mirror of
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/tor.git
synced 2024-11-28 06:13:31 +01:00
8cc70addd7
svn:r12367
324 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
324 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Filename: 105-handshake-revision.txt
|
|
Title: Version negotiation for the Tor protocol.
|
|
Version: $Revision$
|
|
Last-Modified: $Date$
|
|
Author: Nick Mathewson, Roger Dingledine
|
|
Created:
|
|
Status: Accepted
|
|
|
|
Overview:
|
|
|
|
This document was extracted from a modified version of tor-spec.txt that we
|
|
had written before the proposal system went into place. It adds two new
|
|
cells types to the Tor link connection setup handshake: one used for
|
|
version negotiation, and another to prevent MITM attacks.
|
|
|
|
This is an open proposal.
|
|
|
|
Motivation: Tor versions
|
|
|
|
Our *current* approach to versioning the Tor protocol(s) has been as
|
|
follows:
|
|
- All changes must be backward compatible.
|
|
- It's okay to add new cell types, if they would be ignored by previous
|
|
versions of Tor.
|
|
- It's okay to add new data elements to cells, if they would be
|
|
ignored by previous versions of Tor.
|
|
- For forward compatibility, Tor must ignore cell types it doesn't
|
|
recognize, and ignore data in those cells it doesn't expect.
|
|
- Clients can inspect the version of Tor declared in the platform line
|
|
of a router's descriptor, and use that to learn whether a server
|
|
supports a given feature. Servers, however, aren't assumed to all
|
|
know about each other, and so don't know the version of who they're
|
|
talking to.
|
|
|
|
This system has these problems:
|
|
- It's very hard to change fundamental aspects of the protocol, like the
|
|
cell format, the link protocol, any of the various encryption schemes,
|
|
and so on.
|
|
- The router-to-router link protocol has remained more-or-less frozen
|
|
for a long time, since we can't easily have an OR use new features
|
|
unless it knows the other OR will understand them.
|
|
|
|
We need to resolve these problems because:
|
|
- Our cipher suite is showing its age: SHA1/AES128/RSA1024/DH1024 will
|
|
not seem like the best idea for all time.
|
|
- There are many ideas circulating for multiple cell sizes; while it's
|
|
not obvious whether these are safe, we can't do them at all without a
|
|
mechanism to permit them.
|
|
- There are many ideas circulating for alternative circuit building and
|
|
cell relay rules: they don't work unless they can coexist in the
|
|
current network.
|
|
- If our protocol changes a lot, it's hard to describe any coherent
|
|
version of it: we need to say "the version that Tor versions W through
|
|
X use when talking to versions Y through Z". This makes analysis
|
|
harder.
|
|
|
|
Motivation: Preventing MITM attacks
|
|
|
|
TLS prevents a man-in-the-middle attacker from reading or changing the
|
|
contents of a communication. It does not, however, prevent such an
|
|
attacker from observing timing information. Since timing attacks are some
|
|
of the most effective against low-latency anonymity nets like Tor, we
|
|
should take more care to make sure that we're not only talking to who
|
|
we think we're talking to, but that we're using the network path we
|
|
believe we're using.
|
|
|
|
Motivation: Signed clock information
|
|
|
|
It's very useful for Tor instances to know how skewed they are relative
|
|
to one another. The only way to find out currently has been to download
|
|
directory information, and check the Date header--but this is not
|
|
authenticated, and hence subject to modification on the wire. Using
|
|
BEGIN_DIR to create an authenticated directory stream through an existing
|
|
circuit is better, but that's an extra step and it might be nicer to
|
|
learn the information in the course of the regular protocol.
|
|
|
|
Proposal:
|
|
|
|
1.0. Version numbers
|
|
|
|
The node-to-node TLS-based "OR connection" protocol and the multi-hop
|
|
"circuit" protocol are versioned quasi-independently.
|
|
|
|
Of course, some dependencies will continue to exist: Certain versions
|
|
of the circuit protocol may require a minimum version of the connection
|
|
protocol to be used. The connection protocol affects:
|
|
- Initial connection setup, link encryption, transport guarantees,
|
|
etc.
|
|
- The allowable set of cell commands
|
|
- Allowable formats for cells.
|
|
|
|
The circuit protocol determines:
|
|
- How circuits are established and maintained
|
|
- How cells are decrypted and relayed
|
|
- How streams are established and maintained.
|
|
|
|
Version numbers are incremented for backward-incompatible protocol changes
|
|
only. Backward-compatible changes are generally implemented by adding
|
|
additional fields to existing structures; implementations MUST ignore
|
|
fields they do not expect. Unused portions of cells MUST be set to zero.
|
|
|
|
Though versioning the protocol will make it easier to maintain backward
|
|
compatibility with older versions of Tor, we will nevertheless continue to
|
|
periodically drop support for older protocols,
|
|
- to keep the implementation from growing without bound,
|
|
- to limit the maintenance burden of patching bugs in obsolete Tors,
|
|
- to limit the testing burden of verifying that many old protocol
|
|
versions continue to be implemented properly, and
|
|
- to limit the exposure of the network to protocol versions that are
|
|
expensive to support.
