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- \begin{document}
- \title{Tor: The Second-Generation Onion Router}
- \maketitle
- \thispagestyle{empty}
- \begin{abstract}
- We present Tor, a circuit-based low-latency anonymous communication
- system. Tor is the successor to Onion Routing
- and addresses various limitations in the original Onion Routing design.
- Tor works in a real-world Internet environment, requires no special
- privileges such as root- or kernel-level access,
- requires little synchronization or coordination between nodes, and
- provides a reasonable tradeoff between anonymity, usability, and efficiency.
- We include a new practical design for rendezvous points, as well
- as a big list of open problems.
- \end{abstract}
- \Section{Overview}
- \label{sec:intro}
- Onion Routing is a distributed overlay network designed to anonymize
- low-latency TCP-based applications such as web browsing, secure shell,
- and instant messaging. Clients choose a path through the network and
- build a \emph{virtual circuit}, in which each node (or ``onion router'')
- in the path knows its
- predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down the circuit
- is sent in fixed-size \emph{cells}, which are unwrapped by a symmetric key
- at each node (like the layers of an onion) and relayed downstream. The
- original Onion Routing project published several design and analysis
- papers
- \cite{or-ih96,or-jsac98,or-discex00,or-pet00}. While
- a wide area Onion Routing network was deployed for some weeks,
- the only long-running and publicly accessible
- implementation was a fragile proof-of-concept that ran on a single
- machine.
- Many critical design and deployment issues were never resolved,
- and the design has not been updated in several years.
- Here we describe Tor, a protocol for asynchronous, loosely
- federated onion routers that provides the following improvements over
- the old Onion Routing design:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item \textbf{Perfect forward secrecy:} The original Onion Routing
- design was vulnerable to a single hostile node recording traffic and later
- compromising successive nodes in the circuit and forcing them to
- decrypt it.
- Rather than using a single onion to lay each circuit,
- Tor now uses an incremental or \emph{telescoping}
- path-building design, where the initiator negotiates session keys with
- each successive hop in the circuit. Once these keys are deleted,
- subsequently compromised nodes cannot decrypt old traffic.
- As a side benefit, onion replay detection is no longer
- necessary, and the process of building circuits is more reliable, since
- the initiator knows when a hop fails and can then try extending to a new node.
- \item \textbf{Separation of protocol cleaning from anonymity:}
- The original Onion Routing design required a separate ``application
- proxy'' for each
- supported application protocol---most
- of which were never written, so many applications were never supported.
- Tor uses the standard and near-ubiquitous SOCKS
- \cite{socks4} proxy interface, allowing us to support most TCP-based
- programs without modification. This design change allows Tor to
- use the filtering features of privacy-enhancing
- application-level proxies such as Privoxy \cite{privoxy} without having to
- incorporate those features itself.
- \item \textbf{Many TCP streams can share one circuit:} The original
- Onion Routing design built a separate circuit for each application-level
- request.
- This hurt performance by requiring multiple public key operations for
- every request, and also presented
- a threat to anonymity from building so many different circuits; see
- Section~\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity}.
- Tor multiplexes multiple TCP streams along each virtual
- circuit, to improve efficiency and anonymity.
- \item \textbf{Leaky-pipe circuit topology:} Through in-band signalling
- within the circuit, Tor initiators can direct traffic to nodes partway
- down the circuit. This allows for long-range padding to frustrate traffic
- shape and volume attacks at the initiator \cite{defensive-dropping}.
- Because circuits are used by more than one application, it also allows
- traffic to exit the circuit from the middle---thus frustrating traffic
- shape and volume attacks based on observing the end of the circuit.
- \item \textbf{No mixing, padding, or traffic shaping:} The original
- Onion Routing design called for batching and reordering the cells arriving
- from each circuit. It also included padding between onion routers and,
- in a later design, between onion
- proxies (that is, users) and onion routers \cite{or-ih96,or-jsac98}.
- The tradeoff between padding protection and cost was discussed, but no
- general padding scheme was suggested. In
- \cite{or-pet00} it was theorized \emph{traffic shaping} would generally
- be used, but details were not provided.
- Recent research \cite{econymics} and deployment
- experience \cite{freedom21-security} suggest that this level of resource
- use is not practical or economical; and even full link padding is still
- vulnerable \cite{defensive-dropping}. Thus, until we have a proven and
- convenient design for traffic shaping or low-latency mixing that
- will improve anonymity against a realistic adversary, we leave these
- strategies out.
- \item \textbf{Congestion control:} Earlier anonymity designs do not
- address traffic bottlenecks. Unfortunately, typical approaches to load
- balancing and flow control in overlay networks involve inter-node control
- communication and global views of traffic. Tor's decentralized congestion
- control uses end-to-end acks to maintain reasonable anonymity while
- allowing nodes
- at the edges of the network to detect congestion or flooding attacks
- and send less data until the congestion subsides.
- \item \textbf{Directory servers:} The original Onion Routing design
- planned to flood link-state information through the network---an
- approach which can be unreliable and
- open to partitioning attacks or outright deception. Tor takes a simplified
- view towards distributing link-state information. Certain more trusted
- onion routers also act as directory servers: they provide signed
- \emph{directories} which describe the routers they know about and mark
- those that
- are currently up. Users periodically download these directories via HTTP.
- \item \textbf{End-to-end integrity checking:} The original Onion Routing
- design did no integrity checking on data. Any onion router on the circuit
- could change the contents of cells as they pass by---for example, to
- redirect a
- connection on the fly so it connects to a different webserver, or to
- tag encrypted traffic and look for the tagged traffic at the network
- edges \cite{minion-design}. Tor hampers these attacks by checking data
- integrity before it leaves the network.
- \item \textbf{Robustness to failed nodes:} A failed node in the old design
- meant that circuit-building failed, but thanks to Tor's step-by-step
- circuit building, users can notice failed
- nodes while building circuits and route around them. Additionally,
- liveness information from directories allows users to avoid
- unreliable nodes in the first place.
- \item \textbf{Variable exit policies:} Tor provides a consistent
- mechanism for
- each node to specify and advertise a policy describing the hosts and
- ports to which it will connect. These exit policies
- are critical in a volunteer-based distributed infrastructure, because
- each operator is comfortable with allowing different types of traffic
- to exit the Tor network from his node.
- \item \textbf{Implementable in user-space:} Unlike other anonymity systems
- like Freedom \cite{freedom2-arch}, Tor only attempts to anonymize TCP
- streams. Thus it does not require patches to an operating system's network
- stack (or built-in support) to operate. Although this approach is less
- flexible, it has proven valuable to Tor's portability and deployability.
- \item \textbf{Rendezvous points and location-protected servers:}
- Tor provides an integrated mechanism for responder anonymity via
- location-protected servers. Previous Onion Routing designs included
- long-lived ``reply onions'' which could be used to build virtual circuits
- to a hidden server, but a reply onion becomes useless if any node in
- the path goes down or rotates its keys, and it also does not provide
- forward security. In Tor's current design, clients negotiate {\it
- rendezvous points} to connect with hidden servers; reply onions are no
- longer required.
- \end{tightlist}
- We have implemented most of the above features. Our source code is
- available under a free license, and is not encumbered by patents. We have
- recently begun deploying a widespread alpha network to see how well the
- design works in practice, to get more experience with usability and users,
- and to provide a research platform for experimenting with new ideas.
- We review previous work in Section~\ref{sec:related-work}, describe
- our goals and assumptions in Section~\ref{sec:assumptions},
- and then address the above list of improvements in
- Sections~\ref{sec:design}-\ref{sec:rendezvous}. We
- summarize in Section \ref{sec:analysis}
- how our design stands up to known attacks, and conclude with a list of
- open problems.
- \Section{Related work}
- \label{sec:related-work}
- Modern anonymity designs date to Chaum's Mix-Net\cite{chaum-mix} design of
- 1981. Chaum proposed hiding sender-recipient linkability by wrapping
- messages in layers of public key cryptography, and relaying them
- through a path composed of ``Mixes.'' These mixes in turn decrypt, delay,
- and re-order messages, before relaying them along the sender-selected
- path towards their destinations.
- Subsequent relay-based anonymity designs have diverged in two
- principal directions. Some have attempted to maximize anonymity at
- the cost of introducing comparatively large and variable latencies,
- for example, Babel\cite{babel}, Mixmaster\cite{mixmaster-spec}, and
- Mixminion\cite{minion-design}. Because of this
- trade-off, these \emph{high-latency} networks are well-suited for anonymous
- email, but introduce too much lag for interactive tasks such as web browsing,
- internet chat, or SSH connections.
- Tor belongs to the second category: \emph{low-latency} designs that attempt
- to anonymize interactive network traffic. Because these protocols typically
- involve a large number of packets that must be delivered quickly, it is
- difficult for them to prevent an attacker who can eavesdrop both ends of the
- communication from correlating the timing and volume
- of traffic entering the anonymity network with traffic leaving it. These
- protocols are also vulnerable against active attacks in which an
- adversary introduces timing patterns into traffic entering the network, and
- looks
- for correlated patterns among exiting traffic.
- Although some work has been done to frustrate
- these attacks,\footnote{
- The most common approach is to pad and limit communication to a constant
- rate, or to limit
- the variation in traffic shape. Doing so can have prohibitive bandwidth
- costs and/or performance limitations.
