mirror of
https://git.proxmox.com/git/mirror_corosync
synced 2025-05-28 18:07:12 +00:00

(Logical change 1.52) git-svn-id: http://svn.fedorahosted.org/svn/corosync/trunk@159 fd59a12c-fef9-0310-b244-a6a79926bd2f
127 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
***
|
|
All cryptographic software in this package is subject to the following legal
|
|
notice:
|
|
This package includes publicly available encryption source code which,
|
|
together with object code resulting from the compiling of publicly
|
|
available source code, may be exported from the United States under License
|
|
Exception TSU prsuant to 15 C.F.R Section 740.13(e).
|
|
***
|
|
Security Design of openais
|
|
|
|
The openais project intends to mitigate the following threats:
|
|
|
|
1. forged group messaging messages which are intended to fault the openais
|
|
executive
|
|
2. forged group messaging messages which are intended to fault applications
|
|
using openais apis
|
|
3. monitoring of network data to capture sensitive information
|
|
|
|
The openais project does not intend to mitigate the following threats:
|
|
|
|
1. physical access to the hardware which could expose the private key
|
|
2. privledged access to the operating system which could expose the private key
|
|
or be used to inject errors into the ais executive.
|
|
3. library user creates requests which are intended to fault the openais
|
|
executive
|
|
|
|
The openais project mitigates the threats using two mechanisms:
|
|
|
|
1. Authentication
|
|
2. Secrecy
|
|
|
|
Library Interface
|
|
-----------------
|
|
The openais executive authenticates every library user. The library is only
|
|
allowed to access services if it's GID is ais or 0. Unauthorized library
|
|
users are rejected.
|
|
|
|
The ais group is a trusted group. If the administrator doesn't trust the
|
|
application, it should not be added to the group! Any member of the ais group
|
|
could potentially send a malformed request to the executive and cause it to
|
|
fault.
|
|
|
|
Group Messaging Interface
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
Group messaging uses UDP/IP to communicate with other openais executives using
|
|
messages. It is possible without authentication of every packet that an
|
|
attacker could forge messages. These forged messages could fault the openais
|
|
executive distributed state machines. It would also be possible to corrupt
|
|
end applications by forging changes.
|
|
|
|
Since messages are sent using UDP/IP it would be possible to snoop those
|
|
messages and rebuild sensitive data.
|
|
|
|
To solve these problems, the group messaging interface uses two new interfaces
|
|
interal to it's implementation:
|
|
1. encrypt_and_sign - encrypts and signs a message securely
|
|
2. authenticate_and_decrypt - authenticates and decrypts a message securely
|
|
|
|
When the executive wants to send a message over the network, it uses
|
|
encrypt_and_sign to prepare the message to be sent. When the executive
|
|
wants to receive a message from the network, it uses
|
|
authenticate_and_decrypt to verify the message is valid and decrypt it.
|
|
|
|
These two functions utilize the following algorithms:
|
|
sha1 - hash algorithm secure for using with hmac
|
|
hmac - produces a 16 byte digest from any length input
|
|
sober - pseudo random number generator and stream cipher
|
|
|
|
The hmac algorithm requires a 16 byte key.
|
|
The sober algorithm requires a 16 byte private key.
|
|
The sober algorithm requires a 16 byte public initial vector.
|
|
|
|
The private key is read from disk and stored in memory for use with the
|
|
sober algorithm to generate the three required keys.
|
|
|
|
Every message starts with a
|
|
struct security {
|
|
unsigned char digest[20]; A one way hash digest
|
|
unsigned char salt[16]; A securely generated random number
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
When a message is sent (encrypt_and_sign):
|
|
------------------------------------------
|
|
1. sober is used to create a 16 byte random number (salt) using the md4
|
|
algorithm
|
|
2. sober is keyed with the private key and the initial vector is set to the
|
|
salt. Then a 48 byte key is read from the sober algorithm. This 48 byte
|
|
key is split into 3 16 byte keys. The keys are the hmac key, the sober key
|
|
and the sober initial vector.
|
|
3. A sober instance is keyed with the sober key and sober initial vector
|
|
from step #2.
|
|
4. The data of the packet, except for the security header, is encrypted using
|
|
the sober cipher that was initialized in step #3.
|
|
5. The salt is stored in the security header of the outgoing message.
|
|
6. The hmac is initialized with the hmac key generated in step #2.
|
|
7. The message, except for the security header, is hmaced to produce a digest
|
|
using the sha1 algorithm.
|
|
8. The digest is stored in the outgoing message.
|
|
9. The message is transmitted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When a message is received (decrypt_and_authenticate):
|
|
------------------------------------------------------
|
|
1. sober is keyed with the private key and the initial vector is set to the
|
|
salt in the received message. Then a 48 byte key is read from the sober
|
|
algorithm. This 48 byte key is split into 3 16 byte keys. The keys are the
|
|
hmac key, the sober key and the sober initial vector.
|
|
2. The sober key and sober initial vector from step #1 are used to key a
|
|
new sober instance.
|
|
3. The hmac is setup using the hmac key generated in step #1 using sha1.
|
|
5. The message is authenticated, except for the security header.
|
|
6. If the message was not authenticated, the caller is told of the result.
|
|
The caller ignores the message.
|
|
7. The message is decrypted, except for the security header, using the sober
|
|
algorithm in step #2.
|
|
8. The message is processed.
|
|
|
|
This does consume some resources. It ensures the private key is never shared
|
|
openly, that messages are authenticated, that messages are encrypted, and that
|
|
any key exposure of the sober encryption key, sober initial vector, or hmac
|
|
key can only be used to attack one of the algorithms. Finally every key used
|
|
is randomly unique (within the 2^128 search space of the input to sober) to
|
|
ensure that keys are never reused, nonce's are never reused, and hmac's are
|
|
never reused.
|
|
|
|
Comments welcome mailto:openais@lists.osdl.org
|