4 Kerberos Working Group S. Hartman
5 Internet-Draft Painless Security
6 Updates: 4120 (if approved) L. Zhu
7 Intended status: Standards Track Microsoft Corporation
8 Expires: August 15, 2009 February 11, 2009
11 A Generalized Framework for Kerberos Pre-Authentication
12 draft-ietf-krb-wg-preauth-framework-09
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51 Kerberos is a protocol for verifying the identity of principals
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60 (e.g., a workstation user or a network server) on an open network.
61 The Kerberos protocol provides a mechanism called pre-authentication
62 for proving the identity of a principal and for better protecting the
63 long-term secrets of the principal.
65 This document describes a model for Kerberos pre-authentication
66 mechanisms. The model describes what state in the Kerberos request a
67 pre-authentication mechanism is likely to change. It also describes
68 how multiple pre-authentication mechanisms used in the same request
71 This document also provides common tools needed by multiple pre-
72 authentication mechanisms. One of these tools is a secure channel
73 between the client and the KDC with a reply key delivery mechanism;
74 this secure channel can be used to protect the authentication
75 exchange thus eliminate offline dictionary attacks. With these
76 tools, it is relatively straightforward to chain multiple
77 authentication mechanisms, utilize a different key management system,
78 or support a new key agreement algorithm.
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118 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
119 2. Conventions and Terminology Used in This Document . . . . . . 6
120 3. Model for Pre-Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
121 3.1. Information Managed by the Pre-authentication Model . . . 7
122 3.2. Initial Pre-authentication Required Error . . . . . . . . 9
123 3.3. Client to KDC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
124 3.4. KDC to Client . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
125 4. Pre-Authentication Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
126 4.1. Client-authentication Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
127 4.2. Strengthening-reply-key Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
128 4.3. Replacing-reply-key Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
129 4.4. KDC-authentication Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
130 5. Requirements for Pre-Authentication Mechanisms . . . . . . . . 15
131 6. Tools for Use in Pre-Authentication Mechanisms . . . . . . . . 16
132 6.1. Combining Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
133 6.2. Protecting Requests/Responses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
134 6.3. Managing States for the KDC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
135 6.4. Pre-authentication Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
136 6.5. Definition of Kerberos FAST Padata . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
137 6.5.1. FAST Armors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
138 6.5.2. FAST Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
139 6.5.3. FAST Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
140 6.5.4. Authenticated Kerberos Error Messages using
141 Kerberos FAST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
142 6.5.5. Outer and Inner Requests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
143 6.5.6. The Encrypted Challenge FAST Factor . . . . . . . . . 33
144 6.6. Authentication Strength Indication . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
145 7. Assigned Constants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
146 7.1. New Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
147 7.2. Key Usage Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
148 7.3. Authorization Data Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
149 7.4. New PA-DATA Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
150 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
151 8.1. Pre-authentication and Typed Data . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
152 8.2. Fast Armor Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
153 8.3. FAST Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
154 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
155 10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
156 11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
157 11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
158 11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
159 Appendix A. Change History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
160 A.1. Changes since 08 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
161 A.2. Changes since 07 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
162 A.3. Changes since 06 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
163 Appendix B. ASN.1 module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
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172 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
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230 The core Kerberos specification [RFC4120] treats pre-authentication
231 data as an opaque typed hole in the messages to the KDC that may
232 influence the reply key used to encrypt the KDC reply. This
233 generality has been useful: pre-authentication data is used for a
234 variety of extensions to the protocol, many outside the expectations
235 of the initial designers. However, this generality makes designing
236 more common types of pre-authentication mechanisms difficult. Each
237 mechanism needs to specify how it interacts with other mechanisms.
238 Also, problems like combining a key with the long-term secrets or
239 proving the identity of the user are common to multiple mechanisms.
240 Where there are generally well-accepted solutions to these problems,
241 it is desirable to standardize one of these solutions so mechanisms
242 can avoid duplication of work. In other cases, a modular approach to
243 these problems is appropriate. The modular approach will allow new
244 and better solutions to common pre-authentication problems to be used
245 by existing mechanisms as they are developed.
247 This document specifies a framework for Kerberos pre-authentication
248 mechanisms. It defines the common set of functions that pre-
249 authentication mechanisms perform as well as how these functions
250 affect the state of the request and reply. In addition several
251 common tools needed by pre-authentication mechanisms are provided.
252 Unlike [RFC3961], this framework is not complete--it does not
253 describe all the inputs and outputs for the pre-authentication
254 mechanisms. Pre-Authentication mechanism designers should try to be
255 consistent with this framework because doing so will make their
256 mechanisms easier to implement. Kerberos implementations are likely
257 to have plugin architectures for pre-authentication; such
258 architectures are likely to support mechanisms that follow this
259 framework plus commonly used extensions. This framework also
260 facilitates combining multiple pre-authentication mechanisms, each of
261 which may represent an authentication factor, into a single multi-
262 factor pre-authentication mechanism.
264 One of these common tools is the flexible authentication secure
265 tunneling (FAST) padata type. FAST provides a protected channel
266 between the client and the KDC, and it can optionally deliver a reply
267 key within the protected channel. Based on FAST, pre-authentication
268 mechanisms can extend Kerberos with ease, to support, for example,
269 password authenticated key exchange (PAKE) protocols with zero
270 knowledge password proof (ZKPP) [EKE] [IEEE1363.2]. Any pre-
271 authentication mechanism can be encapsulated in the FAST messages as
272 defined in Section 6.5. A pre-authentication type carried within
273 FAST is called a FAST factor. Creating a FAST factor is the easiest
274 path to create a new pre-authentication mechanism. FAST factors are
275 significantly easier to analyze from a security standpoint than other
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284 pre-authentication mechanisms.
286 Mechanism designers should design FAST factors, instead of new pre-
287 authentication mechanisms outside of FAST.
290 2. Conventions and Terminology Used in This Document
292 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
293 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
294 document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
296 The word padata is used as a shorthand for pre-authentication data.
298 A conversation is the set of all authentication messages exchanged
299 between the client and the client's KDCs in order to authenticate the
300 client principal. A conversation as defined here consists of all
301 messages that are necessary to complete the authentication between
302 the client and the client's KDCs.
304 If the KDC reply in an Authentication Service (AS) exchange is
305 verified, the KDC is authenticated by the client. In this document,
306 verification of the KDC reply is used as a synonym of authentication
309 Lastly, this document should be read only after reading the documents
310 describing the Kerberos cryptography framework [RFC3961] and the core
311 Kerberos protocol [RFC4120]. This document may freely use
312 terminology and notation from these documents without reference or
316 3. Model for Pre-Authentication
318 When a Kerberos client wishes to obtain a ticket using the
319 authentication server, it sends an initial Authentication Service
320 (AS) request. If pre-authentication is required but not being used,
321 then the KDC will respond with a KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error.
322 Alternatively, if the client knows what pre-authentication to use, it
323 MAY optimize away a round-trip and send an initial request with
324 padata included in the initial request. If the client includes the
325 padata computed using the wrong pre-authentication mechanism or
326 incorrect keys, the KDC MAY return KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_FAILED with no
327 indication of what padata should have been included. In that case,
328 the client MUST retry with no padata and examine the error data of
329 the KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error. If the KDC includes pre-
330 authentication information in the accompanying error data of
331 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_FAILED, the client SHOULD process the error data, and
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342 The conventional KDC maintains no state between two requests;
343 subsequent requests may even be processed by a different KDC. On the
344 other hand, the client treats a series of exchanges with KDCs as a
345 single conversation. Each exchange accumulates state and hopefully
346 brings the client closer to a successful authentication.
348 These models for state management are in apparent conflict. For many
349 of the simpler pre-authentication scenarios, the client uses one
350 round trip to find out what mechanisms the KDC supports. Then the
351 next request contains sufficient pre-authentication for the KDC to be
352 able to return a successful reply. For these simple scenarios, the
353 client only sends one request with pre-authentication data and so the
354 conversation is trivial. For more complex conversations, the KDC
355 needs to provide the client with a cookie to include in future
356 requests to capture the current state of the authentication session.
357 Handling of multiple round-trip mechanisms is discussed in
360 This framework specifies the behavior of Kerberos pre-authentication
361 mechanisms used to identify users or to modify the reply key used to
362 encrypt the KDC reply. The PA-DATA typed hole may be used to carry
363 extensions to Kerberos that have nothing to do with proving the
364 identity of the user or establishing a reply key. Such extensions
365 are outside the scope of this framework. However mechanisms that do
366 accomplish these goals should follow this framework.
368 This framework specifies the minimum state that a Kerberos
369 implementation needs to maintain while handling a request in order to
370 process pre-authentication. It also specifies how Kerberos
371 implementations process the padata at each step of the AS request
374 3.1. Information Managed by the Pre-authentication Model
376 The following information is maintained by the client and KDC as each
377 request is being processed:
379 o The reply key used to encrypt the KDC reply
381 o How strongly the identity of the client has been authenticated
383 o Whether the reply key has been used in this conversation
385 o Whether the reply key has been replaced in this conversation
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396 o Whether the contents of the KDC reply can be verified by the
400 Conceptually, the reply key is initially the long-term key of the
401 principal. However, principals can have multiple long-term keys
402 because of support for multiple encryption types, salts and
403 string2key parameters. As described in Section 5.2.7.5 of the
404 Kerberos protocol [RFC4120], the KDC sends PA-ETYPE-INFO2 to notify
405 the client what types of keys are available. Thus in full
406 generality, the reply key in the pre-authentication model is actually
407 a set of keys. At the beginning of a request, it is initialized to
408 the set of long-term keys advertised in the PA-ETYPE-INFO2 element on
409 the KDC. If multiple reply keys are available, the client chooses
410 which one to use. Thus the client does not need to treat the reply
411 key as a set. At the beginning of a request, the client picks a key
414 KDC implementations MAY choose to offer only one key in the PA-ETYPE-
415 INFO2 element. Since the KDC already knows the client's list of
416 supported enctypes from the request, no interoperability problems are
417 created by choosing a single possible reply key. This way, the KDC
418 implementation avoids the complexity of treating the reply key as a
421 When the padata in the request is verified by the KDC, then the
422 client is known to have that key, therefore the KDC SHOULD pick the
423 same key as the reply key.
425 At the beginning of handling a message on both the client and the
426 KDC, the client's identity is not authenticated. A mechanism may
427 indicate that it has successfully authenticated the client's
428 identity. This information is useful to keep track of on the client
429 in order to know what pre-authentication mechanisms should be used.
430 The KDC needs to keep track of whether the client is authenticated
431 because the primary purpose of pre-authentication is to authenticate
432 the client identity before issuing a ticket. The handling of
433 authentication strength using various authentication mechanisms is
434 discussed in Section 6.6.
436 Initially the reply key has not been used. A pre-authentication
437 mechanism that uses the reply key to encrypt or checksum some data in
438 the generation of new keys MUST indicate that the reply key is used.
