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			988 lines
		
	
	
		
			45 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| 
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|  
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| 
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| <Network Working Group>                                       Larry Zhu 
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| Internet Draft                                       Karthik Jaganathan 
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| Updates: 1964                                                 Microsoft 
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| Category: Standards Track                                   Sam Hartman 
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| draft-ietf-krb-wg-gssapi-cfx-06.txt                                 MIT 
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|                                                       February 16, 2004 
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|                                                Expires: August 16, 2004 
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|  
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|           The Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API Mechanism: Version 2 
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|  
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| Status of this Memo 
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|  
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|    This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with 
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|    all provisions of Section 10 of [RFC-2026].  
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|     
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|    Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering 
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|    Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that 
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|    other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
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|    Drafts.  Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of 
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|    six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other 
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|    documents at any time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts 
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|    as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in 
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|    progress."  
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|     
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|    The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at 
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|    http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.   
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|     
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|    The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at 
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|    http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. 
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|     
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|    To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the 
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|    "1id-abstracts.txt" listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow 
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|    Directories on ftp.ietf.org (US East Coast), nic.nordu.net (Europe), 
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|    ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast), or munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim). 
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|  
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|    The distribution of this memo is unlimited.  It is filed as  
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|    draft-ietf-krb-wg-gssapi-cfx-06.txt, and expires on August 10 
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|    2004.  Please send comments to: ietf-krb-wg@anl.gov. 
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|     
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| Abstract 
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|     
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|    This document defines protocols, procedures, and conventions to be 
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|    employed by peers implementing the Generic Security Service 
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|    Application Program Interface (GSS-API) when using the Kerberos 
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|    Version 5 mechanism. 
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|     
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|    RFC-1964 is updated and incremental changes are proposed in response 
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|    to recent developments such as the introduction of Kerberos 
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|    cryptosystem framework.  These changes support the inclusion of new 
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|    cryptosystems, by defining new per-message tokens along with their 
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|    encryption and checksum algorithms based on the cryptosystem 
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|    profiles.   
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|     
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| Conventions used in this document 
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|   
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| Zhu                                                                   1 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|     
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|    The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", 
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|    "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this 
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|    document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC-2119]. 
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|     
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|    The term "little endian order" is used for brevity to refer to the 
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|    least-significant-octet-first encoding, while the term "big endian 
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|    order" is for the most-significant-octet-first encoding. 
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|     
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| Table of Contents 
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| 
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|    1. Introduction ...............................................  2 
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|    2. Key Derivation for Per-Message Tokens ......................  3 
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|    3. Quality of Protection ......................................  4 
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|    4. Definitions and Token Formats ..............................  4 
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|    4.1. Context Establishment Tokens .............................  4 
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|    4.1.1. Authenticator Checksum .................................  5 
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|    4.2. Per-Message Tokens .......................................  8 
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|    4.2.1. Sequence Number ........................................  8 
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|    4.2.2. Flags Field ............................................  8 
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|    4.2.3. EC Field ...............................................  9 
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|    4.2.4. Encryption and Checksum Operations .....................  9 
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|    4.2.5. RRC Field .............................................. 10 
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|    4.2.6. Message Layouts ........................................ 10 
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|    4.3. Context Deletion Tokens .................................. 11 
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|    4.4. Token Identifier Assignment Considerations ............... 11 
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|    5. Parameter Definitions ...................................... 12 
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|    5.1. Minor Status Codes ....................................... 12 
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|    5.1.1. Non-Kerberos-specific codes ............................ 12 
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|    5.1.2. Kerberos-specific-codes ................................ 12 
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|    5.2. Buffer Sizes ............................................. 13 
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|    6. Backwards Compatibility Considerations ..................... 13 
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|    7. Security Considerations .................................... 13 
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|    8. Acknowledgments ............................................ 14 
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|    9. Intellectual Property Statement ............................ 15
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|    10. References ................................................ 15 
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|    10.1. Normative References .................................... 15 
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|    10.2. Informative References .................................. 15 
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|    11. Author's Address .......................................... 15
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|    Full Copyright Statement ...................................... 17  
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|    
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| 1. Introduction 
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|     
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|    [KCRYPTO] defines a generic framework for describing encryption and 
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|    checksum types to be used with the Kerberos protocol and associated 
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|    protocols. 
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|     
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|    [RFC-1964] describes the GSS-API mechanism for Kerberos Version 5.  
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|    It defines the format of context establishment, per-message and 
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|    context deletion tokens and uses algorithm identifiers for each 
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|    cryptosystem in per message and context deletion tokens.   
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|     
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|    The approach taken in this document obviates the need for algorithm 
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|    identifiers.  This is accomplished by using the same encryption 
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|    algorithm, specified by the crypto profile [KCRYPTO] for the session 
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|    key or subkey that is created during context negotiation, and its 
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|    required checksum algorithm.  Message layouts of the per-message 
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| Zhu                                                                  2 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|    tokens are therefore revised to remove algorithm indicators and also 
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|    to add extra information to support the generic crypto framework 
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|    [KCRYPTO].  
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|     
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|    Tokens transferred between GSS-API peers for security context 
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|    establishment are also described in this document.  The data 
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|    elements exchanged between a GSS-API endpoint implementation and the 
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|    Kerberos Key Distribution Center (KDC) [KRBCLAR] are not specific to 
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|    GSS-API usage and are therefore defined within [KRBCLAR] rather than 
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|    within this specification. 
