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(no subject)


From: Ganesh Sittampalam
Subject: (no subject)
Date: Sat, 02 Aug 2003 00:05:30 +0100

File: cipe.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Introduction,  Prev: (dir),  Up: (dir)

CIPE
****

CIPE (the name is shortened from _Crypto IP Encapsulation_) is a
package for an encrypting IP tunnel device. This can be used to build
encrypting routers for VPN (Virtual Private Networks) and similar
applications.

    Copyright (C) 1996--2001 Olaf Titz. All rights reserved.

    This program including its documentation is free software; you can
    redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
    Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
    version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
    WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
    General Public License for more details.

    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
    Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

    The author can be contacted through the electronic mail address
    <address@hidden>.

* Menu:

* Introduction::        About routing, VPNs and encryption.
* Installation::        Installing the CIPE software package.
* Configuration::       Configuration.
* PKCIPE::              The PKCIPE public key tool.
* Examples::            Examples of CIPE configurations.
* Protocol descriptions::  How the protocols work internally.
* Misc::                Odds and ends.
* Concept Index::       Index.

 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---

Introduction

* Network layers::      Where encryption takes place.
* Routing::             About IP routing and VPNs.
* How CIPE works::      The encapsulation method employed here.
* Components::          Which pieces of software CIPE consists of.
* Internals::           A look under the hood of CIPE.

Installing the CIPE software package

* Prerequisites::       What you need before installing.
* Protocols and ciphers::  Important compile-time options to select.
* Advanced compiling::  Configuring the compile for different targets.
* Install::             Compiling and installing the software.
* Compilation errors::  If something goes wrong.
* Run::                 Running the software.

Running CIPE

* Program Names::       How the components of CIPE are named.
* insmod::              Loading the kernel module.
* ciped::               Running the daemon.

Configuration of the CIPE software

* Specifying options::  How CIPE gets its parameters.
* Parameter list::      All valid and needed parameters.
* Keys in older CIPE::  An incompatibility between Version 1.4 and earlier.
* SOCKS::               Routing with CIPE over a SOCKS5 relayer.
* Dynamic carrier::     How to deal with dynamic IP address assignment.
* Error handling::      How ciped deals with errors.

The PKCIPE tool

* How it works::        Short overview on PKCIPE.
* Public Keys::         What public keys are and how to use them.
* pkcipe invocation::   Running the pkcipe program.

Usage examples

* Tips::                General useful tips on CIPE configuration.
* Example 1::           The classic VPN setups.
* Example 2::           A PKCIPE setup.
* Connection modes::    Overview on different carrier network situations.

Protocol descriptions

* The CIPE Protocol::   Encrypted IP encapsulation used by CIPE.
* The PKCIPE Protocol::  Public-key based setup and key exchange.

`$Id: cipe.texinfo,v 1.28 2001/02/06 23:00:40 olaf Exp $'


File: cipe.info,  Node: Introduction,  Next: Installation,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top

Introduction
************

* Menu:

* Network layers::      Where encryption takes place.
* Routing::             About IP routing and VPNs.
* How CIPE works::      The encapsulation method employed here.
* Components::          Which pieces of software CIPE consists of.
* Internals::           A look under the hood of CIPE.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Network layers,  Next: Routing,  Prev: Introduction,  
Up: Introduction

Network layers and encryption
=============================

There are several different places where encryption can be built into
an existing network infrastructure, corresponding to the different
protocol layers:

  1. On the "network level": Packets travelling between hosts on the
     network are encrypted. The encryption engine is placed near the
     driver which sends and receives packets. An implementation is
     found in CIPE.

  2. On the "socket level": A logical connection between programs
     running on different hosts (TCP connection; transport or session
     layer in OSI) is encrypted. The encryption engine intercepts or
     proxies connections. SSH and SSL work this way.

  3. On the "application level": Applications contain their own
     encryption engine and encrypt data themselves. The best known
     example is PGP for encrypting mail.

Low-level encryption as implemented with CIPE has the advantage that it
can be made to work transparently, without any change to application
software. In the case of encrypting IP packets, it can be built into IP
routers which usually act as "black boxes" that only route traffic
between hosts, the hosts themselves don't see at all how the routing
works. So an "encrypting router" looks exactly like a non-encrypting
one, without any difference seen by other hosts and applications. It
can thus be used in places where software changes at higher levels are
not feasible.

Low-level encryption has the disadvantage that it does not guard against
intruders on a higher level, e.g. Trojaned applications, bug exploits
in system software or rogue administrators "sniffing" on terminal
devices.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Routing,  Next: How CIPE works,  Prev: Network layers,  
Up: Introduction

IP routing and Virtual Private Networks
=======================================

A "virtual private network" (VPN for short) is a network (1) belonging
to one organization, using its own address range, but overlayed on
existing network infrastructure.  "IP-in-IP tunneling" makes it
possible to build IP-based VPNs on top of other IP-based "carrier
networks", such as the Internet.  "Encrypted tunneling" guards against
passive (sniffing) and active (faked message injection) attacks on the
carrier network. The carrier network sees only encrypted data.

Depending on the choice of protocol, all information the original
packets carry can be encrypted. This includes not only the actual
(payload) data but also the TCP/IP headers, leaving no trace as to
which addresses and services are actually used. "Traffic analysis"
attacks, which attempt to gain useful information out of sniffing by
"who contacts whom", are thus made unfeasible. An even more
sophisticated technique to thwart traffic analysis employs the
injection of dummy packets into the network which carry no useful
information at all but are (at the carrier level) indistinguishable
from real data packets.

IP routing in a VPN situation consists of the routing of the carrier
network, which in most situations is just a standard Internet setup,
and routing of the overlayed VPN. This is easiest when the address
ranges of carrier and VPN do not overlap in any way. It is common for
VPNs to use the 10.0.0.0/8 and 192.168.0.0/16 address ranges, which are
not part of the Internet and thus do never conflict with actual
Internet routing: any address in this range must be local to the
organization using it. *Note Example 1::, for a typical example.

The IPSEC standards define a set of protocols which can be used (among
other things) to build encrypted VPNs. However, IPSEC is a rather
heavyweight and complicated protocol set with a lot of options,
implementations of the full protocol set are still rarely used and some
issues (such as key management) are still not fully resolved.  CIPE
uses a simpler approach, in which many things which can be
parameterized (such as the choice of the actual encryption algorithm
used) are an install-time fixed choice. This limits flexibility but
allows for a simple (and therefore efficient, easy to debug...)
implementation.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) As CIPE is an IP routing application, this manual talks only about
IP-based networks.


File: cipe.info,  Node: How CIPE works,  Next: Components,  Prev: Routing,  Up: 
Introduction

How CIPE works
==============

CIPE encapsulates encrypted IP datagrams in UDP datagrams and sends
them via the normal UDP mechanism.  This is different from standard
IPIP encapsulation. UDP was chosen because this way many different
endpoints can easily be distinguished by port numbers; because an IP
protocol number would warrant a formal registration; and because
handling of UDP datagrams is easier than using a separate IP protocol
number, especially in firewalled setups.  Specifically, UDP can be
handled by user-level applications such as a SOCKS5 relayer. *Note
SOCKS::.

A CIPE "link" always connects exactly two endpoints. In many ways, the
link works like a PPP dial-up link. At present, each link has its own
secret 128-bit key which has to be known by both ends (and nobody
else). This "link key" (called "static key" in the protocol
description) is used to negotiate a frequently changed "dynamic key",
which encrypts the actual data.

Since CIPE 1.5 it is also possible to negotiate the keys via a "public
key" mechanism, similar to the SSH package. This removes the need for
shared secret keys. *Note PKCIPE::.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Components,  Next: Internals,  Prev: How CIPE works,  
Up: Introduction

CIPEs software components
=========================

The CIPE package consists of a kernel module and a driver program.  The
kernel module does the IP packet handling: sending and receiving
packets, encapsulation including encryption. It implements a "network
device" which is mostly handled like any other network device.
Configuration and the whole key exchange process is done by the user
level program `ciped'. *Note Program Names::.

`ciped' looks and behaves rather similar to `pppd'. In particular,
opening and closing a CIPE device is tied to starting and ending a
`ciped' process (one per device), the specification of options to the
daemon mimics `pppd''s setup and `ciped' invokes scripts on opening and
closing a device.

The `pkcipe' program is a separate add-on to the `ciped' driver which
manages keys and other parameters.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Internals,  Prev: Components,  Up: Introduction

Notes on internals
==================

(This section is only relevant to readers who want to understand the
source, not to the regular user.)

The module consists of an output driver, an input driver, the
encapsulation routines and some stuff to keep it all together. The
output driver is largely an adapted version of `new_tunnel' from the
Linux distribution. (1) In Linux 2.0 its actual packet sending is done
via the kernel IP forwarding engine. This implies that (a) forwarding
must be enabled in the kernel and (b) the encrypted packets, being UDP
packets with the source/dest addresses given as "me" and "peer", are
checked against the forwarding (as well as the output) firewall. (If it
doesn't work for you, first make sure that your firewall rules let the
packets pass!)

The input driver is an adaptation from the kernel UDP receiver. To
activate it, ciped has to set a socket into a special mode with an
`ioctl' call. This has to be a connected UDP socket. The
`ioctl_attach(2cipe)' call replaces the socket's `sendto(2)' and
`recvfrom(2)' operations with special versions that do decryption of
traffic internally and only pass key exchange blocks to the user layer.
The whole work of decrypting and rerouting incoming traffic is done
inside a blocking `recvfrom(2)'. This means that unlike normal IP
forwarding, it is called from user mode and the needed CPU time is
charged to the ciped process, although the data never passes into user
mode. `sendto(2)' encodes the block as a key exchange block and sends
it to the peer. The socket should not use `read(2)', `write(2)',
`select(2)' or nonblocking mode (yet).

Before attaching the socket, the operational parameters of the device
have to be set using a `ioctl_setpar(2cipe)' call. The key exchange
process supplies keys to the kernel via `ioctl_setkey(2cipe)'.

The netdevice can only be opened (configured "UP") if it has a
controlling socket. When the controlling socket is closed, the netdevice
gets closed. Conversely, closing the netdevice (with `ifconfig(8)')
closes the socket too. Closing deletes all information that is set by
ciped on the device.

Devices can be dynamically allocated and deallocated using a
`ioctl_alloc(2cipe)' call. The first device always remains allocated as
a hook for the `ioctl' calls.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) For Linux 2.2, this has been merged into the `ipip' module, but the
functionality is the same.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Installation,  Next: Configuration,  Prev: 
Introduction,  Up: Top

Installing the CIPE software package
************************************

The CIPE software package is available via the WWW from
<http://sites.inka.de/~bigred/devel/cipe.html>. It is distributed in a
`tar.gz' file, currently about 138k in size. After unpacking the
distribution, run the `configure' script, possibly specifying options
there. Then run `make'.

* Menu:

* Prerequisites::       What you need before installing.
* Protocols and ciphers::  Important compile-time options to select.
* Advanced compiling::  Configuring the compile for different targets.
* Install::             Compiling and installing the software.
* Compilation errors::  If something goes wrong.
* Run::                 Running the software.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Prerequisites,  Next: Protocols and ciphers,  Prev: 
Installation,  Up: Installation

Prerequisites
=============

CIPE runs under Linux 2.0.* since 2.0.12, 2.1.* since about 2.1.103,
2.2.* and 2.3.*/2.4.* since 2.3.48.  It was developed for the i386
architecture; other architectures _should_ work.

Make sure you have the source, or at least the complete include tree,
of the running kernel installed (usually in `/usr/src/linux'). The
version _and configuration_ of the kernel sources must match the kernel
on which it will run exactly, or else you risk building a module which
crashes.  You also have to use the same compiler version than the one
with which the kernel was compiled.  After reconfiguring and rebuilding
the kernel, don't forget to rebuild the CIPE module too. (This applies
to all externally compiled modules.) Enabling "versioned symbols" on
the kernel is strongly recommended, because it protects against version
skew between kernel and modules.

The kernel needs "IP Forwarding/Gatewaying" enabled in the configuration
for 2.0 kernels. Make sure to enable IP forwarding with
     echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
on system boot with 2.2 or later and recent 2.0 kernels. The `urandom'
device must be available.

A suited version of the module utilities (`modprobe' and friends) needs
to be installed. When in doubt, consult the documentation in the kernel
source.

The PKCIPE tool needs the OpenSSL package, version 0.9.6 or later. If
this is not available, the rest of the CIPE package can still be
compiled and installed as usual.

As of version 1.3, CIPE uses an autoconf-generated configure script to
configure its Makefiles. This script takes the following parameters on
the command line. All of the parameters have defaults which should
suffice for a simple installation.
`--with-linux=dir'
     Path to the Linux source tree (e.g., `/usr/src/linux').

