its Notify Message Type is <TBA by IANA>, Protocol ID and SPI Size are both set to 0. This specification doesn't define any data that this notification may contain, so the Notification Data is left empty. However, future extensions of this specification may make use of it. Implementations MUST ignore any data in the notification they don't understand.¶
Note, that this negotiation is independent from negotiation of using PPKs as specified in [RFC8784]. The initiator that supports both the use of PPKs in IKE_AUTH [RFC8784] and in IKE_INTERMEDIATE MAY include both the USE_PPK_INT and the USE_PPK notifications if configured to so. However, if the responder supports both specifications and is configured to use PPKs, it has to choose one to use, thus it MUST return either USE_PPK_INT or USE_PPK notification in the response, but not both.¶
If the initiator didn't propose using this extension in the IKE_SA_INIT request and responder's policy mandates protecting initial IKE SA with a PPK, then the responder MUST return NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN notification.¶
If the negotiation was successful, the initiator includes one or more PPK_IDENTITY_KEY notification containing PPK identities the initiator believes are appropriate for the IKE SA being created, into the IKE_INTERMEDIATE request.¶
The PPK_IDENTITY_KEY is a Status Type IKEv2 notification. Its Notify Message Type is <TBA by IANA>, Protocol ID and SPI Size fields are both set to 0. The format of the notification data is shown below on Figure 1.¶
Where:¶
PPK_ID (variable) -- PPK_ID as defined in Section 5.1 of [RFC8784]. The receiver can determine the length of PPK_ID by subtracting 8 (the length of PPK Confirmation) from the Notification Data length.¶
PPK Confirmation (8 octets) -- value, which allows the responder to check whether it has the same PPK as the initiator for a given PPK_ID. This field contains the first 8 octets of a string computed as prf( PPK, Ni | Nr | SPIi | SPIr ), where prf is the negotiated PRF; PPK is the key value for a specified PPK_ID; Ni, Nr, SPIi, SPIr -- nonces and IKE SPIs for the SA being established.¶
If a series of the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchanges takes place, the PPK_IDENTITY_KEY notification(s) MUST be sent in the last one, i.e. in the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange immediately preceding the IKE_AUTH exchange. If the last IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange contains other payloads aimed for some other purpose, then the notification(s) MAY be piggybacked with these payloads.¶
Initiator Responder ------------------------------------------------------------------ HDR, SK { ... N(PPK_IDENTITY_KEY, PPK_ID_1) [, N(PPK_IDENTITY_KEY, PPK_ID_2)] ... [, N(PPK_IDENTITY_KEY, PPK_ID_n)]} --->¶
Depending on the responder's capabilities and policy the following situations are possible.¶
If the responder is configured with one of the PPKs which IDs were sent by the initiator and this PPK matches the initiator's one (based on the information from the PPK Confirmation field), then the responder selects this PPK and returns back its identity in the PPK_IDENTITY notification. The PPK_IDENTITY notification is defined in [RFC8784].¶
Initiator Responder --------------------------------------------------------------- <--- HDR, SK { ... N(PPK_IDENTITY, PPK_ID_i)}¶
In this case the IKE_AUTH exchange is performed as defined in IKEv2 [RFC7296]. However, the keys for the IKE SA are computed using PPK, as described in Section 3.1.1. If the responder returns PPK identity that was not proposed by the initiator, then the initiator should treat this as a fatal error and MUST abort the IKE SA establishment.¶
If the responder doesn't have any of the PPKs which IDs were sent by the initiator or it has some of proposed PPKs, but their values mismatch the initiator's ones (based on the information from the PPK Confirmation field), and using PPK is mandatory for the responder, then it MUST return AUTHENTICATION_FAILED notification and abort creating the IKE SA.¶
Initiator Responder --------------------------------------------------------------- <--- HDR, SK {... N(AUTHENTICATION_FAILED)}¶
If the responder doesn't have any of the PPKs which IDs were sent by the initiator or it has some of proposed PPKs, but their values mismatch the initiator's ones (based on the information from the PPK Confirmation field), and using PPK is optional for the responder, then it doesn't include any PPK_IDENTITY notification to the response.¶
Initiator Responder --------------------------------------------------------------- <--- HDR, SK {...}¶