- } most designs protect primarily against traffic analysis rather than traffic
- confirmation \cite{or-jsac98}---that is, they assume that the attacker is
- attempting to learn who is talking to whom, not to confirm a prior suspicion
- about who is talking to whom.
- The simplest low-latency designs are single-hop proxies such as the
- Anonymizer \cite{anonymizer}, wherein a single trusted server strips the
- data's origin before relaying it. These designs are easy to
- analyze, but require end-users to trust the anonymizing proxy.
- Concentrating the traffic to a single point increases the anonymity set
- (the set of people a given user is hiding among), but it can make traffic
- analysis easier: an adversary need only eavesdrop on the proxy to observe
- the entire system.
- More complex are distributed-trust, circuit-based anonymizing systems.
- In these designs, a user establishes one or more medium-term bidirectional
- end-to-end circuits, and tunnels TCP streams in fixed-size cells.
- Establishing circuits is expensive and typically requires public-key
- cryptography, whereas relaying cells is comparatively inexpensive.
- Because a circuit crosses several servers, no single server can link a
- user to her communication partners.
- The Java Anon Proxy (also known
- as JAP or Web MIXes) uses fixed shared routes known as
- \emph{cascades}. As with a single-hop proxy, this approach aggregates
- users into larger anonymity sets, but again an attacker only needs to
- observe both ends of the cascade to bridge all the system's traffic.
- The Java Anon Proxy's design provides protection by padding
- between end users and the head of the cascade \cite{web-mix}. However, the
- current implementation does no padding and thus remains vulnerable
- to both active and passive bridging.
- PipeNet \cite{back01, pipenet}, another low-latency design proposed at
- about the same time as the original Onion Routing design, provided
- stronger anonymity at the cost of allowing a single user to shut
- down the network simply by not sending. Low-latency anonymous
- communication has also been designed for other environments such as
- ISDN \cite{isdn-mixes}.
- In P2P designs like Tarzan \cite{tarzan:ccs02} and MorphMix
- \cite{morphmix:fc04}, all participants both generate traffic and relay
- traffic for others. Rather than aiming to hide the originator within a
- group of other originators, these systems instead aim to prevent a peer
- or observer from knowing whether a given peer originated the request
- or just relayed it from another peer. While Tarzan and MorphMix use
- layered encryption as above, Crowds \cite{crowds-tissec} simply assumes
- an adversary who cannot observe the initiator: it uses no public-key
- encryption, so nodes on a circuit can read that circuit's traffic. The
- anonymity of the initiator relies on filtering all identifying information
- from the data stream.
- Hordes \cite{hordes-jcs} is based on Crowds but also uses multicast
- responses to hide the initiator. Herbivore \cite{herbivore} and P5
- \cite{p5} go even further, requiring broadcast. They make anonymity
- and efficiency tradeoffs to make broadcast more practical.
- These systems are designed primarily for communication between peers,
- although Herbivore users can make external connections by
- requesting a peer to serve as a proxy. Allowing easy connections to
- nonparticipating responders or recipients is important for usability,
- for example so users can visit nonparticipating Web sites or exchange
- mail with nonparticipating recipients.
- Systems like Freedom and the original Onion Routing build the circuit
- all at once, using a layered ``onion'' of public-key encrypted messages,
- each layer of which provides a set of session keys and the address of the
- next server in the circuit. Tor as described herein, Tarzan, MorphMix,
- Cebolla \cite{cebolla}, and AnonNet \cite{anonnet} build the circuit
- in stages, extending it one hop at a time. This approach makes perfect
- forward secrecy feasible.
- Circuit-based anonymity designs must choose which protocol layer
- to anonymize. They may choose to intercept IP packets directly, and
- relay them whole (stripping the source address) as the contents of
- the circuit \cite{freedom2-arch,tarzan:ccs02}. Alternatively, like
- Tor, they may accept TCP streams and relay the data in those streams
- along the circuit, ignoring the breakdown of that data into TCP frames
- \cite{morphmix:fc04,anonnet}. Finally, they may accept application-level
- protocols (such as HTTP) and relay the application requests themselves
- along the circuit.
- This protocol-layer decision represents a compromise between flexibility
- and anonymity. For example, a system that understands HTTP can strip
- identifying information from those requests; can take advantage of caching
- to limit the number of requests that leave the network; and can batch
- or encode those requests in order to minimize the number of connections.
- On the other hand, an IP-level anonymizer can handle nearly any protocol,
- even ones unforeseen by their designers (though these systems require
- kernel-level modifications to some operating systems, and so are more
- complex and less portable). TCP-level anonymity networks like Tor present
- a middle approach: they are fairly application neutral (so long as the
- application supports, or can be tunneled across, TCP), but by treating
- application connections as data streams rather than raw TCP packets,
- they avoid the well-known inefficiencies of tunneling TCP over TCP
- \cite{tcp-over-tcp-is-bad}. [XXX what's a better cite?]
- Distributed-trust anonymizing systems need to prevent attackers from
- adding too many servers and thus compromising too many user paths.
- Tor relies on a small set of well-known servers to make
- decisions about which nodes can join. Tarzan
- and MorphMix allow unknown users to run servers, and limit an attacker
- from becoming too much of the network based on a limited resource such
- as number of IPs controlled. Crowds suggests requiring written, notarized
- requests from potential crowd members.
- Anonymous communication is an essential component of censorship-resistant
- systems like Eternity \cite{eternity}, Free Haven \cite{freehaven-berk},
- Publius \cite{publius}, and Tangler \cite{tangler}. Tor's rendezvous
- points enable connections between mutually anonymous entities; they
- are a building block for location-hidden servers, which are needed by
- Eternity and Free Haven.
- \Section{Design goals and assumptions}
- \label{sec:assumptions}
- \SubSection{Goals}
- Like other low-latency anonymity designs, Tor seeks to frustrate
- attackers from linking communication partners, or from linking
- multiple communications to or from a single user. Within this
- main goal, however, several design considerations have directed
- Tor's evolution.
- \textbf{Deployability:} The design must be one which can be implemented,
- deployed, and used in the real world. This requirement precludes designs
- that are expensive to run (for example, by requiring more bandwidth
- than volunteers are willing to provide); designs that place a heavy
- liability burden on operators (for example, by allowing attackers to
- implicate onion routers in illegal activities); and designs that are
- difficult or expensive to implement (for example, by requiring kernel
- patches, or separate proxies for every protocol). This requirement also
- precludes systems in which users who do not benefit from anonymity are
- required to run special software in order to communicate with anonymous
- parties. (We do not meet this goal for the current rendezvous design,
- however; see Section~\ref{sec:rendezvous}.)
- \textbf{Usability:} A hard-to-use system has fewer users---and because
- anonymity systems hide users among users, a system with fewer users
- provides less anonymity. Usability is not only a convenience for Tor:
- it is a security requirement \cite{econymics,back01}. Tor should not
- require modifying applications; should not introduce prohibitive delays;
- and should require the user to make as few configuration decisions
- as possible.
- \textbf{Flexibility:} The protocol must be flexible and well-specified,
- so that it can serve as a test-bed for future research in low-latency
- anonymity systems. Many of the open problems in low-latency anonymity
- networks, such as generating dummy traffic or preventing Sybil attacks
- \cite{sybil}, may be solvable independently from the issues solved by
- Tor. Hopefully future systems will not need to reinvent Tor's design.
- (But note that while a flexible design benefits researchers,
- there is a danger that differing choices of extensions will make users
- distinguishable. Experiments should be run on a separate network.)
- \textbf{Simple design:} The protocol's design and security
- parameters must be well-understood. Additional features impose implementation
- and complexity costs; adding unproven techniques to the design threatens
- deployability, readability, and ease of security analysis. Tor aims to
- deploy a simple and stable system that integrates the best well-understood
- approaches to protecting anonymity.
- \SubSection{Non-goals}
- \label{subsec:non-goals}
- In favoring simple, deployable designs, we have explicitly deferred
- a number of goals, either because they are solved elsewhere, or because
- they are an open research question.
- \textbf{Not Peer-to-peer:} Tarzan and MorphMix aim to scale to completely
- decentralized peer-to-peer environments with thousands of short-lived
- servers, many of which may be controlled by an adversary. This approach
- is appealing, but still has many open problems
- \cite{tarzan:ccs02,morphmix:fc04}.
- \textbf{Not secure against end-to-end attacks:} Tor does not claim
- to provide a definitive solution to end-to-end timing or intersection
- attacks. Some approaches, such as running an onion router, may help;
- see Section~\ref{sec:analysis} for more discussion.
- \textbf{No protocol normalization:} Tor does not provide \emph{protocol
- normalization} like Privoxy or the Anonymizer. For complex and variable
- protocols such as HTTP, Tor must be layered with a filtering proxy such
- as Privoxy to hide differences between clients, and expunge protocol
- features that leak identity. Similarly, Tor does not currently integrate
- tunneling for non-stream-based protocols like UDP; this too must be
- provided by an external service.
- \textbf{Not steganographic:} Tor does not try to conceal which users are
- sending or receiving communications; it only tries to conceal with whom
- they communicate.
- \SubSection{Threat Model}
- \label{subsec:threat-model}
- A global passive adversary is the most commonly assumed threat when
- analyzing theoretical anonymity designs. But like all practical
- low-latency systems, Tor does not protect against such a strong
- adversary. Instead, we expect an adversary who can observe some fraction
- of network traffic; who can generate, modify, delete, or delay traffic
- on the network; who can operate onion routers of its own; and who can
- compromise some fraction of the onion routers on the network.