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|     
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|    The new token formats specified in this document MUST be used with 
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|    all "newer" encryption types [KRBCLAR] and MAY be used with "older" 
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|    encryption types, provided that the initiator and acceptor know, 
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|    from the context establishment, that they can both process these new 
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|    token formats. 
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|     
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|    "Newer" encryption types are those which have been specified along 
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|    with or since the new Kerberos cryptosystem specification [KCRYPTO], 
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|    as defined in section 3.1.3 of [KRBCLAR].  The list of not-newer 
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|    encryption types is as follows [KCRYPTO]: 
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|     
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|              Encryption Type             Assigned Number     
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|            ---------------------------------------------- 
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|             des-cbc-crc                        1              
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|             des-cbc-md4                        2              
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|             des-cbc-md5                        3              
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|             des3-cbc-md5                       5 
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|             des3-cbc-sha1                      7 
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|             dsaWithSHA1-CmsOID                 9            
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|             md5WithRSAEncryption-CmsOID       10            
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|             sha1WithRSAEncryption-CmsOID      11           
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|             rc2CBC-EnvOID                     12            
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|             rsaEncryption-EnvOID              13    
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|             rsaES-OAEP-ENV-OID                14    
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|             des-ede3-cbc-Env-OID              15            
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|             des3-cbc-sha1-kd                  16                       
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|             rc4-hmac                          23          
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|     
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| 2. Key Derivation for Per-Message Tokens 
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|     
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|    To limit the exposure of a given key, [KCRYPTO] adopted "one-way" 
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|    "entropy-preserving" derived keys, for different purposes or key 
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|    usages, from a base key or protocol key.   
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|     
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|    This document defines four key usage values below that are used to 
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|    derive a specific key for signing and sealing messages, from the 
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|    session key or subkey [KRBCLAR] created during the context 
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|    establishment. 
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|     
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|         Name                         Value 
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|       ------------------------------------- 
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|        KG-USAGE-ACCEPTOR-SEAL         22 
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|        KG-USAGE-ACCEPTOR-SIGN         23 
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|        KG-USAGE-INITIATOR-SEAL        24 
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| 
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| Zhu                                                                  3 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|        KG-USAGE-INITIATOR-SIGN        25 
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|           
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|    When the sender is the context acceptor, KG-USAGE-ACCEPTOR-SIGN is 
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|    used as the usage number in the key derivation function for deriving 
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|    keys to be used in MIC tokens (as defined in section 4.2.6.1), and 
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|    KG-USAGE-ACCEPTOR-SEAL is used for Wrap tokens(as defined in section 
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|    4.2.6.2); similarly when the sender is the context initiator, KG-
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|    USAGE-INITIATOR-SIGN is used as the usage number in the key 
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|    derivation function for MIC tokens, KG-USAGE-INITIATOR-SEAL is used 
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|    for Wrap Tokens.  Even if the Wrap token does not provide for 
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|    confidentiality the same usage values specified above are used. 
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|     
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|    During the context initiation and acceptance sequence, the acceptor 
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|    MAY assert a subkey, and if so, subsequent messages MUST use this 
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|    subkey as the protocol key and these messages MUST be flagged as 
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|    "AcceptorSubkey" as described in section 4.2.2. 
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|  
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| 3. Quality of Protection 
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|  
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|    The GSS-API specification [RFC-2743] provides for Quality of 
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|    Protection (QOP) values that can be used by applications to request 
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|    a certain type of encryption or signing.  A zero QOP value is used 
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|    to indicate the "default" protection; applications which do not use 
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|    the default QOP are not guaranteed to be portable across 
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|    implementations or even inter-operate with different deployment 
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|    configurations of the same implementation.  Using an algorithm that 
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|    is different from the one for which the key is defined may not be 
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|    appropriate.  Therefore, when the new method in this document is 
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|    used, the QOP value is ignored. 
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|     
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|    The encryption and checksum algorithms in per-message tokens are now 
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|    implicitly defined by the algorithms associated with the session key 
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|    or subkey.  Algorithms identifiers as described in [RFC-1964] are 
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|    therefore no longer needed and removed from the new token headers. 
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|  
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| 4. Definitions and Token Formats 
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|     
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|    This section provides terms and definitions, as well as descriptions 
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|    for tokens specific to the Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API mechanism. 
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|                                     
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| 4.1. Context Establishment Tokens 
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|     
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|    All context establishment tokens emitted by the Kerberos Version 5 
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|    GSS-API mechanism SHALL have the framing described in section 3.1 of 
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|    [RFC-2743], as illustrated by the following pseudo-ASN.1 structures: 
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|     
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|          GSS-API DEFINITIONS ::= 
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|     
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|          BEGIN 
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|     
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|          MechType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER 
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|          -- representing Kerberos V5 mechanism 
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|     
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|          GSSAPI-Token ::= 
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|          -- option indication (delegation, etc.) indicated within 
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| Zhu                                                                  4 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|          -- mechanism-specific token 
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|          [APPLICATION 0] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE { 
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|                  thisMech MechType, 
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|                  innerToken ANY DEFINED BY thisMech 
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|                     -- contents mechanism-specific 
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|                     -- ASN.1 structure not required 
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|                  } 
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|     
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|          END 
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|     
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|    Where the innerToken field starts with a two-octet token-identifier 
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|    (TOK_ID) expressed in big endian order, followed by a Kerberos 
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|    message.   
