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Re: [tor-dev] Proposal 189: AUTHORIZE and AUTHORIZED cells
On 2011-11-04, George Kadianakis <desnacked@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Filename: 189-authorize-cell.txt
> Title: AUTHORIZE and AUTHORIZED cells
> Author: George Kadianakis
> Created: 04 Nov 2011
> Status: Open
>
> 1. Overview
>
> Proposal 187 introduced the concept of the AUTHORIZE cell, a cell
> whose purpose is to make Tor bridges resistant to scanning attacks.
>
> This is achieved by having the bridge and the client share a secret
> out-of-band and then use AUTHORIZE cells to validate that the
> client indeed knows that secret before proceeding with the Tor
> protocol.
>
> This proposal specifies the format of the AUTHORIZE cell and also
> introduces the AUTHORIZED cell, a way for bridges to announce to
> clients that the authorization process is complete and successful.
>
> 2. Motivation
>
> AUTHORIZE cells should be able to perform a variety of
> authorization protocols based on a variety of shared secrets. This
> forces the AUTHORIZE cell to have a dynamic format based on the
> authorization method used.
>
> AUTHORIZED cells are used by bridges to signal the end of a
> successful bridge client authorization and the beginning of the
> actual link handshake. AUTHORIZED cells have no other use and for
> this reason their format is very simple.
>
> Both AUTHORIZE and AUTHORIZED cells are to be used under censorship
> conditions and they should look innocuous to any adversary capable
> of monitoring network traffic.
I wrote the following in my reply to proposal 190, but it probably
belongs here instead:
| An adversary who MITMs the TLS connection and receives a Tor AUTHORIZE
| cell will know that the client is trying to connect to a Tor bridge.
|
| Should the client send a string of the form "GET
| /?q=correct+horse+battery+staple\r\n\r\n" instead of an AUTHORIZE
| cell, where "correct+horse+battery+staple" is a semi-plausible search
| phrase derived from the HMAC in some way?
> As an attack example, an adversary could passively monitor the
> traffic of a bridge host, looking at the packets directly after the
> TLS handshake and trying to deduce from their packet size if they
> are AUTHORIZE and AUTHORIZED cells. For this reason, AUTHORIZE and
> AUTHORIZED cells are padded with a random amount of padding before
> sending.
What distribution should this 'random amount' be chosen from?
> 3. Design
>
> 3.1. AUTHORIZE cell
>
> The AUTHORIZE cell is a variable-sized cell.
>
> The generic AUTHORIZE cell format is:
>
> AuthMethod [1 octet]
> MethodFields [...]
> PadLen [2 octets]
> Padding ['PadLen' octets]
>
> where:
>
> 'AuthMethod', is the authorization method to be used.
>
> 'MethodFields', is dependent on the authorization Method used. It's
> a meta-field hosting an arbitrary amount of fields.
>
> 'PadLen', specifies the amount of padding in octets.
>
> 'Padding', is 'PadLen' octets of random content.
>
> 3.2. AUTHORIZED cell format
>
> The AUTHORIZED cell is a variable-sized cell.
>
> The AUTHORIZED cell format is:
>
> 'AuthMethod' [1 octet]
> 'PadLen' [2 octets]
> 'Padding' ['PadLen' octets]
>
> where all fields have the same meaning as in section 3.1.
>
> 3.3. Cell parsing
>
> Implementations MUST ignore the contents of 'Padding'.
>
> Implementations MUST reject an AUTHORIZE or AUTHORIZED cell where
> the 'Padding' field is not 'PadLen' octets long.
>
> Implementations MUST reject an AUTHORIZE cell with an 'AuthMethod'
> they don't recognize.
What does "reject" mean here?
> 4. Discussion
>
> 4.1. Why not let the pluggable transports do the padding, like they
> are supposed to do for the rest of the Tor protocol?
>
> The arguments of section "Alternative design: Just use pluggable
> transports" of proposal 187, apply here as well:
>
> All bridges who use client authorization will also need camouflaged
> AUTHORIZE/AUTHORIZED cell.
What does "camouflaged" mean here?
> 4.2. How should multiple round-trip authorization protocols be handled?
s/multiple round/multiple-round/ # it's part of a phrase acting as an
ad-something
> Protocols that require multiple round-trips between the client and
> the bridge should use AUTHORIZE cells for communication.
.-1s/round-trips/round trips/ # it's part of a top-level noun phrase
> The format of the AUTHORIZE cell is flexible enough to support
> messages from the client to the bridge and the inverse.
s/inverse/reverse/
When can an AUTHORIZE cell be sent, and by whom?
Can a bridge which requires client authorization perform reachability
and bandwidth self-tests? If so, how?
> In the end of a successful multiple round-trip protocol, an
> AUTHORIZED cell must be issued from the bridge to the client.
.-1s/multiple round/multiple-round/ # it's part of a phrase acting as
an ad-something
s/In/At/
> 4.3. AUTHORIZED seems useless. Why not use VPADDING instead?
>
> As noted in proposal 187, the Tor protocol uses VPADDING cells for
> padding; any other use of VPADDING makes the Tor protocol kludgy.
>
> In the future, and in the example case of a v3 handshake, a client
> can optimistically send a VERSIONS cell along with the final
> AUTHORIZE cell of an authorization protocol. That allows the
> bridge, in the case of successful authorization, to also process
> the VERSIONS cell and begin the v3 handshake promptly.
Robert Ransom
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