439 This state is maintained by the client and the KDC to enforce the
440 security requirement stated in Section 4.3 that the reply key SHOULD
441 NOT be replaced after it is used.
443 Initially the reply key has not been replaced. If a mechanism
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452 implements the Replace Reply Key facility discussed in Section 4.3,
453 then the state MUST be updated to indicate that the reply key has
454 been replaced. Once the reply key has been replaced, knowledge of
455 the reply key is insufficient to authenticate the client. The reply
456 key is marked replaced in exactly the same situations as the KDC
457 reply is marked as not being verified to the client principal.
458 However, while mechanisms can verify the KDC reply to the client,
459 once the reply key is replaced, then the reply key remains replaced
460 for the remainder of the conversation.
462 Without pre-authentication, the client knows that the KDC reply is
463 authentic and has not been modified because it is encrypted in a
464 long-term key of the client. Only the KDC and the client know that
465 key. So at the start of a conversation, the KDC reply is presumed to
466 be verified using the client principal's long-term key. It should be
467 noted that in this document, verifying the KDC reply means
468 authenticating the KDC, and these phrases are used interchangeably.
469 Any pre-authentication mechanism that sets a new reply key not based
470 on the principal's long-term secret MUST either verify the KDC reply
471 some other way or indicate that the reply is not verified. If a
472 mechanism indicates that the reply is not verified then the client
473 implementation MUST return an error unless a subsequent mechanism
474 verifies the reply. The KDC needs to track this state so it can
475 avoid generating a reply that is not verified.
477 The typical Kerberos request does not provide a way for the client
478 machine to know that it is talking to the correct KDC. Someone who
479 can inject packets into the network between the client machine and
480 the KDC and who knows the password that the user will give to the
481 client machine can generate a KDC reply that will decrypt properly.
482 So, if the client machine needs to authenticate that the user is in
483 fact the named principal, then the client machine needs to do a TGS
484 request for itself as a service. Some pre-authentication mechanisms
485 may provide a way for the client machine to authenticate the KDC.
486 Examples of this include signing the reply that can be verified using
487 a well-known public key or providing a ticket for the client machine
490 3.2. Initial Pre-authentication Required Error
492 Typically a client starts a conversation by sending an initial
493 request with no pre-authentication. If the KDC requires pre-
494 authentication, then it returns a KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED message.
495 After the first reply with the KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error code,
496 the KDC returns the error code KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED
497 (defined in Section 6.3) for pre-authentication configurations that
498 use multi-round-trip mechanisms; see Section 3.4 for details of that
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508 The KDC needs to choose which mechanisms to offer the client. The
509 client needs to be able to choose what mechanisms to use from the
510 first message. For example consider the KDC that will accept
511 mechanism A followed by mechanism B or alternatively the single
512 mechanism C. A client that supports A and C needs to know that it
513 should not bother trying A.
515 Mechanisms can either be sufficient on their own or can be part of an
516 authentication set--a group of mechanisms that all need to
517 successfully complete in order to authenticate a client. Some
518 mechanisms may only be useful in authentication sets; others may be
519 useful alone or in authentication sets. For the second group of
520 mechanisms, KDC policy dictates whether the mechanism will be part of
521 an authentication set or offered alone. For each mechanism that is
522 offered alone, the KDC includes the pre-authentication type ID of the
523 mechanism in the padata sequence returned in the
524 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error.
526 The KDC SHOULD NOT send data that is encrypted in the long-term
527 password-based key of the principal. Doing so has the same security
528 exposures as the Kerberos protocol without pre-authentication. There
529 are few situations where the KDC needs to expose cipher text
530 encrypted in a weak key before the client has proven knowledge of
531 that key, and pre-authentication is desirable.
535 This description assumes that a client has already received a
536 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED from the KDC. If the client performs
537 optimistic pre-authentication then the client needs to guess values
538 for the information it would normally receive from that error
539 response or use cached information obtained in prior interactions
542 The client starts by initializing the pre-authentication state as
543 specified. It then processes the padata in the
544 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED.
546 When processing the response to the KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED, the
547 client MAY ignore any padata it chooses unless doing so violates a
548 specification to which the client conforms. Clients conforming to
549 this specification MUST NOT ignore the padata defined in Section 6.3.
550 Clients SHOULD process padata unrelated to this framework or other
551 means of authenticating the user. Clients SHOULD choose one
552 authentication set or mechanism that could lead to authenticating the
553 user and ignore the rest. Since the list of mechanisms offered by
554 the KDC is in the decreasing preference order, clients typically
555 choose the first mechanism or authentication set that the client can
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564 usefully perform. If a client chooses to ignore a padata it MUST NOT
565 process the padata, allow the padata to affect the pre-authentication
566 state, nor respond to the padata.
568 For each padata the client chooses to process, the client processes
569 the padata and modifies the pre-authentication state as required by
570 that mechanism. Padata are processed in the order received from the
573 After processing the padata in the KDC error, the client generates a
574 new request. It processes the pre-authentication mechanisms in the
575 order in which they will appear in the next request, updating the
576 state as appropriate. The request is sent when it is complete.
580 When a KDC receives an AS request from a client, it needs to
581 determine whether it will respond with an error or an AS reply.
582 There are many causes for an error to be generated that have nothing
583 to do with pre-authentication; they are discussed in the core
584 Kerberos specification.
586 From the standpoint of evaluating the pre-authentication, the KDC
587 first starts by initializing the pre-authentication state. If a PA-
588 FX-COOKIE pre-authentication data item is present, it is processed
589 first; see Section 6.3 for a definition. It then processes the
590 padata in the request. As mentioned in Section 3.3, the KDC MAY
591 ignore padata that is inappropriate for the configuration and MUST
592 ignore padata of an unknown type. The KDC MUST NOT ignore padata of
593 types used in previous messages. For example, if a KDC issues a
594 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error including padata of type x, then the
595 KDC cannot ignore padata of type x received in an AS-REQ message from
598 At this point the KDC decides whether it will issue an error or a
599 reply. Typically a KDC will issue a reply if the client's identity
600 has been authenticated to a sufficient degree.
602 In the case of a KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED error, the KDC
603 first starts by initializing the pre-authentication state. Then it
604 processes any padata in the client's request in the order provided by
605 the client. Mechanisms that are not understood by the KDC are
606 ignored. Next, it generates padata for the error response, modifying
607 the pre-authentication state appropriately as each mechanism is
608 processed. The KDC chooses the order in which it will generate
609 padata (and thus the order of padata in the response), but it needs
610 to modify the pre-authentication state consistently with the choice
611 of order. For example, if some mechanism establishes an
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620 authenticated client identity, then the subsequent mechanisms in the
621 generated response receive this state as input. After the padata is
622 generated, the error response is sent. Typically the errors with the
623 code KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED in a conversation will include
624 KDC state as discussed in Section 6.3.
626 To generate a final reply, the KDC generates the padata modifying the
627 pre-authentication state as necessary. Then it generates the final
628 response, encrypting it in the current pre-authentication reply key.
631 4. Pre-Authentication Facilities
633 Pre-Authentication mechanisms can be thought of as providing various
634 conceptual facilities. This serves two useful purposes. First,
635 mechanism authors can choose only to solve one specific small
636 problem. It is often useful for a mechanism designed to offer key
637 management not to directly provide client authentication but instead
638 to allow one or more other mechanisms to handle this need. Secondly,
639 thinking about the abstract services that a mechanism provides yields
640 a minimum set of security requirements that all mechanisms providing
641 that facility must meet. These security requirements are not
642 complete; mechanisms will have additional security requirements based
643 on the specific protocol they employ.
645 A mechanism is not constrained to only offering one of these
646 facilities. While such mechanisms can be designed and are sometimes
647 useful, many pre-authentication mechanisms implement several
648 facilities. By combining multiple facilities in a single mechanism,
649 it is often easier to construct a secure, simple solution than by
650 solving the problem in full generality. Even when mechanisms provide
651 multiple facilities, they need to meet the security requirements for
652 all the facilities they provide. If the FAST factor approach is
653 used, it is likely that one or a small number of facilities can be
654 provided by a single mechanism without complicating the security
657 According to Kerberos extensibility rules (Section 1.5 of the
658 Kerberos specification [RFC4120]), an extension MUST NOT change the
659 semantics of a message unless a recipient is known to understand that
660 extension. Because a client does not know that the KDC supports a
661 particular pre-authentication mechanism when it sends an initial
662 request, a pre-authentication mechanism MUST NOT change the semantics
663 of the request in a way that will break a KDC that does not
664 understand that mechanism. Similarly, KDCs MUST NOT send messages to
665 clients that affect the core semantics unless the client has
666 indicated support for the message.
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676 The only state in this model that would break the interpretation of a
677 message is changing the expected reply key. If one mechanism changed
678 the reply key and a later mechanism used that reply key, then a KDC
679 that interpreted the second mechanism but not the first would fail to
680 interpret the request correctly. In order to avoid this problem,
681 extensions that change core semantics are typically divided into two
682 parts. The first part proposes a change to the core semantic--for
683 example proposes a new reply key. The second part acknowledges that
684 the extension is understood and that the change takes effect.
685 Section 4.2 discusses how to design mechanisms that modify the reply
686 key to be split into a proposal and acceptance without requiring
687 additional round trips to use the new reply key in subsequent pre-
688 authentication. Other changes in the state described in Section 3.1
689 can safely be ignored by a KDC that does not understand a mechanism.
690 Mechanisms that modify the behavior of the request outside the scope
691 of this framework need to carefully consider the Kerberos
692 extensibility rules to avoid similar problems.
694 4.1. Client-authentication Facility
696 The client authentication facility proves the identity of a user to
697 the KDC before a ticket is issued. Examples of mechanisms
698 implementing this facility include the encrypted timestamp facility
699 defined in Section 5.2.7.2 of the Kerberos specification [RFC4120].
700 Mechanisms that provide this facility are expected to mark the client
703 Mechanisms implementing this facility SHOULD require the client to
704 prove knowledge of the reply key before transmitting a successful KDC
705 reply. Otherwise, an attacker can intercept the pre-authentication
706 exchange and get a reply to attack. One way of proving the client
707 knows the reply key is to implement the Replace Reply Key facility
708 along with this facility. The PKINIT mechanism [RFC4556] implements
709 Client Authentication alongside Replace Reply Key.
711 If the reply key has been replaced, then mechanisms such as
712 encrypted-timestamp that rely on knowledge of the reply key to
713 authenticate the client MUST NOT be used.
715 4.2. Strengthening-reply-key Facility
717 Particularly when dealing with keys based on passwords, it is
718 desirable to increase the strength of the key by adding additional
719 secrets to it. Examples of sources of additional secrets include the
720 results of a Diffie-Hellman key exchange or key bits from the output
721 of a smart card [KRB-WG.SAM]. Typically these additional secrets can
722 be first combined with the existing reply key and then converted to a
723 protocol key using tools defined in Section 6.1.