- In low-latency anonymity systems that use layered encryption, the
- adversary's typical goal is to observe both the initiator and the
- receiver. Passive attackers can confirm a suspicion that Alice is
- talking to Bob if the timing and volume properties of the traffic on the
- connection are unique enough; active attackers are even more effective
- because they can induce timing signatures on the traffic. Tor provides
- some defenses against these \emph{traffic confirmation} attacks, for
- example by encouraging users to run their own onion routers, but it does
- not provide complete protection. Rather, we aim to prevent \emph{traffic
- analysis} attacks, where the adversary uses traffic patterns to learn
- which points in the network he should attack.
- Our adversary might try to link an initiator Alice with any of her
- communication partners, or he might try to build a profile of Alice's
- behavior. He might mount passive attacks by observing the edges of the
- network and correlating traffic entering and leaving the network---either
- because of relationships in packet timing; relationships in the volume
- of data sent; or relationships in any externally visible user-selected
- options. The adversary can also mount active attacks by compromising
- routers or keys; by replaying traffic; by selectively denying service
- to trustworthy routers to encourage users to send their traffic through
- compromised routers, or denying service to users to see if the traffic
- elsewhere in the
- network stops; or by introducing patterns into traffic that can later be
- detected. The adversary might attack the directory servers to give users
- differing views of network state. Additionally, he can try to decrease
- the network's reliability by attacking nodes or by performing antisocial
- activities from reliable servers and trying to get them taken down;
- making the network unreliable flushes users to other less anonymous
- systems, where they may be easier to attack.
- We consider each of these attacks in more detail below, and summarize
- in Section~\ref{sec:attacks} how well the Tor design defends against
- each of them.
- \Section{The Tor Design}
- \label{sec:design}
- The Tor network is an overlay network; each node is called an onion router
- (OR). Onion routers run as normal user-level processes without needing
- any special
- privileges. Currently, each OR maintains a long-term TLS \cite{TLS}
- connection to every other
- OR. (We examine some ways to relax this clique-topology assumption in
- Section~\ref{subsec:restricted-routes}.) A subset of the ORs also act as
- directory servers, tracking which routers are currently in the network;
- see Section~\ref{subsec:dirservers} for directory server details. Users
- run local software called an onion proxy (OP) to fetch directories,
- establish paths (called \emph{virtual circuits}) across the network,
- and handle connections from user applications. Onion proxies accept
- TCP streams and multiplex them across the virtual circuit. The onion
- router on the other side
- of the circuit connects to the destinations of
- the TCP streams and relays data.
- Each onion router uses three public keys: a long-term identity key, a
- short-term onion key, and a short-term link key. The identity
- (signing) key is used to sign TLS certificates, to sign its router
- descriptor (a summary of its keys, address, bandwidth, exit policy,
- etc), and to sign directories if it is a directory server. Changing
- the identity key of a router is considered equivalent to creating a
- new router. The onion (decryption) key is used for decrypting requests
- from users to set up a circuit and negotiate ephemeral keys. Finally,
- link keys are used by the TLS protocol when communicating between
- onion routers. We discuss rotating these keys in
- Section~\ref{subsec:rotating-keys}.
- Section~\ref{subsec:cells} discusses the structure of the fixed-size
- \emph{cells} that are the unit of communication in Tor. We describe
- in Section~\ref{subsec:circuits} how virtual circuits are
- built, extended, truncated, and destroyed. Section~\ref{subsec:tcp}
- describes how TCP streams are routed through the network, and finally
- Section~\ref{subsec:congestion} talks about congestion control and
- fairness issues.
- \SubSection{Cells}
- \label{subsec:cells}
- Traffic passes from one OR to another, or between a user's OP and an OR,
- in fixed-size cells. Each cell is 256 bytes (but see
- Section~\ref{sec:conclusion}
- for a discussion of allowing large cells and small cells on the same
- network), and consists of a header and a payload. The header includes an
- anonymous circuit identifier (ACI) that specifies which circuit the
- cell refers to
- (many circuits can be multiplexed over the single TCP connection between
- ORs or between an OP and an OR), and a command to describe what to do
- with the cell's payload. Cells are either \emph{control} cells, which are
- interpreted by the node that receives them, or \emph{relay} cells,
- which carry end-to-end stream data. Controls cells can be one of:
- \emph{padding} (currently used for keepalive, but also usable for link
- padding); \emph{create} or \emph{created} (used to set up a new circuit);
- or \emph{destroy} (to tear down a circuit).
- Relay cells have an additional header (the relay header) after the
- cell header, containing the stream identifier (many streams can
- be multiplexed over a circuit); an end-to-end checksum for integrity
- checking; the length of the relay payload; and a relay command. Relay
- commands can be one of: \emph{relay
- data} (for data flowing down the stream), \emph{relay begin} (to open a
- stream), \emph{relay end} (to close a stream cleanly), \emph{relay
- teardown} (to close a broken stream), \emph{relay connected}
- (to notify the OP that a relay begin has succeeded), \emph{relay
- extend} and \emph{relay extended} (to extend the circuit by a hop,
- and to acknowledge), \emph{relay truncate} and \emph{relay truncated}
- (to tear down only part of the circuit, and to acknowledge), \emph{relay
- sendme} (used for congestion control), and \emph{relay drop} (used to
- implement long-range dummies).
- We describe each of these cell types in more detail below.
- \SubSection{Circuits and streams}
- \label{subsec:circuits}
- The original Onion Routing design built one circuit for each
- TCP stream. Because building a circuit can take several tenths of a
- second (due to public-key cryptography delays and network latency),
- this design imposed high costs on applications like web browsing that
- open many TCP streams.
- In Tor, each circuit can be shared by many TCP streams. To avoid
- delays, users construct circuits preemptively. To limit linkability
- among the streams, users rotate connections by building a new circuit
- periodically if the previous one has been used,
- and expire old used circuits that are no longer in use. Tor considers
- making a new circuit once a minute: thus
- even heavy users spend a negligible amount of time and CPU in
- building circuits, but only a limited number of requests can be linked
- to each other by a given exit node. Also, because circuits are built
- in the background, failed routers do not affect user experience.
- \subsubsection{Constructing a circuit}
- Users construct a circuit incrementally, negotiating a symmetric key with
- each hop one at a time. To begin creating a new circuit, the user
- (call her Alice) sends a \emph{create} cell to the first node in her
- chosen path. The cell's payload is the first half of the
- Diffie-Hellman handshake, encrypted to the onion key of the OR (call
- him Bob). Bob responds with a \emph{created} cell containing the second
- half of the DH handshake, along with a hash of the negotiated key
- $K=g^{xy}$.
- To extend a circuit past the first hop, Alice sends a \emph{relay extend}
- cell to the last node in the circuit, specifying the address of the new
- OR and an encrypted $g^x$ for it. That node copies the half-handshake
- into a \emph{create} cell, and passes it to the new OR to extend the
- circuit. When it responds with a \emph{created} cell, the penultimate OR
- copies the payload into a \emph{relay extended} cell and passes it back.
- The onion-level handshake protocol achieves unilateral entity
- authentication (Alice knows she's handshaking with Bob, Bob doesn't
- care who is opening the circuit---Alice has no key and is trying to
- remain anonymous) and unilateral key authentication (Alice and Bob
- agree on a key, and Alice knows Bob is the only other person who should
- know it). We also want perfect forward secrecy and key freshness.
- \begin{equation}
- \begin{aligned}
- \mathrm{Alice} \rightarrow \mathrm{Bob}&: E_{PK_{Bob}}(g^x) \\
- \mathrm{Bob} \rightarrow \mathrm{Alice}&: g^y, H(K | \mathrm{``handshake"}) \\
- \end{aligned}
- \end{equation}
- The second step shows both that it was Bob
- who received $g^x$, and that it was Bob who came up with $y$. We use
- PK encryption in the first step (rather than, e.g., using the first two
- steps of STS, which has a signature in the second step) because we
- don't have enough room in a single cell for a public key and also a
- signature. Preliminary analysis with the NRL protocol analyzer \cite{meadows96}
- shows the above protocol to be secure (including providing PFS) under the
- traditional Dolev-Yao model.
- \subsubsection{Relay cells}
- Once Alice has established the circuit (so she shares a key with each
- OR on the circuit), she can send relay cells.
- The stream ID in the relay header indicates to which stream the cell belongs.
- A relay cell can be addressed to any of the ORs on the circuit. To
- construct a relay cell addressed to a given OR, Alice iteratively
- encrypts the cell payload (that is, the relay header and payload)
- with the symmetric key of each hop up to that OR. Then, at each hop
- down the circuit, the OR decrypts the cell payload and checks whether
- it recognizes the stream ID. A stream ID is recognized either if it
- is an already open stream at that OR, or if it is equal to zero. The
- zero stream ID is treated specially, and is used for control messages,
- e.g. starting a new stream. If the stream ID is unrecognized, the OR
- passes the relay cell downstream. This \emph{leaky pipe} circuit topology
- allows Alice's streams to exit at different ORs on a single circuit.
- Alice may choose different exit points because of their exit policies,
- or to keep the ORs from knowing that two streams
- originate at the same person.