`--with-linux-include=dir'
     Path to the Linux include tree, if you don't have the complete
     source.  This include tree must still contain all files generated
     by the kernel configuration process. Using a complete source tree
     is preferred (necessary on some architectures) because in that
     case the kernel `Makefile' parameters are also used.

`--with-ssl-includes=dir'
     Path to the OpenSSL includes, if the script can not find it.

`--with-ssl-libs=dir'
     Path to the OpenSSL libraries, if the script can not find it.

`--enable-protocol=n'
     Use encapsulation protocol `n'. The supported values in CIPE 1.5
     are 3 and 4. *Note Protocols and ciphers::, for how to choose the
     right one.  The default is 3.

`--enable-idea'
     Use the IDEA cipher (default is Blowfish).

`--disable-debug'
     Disable debugging code in kernel module. Not really useful.

`--disable-dyndev'
     Disable dynamic device allocation. Not really useful.

`--enable-logfacility=x'
     Set syslog facility for `ciped' and `pkcipe' (default and usually
     right is LOG_DAEMON).

`--disable-asm'
     Disable use of assembler code. Not really useful.

`--enable-name=n'
     Set a name suffix for the compilation directory.

`--enable-bug-compatible'
     Use old, broken interpretation of keys. *Note Keys in older CIPE::.

`--disable-send-config'
     Do not send configuration information to the peer. This is normally
     sent on startup to help diagnose mismatches, but it is sent
     unencrypted, which may be unwanted.

`--disable-pkcipe'
     Do not compile and install the PKCIPE tool.

The script then looks for certain parameters (like whether compiling for
an SMP system) in the kernel headers, and it creates a new directory
named like `2.2.6-i386-cb' in which compilation of the module and
daemon will take place. (This would be for Linux 2.2.6 on i386, protocol
3 [the "c"], Blowfish [the "b"].)

The PKCIPE tool and some library components are built in their source
directories, they do not depend on configuration (in theory;
unfortunately `pkcipe' is still tied to the particular `ciped' in use,
but this is going to be fixed).


File: cipe.info,  Node: Protocols and ciphers,  Next: Advanced compiling,  
Prev: Prerequisites,  Up: Installation

Protocols and ciphers
=====================

CIPE supports different versions of the encryption protocol, which in
turn can be used with different ciphers (encryption algorithms). Which
one is used is chosen at compile time with arguments to the `configure'
script.

As of CIPE 1.5, the following options are possible:

Protocol version 3: This is the default protocol and recommended for
most use. It is described in detail in this document. *Note The CIPE
Protocol::. The device works as an IP-only point-to-point device much
like with SLIP or PPP.

Protocol version 4: This protocol uses the same data format as protocol
version 3, except that the packets transmitted contain an
Ethernet-compatible link-level header. With this it is possible to run
payload protocols other than IP, and particularly it is possible to
make the CIPE device part of an Ethernet bridge.  The disadvantage is
that the packets get larger than with protocol 3. It may be necessary
to set the MAC address using the `hwaddr' option to make it unique
across the VPN. With this protocol, the device has a subnet mask and
broadcast address which can be set with appropriate options.

Blowfish: This is the default encryption algorithm, used with a 128 bit
key.

IDEA: An alternate encryption algorithm with a 128 bit key. This
algorithm is patented and may need a licence for commercial use.  It is
included mainly for compatibility with older installations which had
only this algorithm available.

As of CIPE 1.4, both Blowfish and IDEA are available in generic C and
i386 assembler implementations. The assembler versions are used where
possible.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Advanced compiling,  Next: Install,  Prev: Protocols 
and ciphers,  Up: Installation

Advanced compiling
==================

The use of a separate object directory means it is possible to compile
CIPE for separate targets in the same directory. An example would be a
machine running different kernels for testing, etc. In that case you
would have kernel directories like `/usr/src/linux-2.0.36',
`/usr/src/linux-2.2.6', and so on. Running `configure
--with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.0.36' and after that `configure
--with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6' leaves two directories
`2.0.36-i386-cb' and `2.2.6-i386-cb'. You can run `make' _in each of
the object directories_ separately.

Another common case is a setup where one central box compiles kernels
for different machines. You can rename CIPE's compilation directories
with the -enable-name option, perhaps name them after the target
machine:
     ./configure --with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6-bigbox \
                 --enable-name=bigbox
     make -C 2.2.6-i386-cb-bigbox
     ./configure --with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6-satellite \
                 --enable-name=satellite
     make -C 2.2.6-i386-cb-satellite
     ./configure --with-linux=/mounts/srv1/linux-2.2.5-small \
                 --enable-name=laptop
     make -C 2.2.5-i386-cb-laptop

In the same way distribution maintainers could prepare a set of
differently configured CIPE modules (IDEA vs. Blowfish) for one target.
The names of the module and driver are chosen so that different
configurations can coexist on one target. *Note Program Names::.

Note that real cross-compilation is not possible for now, because the
configure script always assumes the CPU architecture of the system where
it runs.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Install,  Next: Compilation errors,  Prev: Advanced 
compiling,  Up: Installation

Installation
============

A simple `make' command compiles everything. Compiler warnings should
not occur. Do `make install' as _root_ to install the software
components in their final location.  These are a kernel module, named
according to the protocol version and encryption algorithm selected,
and the driver program, which is (as of CIPE 1.3) also named after the
protocol version and encryption algorithm. *Note Program Names::. The
Makefiles accept the semi-standard options `BINDIR, MODDIR, INFODIR' to
specify where the stuff gets installed.

If PKCIPE was compiled, `make install' also installs the `pkcipe'
program and a helper `rsa-keygen', sets up the necessary directories
and generates a host key if none is already there.  *Note PKCIPE::.

You need to create a directory `/etc/cipe' which contains at least two
files, `options' and `ip-up'. You can copy the files from the `samples'
directory in the distribution here, and edit them to suit your needs.
*Note Configuration::.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Compilation errors,  Next: Run,  Prev: Install,  Up: 
Installation

Compilation errors
==================

There is a known problem in that the various 2.0.30 and 2.0.31
pre-releases disagree on whether they have a certain feature
(`SO_BINDTODEVICE'), and detecting this version dependency via the
version number is not foolproof. Apparently, since 2.0.32, this problem
is resolved. If `output.c' doesn't compile under 2.0.*, change the line
     #ifdef SO_BINDTODEVICE
to `#if 1' or `#if 0' as needed.

A similar problem exists in the 2.3.99 pre-releases, where the `name'
part of the `net_device' structure has changed. If an error occurs
during compilation of `device.c' under 2.3.99pre-n, change the
conditional definition of `HAVE_DEVNAME_ARRAY' in `cipe.h' to `#if 1'
or `#if 0' as needed.  Since the 2.4.0 test releases this problem is
resolved.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Run,  Prev: Compilation errors,  Up: Installation

Running CIPE
============

Once installed, the CIPE software is run by loading the module and
running the `ciped' daemon.

* Menu:

* Program Names::       How the components of CIPE are named.
* insmod::              Loading the kernel module.
* ciped::               Running the daemon.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Program Names,  Next: insmod,  Prev: Run,  Up: Run

Program Names
-------------

The module name is `cip' followed by the protocol version as a letter
and the first letter of the encryption algorithm. E.g.  `cipcb' for
version 3 (i.e. "c"), Blowfish (the default). The device names which
this module manages are the module name followed by a number, e.g.
`cipcb0'.

Since CIPE 1.3, the daemon program is named `ciped-' followed by the
protocol and encryption letters, likewise. E.g. `ciped-cb'.  Where this
manual refers to `ciped', assume the real name as given here.

The configuration parameters of kernel module and daemon must match (the
module checks this), but the daemon does not depend (at least not in
theory) on the kernel version. The naming scheme is chosen so that all
possible modules and daemons on one machine can coexist.

The `pkcipe' program is designed to be independent from the
configuration. However, currently it can only handle one version of
`ciped' (i.e. one protocol and cipher version). This will be fixed in
future versions.


File: cipe.info,  Node: insmod,  Next: ciped,  Prev: Program Names,  Up: Run

Loading the module
------------------

The kernel module is loaded into the kernel via the command
     modprobe modulename parameter=value...

The CIPE module accepts the following additional parameters:
`cipe_debug=(number)'
     Set the debugging level. The file `cipe.h' defines different
     debugging levels which are ORed. Set this to 0 if you don't need
     debugging output. Debugging output is emitted via kernel messages,
     which means it usually winds up in the syslog somewhere.

`cipe_maxdev=(number)'
     Set the number of channels this module manages. E.g. with
     `cipe_maxdev=4' the devices `cipcb0' through `cipcb3' are
     available. Maximum is 99. Since CIPE 1.2, there is no need to set
     this, since channels are allocated dynamically.

The module can be autoloaded via `kerneld'/`kmod'. Advanced users will
recognize the following options in `/etc/conf.modules' necessary to
make it work correctly:
     alias cipcb0 cipcb
     options cipcb cipe_debug=0
Note: with dynamic device allocation, aliasing any device other than
`cipcb0' is pointless and autoloading only works when the requesting
application is `ciped' (not `ifconfig' etc.)  This is a limitation
inherent in dynamic device allocation.


File: cipe.info,  Node: ciped,  Prev: insmod,  Up: Run

Running the `ciped' daemon
--------------------------

The `ciped' daemon must be run as _root_. (*Do not* make it setuid.) It
takes as command line arguments an optional `-o file' parameter
specifying an options file followed by any number of individual option
arguments. *Note Specifying options::.

Except in debugging mode, the daemon puts itself in the background and
uses `syslog(3)' for logging messages. Normal operation causes no log
messages except for errors and a notice when the daemon terminates.

Shutting down (with `ifconfig(8)') a CIPE device terminates its `ciped'
process, and vice-versa terminating a `ciped' closes the device. When a
device is closed, its configuration parameters including all keys and
statistics are erased. (This is different from earlier CIPE versions!)
`ciped' does not keep any keys in memory.

When the device comes up, `ciped' spawns `/etc/cipe/ip-up' with the
parameters described in the sample version. It waits for completion of
this script before data can be sent over the device and before it goes
into the background. The script is called with standard input, output
and error to `/dev/null'. It typically sets routes and does some
logging. Since CIPE 1.4, the script is called with all options (except
key) in environment variables named after the option.

Likewise, when a CIPE device goes down, `/etc/cipe/ip-down' is invoked.
`ciped' itself logs the interface statistics when closing.

`ciped' will terminate when an error occurs. This includes a
"connection refused" message from the peer, to be able to detect
non-working peers. This default error handling implies that no data may
be sent over a link unless _both_ ends are up and running, or the first
one to come up will go down again immediately. In particular, the
"ping" command in the sample `ip-up' should not be activated on both
ends of a link. This behaviour can be customized. *Note Error
handling::, for more details.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Configuration,  Next: PKCIPE,  Prev: Installation,  Up: 
Top

Configuration of the CIPE software
**********************************

* Menu:

* Specifying options::  How CIPE gets its parameters.
* Parameter list::      All valid and needed parameters.
* Keys in older CIPE::  An incompatibility between Version 1.4 and earlier.
* SOCKS::               Routing with CIPE over a SOCKS5 relayer.
* Dynamic carrier::     How to deal with dynamic IP address assignment.
* Error handling::      How ciped deals with errors.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Specifying options,  Next: Parameter list,  Prev: 
Configuration,  Up: Configuration

Specifying options
==================

All configuration parameters are processed by the `ciped' daemon.  It
takes parameters from
  1. the default options file (`/etc/cipe/options'),

  2. an options file specified as `-o file' on the command line,

  3. single options given on the command line,

in that order. Which means, parameters on the command line override
those from files, and parameters from an explicit options file override
those from the default options file.

Options are one of the types: boolean, integer, string, IP address, IP
address with port number. Booleans are default false and specifying them
as option makes them true. IP addresses are given as dot-quad notation
or domain names which can be resolved using `gethostbyname(3)'. UDP or
TCP addresses are given as `ip:port', where the port is a number or a
name resolvable by `getservbyname(3)'.

The syntax for specifying options is `name=value' on the command line,
and `name value' (one option per line, no continuations, escapes,
quoting etc.) in the options file.

For security reasons, options files must be given as absolute paths,
and they and all their parent directories must be owned by root and not
writable by group or other, and the options file itself must be even not
readable by group or other (because it may contain secret keys).