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|     
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|    Here are the TOK_ID values used in the context establishment tokens: 
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|     
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|          Token               TOK_ID Value in Hex  
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|         ----------------------------------------- 
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|          KRB_AP_REQ            01 00 
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|          KRB_AP_REP            02 00 
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|          KRB_ERROR             03 00 
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|              
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|    Where Kerberos message KRB_AP_REQUEST, KRB_AP_REPLY, and KRB_ERROR 
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|    are defined in [KRBCLAR].   
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|     
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|    If an unknown token identifier (TOK_ID) is received in the initial 
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|    context establishment token, the receiver MUST return 
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|    GSS_S_CONTINUE_NEEDED major status, and the returned output token 
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|    MUST contain a KRB_ERROR message with the error code 
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|    KRB_AP_ERR_MSG_TYPE [KRBCLAR]. 
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|     
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| 4.1.1. Authenticator Checksum 
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|  
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|    The authenticator in the KRB_AP_REQ message MUST include the 
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|    optional sequence number and the checksum field.  The checksum field 
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|    is used to convey service flags, channel bindings, and optional 
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|    delegation information.   
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|     
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|    The checksum type MUST be 0x8003. When delegation is used, a ticket-
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|    granting ticket will be transferred in a KRB_CRED message.  This 
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|    ticket SHOULD have its forwardable flag set.  The EncryptedData 
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|    field of the KRB_CRED message [KRBCLAR] MUST be encrypted in the 
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|    session key of the ticket used to authenticate the context. 
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|     
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|    The authenticator checksum field SHALL have the following format: 
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|        
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|       Octet        Name      Description 
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|      ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
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|       0..3         Lgth    Number of octets in Bnd field;  Represented  
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|                            in little-endian order;  Currently contains   
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|                            hex value 10 00 00 00 (16). 
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|       4..19        Bnd     Channel binding information, as described in  
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|                            section 4.1.1.2. 
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|       20..23       Flags   Four-octet context-establishment flags in 
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|                            little-endian order as described in section  
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| Zhu                                                                  5 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|                            4.1.1.1.  
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|       24..25       DlgOpt  The delegation option identifier (=1) in  
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|                            little-endian order [optional].  This field  
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|                            and the next two fields are present if and  
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|                            only if GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is set as described  
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|                            in section 4.1.1.1.   
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|       26..27       Dlgth   The length of the Deleg field in little- 
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|                            endian order [optional]. 
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|       28..(n-1)    Deleg   A KRB_CRED message (n = Dlgth + 28)  
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|                            [optional].  
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|       n..last      Exts    Extensions [optional]. 
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|     
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|    The length of the checksum field MUST be at least 24 octets when 
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|    GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is not set (as described in section 4.1.1.1), and 
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|    at least 28 octets plus Dlgth octets when GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is set.  
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|    When GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is set, the DlgOpt, Dlgth and Deleg fields 
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|    of the checksum data MUST immediately follow the Flags field.  The 
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|    optional trailing octets (namely the "Exts" field) facilitate 
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|    future extensions to this mechanism.  When delegation is not used 
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|    but the Exts field is present, the Exts field starts at octet 24 
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|    (DlgOpt, Dlgth and Deleg are absent). 
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|     
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|    Initiators that do not support the extensions MUST NOT include more 
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|    than 24 octets in the checksum field, when GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is not 
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|    set, or more than 28 octets plus the KRB_CRED in the Deleg field, 
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|    when GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is set.  Acceptors that do not understand the 
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|    extensions MUST ignore any octets past the Deleg field of the 
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|    checksum data, when GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is set, or past the Flags field 
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|    of the checksum data, when GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG is not set. 
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|  
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| 4.1.1.1. Checksum Flags Field 
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|     
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|    The checksum "Flags" field is used to convey service options or 
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|    extension negotiation information. 
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|     
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|    The following context establishment flags are defined in [RFC-2744].   
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|     
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|         Flag Name              Value     
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|       --------------------------------- 
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|        GSS_C_DELEG_FLAG           1        
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|        GSS_C_MUTUAL_FLAG          2       
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|        GSS_C_REPLAY_FLAG          4       
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|        GSS_C_SEQUENCE_FLAG        8        
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|        GSS_C_CONF_FLAG           16      
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|        GSS_C_INTEG_FLAG          32     
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|         
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|    Context establishment flags are exposed to the calling application.  
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|    If the calling application desires a particular service option then 
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|    it requests that option via GSS_Init_sec_context() [RFC-2743].  If 
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|    the corresponding return state values [RFC-2743] indicate that any 
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|    of above optional context level services will be active on the 
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|    context, the corresponding flag values in the table above MUST be 
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|    set in the checksum Flags field. 
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|     
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| 
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| Zhu                                                                  6 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|    Flag values 4096..524288 (2^12, 2^13, ..., 2^19) are reserved for 
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|    use with legacy vendor-specific extensions to this mechanism. 
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|     
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|    All other flag values not specified herein are reserved for future 
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|    use.  Future revisions of this mechanism may use these reserved 
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|    flags and may rely on implementations of this version to not use 
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|    such flags in order to properly negotiate mechanism versions.  
