tor/doc/spec/proposals/110-avoid-infinite-circuits.txt

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Filename: 110-avoid-infinite-circuits.txt
Title: Avoiding infinite length circuits
Version: $Revision$
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Roger Dingledine
Created: 13-Mar-2007
Status: Accepted
Target: 0.2.1.x
Implemented-In: 0.2.1.3-alpha
History:
Revised 28 July 2008 by nickm: set K.
Revised 3 July 2008 by nickm: rename from relay_extend to
relay_early. Revise to current migration plan. Allow K cells
over circuit lifetime, not just at start.
Overview:
Right now, an attacker can add load to the Tor network by extending a
circuit an arbitrary number of times. Every cell that goes down the
circuit then adds N times that amount of load in overall bandwidth
use. This vulnerability arises because servers don't know their position
on the path, so they can't tell how many nodes there are before them
on the path.
We propose a new set of relay cells that are distinguishable by
intermediate hops as permitting extend cells. This approach will allow
us to put an upper bound on circuit length relative to the number of
colluding adversary nodes; but there are some downsides too.
Motivation:
The above attack can be used to generally increase load all across the
network, or it can be used to target specific servers: by building a
circuit back and forth between two victim servers, even a low-bandwidth
attacker can soak up all the bandwidth offered by the fastest Tor
servers.
The general attacks could be used as a demonstration that Tor isn't
perfect (leading to yet more media articles about "breaking" Tor), and
the targetted attacks will come into play once we have a reputation
system -- it will be trivial to DoS a server so it can't pass its
reputation checks, in turn impacting security.
Design:
We should split RELAY cells into two types: RELAY and RELAY_EARLY.
Only K (say, 10) Relay_early cells can be sent across a circuit, and
only relay_early cells are allowed to contain extend requests. We
still support obscuring the length of the circuit (if more research
shows us what to do), because Alice can choose how many of the K to
mark as relay_early. Note that relay_early cells *can* contain any
sort of data cell; so in effect it's actually the relay type cells
that are restricted. By default, she would just send the first K
data cells over the stream as relay_early cells, regardless of their
actual type.
Each intermediate server would pass on the same type of cell that it
received (either relay or relay_early), and the cell's destination
will be able to learn whether it's allowed to contain an Extend request.
If an intermediate server receives more than K relay_early cells, or
if it sees a relay cell that contains an extend request, then it
tears down the circuit (protocol violation).
Security implications:
The upside is that this limits the bandwidth amplification factor to
K: for an individual circuit to become arbitrary-length, the attacker
would need an adversary-controlled node every K hops, and at that
point the attack is no worse than if the attacker creates N/K separate
K-hop circuits.
On the other hand, we want to pick a large enough value of K that we
don't mind the cap.
If we ever want to take steps to hide the number of hops in the circuit
or a node's position in the circuit, this design probably makes that
more complex.
Migration:
In 0.2.0, servers speaking v2 or later of the link protocol accept
RELAY_EARLY cells, and pass them on. If the next OR in the circuit
is not speaking the v2 link protocol, the server relays the cell as
a RELAY cell.
In 0.2.1.3-alpha, clients begin using RELAY_EARLY cells on v2
connections. This functionality can be safely backported to
0.2.0.x. Clients should pick a random number betweeen (say) K and
K-2 to send.
In 0.2.1.3-alpha, servers close any circuit in which more than K
relay_early cells are sent.
Once all versions the do not send RELAY_EARLY cells are obsolete,
servers can begin to reject any EXTEND requests not sent in a
RELAY_EARLY cell.
Parameters:
Let K = 8, for no terribly good reason.
Spec:
[We can formalize this part once we think the design is a good one.]
Acknowledgements:
This design has been kicking around since Christian Grothoff and I came
up with it at PET 2004. (Nathan Evans, Christian Grothoff's student,
is working on implementing a fix based on this design in the summer
2007 timeframe.)