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							- Filename: 110-avoid-infinite-circuits.txt
 
- Title: Avoiding infinite length circuits
 
- Version: $Revision$
 
- Last-Modified: $Date$
 
- Author: Roger Dingledine
 
- Created: 13-Mar-2007
 
- Status: Open
 
- Overview:
 
-   Right now, an attacker can add load to the Tor network by extending a
 
-   circuit an arbitrary number of times. Every cell that goes down the
 
-   circuit then adds N times that amount of load in overall bandwidth
 
-   use. This vulnerability arises because servers don't know their position
 
-   on the path, so they can't tell how many nodes there are before them
 
-   on the path.
 
-   We propose a new set of relay cells that are distinguishable by
 
-   intermediate hops as permitting extend cells. This approach will allow
 
-   us to put an upper bound on circuit length relative to the number of
 
-   colluding adversary nodes; but there are some downsides too.
 
- Motivation:
 
-   The above attack can be used to generally increase load all across the
 
-   network, or it can be used to target specific servers: by building a
 
-   circuit back and forth between two victim servers, even a low-bandwidth
 
-   attacker can soak up all the bandwidth offered by the fastest Tor
 
-   servers.
 
-   The general attacks could be used as a demonstration that Tor isn't
 
-   perfect (leading to yet more media articles about "breaking" Tor), and
 
-   the targetted attacks will come into play once we have a reputation
 
-   system -- it will be trivial to DoS a server so it can't pass its
 
-   reputation checks, in turn impacting security.
 
- Design:
 
-   We should split RELAY cells into two types: RELAY and RELAY_EXTEND.
 
-   Relay_extend cells can only be sent in the first K (say, 10) data
 
-   cells sent across a circuit, and only relay_extend cells are allowed
 
-   to contain extend requests. We still support obscuring the length of
 
-   the circuit (if more research shows us what to do), because Alice can
 
-   choose how many of the K to mark as relay_extend. Note that relay_extend
 
-   cells *can* contain any sort of data cell; so in effect it's actually
 
-   the relay type cells that are restricted. By default, she would just
 
-   send the first K data cells over the stream as relay_extend cells,
 
-   regardless of their actual type.
 
-   Each intermediate server would pass on the same type of cell that it
 
-   received (either relay or relay_extend), and the cell's destination
 
-   will be able to learn whether it's allowed to contain an Extend request.
 
-   If an intermediate server receives a relay_extend cell after it has
 
-   already seen k data cells, or if it sees a relay cell that contains an
 
-   extend request, then it tears down the circuit (protocol violation).
 
- Security implications:
 
-   The upside is that this limits the bandwidth amplification factor to
 
-   K: for an individual circuit to become arbitrary-length, the attacker
 
-   would need an adversary-controlled node every K hops, and at that
 
-   point the attack is no worse than if the attacker creates N/K separate
 
-   K-hop circuits.
 
-   On the other hand, we want to pick a large enough value of K that we
 
-   don't mind the cap.
 
-   If we ever want to take steps to hide the number of hops in the circuit
 
-   or a node's position in the circuit, this design probably makes that
 
-   more complex.
 
- Migration:
 
-   Phase one: servers should recognize relay_extend cells and pass them
 
-   on just like relay cells. Don't do any enforcement of the protocol
 
-   yet. We could do this phase in the 0.2.0 timeline.
 
-   Phase two: once support in phase one is pervasive, clients could start
 
-   using relay_extend cells when all nodes currently in the circuit would
 
-   recognize them. We could conceivably do this phase during 0.2.0 too.
 
-   Phase three: once clients that don't use relay_extend cells are
 
-   obsolete, servers should start enforcing the protocol.
 
-   (Another migration plan would be to coordinate this with proposal
 
-   105's new link versions. Would that be better/worse? Can somebody
 
-   sketch out what it might look like?)
 
- Spec:
 
-   [We can formalize this part once we think the design is a good one.]
 
- Additional complexity:
 
-   Rather than limiting the relay_extend cells to being in the first K
 
-   data cells seen, we could instead permit up to K relay_extend cells
 
-   in the lifetime of the circuit. This would let us extend the circuit
 
-   later on in its life if we decided it was worth doing, though we would
 
-   reveal our intent to each node in the circuit when we do.
 
- Acknowledgements:
 
-   This design has been kicking around since Christian Grothoff and I came
 
-   up with it at PET 2004. (Nathan Evans, Christian Grothoff's student,
 
-   is working on implementing a fix based on this design in the summer
 
-   2007 timeframe.)
 
 
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