Changes to Pluto ================ - [MCR] changes to support co-terminal connections of the near kind. - --dontrekey is now a misnomer: the IPsec SA will be rekeyed if we are the Initiator and there is outbound traffic in the period leading up to the rekeying decision point. This is a heuristic: a mistake doesn't matter much since the connection, once deleted, will be rekeyed on demand. - accept a proposal with compression even if the connection does not have the POLICY_COMPRESSION flag. This is a reversal of a policy introduced in 1.6. - fixed load-triggered deadlock between asynch DNS process and pluto - add %myid to indirectly refer to current id. Set from $IPSECmyid on startup and via whack --myid - make whack/pluto version matching less stringent for --status and --shutdown. - remove all code for DODGE_DH_MISSING_ZERO_BUG - when attempting outbound Opportunism, check our side's DNS entries, not just the other side's. If we don't have them, fail: not worth attempting. Change since 2.00 release by MCR and DHR - "KEY Restrict": in each place where Pluto used the DNS KEY Resource Record, it now uses one of our special TXT Resource Records. For now, we continue to accept KEY records if the TXT record is not found. Changes since 1.99 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Fixed assertion failure in quick_inI1_outR1_continue. Can happen when the result of a DNS TXT query is not needed by the time it arrives (due to another negotiation providing the information). Can be demonstrated by the test "ipsec-oppo-race-iinr-net". Changes since 1.97 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - added --dnskeyondemand option for connection ends. - Fixed a bug that provoked PF_KEY errors. If an updown script fails and it was invoked as part of a step that involved installing an eroute, any previous eroute should be restored as part of undoing that step. The bug was that any old eroute was lost. - When representing a long string in a DNS TXT resource record, it must be broken up into chunks less than 256. When reconstitute the original string, Pluto now just concatenates them. It used to add a space after a chunk if it was shorter than 255 characters. This should make it easier (not easy!) to edit the TXT record source by hand. - [mlafon@arkoon.net] fixed protocol numbers used in delete payload. - took -DDODGE_DH_MISSING_ZERO_BUG out of Makefile. Anyone planning on talking to FreeS/WAN 1.0 systems should put it back. And check into the Smithsonian Institution. - in --status and logging output, references to connection instances now contain a sequence number for the instance and details of the instantiation (i.e. more IP addresses). Perhaps too bulky. - reworked initiate_opportunistic to avoid race conditions introduced with Asynch DNS. - added impairment to aid testing: IMPAIR_DELAY_ADNS_ANSWER - whack --status now displays the bare shunt table. - Changed Main Mode hash calculation to use the ID Payload as sent by peer, rather than reconstituting it from our tables. This matters if we use different case than peer did (eg @example.com vs @Example.Com). - renamed source files: + kernel_comm.[hc] => rcv_whack.[hc] + preshared.[hc] => keys.[hc] + main.c => plutomain.c - added POLICY_UP to track whether our admin has requested that this connection be up. Changes since 1.96 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - fixed a bug that would make the following (pointless) sequence to trigger a failure of Pluto assertion "c->routing == RT_ROUTED_TUNNEL": ipsec auto --add conn ipsec auto --up conn ipsec auto --route conn ipsec auto --down conn - send Delete Notifications when deleting IPSEC SAs. We don't yet understand ones we receive. - added "keyid" (see ipsec_keyblobtoid(3)) to appropriate messages so that RSA key being used is manifest. - track whether information (security gateway, public key) came from DNSsec or unauthenticated DNS. Untested since normal resolver calls can no longer return DNSsec results. The information isn't used. - use asynchronous DNS mechanism for all lookups during keying. - added --interface flag to Pluto to constrain interfaces considered. One use of this option is to specify which interface should be used when two or more share the same IP address. Another is to assist with test setups. - small cleanups: + fix compile without no -DKLIPS + use ttodatav in place of atobytes and ttodata + use hosttosubnet + define and use close_any + define and use USED_BY_KLIPS and USED_BY_DEBUG + define and use happy, a kind of assertion macro + define and use impossible, a kind of assertion macro + when an unknown attribute value is seen in an ISAKMP transform, reject only that transform, not the whole proposal. + add