- To tear down a circuit, Alice sends a destroy control cell. Each OR
- in the circuit receives the destroy cell, closes all open streams on
- that circuit, and passes a new destroy cell forward. But since circuits
- can be built incrementally, they can also be torn down incrementally:
- Alice can instead send a relay truncate cell to a node along the circuit. That
- node will send a destroy cell forward, and reply with an acknowledgment
- (relay truncated). Alice might truncate her circuit so she can extend it
- to different nodes without signaling to the first few nodes (or somebody
- observing them) that she is changing her circuit. That is, nodes in the
- middle are not even aware that the circuit was truncated, because the
- relay cells are encrypted. Similarly, if a node on the circuit goes down,
- the adjacent node can send a relay truncated back to Alice. Thus the
- ``break a node and see which circuits go down'' attack is weakened.
- \SubSection{Opening and closing streams}
- \label{subsec:tcp}
- When Alice's application wants to open a TCP connection to a given
- address and port, it asks the OP (via SOCKS) to make the connection. The
- OP chooses the newest open circuit (or creates one if none is available),
- chooses a suitable OR on that circuit to be the exit node (usually the
- last node, but maybe others due to exit policy conflicts; see
- Section~\ref{sec:exit-policies}), chooses a new random stream ID for
- this stream,
- and delivers a relay begin cell to that exit node. It uses a stream ID
- of zero for the begin cell (so the OR will recognize it), and the relay
- payload lists the new stream ID and the destination address and port.
- Once the exit node completes the connection to the remote host, it
- responds with a relay connected cell through the circuit. Upon receipt,
- the OP notifies the application that it can begin talking.
- There's a catch to using SOCKS, though -- some applications hand the
- alphanumeric address to the proxy, while others resolve it into an IP
- address first and then hand the IP to the proxy. When the application
- does the DNS resolution first, Alice broadcasts her destination. Common
- applications like Mozilla and ssh have this flaw.
- In the case of Mozilla, we're fine: the filtering web proxy called Privoxy
- does the SOCKS call safely, and Mozilla talks to Privoxy safely. But a
- portable general solution, such as for ssh, is an open problem. We can
- modify the local nameserver, but this approach is invasive, brittle, and
- not portable. We can encourage the resolver library to do resolution
- via TCP rather than UDP, but this approach is hard to do right, and also
- has portability problems. We can provide a tool similar to \emph{dig} that
- can do a private lookup through the Tor network. Our current answer is to
- encourage the use of privacy-aware proxies like Privoxy wherever possible,
- Ending a Tor stream is analogous to ending a TCP stream: it uses a
- two-step handshake for normal operation, or a one-step handshake for
- errors. If one side of the stream closes abnormally, that node simply
- sends a relay teardown cell, and tears down the stream. If one side
- of the stream closes the connection normally, that node sends a relay
- end cell down the circuit. When the other side has sent back its own
- relay end, the stream can be torn down. This two-step handshake allows
- for TCP-based applications that, for example, close a socket for writing
- but are still willing to read. Remember that all relay cells use layered
- encryption, so only the destination OR knows what type of relay cell
- it is.
- \SubSection{Integrity checking on streams}
- Because the old Onion Routing design used a stream cipher, traffic was
- vulnerable to a malleability attack: even though the attacker could not
- decrypt cells, he could make changes to an encrypted
- cell to create corresponding changes to the data leaving the network.
- (Even an external adversary could do this, despite link encryption!)
- This weakness allowed an adversary to change a padding cell to a destroy
- cell; change the destination address in a relay begin cell to the
- adversary's webserver; or change a user on an ftp connection from
- typing ``dir'' to typing ``delete *''. Any node or external adversary
- along the circuit could introduce such corruption in a stream.
- Tor prevents external adversaries from mounting this attack simply by
- using TLS. Addressing the insider malleability attack, however, is
- more complex.
- We could do integrity checking of the relay cells at each hop, either
- by including hashes or by using a cipher mode like EAX \cite{eax},
- but we don't want the added message-expansion overhead at each hop, and
- we don't want to leak the path length or pad to some max path length.
- Because we've already accepted that our design is vulnerable to end-to-end
- timing attacks, we can perform integrity checking only at the edges of
- the circuit without introducing any new anonymity attacks. When Alice
- negotiates a key
- with each hop, they both start a SHA-1 with some derivative of that key,
- thus starting out with randomness that only the two of them know. From
- then on they each incrementally add to the SHA-1 all the data bytes
- entering or exiting from the circuit, and each such relay cell includes
- the first 4 bytes of the current value of the hash.
- The attacker must be able to guess all previous bytes between Alice
- and Bob on that circuit (including the pseudorandomness from the key
- negotiation), plus the bytes in the current cell, to remove or modify the
- cell. Attacks on SHA-1 where the adversary can incrementally add to a
- hash to produce a new valid hash don't work,
- because all hashes are end-to-end encrypted across the circuit.
- The computational overhead isn't so bad, compared to doing an AES
- crypt at each hop in the circuit. We use only four bytes per cell to
- minimize overhead; the chance that an adversary will correctly guess a
- valid hash, plus the payload the current cell, is acceptly low, given
- that Alice or Bob tear down the circuit if they receive a bad hash.
- \SubSection{Rate limiting and fairness}
- Volunteers are generally more willing to run services that can limit
- their bandwidth usage. To accomodate them, Tor servers use a token
- bucket approach to limit the number of bytes they
- receive. Tokens are added to the bucket each second (when the bucket is
- full, new tokens are discarded.) Each token represents permission to
- receive one byte from the network---to receive a byte, the connection
- must remove a token from the bucket. Thus if the bucket is empty, that
- connection must wait until more tokens arrive. The number of tokens we
- add enforces a long-term average rate of incoming bytes, while still
- permitting short-term bursts above the allowed bandwidth. Current bucket
- sizes are set to ten seconds worth of traffic.
- Further, we want to avoid starving any Tor streams. Entire circuits
- could starve if we read greedily from connections and one connection
- uses all the remaining bandwidth. We solve this by dividing the number
- of tokens in the bucket by the number of connections that want to read,
- and reading at most that number of bytes from each connection. We iterate
- this procedure until the number of tokens in the bucket is under some
- threshold (eg 10KB), at which point we greedily read from connections.
- Because the Tor protocol generates roughly the same number of outgoing
- bytes as incoming bytes, it is sufficient in practice to rate-limit
- incoming bytes.
- Further, inspired by Rennhard et al's design in \cite{anonnet}, a
- circuit's edges heuristically distinguish interactive streams from bulk
- streams by comparing the frequency with which they supply cells. We can
- provide good latency for interactive streams by giving them preferential
- service, while still getting good overall throughput to the bulk
- streams. Such preferential treatment presents a possible end-to-end
- attack, but an adversary who can observe both
- ends of the stream can already learn this information through timing
- attacks.
- \SubSection{Congestion control}
- \label{subsec:congestion}
- Even with bandwidth rate limiting, we still need to worry about
- congestion, either accidental or intentional. If enough users choose the
- same OR-to-OR connection for their circuits, that connection can become
- saturated. For example, an adversary could make a large HTTP PUT request
- through the onion routing network to a webserver he runs, and then
- refuse to read any of the bytes at the webserver end of the
- circuit. Without some congestion control mechanism, these bottlenecks
- can propagate back through the entire network. We describe our
- responses below.
- \subsubsection{Circuit-level}
- To control a circuit's bandwidth usage, each OR keeps track of two
- windows. The \emph{package window} tracks how many relay data cells the OR is
- allowed to package (from outside streams) for transmission back to the OP,
- and the \emph{deliver window} tracks how many relay data cells it is willing
- to deliver to streams outside the network. Each window is initialized
- (say, to 1000 data cells). When a data cell is packaged or delivered,
- the appropriate window is decremented. When an OR has received enough
- data cells (currently 100), it sends a relay sendme cell towards the OP,
- with stream ID zero. When an OR receives a relay sendme cell with stream
- ID zero, it increments its packaging window. Either of these cells
- increments the corresponding window by 100. If the packaging window
- reaches 0, the OR stops reading from TCP connections for all streams
- on the corresponding circuit, and sends no more relay data cells until
- receiving a relay sendme cell.
- The OP behaves identically, except that it must track a packaging window
- and a delivery window for every OR in the circuit. If a packaging window
- reaches 0, it stops reading from streams destined for that OR.
- \subsubsection{Stream-level}
- The stream-level congestion control mechanism is similar to the
- circuit-level mechanism above. ORs and OPs use relay sendme cells
- to implement end-to-end flow control for individual streams across
- circuits. Each stream begins with a package window (e.g. 500 cells),
- and increments the window by a fixed value (50) upon receiving a relay
- sendme cell. Rather than always returning a relay sendme cell as soon
- as enough cells have arrived, the stream-level congestion control also
- has to check whether data has been successfully flushed onto the TCP
- stream; it sends a relay sendme only when the number of bytes pending
- to be flushed is under some threshold (currently 10 cells worth).
- Currently, non-data relay cells do not affect the windows. Thus we
- avoid potential deadlock issues, e.g. because a stream can't send a
- relay sendme cell because its packaging window is empty.
- \subsubsection{Needs more research}
- We don't need to reimplement full TCP windows (with sequence numbers,
- the ability to drop cells when we're full and retransmit later, etc),
- because the TCP streams already guarantee in-order delivery of each
- cell. But we need to investigate further the effects of the current
- parameters on throughput and latency, while also keeping privacy in mind;
- see Section~\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity} for more discussion.
