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- Filename: 121-hidden-service-authentication.txt
- Title: Hidden Service Authentication
- Version: $LastChangedRevision$
- Last-Modified: $LastChangedDate$
- Author: Tobias Kamm, Thomas Lauterbach, Karsten Loesing, Ferdinand Rieger,
- Christoph Weingarten
- Created: 10-Sep-2007
- Status: Open
- Change history:
- 26-Sep-2007 Initial proposal for or-dev
- Overview:
- This proposal deals with some possibilities to implement authentication
- for restricted access to hidden services. This way we try to increase the
- security level for the service provider (Bob) by giving him the ability
- to exclude non-authorized users from using his service. It is based on
- proposal 114-distributed-storage but is better suited for a fine grained
- way of authentication, because it is less resource-consuming. Whenever we
- refer to service descriptors and cell formats, we are talking about the
- definitions found in 114-distributed-storage unless otherwise stated.
- We discuss password and public-key authentication for the Onion Proxy
- (OP) of Bob's hidden service (HS). Furthermore a challenge-response
- authentication mechanism is introduced at the introduction point.
- These modifications aim at:
- - increasing the security of hidden services by limiting access only to
- authorized users (specification see details) and
- - reducing the traffic in the network by rejecting unauthorized access
- requests earlier.
- Motivation:
- The currently used implementation of hidden services does not provide any
- kind of authentication. The v2 implementation adds an authentication
- mechanism at the directory server. Security can be further improved by
- adding two more authentication authorities at the introduction point
- (IPo) and the OP.
- Although the service descriptors are already designed to carry
- authentication information the existing fields are not used so far.
- Moreover one can find a couple of notes at the specification of cell
- formats (rend-spec) which point at adding authentication information but
- no fields are specified yet. It would be preferable to extend the Tor
- network with authentication features to offer a solution for all
- services. This would also provide means to authorize access to services
- that currently do not support authentication mechanisms. Moreover, Bob's
- authentication administration for all services could be performed
- centralized in the Tor application, and the implementation overhead for
- developers would be significantly reduced. Another benefit would be the
- reduced traffic by checking authentication data and dropping unauthorized
- requests as soon as possible. For example unauthorized requests could
- already be discarded at the introduction points.
- In addition to that, our implementation is able to hide the service from
- users, who still have access to the secret cookie (see
- 114-distributed-storage) but should no longer be authorized. Bob can now
- not only hide his location, but also to a certain degree his presence
- towards unauthorized clients given that none of his IPo's are corrupted.
- Details:
- /1/ Client authentication at the hidden service
- In proposal 114 a client (Alice) who has a valid secret cookie, which may
- be considered as a form of authentication, and a service ID is able to
- connect to Bob if he is online. He can not distinguish between Alice
- being intentionally authorized by himself or being an attacker.
- Integrating authentication in Tor HS will ensure Bob that Alice is only
- able to use the service if she is authorized by him.
- Authentication data will be transmitted via the RELAY_INTRODUCE1 cell
- from Alice to Bob that is forwarded by the IPo. For this message several
- format versions are specified in the rend-spec in section 1.8. We will
- use the format version 3. This specification already contains the fields
- "AUTHT" (to specify the authentication method), "AUTHL" (length of the
- authentication data), and "AUTHD" (the authentication data) that will be
- used to store authentication data. Since these fields are encrypted with
- the service's public key, sniffing attacks will fail. Bob will only build
- the circuit to the rendezvous point if the provided authentication data
- is valid, otherwise he will drop the cell. This will improve security due
- to preventing communication between Bob and Alice if she is an attacker.
- As a positive side effect it reduces network traffic because it avoids
- Bob from building unnecessary circuits to the rendezvous points.
- Authentication at the HS should be the last gatekeeper and the number of
- cases in which a client successfully passes the introduction point, but
- fails at the HS should be almost zero. Therefore it is very important to
- perform fine-grained access control already at the IPo (but without
- relying on it).