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732 Typically a mechanism implementing this facility will know that the
733 other side of the exchange supports the facility before the reply key
734 is changed. For example, a mechanism might need to learn the
735 certificate for a KDC before encrypting a new key in the public key
736 belonging to that certificate. However, if a mechanism implementing
737 this facility wishes to modify the reply key before knowing that the
738 other party in the exchange supports the mechanism, it proposes
739 modifying the reply key. The other party then includes a message
740 indicating that the proposal is accepted if it is understood and
741 meets policy. In many cases it is desirable to use the new reply key
742 for client authentication and for other facilities. Waiting for the
743 other party to accept the proposal and actually modify the reply key
744 state would add an additional round trip to the exchange. Instead,
745 mechanism designers are encouraged to include a typed hole for
746 additional padata in the message that proposes the reply key change.
747 The padata included in the typed hole are generated assuming the new
748 reply key. If the other party accepts the proposal, then these
749 padata are considered as an inner level. As with the outer level,
750 one authentication set or mechanism is typically chosen for client
751 authentication, along with auxiliary mechanisms such as KDC cookies,
752 and other mechanisms are ignored. When mechanisms include such a
753 container, the hint provided for use in authentication sets (as
754 defined in Section 6.4) MUST contain a sequence of inner mechanisms
755 along with hints for those mechanisms. The party generating the
756 proposal can determine whether the padata were processed based on
757 whether the proposal for the reply key is accepted.
759 The specific formats of the proposal message, including where padata
760 are included is a matter for the mechanism specification. Similarly,
761 the format of the message accepting the proposal is mechanism-
764 Mechanisms implementing this facility and including a typed hole for
765 additional padata MUST checksum that padata using a keyed checksum or
766 encrypt the padata. This requirement protects against modification
767 of the contents of the typed hole. By modifying these contents an
768 attacker might be able to choose which mechanism is used to
769 authenticate the client, or to convince a party to provide text
770 encrypted in a key that the attacker had manipulated. It is
771 important that mechanisms strengthen the reply key enough that using
772 it to checksum padata is appropriate.
774 4.3. Replacing-reply-key Facility
776 The Replace Reply Key facility replaces the key in which a successful
777 AS reply will be encrypted. This facility can only be used in cases
778 where knowledge of the reply key is not used to authenticate the
779 client. The new reply key MUST be communicated to the client and the
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788 KDC in a secure manner. This facility MUST NOT be used if there can
789 be a man-in-the-middle between the client and the KDC. Mechanisms
790 implementing this facility MUST mark the reply key as replaced in the
791 pre-authentication state. Mechanisms implementing this facility MUST
792 either provide a mechanism to verify the KDC reply to the client or
793 mark the reply as unverified in the pre-authentication state.
794 Mechanisms implementing this facility SHOULD NOT be used if a
795 previous mechanism has used the reply key.
797 As with the strengthening-reply-key facility, Kerberos extensibility
798 rules require that the reply key not be changed unless both sides of
799 the exchange understand the extension. In the case of this facility
800 it will likely be the case for both sides to know that the facility
801 is available by the time that the new key is available to be used.
802 However, mechanism designers can use a container for padata in a
803 proposal message as discussed in Section 4.2 if appropriate.
805 4.4. KDC-authentication Facility
807 This facility verifies that the reply comes from the expected KDC.
808 In traditional Kerberos, the KDC and the client share a key, so if
809 the KDC reply can be decrypted then the client knows that a trusted
810 KDC responded. Note that the client machine cannot trust the client
811 unless the machine is presented with a service ticket for it
812 (typically the machine can retrieve this ticket by itself). However,
813 if the reply key is replaced, some mechanism is required to verify
814 the KDC. Pre-authentication mechanisms providing this facility allow
815 a client to determine that the expected KDC has responded even after
816 the reply key is replaced. They mark the pre-authentication state as
817 having been verified.
820 5. Requirements for Pre-Authentication Mechanisms
822 This section lists requirements for specifications of pre-
823 authentication mechanisms.
825 For each message in the pre-authentication mechanism, the
826 specification describes the pa-type value to be used and the contents
827 of the message. The processing of the message by the sender and
828 recipient is also specified. This specification needs to include all
829 modifications to the pre-authentication state.
831 Generally mechanisms have a message that can be sent in the error
832 data of the KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error message or in an
833 authentication set. If the client needs information such as trusted
834 certificate authorities in order to determine if it can use the
835 mechanism, then this information should be in that message. In
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844 addition, such mechanisms should also define a pa-hint to be included
845 in authentication sets. Often, the same information included in the
846 padata-value is appropriate to include in the pa-hint (as defined in
849 In order to ease security analysis the mechanism specification should
850 describe what facilities from this document are offered by the
851 mechanism. For each facility, the security consideration section of
852 the mechanism specification should show that the security
853 requirements of that facility are met. This requirement is
854 applicable to any FAST factor that provides authentication
857 Significant problems have resulted in the specification of Kerberos
858 protocols because much of the KDC exchange is not protected against
859 authentication. The security considerations section should discuss
860 unauthenticated plaintext attacks. It should either show that
861 plaintext is protected or discuss what harm an attacker could do by
862 modifying the plaintext. It is generally acceptable for an attacker
863 to be able to cause the protocol negotiation to fail by modifying
864 plaintext. More significant attacks should be evaluated carefully.
866 As discussed in Section 6.3, there is no guarantee that a client will
867 use the same KDCs for all messages in a conversation. The mechanism
868 specification needs to show why the mechanism is secure in this
869 situation. The hardest problem to deal with, especially for
870 challenge/response mechanisms is to make sure that the same response
871 cannot be replayed against two KDCs while allowing the client to talk
875 6. Tools for Use in Pre-Authentication Mechanisms
877 This section describes common tools needed by multiple pre-
878 authentication mechanisms. By using these tools mechanism designers
879 can use a modular approach to specify mechanism details and ease
884 Frequently a weak key needs to be combined with a stronger key before
885 use. For example, passwords are typically limited in size and
886 insufficiently random, therefore it is desirable to increase the
887 strength of the keys based on passwords by adding additional secrets.
888 Additional source of secrecy may come from hardware tokens.
890 This section provides standard ways to combine two keys into one.
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900 KRB-FX-CF1() is defined to combine two pass-phrases.
902 KRB-FX-CF1(UTF-8 string, UTF-8 string) -> (UTF-8 string)
903 KRB-FX-CF1(x, y) -> x || y
905 Where || denotes concatenation. The strength of the final key is
906 roughly the total strength of the individual keys being combined
907 assuming that the string_to_key() function [RFC3961] uses all its
910 An example usage of KRB-FX-CF1() is when a device provides random but
911 short passwords, the password is often combined with a personal
912 identification number (PIN). The password and the PIN can be
913 combined using KRB-FX-CF1().
915 KRB-FX-CF2() combines two protocol keys based on the pseudo-random()
916 function defined in [RFC3961].
918 Given two input keys, K1 and K2, where K1 and K2 can be of two
919 different enctypes, the output key of KRB-FX-CF2(), K3, is derived as
922 KRB-FX-CF2(protocol key, protocol key, octet string,
923 octet string) -> (protocol key)
925 PRF+(K1, pepper1) -> octet-string-1
926 PRF+(K2, pepper2) -> octet-string-2
927 KRB-FX-CF2(K1, K2, pepper1, pepper2) ->
928 random-to-key(octet-string-1 ^ octet-string-2)
930 Where ^ denotes the exclusive-OR operation. PRF+() is defined as
933 PRF+(protocol key, octet string) -> (octet string)
935 PRF+(key, shared-info) -> pseudo-random( key, 1 || shared-info ) ||
936 pseudo-random( key, 2 || shared-info ) ||
937 pseudo-random( key, 3 || shared-info ) || ...
939 Here the counter value 1, 2, 3 and so on are encoded as a one-octet
940 integer. The pseudo-random() operation is specified by the enctype
941 of the protocol key. PRF+() uses the counter to generate enough bits
942 as needed by the random-to-key() [RFC3961] function for the
943 encryption type specified for the resulting key; unneeded bits are
944 removed from the tail. Unless otherwise specified, the resulting
945 enctype of KRB-FX-CF2 is the enctype of k1.
947 Mechanism designers MUST specify the values for the input parameter
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956 pepper1 and pepper2 when combining two keys using KRB-FX-CF2(). The
957 pepper1 and pepper2 MUST be distinct so that if the two keys being
958 combined are the same, the resulting key is not a trivial key.
960 6.2. Protecting Requests/Responses
962 Mechanism designers SHOULD protect clear text portions of pre-
963 authentication data. Various denial of service attacks and downgrade
964 attacks against Kerberos are possible unless plaintexts are somehow
965 protected against modification. An early design goal of Kerberos
966 Version 5 [RFC4120] was to avoid encrypting more of the
967 authentication exchange that was required. (Version 4 doubly-
968 encrypted the encrypted part of a ticket in a KDC reply, for
969 example.) This minimization of encryption reduces the load on the
970 KDC and busy servers. Also, during the initial design of Version 5,
971 the existence of legal restrictions on the export of cryptography
972 made it desirable to minimize of the number of uses of encryption in
973 the protocol. Unfortunately, performing this minimization created
974 numerous instances of unauthenticated security-relevant plaintext
977 If there is more than one round trip for an authentication exchange,
978 mechanism designers need to allow either the client or the KDC to
979 provide a checksum of all the messages exchanged on the wire in the
980 conversation, and the checksum is then verified by the receiver.
982 New mechanisms MUST NOT be hard-wired to use a specific algorithm.
984 Primitives defined in [RFC3961] are RECOMMENDED for integrity
985 protection and confidentiality. Mechanisms based on these primitives
986 are crypto-agile as the result of using [RFC3961] along with
987 [RFC4120]. The advantage afforded by crypto-agility is the ability
988 to incrementally deploy a fix specific to a particular algorithm thus
989 avoid a multi-year standardization and deployment cycle, when real
990 attacks do arise against that algorithm.
992 Note that data used by FAST factors (defined in Section 6.5) is
993 encrypted in a protected channel, thus they do not share the un-
994 authenticated-text issues with mechanisms designed as full-blown pre-
995 authentication mechanisms.
997 6.3. Managing States for the KDC
999 Kerberos KDCs are stateless. There is no requirement that clients
1000 will choose the same KDC for the second request in a conversation.
1001 Proxies or other intermediate nodes may also influence KDC selection.
1002 So, each request from a client to a KDC must include sufficient
1003 information that the KDC can regenerate any needed state. This is
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1012 accomplished by giving the client a potentially long opaque cookie in
1013 responses to include in future requests in the same conversation.
1014 The KDC MAY respond that a conversation is too old and needs to
1015 restart by responding with a KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_EXPIRED error.
1017 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_EXPIRED TBA
1019 When a client receives this error, the client SHOULD abort the
1020 existing conversation, and restart a new one.
1022 An example, where more than one message from the client is needed, is
1023 when the client is authenticated based on a challenge-response
1024 scheme. In that case, the KDC needs to keep track of the challenge
1025 issued for a client authentication request.
1027 The PA-FX-COOKIE padata type is defined in this section to facilitate
1028 state management. This padata is sent by the KDC when the KDC
1029 requires state for a future transaction. The client includes this
1030 opaque token in the next message in the conversation. The token may
1031 be relatively large; clients MUST be prepared for tokens somewhat
1032 larger than the size of all messages in a conversation.