- \Section{Other design decisions}
- \SubSection{Resource management and DoS prevention}
- \label{subsec:dos}
- Providing Tor as a public service provides many opportunities for an
- attacker to mount denial-of-service attacks against the network. While
- flow control and rate limiting (discussed in
- Section~\ref{subsec:congestion}) prevent users from consuming more
- bandwidth than routers are willing to provide, opportunities remain for
- users to
- consume more network resources than their fair share, or to render the
- network unusable for other users.
- First of all, there are a number of CPU-consuming denial-of-service
- attacks wherein an attacker can force an OR to perform expensive
- cryptographic operations. For example, an attacker who sends a
- \emph{create} cell full of junk bytes can force an OR to perform an RSA
- decrypt. Similarly, an attacker can
- fake the start of a TLS handshake, forcing the OR to carry out its
- (comparatively expensive) half of the handshake at no real computational
- cost to the attacker.
- Several approaches exist to address these attacks. First, ORs may
- demand proof-of-computation tokens \cite{hashcash} before beginning new
- TLS handshakes or accepting \emph{create} cells. So long as these
- tokens are easy to verify and computationally expensive to produce, this
- approach limits the DoS attack multiplier. Additionally, ORs may limit
- the rate at which they accept create cells and TLS connections, so that
- the computational work of processing them does not drown out the (comparatively
- inexpensive) work of symmetric cryptography needed to keep cells
- flowing. This rate limiting could, however, allows an attacker
- to slow down other users when they build new circuits.
- Attackers also have an opportunity to attack the Tor network by mounting
- attacks on its hosts and network links. Disrupting a single circuit or
- link breaks all currently open streams passing along that part of the
- circuit. Indeed, this same loss of service occurs when a router crashes
- or its operator restarts it. The current Tor design treats such attacks
- as intermittent network failures, and depends on users and applications
- to respond or recover as appropriate. A future design could use an
- end-to-end based TCP-like acknowledgment protocol, so that no streams are
- lost unless the entry or exit point itself is disrupted. This solution
- would require more buffering at the network edges, however, and the
- performance and anonymity implications from this extra complexity still
- require investigation.
- \SubSection{Exit policies and abuse}
- \label{subsec:exitpolicies}
- Exit abuse is a serious barrier to wide-scale Tor deployment. Not
- only does anonymity present would-be vandals and abusers with an
- opportunity to hide the origins of their activities---but also,
- existing sanctions against abuse present an easy way for attackers to
- harm the Tor network by implicating exit servers for their abuse.
- Thus, must block or limit attacks and other abuse that travel through
- the Tor network.
- Also, applications that commonly use IP-based authentication (such
- institutional mail or web servers) can be fooled by the fact that
- anonymous connections appear to originate at the exit OR. Rather than
- expose a private service, an administrator may prefer to prevent Tor
- users from connecting to those services from a local OR.
- To mitigate abuse issues, in Tor, each onion router's \emph{exit
- policy} describes to which external addresses and ports the router
- will permit stream connections. On one end of the spectrum are
- \emph{open exit} nodes that will connect anywhere. As a compromise,
- most onion routers will function as \emph{restricted exits} that
- permit connections to the world at large, but prevent access to
- certain abuse-prone addresses and services. on the other end are
- \emph{middleman} nodes that only relay traffic to other Tor nodes, and
- \emph{private exit} nodes that only connect to a local host or
- network. (Using a private exit (if one exists) is a more secure way
- for a client to connect to a given host or network---an external
- adversary cannot eavesdrop traffic between the private exit and the
- final destination, and so is less sure of Alice's destination and
- activities.) is less sure of Alice's destination. In general,
- nodes can require a variety of forms of traffic authentication
- \cite{or-discex00}.
- Many administrators will use port restrictions to support only a
- limited set of well-known services, such as HTTP, SSH, or AIM.
- This is not a complete solution, since abuse opportunities for these
- protocols are still well known. Nonetheless, the benefits are real,
- since administrators seem used to the concept of port 80 abuse not
- coming from the machine's owner.
- A further solution may be to use proxies to clean traffic for certain
- protocols as it leaves the network. For example, much abusive HTTP
- behavior (such as exploiting buffer overflows or well-known script
- vulnerabilities) can be detected in a straightforward manner.
- Similarly, one could run automatic spam filtering software (such as
- SpamAssassin) on email exiting the OR network. A generic
- intrusion detection system (IDS) could be adapted to these purposes.
- [XXX Mention possibility of filtering spam-like habits--e.g., many
- recipients. -NM]
- ORs may also choose to rewrite exiting traffic in order to append
- headers or other information to indicate that the traffic has passed
- through an anonymity service. This approach is commonly used, to some
- success, by email-only anonymity systems. When possible, ORs can also
- run on servers with hostnames such as {\it anonymous}, to further
- alert abuse targets to the nature of the anonymous traffic.
- A mixture of open and restricted exit nodes will allow the most
- flexibility for volunteers running servers. But while a large number
- of middleman nodes is useful to provide a large and robust network,
- having only a small number of exit nodes reduces the number of nodes
- an adversary needs to monitor for traffic analysis, and places a
- greater burden on the exit nodes. This tension can be seen in the JAP
- cascade model, wherein only one node in each cascade needs to handle
- abuse complaints---but an adversary only needs to observe the entry
- and exit of a cascade to perform traffic analysis on all that
- cascade's users. The Hydra model (many entries, few exits) presents a
- different compromise: only a few exit nodes are needed, but an
- adversary needs to work harder to watch all the clients.
- Finally, we note that exit abuse must not be dismissed as a peripheral
- issue: when a system's public image suffers, it can reduce the number
- and diversity of that system's users, and thereby reduce the anonymity
- of the system itself. Like usability, public perception is also a
- security parameter. Sadly, preventing abuse of open exit nodes is an
- unsolved problem, and will probably remain an arms race for the
- forseeable future. The abuse problems faced by Princeton's CoDeeN
- project \cite{darkside} give us a glimpse of likely issues.
- \SubSection{Directory Servers}
- \label{subsec:dirservers}
- First-generation Onion Routing designs \cite{or-jsac98,freedom2-arch} did
- in-band network status updates: each router flooded a signed statement
- to its neighbors, which propagated it onward. But anonymizing networks
- have different security goals than typical link-state routing protocols.
- For example, delays (accidental or intentional)
- that can cause different parts of the network to have different pictures
- of link-state and topology are not only inconvenient---they give
- attackers an opportunity to exploit differences in client knowledge.
- We also worry about attacks to deceive a
- client about the router membership list, topology, or current network
- state. Such \emph{partitioning attacks} on client knowledge help an
- adversary with limited resources to efficiently deploy those resources
- when attacking a target.
- Instead of flooding, Tor uses a small group of redundant, well-known
- directory servers to track changes in network topology and node state,
- including keys and exit policies. Directory servers are a small group
- of well-known, mostly-trusted onion routers. They listen on a
- separate port as an HTTP server, so that participants can fetch
- current network state and router lists (a \emph{directory}), and so
- that other onion routers can upload their router descriptors. Onion
- routers now periodically publish signed statements of their state to
- the directories only. The directories themselves combine this state
- information with their own views of network liveness, and generate a
- signed description of the entire network state whenever its contents
- have changed. Client software is pre-loaded with a list of the
- directory servers and their keys, and uses this information to
- bootstrap each client's view of the network.
- When a directory receives a signed statement from and onion router, it
- recognizes the onion router by its identity (signing) key.
- Directories do not automatically advertise ORs that they do not
- recognize. (If they did, an adversary could take over the network by
- creating many servers \cite{sybil}.) Instead, new nodes must be
- approved by the directory administrator before they are included.
- Mechanisms for automated node approval are an area of active research,
- and are discussed more in section~\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity}.
-
- Of course, a variety of attacks remain. An adversary who controls a
- directory server can track certain clients by providing different
- information---perhaps by listing only nodes under its control
- as working, or by informing only certain clients about a given
- node. Moreover, an adversary without control of a directory server can
- still exploit differences among client knowledge. If Eve knows that
- node $M$ is listed on server $D_1$ but not on $D_2$, she can use this
- knowledge to link traffic through $M$ to clients who have queried $D_1$.
- Thus these directory servers must be synchronized and redundant. The
- software is distributed with the signature public key of each directory
- server, and directories must be signed by a threshold of these keys.
- The directory servers in Tor are modeled after those in Mixminion
- \cite{minion-design}, but our situation is easier. First, we make the
- simplifying assumption that all participants agree on who the
- directory servers are. Second, Mixminion needs to predict node
- behavior, whereas Tor only needs a threshold consensus of the current
- state of the network.
- Tor directory servers build a consensus directory through a simple
- four-round broadcast protocol. In round one, each server dates and
- signs its current opinion, and broadcasts it to the other directory
- servers; then in round two, each server rebroadcasts all the signed
- opinions it has received. At this point all directory servers check
- to see whether any server has signed multiple opinions in the same
- period. If so, the server is either broken or cheating, so the protocol
- stops and notifies the administrators, who either remove the cheater
- or wait for the broken server to be fixed. If there are no
- discrepancies, each directory server then locally computes an algorithm
- (described below)
- on the set of opinions, resulting in a uniform shared directory. In
- round three servers sign this directory and broadcast it; and finally
- in round four the servers rebroadcast the directory and all the
- signatures. If any directory server drops out of the network, its
- signature is not included on the final directory.