Hybrid auth methods to table to improve diagnostics Changes since 1.95 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - fixed bug in ipsec_doi.c:main_inR3 with unknown consequences. When the Initiator finds out the peer's Phase 1 ID, it might change which connection it thinks is being used. If so, this routine used to perform an operation on the old connection data structure -- a mistake now corrected. There are few cases where the Responder surprises the Initiator about Phase 1 IDs. - fixed an error in network error handling that caused a segfault if there was a MSG_ERRQUEUE report on the last message of a Quick Mode exchange. - fix leak (detected by assertion failure) triggered by missing private key. Changes since 1.94 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - added "whack --deletestate " as a crude tool for deleting instances of connections. - fix assertion in quick_inI1_outR1 introduced with key rollover support in 1.92. Assertion failed in Responder when Source was not the same as Initiator. - reduce level of routine logging. Add --debug-lifecycle, a temporary hack: it controls some logging, not debugging. - Reorganize code to prepare for asynchronous DNS. - Arrange for our file descriptors to be close-on-exec so that the updown script won't inherit them. Some library facilities (syslog?) may not be as careful. - Fix assertion failure in DNS record handling. Provoked by a malformed key in a TXT record. Introduced in 1.93. - Change Responder cookie generation algorithm so that a particular peer no longer gets the same cookie each time. - Tidy and correct setting and resetting cur_* variables. A per-connection debug setting could provoke a GLOBALS_ARE_RESET assertion failure. - Fix handing of pending list in release_dead_interfaces: connection must be released before it is removed from host_pair list. - Ignore IPv6 interface addresses that are of link-local scope. We think that they are never relevant. Trying to bind to these addresses without a scope-id causes bind to balk. Changes since 1.93 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Only run the up-* updown script for tunnel eroutes, not shunt eroutes. - Now only --routed connections may be initiated on demand (i.e. triggered by SADB_ACQUIRE triggered by trapped outbound packet). Among other things, this eliminates a bug whereby an ACQUIRE could be ascribed by Pluto to a Road Warrior template connection. Pluto will now refuse to --route a Road Warrior template. - Correct bug that lost track of a bare shunt table entry. Add debugging logging for changes to that table. Changes since 1.92 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - [andreas.steffen@strongsec.com] Bug fix: carrying Phase 1 ID over when instantiating a different RW connection due to revelation of Phase 2 IDs. This bug should only have affected X509-authenticated negotiations. - add more context to log and status lines. If the connection or state is an instance, show the peer involved; if Opportunistic, also show the client subnet. - seed rand(3) with bytes from /dev/urandom. - propose 1536 MODP Group before 1024 MODP Group. This generates more entropy, so should be a little safer. And slower. - add --debug-dns flag - During Phase 1, when an RSA Public Key is require, only query DNS for a KEY record for an Opportunistic connection. (This does not change the whack --keyid way of querying for a KEY record during preconfiguration.) - Multiple RSA public keys, if available, will be tried when authenticating a signature. This facilitates key rollover. New whack flag --addkey. Multiple DNS TXT and KEY records are used if they are found (but only one Responder is tried). - no longer try to figure out --rsasig or --psk if neither specified. This would require an extra DNS lookup for a KEY record. Changes since 1.91 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - got rid of caching of DNS results. They might become stale. - Added --dontrekey option for a connection. Crudely useful for Road Warrior and Opportunistic connections. - Ignore the Commit Flag. This should let us interoperate with implementations that insist on it. The damage should be minor. - Don't split the topology line of --status output. The output is now more consistent (if wider). - Improve diagnosis when ipsec.secrets has a non-indented "}" at the end of an RSA private key. - Savatier Sébastien : fix bug in emitting explicit IP address ID payload. - Support inbound policy check of source and destination inner addresses of tunneled packets. This will make it possible to prevent one peer from successfully spoofing packets from another. - Use poll(2) to check for MSG_ERRQUEUE messages before recvfrom: even though