1035 -- Stateless cookie that is not tied to a specific KDC.
1037 The corresponding padata-value field [RFC4120] contains an opaque
1038 token that will be echoed by the client in its response to an error
1041 The cookie token is generated by the KDC and transmitted in a PA-FX-
1042 COOKIE pre-authentication data item of a KRB-ERROR message. The
1043 client MUST copy the exact cookie encapsulated in a PA-FX-COOKIE data
1044 element into the next message of the same conversation. The content
1045 of the cookie field is a local matter of the KDC. As a result, it is
1046 not generally possible to mix KDC implementations from different
1047 vendors in the same realm. However the KDC MUST construct the cookie
1048 token in such a manner that a malicious client cannot subvert the
1049 authentication process by manipulating the token. The KDC
1050 implementation needs to consider expiration of tokens, key rollover
1051 and other security issues in token design. The content of the cookie
1052 field is likely specific to the pre-authentication mechanisms used to
1053 authenticate the client. If a client authentication response can be
1054 replayed to multiple KDCs via the PA-FX-COOKIE mechanism, an
1055 expiration in the cookie is RECOMMENDED to prevent the response being
1056 presented indefinitely.
1058 If at least one more message for a mechanism or a mechanism set is
1059 expected by the KDC, the KDC returns a
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1068 KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED error with a PA-FX-COOKIE to
1069 identify the conversation with the client according to Section 3.2.
1070 The cookie is not expected to stay constant for a conversation: the
1071 KDC is expected to generate a new cookie for each message.
1073 KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED TBA
1075 6.4. Pre-authentication Set
1077 If all mechanisms in a group need to successfully complete in order
1078 to authenticate a client, the client and the KDC SHOULD use the PA-
1079 AUTHENTICATION-SET padata element.
1081 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET TBA
1083 A PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET padata element contains the ASN.1 DER
1084 encoding of the PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET structure:
1086 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET ::= SEQUENCE OF PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM
1088 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM ::= SEQUENCE {
1090 -- same as padata-type.
1091 pa-hint [1] OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,
1092 pa-value [2] OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,
1096 The pa-type field of the PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM structure
1097 contains the corresponding value of padata-type in PA-DATA [RFC4120].
1098 Associated with the pa-type is a pa-hint, which is an octet-string
1099 specified by the pre-authentication mechanism. This hint may provide
1100 information for the client which helps it determine whether the
1101 mechanism can be used. For example a public-key mechanism might
1102 include the certificate authorities it trusts in the hint info. Most
1103 mechanisms today do not specify hint info; if a mechanism does not
1104 specify hint info the KDC MUST NOT send a hint for that mechanism.
1105 To allow future revisions of mechanism specifications to add hint
1106 info, clients MUST ignore hint info received for mechanisms that the
1107 client believes do not support hint info. The pa-value element of
1108 the PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM sequence is included to carry the
1109 first padata-value from the KDC to the client. If the client chooses
1110 this authentication set then the client MUST process this pa-value.
1111 The pa-value element MUST be absent for all but the first entry in
1112 the authentication set. Clients MUST ignore pa-value for the second
1113 and following entries in the authentication set.
1115 If the client chooses an authentication set, then its first AS-REQ
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1124 message MUST contain a PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED padata element.
1125 This element contains the encoding of the PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET
1126 sequence received from the KDC corresponding to the authentication
1127 set that is chosen. The client MUST use the same octet values
1128 received from the KDC; it cannot re-encode the sequence. This allows
1129 KDCs to use bit-wise comparison to identify the selected
1130 authentication set. The PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED padata
1131 element MUST come before any padata elements from the authentication
1132 set in the padata sequence in the AS-REQ message. The client MAY
1133 cache authentication sets from prior messages and use them to
1134 construct an optimistic initial AS-REQ. If the KDC receives a PA-
1135 AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED padata element that does not correspond
1136 to an authentication set that it would offer, then the KDC returns
1137 the KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_BAD_AUTHENTICATION_SET error. The e-data in this
1138 error contains a sequence of padata just as for the
1139 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_REQUIRED error.
1142 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED TBA
1143 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_BAD_AUTHENTICATION_SET TBA
1145 The PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET appears only in the first message from the
1146 KDC to the client. In particular, the client MAY fail if the
1147 authentication mechanism sets change as the conversation progresses.
1148 Clients MAY assume that the hints provided in the authentication set
1149 contain enough information that the client knows what user interface
1150 elements need to be displayed during the entire authentication
1151 conversation. Exceptional circumstances such as expired passwords or
1152 expired accounts may require that additional user interface be
1153 displayed. Mechanism designers need to carefully consider the design
1154 of their hints so that the client has this information. This way,
1155 clients can construct necessary dialogue boxes or wizards based on
1156 the authentication set and can present a coherent user interface.
1157 Current standards for user interface do not provide an acceptable
1158 experience when the client has to ask additional questions later in
1161 When indicating which sets of pre-authentication mechanisms are
1162 supported, the KDC includes a PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET padata element
1163 for each pre-authentication mechanism set.
1165 The client sends the padata-value for the first mechanism it picks in
1166 the pre-authentication set, when the first mechanism completes, the
1167 client and the KDC will proceed with the second mechanism, and so on
1168 until all mechanisms complete successfully. The PA-FX-COOKIE as
1169 defined in Section 6.3 MUST be sent by the KDC so that the
1170 conversation can continue if the conversation involves multiple KDCs.
1171 The cookie may not be needed in the first message containing the PA-
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1180 AUTHENTICATION-SET sequence as the KDC may be able to reconstruct the
1181 state from the PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED padata. KDCs MUST
1182 support clients that do not include a cookie because they
1183 optimistically choose an authentication set, although they MAY always
1184 return KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_BAD_AUTHENTICATION_SET and include a cookie in
1185 that message. Clients that support PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET MUST
1186 support PA-FX-COOKIE.
1188 Before the authentication succeeds and a ticket is returned, the
1189 message that the client sends is an AS_REQ and the message that the
1190 KDC sends is a KRB-ERROR message. The error code in the KRB-ERROR
1191 message from the KDC is KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED as defined
1192 in Section 6.3 and the accompanying e-data contains the DER encoding
1193 of ASN.1 type METHOD-DATA. The KDC includes the padata elements in
1194 the METHOD-DATA. If there is no padata, the e-data field is absent
1195 in the KRB-ERROR message.
1197 If the client sends the last message for a given mechanism, then the
1198 KDC sends the first message for the next mechanism. If the next
1199 mechanism does not start with a KDC-side challenge, then the KDC
1200 includes a padata item with the appropriate pa-type and an empty pa-
1203 If the KDC sends the last message for a particular mechanism, the KDC
1204 also includes the first padata for the next mechanism.
1206 6.5. Definition of Kerberos FAST Padata
1208 As described in [RFC4120], Kerberos is vulnerable to offline
1209 dictionary attacks. An attacker can request an AS-REP and try
1210 various passwords to see if they can decrypt the resulting ticket.
1211 RFC 4120 provides the encrypted timestamp pre-authentication method
1212 that ameliorates the situation somewhat by requiring that an attacker
1213 observe a successful authentication. However stronger security is
1214 desired in many environments. The Kerberos FAST pre-authentication
1215 padata defined in this section provides a tool to significantly
1216 reduce vulnerability to offline dictionary attack. When combined
1217 with encrypted challenge, FAST requires an attacker to mount a
1218 successful man-in-the-middle attack to observe ciphertext. When
1219 combined with host keys, FAST can even protect against active
1220 attacks. FAST also provides solutions to common problems for pre-
1221 authentication mechanisms such as binding of the request and the
1222 reply, freshness guarantee of the authentication. FAST itself,
1223 however, does not authenticate the client or the KDC, instead, it
1224 provides a typed hole to allow pre-authentication data be tunneled.
1225 A pre-authentication data element used within FAST is called a FAST
1226 factor. A FAST factor captures the minimal work required for
1227 extending Kerberos to support a new pre-authentication scheme.
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1236 A FAST factor MUST NOT be used outside of FAST unless its
1237 specification explicitly allows so. The typed holes in FAST messages
1238 can also be used as generic holes for other padata that are not
1239 intended to prove the client's identity, or establish the reply key.
1241 New pre-authentication mechanisms SHOULD be designed as FAST factors,
1242 instead of full-blown pre-authentication mechanisms.
1244 FAST factors that are pre-authentication mechanisms MUST meet the
1245 requirements in Section 5.
1247 FAST employs an armoring scheme. The armor can be a Ticket Granting
1248 Ticket (TGT) obtained by the client's machine using the host keys to
1249 pre-authenticate with the KDC, or an anonymous TGT obtained based on
1250 anonymous PKINIT [KRB-ANON] [RFC4556].
1252 The rest of this section describes the types of armors and the syntax
1253 of the messages used by FAST. Conforming implementations MUST
1254 support Kerberos FAST padata.
1256 Any FAST armor scheme MUST provide a fresh armor key for each
1257 conversation. Clients and KDCs can assume that if a message is
1258 encrypted and integrity protected with a given armor key then it is
1259 part of the conversation using that armor key.
1261 All KDCs in a realm MUST support FAST if FAST is offered by any KDC
1262 as a pre-authentication mechanism.
1266 An armor key is used to encrypt pre-authentication data in the FAST
1267 request and the response. The KrbFastArmor structure is defined to
1268 identify the armor key. This structure contains the following two
1269 fields: the armor-type identifies the type of armors, and the armor-
1270 value is an OCTET STRING that contains the description of the armor
1271 scheme and the armor key.
1273 KrbFastArmor ::= SEQUENCE {
1274 armor-type [0] Int32,
1275 -- Type of the armor.
1276 armor-value [1] OCTET STRING,
1277 -- Value of the armor.
1281 The value of the armor key is a matter of the armor type
1282 specification. Only one armor type is defined in this document.
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1292 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST 1
1294 The FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST armor is based on Kerberos tickets.
1296 Conforming implementations MUST implement the
1297 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST armor type.
1299 FAST implementations MUST maintain state about whether the armor
1300 mechanism authenticates the KDC. If it does not, then a fast factor
1301 that authenticates the KDC MUST be used if the reply key is replaced.
1303 6.5.1.1. Ticket-based Armors
1305 This is a ticket-based armoring scheme. The armor-type is
1306 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST, the armor-value contains an ASN.1 DER
1307 encoded AP-REQ. The ticket in the AP-REQ is called an armor ticket
1308 or an armor TGT. The subkey field in the AP-REQ MUST be present.
1309 The armor key is defined by the following function:
1311 armor_key = KRB-FX-CF2( subkey, ticket_session_key,
1312 "subkeyarmor", "ticketarmor" )
1314 The `ticket_key' is the session key from the ticket in the ap-req.
1315 The `subkey' is the ap-req subkey. This construction guarantees that
1316 both the KDC (through the session key) and the client (through the
1317 subkey) contribute to the armor key.