|
|
|
|
The Tor protocol as implemented through the 0.1.2.x Tor series will be
|
|
called "version 1" in its link protocol and "version 1" in its relay
|
|
protocol. Versions of the Tor protocol so old as to be incompatible with
|
|
Tor 0.1.2.x can be considered to be version 0 of each, and are not
|
|
supported.
|
|
|
|
2.1. VERSIONS cells
|
|
|
|
When a Tor connection is established, both parties normally send a
|
|
VERSIONS cell before sending any other cells. (But see below.)
|
|
|
|
VersionsLen [2 byte]
|
|
Versions [VersionsLen bytes]
|
|
|
|
"Versions" is a sequence of VersionsLen bytes. Each value between 1 and
|
|
127 inclusive represents a single version; current implementations MUST
|
|
ignore other bytes. Parties should list all of the versions which they
|
|
are able and willing to support. Parties can only communicate if they
|
|
have some connection protocol version in common.
|
|
|
|
Version 0.2.0.x-alpha and earlier don't understand VERSIONS cells,
|
|
and therefore don't support version negotiation. Thus, waiting until
|
|
the other side has sent a VERSIONS cell won't work for these servers:
|
|
if the other side sends no cells back, it is impossible to tell
|
|
whether they
|
|
have sent a VERSIONS cell that has been stalled, or whether they have
|
|
dropped our own VERSIONS cell as unrecognized. Therefore, we'll
|
|
change the TLS negotiation parameters so that old parties can still
|
|
negotiate, but new parties can recognize each other. Immediately
|
|
after a TLS connection has been established, the parties check
|
|
whether the other side negotiated the connection in an "old" way or a
|
|
"new" way. If either party negotiated in the "old" way, we assume a
|
|
v1 connection. Otherwise, both parties send VERSIONS cells listing
|
|
all their supported versions. Upon receiving the other party's
|
|
VERSIONS cell, the implementation begins using the highest-valued
|
|
version common to both cells. If the first cell from the other party
|
|
has a recognized command, and is _not_ a VERSIONS cell, we assume a
|
|
v1 protocol.
|
|
|
|
(For more detail on the TLS protocol change, see forthcoming draft
|
|
proposals from Steven Murdoch.)
|
|
|
|
Implementations MUST discard VERSIONS cells that are not the first
|
|
recognized cells sent on a connection.
|
|
|
|
The VERSIONS cell must be sent as a v1 cell (2 bytes of circuitID, 1
|
|
byte of command, 509 bytes of payload).
|
|
|
|
[NOTE: The VERSIONS cell is assigned the command number 7.]
|
|
|
|
2.2. MITM-prevention and time checking
|
|
|
|
If we negotiate a v2 connection or higher, the second cell we send SHOULD
|
|
be a NETINFO cell. Implementations SHOULD NOT send NETINFO cells at other
|
|
times.
|
|
|
|
A NETINFO cell contains:
|
|
Timestamp [4 bytes]
|
|
Other OR's address [variable]
|
|
Number of addresses [1 byte]
|
|
This OR's addresses [variable]
|
|
|
|
Timestamp is the OR's current Unix time, in seconds since the epoch. If
|
|
an implementation receives time values from many ORs that
|
|
indicate that its clock is skewed, it SHOULD try to warn the
|
|
administrator. (We leave the definition of 'many' intentionally vague
|
|
for now.)
|
|
|
|
Before believing the timestamp in a NETINFO cell, implementations
|
|
SHOULD compare the time at which they received the cell to the time
|
|
when they sent their VERSIONS cell. If the difference is very large,
|
|
it is likely that the cell was delayed long enough that its
|
|
contents are out of date.
|
|
|
|
Each address contains Type/Length/Value as used in Section 6.4 of
|
|
tor-spec.txt. The first address is the one that the party sending
|
|
the NETINFO cell believes the other has -- it can be used to learn
|
|
what your IP address is if you have no other hints.
|
|
The rest of the addresses are the advertised addresses of the party
|
|
sending the NETINFO cell -- we include them
|
|
to block a man-in-the-middle attack on TLS that lets an attacker bounce
|
|
traffic through his own computers to enable timing and packet-counting
|
|
attacks.
|
|
|
|
A Tor instance should use the other Tor's reported address
|
|
information as part of logic to decide whether to treat a given
|
|
connection as suitable for extending circuits to a given address/ID
|
|
combination. When we get an extend request, we use an
|
|
existing OR connection if the ID matches, and ANY of the following
|
|
conditions hold:
|
|
- The IP matches the requested IP.
|
|
- We know that the IP we're using is canonical because it was
|
|
listed in the NETINFO cell.
|
|
- We know that the IP we're using is canonical because it was
|
|
listed in the server descriptor.
|
|
|
|
[NOTE: The NETINFO cell is assigned the command number 8.]
|
|
|
|
Discussion: Versions versus feature lists
|
|
|
|
Many protocols negotiate lists of available features instead of (or in
|
|
addition to) protocol versions. While it's possible that some amount of
|
|
feature negotiation could be supported in a later Tor, we should prefer to
|
|
use protocol versions whenever possible, for reasons discussed in
|
|
the "Anonymity Loves Company" paper.