- The first authentication mechanism that will be supported is password
- (symmetric secret) authentication. "AUTHT" is set to "1" for this
- authentication method while the "AUTHL" field is set to "20", the length
- of the SHA-1 digest of the password.
- (1) Alice creates a password x and sends the password digest h(x) to Bob
- out of band.
- (2) Alice sends h(x) to Bob, encrypted with Bob's fresh service key (not
- subject to this proposal, see proposal 114).
- (3) Bob decrypts Alice's message using his private service key (see
- proposal 114) and compares the contained h(x) with what he knows what
- Alice's password digest h(x) should be.
- This kind of authentication is well-known. It has the known disadvantage
- of weak passwords that are vulnerable to dictionary or brute-force
- attacks. Nevertheless it seems to be an appropriate solution since safe
- passwords can be randomly generated by Tor. Cracking methods that rely on
- guessing passwords should not be effective in the constantly changing
- network infrastructure. A usability advantage is that this method is easy
- to perform even for unexperienced users. The authenticationdata will be
- the SHA-1 secure hash (see tor-spec) of the shared secret (password).
- The premise to use password authentication is that Bob must send the
- password to Alice outside Tor. If at the same time the secret cookie is
- transmitted and the message is intercepted the attacker can gain access
- to the service. Therefore, a secure way to exchange this information must
- be established.
- The second authentication mechanism is public-key authentication. The
- well-known RSA implementation will be used as cipher (see tor-spec).
- Authentication data will be the hash of the rendezvous cookie, signed
- with the private key (SK).
- When Alice wants to use this authentication method she sets "AUTHT" to
- "2" and "AUTHL" to "128" which is the size of the encrypted data. Since
- the rendezvous cookie changes each time Alice connects, replay attacks
- can be easily prevented.
- (1) Alice creates a private key e and sends the corresponding public key
- d to Bob out of band.
- (2) Alice generates a random rendezvous cookie r, computes PKSign(e, r),
- encrypts it with Bob's fresh service key (see proposal 114), and
- sends the result to Bob.
- (3) Bob decrypts Alice's message using his private service key (see
- proposal 114) and verifies PKSign(e, r) with d.
- The premise for public-key authentication is that Alice must send the
- generated public key to Bob outside Tor. If an attacker is able to swap
- that key, the attacker could perform a man-in-the-middle attack, if he
- managed to serve as an IPo for Bob. Therefore a secure exchange channel
- must be established.
- Depending on what authentication data Bob knows from Alice (password
- and/or public key, or other data that is added later) there are several
- choices for Alice to authenticate to the service.
- After validating the provided "AUTHD" Bob builds a circuit to the
- rendezvous point and starts interacting with Alice. If Bob cannot
- identify the client he must refuse the request by not connecting to the
- rendezvous point.
- It will also still be possible to establish v2 hidden services without
- authentication. Therefore the "AUTHT" field must be set to "0". "AUTHL"
- and "AUTHD" are not provided by the client in that case.
- /2/ Client authentication at the introduction point
- In addition to authentication at the HS OP, the IPo should be able to
- detect and abandon all unauthorized requests. This would help to raise
- the level of privacy and therefore also the level of security for Bob by
- better hiding his online activity from unauthorized users. Especially if
- Alice still has access to the secret cookie. This can be the case if she
- had access to the service earlier, but is no longer authorized or the
- directory is outdated. Another advantage of this additional "gate keeper"
- would be reduced traffic in the network, because unauthorized requests
- could already be detected and declined at the IPo.
- It is important to notice that the IPo may not be trustworthy, and
- therefore can not replace authentication at the HS OP itself. Nor should
- the IPo get hold of critical authentication information (because it could
- try to access the service itself).
- A challenge-response authentication protocol is used to address these
- issues. This means that a challenge is needed to be solved by Alice to
- get forwarded to Bob by the IPo.