1319 The server name field of the armor ticket MUST identify the TGS of
1320 the target realm. Here are three common ways in the decreasing
1321 preference order how an armor TGT SHOULD be obtained:
1323 1. If the client is authenticating from a host machine whose
1324 Kerberos realm has an authentication path to the client's realm,
1325 the host machine obtains a TGT by using the host keys. If the
1326 client's realm is different than the realm of the local host, the
1327 machine then obtains a cross-realm TGT to the client's realm as
1328 the armor ticket. Otherwise, the host's primary TGT is the armor
1331 2. If the client's host machine cannot obtain a host ticket strictly
1332 based on RFC4120, but the KDC has an asymmetric signing key whose
1333 binding with the expected KDC can be verified by the client, the
1334 client can use anonymous PKINIT [KRB-ANON] [RFC4556] to
1335 authenticate the KDC and obtain an anonymous TGT as the armor
1336 ticket. The armor ticket can also be a cross-realm TGT obtained
1337 based on the initial primary TGT obtained using anonymous PKINIT
1338 with KDC authentication.
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1348 3. Otherwise, the client uses anonymous PKINIT to get an anonymous
1349 TGT without KDC authentication and that TGT is the armor ticket.
1350 Note that this mode of operation is vulnerable to man-in-the-
1351 middle attacks at the time of obtaining the initial anonymous
1354 If anonymous PKINIT is used, The KDC cannot know whether its signing
1355 key can be verified by the client, hence the KDC MUST be marked as
1356 unverified from the KDC's point of view while the client could be
1357 able to authenticate the KDC by verifying the KDC's signing key is
1358 bound with the expected KDC. The client needs to carefully consider
1359 the risk and benefit tradeoffs associated with active attacks before
1360 exposing cipher text encrypted using the user's long-term secrets
1361 when the armor does not authenticate the KDC.
1363 The TGS MUST reject a request if there is an AD-fx-fast-armor (TBD)
1364 element in the authenticator of the pa-tgs-req padata or if the
1365 ticket in the authenticator of a pa-tgs-req contains the AD-fx-fast-
1366 armor authorization data element. These tickets and authenticators
1367 MAY be used as FAST armor tickets but not to obtain a ticket via the
1368 TGS. This authorization data is used in a system where the
1369 encryption of the user's pre-authentication data is performed in an
1370 unprivileged user process. A privileged process can provide to the
1371 user process a host ticket, an authenticator for use with that
1372 ticket, and the sub session key contained in the authenticator. In
1373 order for the host process to ensure that the host ticket is not
1374 accidentally or intentionally misused, (i.e. the user process might
1375 use the host ticket to authenticate as the host), it MUST include a
1376 critical authorization data element of the type AD-fx-fast-armor when
1377 providing the authenticator or in the enc-authorization-data field of
1378 the TGS request used to obtain the TGT. The corresponding ad-data
1379 field of the AD-fx-fast-armor element is empty.
1381 As discussed previously, the server of an armor ticket MUST be the
1382 TGS of the realm from whom service is requested. As a result, if
1383 this armor type is used when a ticket is being validated, proxied, or
1384 in other cases where a ticket other than a TGT is presented to the
1385 TGS, a TGT will be used as an armor ticket, while another ticket will
1386 be used in the pa-tgs-req authenticator.
1390 A padata type PA-FX-FAST is defined for the Kerberos FAST pre-
1391 authentication padata. The corresponding padata-value field
1392 [RFC4120] contains the DER encoding of the ASN.1 type PA-FX-FAST-
1393 REQUEST. As with all pre-authentication types, the KDC SHOULD
1394 advertise PA-FX-FAST with an empty pa-value in a PREAUTH_REQUIRED
1395 error. Clients MUST ignore the pa-value of PA-FX-FAST in an initial
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1404 PREAUTH_REQUIRED error. FAST is not expected to be used in an
1405 authentication set: clients will typically use FAST padata if
1406 available and this decision should not depend on what other pre-
1407 authentication methods are available. As such, no pa-hint is defined
1408 for FAST at this time.
1411 -- Padata type for Kerberos FAST
1413 PA-FX-FAST-REQUEST ::= CHOICE {
1414 armored-data [0] KrbFastArmoredReq,
1418 KrbFastArmoredReq ::= SEQUENCE {
1419 armor [0] KrbFastArmor OPTIONAL,
1420 -- Contains the armor that identifies the armor key.
1421 -- MUST be present in AS-REQ.
1422 req-checksum [1] Checksum,
1423 -- Checksum performed over the type KDC-REQ-BODY for
1424 -- the req-body field of the KDC-REQ structure defined in
1426 -- The checksum key is the armor key, the checksum
1427 -- type is the required checksum type for the enctype of
1428 -- the armor key, and the key usage number is
1429 -- KEY_USAGE_FAST_REQ_CHKSUM.
1430 enc-fast-req [2] EncryptedData, -- KrbFastReq --
1431 -- The encryption key is the armor key, and the key usage
1432 -- number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_ENC.
1436 KEY_USAGE_FAST_REQ_CHKSUM TBA
1437 KEY_USAGE_FAST_ENC TBA
1439 The PA-FX-FAST-REQUEST structure contains a KrbFastArmoredReq type.
1440 The KrbFastArmoredReq encapsulates the encrypted padata.
1442 The enc-fast-req field contains an encrypted KrbFastReq structure.
1443 The armor key is used to encrypt the KrbFastReq structure, and the
1444 key usage number for that encryption is KEY_USAGE_FAST_ENC.
1446 The armor key is selected as follows:
1448 o In an AS request, the armor field in the KrbFastArmoredReq
1449 structure MUST be present and the armor key is identified
1450 according to the specification of the armor type.
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1460 o There are two possibilities for armor for a TGS request. If the
1461 ticket presented in the PA-TGS-REQ authenticator is a TGT, then
1462 the client SHOULD not include the armor field in the Krbfastreq
1463 and a subkey MUST be included in the PA-TGS-REQ authenticator. In
1464 this case, the armor key is the same armor key that would be
1465 computed if the TGS-REQ authenticator was used in a
1466 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST armor. If a ticket other than a TGT is
1467 being presented to the TGS, a client SHOULD use some form of FAST
1468 armor such as a ticket-based armor with a TGT as an armor ticket.
1469 Clients MAY present a non-TGT in the PA-TGS-REQ authenticator and
1470 omit the armor field, in which case the armor key is the same that
1471 would be computed if the authenticator were used in a
1472 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST armor. This is the only case where a
1473 ticket other than a TGT can be used to establish an armor key;
1474 even though the armor key is computed the same as a
1475 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST, a non-TGT cannot be used as an armor
1476 ticket in FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST.
1478 The req-checksum field contains a checksum that is performed over the
1479 type KDC-REQ-BODY for the req-body field of the KDC-REQ [RFC4120]
1480 structure of the containing message. The checksum key is the armor
1481 key, and the checksum type is the required checksum type for the
1482 enctype of the armor key per [RFC3961]. This checksum is included in
1483 order to bind the FAST padata to the outer request. A KDC that
1484 implements FAST will ignore the outer request, but including a
1485 checksum is relatively cheap and may prevent confusing behavior.
1487 The KrbFastReq structure contains the following information:
1489 KrbFastReq ::= SEQUENCE {
1490 fast-options [0] FastOptions,
1491 -- Additional options.
1492 padata [1] SEQUENCE OF PA-DATA,
1493 -- padata typed holes.
1494 req-body [2] KDC-REQ-BODY,
1495 -- Contains the KDC request body as defined in Section
1496 -- 5.4.1 of [RFC4120].
1497 -- This req-body field is preferred over the outer field
1498 -- in the KDC request.
1502 The fast-options field indicates various options that are to modify
1503 the behavior of the KDC. The following options are defined:
1505 FastOptions ::= KerberosFlags
1507 -- hide-client-names(1),
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1516 -- kdcfollow--referrals(16)
1519 Bits Name Description
1520 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1521 0 RESERVED Reserved for future expansion of this
1523 1 hide-client-names Requesting the KDC to hide client
1524 names in the KDC response, as
1525 described next in this section.
1526 16 kdc-follow-referrals Requesting the KDC to follow referrals.
1528 Bits 1 through 15 inclusive (with bit 1 and bit 15 included) are
1529 critical options. If the KDC does not support a critical option, it
1530 MUST fail the request with KDC_ERR_UNKNOWN_CRITICAL_FAST_OPTIONS, and
1531 there is no accompanying e-data defined in this document for this
1532 error code. Bit 16 and onward (with bit 16 included) are non-
1533 critical options. KDCs conforming to this specification ignore
1534 unknown non-critical options.
1536 KDC_ERR_UNKNOWN_FAST_OPTIONS TBA
1538 The hide-client-names Option
1540 The Kerberos response defined in [RFC4120] contains the client
1541 identity in clear text, This makes traffic analysis
1542 straightforward. The hide-client-names option is designed to
1543 complicate traffic analysis. If the hide-client-names option is
1544 set, the KDC implementing PA-FX-FAST MUST identify the client as
1545 the anonymous principal [KRB-ANON] in the KDC reply and the error
1546 response. Hence this option is set by the client if it wishes to
1547 conceal the client identity in the KDC response. A conforming KDC
1548 ignores the client principal name in the outer KDC-REQ-BODY field,
1549 and identifies the client using the cname and crealm fields in the
1550 req-body field of the KrbFastReq structure.
1552 The kdc-follow-referrals Option
1554 The Kerberos client described in [RFC4120] has to request referral
1555 TGTs along the authentication path in order to get a service
1556 ticket for the target service. The Kerberos client described in
1557 the [REFERRALS] needs to contact the AS specified in the error
1558 response in order to complete client referrals. The kdc-follow-
1559 referrals option is designed to minimize the number of messages
1560 that need to be processed by the client. This option is useful
1561 when, for example, the client may contact the KDC via a satellite
1562 link that has high network latency, or the client has limited
1563 computational capabilities. If the kdc-follow-referrals option is
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1572 set, the KDC MAY act as the client to follow TGS referrals
1573 [REFERRALS], and return the service ticket to the named server
1574 principal in the client request using the reply key expected by
1575 the client. That is, rather than returning a referral, the KDC
1576 follows that referral by contacting a remote KDC and processing
1577 the referral. The kdc-referrals option can be implemented when
1578 the KDC knows the reply key. The KDC can ignore kdc-referrals
1579 option when it does not understand it or it does not allow this
1580 option based on local policy. The client SHOULD be capable of
1581 processing the KDC responses when this option is not honored by
1582 the KDC. Clients SHOULD use TCP to contact a KDC if this option
1583 is going to be used to avoid problems when the client's UDP
1584 retransmit algorithm has timeouts insufficient to allow the KDC to
1585 interact with remote KDCs.
1587 The padata field contains a list of PA-DATA structures as described
1588 in Section 5.2.7 of [RFC4120]. These PA-DATA structures can contain
1589 FAST factors. They can also be used as generic typed-holes to
1590 contain data not intended for proving the client's identity or
1591 establishing a reply key, but for protocol extensibility.