|
|
|
|
Discussion: Bytes per version, versions per cell
|
|
|
|
This document provides for a one-byte count of how many versions a Tor
|
|
supports, and allows one byte per version. Thus, it can only support only
|
|
254 more versions of the protocol beyond the unallocated v0 and the
|
|
current v1. If we ever need to split the protocol into 255 incompatible
|
|
versions, we've probably screwed up badly somewhere.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, here are two ways we could support more versions:
|
|
- Change the version count to a two-byte field that counts the number of
|
|
_bytes_ used, and use a UTF8-style encoding: versions 0 through 127
|
|
take one byte to encode, versions 128 through 2047 take two bytes to
|
|
encode, and so on. We wouldn't need to parse any version higher than
|
|
127 right now, since all bytes used to encode higher versions would
|
|
have their high bit set.
|
|
|
|
We'd still have a limit of 380 simultaneously versions that could be
|
|
declared in any version. This is probably okay.
|
|
|
|
- Decide that if we need to support more versions, we can add a
|
|
MOREVERSIONS cell that gets sent before the VERSIONS cell. The spec
|
|
above requires Tors to ignore unrecognized cell types that they get
|
|
before the first VERSIONS cell, and still allows version negotiation
|
|
to
|
|
succeed.
|
|
|
|
[Resolution: Reserve the high bit and the v0 value for later use. If
|
|
we ever have more live versions than we can fit in a cell, we've made a
|
|
bad design decision somewhere along the line.]
|
|
|
|
Discussion: Reducing round-trips
|
|
|
|
It might be appealing to see if we can cram more information in the
|
|
initial VERSIONS cell. For example, the contents of NETINFO will pretty
|
|
soon be sent by everybody before any more information is exchanged, but
|
|
decoupling them from the version exchange increases round-trips.
|
|
|
|
Instead, we could speculatively include handshaking information at
|
|
the end of a VERSIONS cell, wrapped in a marker to indicate, "if we wind
|
|
up speaking VERSION 2, here's the NETINFO I'll send. Otherwise, ignore
|
|
this." This could be extended to opportunistically reduce round trips
|
|
when possible for future versions when we guess the versions right.
|
|
|
|
Of course, we'd need to be careful about using a feature like this:
|
|
- We don't want to include things that are expensive to compute,
|
|
like PK signatures or proof-of-work.
|
|
- We don't want to speculate as a mobile client: it may leak our
|
|
experience with the server in question.
|
|
|
|
Discussion: Advertising versions in routerdescs and networkstatuses.
|
|
|
|
In network-statuses:
|
|
|
|
The networkstatus "v" line now has the format:
|
|
"v" IMPLEMENTATION IMPL-VERSION "Link" LINK-VERSION-LIST
|
|
"Circuit" CIRCUIT-VERSION-LIST NL
|
|
|
|
LINK-VERSION-LIST and CIRCUIT-VERSION-LIST are comma-separated lists of
|
|
supported version numbers. IMPLEMENTATION is the name of the
|
|
implementation of the Tor protocol (e.g., "Tor"), and IMPL-VERSION is the
|
|
version of the implementation.
|
|
|
|
Examples:
|
|
v Tor 0.2.5.1-alpha Link 1,2,3 Circuit 2,5
|
|
|
|
v OtherOR 2000+ Link 3 Circuit 5
|
|
|
|
Implementations that release independently of the Tor codebase SHOULD NOT
|
|
use "Tor" as the value of their IMPLEMENTATION.
|
|
|
|
Additional fields on the "v" line MUST be ignored.
|
|
|
|
In router descriptors:
|
|
|
|
The router descriptor should contain a line of the form,
|
|
"protocols" "Link" LINK-VERSION-LIST "Circuit" CIRCUIT_VERSION_LIST
|
|
|
|
Additional fields on the "protocols" line MUST be ignored.
|
|
|
|
[Versions of Tor before 0.1.2.5-alpha rejected router descriptors with
|
|
unrecognized items; the protocols line should be preceded with an "opt"
|
|
until these Tors are obsolete.]
|
|
|
|
Security issues:
|
|
|
|
Client partitioning is the big danger when we introduce new versions; if a
|
|
client supports some very unusual set of protocol versions, it will stand
|
|
out from others no matter where it goes. If a server supports an unusual
|
|
version, it will get a disproportionate amount of traffic from clients who
|
|
prefer that version. We can mitigate this somewhat as follows:
|
|
|
|
- Do not have clients prefer any protocol version by default until that
|
|
version is widespread. (First introduce the new version to servers,
|
|
and have clients admit to using it only when configured to do so for
|
|
testing. Then, once many servers are running the new protocol
|
|
version, enable its use by default.)
|
|
|
|
- Do not multiply protocol versions needlessly.
|
|
|
|
- Encourage protocol implementors to implement the same protocol version
|
|
sets as some popular version of Tor.
|
|
|
|
- Disrecommend very old/unpopular versions of Tor via the directory
|
|
authorities' RecommmendedVersions mechanism, even if it is still
|
|
technically possible to use them.
|
|
|