select(2) says that there is a message, a plain recvfrom(2) can block if the only message is on MSG_ERRQUEUE. I think that this blocking is a kernel bug, or at least a documentation bug. Also check for MSG_ERRQUEUE messages before sendto(2): their presence can cause sendto to fail confusingly (i.e. the failure has nothing to do with the actual sendto). Changes since 1.9 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - SIGTERM now causes Pluto to exit cleanly. - if --nofork is used, Pluto prints the line "Pluto initialized" to standard out after creating the lock file and the control socket. - the startup script relies on the property that whack can be used immediately after the pluto command finishes (i.e. right after the parent process of the daemon exits). In the past, the control socket used by whack was created after the fork: not necessarily before the parent exits. This race condition has been eliminated. - refined the code for DODGE_DH_MISSING_ZERO_BUG to ensure Responder never drops a negotiation. - added and exploited builddiag(), a routine make it easier to add intermediate context to diagnostics. - For purposes of IPv4, Pluto will now only consider interfaces that are "up". It has always ignored those configured with address 0.0.0.0, thus ignoring "down" interfaces in most cases. - add a list of interface pairs to --status output. - replace signal(2) calls with sigaction(2) calls: glibc has further broken the semantics of signal(2). We want slow system calls to be interruptible and not be restarted. - improved error message for lack of preshared key by showing IDs that were used in lookup. Collateral tidying. - documented complex logic of routing and erouting in routing.txt - When a connection is --routed, a route is installed to direct outbound packets destined for the peer's client to go to the ipsec interface implicit in the connection. This is not allowed for Road Warrior connections -- they are strictly inbound. For Opportunistic connections, a new default root is installed that points to the ipsec interface. Note that the route does not take into account the source address. In addition, a TRAP shunt eroute is installed to catch any traffic sent on the not-yet-initiated connection. - When an outbound packet is trapped by the TRAP shunt eroute, Pluto attempts to initiate the corresponding connection. If the attempt fails because an Opportunistic connection was used and no gateway information was found, a PASS shunt eroute is installed (with no provision for automatic removal). - if negotiation fails at a later point, a shunt eroute is installed. The kind of shunt is a policy decision. It is specified as part of the connection. (Untested; can not be specified in ipsec.conf.) - When an inbound negotiation doesn't match a specific connection, and there is an Opportunistic connection, Pluto will try to respond using that connection. - Every 2 minutes (SHUNT_SCAN_INTERVAL seconds), Pluto scans for + PASS eroutes that it installed that haven't been used recently. These will be deleted. + HOLD eroutes for which Pluto hasn't received a PFKEY_ACQUIRE message. For any it finds, it will attempt an opportunistic initiate. - We no longer allow Phase 1 negotiations that we initiate to switch which connection is being used based on the Peer's Phase 1 ID. The fact that we used to do so was probably a bug. - When Pluto as the Responder receives the Peer's Phase 1 ID, it is now willing to use a connection with a different ID and private RSA key for our end. Nothing has committed us to the current guess. - Changes in internal data structures to aid in better tracking of history of attempted and successful communication. Needed for effective Opportunism. + struct host_pair represents information about pairs of hosts. + "Orientation" is done as soon as possible rather than as late as possible. + an arbitrary number of Quick Mode negotiations may now queue for the completion of a Main Mode negotiation. Formerly, a negotiation could only use a previously completed Keying Channel. Changes since 1.8 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - [Svenning Soerensen] correct check requiring OAKLEY_LIFE_TYPE attribute before OAKLEY_LIFE_DURATION. - Improved whack diagnostics for various cases of failure to connect with Pluto. - Added function state_with_serialno to allow a serial number to be used as a safe reference to a state object. This avoids the risk of dangling pointers. - Add crude support for PF_KEY SADB_ACQUIRE messages from the kernel. These cause the initiation of opportunistic negotiation. - More processing of PF_KEY messages from the kernel. We check that each message we send to the kernel elicits a response. Other messages are queued