File: cipe.info,  Node: Parameter list,  Next: Keys in older CIPE,  Prev: 
Specifying options,  Up: Configuration

List of all parameters
======================

(Req=Required parameter)

Name       Type      Req     
`device'   String    no      Name of the CIPE device. If not given, the
                             system picks a free one.
`debug'    Bool              Don't go background, use stderr instead of
                             syslog.   (Independent of the kernel driver
                             debug option.)
`ipaddr'   IP        yes     IP address of the CIPE device.
`ptpaddr'  IP        (yes)   IP address of the peer device (i.e. the CIPE
                             device on the other  end). For protocol 3.
`mask'     IP        no      Netmask of the CIPE device. For protocol 4.
`bcast'    IP        no      Broadcast address of the CIPE device. For
                             protocol 4.
`mtu'      Int       no      Device MTU (default: ethernet standard MTU
                             minus all necessary headers)
`metric'   Int       no      Device metric (not sure if this is used
                             anywhere...)
`cttl'     Int       no      Carrier TTL value. If not specified or 0, use
                             the payload packet's  TTL. Default
                             recommendation is 64.
`me'       UDP       no      Our carrier UDP address. If either IP or port
                             are not given, the  system picks one and
                             reports it via `ip-up'.
`peer'     UDP       yes     The other end's carrier UDP address.
`key'      String    (yes)   The link key. For security reasons, the key
                             has to be set via an  options file, subject
                             to the restrictions described above. The key
                             should be 128 bits in hexadecimal encoding.
                             (To generate such a beast  from random, try
                             `ps -auxw | md5sum'.)
`nokey'    Bool              Don't encrypt at all, just encapsulate in
                             UDP. Only with this option,  `key' is not
                             needed.
`socks'    TCP       no      Address (port required!) of the SOCKS5
                             server. *Note SOCKS::.
`tokxc'    Int       no      Timeout (seconds) for key exchange. Default:
                             10.
`tokey'    Int       no      Dynamic key lifetime. Default: 600 (10
                             minutes).
`ipup'     String    no      Script to run instead of `/etc/cipe/ip-up'.
`ipdown'   String    no      Script to run instead of `/etc/cipe/ip-down'.
`arg'      String    no      Argument to supply to `ip-up', `ip-down'.
`maxerr'   Int       no      Maximum number of errors before ciped exits.
                             *Note Error handling::.
`tokxts'   Int       no      Key exchange timestamp timeout. Default: 0
                             (no timestamps).   Set this to 30 to prevent
                             key exchange replay attacks, but only if the
                             peer runs CIPE 1.2 or later and both system
                             clocks are reasonably  synchronized.
`ping'     Int       no      Frequency (in seconds) for keep-alive pings.
                             Default is don't send any pings.   The "ping"
                             used here is internal to CIPE, not ICMP ping.
`toping'   Int       no      Timeout for pings. If no answer is received
                             on a keep-alive ping in  this time, it counts
                             as an error, *Note Error handling::.
                             Default is no check for answers.
`dynip'    Bool              Assume the carrier is on a dynamic IP
                             address. *Note Dynamic carrier::.
`hwaddr'   String    no      Set the dummy MAC address used in Ethernet
                             mode (protocol 4).
`ifconfig' Bool              Require an external `ifconfig' call to
                             configure the interface.
`checksum' Bool              Use checksummed UDP carrier packets. Only
                             necessary if the network  does not like
                             unchecksummed packets.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Keys in older CIPE,  Next: SOCKS,  Prev: Parameter 
list,  Up: Configuration

Incompatibility of keys to older CIPE versions
==============================================

Versions of CIPE before 1.4.0 have a bug in the way the `key' option is
interpreted. It is supposed to be a 128-bit hexadecimal number.
However, earlier versions interpret the digits `a' through `f' as equal
to `1' through `6'. This reduces the effective key space from 16^32 (32
hex digits) to 10^32 (32 decimal digits), or 109 bits. Worse, it
introduces bias in the distribution of bit patterns in the effective
key.

This bug needed to be fixed as soon as it was found. Unfortunately the
fix means that old and new versions of `ciped' will read the same key
parameter differently, in other words: keys are not compatible between
1.4.0 and older when they contain any non-decimal digits.

The solution to make them work again is either to upgrade both ends at
once (recommended), or generate new keys which consist only of decimal
digits. A possible method to generate such a key is
     (ps aux|md5sum; ps alx|md5sum) | tr -cd 0-9

Alternatively, the 1.4 or newer package can be given the option
`--enable-bug-compatible' to `configure' to use the old broken key
parser.


File: cipe.info,  Node: SOCKS,  Next: Dynamic carrier,  Prev: Keys in older 
CIPE,  Up: Configuration

Working with SOCKS
==================

With the `socks' option, CIPE uses a SOCKS5 server for sending and
receiving the encrypted data. Since this is UDP, SOCKS4 (which doesn't
support UDP) can not be used. SOCKS5 has a number of authentication
methods. CIPE can use either no authentication or Username/Password.
(1) Username and password are taken from the environment variables
`SOCKS5_USER' and `SOCKS5_PASSWD'.

The SOCKS server is free to pick any IP address, or at least any port
number, as it sees fit. Thus using SOCKS implies a dynamic carrier
address. *Note Dynamic carrier::.

The implementation is not based on a SOCKS library, don't attempt to
link `ciped' with it.

`ciped' periodically checks whether the SOCKS server has closed the
control connection. If the SOCKS server goes down, there is no way to
recover without restarting the client (in this case, `ciped'). This is
a limitation in the SOCKS5 protocol. *Note Error handling::.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) GSSAPI/Kerberos authentication is not supported because (a) I don't
have the environment to test it, and (b) it can specify that UDP
packets be encrypted with its own method, which is unnecessary and
causes only additional load here, and (c) it makes the implementation
much more complicated.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Dynamic carrier,  Next: Error handling,  Prev: SOCKS,  
Up: Configuration

Dynamic carrier addresses
=========================

CIPE can handle dynamically changing carrier addresses. This is subject
to certain restrictions, however.

When a link is already established, one end must notice when the other
end's carrier address changes. CIPE versions since 0.5.1 do this
automatically.

When one end of the link is on a real dynamic IP address (dial-up
device), it must notice when its own carrier address changes. This
requires Linux 2.2 or higher, CIPE version 1.4.0 or higher and the
`dynip' option set.

The trickiest part with using dynamic carrier addresses is finding out
the peer address before the link is established. Each CIPE needs to know
the IP address and UDP port number to send packets to. Normally this is
set with the `peer' option. As soon as a valid packet is received the
driver recognizes the peer address automatically.

With one static and one dynamic (or SOCKS) end, this is fairly easy.
Just make sure the dynamic end has the right `peer' option, and (only!)
the dynamic end has the `ping' in the example `ip-up' activated. The
`ping' will ensure that the dynamic end tells the static end its
carrier address as soon as possible. The static end should use a dummy
`peer' which does not respond to packets normally(1) and the option
`maxerr=-1'. The link is initiated by the dynamic end.

Whether a link between two dynamic carriers is possible depends on the
situation. It must be possible for one end to tell the other end its
current address in _some_ way outside of CIPE, and it should be
possible to initiate an immediate restart of `ciped' this way.  As of
CIPE 1.5, the recommended way to do this is the PKCIPE program.  *Note
PKCIPE::.

The `ip-up' script is always given the correct address in the `me'
environment variable. For dynamic addresses this is the current address
and for SOCKS this is the address of the SOCKS relayer.

In such a configuration, both ends should use `maxerr=-1' and the
initiating end should use the `ping'.

*Note Connection modes::, for an overview on the different sorts of
dynamic addresses and how they can be handled.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) Use `127.0.0.1:9', the discard UDP port on the local host


File: cipe.info,  Node: Error handling,  Prev: Dynamic carrier,  Up: 
Configuration

Error handling in `ciped'
=========================

When the remote `ciped' is down or not available, the local `ciped'
will get a "connection refused" error. Older versions always exited on
this error. This has proven impractical in some situations, so an extra
option has been added: `maxerr' determines how many network errors
`ciped' will tolerate before exiting. This counter is reset when the
connection proves OK (more precisely: when a key exchange packet is
received). The default for `maxerr' is 8, like the non-changeable
default in version 0.5.1. A value of -1 will cause `ciped' to ignore
any network errors. In this case, it can only be brought down manually.

If keep-alive pings are enabled, a failure to respond to a ping counts
as one error in this picture. This means that for maxerr=5 and ping=60,
a dead link will take ciped down after five minutes.

Error handling for SOCKS is independent of this option, however. When an
error occurs on the SOCKS control connection (e.g., the SOCKS server
goes down), `ciped' will exit. This behaviour is mandated by the SOCKS5
protocol.


File: cipe.info,  Node: PKCIPE,  Next: Examples,  Prev: Configuration,  Up: Top

The PKCIPE tool
***************

The `pkcipe' program, included in the CIPE package since version 1.5,
eases configuration and running of CIPE links. With `pkcipe' it is not
necessary to use long lived static keys. A public key based scheme
(using Diffie-Hellman key exchange and RSA signatures) is used instead.
`pkcipe' also automatically handles dynamic carrier addresses.

* Menu:

* How it works::        Short overview on PKCIPE.
* Public Keys::         What public keys are and how to use them.
* pkcipe invocation::   Running the pkcipe program.


File: cipe.info,  Node: How it works,  Next: Public Keys,  Prev: PKCIPE,  Up: 
PKCIPE

How it works
============

To start a CIPE link, two instances of the `pkcipe' program, one on
each side of the link, are connected via TCP. They do a key exchange,
yielding a new random key which is used as the `key' parameter for
CIPE. They tell each other their _identity_ and send a _signature_
built with their private key.

Each side verifies the signature using the other side's public key.
Additional parameters are exchanged as necessary. Currently these
additional parameters are only the carrier IP addresses, which the
`pkcipe' program obtains from the system at run time.

After all parameters are set up, `pkcipe' writes an options file
containing the new key and other parameters and starts `ciped' with
this options file. Then `pkcipe' exits and the TCP connection is closed.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Public Keys,  Next: pkcipe invocation,  Prev: How it 
works,  Up: PKCIPE

Public Keys
===========

With PKCIPE, each host has a public/private key pair. The private
(secret) key is kept in the file `/etc/cipe/identity.priv' and never
copied anywhere else. The `/etc/cipe/pk' directory contains the public
keys of all peers. For all key files, the same restrictions on file and
directory permissions apply as for options files.  *Note Specifying
options::.

Each host has an "identity" (may be its host name) by which it is known
to its peers. The public key files are named according to these
identities. Each public key files also contains options (as in a CIPE
options file) for this peer. The peer which has the right private key is
allowed to connect.(1)

A public key pair may be generated with the `rsa-keygen' script.  This
generates two files, one with the public and one with the private key,
the latter having the file name ending `.priv'. The Makefile
automatically does this on installation time if necessary.

The secret key may be encrypted with a passphrase. In this case
`pkcipe' asks for the passphrase every time it starts. This may be
useful e.g. for mobile systems which connect manually to a central host.
The `-p' argument to `rsa-keygen' allows to set a passphrase on the
newly generated secret key. For existing secret keys, the passphrase
can be changed with the command
     openssl rsa -des3 -out newfile -in oldfile
and deleted with the command
     openssl rsa -out newfile -in oldfile
where `oldfile' is the existing secret key file; the result will be
stored in `newfile'.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) Note the similarity to the `ssh' program.


File: cipe.info,  Node: pkcipe invocation,  Prev: Public Keys,  Up: PKCIPE

Running the `pkcipe' program
============================

The `pkcipe' program must be run as _root_. (*Do not* make it setuid.)
`pkcipe' takes the following command line parameters:

`-c HOST:PORT'
     Run in client mode, connect to the given address.

`-t TIMEOUT'
     Set the timeout for each network read (default is 60 seconds).

`-r HOST'
     Give the host where the actual CIPE UDP packets are routed to. This
     option is necessary when the TCP connection is done via a SOCKS or
     other proxy (e.g. SSH redirection).

`-k KEYFILE'
     Specify the private key file. Default is `/etc/cipe/identity.priv'.

`-p PROTO'
     Set the PKCIPE protocol level to use. Currently there exists only
     the protocol level 2.

`-D DEBUG'
     Debug logging flags.

`-E'
     Log to standard error instead of syslog. For debugging purposes.

`IDENTITY'
     (non-option parameter) Specify the identity to use. Default is the
     host name.

The location of the `ciped' command to be run by PKCIPE, as well as the
auxiliary files read from and written to, is currently hardcoded at
compile time.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Examples,  Next: Protocol descriptions,  Prev: PKCIPE,  
Up: Top

Usage examples
**************

Here are some tips, examples and additional information on how to design
a network structure with CIPE and configure the devices accordingly.

* Menu:

* Tips::                General useful tips on CIPE configuration.
* Example 1::           The classic VPN setups.
* Example 2::           A PKCIPE setup.
* Connection modes::    Overview on different carrier network situations.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Tips,  Next: Example 1,  Prev: Examples,  Up: Examples

General tips
============

   * The IP address of a CIPE device and it's UDP carrier _must_ be
     different. Chose a "transit network" (e.g. 192.168 address) for
     the CIPE devices if these don't fit into existing structures.