- Two types of authentication are supported and need to be preconfigured by
- Bob when creating the service: password and public-key authentication.
- Again it is up to Alice what kind of authentication mechanism she wants
- to use, given that Bob knows both her password and her public key.
- If Alice uses a password to authenticate herself at the IPo, the
- authentication is based on a symmetric challenge-response authentication
- protocol. In this case the challenge for Alice is to send h(x|y) where x
- is a user-specific password, which should be different from the password
- needed for authentication at the hidden service and y is a randomly
- generated value. Alice gets hold of her password out of band.
- With the initial RELAY_ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, the IPo gets a list of
- h(x|y)'s which it stores locally. Upon a request of Alice it compares her
- provided authentication data with the list entries. If there is a
- matching entry in its list, Alice's request is valid and can be forwarded
- to Bob. To generate the hash, Alice needs to know the password (which she
- will get out of band) and the random value y. This value is contained in
- the cookie-encrypted part of the hidden service descriptor which Alice
- can retrieve from the directory using her secret cookie.
- (1) Alice creates a password x and sends the password digest h(x) to Bob
- out of band.
- (2) Bob creates a random value y, computes h(h(x)|y), and sends the
- result to the introduction point.
- (3) Bob encrypts y with a secret cookie (see proposal 114) and writes it
- to a rendezvous service descriptor.
- (4) Alice fetches Bob's rendezvous service descriptor, decrypts y using
- the secret cookie (see proposal 114), computes h(h(x)|y), encrypts
- it with the public key of the introduction point, and sends it to
- that introduction point.
- (5) The introduction point decrypts h(h(x)|y) from Alice's message and
- compares it to the value it knows from Bob (from step 2).
- If Alice wants to use public-key authentication to authenticate herself
- at Bob's HS, the challenge-response authentication protocol is slightly
- different.
- The IPo's are provided with a list of random value hashes h(r) with an
- entry for each user via the RELAY_ESTABLISH_INTRO cell. For public-key
- authentication Alice uses an RSA public/private-key pair (as specified in
- tor-spec). The public key is made known to Bob out of band. The IPo's
- will now be sent a new ESTABLISH_INTRO cell with an additional random
- value hash for Alice and a new descriptor is uploaded to the responsible
- directories. The public-key authentication part of the service descriptor
- holds a blank separated list of key-value pairs with one pair for every
- authorized user. The hash of the public key of a user serves as a key,
- while the PK-encrypted r represents the value. Authorized users can now
- find their respective key-value pair and decrypt the value of h(r). This
- result serves as an authorization token at the IPo in the same way as
- with password authentication. The IPo does not know which authentication
- method was used since the tokens always have the same format.
- (1) Alice creates a private key e and sends the corresponding public key
- d to Bob out of band.
- (2) Bob creates a random value y and sends it to the introduction point.
- (3) Bob computes PKEncrypt(d, y), encrypts the result with a secret
- cookie (see proposal 114), and writes it to a rendezvous service
- descriptor.
- (4) Alice fetches Bob's rendezvous service descriptor, decrypts
- PKEncrypt(d, y) using the secret cookie (see proposal 114), decrypts
- y from it using her private key e, and sends it to the introduction
- point.
- (5) The introduction point compares y with the value it knows from Bob
- (from step 2).
- To remove a user from a group, Bob needs to update the random value list
- at the IPo's.
- The changes needed in Tor to realize these two challenge-response
- variations affect the RELAY_ESTABLISH_INTRO and RELAY_INTRODUCE1 relay
- cells, the service descriptor and the code parts in Tor where these cells
- and the descriptor are handled.
- The RELAY_ESTABLISH_INTRO cell is now structured as follows:
- V Format byte: set to 255 [1 octet]
- V Version byte: set to 2 [1 octet]
- KL Key length [2 octets]
- PK Bob's public key [KL octets]
- HS Hash of session info [20 octets]
- AUTHT The auth type that is supported [1 octet]
- AUTHL Length of auth data [2 octets]
- AUTHD Auth data [variable]
- SIG Signature of above information [variable]
- "AUTHT" is set to "1" for password/public-key authentication.