In this case the initiator cannot achieve quantum computer resistance using the proposed PPKs. If this is a requirement for the initiator, then it MUST abort creating IKE SA. Otherwise, the initiator continues with the IKE_AUTH exchange as described in IKEv2 [RFC7296].¶
Table 1 summarizes the above logic for the responder:¶
Received USE_PPK_INT | Supports USE_PPK_INT | Has one of proposed PPKs | PPK is mandatory for initial IKE SA | Action |
---|---|---|---|---|
No | * | * | No | [RFC8784] (if proposed) or standard IKEv2 protocol |
No | Yes | * | Yes | Send NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN |
Yes | Yes | Yes | * | Section 3.1, Paragraph 16, Item 1 (use this extension) |
Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Section 3.1, Paragraph 16, Item 2 (abort negotiation) |
Yes | Yes | No | No | Section 3.1, Paragraph 16, Item 3 (standard IKEv2 protocol) |
Since the responder selects PPK before it knows the identity of the initiator, a situation may occur, when the responder agrees to use some PPK in the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange, but during the IKE_AUTH exchange discovers that this particular PPK is not associated with the initiator's identity in its local policy. Note, that the responder does have this PPK, but it is just not listed among the PPKs for using with this initiator. In this case the responder SHOULD abort negotiation and return back the AUTHENTICATION_FAILED notification to be consistent with its policy. However, the responder MAY continue creating IKE SA using the negotiated "wrong" PPK if this is acceptable according to its local policy.¶
Once the PPK is negotiated in the last IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange, the IKE SA keys are recalculated. Note that if the IKE SA keys are also recalculated as the result of the other actions performed in the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange (for example, as defined in [RFC9370]), then applying PPK MUST be done after all of them, so that recalculating IKE SA keys with PPK is the last action before they are used in the IKE_AUTH exchange.¶
The IKE SA keys are computed differently compared to use PPKs in IKE_AUTH. A new SKEYSEED' value is computed using the negotiated PPK and the most recently computed SK_d key. Note, that the PPK is applied to SK_d exactly how it is specified in [RFC8784], and the result is used as SKEYSEED'.¶
SKEYSEED' = prf+ (PPK, SK_d)¶
Then the SKEYSEED' is used to recalculate all SK_* keys as defined in Section 2.14 of [RFC7296].¶
{SK_d | SK_ai | SK_ar | SK_ei | SK_er | SK_pi | SK_pr} = prf+ (SKEYSEED', Ni | Nr | SPIi | SPIr )¶
In the formula above, Ni and Nr are nonces from the IKE_SA_INIT exchange, and SPIi and SPIr are the SPIs of the IKE SA being created. Note, that SK_d, SK_pi, and SK_pr are not individually recalculated using PPK, as it is defined in [RFC8784].¶
The resulting keys are then used in the IKE_AUTH exchange and in the created IKE SA.¶
If a fresh PPK is available to both peers at the time when an IKE SA is active, peers MAY use this PPK without creating a new IKE SA from scratch. In this case the PPK can be used for creating additional IPsec SAs and for rekeying both IKE and IPsec SAs regardless whether the current IKE SA was created with use of a PPK (no matter how: in IKE_AUTH, in IKE_INTERMEDIATE or in CREATE_CHILD_SA) or not.¶
If the initiator wants to use a PPK in the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange, it includes one or more PPK_IDENTITY_KEY notification containing PPK identities the initiator believes are appropriate for the SA being created, into the CREATE_CHILD_SA request. The PPK Confirmation field in this case contains the first 8 octets of a string computed as prf( PPK, Ni | SPIi | SPIr ), where Ni is the initiator's nonce from the CREATE_CHILD_SA request and SPIi/SPIr - SPIs of the current IKE SA. If the responder supports use PPKs in the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange and is configured and ready to do it, then it sends back the PPK_IDENTITY notification containing the ID of the selected PPK, as depicted in figures below.¶
In case the responder doesn't support (or is not configured for) using PPKs in the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange, or doesn't have any of the PPKs which IDs were sent by the initiator, or it has some of proposed PPKs, but their values mismatch the initiator's ones (based on the information from the PPK Confirmation field), then it doesn't include any PPK_IDENTITY notification in the response and new SA is created as defined in IKEv2 [RFC7296]. If this is inappropriate for the initiator, it may immediately delete this SA.¶