   * The route to the UDP carrier ("peer" address) _can not_ go through
     the CIPE device. If both are on the same route (e.g. both are on
     the same network, IP-address-wise), add a host route to the "peer"
     address through the right device or gateway.

   * In Linux 2.0, the `route add -host $5 dev $1' in `ip-up' is
     required.  Without it the link won't work. This also means the
     `ip-up' script itself is mandatory.

   * Routes through a CIPE device should be set only in the `ip-up'
     script. Use case selections on `$1' or `$5' if you have several
     CIPE links. Use `route add ... gw $5', not `route add ... dev $1'.
     Remember that Linux deletes any routes through a device when this
     device goes down.

   * If you have a default route, the addresses reachable via the CIPE
     link are routed via the default when the link is down. This can
     defeat the purpose of an encrypted link. To guard against this,
     set a reject route to the affected addresses with higher metric in
     the system startup script.

   * On a system running `gated', gated is the only thing responsible
     for setting any routes and the routes through the CIPE device
     routes belong in `gated.conf' as static routes, or are to be set
     via a routing protocol. To gated, a CIPE link looks and behaves
     exactly like a dial-up link. It is strongly recommended to put
     `gdc interface' in `ip-up' as well as `ip-down' to tell gated
     about status changes.

   * The configuration of both ends of a link is symmetric. One side's
     `ipaddr' is the other's `ptpaddr', and one side's `me' is the
     other's `peer'. Since CIPE 0.5, `peer' is picked up dynamically
     and the real peer may be different from that set in the config
     file (but this config item must still be present, it should
     specify the other end's reverse as a reasonable default).

   * When designing a network structure, draw the CIPE links as if they
     were SLIP/PPP links. Build the routing with these links enabled.
     Then look at the picture as if the CIPE links weren't there, so
     you can see the routing needed for the UDP adresses.

   * Firewall rules which contain a device are independent of the
     device's existence. This means that they can be established before
     the module is loaded and `ciped' run, and that an explicit
     `device' option should be used if the device name is used in
     firewall rules.

   * With PKCIPE, the location and content of the PID files from the
     `ip-up' sample scripts is mandatory as they are used as lock files.
     Omitting these can cause confusion when several instances of
     `pkcipe' run at the same time.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Example 1,  Next: Example 2,  Prev: Tips,  Up: Examples

Example 1
=========

This basic example shows how to connect hosts and networks with
unofficial network numbers through the Internet. Uses for this are
classic VPN setups:

  1. Connecting two unofficial subnets through an Internet link

  2. Connecting a branch office to the head office through a
     one-address dialup

  3. Connecting a mobile host with varying access points


               Internet               Internet
                  ^                      ^
                  |                      |                           hostz
                  |ppp0                  |eth1                  200.0.24.3
                  |200.0.24.65           |200.0.24.1                     |
     +---------routera                routerb         eth0 200.0.24.1    |
     |    eth0        \_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _/      \---------------+-------+---+
     |  10.0.1.1   cipcb0         cipcb0      eth0           |       |
   hosta           10.0.1.1      10.0.2.1     10.0.2.1       |       |
 10.0.1.88                                                hostx   hosty
                                                       10.0.2.5  10.0.2.6

As can be seen from the picture, a CIPE device and another network
device can have the same IP address if there are no overlapping routes
between them.

The CIPE devices are configured like this:

                   routera                   routerb
                   cipcb0                    cipcb0
ipaddr             10.0.1.1                  10.0.2.1
ptpaddr            10.0.2.1                  10.0.1.1
me                 200.0.24.65:9999          200.0.24.1:9999
peer               200.0.24.1:9999           200.0.24.65:9999
static routes      10.0.1.0/24 dev eth0      10.0.2.0/24 dev eth0
                   default dev ppp0          200.0.24.0/26 dev eth0
                                             default dev eth1
routes in ip-up    10.0.2.0/24 gw 10.0.2.1   10.0.1.0/24 gw 10.0.1.1

For case 3, assume `routera' to be the mobile host, think of `eth0'
missing and `ppp0' having a dynamic address. The `routerb' config
remains unchanged. For `routera' simply omit the `eth0' stuff, add the
`dynip' flag for ciped. `routerb' picks up its peer dynamically. This
even works when `routerb' is plugged behind a firewall and has to rely
on a SOCKS5 server for outside access. (Yes, this can be used to punch
holes into firewalls. No, it's not my intention to do anything about
it. Local policy issues have to be dealt with locally.)


File: cipe.info,  Node: Example 2,  Next: Connection modes,  Prev: Example 1,  
Up: Examples

Example 2
=========

This example shows how to set up PKCIPE. The overall setup is symmetric,
there are no designated servers and clients. However, one end has to
accept incoming TCP connections on a chosen port ("server mode") and
the other one has to connect to it ("client mode").

The basic configuration of a link is like this: assuming `routera' has
the address (of the CIPE device) `10.0.1.1' and `routerb' has the
address `10.0.2.1' like in Example 1. Each `/etc/cipe/pk/HOST' file
contains the public key of that host together with options applying to
that host:

On `routera', `/etc/cipe/pk/routerb' looks like this:

     -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
     (here is the public key of routerb)
     -----END PUBLIC KEY-----
     ipaddr  10.0.1.1
     ptpaddr 10.0.2.1

and on `routerb', `/etc/cipe/pk/routera' looks like this:

     -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
     (here is the public key of routera)
     -----END PUBLIC KEY-----
     ipaddr  10.0.2.1
     ptpaddr 10.0.1.1

This is all of the minimum configuration. Note that no `me' and `peer'
options are necessary. These are determined by `pkcipe'. It does not
matter which side runs `pkcipe' in server and which one in client mode.

In server mode, `pkcipe' has to be started via `inetd'. This requires
the following steps:
  1. Choose a port. (This is arbitrary, here I use 963.) Enter this
     port into `/etc/services' on _both_ machines, giving it a name:
          pkcipe       963/tcp

  2. Enter the parameters into `/etc/inetd.conf':
          pkcipe stream tcp nowait root /usr/local/sbin/pkcipe pkcipe
     or if using TCP Wrapper for access control:
          pkcipe stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/local/sbin/pkcipe
     Restart `inetd' after any change.

The other end then initiates the connection simply via
     pkcipe -c SERVER.MACHINE:pkcipe
It is possible to run this connection through NAT (masquerading) or via
SOCKS using a dynamic SOCKS library (`socksify'/`runsocks' script). In
the latter case it may be necessary to repeat the peer address in a `-r
SERVER.MACHINE' argument.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Connection modes,  Prev: Example 2,  Up: Examples

Connection modes
================

Here is in detail how it is possible to build CIPE links between
different classes of carriers. Those classes are, based on how they are
able to reach the Internet:

  1. Direct connection on a static IP address.

  2. Direct connection on a dynamic IP address.

  3. Indirect connection through a SOCKS server.

  4. Indirect connection through a NAT (masquerading) router.

This produces ten different combinations:

`1-1'
     Can be configured statically like in the simple example. Or any
     end may run a PKCIPE server and let the other end connect.

`1-2'
     The `1' end can run a PKCIPE server and let the `2' end connect.
     `pkcipe' gets the right IP addresses at both ends, later changes
     are handled automatically. (1)

`1-3'
     Like `1-2', with a `ping' in `ip-up' at the `3' end.  The `3' end
     does not know its effective (as seen by the other end) carrier
     address, so the PKCIPE exchange produces a wrong `peer' parameter
     at the `1' end. The `ping' corrects that by sending packets with
     the right address. (2)

`1-4'
     Like `1-3'.

`2-2'
     One end runs a PKCIPE server and publishes its current IP address
     using some external service (like a web server or dynamic DNS
     (3)). The other end fetches this address to connect to and proceeds
     like in `1-2'.

`2-3'
     Like `1-3', except that the `2' end uses an external service to
     publish its current address.

`2-4'
     Like `1-4', except that the `2' end uses an external service to
     publish its current address.

`3-3'
     This is not easily possible with the current code because neither
     end knows its effective carrier address (i.e. the SOCKS UDP
     relayer address) before the link is set up, and so neither side
     can send packets to the other. This information is available in
     the `ip-up' script, but transmitting it to the other end would
     need some means outside of CIPE.  It is planned that future
     versions will be able to handle this via extended capabilities of
     PKCIPE; this will also require an external service like dynamic
     DNS with a special setup.

`3-4'
     Like `3-3'.

`4-4'
     Not possible. Neither side gets to know its effective carrier
     address at all.

*Note Dynamic carrier::, for a more detailed explanation of some of
these configurations.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) It is also possible, but less convenient, to configure this
statically: The carrier address of the `2' end should be the special
dummy `127.0.0.1:9', and the `ip-up' script in `2' should have the
`ping' statement as in the sample. See also `1-3'.

(2) Static configuration like `1-2' is also possible.

(3) Dynamic DNS is easiest to handle because it does not need any
external scripts or special software for CIPE, only the dynamic DNS
client. There are some services which provide dynamic DNS free of
charge.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Protocol descriptions,  Next: Misc,  Prev: Examples,  
Up: Top

Protocol descriptions
*********************

* Menu:

* The CIPE Protocol::   Encrypted IP encapsulation used by CIPE.
* The PKCIPE Protocol::  Public-key based setup and key exchange.


File: cipe.info,  Node: The CIPE Protocol,  Next: The PKCIPE Protocol,  Prev: 
Protocol descriptions,  Up: Protocol descriptions

The CIPE protocol
=================

     This chapter is copied verbatim from the earlier documentation texts.

The primary goal of this software is to provide a facility for secure
(against eavesdropping, including traffic analsyis, and faked message
injection) subnetwork interconnection across an insecure packet network
such as the Internet.

1. Overview

This protocol was designed to be simple and efficient, and to work over
existing communication facilities, especially by encapsulation in UDP
packets. Compatibility with existing protocols such as the IPSEC RFCs
were not a concern. The first test implementation was done entirely on
the user level, while the now published one consists of a kernel module
and a user level program.

The CIPE model assumes a fixed link between two peers which exchange
datagrams (packetwise, not necessarily reliable). The most common way
of implementing such a thing is sending UDP messages between them.
(Another would be encapsulation in PPP, etc.)

Nothing that can be parameterized is inside the scope of this protocol
and implementation. This is delegated to either prior arrangement or a
yet-to-be-defined application level protocol. Most notably, this
involves exchanging a shared secret key by now, and it involves choice
of encryption algorithm.

The CIPE protocol consists of two parts: Encryption and checksumming of
the data packets and dynamic key exchange.

2. Packet encryption

Each IP datagram is taken as a whole, including headers. It is padded
at the end with zero to seven random octets so that the total length in
octets is congruent three modulo eight. The padded packet is appended
with one octet of the value P described below and the CRC-32 over the
packet built up so far, up to and including P. (This makes the complete
packet length a multiple of eight octets.)

This packet is then encrypted through a 64-bit block cipher in CBC mode
with an IV as described below using either the static or the sending
dynamic key of the outbound interface (for definition of keys see
below). The default cipher algorithm is IDEA. The current
implementation also supports Blowfish with 128 bit key.

The encrypted packet is prepended with the IV block. The highest order
bit of the first octet of the IV is zero if the static key is used, one
if the dynamic key is used. The remaining 63 bits are random, but the
first 31 of them should not be all zeros (i.e. an IV/packet that starts
with hex 0000 0000 or 8000 0000 is not allowed). Such packets are
reserved for later protocol extensions.

The CRC is over the polynomial

     X^32+X^26+X^23+X^22+X^16+X^12+X^11+X^10+X^8+X^7+X^5+X^4+X^2+X^1+X^0
and represented in network byte order.

The value P is given as follows: bits 6,5,4 indicate the length of the
padding between the original packet end and P. Bits 2,1 are a type
code, indicating which kind of packet this is. The remaining bits 7,3,0
are reserved and must be zero.

The type codes are: 00 - data 01 - key exchange 10 - reserved 11 -
reserved

For decryption, first check the highest bit of the first octet and use
it to select the key. Decrypt the packet, calculate the CRC over the
packet minus the last four octets, compare that with the last four
octets. If valid, strip off the last octet as value P, strip off the
padding as given by bits 6,5,4 of P and process the packet as indicated
by bits 2,1 of P.

3. Key exchange

Every interface is associated with a static key, a sending dynamic key
and a receiving dynamic key. (An interface is an endpoint of a
connection, which may use protocols like UDP for transport but for the
purpose of CIPE are always point-to-point links.) On startup, only the
static key is valid. Encryption uses the static key if and only if the
sending dynamic key is invalid. The value 0 (all bits zero) for the
static key is reserved for future extensions and should not be used.