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|    Undefined flag values MUST be cleared by the sender, and unknown 
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|    flags MUST be ignored by the receiver.   
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|     
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| 4.1.1.2. Channel Binding Information 
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|     
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|    These tags are intended to be used to identify the particular 
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|    communications channel for which the GSS-API security context 
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|    establishment tokens are intended, thus limiting the scope within 
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|    which an intercepted context establishment token can be reused by an 
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|    attacker (see [RFC-2743], section 1.1.6). 
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|     
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|    When using C language bindings, channel bindings are communicated 
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|    to the GSS-API using the following structure [RFC-2744]: 
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|  
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|       typedef struct gss_channel_bindings_struct { 
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|          OM_uint32       initiator_addrtype; 
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|          gss_buffer_desc initiator_address; 
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|          OM_uint32       acceptor_addrtype; 
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|          gss_buffer_desc acceptor_address; 
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|          gss_buffer_desc application_data; 
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|       } *gss_channel_bindings_t; 
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|     
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|    The member fields and constants used for different address types 
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|    are defined in [RFC-2744]. 
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|     
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|    The "Bnd" field contains the MD5 hash of channel bindings, taken 
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|    over all non-null components of bindings, in order of declaration.  
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|    Integer fields within channel bindings are represented in little-
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|    endian order for the purposes of the MD5 calculation. 
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|     
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|    In computing the contents of the Bnd field, the following detailed 
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|    points apply:  
 | ||
|     
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|    (1) For purposes of MD5 hash computation, each integer field and 
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|    input length field SHALL be formatted into four octets, using 
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|    little endian octet ordering.  
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|     
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|    (2) All input length fields within gss_buffer_desc elements of a 
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|    gss_channel_bindings_struct even those which are zero-valued, SHALL 
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|    be included in the hash calculation; the value elements of 
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|    gss_buffer_desc elements SHALL be dereferenced, and the resulting 
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|    data SHALL be included within the hash computation, only for the 
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|    case of gss_buffer_desc elements having non-zero length specifiers.  
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|     
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|    (3) If the caller passes the value GSS_C_NO_BINDINGS instead of a 
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|    valid channel binding structure, the Bnd field SHALL be set to 16 
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|    zero-valued octets.  
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|  
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| Zhu                                                                  7 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
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|    If the caller to GSS_Accept_sec_context [RFC-2743] passes in 
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|    GSS_C_NO_CHANNEL_BINDINGS [RFC-2744] as the channel bindings then 
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|    the acceptor MAY ignore any channel bindings supplied by the 
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|    initiator, returning success even if the initiator did pass in 
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|    channel bindings. 
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|     
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|    If the application supply, in the channel bindings, a buffer with a 
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|    length field larger than 4294967295 (2^32 - 1), the implementation 
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|    of this mechanism MAY chose to reject the channel bindings 
 | ||
|    altogether, using major status GSS_S_BAD_BINDINGS [RFC-2743].  In 
 | ||
|    any case, the size of channel binding data buffers that can be used 
 | ||
|    (interoperable, without extensions) with this specification is 
 | ||
|    limited to 4294967295 octets. 
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|     
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| 4.2. Per-Message Tokens 
 | ||
|     
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|    Two classes of tokens are defined in this section:  "MIC" tokens, 
 | ||
|    emitted by calls to GSS_GetMIC() and consumed by calls to 
 | ||
|    GSS_VerifyMIC(), "Wrap" tokens, emitted by calls to GSS_Wrap() and 
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|    consumed by calls to GSS_Unwrap(). 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The new per-message tokens introduced here do not include the 
 | ||
|    generic GSS-API token framing used by the context establishment 
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|    tokens.  These new tokens are designed to be used with newer crypto 
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|    systems that can, for example, have variable-size checksums.   
 | ||
|     
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| 4.2.1. Sequence Number 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    To distinguish intentionally-repeated messages from maliciously-
 | ||
|    replayed ones, per-message tokens contain a sequence number field, 
 | ||
|    which is a 64 bit integer expressed in big endian order.  After 
 | ||
|    sending a GSS_GetMIC() or GSS_Wrap() token, the sender's sequence 
 | ||
|    numbers SHALL be incremented by one. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 4.2.2. Flags Field 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The "Flags" field is a one-octet integer used to indicate a set of 
 | ||
|    attributes for the protected message.  For example, one flag is 
 | ||
|    allocated as the direction-indicator, thus preventing an adversary 
 | ||
|    from sending back the same message in the reverse direction and 
 | ||
|    having it accepted.   
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The meanings of bits in this field (the least significant bit is 
 | ||
|    bit 0) are as follows: 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|         Bit    Name             Description 
 | ||
|        --------------------------------------------------------------- 
 | ||
|         0   SentByAcceptor    When set, this flag indicates the sender  
 | ||
|                               is the context acceptor.  When not set, 
 | ||
|                               it indicates the sender is the context  
 | ||
|                               initiator. 
 | ||
|         1   Sealed            When set in Wrap tokens, this flag  
 | ||
|                               indicates confidentiality is provided  
 | ||
|                               for.  It SHALL NOT be set in MIC tokens. 
 | ||
|         2   AcceptorSubkey    A subkey asserted by the context acceptor 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                  8 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|                               is used to protect the message. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The rest of available bits are reserved for future use and MUST be 
 | ||
|    cleared.  The receiver MUST ignore unknown flags. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 4.2.3. EC Field 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The "EC" (Extra Count) field is a two-octet integer field expressed 
 | ||
|    in big endian order.   