1593 The KDC-REQ-BODY in the FAST structure is used in preference to the
1594 KDC-REQ-BODY outside of the FAST pre-authentication. The outer KDC-
1595 REQ-BODY structure SHOULD be filled in for backwards compatibility
1596 with KDCs that do not support FAST. A conforming KDC ignores the
1597 outer KDC-REQ-BODY field in the KDC request. However pre-
1598 authentication data methods such as [RFC4556] that include a checksum
1599 of the KDC-REQ-BODY should checksum the outer KDC-REQ-BODY. These
1600 methods will already be bound to the inner body through the integrity
1601 protection in the FAST request.
1603 6.5.3. FAST Response
1605 The KDC that supports the PA-FX-FAST padata MUST include a PA-FX-FAST
1606 padata element in the KDC reply. In the case of an error, the PA-FX-
1607 FAST padata is included in the KDC responses according to
1610 The corresponding padata-value field [RFC4120] for the PA-FX-FAST in
1611 the KDC response contains the DER encoding of the ASN.1 type PA-FX-
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1628 PA-FX-FAST-REPLY ::= CHOICE {
1629 armored-data [0] KrbFastArmoredRep,
1633 KrbFastArmoredRep ::= SEQUENCE {
1634 enc-fast-rep [0] EncryptedData, -- KrbFastResponse --
1635 -- The encryption key is the armor key in the request, and
1636 -- the key usage number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_REP.
1639 KEY_USAGE_FAST_REP TBA
1641 The PA-FX-FAST-REPLY structure contains a KrbFastArmoredRep
1642 structure. The KrbFastArmoredRep structure encapsulates the padata
1643 in the KDC reply in the encrypted form. The KrbFastResponse is
1644 encrypted with the armor key used in the corresponding request, and
1645 the key usage number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_REP.
1647 The Kerberos client who does not receive a PA-FX-FAST-REPLY in the
1648 KDC response MUST support a local policy that rejects the response.
1649 Clients MAY also support policies that fall back to other mechanisms
1650 or that do not use pre-authentication when FAST is unavailable. It
1651 is important to consider the potential downgrade attacks when
1652 deploying such a policy.
1654 The KrbFastResponse structure contains the following information:
1656 KrbFastResponse ::= SEQUENCE {
1657 padata [0] SEQUENCE OF PA-DATA,
1658 -- padata typed holes.
1659 rep-key [1] EncryptionKey OPTIONAL,
1660 -- This, if present, replaces the reply key for AS and TGS.
1661 -- MUST be absent in KRB-ERROR.
1662 finished [2] KrbFastFinished OPTIONAL,
1663 -- MUST be present if the client is authenticated,
1664 -- absent otherwise.
1665 -- Typically this is present if and only if the containing
1666 -- message is the last one in a conversation.
1670 The padata field in the KrbFastResponse structure contains a list of
1671 PA-DATA structures as described in Section 5.2.7 of [RFC4120]. These
1672 PA-DATA structures are used to carry data advancing the exchange
1673 specific for the FAST factors. They can also be used as generic
1674 typed-holes for protocol extensibility. Unless otherwise specified,
1675 the KDC MUST include any padata otherwise in the outer KDC reply into
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1684 this field. The padata field in the KDC reply structure outside of
1685 the PA-FX-FAST-REPLY structure typically includes only the PA-FX-
1686 FAST-REPLY padata and optionally the PA-FX-COOKIE padata.
1688 The rep-key field, if present, contains the reply key that is used to
1689 encrypted the KDC reply. The rep-key field MUST be absent in the
1690 case where an error occurs. The enctype of the rep-key is the
1691 strongest mutually supported by the KDC and the client.
1693 The finished field contains a KrbFastFinished structure. It is
1694 filled by the KDC in the final message in the conversation; it MUST
1695 be absent otherwise. In other words, this field can only be present
1696 in an AS-REP or a TGS-REP when a ticket is returned.
1698 The KrbFastFinished structure contains the following information:
1700 KrbFastFinished ::= SEQUENCE {
1701 timestamp [0] KerberosTime,
1702 usec [1] Microseconds,
1703 -- timestamp and usec represent the time on the KDC when
1704 -- the reply was generated.
1706 cname [3] PrincipalName,
1707 -- Contains the client realm and the client name.
1708 checksum [4] Checksum,
1709 -- Checksum performed over all the messages in the
1710 -- conversation, except the containing message.
1711 -- The checksum key is the armor key as defined in
1712 -- Section 6.5.1, and the checksum type is the required
1713 -- checksum type of the armor key.
1714 ticket-checksum [5] Checksum,
1715 -- checksum of the ticket in the KDC-REP using the armor
1716 -- and the key usage is KEY_USAGE_FAST_FINISH.
1717 -- The checksum type is the required checksum type
1718 -- of the armor key.
1721 KEY_USAGE_FAST_FINISHED TBA
1723 The timestamp and usec fields represent the time on the KDC when the
1724 reply ticket was generated, these fields have the same semantics as
1725 the corresponding-identically-named fields in Section 5.6.1 of
1726 [RFC4120]. The client MUST use the KDC's time in these fields
1727 thereafter when using the returned ticket. Note that the KDC's time
1728 in AS-REP may not match the authtime in the reply ticket if the kdc-
1729 follow-referrals option is requested and honored by the KDC. The
1730 client need not confirm that the timestamp returned is within
1731 allowable clock skew: the armor key guarantees that the reply is
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1740 fresh. The client MAY trust the time stamp returned.
1742 The cname and crealm fields identify the authenticated client. If
1743 facilities described in [REFERRALS] are used, the authenticated
1744 client may differ from the client in the FAST request.
1746 The checksum field contains a checksum of all the messages in the
1747 conversation prior to the containing message (the containing message
1748 is excluded). The checksum key is the armor key, and the checksum
1749 type is the required checksum type of the enctype of that key, and
1750 the key usage number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_FINISHED. The ticket-checksum
1751 is a checksum of the issued ticket using the same key and key usage.
1753 When FAST padata is included, the PA-FX-COOKIE padata as defined in
1754 Section 6.3 MUST also be included if the KDC expects at least one
1755 more message from the client in order to complete the authentication.
1757 6.5.4. Authenticated Kerberos Error Messages using Kerberos FAST
1759 If the Kerberos FAST padata was included in the request, unless
1760 otherwise specified, the e-data field of the KRB-ERROR message
1761 [RFC4120] contains the ASN.1 DER encoding of the type METHOD-DATA
1762 [RFC4120] and a PA-FX-FAST is included in the METHOD-DATA. The KDC
1763 MUST include all the padata elements such as PA-ETYPE-INFO2 and
1764 padata elements that indicate acceptable pre-authentication
1765 mechanisms [RFC4120] in the KrbFastResponse structure.
1767 The KDC MUST also include a PA-FX-ERROR padata item in the
1768 KRBFastResponse structure. The padata-value element of this sequence
1769 is the ASN.1 DER encoding of the type KRB-ERROR. The e-data field
1770 MUST be absent in the PA-FX-ERROR padata. All other fields should be
1771 the same as the outer KRB-ERROR. The client ignores the outer error
1772 and uses the combination of the padata in the KRBFastResponse and the
1773 error information in the PA-FX-ERROR.
1777 If the Kerberos FAST padata is included in the request but not
1778 included in the error reply, it is a matter of the local policy on
1779 the client to accept the information in the error message without
1780 integrity protection. The Kerberos client MAY process an error
1781 message without a PA-FX-FAST-REPLY, if that is only intended to
1782 return better error information to the application, typically for
1783 trouble-shooting purposes.
1785 In the cases where the e-data field of the KRB-ERROR message is
1786 expected to carry a TYPED-DATA [RFC4120] element, then that
1787 information should be transmitted in a pa-data element within the
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1796 KRBFastResponse structure. The padata-type is the same as the data-
1797 type would be in the typed data element and the padata-value is the
1798 same as the data-value. As discussed in Section 8, data-types and
1799 padata-types are drawn from the same namespace. For example, the
1800 TD_TRUSTED_CERTIFIERS structure is expected to be in the KRB-ERROR
1801 message when the error code is KDC_ERR_CANT_VERIFY_CERTIFICATE
1804 6.5.5. Outer and Inner Requests
1806 Typically, a client will know that FAST is being used before a
1807 request containing PA-FX-FAST is sent. So, the outer AS request
1808 typically only includes two pa-data items: PA-FX-FAST and PA-FX-
1809 COOKIE. The client MAY include additional pa-data, but the KDC MUST
1810 ignore the outer request body and any padata besides PA-FX-FAST and
1811 PA-FX-COOKIE if PA-FX-FAST is processed. In the case of the TGS
1812 request, the outer request should include PA-FX-FAST and PA-TGS-REQ.
1814 When an AS generates a response, all padata besides PA-FX-FAST and
1815 PA-FX-COOKIE should be included in PA-FX-FAST. The client MUST
1816 ignore other padata outside of PA-FX-FAST.
1818 6.5.6. The Encrypted Challenge FAST Factor
1820 The encrypted challenge FAST factor authenticates a client using the
1821 client's long-term key. This factor works similarly to the encrypted
1822 time stamp pre-authentication option described in [RFC4120]. The
1823 client encrypts a structure containing a timestamp in the challenge
1824 key. The challenge key used by the client to send a message to the
1825 KDC is KRB-FX-CF2(armor_key,long_term_key, "clientchallengearmor",
1826 "challengelongterm"). The challenge key used by the KDC encrypting
1827 to the client is KRB-FX-CF2(armor_key, long_term_key,
1828 "kdcchallengearmor", "challengelongterm"). Because the armor key is
1829 fresh and random, the challenge key is fresh and random. The only
1830 purpose of the timestamp is to limit the validity of the
1831 authentication so that a request cannot be replayed. A client MAY
1832 base the timestamp on the KDC time in a KDC error and need not
1833 maintain accurate time synchronization itself. If a client bases its
1834 time on an untrusted source, an attacker may trick the client into
1835 producing an authentication request that is valid at some future
1836 time. The attacker may be able to use this authentication request to
1837 make it appear that a client has authenticated at that future time.
1838 If ticket-based armor is used, then the lifetime of the ticket will
1839 limit the window in which an attacker can make the client appear to
1840 have authenticated. For many situations, the ability of an attacker
1841 to cause a client to appear to have authenticated is not a
1842 significant concern; the ability to avoid requiring time
1843 synchronization on clients is more valuable.
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1852 The client sends a padata of type PA-ENCRYPTED-CHALLENGE the
1853 corresponding padata-value contains the DER encoding of ASN.1 type
1856 EncryptedChallenge ::= EncryptedData
1857 -- Encrypted PA-ENC-TS-ENC, encrypted in the challenge key
1858 -- using key usage KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_CLIENT for the
1859 -- client and KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_KDC for the KDC.
