| EAP with MD5-Challenge and SRP-SHA1 support |
| by James Carlson, Sun Microsystems |
| Version 2, September 22nd, 2002 |
| |
| |
| 1. What it does |
| |
| The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP; RFC 2284) is a |
| security protocol that can be used with PPP. It provides a means |
| to plug in multiple optional authentication methods. |
| |
| This implementation includes the required default MD5-Challenge |
| method, which is similar to CHAP (RFC 1994), as well as the new |
| SRP-SHA1 method. This latter method relies on an exchange that is |
| not vulnerable to dictionary attacks (as is CHAP), does not |
| require the server to keep a cleartext copy of the secret (as in |
| CHAP), supports identity privacy, and produces a temporary shared |
| key that could be used for data encryption. |
| |
| The SRP-SHA1 method is based on draft-ietf-pppext-eap-srp-03.txt, |
| a work in progress. |
| |
| 2. Required libraries |
| |
| Two other packages are required first. Download and install |
| OpenSSL and Thomas Wu's SRP implementation. |
| |
| http://www.openssl.org/ (or ftp://ftp.openssl.org/source/) |
| http://srp.stanford.edu/ |
| |
| Follow the directions in each package to install the SSL and SRP |
| libraries. Once SRP is installed, you may run tconf as root to |
| create known fields, if desired. (This step is not required.) |
| |
| 3. Installing the patch |
| |
| The EAP-SRP patch described here is integrated into this version |
| of pppd. The following patch may be used with older pppd sources: |
| |
| ftp://playground.sun.com/carlsonj/eap/ppp-2.4.1-eap-1.tar.gz |
| |
| Configure, compile, and install as root. You may want to edit |
| pppd/Makefile after configuring to enable or disable optional |
| features. |
| |
| % ./configure |
| % make |
| % su |
| # make install |
| |
| If you use csh or tcsh, run "rehash" to pick up the new commands. |
| |
| If you're using Solaris, and you run into trouble with the |
| pseudonym feature on the server side ("no DES here" shows in the |
| log file), make sure that you have the "domestic" versions of the |
| DES libraries linked. You should see "crypt_d" in "ldd |
| /usr/local/bin/pppd". If you see "crypt_i" instead, then make |
| sure that /usr/lib/libcrypt.* links to /usr/lib/libcrypt_d.*. (If |
| you have the international version of Solaris, then you won't have |
| crypt_d. You might want to find an alternative DES library.) |
| |
| 4. Adding the secrets |
| |
| On the EAP SRP-SHA1 client side, access to the cleartext secret is |
| required. This can be done in two ways: |
| |
| - Enter the client name, server name, and password in the |
| /etc/ppp/srp-secrets file. This file has the same format as |
| the existing chap-secrets and pap-secrets files. |
| |
| clientname servername "secret here" |
| |
| - Use the "password" option in any of the standard |
| configuration files (or the command line) to specify the |
| secret. |
| |
| password "secret here" |
| |
| On the EAP SRP-SHA1 server side, a secret verifier is required. |
| This is a one-way hash of the client's name and password. To |
| generate this value, run the srp-entry program (see srp-entry(8)). |
| This program prompts for the client name and the passphrase (the |
| secret). The output will be an entry, such as the following, |
| suitable for use in the server's srp-secrets file. Note that if |
| this is transferred by cut-and-paste, the entry must be a single |
| line of text in the file. |
| |
| pppuser srpserver 0:LFDpwg4HBLi4/kWByzbZpW6pE95/iIWBSt7L.DAkHsvwQphtiq0f6reoUy/1LC1qYqjcrV97lCDmQHQd4KIACGgtkhttLdP3KMowvS0wLXLo25FPJeG2sMAUEWu/HlJPn2/gHyh9aT.ZxUs5MsoQ1E61sJkVBc.2qze1CdZiQGTK3qtWRP6DOpM1bfhKtPoVm.g.MiCcTMWzc54xJUIA0mgKtpthE3JrqCc81cXUt4DYi5yBzeeGTqrI0z2/Gj8Jp7pS4Fkq3GmnYjMxnKfQorFXNwl3m7JSaPa8Gj9/BqnorJOsnSMlIhBe6dy4CYytuTbNb4Wv/nFkmSThK782V:2cIyMp1yKslQgE * |
| |
| The "secret" field consists of three entries separated by colons. |
| The first entry is the index of the modulus and generator from |
| SRP's /etc/tpasswd.conf. If the special value 0 is used, then the |
| well-known modulus/generator value is used (this is recommended, |
| because it is much faster). The second value is the verifier |
| value. The third is the password "salt." These latter two values |
| are encoded in base64 notation. |
| |
| For EAP MD5-Challenge, both client and server use the existing |
| /etc/ppp/chap-secrets file. |
| |
| 5. Configuration options |
| |
| There are two main options relating to EAP available for the |
| client. These are: |
| |
| refuse-eap - refuse to authenticate with EAP |
| srp-use-pseudonym - use the identity privacy if |
| offered by server |
| |
| The second option stores a pseudonym, if offered by the EAP |
| SRP-SHA1 server, in the $HOME/.ppp_pseudonym file. The pseudonym |
| is typically an encrypted version of the client identity. During |
| EAP start-up, the pseudonym stored in this file is offered to the |
| peer as the identity. If this is accepted by the peer, then |
| eavesdroppers will be unable to determine the identity of the |
| client. Each time the client is authenticated, the server will |
| offer a new pseudoname to the client using an obscured (reversibly |
| encrypted) message. Thus, access across successive sessions |
| cannot be tracked. |
| |
| There are two main options for EAP on the server: |
| |
| require-eap - require client to use EAP |
| srp-pn-secret "string" - set server's pseudoname secret |
| |
| The second option sets the long-term secret used on the server to |
| encrypt the user's identity to produce pseudonames. The |
| pseudoname is constructed by hashing this string with the current |
| date (to the nearest day) with SHA1, then using this hash as the |
| key for a DES encryption of the client's name. The date is added |
| to the hash for two reasons. First, this allows the pseudonym to |
| change daily. Second, it allows the server to decode any previous |
| pseudonym by trying previous dates. |
| |
| See the pppd(8) man page for additional options. |
| |
| 6. Comments welcome! |
| |
| This is still an experimental implementation. It has been tested |
| and reviewed carefully for correctness, but may still be |
| incomplete or have other flaws. All comments are welcome. Please |
| address them to the author: |
| |
| james.d.carlson@sun.com |
| |
| or, for EAP itself or the SRP extensions to EAP, to the IETF PPP |
| Extensions working group: |
| |
| ietf-ppp@merit.edu |