to be processed at the head of the event loop. - Fix bug in find_client_connection. The manifestation is a Pluto segfault when a negotiation successfully gets to Phase 2, but there is no connection with the appropriate clients AND there is no wildcarded connection using our same host interface (not even an inappropriate one). - Purely internal change: simplify EVENT_SO_DISCARD logic. - Accept GROUP_DESCRIPTION in IPCA (IPcomp SA) proposal. Although this SHOULD NOT appear according to draft-shacham-ippcp-rfc2393bis-05.txt 4.1, it should harmlessly help interoperation. - Adjust to whether KLIPS supports IPCOMP. If it does not, ignore --compress policy flag in Connections. So Pluto would then neither propose nor accept IPCOMP transforms. Changes since 1.7 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Allow IPcomp transformations to use "well known CPIs". This perversion allows better interoperation. - Added rather experimental code to exploit IP_RECVERR. This facility allows us to report who refuses our packets when they are refused. I don't understand the documentation of the mechanism, hence the experimental nature of our use of it. Our code is pretty ugly too. - [Svenning Soerensen] found a bug in the calculation of the verb for the updown script and proposed a fix. The -host suffix was being used when the client subnet contained only one IP address, even if that address was not of the host. - [Svenning Soerensen] Allow Phase 1 ID Payloads of type FQDN and user@FQDN to specify UDP/500 explicitly as per RFC2407 (IPSEC DOI) 4.6.2. - When responding in Quick mode, after switching to an appropriate connection based on the ID payloads, copy the connection's IPSEC policy flags into the state object. Do this before consulting these flags. - --status output now indicates when a connection is an instance of another. "POLICY_" has been removed from the display of each policy flag, reducing clutter. An extra space has been added to further indent lines in the --status report. - Fixed a bug in displaying subnets in the error message "cannot respond to IPsec SA request..." - In SA proposals, accept CPIs that are 4 bytes too, as long as the high order 2 bytes are 0. - bug fix: no longer allocate tunnel SPIs below IPSEC_DOI_SPI_OUR_MIN. - Added recognition (not support) for new Assigned Numbers for AES and friends. Changes since 1.6 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - only accept a proposal with compression if the connection has the POLICY_COMPRESSION flag. Normally, these flags don't affect what we propose. In this case, we need this control since our IPCOMP implementation has a history of crashing. - Fixed nasty bug in connections.c:fc_try(). For a Quick Mode exchange, if Pluto picked a connection as a starting point that had no peer client, it would not accept any proposed peer client. On the other hand, if it picked a connection with a peer client, it would not accept any proposal without a peer client. Changes since 1.5 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - added a global pluto option --uniqueids. If this is enabled, whenever a new ISAKMP SA is established, any connections with the same Peer Id but different Peer IP address are unoriented, blowing away any of their SAs. This should help eliminate dangling Road Warrior connections when the same Road Warrior reconnects. It thus requires that IDs not be shared by hosts (a previously legal but probably useless capability). - introduced clearer notation: + --host %any signifying any IP address, for Road Warrior, replacing 0.0.0.0 or 0::0 + --nexthop %direct signifying "same IP as peer", replacing 0.0.0.0 or 0::0 + %any and %any6 as indices in ipsec.secrets to match IP addresses of Road Warriors (replacing 0.0.0.0 or 0::0) + --host %opportunistic signifying that the peer is actually to be discovered from the reverse DNS entry for the peer's client. This replaces --host 0.0.0.0 --client 0.0.0.0/32 (and IPv6 variants). - be more strict about Phase 2 ID payloads (the ones that specify clients): reject if they specify protocol or port (which we do not support). - Remove support for Diffie Hellman MODP 768 Group. Increase support for MODP 1536 Group. - Remove NO_RSA option -- patent expired!! - Improve support for newer resolvers. - [initially from Svenning Soerensen ] support IPcomp (compression) - [mostly Gerhard Gessler ] initial support for IPv6. - As part of the IPv6 support, changes were made to the Pluto/updown interface. See pluto(8) for the details. One oft-requested feature is the new PLUTO_*_CLIENT environment variables. The changes are "upward compatible", so the PLUTO_VERSION environment variable setting was changed from 1.0 to 1.1. Unfortunately, this