- The rebroadcast steps ensure that a directory server is heard by
- either all of the other servers or none of them, assuming that any two
- directory servers can talk directly, or via a third directory server (some of the
- links between directory servers may be down). Broadcasts are feasible
- because there are relatively few directory servers (currently 3, but we expect
- to transition to 9 as the network scales). The actual local algorithm
- for computing the shared directory is a straightforward threshold
- voting process: we include an OR if a majority of directory servers
- believe it to be good.
- To avoid attacks where a router connects to all the directory servers
- but refuses to relay traffic from other routers, the directory servers
- must build circuits and use them to anonymously test router reliability
- \cite{mix-acc}.
- When Alice retrieves a consensus directory, she uses it if it
- is signed by a majority of the directory servers she knows.
- Using directory servers rather than flooding provides simplicity and
- flexibility. For example, they don't complicate the analysis when we
- start experimenting with non-clique network topologies. And because
- the directories are signed, they can be cached by other onion routers.
- Thus directory servers are not a performance
- bottleneck when we have many users, and do not aid traffic analysis by
- forcing clients to periodically announce their existence to any
- central point.
- \Section{Rendezvous points: location privacy}
- \label{sec:rendezvous}
- Rendezvous points are a building block for \emph{location-hidden
- services} (also known as ``responder anonymity'') in the Tor
- network. Location-hidden services allow a server Bob to offer a TCP
- service, such as a webserver, without revealing the IP of his service.
- Besides allowing Bob to provided services anonymously, location
- privacy also seeks to provide some protection against DDoS attacks:
- attackers are forced to attack the onion routing network as a whole
- rather than just Bob's IP.
- \subsection{Goals for rendezvous points}
- \label{subsec:rendezvous-goals}
- Our design for location-hidden servers has the following properties:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item[Flood-proof:] An attacker should not be able to flood Bob with traffic
- simply by sending many requests to talk to Bob. Thus, Bob needs a
- way to filter incoming requests.
- \item[Robust:] Bob should be able to maintain a long-term pseudonymous
- identity even in the presence of router failure. Thus, Bob's service
- must not be tied to a single OR, and Bob must be able to tie his service
- to new ORs.
- \item[Smear-resistant:] An attacker should not be able to use rendezvous
- points to smear an OR. That is, if a social attacker tries to host a
- location-hidden service that is illegal or disreputable, it should not
- appear---even to a casual observer---that the OR is hosting that service.
- \item[Application-transparent:] Although we are willing to require users to
- run special software to access location-hidden servers, we are not willing
- to require them to modify their applications.
- \end{tightlist}
- \subsection{Rendezvous design}
- We provide location-hiding for Bob by allowing him to advertise
- several onion routers (his \emph{Introduction Points}) as his public
- location. (He may do this on any robust efficient distributed
- key-value lookup system with authenticated updates, such as CFS
- \cite{cfs:sosp01}\footnote{
- Each onion router could run a node in this lookup
- system; also note that as a stopgap measure, we can start by running a
- simple lookup system on the directory servers.})
- Alice, the client, chooses a node for her
- \emph{Meeting Point}. She connects to one of Bob's introduction
- points, informs him about her rendezvous point, and then waits for him
- to connect to the rendezvous point. This extra level of indirection
- helps Bob's introduction points avoid problems associated with serving
- unpopular files directly, as could occur, for example, if Bob chooses
- an introduction point in Texas to serve anti-ranching propaganda,
- or if Bob's service tends to get DDoS'ed by network vandals.
- The extra level of indirection also allows Bob to respond to some requests
- and ignore others.
- The steps of a rendezvous as follows. These steps are performed on
- behalf of Alice and Bob by their local onion proxies, which they both
- must run; application integration is described more fully below.
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item Bob chooses some introduction ppoints, and advertises them via
- CFS (or some other distributed key-value publication system).
- \item Bob establishes a Tor virtual circuit to each of his
- Introduction Points, and waits.
- \item Alice learns about Bob's service out of band (perhaps Bob told her,
- or she found it on a website). She looks up the details of Bob's
- service from CFS.
- \item Alice chooses an OR to serve as a Rendezvous Point (RP) for this
- transaction. She establishes a virtual circuit to her RP, and
- tells it to wait for connections. [XXX how?]
- \item Alice opens an anonymous stream to one of Bob's Introduction
- Points, and gives it message (encrypted for Bob) which tells him
- about herself, her chosen RP, and the first half of an ephemeral
- key handshake. The Introduction Point sends the message to Bob.
- \item Bob may decide to ignore Alice's request. [XXX Based on what?]
- Otherwise, he creates a new virtual circuit to Alice's RP, and
- authenticates himself. [XXX how?]
- \item If the authentication is successful, the RP connects Alice's
- virtual circuit to Bob's. Note that RP can't recognize Alice,
- Bob, or the data they transmit (they share a session key).
- \item Alice now sends a Begin cell along the circuit. It arrives at Bob's
- onion proxy. Bob's onion proxy connects to Bob's webserver.
- \item An anonymous stream has been established, and Alice and Bob
- communicate as normal.
- \end{tightlist}
- [XXX We need to modify the above to refer people down to these next
- paragraphs. -NM]
- When establishing an introduction point, Bob provides the onion router
- with a public ``introduction'' key. The hash of this public key
- identifies a unique service, and (since Bob is required to sign his
- messages) prevents anybody else from usurping Bob's introduction point
- in the future. Bob uses the same public key when establishing the other
- introduction points for that service.
- The message that Alice gives the introduction point includes a hash of Bob's
- public key to identify the service, an optional initial authentication
- token (the introduction point can do prescreening, eg to block replays),
- and (encrypted to Bob's public key) the location of the rendezvous point,
- a rendezvous cookie Bob should tell RP so he gets connected to
- Alice, an optional authentication token so Bob can choose whether to respond,
- and the first half of a DH key exchange. When Bob connects to RP
- and gets connected to Alice's pipe, his first cell contains the
- other half of the DH key exchange.
- The authentication tokens can be used to provide selective access to users
- proportional to how important it is that they main uninterrupted access
- to the service. During normal situations, Bob's service might simply be
- offered directly from mirrors; Bob can also give out authentication cookies
- to high-priority users. If those mirrors are knocked down by DDoS attacks,
- those users can switch to accessing Bob's service via the Tor
- rendezvous system.
- \SubSection{Integration with user applications}
- For each service Bob offers, he configures his local onion proxy to know
- the local IP and port of the server, a strategy for authorizing Alices,
- and a public key. Bob publishes
- the public key, an expiration
- time (``not valid after''), and the current introduction points for
- his
- service into CFS, all indexed by the hash of the public key
- Note that Bob's webserver is unmodified, and doesn't even know
- that it's hidden behind the Tor network.
- Because Alice's applications must work unchanged, her client interface
- remains a SOCKS proxy. Thus we must encode all of the necessary
- information into the fully qualified domain name Alice uses when
- establishing her connections. Location-hidden services use a virtual
- top level domain called `.onion': thus hostnames take the form
- x.y.onion where x is the authentication cookie, and y encodes the hash
- of PK. Alice's onion proxy examines hostnames and recognizes when
- they're destined for a hidden server. If so, it decodes the PK and
- starts the rendezvous as described in the table above.
- \subsection{Previous rendezvous work}
- Ian Goldberg developed a similar notion of rendezvous points for
- low-latency anonymity systems \cite{ian-thesis}. His ``service tags''
- play the same role in his design as the hashes of services' public
- keys play in ours. We use public key hashes so that they can be
- self-authenticating, and so the client can recognize the same service
- with confidence later on. His design also differs from ours in the
- following ways: First, Goldberg suggests that the client should
- manually hunt down a current location of the service via Gnutella;
- whereas our use of CFS makes lookup faster, more robust, and
- transparent to the user. Second, in Tor the client and server
- negotiate ephemeral keys via Diffie-Hellman, so at no point in the
- path is the plaintext exposed. Third, our design tries to minimize the
- exposure associated with running the service, so as to make volunteers
- more willing to offer introduction and rendezvous point services.
- Tor's introduction points do not output any bytes to the clients, and
- the rendezvous points don't know the client, the server, or the data
- being transmitted. The indirection scheme is also designed to include
- authentication/authorization---if the client doesn't include the right
- cookie with its request for service, the server need not even
- acknowledge its existence.
- \Section{Analysis}
- \label{sec:analysis}
- In this section, we discuss how well Tor meets our stated design goals
- and its resistance to attacks.
- \SubSection{Meeting Basic Goals}
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item [Basic Anonymity:] Because traffic is encrypted, changing in
- appearance, and can flow from anywhere to anywhere within the
- network, a simple observer that cannot see both the initiator
- activity and the corresponding activity where the responder talks to
- the network will not be able to link the initiator and responder.
- Nor is it possible to directly correlate any two communication
- sessions as coming from a single source without additional
- information. Resistance to more sophisticated anonymity threats is
- discussed below.
- \item[Deployability:] Tor requires no specialized hardware. Tor
- requires no kernel modifications; it runs in user space (currently
- on Linux, various BSDs, and Windows). All of these imply a low
- technical barrier to running a Tor node. There is an assumption that
- Tor nodes have good relatively persistent net connectivity
- (currently T1 or better);
- however, there is no padding overhead, and operators can limit
- bandwidth on any link. Tor is freely available under the modified
- BSD license, and operators are able to choose their own exit
- policies, thus reducing legal and social barriers to
- running a node.