- "AUTHD" is a list of 20 octet long challenges for clients.
- The service descriptor as specified in 114-distributed-storage is used in
- our implementation.
- For password authentication "authentication" auth-type is set to "1" and
- auth-data contains the 20 octets long string used by clients to construct
- the response to the challenge for authentication at the IPo.
- When using public-key authentication the auth-type is set to "2" and
- auth-data holds a list of 148 octets long blank separated values. The
- first 20 octets of each value is the hash of the public key of a certain
- client and used by Alice to determine her entry in the list. The
- remaining 128 octets contain the PK-encrypted token needed to
- authenticate to the IPo.
- The part of the RELAY_INTRODUCE1 cell that can be read by the IPo has the
- following fields added:
- AUTHT The auth type that is supported [1 octet]
- AUTHL Length of auth data [1 octets]
- AUTHD Auth data [variable]
- The AUTHT and AUTHL fields are provided to allow extensions of the
- protocol. Currently, we set AUTHT to 1 for password/public-key
- authentication and AUTHL to 20 for the length of the authorization token.
- Security implications:
- In addition to the security features proposed in 114-distributed-storage
- a new way of authentication is added at the OP of Bob. Moreover, the
- authentication at the IPo's is improved to support a fine-grained access
- control. Corrupted IPo's may easily bypass this authentication, but given
- the case that the majority of IPo's is acting as expected we still
- consider this feature as being useful.
- Bob can now decide whether he wants to allow Alice to use his services or
- not. This gives him the possibility to offer his services only to known
- and trusted users that need to identify by a password or by signing their
- messages. The anonymity of the client towards the service provider is
- thereby reduced to pseudonymity.
- Changing of access rights now involves all three authorization authorities
- depending on what changes should be made:
- - The user configures his changes at the local OP. Therefore he can
- edit the cookie files that were extended to support multiple users.
- Moreover he can edit the new user files that were added to specify
- authentication information for every user.
- - Whenever local changes occur, this information needs to be either
- passed to the responsible IPo's, the directory servers, or both
- depending on the authorization method and operation used. It is
- important to have consistent authorization results at all authorities
- at the same time, to create a trustworthy system with good user
- acceptance. As these reconfigurations always follow local changes
- they can be done automatically by the new Tor implementation and
- therefore no user interaction is needed.
- - The secret cookies proposed in 114-distributed-storage are used for
- group management in our implementation as their use would be far to
- costly for a user-based authorization. That is because right now one
- descriptor is generated and uploaded for every secret cookie. Changes
- in this configuration should therefore be rare (maybe never) and only
- a few groups should exist. Provided that this is the case the costs
- for changes seem acceptable. As there is currently no possibility to
- make a directory remove the descriptor for a group an updated
- descriptor without any IPo should be uploaded to the directory
- servers.
- Local changes to access rights can now be done faster than by changing
- service descriptors which reduces the directory server load and network
- traffic. Still every configuration change remains costly and users should
- carefully choose how detailed the access right configuration should be.
- Attacking clients now need to bypass two more authentication steps to
- reach the service implementation. Compared to the current state it is
- more likely that attackers can be stopped even before they are able to
- contact Bob's OP. We expect that the possibility of an attack is thereby
- significantly reduced. Another positive side effect is that network
- traffic and router load is reduced by discarding unauthorized cells which
- should lower the effectiveness of denial of service attacks.
- Compatibility:
- When using our authentication for hidden services the implementation of
- IPo's needs to be extended. Therefore we use version information provided
- in router descriptors to be sure that we only send modified
- RELAY_ESTABLISH_INTRO cells to routers that can handle them. Clients of
- v2 hidden services will have to update their Tor installation if they
- want to be able to use the service.
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