will break many customized updown scripts. - Prototype support for initiating and responding to opportunistic negotiation. A connection is considered for instantiation for opportunism if it has a peer of %opportunistic (the connection description must not specify a client for the peer). Currently, the only way to provoke an opportunistic initiation is to use whack to simulate the interception of an outbound flow (do a "whack --help" and look at opportunistic initiation). These features are not documented because they are experimental. Limitations: no actual interception of packets, DNS query synchronous. - in ipsec.secrets, if multiple entries are the best match for the connection, they must all have the same secret. In the past there was no code to compare RSA keys, so separate RSA entries were assumed to be different. Now they are compared. - Introduce now() to protect against clock being set backwards. The risk is that events might be delayed a lot. Still no protection against clock being moved forward. - Don't "discover" interfaces that share IP addresses with others. This avoids an assertion failure. Eventually, Pluto will have to ask KLIPS about interfaces. - prevent infinite loop decoding certain malformed DNS records - explain "Phase 1", "Phase 2", "Main Mode", and "Quick Mode" - fiddled with "max number of retransmissions" diagnostic to add a bit of explanation. Changes since 1.4 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - reorganized how messages are logged. More of the serious messages are distinguished with the code RC_LOG_SERIOUS and hence should make it through ipsec auto's filter. - Reserve Message IDs only within their ISAKMP SA. This eliminates the unbounded memory requirement when reserving them per peer. - Pluto's retransmission logic has been improved: + the initial retransmission occurs after 10 seconds of silence, down from 30 seconds. The theory is that this will ungum a lost-packet situation more quickly + the delay after each retransmission is twice the delay before it -- exponential backoff + In the special case of the first message initiating Main Mode, when --keyingtries is 0 (meaning unlimited retries), Pluto will attempt more retransmissions at the same rate (no exponential backoff). This cuts down on the pointless busywork while a peer isn't responding. - Pluto will no longer generate SPIs in the range 0x100-0xFFF. This has the effect of reserving this range for manual keying. Of course Pluto will still allow its peer to use this range. - Fixed another bug in Road Warrior support. In responding to Phase 2 / Quick Mode, once the client subnets (if any) are known, Pluto must reselect which connection to use. If it didn't happen to be using the right one already, and no ID was explicitly specified for the peer, and the right one is a Road Warrior connection, the right one would not be found. Changes since 1.3 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Pluto can now acquire a public key from DNS. It must be told to do so. Hint: --pubkeyrsa is optional when specifying keyid. - On the Responder, if a connection is to be routed, and the peer has a client that is a fixed subnet, and that subnet is already routed for other connections, and that route conflicts, Pluto will unorient the old connections (deleting the SAs that depend on the old route) on the theory that they have been superseded. Too bad we can't otherwise tell when a connection is outdated. - Support for netlink has been removed. We always use PFKEYV2. Pluto no longer #includes any kernel headers! - Added a TODO file - Road Warrior support is unconditionally included. No more need to define ROAD_WARRIOR_FUDGE. - Fixed bug preventing Road Warrior connections being instantiated during the connection reselection prompted by receipt of Phase 1 ID Payload [Kai Martius ]. Fixed bug that caused Phase 1 ID to be ignored by connection reselection prompted by receipt of Phase 2 client IDs. Changes since 1.2 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - fixed deficiencies in id handling - changed to use updown script for routing (and firewalling) - In quick Mode, when Responder, avoid selecting same SPIs as initiator. This prevents KEYMAT being the same in both directions. See Ferguson and Schneier: "A Cryptographic Evaluation of IPsec", http://www.counterpane.com/ipsec.pdf, 5.6 #2. - In Quick Mode, when Responder, install inbound IPsec SA one message earlier. This eliminates the chance of a message being sent before the SA is established. - slight complication to RSA private key lookup rules to allow match to an entry with multiple identities for the host. - support per-connection debugging flags - more use of PFKEY (RGB+DHR) - inbound