The dynamic key is set by a dialogue procedure involving messages with
type code bits 01. These are encrypted just like above. The packets
consist of a type octet followed by protocol data followed by a random
amount of padding random data, so that the packet is at least 64 octets
long. A key consists of 16 octets, a key CRC is the CRC-32 over the
key, transferred in network order.

The following messages exist:

NK_REQ: Type code 1, no data: Requests the peer to immediately start a
key negotiation (send NK_IND). This should be sent when a packet is
received encrypted with a dynamic key but no dynamic receive key is
valid. (Which can happen when the receiving side of a connection is
rebooted while the sending side remains running.)

NK_IND: Type code 2, data is new key followed by key CRC. Specifies a
new sending dynamic key for this sender. Requests the peer to
immediately answer with NK_ACK.

NK_ACK: Type code 3, data is CRC of the previously accepted key.
Confirms receipt of NK_IND.

The key negotiation procedure normally runs as follows: The sender
sends a NK_IND with the new key, then invalidates its own sending key.
Upon receipt of NK_IND, the receiver starts using this key as its
receiving key and sends a NK_ACK. When the sender receives NK_ACK, it
starts using the new key as its sending key. If either of NK_IND or
NK_ACK is lost in transmission, no new key will be used. The sender
should send a new NK_IND (with new key) if no matching NK_ACK is
received within a reasonable amount of time (current specification: 10
seconds).

If any of the checksums contained in the key negotiation data
mismatches the contained or stored key, this packet is ignored and no
further action taken.

A sending dynamic key should be invalidated after being used for a
certain period of time or amount of data and a new NK_IND sent. The
process is symmetric and both sides act independently for their own
sending key. The dynamic key lifetime should not exceed 15 minutes and
the amount of data sent using one dynamic key should not exceed 2^32
packets.

Optionally, the key exchange packets can be timestamped. The timestamp
is a 32bit unsigned integer in network order representing the UNIX time
of the sending host, placed in octets 56-59 (starting at zero) of the
key exchange packets. The receiver may be configured to ignore the
timestamp, or it may be configured to reject all key exchange packets
whose timestamp differs from the current UNIX time of the receiving host
by more than a defined amount. It is recommended that this timeout not
exceeds 30 seconds.

4. Security considerations

The packets that actually get transmitted don't carry any usable
information related to the original IP datagram other than its length,
padded to a multiple of 8. This should effectively guard against most
aspects of traffic analysis. The only information visible prior
(attempt) to decrypting the packet is the bit that tells whether the
static or dynamic key was used. Because the static key has a
potentially long lifetime it is expected to be used as rarely as
possible. It is normally used only in the short period of time during a
key exchange. The dynamic key is changed often. These precautions are
there because the application is prone to known and chosen plaintext
attacks and the intention is to inhibit feeding of large amounts of
data through one key.

Because the type code and padding length are encrypted with the packet,
they can not be deduced from the ciphertext. Especially, it is not
possible to determine whether the packet is a data or key exchange
packet. (Usually, the last packet of a sequence of dynamic key packets
followed by a sequence of static key packets is a NK_IND, but the
NK_ACK and a possible second NK_IND can't be guessed this way, so there
is no provision to tell whether the key exchange succeeded.  However,
this is a small but real weakness.)

The CRC serves as a check whether the encryption key was valid - i.e.
some sort of signature for authenticity of the packet. Additionally,
data packets should still have to form valid IP headers (with their own
16-bit checksum) and key exchange packets carry their own checksum as
defined above.

IP packets carry some known or easily guessable plaintext in certain
positions of their header. Potential exploitation of this fact should
be mitigated by the limited key usage described above. The use of a
random IV for each packet means at least that identical (retransmitted)
packets encrypt to different ciphertexts.

The protocol gives only limited protection against replay attacks. A
packet remains valid as long as the key it is encrypted with remains
valid. However, active exploitation is unlikely as the packet carries
no indication of its meaning. (Except for the note about sequences and
NK_IND above. Replay of NK_IND could be dangerous. Possible remedy:
store the last N accepted key CRCs [for large-ish N] and refuse to
accept NK_INDs with the same CRC as an already stored one.)

If the timestamp of key exchange packets is used, it should guard
against replay of key exchange packets. However, this requires that the
clocks of both machines are in sync.

Denial of service attacks are possible e.g. by sending large amounts of
bogus packets, which should affect performance only. A vulnerability
against disruption of the key generation process exists if the sender
is overrun with bogus packets so that it fails to process the NK_ACK,
effectively being forced to use its static sending key for a prolonged
period of time. A possible way out of this problem is to stop sending
data completely after a long burst of static key sends, sending only
NK_INDs and resuming only after a valid NK_ACK has been processed.
Then this attack would become a simple denial-of-service.

5. Practical test, Conclusion

The mentioned prototype implementations, one on the user level and one
as a kernel module, have been in use for several months now on a live
network, where they provide a transparent connection between
subnetworks through an insecure transit network based on UDP
encapsulation. This does work flawlessly. However, it is too early to
draw final conclusions about the feasibility of this approach.

It is planned to replace the simple secret key based key exchange
process described above by a signed Diffie-Hellman scheme, which would
eliminate the need for secret keys.

6. Appendix: New protocol for control messages in CIPE 1.3

CIPE 1.3 has added control messages. These are transmitted as key
exchange messages with a type code of 0x70 or higher. They may, but
don't need to carry a timestamp.

CT_DUMMY: Type code 0x70. Dummy/keepalive message, should be ignored by
the receiver.

CT_DEBUG: Type code 0x71. Debug message. The data is a string which the
receiver should log.

CT_PING: Type code 0x72. Echo request. Receiver should immediately
answer with a CT_PONG.

CT_PONG: Type code 0x73. Echo reply. Data should be copied from the
CT_PING message.

CT_KILL: Type code 0x74. Requests the peer to exit. Data is a string
which should be logged, indicating the reason.

Strings sent in control packets should not exceed 254 octets in length.
They should be terminated with a zero octet, after which random padding
may follow. If the messages are timestamped, the string must not exceed
a length of 54 octets, so a timestamp can be placed at octet 56.

CIPE 1.5 has added the following control messages. Because they are
expected to be evaluated without even knowing if a matching key exists,
they are sent as unencrypted control messages (see next section).

CT_CONFREQ: Type code 0x75. Tells the peer the fixed (compile-time)
configuration parameters. The receiver should compare this to its own
parameters, warn the user on any mismatch, and in any case immediately
reply with a CT_CONF message.

The data in this packet is the following structure (shown here including
the type code:)

(Octet 0    the type code)
1-3         filler, ignored
4-8         the ASCII letters "CIPE"
9           the protocol version, here 3 or 4
10          letter indicating the encryption algorithm ("b" or "i")
11-12       Major/minor number of the software release
13          1 if the implementation uses a correct key parser,
            0 for the broken key interpretation of CIPE <1.4
This structure may be extended in the future.

CT_CONF: Type code 0x76. Identical to CT_CONFREQ except that it does not
solicit a response.

7. Appendix: New protocol for unencrypted control messages in CIPE 1.5

Starting with CIPE 1.5, control messages of certain kinds may be sent in
the clear without any encryption at all. These are sent as a packet
starting with an all-zeros IV (i.e. 8 zero bytes for IDEA and Blowfish),
after which the actual message follows. The packet may carry a
timestamp; the position of the timestamp is calculated starting with
(i.e. including) the all-zeros IV.

Receivers must treat a packet starting with an IV with its first 32
bits zero as unencrypted control message. They should discard with a
warning any unencrypted control message which would affect the proper
operation of the daemon or the keying, especially CT_KILL and all KX_
messages.

A. Appendix: Errata

The IV specification originally said: "The remaining 63 bits are random,
but the first 15 of them should not be all zeros (i.e. an IV/packet that
starts with hex 0000 0000 or 8000 0000 is not allowed)." This is
inconsistent. The hex numbers are correct and the right number of bits
is 31. This has been corrected in the text above.


File: cipe.info,  Node: The PKCIPE Protocol,  Prev: The CIPE Protocol,  Up: 
Protocol descriptions

The PKCIPE Protocol
===================

To be written.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Misc,  Next: Concept Index,  Prev: Protocol 
descriptions,  Up: Top

Odds and ends
*************

   * Ideas and code for this project came from various parts of the
     Linux 2.0.12 kernel, most notably the `ipip' protocol, the
     `new_tunnel' driver, and the `udp' protocol.

   * NOTE: This software contains a data encryption facility. Use of it
     is restricted by law in some countries including France and
     Russia. In the United States of America it is not allowed to
     export such systems without special permission. The IDEA algorithm
     included herein is patented and subject to licensing conditions at
     least in parts of Europe and America (see
     <http://www.ascom.ch/systec>).

   * A note on the Blowfish algorithm: For historical reasons (a bug in
     the original i386 assembler implementation), CIPE uses a variant
     of the Blowfish algorithm where the plaintext and ciphertext data
     words are interpreted as little-endian. This means it is Blowfish
     with an added initial and final permutation. This does not affect
     the cryptographic properties of the algorithm.

   * A Windows port of the CIPE protocol is being developed. It is
     found at <http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net>.

   * To Do list for future development:
        - Profiling and optimization for speed. Check C implementation
          of IDEA for possible optimization.

        - Make IDEA run in constant time to harden against timing
          attack? This would impose a serious performance penalty. It
          is at least possible in C and i486 and higher; probably not
          for the i386. The Blowfish algorithm always runs in constant
          time (at least the assembler implementation).

        - Test various combinations of crypto algorithm and
          implementation selected.

        - Implement all of the attack protections outlined in the
          protocol chapter. (Keeping log of recent keys and
          timestamping is implemented.)

        - Implement dummy packet generation.

   * There is a mailing list for CIPE users and development.  To
     subscribe, send mail to <address@hidden> containing the line
          subscribe cipe-l
     in the message body. Please subscribe before posting to the list.

   * The Encryption HOWTO covers various methods on disk and network
     encryption. See <http://EncryptionHOWTO.sourceforge.net/>.



File: cipe.info,  Node: Concept Index,  Prev: Misc,  Up: Top

Concept Index
*************

* Menu:

* /etc/cipe directory:                   Install.
* autoloading of modules:                insmod.
* Blowfish <1>:                          Misc.
* Blowfish:                              The CIPE Protocol.
* Branch office -- head office:          Example 1.
* Bridging:                              Protocols and ciphers.
* carrier network:                       Routing.
* CIPE link:                             How CIPE works.
* ciped:                                 Components.
* Classic VPN setup:                     Example 1.
* command line options:                  Specifying options.
* Compiling modules:                     Prerequisites.
* CRC:                                   The CIPE Protocol.
* daemon name:                           Program Names.
* debugging level:                       insmod.
* Denial of service attack:              The CIPE Protocol.
* Designing network structure:           Tips.
* device names:                          Program Names.
* devices, number of:                    insmod.
* dynamic addresses <1>:                 Connection modes.
* dynamic addresses:                     Dynamic carrier.
* Dynamic DNS:                           Connection modes.
* Encrypted tunneling:                   Routing.
* Encryption HOWTO:                      Misc.
* Ethernet:                              Protocols and ciphers.
* firewall rules <1>:                    Tips.
* firewall rules:                        Internals.
* gated:                                 Tips.
* Hole in firewall:                      Example 1.
* IDEA:                                  The CIPE Protocol.
* identity:                              Public Keys.
* inetd:                                 Example 2.
* IP address syntax:                     Specifying options.
* IP-in-IP tunneling:                    Routing.
* IPIP:                                  How CIPE works.
* IPSEC <1>:                             The CIPE Protocol.
* IPSEC:                                 Routing.
* Kernel IP forwarding option <1>:       Prerequisites.
* Kernel IP forwarding option:           Internals.
* Kernel versions:                       Prerequisites.
* Key exchange:                          The CIPE Protocol.
* Legal issues:                          Misc.
* link key:                              How CIPE works.
* Mailing list:                          Misc.
* masquerading:                          Connection modes.
* Mobile host:                           Example 1.
* modprobe command:                      insmod.
* module name:                           Program Names.
* module parameters:                     insmod.
* NAT:                                   Connection modes.
* net_device structure:                  Compilation errors.
* network device:                        Components.
* Network layers:                        Network layers.
* Obtaining the CIPE package:            Installation.
* OpenSSL:                               Prerequisites.
* options file:                          Specifying options.
* Packet encryption:                     The CIPE Protocol.
* PGP:                                   Network layers.
* PKCIPE, modes:                         Example 2.
* PKCIPE, over SOCKS:                    Example 2.
* pkcipe, program <1>:                   Example 2.
* pkcipe, program:                       Components.
* pppd:                                  Components.
* reject route:                          Tips.
* Setting routes:                        Tips.
* SO_BINDTODEVICE:                       Compilation errors.
* SOCKS <1>:                             Connection modes.
* SOCKS:                                 SOCKS.
* SSH:                                   Network layers.
* SSL:                                   Network layers.
* To Do list:                            Misc.
* traffic analysis:                      Routing.
* transit network:                       Tips.
* tunnel driver:                         Internals.
* UDP:                                   How CIPE works.
* Unofficial subnets:                    Example 1.
* VPN:                                   Routing.
* Windows:                               Misc.