1861 PA-ENCRYPTED-CHALLENGE TBA
1862 KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_CLIENT TBA
1863 KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_KDC TBA
1865 The client includes some time stamp reasonably close to the KDC's
1866 current time and encrypts it in the challenge key. Clients MAY use
1867 the current time; doing so prevents the exposure where an attacker
1868 can cause a client to appear to authenticate in the future. The
1869 client sends the request including this factor.
1871 On receiving an AS-REQ containing the PA-ENCRYPTED-CHALLENGE fast
1872 factor, the KDC decrypts the timestamp. If the decryption fails the
1873 KDC SHOULD return KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_FAILED, including PA-ETYPE-INFO2 in
1874 the KRBFastResponse in the error. The KDC confirms that the
1875 timestamp falls within its current clock skew returning
1876 KRB_APP_ERR_SKEW if not. The KDC then SHOULD check to see if the
1877 encrypted challenge is a replay. The KDC MUST NOT consider two
1878 encrypted challenges replays simply because the time stamps are the
1879 same; to be a replay, the ciphertext MUST be identical. Allowing
1880 clients to re-use time stamps avoids requiring that clients maintain
1881 state about which time stamps have been used.
1883 If the KDC accepts the encrypted challenge, it MUST include a padata
1884 element of type PA-ENCRYPTED-CHALLENGE. The KDC encrypts its current
1885 time in the challenge key. The KDC MUST replace the reply key before
1886 issuing a ticket. The client MUST check that the timestamp decrypts
1887 properly. The client MAY check that the timestamp is winthin the
1888 window of acceptable clock skew for the client. The client MUST NOT
1889 require that the timestamp be identical to the timestamp in the
1890 issued credentials or the returned message.
1892 The encrypted challenge FAST factor provides the following
1893 facilities: client-authentication and KDC authentication. This FAST
1894 factor also takes advantage of the FAST facility to replace the reply
1895 key. It does not provide the strengthening-reply-key facility. The
1896 security considerations section of this document provides an
1897 explanation why the security requirements are met.
1899 The encrypted challenge FAST factor can be useful in an
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1908 authentication set. No pa-hint is defined because the only
1909 information needed by this mechanism is information contained in the
1910 PA-ETYPE-INFO2 pre-authentication data. KDCs are already required to
1911 send PA-ETYPE-INFO2. If KDCs were not required to send PA-ETYPE-
1912 INFO2 then that information would need to be part of a hint for
1913 encrypted challenge.
1915 Conforming implementations MUST support the encrypted challenge FAST
1918 6.6. Authentication Strength Indication
1920 Implementations that have pre-authentication mechanisms offering
1921 significantly different strengths of client authentication MAY choose
1922 to keep track of the strength of the authentication used as an input
1923 into policy decisions. For example, some principals might require
1924 strong pre-authentication, while less sensitive principals can use
1925 relatively weak forms of pre-authentication like encrypted timestamp.
1927 An AuthorizationData data type AD-Authentication-Strength is defined
1930 AD-authentication-strength TBA
1932 The corresponding ad-data field contains the DER encoding of the pre-
1933 authentication data set as defined in Section 6.4. This set contains
1934 all the pre-authentication mechanisms that were used to authenticate
1935 the client. If only one pre-authentication mechanism was used to
1936 authenticate the client, the pre-authentication set contains one
1939 The AD-authentication-strength element MUST be included in the AD-IF-
1940 RELEVANT, thus it can be ignored if it is unknown to the receiver.
1943 7. Assigned Constants
1945 The pre-authentication framework and FAST involve using a number of
1946 Kerberos protocol constants. This section lists protocol constants
1947 first introduced in this specification drawn from registries not
1948 managed by IANA. Many of these registries would best be managed by
1949 IANA; that is a known issue that is out of scope for this document.
1950 The constants described in this section have been accounted for and
1951 will appear in the next revision of the Kerberos core specification
1952 or in a document creating IANA registries.
1954 Section 8 creates IANA registries for a different set of constants
1955 used by the extensions described in this document.
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1966 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_EXPIRED TBA
1967 KDC_ERR_MORE_PREAUTH_DATA_NEEDED TBA
1968 KDC_ERR_PREAUTH_BAD_AUTHENTICATION_SET TBA
1969 KDC_ERR_UNKNOWN_FAST_OPTIONS TBA
1971 7.2. Key Usage Numbers
1973 KEY_USAGE_FAST_REQ_CHKSUM TBA
1974 KEY_USAGE_FAST_ENC TBA
1975 KEY_USAGE_FAST_REP TBA
1976 KEY_USAGE_FAST_FINISHED TBA
1977 KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_CLIENT TBA
1978 KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_KDC TBA
1980 7.3. Authorization Data Elements
1982 AD-authentication-strength TBA
1983 AD-fx-fast-armor TBA
1985 7.4. New PA-DATA Types
1988 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET TBA
1989 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED TBA
1992 PA-ENCRYPTED-CHALLENGE TBA
1995 8. IANA Considerations
1997 This document creates a number of IANA registries. These registries
1998 should all be located under
1999 http://www.iana.org/assignments/kerberos-parameters.
2001 8.1. Pre-authentication and Typed Data
2003 RFC 4120 defines pre-authentication data, which can be included in a
2004 KDC request or response in order to authenticate the client or extend
2005 the protocol. In addition, it defines Typed-Data which is an
2006 extension mechanism for errors. Both pre-authentication data and
2007 typed data are carried as a 32-bit signed integer along with an octet
2008 string. The encoding of typed data and pre-authentication data is
2009 slightly different. However the types for pre-authentication data
2010 and typed-data are drawn from the same namespace. By convention,
2011 registrations starting with TD- are typed data and registration
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2020 starting with PA- are pre-authentication data. It is important that
2021 these data types be drawn from the same namespace, because some
2022 errors where it would be desirable to include typed data require the
2023 e-data field to be formatted as pre-authentication data.
2025 When Kerberos FAST is used, pre-authentication data encoding is
2028 There is one apparently conflicting registration between typed data
2029 and pre-authentication data. PA-GET-FROM-TYPED-DATA and TD-PADATA
2030 are both assigned the value 22. However this registration is simply
2031 a mechanism to include an element of the other encoding. The use of
2032 both should be deprecated.
2034 This document creates a registry for pre-authentication and typed
2035 data. The registration procedures are as follows. Expert review for
2036 pre-authentication mechanisms designed to authenticate users, KDCs,
2037 or establish the reply key. The expert first determines that the
2038 purpose of the method is to authenticate clients, KDCs, or to
2039 establish the reply key. If so, expert review is appropriate. The
2040 expert evaluates the security and interoperability of the
2043 IETF review is required if the expert believes that the pre-
2044 authentication method is broader than these three areas. Pre-
2045 authentication methods that change the Kerberos state machine or
2046 otherwise make significant changes to the Kerberos protocol should be
2047 standards track RFCs. A concern that a particular method needs to be
2048 a standards track RFC may be raised as an objection during IETF
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2076 Type Value Reference
2077 PA-TGS-REQ 1 RFC 4120
2078 PA-ENC-TIMESTAMP 2 RFC 4120
2079 PA-PW-SALT 3 RFC 4120
2081 PA-ENC-UNIX-TIME 5 (deprecated)
2082 PA-SANDIA-SECUREID 6
2085 PA-CYBERSAFE-SECUREID 9
2087 PA-ETYPE-INFO 11 RFC 4120
2088 PA-SAM-CHALLENGE 12 (sam/otp)
2089 PA-SAM-RESPONSE 13 (sam/otp)
2090 PA-PK-AS-REQ_OLD 14 draft-ietf-cat-kerberos-pk-init-09
2091 PA-PK-AS-REP_OLD 15 draft-ietf-cat-kerberos-pk-init-09
2092 PA-PK-AS-REQ 16 RFC 4556
2093 PA-PK-AS-REP 17 RFC 4556
2094 PA-ETYPE-INFO2 19 RFC 4120
2095 PA-USE-SPECIFIED-KVNO 20
2096 PA-SAM-REDIRECT 21 (sam/otp)
2097 PA-GET-FROM-TYPED-DATA 22 (embedded in typed data)
2098 TD-PADATA 22 (embeds padata)
2099 PA-SAM-ETYPE-INFO 23 (sam/otp)
2100 PA-ALT-PRINC 24 (crawdad@fnal.gov)
2101 PA-SAM-CHALLENGE2 30 (kenh@pobox.com)
2102 PA-SAM-RESPONSE2 31 (kenh@pobox.com)
2103 PA-EXTRA-TGT 41 Reserved extra TGT
2104 TD-PKINIT-CMS-CERTIFICATES 101 CertificateSet from CMS
2105 TD-KRB-PRINCIPAL 102 PrincipalName
2106 TD-KRB-REALM 103 Realm
2107 TD-TRUSTED-CERTIFIERS 104 from PKINIT
2108 TD-CERTIFICATE-INDEX 105 from PKINIT
2109 TD-APP-DEFINED-ERROR 106 application specific
2110 TD-REQ-NONCE 107 INTEGER
2111 TD-REQ-SEQ 108 INTEGER
2112 PA-PAC-REQUEST 128 MS-KILE
2115 8.2. Fast Armor Types
2117 FAST armor types are defined in Section 6.5.1. A FAST armor type is
2118 a signed 32-bit integer. FAST armor types are assigned by standards
2121 Type Name Description
2122 ------------------------------------------------------------
2127 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 38]
2129 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2132 1 FX_FAST_ARMOR_AP_REQUEST Ticket armor using an ap-req.
2136 A FAST request includes a set of bit flags to indicate additional
2137 options. Bits 0-15 are critical; other bits are non-critical.
2138 Assigning bits greater than 31 may require special support in
2139 implementations. Assignment of FAST options requires standards
2142 Type Name Description
2143 -------------------------------------------------------------------
2144 0 RESERVED Reserved for future expansion of this
2146 1 hide-client-names Requesting the KDC to hide client
2147 names in the KDC response
2148 16 kdc-follow-referrals Requesting the KDC to follow
2152 9. Security Considerations
2154 The kdc-referrals option in the Kerberos FAST padata requests the KDC
2155 to act as the client to follow referrals. This can overload the KDC.
2156 To limit the damages of denied of service using this option, KDCs MAY
2157 restrict the number of simultaneous active requests with this option
2158 for any given client principal.
2160 With regarding to the facilities provided by the Encrypted Challenge
2161 FAST factor, the challenge key is derived from the client secrets and
2162 because the client secrets are known only to the client and the KDC,
2163 the verification of the EncryptedChallenge structure proves the
2164 client's identity, the verification of the EncryptedChallenge
2165 structure in the KDC reply proves that the expected KDC responded.
2166 Therefore, the Encrypted Challenge FAST factor as a pre-
2167 authentication mechanism offers the following facilities: client-
2168 authentication and KDC-authentication. There is no un-authenticated
2169 clear text introduced by the Encrypted Challenge FAST factor.
2172 10. Acknowledgements
2174 Sam Hartman would like to thank the MIT Kerberos Consortium for its
2175 funding of his time on this project.
2177 Several suggestions from Jeffrey Hutzelman based on early revisions
2178 of this documents led to significant improvements of this document.