SAs are now spigrped and an inbound IPIP SA is created if tunneling is used. This more symmetric with outbound processing and it allows KLIPS to check that the correct SAs are all applied. - The way SA lifetime limits are proposed and accepted is better documented. whack now complains when a specified value exceeds the limit. Changes since 1.1 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Updated constants to track newer IETF drafts - added support for RSA Signature authentication + augmented demux.c to support packet syntax differences due to authentication technique. + preshared.c now can record RSA private keys + whack --keyid --pubkeyrsa records RSA public keys + whack --unlisten to allow a sequence of whack operations to be atomic with respect to IKE traffic (eg. loading public keys) + ipsec_doi.c will now do RSA Signature authentication + new policy bits are added to select authentication method (--rsasig, --psk) - started towards more general ids (@FQDN and user@FQDN, in addition to IP addresses). + Note: there is *no* meaning attached to the id used beyond being an identifier. Almost no syntax checking is done. + these forms of id work in: o ipsec.secrets indices o whack's --keyid for defining public keys o id payloads (generated and accepted) o --id option for each side in a connection description + the Id may be an IP address that isn't that of one end (but it must authenticate) + once and ID payload is received, Pluto will reconsider which potential connection should be used. It makes sure that any authentication already done would apply to the new connection too. This should make RSASIG + Road Warrior useful. - [RGB, Peter Onion, and DHR] start of PFKEY2 support Changes since 1.00 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - revamped rekeying: + added --rekeyfuzz; defaults to 100% so lifetime must now be more than twice rekeymargin + added rekeying for responders (but rigged to favour initiators) + [BUGFIX] responder of an exchange will not reinitiate the exchange if it does not complete - Renamed --rekeywindow to --rekeymargin to match ipsec.conf. The old name will be accepted for a while. - improved error and debugging messages - updated list of notification messages (but we still don't support them). - In ID payload, support range representation, but only for a subnet. This may improve interoperability - scatter asterisks in debugging code to support EMACS outline mode. - many internal changes were made to improve to code. This should make it easier to add new states. There should be few behaviour changes. - whack --status now shows the SPIs for established SAs. - [BUGFIX] DH values are now represented with the length specified by the group description, not the length actually needed. About one time in 256, this will make a difference. In those cases, the new Pluto won't interoperate with old Plutos. It looks as if this change brings us in line with other IKE daemons. Added a fudge (select with DODGE_DH_MISSING_ZERO_BUG) so that when a problem arises, a new replacement exchange is initiated (idea from John Gilmore). - [BUGFIX] whack no longer assumes that UNIX domain sockets preserve record boundaries (they don't). This faulty assumption caused whack's exit status to be unreliable - [BUGFIX] pluto now correctly defaults the client subnet in a connection created for a Road Warrior exchange. - [BUGFIX] Road Warrior code now supports multiple connections terminating in a particular Road Warrior node (allowing all appropriate combinations of host and subnets to be simultaneously connected). - [BUGFIX] fix various peculiar Road Warrior crashes. - [BUGFIX] fix spurious deletion of control socket when lock could not be acquired (Thomas Bellman ) - [BUGFIX] interface discovery properly ignores nonAF_NET interfaces Changes since .92 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - Communication between whack and pluto is now done using UNIX domain sockets. This channel can be secured! - liberalized ISAKMP SA acceptance. Now anything up to and including 16 bytes long is accepted. How silly. - All ISAKMP messages in UDP packets generated by pluto are now explicitly padded to be a multiple of 4 octets long. This was wrong if certain big numbers (eg. nonces) happened to have leading zero octets. - set socket option SO_REUSEADDR on pluto's whack socket. This allows Pluto to quickly restart. - Use new, consistent notation for topology: client===host---nexthop...nexthop---host===client - prefix every line of status output with connection name. This allows selection of output using grep. - Replaced system's assert with passert. This sends the diagnostic to syslog. - Changed secrets file name processing to support sh-like "globbing" for file names. - Where appropriate, log messages are prefixed by their connection name and state object serial numbers. Connection names are quoted with double quotes and serial numbers are prefixed with the number sign (#). Otherwise, where appropriate, log messages are prefixed by the IP address and port number from which the current message was sent. - some attempt at making the messages more helpful + warnings when authentication (preshared secrets) failure is likely cause of the observed symptom + status message now highlights which SAs are the most recent (those are the ones that are subject to rekeying)and which are erouted. + state names are slightly improved + status message prints the "meaning" of a state after its name. - the policy options of a connection (--pfs, --authenticate, --encrypt, (but not --tunnel)) now apply to negotiations being responded to. They continue to apply to negotiations initiated by Pluto. - The Oakley group used for PFS in Phase 2 is dictated by the initiator. We used to dictate one of our choice. To increase the chances for success, we now dictate the same group as was used in Phase 1. - First, some context. The "negotiated" lifetime of an SA is actually dictated by the initiator. If the responder doesn't like this lifetime, it can tell the initiator in a NOTIFY message. Pluto doesn't do this. Instead, it will just expire the lifetime sooner than negotiated. In the past, Pluto only initiated rekeying if it was the initiator. Now, a responder Pluto will initiate rekeying if it is going to expire the SA earlier than negotiated. To prevent an explosion of SAs, rekeying will only be done if the SA is the newest one for its connection. Rekeying of IPsec SA will respect the security properties of the old SA at the level of policy options (i.e. --pfs, --authenticate, --encrypt, --tunnel). - Replaced --rekeytries with --keyingtries. This option now applies to initial keying as well as rekeying, hence the name change. Even though initial keying will now try more than once, whack logging will be stopped after the first attempt. The value 0 is taken to mean, effectively, infinity: don't give up. Changes since .91 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier - A hack has been added to support mobile or anonymous initiators. - The isakmp-secrets file has been renamed ipsec.secrets and the format spruced up to aid scalability. Entries now can be shared between relevant machines verbatim. An include facility was added. The file is now only read upon --listen commands. - If --firewall appears on our end of a connection, Pluto will add a firewall rule to enable appropriate forwarding, without masquerading for any route it adds. It will delete the rule when it deletes the route. - When Pluto thinks whack's message is malformed, it now says so to whack, not just syslog. - In addition to the messages traditionally sent back to whack, non-debugging messages sent to the log that relate to whack's current activity are copied to whack. Whack's exit status now reflects the last message (if any) returned by Pluto. This should allow a script to tell, for example, if an SA was established. - top-level payload parsing has been centralized. This should make it easier to add new features. Payload ordering constraints have are now just those required by RFC2409 (IKE). In most cases, Pluto will now ignore duplicated packets. It should recover better from the reception of a corrupt packet. - Interface discovery is more clever. It notes each configured interface with a name ipsec[0-9] as a virtual public interface and considers any interface with a different kind of name and the same IP address to be the corresponding real public interface. This is only done when Pluto starts, so any interfaces of interest must be configured before then. This feature allows Pluto to support multiple public networks. - Pluto now exploits the fact that eroutes only conflict if their local clients AND peer clients are the same. So we can now support multiple subnets behind our security gateway all talking to clients behind another security gateway. - Switched to using ipsec_spi_t to represent SPIs. In the process fixed a related bug found by Peter Onion. Changes since .9 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier [incomplete] - Message IDs are now random, rather than counting up from 1. This should help keep messages in different but simultaneous Phase 2 exchanges being mixed up. - syslogged informative (i.e. debugging) messages are now prefixed with "| " to make the easier to ignore. - forbid zero cookies. Among other things, this prevents feedback confusing Pluto. - Use serial numbers to cause most recent of available