Tag Table:
Node: Top72
Node: Introduction3645
Node: Network layers4056
Node: Routing5820
Ref: Routing-Footnote-18285
Node: How CIPE works8376
Node: Components9602
Node: Internals10540
Ref: Internals-Footnote-112935
Node: Installation13035
Node: Prerequisites13855
Node: Protocols and ciphers17934
Node: Advanced compiling19677
Node: Install21420
Node: Compilation errors22522
Node: Run23401
Node: Program Names23768
Node: insmod24851
Node: ciped26167
Node: Configuration28166
Node: Specifying options28711
Node: Parameter list30148
Node: Keys in older CIPE34468
Node: SOCKS35741
Ref: SOCKS-Footnote-136830
Node: Dynamic carrier37128
Ref: Dynamic carrier-Footnote-139374
Node: Error handling39437
Node: PKCIPE40621
Node: How it works41259
Node: Public Keys42140
Ref: Public Keys-Footnote-143803
Node: pkcipe invocation43850
Node: Examples45029
Node: Tips45533
Node: Example 148553
Node: Example 251115
Node: Connection modes53287
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-155766
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-256018
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-356073
Node: Protocol descriptions56282
Node: The CIPE Protocol56557
Node: The PKCIPE Protocol70103
Node: Misc70261
Node: Concept Index72693

End Tag Table
This is cipe.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from cipe.texinfo.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Introduction,  Prev: (dir),  Up: (dir)

CIPE
****

CIPE (the name is shortened from _Crypto IP Encapsulation_) is a
package for an encrypting IP tunnel device. This can be used to build
encrypting routers for VPN (Virtual Private Networks) and similar
applications.

    Copyright (C) 1996--2001 Olaf Titz. All rights reserved.

    This program including its documentation is free software; you can
    redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
    Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
    version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
    WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
    General Public License for more details.

    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
    Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

    The author can be contacted through the electronic mail address
    <address@hidden>.

* Menu:

* Introduction::        About routing, VPNs and encryption.
* Installation::        Installing the CIPE software package.
* Configuration::       Configuration.
* PKCIPE::              The PKCIPE public key tool.
* Examples::            Examples of CIPE configurations.
* Protocol descriptions::  How the protocols work internally.
* Misc::                Odds and ends.
* Concept Index::       Index.

 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---

Introduction

* Network layers::      Where encryption takes place.
* Routing::             About IP routing and VPNs.
* How CIPE works::      The encapsulation method employed here.
* Components::          Which pieces of software CIPE consists of.
* Internals::           A look under the hood of CIPE.

Installing the CIPE software package

* Prerequisites::       What you need before installing.
* Protocols and ciphers::  Important compile-time options to select.
* Advanced compiling::  Configuring the compile for different targets.
* Install::             Compiling and installing the software.
* Compilation errors::  If something goes wrong.
* Run::                 Running the software.

Running CIPE

* Program Names::       How the components of CIPE are named.
* insmod::              Loading the kernel module.
* ciped::               Running the daemon.

Configuration of the CIPE software

* Specifying options::  How CIPE gets its parameters.
* Parameter list::      All valid and needed parameters.
* Keys in older CIPE::  An incompatibility between Version 1.4 and earlier.
* SOCKS::               Routing with CIPE over a SOCKS5 relayer.
* Dynamic carrier::     How to deal with dynamic IP address assignment.
* Error handling::      How ciped deals with errors.

The PKCIPE tool

* How it works::        Short overview on PKCIPE.
* Public Keys::         What public keys are and how to use them.
* pkcipe invocation::   Running the pkcipe program.

Usage examples

* Tips::                General useful tips on CIPE configuration.
* Example 1::           The classic VPN setups.
* Example 2::           A PKCIPE setup.
* Connection modes::    Overview on different carrier network situations.

Protocol descriptions

* The CIPE Protocol::   Encrypted IP encapsulation used by CIPE.
* The PKCIPE Protocol::  Public-key based setup and key exchange.

`$Id: cipe.texinfo,v 1.28 2001/02/06 23:00:40 olaf Exp $'


File: cipe.info,  Node: Introduction,  Next: Installation,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top

Introduction
************

* Menu:

* Network layers::      Where encryption takes place.
* Routing::             About IP routing and VPNs.
* How CIPE works::      The encapsulation method employed here.
* Components::          Which pieces of software CIPE consists of.
* Internals::           A look under the hood of CIPE.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Network layers,  Next: Routing,  Prev: Introduction,  
Up: Introduction

Network layers and encryption
=============================

There are several different places where encryption can be built into
an existing network infrastructure, corresponding to the different
protocol layers:

  1. On the "network level": Packets travelling between hosts on the
     network are encrypted. The encryption engine is placed near the
     driver which sends and receives packets. An implementation is
     found in CIPE.

  2. On the "socket level": A logical connection between programs
     running on different hosts (TCP connection; transport or session
     layer in OSI) is encrypted. The encryption engine intercepts or
     proxies connections. SSH and SSL work this way.

  3. On the "application level": Applications contain their own
     encryption engine and encrypt data themselves. The best known
     example is PGP for encrypting mail.

Low-level encryption as implemented with CIPE has the advantage that it
can be made to work transparently, without any change to application
software. In the case of encrypting IP packets, it can be built into IP
routers which usually act as "black boxes" that only route traffic
between hosts, the hosts themselves don't see at all how the routing
works. So an "encrypting router" looks exactly like a non-encrypting
one, without any difference seen by other hosts and applications. It
can thus be used in places where software changes at higher levels are
not feasible.

Low-level encryption has the disadvantage that it does not guard against
intruders on a higher level, e.g. Trojaned applications, bug exploits
in system software or rogue administrators "sniffing" on terminal
devices.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Routing,  Next: How CIPE works,  Prev: Network layers,  
Up: Introduction

IP routing and Virtual Private Networks
=======================================

A "virtual private network" (VPN for short) is a network (1) belonging
to one organization, using its own address range, but overlayed on
existing network infrastructure.  "IP-in-IP tunneling" makes it
possible to build IP-based VPNs on top of other IP-based "carrier
networks", such as the Internet.  "Encrypted tunneling" guards against
passive (sniffing) and active (faked message injection) attacks on the
carrier network. The carrier network sees only encrypted data.

Depending on the choice of protocol, all information the original
packets carry can be encrypted. This includes not only the actual
(payload) data but also the TCP/IP headers, leaving no trace as to
which addresses and services are actually used. "Traffic analysis"
attacks, which attempt to gain useful information out of sniffing by
"who contacts whom", are thus made unfeasible. An even more
sophisticated technique to thwart traffic analysis employs the
injection of dummy packets into the network which carry no useful
information at all but are (at the carrier level) indistinguishable
from real data packets.

IP routing in a VPN situation consists of the routing of the carrier
network, which in most situations is just a standard Internet setup,
and routing of the overlayed VPN. This is easiest when the address
ranges of carrier and VPN do not overlap in any way. It is common for
VPNs to use the 10.0.0.0/8 and 192.168.0.0/16 address ranges, which are
not part of the Internet and thus do never conflict with actual
Internet routing: any address in this range must be local to the
organization using it. *Note Example 1::, for a typical example.

The IPSEC standards define a set of protocols which can be used (among
other things) to build encrypted VPNs. However, IPSEC is a rather
heavyweight and complicated protocol set with a lot of options,
implementations of the full protocol set are still rarely used and some
issues (such as key management) are still not fully resolved.  CIPE
uses a simpler approach, in which many things which can be
parameterized (such as the choice of the actual encryption algorithm
used) are an install-time fixed choice. This limits flexibility but
allows for a simple (and therefore efficient, easy to debug...)
implementation.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) As CIPE is an IP routing application, this manual talks only about
IP-based networks.


File: cipe.info,  Node: How CIPE works,  Next: Components,  Prev: Routing,  Up: 
Introduction

How CIPE works
==============

CIPE encapsulates encrypted IP datagrams in UDP datagrams and sends
them via the normal UDP mechanism.  This is different from standard
IPIP encapsulation. UDP was chosen because this way many different
endpoints can easily be distinguished by port numbers; because an IP
protocol number would warrant a formal registration; and because
handling of UDP datagrams is easier than using a separate IP protocol
number, especially in firewalled setups.  Specifically, UDP can be
handled by user-level applications such as a SOCKS5 relayer. *Note
SOCKS::.

A CIPE "link" always connects exactly two endpoints. In many ways, the
link works like a PPP dial-up link. At present, each link has its own
secret 128-bit key which has to be known by both ends (and nobody
else). This "link key" (called "static key" in the protocol
description) is used to negotiate a frequently changed "dynamic key",
which encrypts the actual data.

Since CIPE 1.5 it is also possible to negotiate the keys via a "public
key" mechanism, similar to the SSH package. This removes the need for
shared secret keys. *Note PKCIPE::.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Components,  Next: Internals,  Prev: How CIPE works,  
Up: Introduction

CIPEs software components
=========================

The CIPE package consists of a kernel module and a driver program.  The
kernel module does the IP packet handling: sending and receiving
packets, encapsulation including encryption. It implements a "network
device" which is mostly handled like any other network device.
Configuration and the whole key exchange process is done by the user
level program `ciped'. *Note Program Names::.

`ciped' looks and behaves rather similar to `pppd'. In particular,
opening and closing a CIPE device is tied to starting and ending a
`ciped' process (one per device), the specification of options to the
daemon mimics `pppd''s setup and `ciped' invokes scripts on opening and
closing a device.

The `pkcipe' program is a separate add-on to the `ciped' driver which
manages keys and other parameters.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Internals,  Prev: Components,  Up: Introduction

Notes on internals
==================

(This section is only relevant to readers who want to understand the
source, not to the regular user.)

The module consists of an output driver, an input driver, the
encapsulation routines and some stuff to keep it all together. The
output driver is largely an adapted version of `new_tunnel' from the
Linux distribution. (1) In Linux 2.0 its actual packet sending is done
via the kernel IP forwarding engine. This implies that (a) forwarding
must be enabled in the kernel and (b) the encrypted packets, being UDP
packets with the source/dest addresses given as "me" and "peer", are
checked against the forwarding (as well as the output) firewall. (If it
doesn't work for you, first make sure that your firewall rules let the
packets pass!)

The input driver is an adaptation from the kernel UDP receiver. To
activate it, ciped has to set a socket into a special mode with an
`ioctl' call. This has to be a connected UDP socket. The
`ioctl_attach(2cipe)' call replaces the socket's `sendto(2)' and
`recvfrom(2)' operations with special versions that do decryption of
traffic internally and only pass key exchange blocks to the user layer.
The whole work of decrypting and rerouting incoming traffic is done
inside a blocking `recvfrom(2)'. This means that unlike normal IP
forwarding, it is called from user mode and the needed CPU time is
charged to the ciped process, although the data never passes into user
mode. `sendto(2)' encodes the block as a key exchange block and sends
it to the peer. The socket should not use `read(2)', `write(2)',
`select(2)' or nonblocking mode (yet).

Before attaching the socket, the operational parameters of the device
have to be set using a `ioctl_setpar(2cipe)' call. The key exchange
process supplies keys to the kernel via `ioctl_setkey(2cipe)'.

The netdevice can only be opened (configured "UP") if it has a
controlling socket. When the controlling socket is closed, the netdevice
gets closed. Conversely, closing the netdevice (with `ifconfig(8)')
closes the socket too. Closing deletes all information that is set by
ciped on the device.

Devices can be dynamically allocated and deallocated using a
`ioctl_alloc(2cipe)' call. The first device always remains allocated as
a hook for the `ioctl' calls.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) For Linux 2.2, this has been merged into the `ipip' module, but the
functionality is the same.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Installation,  Next: Configuration,  Prev: 
Introduction,  Up: Top

Installing the CIPE software package
************************************

The CIPE software package is available via the WWW from
<http://sites.inka.de/~bigred/devel/cipe.html>. It is distributed in a
`tar.gz' file, currently about 138k in size. After unpacking the
distribution, run the `configure' script, possibly specifying options
there. Then run `make'.

* Menu:

* Prerequisites::       What you need before installing.
* Protocols and ciphers::  Important compile-time options to select.
* Advanced compiling::  Configuring the compile for different targets.
* Install::             Compiling and installing the software.
* Compilation errors::  If something goes wrong.
* Run::                 Running the software.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Prerequisites,  Next: Protocols and ciphers,  Prev: 
Installation,  Up: Installation

Prerequisites
=============

CIPE runs under Linux 2.0.* since 2.0.12, 2.1.* since about 2.1.103,
2.2.* and 2.3.*/2.4.* since 2.3.48.  It was developed for the i386
architecture; other architectures _should_ work.