-
- \item[Usability:] As noted, Tor runs in user space. So does the onion
- proxy, which is comparatively easy to install and run. SOCKS-aware
- applications require nothing more than to be pointed at the onion
- proxy; other applications can be redirected to use SOCKS for their
- outgoing TCP connections by drop-in libraries such as tsocks.
-
- \item[Flexibility:] Tor's design and implementation is fairly modular,
- so that,
- for example, a scalable P2P replacement for the directory servers
- would not substantially impact other aspects of the system. Tor
- runs on top of TCP, so design options that could not easily do so
- would be difficult to test on the current network. However, most
- low-latency protocols are designed to run over TCP. We are currently
- discussing with the designers of MorphMix interoperability of the
- two systems, which seems to be relatively straightforward. This will
- allow testing and direct comparison of the two rather different
- designs.
-
-
-
- \item[Conservative design:] Tor opts for practicality when there is no
- clear resolution of anonymity tradeoffs or practical means to
- achieve resolution. Thus, we do not currently pad or mix; although
- it would be easy to add either of these. Indeed, our system allows
- long-range and variable padding if this should ever be shown to have
- a clear advantage. Similarly, we do not currently attempt to
- resolve such issues as Sybil attacks to dominate the network except
- by such direct means as personal familiarity of director operators
- with all node operators.
- \end{tightlist}
- \SubSection{Attacks and Defenses}
- \label{sec:attacks}
- Below we summarize a variety of attacks and how well our design withstands
- them.
- [XXX Note that some of these attacks are outside our threat model! -NM]
- \subsubsection*{Passive attacks}
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item \emph{Observing user traffic patterns.} Observations of connection
- between an end user and a first onion router will not reveal to whom
- the user is connecting or what information is being sent. It will
- reveal patterns of user traffic (both sent and received). Simple
- profiling of user connection patterns is not generally possible,
- however, because multiple application connections (streams) may be
- operating simultaneously or in series over a single circuit. Thus,
- further processing is necessary to try to discern even these usage
- patterns.
-
- \item \emph{Observing user content.} At the user end, content is
- encrypted; however, connections from the network to arbitrary
- websites may not be. Further, a responding website may itself be
- considered an adversary. Filtering content is not a primary goal of
- Onion Routing; nonetheless, Tor can directly make use of Privoxy and
- related filtering services via SOCKS and thus anonymize their
- application data streams.
- \item \emph{Option distinguishability.} Configuration options can be a
- source of distinguishable patterns. In general there is economic
- incentive to allow preferential services \cite{econymics}, and some
- degree of configuration choice is a factor in attracting large
- numbers of users to provide anonymity. So far, however, we have
- not found a compelling use case in Tor for any client-configurable
- options. Thus, clients are currently distinguishable only by their
- behavior.
-
- \item \emph{End-to-end Timing correlation.} Tor only minimally hides
- end-to-end timing correlations. If an attacker can watch patterns of
- traffic at the initiator end and the responder end, then he will be
- able to confirm the correspondence with high probability. The
- greatest protection currently against such confirmation is if the
- connection between the onion proxy and the first Tor node is hidden,
- possibly because it is local or behind a firewall. This approach
- requires an observer to separate traffic originating the onion
- router from traffic passes through it. We still do not, however,
- predict this approach to be a large problem for an attacker who can
- observe traffic at both ends of an application connection.
-
- \item \emph{End-to-end Size correlation.} Simple packet counting
- without timing consideration will also be effective in confirming
- endpoints of a connection through Onion Routing; although slightly
- less so. This is because, even without padding, the leaky pipe
- topology means different numbers of packets may enter one end of a
- circuit than exit at the other.
-
- \item \emph{Website fingerprinting.} All the above passive
- attacks that are at all effective are traffic confirmation attacks.
- This puts them outside our general design goals. There is also
- a passive traffic analysis attack that is potentially effective.
- Instead of searching exit connections for timing and volume
- correlations it is possible to build up a database of
- ``fingerprints'' containing file sizes and access patterns for a
- large numbers of interesting websites. If one now wants to
- monitor the activity of a user, it may be possible to confirm a
- connection to a site simply by consulting the database. This attack has
- been shown to be effective against SafeWeb \cite{hintz-pet02}. Onion
- Routing is not as vulnerable as SafeWeb to this attack: There is the
- possibility that multiple streams are exiting the circuit at
- different places concurrently. Also, fingerprinting will be limited to
- the granularity of cells, currently 256 bytes. Larger cell sizes
- and/or minimal padding schemes that group websites into large sets
- are possible responses. But this remains an open problem. Link
- padding or long-range dummies may also make fingerprints harder to
- detect. (Note that
- such fingerprinting should not be confused with the latency attacks
- of \cite{back01}. Those require a fingerprint of the latencies of
- all circuits through the network, combined with those from the
- network edges to the targeted user and the responder website. While
- these are in principal feasible and surprises are always possible,
- these constitute a much more complicated attack, and there is no
- current evidence of their practicality.)
- \item \emph{Content analysis.} Tor explicitly provides no content
- rewriting for any protocol at a higher level than TCP. When
- protocol cleaners are available, however (as Privoxy is for HTTP),
- Tor can integrate them in order to address these attacks.
- \end{tightlist}
- \subsubsection*{Active attacks}
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item \emph{Key compromise.} We consider the impact of a compromise
- for each type of key in turn, from the shortest- to the
- longest-lived. If a circuit session key is compromised, the
- attacker can unwrap a single layer of encryption from the relay
- cells traveling along that circuit. (Only nodes on the circuit can
- see these cells.) If a TLS session key is compromised, an attacker
- can view all the cells on TLS connection until the key is
- renegotiated. (These cells are themselves encrypted.) If a TLS
- private key is compromised, the attacker can fool others into
- thinking that he is the affected OR, but still cannot accept any
- connections. If an onion private key is compromised, the attacker
- can impersonate the OR in circuits, but only if the attacker has
- also compromised the OR's TLS private key, or is running the
- previous OR in the circuit. (This compromise affects newly created
- circuits, but because of perfect forward secrecy, the attacker
- cannot hijack old circuits without compromising their session keys.)
- In any case, an attacker can only take advantage of a compromise in
- these mid-term private keys until they expire. Only by
- compromising a node's identity key can an attacker replace that
- node indefinitely, by sending new forged mid-term keys to the
- directories. Finally, an attacker who can compromise a
- \emph{directory's} identity key can influence every client's view
- of the network---but only to the degree made possible by gaining a
- vote with the rest of the the directory servers.
- \item \emph{Iterated compromise.} A roving adversary who can
- compromise ORs (by system intrusion, legal coersion, or extralegal
- coersion) could march down length of a circuit compromising the
- nodes until he reaches the end. Unless the adversary can complete
- this attack within the lifetime of the circuit, however, the ORs
- will have discarded the necessary information before the attack can
- be completed. (Thanks to the perfect forward secrecy of session
- keys, the attacker cannot cannot force nodes to decrypt recorded
- traffic once the circuits have been closed.) Additionally, building
- circuits that cross jurisdictions can make legal coercion
- harder---this phenomenon is commonly called ``jurisdictional
- arbitrage.'' The JAP project recently experienced this issue, when
- the German government successfully ordered them to add a backdoor to
- all of their nodes.
-
- \item \emph{Run a recipient.} By running a Web server, an adversary
- trivially learns the timing patterns of those connecting to it, and
- can introduce arbitrary patterns in its responses. This can greatly
- facilitate end-to-end attacks: If the adversary can induce certain
- users to connect to connect to his webserver (perhaps by providing
- content targeted at those users), she now holds one end of their
- connection. Additonally, here is a danger that the application
- protocols and associated programs can be induced to reveal
- information about the initiator. This is not directly in Onion
- Routing's protection area, so we are dependent on Privoxy and
- similar protocol cleaners to solve the problem.
-
- \item \emph{Run an onion proxy.} It is expected that end users will
- nearly always run their own local onion proxy. However, in some
- settings, it may be necessary for the proxy to run
- remotely---typically, in an institutional setting where it was
- necessary to monitor the activity of those connecting to the proxy.
- The drawback, of course, is that if the onion proxy is compromised,
- then all future connections through it are completely compromised.
- \item \emph{DoS non-observed nodes.} An observer who can observe some
- of the Tor network can increase the value of this traffic analysis
- if it can attack non-observed nodes to shut them down, reduce
- their reliability, or persuade users that they are not trustworthy.
- The best defense here is robustness.
-
- \item \emph{Run a hostile node.} In addition to the abilties of a
- local observer, an isolated hostile node can create circuits through
- itself, or alter traffic patterns, in order to affect traffic at
- other nodes. Its ability to directly DoS a neighbor is now limited
- by bandwidth throttling. Nonetheless, in order to compromise the
- anonymity of the endpoints of a circuit by its observations, a
- hostile node is only significant if it is immediately adjacent to
- that endpoint.
-
- \item \emph{Run multiple hostile nodes.} If an adversary is able to
- run multiple ORs, and is able to persuade the directory servers
- that those ORs are trustworthy and independant, then occasionally
- some user will choose one of those ORs for the start and another of
- those ORs as the end of a circuit. When this happens, the user's
- anonymity is compromised for those circuits. If an adversary can
- control $m$ out of $N$ nodes, he should be able to correlate at most
- $\frac{m}{N}$ of the traffic in this way---although an adersary
- could possibly attract a disproportionately large amount of traffic
- by running an exit node with an unusually permisssive exit policy.