ISAKMP SAs to be chosen. Also useful in debugging output. - Pluto will now only listen to Whack on the loopback interface (important security limitation). - implement rekeying, based on time, for ISAKMP and IPsec SAs - Whack now talks to Pluto using TCP. This allows status information to be returned to Whack. For now, not much interesting is sent back. The TCP port is the *same* as the IKE port -- no longer 1 greater. Pluto closes the socket once the "goal" is established or the state object is freed. All this will evolve. - For SAs that were initiated by Pluto, Pluto will try to replace the SA before it expires. There is a 10 minute window (SA_REPLACEMENT_WINDOW) in which this can occur. - Support --peer_nexthop for initiator of ISAKMP SA. - Support --optionsfrom - be more specific about error conditions: for each STF_FAIL, designate which notification message most applies. - use these results in reporting to whack - make whack back-talk look like FTP messages - add and use notion of (potential) connection database. All scripts change! - fix handling of the variable form of attribute - don't allow --initiate before --listen - use new number for ESP_NULL - demand each transform include an ENCAPSULATION_MODE attribute - demand each AH transform include an appropriate AUTH_ALGORITHM attribute - add not-yet-standardized OAKLEY_GROUP 5 (MODP 1536) - since KLIPS only allows one IPsec SA to be routed to a particular subnet (for a peer's client), detect when a subnet is engaged. If we are replacing that SA, OK. Otherwise, balk. - [experimental] exploit the new UDP 500 hole to support host mode. - add --route and --unroute: hysteresis in routing should prevent packets flowing in the clear during IPsec SA transitions. - add --status to display the internal state of Pluto. - deleted misleading README; other resources fulfill its role - eliminated EVENT_CLEANUP: using EVENT_RETRANSMIT seemed more correct - gave special meaning to combination of delete and add - improved and documented combinations of whack command types - improved logging - added and used LEAK_DETECTIVE. Fixed some leaks. Changes between .85 and .9 release by D. Hugh Redelmeier [incomplete] - change pluto and whack's argument processing to use getopt_long: the syntax and expressive power is quite different. - allow selection of debugging output. Change pluto to accept arguments for specifying this. Change whack and pluto allow settings to change during a run. - make most controls for debugging run-time rather than compile-time. This required the addition of many command line arguments (see README) - support 3DES encryption of Oakley messages (OAKLEY_3DES_CBC) - accept modestly long attribute values (32 bits) for OAKLEY_LIFE_DURATION and SA_LIFE_DURATION. Changes between .7alpha and .85 (highlights) by D. Hugh Redelmeier - support RHL5.0 (glibc): avoid clash between and - Lessons from porting to Solaris: endianness, careful typing, alignment, correct fd_set bugs in call_server(), correct rnd.c to use sig_atomic_t - Makefile: add distlist target to put out names of files in distribution - Makefile: when installing binaries, move old ones to .OLD - add and exploit pb_stream mechanism for systematically decoding and encoding packets - More flexible security policy, but still hard-wired. - support new Oakley group (2 -- modp 1024) - make returned IPsec proposal for acceptance a copy of winning proposal (as per spec) - add and use generic interface to hash functions - add many comments referencing the draft standards - change all uses of stdout to use stderr instead (choice between stdout and stderr was haphazard) - fix SPI stuff: Oakley and IPSEC SPIs are different beasts - generate initial IPSEC SPI as a random number (avoid clashes) - fix layout bug for struct isakmp_transform - fix several dangerous memory allocation and buffer overflow errors; eliminate all inline uses of calloc (use a wrapper) - avoid memory leak due to uncleared mpz variables - general tidying and restructuring; get rid of many "magic" numbers - de-lint everywhere (add -Wall -Wmissing-prototypes to Makefile) - switch from BSD b* functions to ANSI mem* functions - get rid of bitfields - generate the correct amount of keying material (PRF feedback, if needed) - improve get_preshared_key (new format too) - improve handling of informational exchanges. Still poor. - improve tracing output - print version information (whack and pluto) - wherever an enum-like value is printed, print the name of the value - make duplicate_state() duplicate the st_myidentity_type field. - make kernel interface do required route commands - open and close /dev/ipsec more carefully - support separate keys for esp encryption and esp authentication