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    In Wrap tokens with confidentiality, the EC field SHALL be used to 
 | ||
|    encode the number of octets in the filler, as described in section 
 | ||
|    4.2.4. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    In Wrap tokens without confidentiality, the EC field SHALL be used 
 | ||
|    to encode the number of octets in the trailing checksum, as 
 | ||
|    described in section 4.2.4.   
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 4.2.4. Encryption and Checksum Operations 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The encryption algorithms defined by the crypto profiles provide for 
 | ||
|    integrity protection [KCRYPTO].  Therefore no separate checksum is 
 | ||
|    needed.  
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The result of decryption can be longer than the original plaintext 
 | ||
|    [KCRYPTO] and the extra trailing octets are called "crypto-system 
 | ||
|    garbage" in this document.  However, given the size of any plaintext 
 | ||
|    data, one can always find a (possibly larger) size so that, when 
 | ||
|    padding the to-be-encrypted text to that size, there will be no 
 | ||
|    crypto-system garbage added [KCRYPTO].  
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    In Wrap tokens that provide for confidentiality, the first 16 octets 
 | ||
|    of the Wrap token (the "header", as defined in section 4.2.6), SHALL 
 | ||
|    be appended to the plaintext data before encryption.  Filler octets 
 | ||
|    MAY be inserted between the plaintext data and the "header", and the 
 | ||
|    values and size of the filler octets are chosen by implementations, 
 | ||
|    such that there SHALL be no crypto-system garbage present after the 
 | ||
|    decryption.  The resulting Wrap token is {"header" | 
 | ||
|    encrypt(plaintext-data | filler | "header")}, where encrypt() is the 
 | ||
|    encryption operation (which provides for integrity protection) 
 | ||
|    defined in the crypto profile [KCRYPTO], and the RRC field (as 
 | ||
|    defined in section 4.2.5) in the to-be-encrypted header contain the 
 | ||
|    hex value 00 00.   
 | ||
|            
 | ||
|    In Wrap tokens that do not provide for confidentiality, the checksum 
 | ||
|    SHALL be calculated first over the to-be-signed plaintext data, and 
 | ||
|    then the first 16 octets of the Wrap token (the "header", as defined 
 | ||
|    in section 4.2.6).  Both the EC field and the RRC field in the token 
 | ||
|    header SHALL be filled with zeroes for the purpose of calculating 
 | ||
|    the checksum.  The resulting Wrap token is {"header" | plaintext-
 | ||
|    data | get_mic(plaintext-data | "header")},  where get_mic() is the 
 | ||
|    checksum operation for the required checksum mechanism of the chosen 
 | ||
|    encryption mechanism defined in the crypto profile [KCRYPTO].  
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                  9 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The parameters for the key and the cipher-state in the encrypt() and 
 | ||
|    get_mic() operations have been omitted for brevity.   
 | ||
|         
 | ||
|    For MIC tokens, the checksum SHALL be calculated as follows: the 
 | ||
|    checksum operation is calculated first over the to-be-signed 
 | ||
|    plaintext data, and then the first 16 octets of the MIC token, where 
 | ||
|    the checksum mechanism is the required checksum mechanism of the 
 | ||
|    chosen encryption mechanism defined in the crypto profile [KCRYPTO]. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|    The resulting Wrap and MIC tokens bind the data to the token header, 
 | ||
|    including the sequence number and the direction indicator.  
 | ||
|    
 | ||
| 4.2.5. RRC Field 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The "RRC" (Right Rotation Count) field in Wrap tokens is added to 
 | ||
|    allow the data to be encrypted in-place by existing SSPI (Security 
 | ||
|    Service Provider Interface) [SSPI] applications that do not provide 
 | ||
|    an additional buffer for the trailer (the cipher text after the in-
 | ||
|    place-encrypted data) in addition to the buffer for the header (the 
 | ||
|    cipher text before the in-place-encrypted data).  The resulting Wrap 
 | ||
|    token in the previous section, excluding the first 16 octets of the 
 | ||
|    token header, is rotated to the right by "RRC" octets.  The net 
 | ||
|    result is that "RRC" octets of trailing octets are moved toward the 
 | ||
|    header.  Consider the following as an example of this rotation 
 | ||
|    operation:  Assume that the RRC value is 3 and the token before the 
 | ||
|    rotation is {"header" | aa | bb | cc | dd | ee | ff | gg | hh}, the 
 | ||
|    token after rotation would be {"header" | ff | gg | hh | aa | bb | 
 | ||
|    cc | dd | ee }, where {aa | bb | cc |...| hh} is used to indicate 
 | ||
|    the octet sequence. 
 | ||
|   
 | ||
|    The RRC field is expressed as a two-octet integer in big endian 
 | ||
|    order. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The rotation count value is chosen by the sender based on 
 | ||
|    implementation details, and the receiver MUST be able to interpret 
 | ||
|    all possible rotation count values, including rotation counts 
 | ||
|    greater than the length of the token. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 4.2.6. Message Layouts 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Per-message tokens start with a two-octet token identifier (TOK_ID) 
 | ||
|    field, expressed in big endian order.  These tokens are defined 
 | ||
|    separately in subsequent sub-sections. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 4.2.6.1. MIC Tokens 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Use of the GSS_GetMIC() call yields a token (referred as the MIC 
 | ||
|    token in this document), separate from the user  
 | ||
|    data being protected, which can be used to verify the integrity of  
 | ||
|    that data as received.  The token has the following format: 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|       Octet no   Name        Description 
 | ||
|       ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
 | ||
|        0..1     TOK_ID     Identification field.  Tokens emitted by  
 | ||
|                            GSS_GetMIC() contain the hex value 04 04  
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 10 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|                            expressed in big endian order in this field. 