- \item \emph{Compromise entire path.} Anyone compromising both
- endpoints of a circuit can confirm this with high probability. If
- the entire path is compromised, this becomes a certainty; however,
- the added benefit to the adversary of such an attack is small in
- relation to the difficulty.
-
- \item \emph{Run a hostile directory server.} Directory servers control
- admission to the network. However, because the network directory
- must be signed by a majority of servers, the threat of a single
- hostile server is minimized.
-
- \item \emph{Selectively DoS a Tor node.} As noted, neighbors are
- bandwidth limited; however, it is possible to open up sufficient
- numbers of circuits that converge at a single onion router to
- overwhelm its network connection, its ability to process new
- circuits or both.
-
- \item \emph{Introduce timing into messages.} This is simply a stronger
- version of passive timing attacks already discussed above.
-
- \item \emph{Tagging attacks.} A hostile node could try to ``tag'' a
- cell by altering it. This would render it unreadable, but if the
- connection is, for example, an unencrypted request to a Web site,
- the garbled content coming out at the appropriate time could confirm
- the association. However, integrity checks on cells prevent
- this attack from succeeding.
- \item \emph{Replace contents of unauthenticated protocols.} When a
- relaying an unauthenticated protocol like HTTP, a hostile exit node
- can impersonate the target server. Thus, whenever possible, clients
- should prefer protocols with end-to-end authentication.
- \item \emph{Replay attacks.} Some anonymity protocols are vulnerable
- to replay attacks. Tor is not; replaying one side of a handshake
- will result in a different negotiated session key, and so the rest
- of the recorded session can't be used.
-
- \item \emph{Smear attacks.} An attacker could use the Tor network to
- engage in socially dissapproved acts, so as to try to bring the
- entire network into disrepute and get its operators to shut it down.
- Exit policies can help reduce the possibilities for abuse, but
- ultimately, the network will require volunteers who can tolerate
- some political heat.
- \end{tightlist}
- \subsubsection*{Directory attacks}
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item knock out a dirserver
- \item knock out half the dirservers
- \item trick user into using different software (with different dirserver
- keys)
- \item OR connects to the dirservers but nowhere else
- \item foo
- \end{tightlist}
- \subsubsection*{Attacks against rendezvous points}
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item foo
- \end{tightlist}
- \Section{Open Questions in Low-latency Anonymity}
- \label{sec:maintaining-anonymity}
-
- In addition to the open problems discussed in
- section~\ref{subsec:non-goals}, many other questions remain to be
- solved by future research before we can be truly confident that we
- have built a secure low-latency anonymity service.
- Many of these open issues are questions of balance. For example,
- how often should users rotate to fresh circuits? Too-frequent
- rotation is inefficient and expensive, but too-infrequent rotation
- makes the user's traffic linkable. Instead of opening a fresh
- circuit; clients can also limit linkability exit from a middle point
- of the circuit, or by truncating and re-extending the circuit, but
- more analysis is needed to determine the proper trade-off.
- [XXX mention predecessor attacks?]
- A similar question surrounds timing of directory operations:
- how often should directories be updated? With too-infrequent
- updates clients receive an inaccurate picture of the network; with
- too-frequent updates the directory servers are overloaded.
- [XXX Choosing paths and path lengths: I'm not writing this bit till
- Arma's pathselection stuff is in. -NM]
- Throughout this paper, we have assumed that end-to-end traffic
- analysis cannot yet be defeated. But even high-latency anonymity
- systems can be vulnerable to end-to-end traffic analysis, if the
- traffic volumes are high enough, and if users' habits are sufficiently
- distinct \cite{limits-open,statistical-disclosure}. \emph{What can be
- done to limit the effectiveness of these attacks against low-latency
- systems?} Tor already makes some effort to conceal the starts and
- ends of streams by wrapping all long-range control commands in
- identical-looking relay cells, but more analysis is needed. Link
- padding could frustrate passive observer who count packets; long-range
- padding could work against observers who own the first hop in a
- circuit. But more research needs to be done in order to find an
- efficient and practical approach. Volunteers prefer not to run
- constant-bandwidth padding; but more sophisticated traffic shaping
- approaches remain somewhat unanalyzed. [XXX is this so?] Recent work
- on long-range padding \cite{defensive-dropping} shows promise. One
- could also try to reduce correlation in packet timing by batching and
- re-ordering packets, but it is unclear whether this could improve
- anonymity without introducing so much latency as to render the
- network unusable.
- Even if passive timing attacks were wholly solved, active timing
- attacks would remain. \emph{What can
- be done to address attackers who can introduce timing patterns into
- a user's traffic?} [XXX mention likely approaches]
- In order to scale to large numbers of users, and to prevent an
- attacker from observing the whole network at once, it may be necessary
- for low-latency anonymity systems to support far more servers than Tor
- currently anticipates. This introduces several issues. First, if
- approval by a centralized set of directory servers is no longer
- feasible, what mechanism should be used to prevent adversaries from
- signing up many spurious servers?
- Second, if clients can no longer have a complete
- picture of the network at all times, how can should they perform
- discovery while preventing attackers from manipulating or exploiting
- gaps in client knowledge? Third, if there are to many servers
- for every server to constantly communicate with every other, what kind
- of non-clique topology should the network use? Restricted-route
- topologies promise comparable anonymity with better scalability
- \cite{danezis-pets03}, but whatever topology we choose, we need some
- way to keep attackers from manipulating their position within it.
- Fourth, since no centralized authority is tracking server reliability,
- How do we prevent unreliable servers from rendering the network
- unusable? Fifth, do clients receive so much anonymity benefit from
- running their own servers that we should expect them all to do so, or
- do we need to find another incentive structure to motivate them?
- (Tarzan and MorphMix present possible solutions.)
- [[ XXX how to approve new nodes (advogato, sybil, captcha (RTT));]
- Alternatively, it may be the case that one of these problems proves
- intractable, or that the drawbacks to many-server systems prove
- greater than the benefits. Nevertheless, we may still do well to
- consider non-clique topologies. A cascade topology may provide more
- defense against traffic confirmation confirmation.
- Does the hydra (many inputs, few outputs) topology work
- better? Are we going to get a hydra anyway because most nodes will be
- middleman nodes?
- As mentioned in section\ref{where-is-it-now}, Tor could improve its
- robustness against node failure by buffering stream data at the
- network's edges, and performing end-to-end acknowledgments. The
- efficacy of this approach remains to be tested, however, and there
- may be more effective means for ensuring reliable connections in the
- presence of unreliable nodes.
- \Section{Future Directions}
- \label{sec:conclusion}
- Tor brings together many innovations into
- a unified deployable system. But there are still several attacks that
- work quite well, as well as a number of sustainability and run-time
- issues remaining to be ironed out. In particular:
- \begin{tightlist}
- \item \emph{Scalability:} Tor's emphasis on design simplicity and
- deployability has led us to adopt a clique topology, a
- semi-centralized model for directories and trusts, and a
- full-network-visibility model for client knowledge. None of these
- properties will scale to more than a few hundred servers, at most.
- Promising approaches to better scalability exist (see
- section~\ref{sec:maintaining-anonymity}), but more deployment
- experience would be helpful in learning the relative importance of
- these bottlenecks.
- \item \emph{Cover traffic:} Currently we avoid cover traffic because
- of its clear costs in performance and bandwidth, and because its
- security benefits have not well understood. With more research
- \cite{SS03,defensive-dropping}, the price/value ratio may change,
- both for link-level cover traffic and also long-range cover traffic.
- \item \emph{Better directory distribution:} Even with the threshold
- directory agreement algorithm described in \ref{subsec:dirservers},
- the directory servers are still trust bottlenecks. We must find more
- decentralized yet practical ways to distribute up-to-date snapshots of
- network status without introducing new attacks. Also, directory
- retrieval presents a scaling problem, since clients currently
- download a description of the entire network state every 15
- minutes. As the state grows larger and clients more numerous, we
- may need to move to a solution in which clients only receive
- incremental updates to directory state, or where directories are
- cached at the ORs to avoid high loads on the directory servers.
- \item \emph{Implementing location-hidden servers:} While
- Section~\ref{sec:rendezvous} describes a design for rendezvous
- points and location-hidden servers, these feature has not yet been
- implemented. While doing so, will likely encounter additional
- issues, both in terms of usability and anonymity, that must be
- resolved.
- \item \emph{Further specification review:} Although we have a public,
- byte-level specification for the Tor protocols, this protocol has
- not received extensive external review. We hope that as Tor
- becomes more widely deployed, more people will become interested in
- examining our specification.
- \item \emph{Wider-scale deployment:} The original goal of Tor was to
- gain experience in deploying an anonymizing overlay network, and
- learn from having actual users. We are now at the point in design
- and development where we can start deploying a wider network. Once
- we have are ready for actual users, we will doubtlessly be better
- able to evaluate some of our design decisions, including our
- robustness/latency tradeoffs, our abuse-prevention mechanisms, and
- our overall usability.
- \end{tightlist}
- \bibliographystyle{latex8}
- \bibliography{tor-design}
- \end{document}
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