Make sure you have the source, or at least the complete include tree,
of the running kernel installed (usually in `/usr/src/linux'). The
version _and configuration_ of the kernel sources must match the kernel
on which it will run exactly, or else you risk building a module which
crashes.  You also have to use the same compiler version than the one
with which the kernel was compiled.  After reconfiguring and rebuilding
the kernel, don't forget to rebuild the CIPE module too. (This applies
to all externally compiled modules.) Enabling "versioned symbols" on
the kernel is strongly recommended, because it protects against version
skew between kernel and modules.

The kernel needs "IP Forwarding/Gatewaying" enabled in the configuration
for 2.0 kernels. Make sure to enable IP forwarding with
     echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
on system boot with 2.2 or later and recent 2.0 kernels. The `urandom'
device must be available.

A suited version of the module utilities (`modprobe' and friends) needs
to be installed. When in doubt, consult the documentation in the kernel
source.

The PKCIPE tool needs the OpenSSL package, version 0.9.6 or later. If
this is not available, the rest of the CIPE package can still be
compiled and installed as usual.

As of version 1.3, CIPE uses an autoconf-generated configure script to
configure its Makefiles. This script takes the following parameters on
the command line. All of the parameters have defaults which should
suffice for a simple installation.
`--with-linux=dir'
     Path to the Linux source tree (e.g., `/usr/src/linux').

`--with-linux-include=dir'
     Path to the Linux include tree, if you don't have the complete
     source.  This include tree must still contain all files generated
     by the kernel configuration process. Using a complete source tree
     is preferred (necessary on some architectures) because in that
     case the kernel `Makefile' parameters are also used.

`--with-ssl-includes=dir'
     Path to the OpenSSL includes, if the script can not find it.

`--with-ssl-libs=dir'
     Path to the OpenSSL libraries, if the script can not find it.

`--enable-protocol=n'
     Use encapsulation protocol `n'. The supported values in CIPE 1.5
     are 3 and 4. *Note Protocols and ciphers::, for how to choose the
     right one.  The default is 3.

`--enable-idea'
     Use the IDEA cipher (default is Blowfish).

`--disable-debug'
     Disable debugging code in kernel module. Not really useful.

`--disable-dyndev'
     Disable dynamic device allocation. Not really useful.

`--enable-logfacility=x'
     Set syslog facility for `ciped' and `pkcipe' (default and usually
     right is LOG_DAEMON).

`--disable-asm'
     Disable use of assembler code. Not really useful.

`--enable-name=n'
     Set a name suffix for the compilation directory.

`--enable-bug-compatible'
     Use old, broken interpretation of keys. *Note Keys in older CIPE::.

`--disable-send-config'
     Do not send configuration information to the peer. This is normally
     sent on startup to help diagnose mismatches, but it is sent
     unencrypted, which may be unwanted.

`--disable-pkcipe'
     Do not compile and install the PKCIPE tool.

The script then looks for certain parameters (like whether compiling for
an SMP system) in the kernel headers, and it creates a new directory
named like `2.2.6-i386-cb' in which compilation of the module and
daemon will take place. (This would be for Linux 2.2.6 on i386, protocol
3 [the "c"], Blowfish [the "b"].)

The PKCIPE tool and some library components are built in their source
directories, they do not depend on configuration (in theory;
unfortunately `pkcipe' is still tied to the particular `ciped' in use,
but this is going to be fixed).


File: cipe.info,  Node: Protocols and ciphers,  Next: Advanced compiling,  
Prev: Prerequisites,  Up: Installation

Protocols and ciphers
=====================

CIPE supports different versions of the encryption protocol, which in
turn can be used with different ciphers (encryption algorithms). Which
one is used is chosen at compile time with arguments to the `configure'
script.

As of CIPE 1.5, the following options are possible:

Protocol version 3: This is the default protocol and recommended for
most use. It is described in detail in this document. *Note The CIPE
Protocol::. The device works as an IP-only point-to-point device much
like with SLIP or PPP.

Protocol version 4: This protocol uses the same data format as protocol
version 3, except that the packets transmitted contain an
Ethernet-compatible link-level header. With this it is possible to run
payload protocols other than IP, and particularly it is possible to
make the CIPE device part of an Ethernet bridge.  The disadvantage is
that the packets get larger than with protocol 3. It may be necessary
to set the MAC address using the `hwaddr' option to make it unique
across the VPN. With this protocol, the device has a subnet mask and
broadcast address which can be set with appropriate options.

Blowfish: This is the default encryption algorithm, used with a 128 bit
key.

IDEA: An alternate encryption algorithm with a 128 bit key. This
algorithm is patented and may need a licence for commercial use.  It is
included mainly for compatibility with older installations which had
only this algorithm available.

As of CIPE 1.4, both Blowfish and IDEA are available in generic C and
i386 assembler implementations. The assembler versions are used where
possible.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Advanced compiling,  Next: Install,  Prev: Protocols 
and ciphers,  Up: Installation

Advanced compiling
==================

The use of a separate object directory means it is possible to compile
CIPE for separate targets in the same directory. An example would be a
machine running different kernels for testing, etc. In that case you
would have kernel directories like `/usr/src/linux-2.0.36',
`/usr/src/linux-2.2.6', and so on. Running `configure
--with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.0.36' and after that `configure
--with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6' leaves two directories
`2.0.36-i386-cb' and `2.2.6-i386-cb'. You can run `make' _in each of
the object directories_ separately.

Another common case is a setup where one central box compiles kernels
for different machines. You can rename CIPE's compilation directories
with the -enable-name option, perhaps name them after the target
machine:
     ./configure --with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6-bigbox \
                 --enable-name=bigbox
     make -C 2.2.6-i386-cb-bigbox
     ./configure --with-linux=/usr/src/linux-2.2.6-satellite \
                 --enable-name=satellite
     make -C 2.2.6-i386-cb-satellite
     ./configure --with-linux=/mounts/srv1/linux-2.2.5-small \
                 --enable-name=laptop
     make -C 2.2.5-i386-cb-laptop

In the same way distribution maintainers could prepare a set of
differently configured CIPE modules (IDEA vs. Blowfish) for one target.
The names of the module and driver are chosen so that different
configurations can coexist on one target. *Note Program Names::.

Note that real cross-compilation is not possible for now, because the
configure script always assumes the CPU architecture of the system where
it runs.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Install,  Next: Compilation errors,  Prev: Advanced 
compiling,  Up: Installation

Installation
============

A simple `make' command compiles everything. Compiler warnings should
not occur. Do `make install' as _root_ to install the software
components in their final location.  These are a kernel module, named
according to the protocol version and encryption algorithm selected,
and the driver program, which is (as of CIPE 1.3) also named after the
protocol version and encryption algorithm. *Note Program Names::. The
Makefiles accept the semi-standard options `BINDIR, MODDIR, INFODIR' to
specify where the stuff gets installed.

If PKCIPE was compiled, `make install' also installs the `pkcipe'
program and a helper `rsa-keygen', sets up the necessary directories
and generates a host key if none is already there.  *Note PKCIPE::.

You need to create a directory `/etc/cipe' which contains at least two
files, `options' and `ip-up'. You can copy the files from the `samples'
directory in the distribution here, and edit them to suit your needs.
*Note Configuration::.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Compilation errors,  Next: Run,  Prev: Install,  Up: 
Installation

Compilation errors
==================

There is a known problem in that the various 2.0.30 and 2.0.31
pre-releases disagree on whether they have a certain feature
(`SO_BINDTODEVICE'), and detecting this version dependency via the
version number is not foolproof. Apparently, since 2.0.32, this problem
is resolved. If `output.c' doesn't compile under 2.0.*, change the line
     #ifdef SO_BINDTODEVICE
to `#if 1' or `#if 0' as needed.

A similar problem exists in the 2.3.99 pre-releases, where the `name'
part of the `net_device' structure has changed. If an error occurs
during compilation of `device.c' under 2.3.99pre-n, change the
conditional definition of `HAVE_DEVNAME_ARRAY' in `cipe.h' to `#if 1'
or `#if 0' as needed.  Since the 2.4.0 test releases this problem is
resolved.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Run,  Prev: Compilation errors,  Up: Installation

Running CIPE
============

Once installed, the CIPE software is run by loading the module and
running the `ciped' daemon.

* Menu:

* Program Names::       How the components of CIPE are named.
* insmod::              Loading the kernel module.
* ciped::               Running the daemon.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Program Names,  Next: insmod,  Prev: Run,  Up: Run

Program Names
-------------

The module name is `cip' followed by the protocol version as a letter
and the first letter of the encryption algorithm. E.g.  `cipcb' for
version 3 (i.e. "c"), Blowfish (the default). The device names which
this module manages are the module name followed by a number, e.g.
`cipcb0'.

Since CIPE 1.3, the daemon program is named `ciped-' followed by the
protocol and encryption letters, likewise. E.g. `ciped-cb'.  Where this
manual refers to `ciped', assume the real name as given here.

The configuration parameters of kernel module and daemon must match (the
module checks this), but the daemon does not depend (at least not in
theory) on the kernel version. The naming scheme is chosen so that all
possible modules and daemons on one machine can coexist.

The `pkcipe' program is designed to be independent from the
configuration. However, currently it can only handle one version of
`ciped' (i.e. one protocol and cipher version). This will be fixed in
future versions.


File: cipe.info,  Node: insmod,  Next: ciped,  Prev: Program Names,  Up: Run

Loading the module
------------------

The kernel module is loaded into the kernel via the command
     modprobe modulename parameter=value...

The CIPE module accepts the following additional parameters:
`cipe_debug=(number)'
     Set the debugging level. The file `cipe.h' defines different
     debugging levels which are ORed. Set this to 0 if you don't need
     debugging output. Debugging output is emitted via kernel messages,
     which means it usually winds up in the syslog somewhere.

`cipe_maxdev=(number)'
     Set the number of channels this module manages. E.g. with
     `cipe_maxdev=4' the devices `cipcb0' through `cipcb3' are
     available. Maximum is 99. Since CIPE 1.2, there is no need to set
     this, since channels are allocated dynamically.

The module can be autoloaded via `kerneld'/`kmod'. Advanced users will
recognize the following options in `/etc/conf.modules' necessary to
make it work correctly:
     alias cipcb0 cipcb
     options cipcb cipe_debug=0
Note: with dynamic device allocation, aliasing any device other than
`cipcb0' is pointless and autoloading only works when the requesting
application is `ciped' (not `ifconfig' etc.)  This is a limitation
inherent in dynamic device allocation.


File: cipe.info,  Node: ciped,  Prev: insmod,  Up: Run

Running the `ciped' daemon
--------------------------

The `ciped' daemon must be run as _root_. (*Do not* make it setuid.) It
takes as command line arguments an optional `-o file' parameter
specifying an options file followed by any number of individual option
arguments. *Note Specifying options::.

Except in debugging mode, the daemon puts itself in the background and
uses `syslog(3)' for logging messages. Normal operation causes no log
messages except for errors and a notice when the daemon terminates.

Shutting down (with `ifconfig(8)') a CIPE device terminates its `ciped'
process, and vice-versa terminating a `ciped' closes the device. When a
device is closed, its configuration parameters including all keys and
statistics are erased. (This is different from earlier CIPE versions!)
`ciped' does not keep any keys in memory.

When the device comes up, `ciped' spawns `/etc/cipe/ip-up' with the
parameters described in the sample version. It waits for completion of
this script before data can be sent over the device and before it goes
into the background. The script is called with standard input, output
and error to `/dev/null'. It typically sets routes and does some
logging. Since CIPE 1.4, the script is called with all options (except
key) in environment variables named after the option.

Likewise, when a CIPE device goes down, `/etc/cipe/ip-down' is invoked.
`ciped' itself logs the interface statistics when closing.

`ciped' will terminate when an error occurs. This includes a
"connection refused" message from the peer, to be able to detect
non-working peers. This default error handling implies that no data may
be sent over a link unless _both_ ends are up and running, or the first
one to come up will go down again immediately. In particular, the
"ping" command in the sample `ip-up' should not be activated on both
ends of a link. This behaviour can be customized. *Note Error
handling::, for more details.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Configuration,  Next: PKCIPE,  Prev: Installation,  Up: 
Top

Configuration of the CIPE software
**********************************

* Menu:

* Specifying options::  How CIPE gets its parameters.
* Parameter list::      All valid and needed parameters.
* Keys in older CIPE::  An incompatibility between Version 1.4 and earlier.
* SOCKS::               Routing with CIPE over a SOCKS5 relayer.
* Dynamic carrier::     How to deal with dynamic IP address assignment.
* Error handling::      How ciped deals with errors.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Specifying options,  Next: Parameter list,  Prev: 
Configuration,  Up: Configuration

Specifying options
==================

All configuration parameters are processed by the `ciped' daemon.  It
takes parameters from
  1. the default options file (`/etc/cipe/options'),

  2. an options file specified as `-o file' on the command line,

  3. single options given on the command line,

in that order. Which means, parameters on the command line override
those from files, and parameters from an explicit options file override
those from the default options file.