 | ||
|        2        Flags      Attributes field, as described in section  
 | ||
|                            4.2.2. 
 | ||
|        3..7     Filler     Contains five octets of hex value FF. 
 | ||
|        8..15    SND_SEQ    Sequence number field in clear text,  
 | ||
|                            expressed in big endian order.  
 | ||
|        16..last SGN_CKSUM  Checksum of the "to-be-signed" data and  
 | ||
|                            octet 0..15, as described in section 4.2.4. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The Filler field is included in the checksum calculation for 
 | ||
|    simplicity.   
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 4.2.6.2. Wrap Tokens 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Use of the GSS_Wrap() call yields a token (referred as the Wrap 
 | ||
|    token in this document), which consists of a descriptive header, 
 | ||
|    followed by a body portion that contains either the input user data 
 | ||
|    in plaintext concatenated with the checksum, or the input user data 
 | ||
|    encrypted.  The GSS_Wrap() token SHALL have the following format: 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|       Octet no   Name        Description 
 | ||
|       --------------------------------------------------------------- 
 | ||
|        0..1     TOK_ID     Identification field.  Tokens emitted by  
 | ||
|                            GSS_Wrap() contain the the hex value 05 04                 
 | ||
|                            expressed in big endian order in this field. 
 | ||
|        2        Flags      Attributes field, as described in section  
 | ||
|                            4.2.2. 
 | ||
|        3        Filler     Contains the hex value FF. 
 | ||
|        4..5     EC         Contains the "extra count" field, in big  
 | ||
|                            endian order as described in section 4.2.3. 
 | ||
|        6..7     RRC        Contains the "right rotation count" in big  
 | ||
|                            endian order, as described in section 4.2.5. 
 | ||
|        8..15    SND_SEQ    Sequence number field in clear text, 
 | ||
|                            expressed in big endian order. 
 | ||
|        16..last Data       Encrypted data for Wrap tokens with  
 | ||
|                            confidentiality, or plaintext data followed  
 | ||
|                            by the checksum for Wrap tokens without  
 | ||
|                            confidentiality, as described in section  
 | ||
|                            4.2.4.         
 | ||
|              
 | ||
| 4.3. Context Deletion Tokens 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    Context deletion tokens are empty in this mechanism.  Both peers to 
 | ||
|    a security context invoke GSS_Delete_sec_context() [RFC-2743] 
 | ||
|    independently, passing a null output_context_token buffer to 
 | ||
|    indicate that no context_token is required.  Implementations of 
 | ||
|    GSS_Delete_sec_context() should delete relevant locally-stored 
 | ||
|    context information. 
 | ||
|         
 | ||
| 4.4. Token Identifier Assignment Considerations 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Token identifiers (TOK_ID) from 0x60 0x00 through 0x60 0xFF 
 | ||
|    inclusive are reserved and SHALL NOT be assigned.  Thus by examining 
 | ||
|    the first two octets of a token, one can tell unambiguously if it is 
 | ||
|    wrapped with the generic GSS-API token framing.   
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 11 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 5. Parameter Definitions 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    This section defines parameter values used by the Kerberos V5 GSS-
 | ||
|    API mechanism.  It defines interface elements in support of 
 | ||
|    portability, and assumes use of C language bindings per [RFC-2744]. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 5.1. Minor Status Codes 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    This section recommends common symbolic names for minor_status 
 | ||
|    values to be returned by the Kerberos V5 GSS-API mechanism.  Use of 
 | ||
|    these definitions will enable independent implementers to enhance 
 | ||
|    application portability across different implementations of the 
 | ||
|    mechanism defined in this specification.  (In all cases, 
 | ||
|    implementations of GSS_Display_status() will enable callers to 
 | ||
|    convert minor_status indicators to text representations.)  Each 
 | ||
|    implementation should make available, through include files or other 
 | ||
|    means, a facility to translate these symbolic names into the 
 | ||
|    concrete values which a particular GSS-API implementation uses to 
 | ||
|    represent the minor_status values specified in this section.  
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    It is recognized that this list may grow over time, and that the 
 | ||
|    need for additional minor_status codes specific to particular 
 | ||
|    implementations may arise.  It is recommended, however, that 
 | ||
|    implementations should return a minor_status value as defined on a 
 | ||
|    mechanism-wide basis within this section when that code is 
 | ||
|    accurately representative of reportable status rather than using a 
 | ||
|    separate, implementation-defined code.  