If using PPKs in CREATE_CHILD_SA is mandatory for the responder and the initiator doesn't include any PPK_IDENTITY_KEY notification in the request or the responder doesn't have any of the PPKs which IDs were sent by the initiator, or it has some of proposed PPKs, but their values mismatch the initiator's ones (based on the information from the PPK Confirmation field), then the responder MUST return the NO_PROPOSAL_CHOSEN notification.¶
Otherwise the new SA is created using the selected PPK.¶
For the purpose of calculation session keys for the new SA, the current SK_d key is first mixed with the selected PPK:¶
SK_d' = prf+ (PPK, SK_d)¶
The resulted key SK_d' is then used instead of SK_d in all formulas for computing keys for the new SA (Sections 2.17 and 2.18 of [RFC7296], Section 2.2.4 of [RFC9370]).¶
Note, that if the PPK that was used for the IKE SA establishment is not changed, then there is no point to use it in the CREATE_CHILD_SA exchange.¶
Security considerations of using Post-quantum Preshared Keys in the IKEv2 protocol are discussed in [RFC8784]. Compared to use PPKs in IKE_AUTH this specification makes even initial IKE SA quantum secure. In addition, a PPK is mixed into the SK_* keys calculation before the IKE_AUTH exchange starts, and since PPK is used in authentication too, that gives this exchange a QR protection even against active attacker.¶
This specification relies on the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange. Refer to [RFC9242] for discussion of related security issues.¶
Section 4 of [RFC9370] discusses the potential impact of appearing a CRQC to various cryptographic primitives used in IKEv2. It is worth to repeat here that it is believed that security of symmetric key cryptographic primitives will not be affected by CRQC.¶
This document defines two new Notify Message Types in the "IKEv2 Notify Message Types - Status Types" registry:¶
<TBA> USE_PPK_INT <TBA> PPK_IDENTITY_KEY¶
Author would like to thank Paul Wouters for valuable comments and Tero Kivinen who made a thorough review of the document and proposed a lot of text improvements, and who also pointed out to the problem of mismatched preshared keys. Thanks to Rebecca Guthrie for providing comments and proposals for the document and to Mikhail Borodin for discovering the problem of calculating PPK Confirmation in CREATE_CHILD_SA.¶
This specification isn't intended to be a replacement for use PPKs in IKE_AUTH as defined in [RFC8784]. Instead, it is supposed to be used in situations where the approach defined there has a significant shortcomings. However, if the partners support both use PPKs in IKE_AUTH and this specification, then the latter MAY also be used in situations where use PPKs in IKE_AUTH suffices.¶
The approach defined in this document has the following advantages:¶
The main advantage of using PPK in the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange instead of the IKE_AUTH exchange is that it allows IKE_AUTH to be fully protected. This means that the ID payloads and any other sensitive content sent in the IKE_AUTH are protected against quantum computers. The prominent example of situation when cryptographic keys are transferred in the modified IKE_AUTH exchange (called GSA_AUTH) of G-IKEv2 [I-D.ietf-ipsecme-g-ikev2].¶
In addition to the IKE_AUTH exchange being fully protected, the initial IKE SA is also fully protected, which is important when sensitive information, e.g. cryptographic keys, is transferred over initial IKE SA. The prominent example of such situation is the GSA_REGISTRATION exchange of G-IKEv2 [I-D.ietf-ipsecme-g-ikev2].¶
As the PPK exchange happens as separate exchange before IKE_AUTH this means that initiator can propose several PPKs and responder can pick one. This is not possible when PPK exchange happens in the IKE_AUTH. This feature could simplify PPK rollover.¶
With this specification there is no need for the initiator to calculate the content of the AUTH payload twice (with and without PPK) to support a situation when using PPK is optional for both sides.¶
The main disadvantage of the approach defined in this document is that it always requires an additional round trip (the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange) to set up IKE SA and initial IPsec SA. However, if the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange has to be used for some other purposes in any case, then PPK stuff can be piggybacked with other payloads, thus eliminating this penalty.¶