2183 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 39]
2185 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2188 The proposal to ask one KDC to chase down the referrals and return
2189 the final ticket is based on requirements in [ID.CROSS].
2191 Joel Webber had a proposal for a mechanism similar to FAST that
2192 created a protected tunnel for Kerberos pre-authentication.
2197 11.1. Normative References
2200 Zhu, L. and P. Leach, "Kerberos Anonymity Support",
2201 draft-ietf-krb-wg-anon-04.txt (work in progress), 2007.
2203 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
2204 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
2206 [RFC3961] Raeburn, K., "Encryption and Checksum Specifications for
2207 Kerberos 5", RFC 3961, February 2005.
2209 [RFC4120] Neuman, C., Yu, T., Hartman, S., and K. Raeburn, "The
2210 Kerberos Network Authentication Service (V5)", RFC 4120,
2213 [RFC4556] Zhu, L. and B. Tung, "Public Key Cryptography for Initial
2214 Authentication in Kerberos (PKINIT)", RFC 4556, June 2006.
2216 11.2. Informative References
2219 Sakane, S., Zrelli, S., and M. Ishiyama , "Problem
2220 Statement on the Operation of Kerberos in a Specific
2221 System", draft-sakane-krb-cross-problem-statement-02.txt
2222 (work in progress), April 2007.
2225 Hornstein, K., Renard, K., Neuman, C., and G. Zorn,
2226 "Integrating Single-use Authentication Mechanisms with
2227 Kerberos", draft-ietf-krb-wg-kerberos-sam-02.txt (work in
2228 progress), October 2003.
2231 Raeburn, K. and L. Zhu, "Generating KDC Referrals to
2232 Locate Kerberos Realms",
2233 draft-ietf-krb-wg-kerberos-referrals-10.txt (work in
2239 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 40]
2241 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2244 Appendix A. Change History
2246 RFC editor, please remove this section before publication.
2248 A.1. Changes since 08
2250 Fix a number of typos
2251 Rename anonymous flag to hide-client-name; rename kdc-referals to
2252 kdc-follow-referrals
2253 Clarify how anonymous pkinit interacts with KDC verified.
2254 Introduce AD-fx-fast-armor authorization data to deal with
2255 unprivileged processes constructing KDC requests. Note that a TGT
2256 is always used for armor tickets if the armor field is present; if
2257 you proxy or validate you'll end up with a TGT armor ticket and
2258 another ticket in the pa-tgs-req. Alternatively you can simply
2259 use the other ticket in the PA-TGS-REQ; weak consensus within WG.
2260 All KDCs in a realm MUST support FAST if it is to be offered.
2261 The cookie message is always generated by the KDC.
2262 Note that the client can trust and need not verify the time stamp
2263 in the finish message. This can seed the client's idea of KDC
2265 Note that the client name in the finish message may differ from
2266 the name in the request if referrals are used.
2267 Note that KDCs should advertize fast in preauth_required errors.
2268 Armor key is constructed using KRB-FX-CF2. This is true even in
2269 the TGS case; there is no security reason to do this. Using the
2270 subkey as done in draft 08 would be fine, but the current text
2271 uses the same procedure both in the TGS and AS case.
2272 Use a different challenge key in each direction in the encrypted
2274 Note that the KDC should process PA-FX-COOKIE before other padata.
2275 KRB-FX-CF2 uses k1's enctype for the result; change around calling
2276 order so we pass in subkeys and armor keys as k1 in preference to
2277 long-term keys or ticket session keys.
2278 Clarify the relationship between authentication sets and cookies.
2279 A cookie may not be needed in the first message. Clarify how this
2280 interacts with optimistic clients.
2281 Remove text raising a concern that RFC 3961 may permit ciphertext
2282 transformations that do not change plaintext: discussion on the
2283 list came to the conclusion that RFC 3961 does not permit this.
2284 Remove binding key concept; use the armor key instead. The cookie
2285 becomes just an octet string.
2286 Include PA-FX-ERROR to protect the error information per Dublin.
2287 Returning preauth_failed in the failed to decrypt encrypted
2288 challenge seems fine; remove the issue marker
2289 Add a section describing what goes in the inner and outer request.
2290 I believe it is redundant but found it useful while putting
2291 together an implementation proposal.
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2300 Use hyphen rather than underscore in the constants for pre-
2301 authentication data to be consistent with RFC 4120.
2302 Add a ticket-checksum to the finished message
2303 Remove redundant KEY_USAGE_FAST_ARMOR.
2304 Add protocol constants section for non-IANA registrations and
2305 flesh out IANA section.
2306 Clarify that kdc-req-body checksums should always use the outer
2307 body even for mechanisms like PKINIT that include their own (now
2308 redundant) checksum.
2309 Remove mechanism for encapsulating typed data in padata; just
2312 A.2. Changes since 07
2314 Propose replacement of authenticated timestamp with encrypted
2315 challenge. The desire to avoid clients needing time
2316 synchronization and to simply the factor.
2317 Add a requirement that any FAST armor scheme must provide a fresh
2318 key for each conversation. This allows us to assume that anything
2319 encrypted/integrity protected in the right key is fresh and not
2320 subject to cross-conversation cut and paste.
2321 Removed heartbeat padata. The KDC will double up messages if it
2322 needs to; the client simply sends its message and waits for the
2324 Define PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-SELECTED
2325 Clarify a KDC cannot ignore padata is has claimed to support
2327 A.3. Changes since 06
2329 Note that even for replace reply key it is likely that the side
2330 using the mechanism will know that the other side supports it.
2331 Since it is reasonably unlikely we'll need a container mechanism
2332 other than FAST itself, we don't need to optimize for that case.
2333 So, we want to optimize for implementation simplicity. Thus if
2334 you do have such a container mechanism interacting with
2335 authentication sets we'll assume that the hint need to describe
2336 hints for all contained mechanisms. This closes out a long-
2338 Write up what Sam believes is the consensus on UI and prompts in
2339 the authentication set: clients MAY assume that they have all the
2340 UI information they need.
2343 Appendix B. ASN.1 module
2345 KerberosPreauthFramework {
2346 iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)
2347 security(5) kerberosV5(2) modules(4) preauth-framework(3)
2351 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 42]
2353 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2356 } DEFINITIONS EXPLICIT TAGS ::= BEGIN
2359 KerberosTime, PrincipalName, Realm, EncryptionKey, Checksum,
2360 Int32, EncryptedData, PA-ENC-TS-ENC, PA-DATA, KDC-REQ-BODY,
2361 Microseconds, KerberosFlags
2362 FROM KerberosV5Spec2 { iso(1) identified-organization(3)
2363 dod(6) internet(1) security(5) kerberosV5(2)
2364 modules(4) krb5spec2(2) };
2365 -- as defined in RFC 4120.
2368 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET ::= SEQUENCE OF PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM
2370 PA-AUTHENTICATION-SET-ELEM ::= SEQUENCE {
2372 -- same as padata-type.
2373 pa-hint [1] OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,
2374 pa-value [2] OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,
2378 KrbFastArmor ::= SEQUENCE {
2379 armor-type [0] Int32,
2380 -- Type of the armor.
2381 armor-value [1] OCTET STRING,
2382 -- Value of the armor.
2386 PA-FX-FAST-REQUEST ::= CHOICE {
2387 armored-data [0] KrbFastArmoredReq,
2391 KrbFastArmoredReq ::= SEQUENCE {
2392 armor [0] KrbFastArmor OPTIONAL,
2393 -- Contains the armor that identifies the armor key.
2394 -- MUST be present in AS-REQ.
2395 req-checksum [1] Checksum,
2396 -- Checksum performed over the type KDC-REQ-BODY for
2397 -- the req-body field of the KDC-REQ structure defined in
2399 -- The checksum key is the armor key, the checksum
2400 -- type is the required checksum type for the enctype of
2401 -- the armor key, and the key usage number is
2402 -- KEY_USAGE_FAST_REQ_CHKSUM.
2403 enc-fast-req [2] EncryptedData, -- KrbFastReq --
2407 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 43]
2409 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2412 -- The encryption key is the armor key, and the key usage
2413 -- number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_ENC.
2417 KrbFastReq ::= SEQUENCE {
2418 fast-options [0] FastOptions,
2419 -- Additional options.
2420 padata [1] SEQUENCE OF PA-DATA,
2421 -- padata typed holes.
2422 req-body [2] KDC-REQ-BODY,
2423 -- Contains the KDC request body as defined in Section
2424 -- 5.4.1 of [RFC4120].
2425 -- This req-body field is preferred over the outer field
2426 -- in the KDC request.
2430 FastOptions ::= KerberosFlags
2433 -- kdc-referrals(16)
2435 PA-FX-FAST-REPLY ::= CHOICE {
2436 armored-data [0] KrbFastArmoredRep,
2440 KrbFastArmoredRep ::= SEQUENCE {
2441 enc-fast-rep [0] EncryptedData, -- KrbFastResponse --
2442 -- The encryption key is the armor key in the request, and
2443 -- the key usage number is KEY_USAGE_FAST_REP.
2447 KrbFastResponse ::= SEQUENCE {
2448 padata [0] SEQUENCE OF PA-DATA,
2449 -- padata typed holes.
2450 rep-key [1] EncryptionKey OPTIONAL,
2451 -- This, if present, replaces the reply key for AS and TGS.
2452 -- MUST be absent in KRB-ERROR.
2453 finished [2] KrbFastFinished OPTIONAL,
2454 -- MUST be present if the client is authenticated,
2455 -- absent otherwise.
2456 -- Typically this is present if and only if the containing
2457 -- message is the last one in a conversation.
2463 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 44]
2465 Internet-Draft Kerberos Preauth Framework February 2009
2468 KrbFastFinished ::= SEQUENCE {
2469 timestamp [0] KerberosTime,
2470 usec [1] Microseconds,
2471 -- timestamp and usec represent the time on the KDC when
2472 -- the reply was generated.
2474 cname [3] PrincipalName,
2475 -- Contains the client realm and the client name.
2476 checksum [4] Checksum,
2477 -- Checksum performed over all the messages in the
2478 -- conversation, except the containing message.
2479 -- The checksum key is the armor key as defined in
2480 -- Section 6.5.1, and the checksum type is the required
2481 -- checksum type of the armor key.
2482 ticket-checksum [5] Checksum,
2483 -- checksum of the ticket in the KDC-REP using the armor
2484 -- and the key usage is KEY_USAGE_FAST_FINISH.
2485 -- The checksum type is the required checksum type
2486 -- of the armor key.
2490 EncryptedChallenge ::= EncryptedData
2491 -- Encrypted PA-ENC-TS-ENC, encrypted in the challenge key
2492 -- using key usage KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_CLIENT for the
2493 -- client and KEY_USAGE_ENC_CHALLENGE_KDC for the KDC.
2502 Email: hartmans-ietf@mit.edu
2506 Microsoft Corporation
2511 Email: lzhu@microsoft.com
2519 Hartman & Zhu Expires August 15, 2009 [Page 45]