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 5.1.1. Non-Kerberos-specific codes 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_BAD_SERVICE_NAME  
 | ||
|               /* "No @ in SERVICE-NAME name string" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_BAD_STRING_UID 
 | ||
|               /* "STRING-UID-NAME contains nondigits" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_NOUSER 
 | ||
|               /* "UID does not resolve to username" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_VALIDATE_FAILED 
 | ||
|               /* "Validation error" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_BUFFER_ALLOC 
 | ||
|               /* "Couldn't allocate gss_buffer_t data" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_BAD_MSG_CTX 
 | ||
|               /* "Message context invalid" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_WRONG_SIZE 
 | ||
|               /* "Buffer is the wrong size" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_BAD_USAGE 
 | ||
|               /* "Credential usage type is unknown" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_G_UNKNOWN_QOP 
 | ||
|               /* "Unknown quality of protection specified" */ 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 5.1.2. Kerberos-specific-codes 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_CCACHE_NOMATCH  
 | ||
|               /* "Client principal in credentials does not match   
 | ||
|                  specified name" */ 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 12 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_KEYTAB_NOMATCH 
 | ||
|               /* "No key available for specified service principal" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_TGT_MISSING 
 | ||
|               /* "No Kerberos ticket-granting ticket available" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_NO_SUBKEY 
 | ||
|               /* "Authenticator has no subkey" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_CONTEXT_ESTABLISHED 
 | ||
|               /* "Context is already fully established" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_BAD_SIGN_TYPE 
 | ||
|               /* "Unknown signature type in token" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_BAD_LENGTH 
 | ||
|               /* "Invalid field length in token" */ 
 | ||
|       GSS_KRB5_S_KG_CTX_INCOMPLETE 
 | ||
|               /* "Attempt to use incomplete security context" */ 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 5.2. Buffer Sizes 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    All implementations of this specification MUST be capable of 
 | ||
|    accepting buffers of at least 16K octets as input to GSS_GetMIC(), 
 | ||
|    GSS_VerifyMIC(), and GSS_Wrap(), and MUST be capable of accepting 
 | ||
|    the output_token generated by GSS_Wrap() for a 16K octet input 
 | ||
|    buffer as input to GSS_Unwrap().  Implementations SHOULD support 64K 
 | ||
|    octet input buffers, and MAY support even larger input buffer sizes. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 6. Backwards Compatibility Considerations 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The new token formats defined in this document will only be 
 | ||
|    recognized by new implementations.  To address this, implementations 
 | ||
|    can always use the explicit sign or seal algorithm in [RFC-1964] 
 | ||
|    when the key type corresponds to "older" enctypes.  An alternative 
 | ||
|    approach might be to retry sending the message with the sign or seal 
 | ||
|    algorithm explicitly defined as in [RFC-1964].  However this would 
 | ||
|    require either the use of a mechanism such as [RFC-2478] to securely 
 | ||
|    negotiate the method or the use out of band mechanism to choose 
 | ||
|    appropriate mechanism.  For this reason, it is RECOMMENDED that the 
 | ||
|    new token formats defined in this document SHOULD be used only if 
 | ||
|    both peers are known to support the new mechanism during context 
 | ||
|    negotiation because of, for example, the use of "new" enctypes. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    GSS_Unwrap() or GSS_VerifyMIC() can process a message token as 
 | ||
|    follows: it can look at the first octet of the token header, if it 
 | ||
|    is 0x60 then the token must carry the generic GSS-API pseudo ASN.1 
 | ||
|    framing, otherwise the first two octets of the token contain the 
 | ||
|    TOK_ID that uniquely identify the token message format. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 7. Security Considerations 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Channel bindings are validated by the acceptor.  The acceptor can 
 | ||
|    ignore the channel bindings restriction supplied by the initiator 
 | ||
|    and carried in the authenticator checksum, if channel bindings are 
 | ||
|    not used by GSS_Accept_sec_context [RFC-2743], and the acceptor does 
 | ||
|    not prove to the initiator that it has the same channel bindings as 
 | ||
|    the initiator, even if the client requested mutual authentication.  
 | ||
|    This limitation should be taken into consideration by designers of 
 | ||
|    applications that would use channel bindings, whether to limit the 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 13 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    use of GSS-API contexts to nodes with specific network addresses, to 
 | ||
|    authenticate other established, secure channels using Kerberos 
 | ||
|    Version 5, or for any other purpose. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    Session key types are selected by the KDC.  Under the current 
 | ||
|    mechanism, no negotiation of algorithm types occurs, so server-side 
 | ||
|    (acceptor) implementations cannot request that clients not use 
 | ||
|    algorithm types not understood by the server.  However, 
 | ||
|    administrators can control what enctypes can be used for session 
 | ||
|    keys for this mechanism by controlling the set of the ticket session 
 | ||
|    key enctypes which the KDC is willing to use in tickets for a given 
 | ||
|    acceptor principal.  The KDC could therefore be given the task of 
 | ||
|    limiting session keys for a given service to types actually 
 | ||
|    supported by the Kerberos and GSSAPI software on the server.  This 
 | ||
|    does have a drawback for cases where a service principal name is 
 | ||
|    used both for GSSAPI-based and non-GSSAPI-based communication (most 
 | ||
|    notably the "host" service key), if the GSSAPI implementation does 
 | ||
|    not understand (for example) AES [AES-KRB5] but the Kerberos 
 | ||
|    implementation does.  It means that AES session keys cannot be 
 | ||
|    issued for that service principal, which keeps the protection of 
 | ||
|    non-GSSAPI services weaker than necessary.  KDC administrators 
 | ||
|    desiring to limit the session key types to support interoperability 
 | ||
|    with such GSSAPI implementations should carefully weigh the 
 | ||
|    reduction in protection offered by such mechanisms against the 
 | ||
|    benefits of interoperability. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 8. Acknowledgments 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|   Ken Raeburn and Nicolas Williams corrected many of our errors in the 
 | ||
|   use of generic profiles and were instrumental in the creation of 
 | ||
|   this document.  
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   The text for security considerations was contributed by Nicolas 
 | ||
|   Williams and Ken Raeburn. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Sam Hartman and Ken Raeburn suggested the "floating trailer" idea, 
 | ||
|   namely the encoding of the RRC field.   
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Sam Hartman and Nicolas Williams recommended the replacing our 
 | ||
|   earlier key derivation function for directional keys with different 
 | ||
|   key usage numbers for each direction as well as retaining the 
 | ||
|   directional bit for maximum compatibility.   
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Paul Leach provided numerous suggestions and comments.  
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Scott Field, Richard Ward, Dan Simon, Kevin Damour, and Simon 
 | ||
|   Josefsson also provided valuable inputs on this document. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Jeffrey Hutzelman provided comments and clarifications for the text 
 | ||
|   related to the channel bindings.  
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Jeffrey Hutzelman and Russ Housley suggested many editorial changes. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 14 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|   Luke Howard provided implementations of this document for the 
 | ||
|   Heimdal code base, and helped inter-operability testing with the 
 | ||
|   Microsoft code base, together with Love Hornquist Astrand.  These 
 | ||
|   experiments formed the basis of this document. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   Martin Rex provided suggestions of TOK_ID assignment recommendations 
 | ||
|   thus the token tagging in this document is unambiguous if the token 
 | ||
|   is wrapped with the pseudo ASN.1 header.  
 | ||
|    
 | ||
|   This document retains some of the text of RFC-1964 in relevant 
 | ||
|   sections. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
| 9. Intellectual Property Statement 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any 
 | ||
|    intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to 
 | ||
|    pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in 
 | ||
|    this document or the extent to which any license under such rights 
 | ||
|    might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it 
 | ||
|    has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the 
 | ||
|    IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and 
 | ||
|    standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.  Copies of 
 | ||
|    claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances 
 | ||
|    of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made 
 | ||
|    to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such 
 | ||
|    proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification 
 | ||
|    can be obtained from the IETF Secretariat. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any 
 | ||
|    copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary 
 | ||
|    rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice 
 | ||
|    this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive 
 | ||
|    Director. 
 | ||
|    
 | ||
| 10. References 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 10.1. Normative References 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [RFC-2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 
 | ||
|    3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.  
 | ||
|         
 | ||
|    [RFC-2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate 
 | ||
|    Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [RFC-2743] Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application Program    
 | ||
|    Interface Version 2, Update 1", RFC 2743, January 2000. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [RFC-2744] Wray, J., "Generic Security Service API Version 2: C-
 | ||
|    bindings", RFC 2744, January 2000. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [RFC-1964] Linn, J., "The Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API Mechanism",    
 | ||
|    RFC 1964, June 1996. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Zhu                                                                 15 
 | ||
| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    [KCRYPTO] RFC-Editor: To be replaced by RFC number for draft-ietf-
 | ||
|    krb-wg-crypto.  Work in Progress. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [KRBCLAR] RFC-Editor: To be replaced by RFC number for draft-ietf-
 | ||
|    krb-wg-kerberos-clarifications.  Work in Progress. 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| 10.2. Informative References 
 | ||
|  
 | ||
|    [SSPI] Leach, P., "Security Service Provider Interface", Microsoft 
 | ||
|    Developer Network (MSDN), April 2003. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [AES-KRB5] RFC-Editor: To be replaced by RFC number for draft-
 | ||
|    raeburn-krb-rijndael-krb.  Work in Progress. 
 | ||
|     
 | ||
|    [RFC-2478] Baize, E., Pinkas D., "The Simple and Protected GSS-API 
 | ||
|    Negotiation Mechanism", RFC 2478, December 1998. 
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| 11. Author's Address 
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|    Larry Zhu 
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|    One Microsoft Way 
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|    Redmond, WA 98052 - USA 
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|    EMail: LZhu@microsoft.com 
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|  
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|    Karthik Jaganathan 
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|    One Microsoft Way 
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|    Redmond, WA 98052 - USA 
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|    EMail: karthikj@microsoft.com 
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|  
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|    Sam Hartman 
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|    Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
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|    77 Massachusetts Avenue 
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|    Cambridge, MA 02139 - USA 
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|    Email: hartmans@MIT.EDU 
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| Zhu                                                                 16 
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| DRAFT               Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API     Expires August 2004 
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|  
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|     
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| Full Copyright Statement 
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|     
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|    Copyright (C) The Internet Society (date). All Rights Reserved. 
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|     
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|    This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to 
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|    others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it 
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|    or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published 
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|    and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any 
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|    kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph 
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|    are included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this 
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|    document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing 
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|    the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other 
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|    Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of 
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|    developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for 
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|    copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be 
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|    followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than 
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|    English. 
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|     
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|    The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be 
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|    revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns. 
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|     
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|    This document and the information contained herein is provided on an 
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|    "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING 
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|    TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING 
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|    BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION 
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|    HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF 
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|    MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 
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| Zhu                                                                 17  |