Options are one of the types: boolean, integer, string, IP address, IP
address with port number. Booleans are default false and specifying them
as option makes them true. IP addresses are given as dot-quad notation
or domain names which can be resolved using `gethostbyname(3)'. UDP or
TCP addresses are given as `ip:port', where the port is a number or a
name resolvable by `getservbyname(3)'.

The syntax for specifying options is `name=value' on the command line,
and `name value' (one option per line, no continuations, escapes,
quoting etc.) in the options file.

For security reasons, options files must be given as absolute paths,
and they and all their parent directories must be owned by root and not
writable by group or other, and the options file itself must be even not
readable by group or other (because it may contain secret keys).


File: cipe.info,  Node: Parameter list,  Next: Keys in older CIPE,  Prev: 
Specifying options,  Up: Configuration

List of all parameters
======================

(Req=Required parameter)

Name       Type      Req     
`device'   String    no      Name of the CIPE device. If not given, the
                             system picks a free one.
`debug'    Bool              Don't go background, use stderr instead of
                             syslog.   (Independent of the kernel driver
                             debug option.)
`ipaddr'   IP        yes     IP address of the CIPE device.
`ptpaddr'  IP        (yes)   IP address of the peer device (i.e. the CIPE
                             device on the other  end). For protocol 3.
`mask'     IP        no      Netmask of the CIPE device. For protocol 4.
`bcast'    IP        no      Broadcast address of the CIPE device. For
                             protocol 4.
`mtu'      Int       no      Device MTU (default: ethernet standard MTU
                             minus all necessary headers)
`metric'   Int       no      Device metric (not sure if this is used
                             anywhere...)
`cttl'     Int       no      Carrier TTL value. If not specified or 0, use
                             the payload packet's  TTL. Default
                             recommendation is 64.
`me'       UDP       no      Our carrier UDP address. If either IP or port
                             are not given, the  system picks one and
                             reports it via `ip-up'.
`peer'     UDP       yes     The other end's carrier UDP address.
`key'      String    (yes)   The link key. For security reasons, the key
                             has to be set via an  options file, subject
                             to the restrictions described above. The key
                             should be 128 bits in hexadecimal encoding.
                             (To generate such a beast  from random, try
                             `ps -auxw | md5sum'.)
`nokey'    Bool              Don't encrypt at all, just encapsulate in
                             UDP. Only with this option,  `key' is not
                             needed.
`socks'    TCP       no      Address (port required!) of the SOCKS5
                             server. *Note SOCKS::.
`tokxc'    Int       no      Timeout (seconds) for key exchange. Default:
                             10.
`tokey'    Int       no      Dynamic key lifetime. Default: 600 (10
                             minutes).
`ipup'     String    no      Script to run instead of `/etc/cipe/ip-up'.
`ipdown'   String    no      Script to run instead of `/etc/cipe/ip-down'.
`arg'      String    no      Argument to supply to `ip-up', `ip-down'.
`maxerr'   Int       no      Maximum number of errors before ciped exits.
                             *Note Error handling::.
`tokxts'   Int       no      Key exchange timestamp timeout. Default: 0
                             (no timestamps).   Set this to 30 to prevent
                             key exchange replay attacks, but only if the
                             peer runs CIPE 1.2 or later and both system
                             clocks are reasonably  synchronized.
`ping'     Int       no      Frequency (in seconds) for keep-alive pings.
                             Default is don't send any pings.   The "ping"
                             used here is internal to CIPE, not ICMP ping.
`toping'   Int       no      Timeout for pings. If no answer is received
                             on a keep-alive ping in  this time, it counts
                             as an error, *Note Error handling::.
                             Default is no check for answers.
`dynip'    Bool              Assume the carrier is on a dynamic IP
                             address. *Note Dynamic carrier::.
`hwaddr'   String    no      Set the dummy MAC address used in Ethernet
                             mode (protocol 4).
`ifconfig' Bool              Require an external `ifconfig' call to
                             configure the interface.
`checksum' Bool              Use checksummed UDP carrier packets. Only
                             necessary if the network  does not like
                             unchecksummed packets.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Keys in older CIPE,  Next: SOCKS,  Prev: Parameter 
list,  Up: Configuration

Incompatibility of keys to older CIPE versions
==============================================

Versions of CIPE before 1.4.0 have a bug in the way the `key' option is
interpreted. It is supposed to be a 128-bit hexadecimal number.
However, earlier versions interpret the digits `a' through `f' as equal
to `1' through `6'. This reduces the effective key space from 16^32 (32
hex digits) to 10^32 (32 decimal digits), or 109 bits. Worse, it
introduces bias in the distribution of bit patterns in the effective
key.

This bug needed to be fixed as soon as it was found. Unfortunately the
fix means that old and new versions of `ciped' will read the same key
parameter differently, in other words: keys are not compatible between
1.4.0 and older when they contain any non-decimal digits.

The solution to make them work again is either to upgrade both ends at
once (recommended), or generate new keys which consist only of decimal
digits. A possible method to generate such a key is
     (ps aux|md5sum; ps alx|md5sum) | tr -cd 0-9

Alternatively, the 1.4 or newer package can be given the option
`--enable-bug-compatible' to `configure' to use the old broken key
parser.


File: cipe.info,  Node: SOCKS,  Next: Dynamic carrier,  Prev: Keys in older 
CIPE,  Up: Configuration

Working with SOCKS
==================

With the `socks' option, CIPE uses a SOCKS5 server for sending and
receiving the encrypted data. Since this is UDP, SOCKS4 (which doesn't
support UDP) can not be used. SOCKS5 has a number of authentication
methods. CIPE can use either no authentication or Username/Password.
(1) Username and password are taken from the environment variables
`SOCKS5_USER' and `SOCKS5_PASSWD'.

The SOCKS server is free to pick any IP address, or at least any port
number, as it sees fit. Thus using SOCKS implies a dynamic carrier
address. *Note Dynamic carrier::.

The implementation is not based on a SOCKS library, don't attempt to
link `ciped' with it.

`ciped' periodically checks whether the SOCKS server has closed the
control connection. If the SOCKS server goes down, there is no way to
recover without restarting the client (in this case, `ciped'). This is
a limitation in the SOCKS5 protocol. *Note Error handling::.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) GSSAPI/Kerberos authentication is not supported because (a) I don't
have the environment to test it, and (b) it can specify that UDP
packets be encrypted with its own method, which is unnecessary and
causes only additional load here, and (c) it makes the implementation
much more complicated.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Dynamic carrier,  Next: Error handling,  Prev: SOCKS,  
Up: Configuration

Dynamic carrier addresses
=========================

CIPE can handle dynamically changing carrier addresses. This is subject
to certain restrictions, however.

When a link is already established, one end must notice when the other
end's carrier address changes. CIPE versions since 0.5.1 do this
automatically.

When one end of the link is on a real dynamic IP address (dial-up
device), it must notice when its own carrier address changes. This
requires Linux 2.2 or higher, CIPE version 1.4.0 or higher and the
`dynip' option set.

The trickiest part with using dynamic carrier addresses is finding out
the peer address before the link is established. Each CIPE needs to know
the IP address and UDP port number to send packets to. Normally this is
set with the `peer' option. As soon as a valid packet is received the
driver recognizes the peer address automatically.

With one static and one dynamic (or SOCKS) end, this is fairly easy.
Just make sure the dynamic end has the right `peer' option, and (only!)
the dynamic end has the `ping' in the example `ip-up' activated. The
`ping' will ensure that the dynamic end tells the static end its
carrier address as soon as possible. The static end should use a dummy
`peer' which does not respond to packets normally(1) and the option
`maxerr=-1'. The link is initiated by the dynamic end.

Whether a link between two dynamic carriers is possible depends on the
situation. It must be possible for one end to tell the other end its
current address in _some_ way outside of CIPE, and it should be
possible to initiate an immediate restart of `ciped' this way.  As of
CIPE 1.5, the recommended way to do this is the PKCIPE program.  *Note
PKCIPE::.

The `ip-up' script is always given the correct address in the `me'
environment variable. For dynamic addresses this is the current address
and for SOCKS this is the address of the SOCKS relayer.

In such a configuration, both ends should use `maxerr=-1' and the
initiating end should use the `ping'.

*Note Connection modes::, for an overview on the different sorts of
dynamic addresses and how they can be handled.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) Use `127.0.0.1:9', the discard UDP port on the local host


File: cipe.info,  Node: Error handling,  Prev: Dynamic carrier,  Up: 
Configuration

Error handling in `ciped'
=========================

When the remote `ciped' is down or not available, the local `ciped'
will get a "connection refused" error. Older versions always exited on
this error. This has proven impractical in some situations, so an extra
option has been added: `maxerr' determines how many network errors
`ciped' will tolerate before exiting. This counter is reset when the
connection proves OK (more precisely: when a key exchange packet is
received). The default for `maxerr' is 8, like the non-changeable
default in version 0.5.1. A value of -1 will cause `ciped' to ignore
any network errors. In this case, it can only be brought down manually.

If keep-alive pings are enabled, a failure to respond to a ping counts
as one error in this picture. This means that for maxerr=5 and ping=60,
a dead link will take ciped down after five minutes.

Error handling for SOCKS is independent of this option, however. When an
error occurs on the SOCKS control connection (e.g., the SOCKS server
goes down), `ciped' will exit. This behaviour is mandated by the SOCKS5
protocol.


File: cipe.info,  Node: PKCIPE,  Next: Examples,  Prev: Configuration,  Up: Top

The PKCIPE tool
***************

The `pkcipe' program, included in the CIPE package since version 1.5,
eases configuration and running of CIPE links. With `pkcipe' it is not
necessary to use long lived static keys. A public key based scheme
(using Diffie-Hellman key exchange and RSA signatures) is used instead.
`pkcipe' also automatically handles dynamic carrier addresses.

* Menu:

* How it works::        Short overview on PKCIPE.
* Public Keys::         What public keys are and how to use them.
* pkcipe invocation::   Running the pkcipe program.


File: cipe.info,  Node: How it works,  Next: Public Keys,  Prev: PKCIPE,  Up: 
PKCIPE

How it works
============

To start a CIPE link, two instances of the `pkcipe' program, one on
each side of the link, are connected via TCP. They do a key exchange,
yielding a new random key which is used as the `key' parameter for
CIPE. They tell each other their _identity_ and send a _signature_
built with their private key.

Each side verifies the signature using the other side's public key.
Additional parameters are exchanged as necessary. Currently these
additional parameters are only the carrier IP addresses, which the
`pkcipe' program obtains from the system at run time.

After all parameters are set up, `pkcipe' writes an options file
containing the new key and other parameters and starts `ciped' with
this options file. Then `pkcipe' exits and the TCP connection is closed.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Public Keys,  Next: pkcipe invocation,  Prev: How it 
works,  Up: PKCIPE

Public Keys
===========

With PKCIPE, each host has a public/private key pair. The private
(secret) key is kept in the file `/etc/cipe/identity.priv' and never
copied anywhere else. The `/etc/cipe/pk' directory contains the public
keys of all peers. For all key files, the same restrictions on file and
directory permissions apply as for options files.  *Note Specifying
options::.

Each host has an "identity" (may be its host name) by which it is known
to its peers. The public key files are named according to these
identities. Each public key files also contains options (as in a CIPE
options file) for this peer. The peer which has the right private key is
allowed to connect.(1)

A public key pair may be generated with the `rsa-keygen' script.  This
generates two files, one with the public and one with the private key,
the latter having the file name ending `.priv'. The Makefile
automatically does this on installation time if necessary.

The secret key may be encrypted with a passphrase. In this case
`pkcipe' asks for the passphrase every time it starts. This may be
useful e.g. for mobile systems which connect manually to a central host.
The `-p' argument to `rsa-keygen' allows to set a passphrase on the
newly generated secret key. For existing secret keys, the passphrase
can be changed with the command
     openssl rsa -des3 -out newfile -in oldfile
and deleted with the command
     openssl rsa -out newfile -in oldfile
where `oldfile' is the existing secret key file; the result will be
stored in `newfile'.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) Note the similarity to the `ssh' program.


File: cipe.info,  Node: pkcipe invocation,  Prev: Public Keys,  Up: PKCIPE

Running the `pkcipe' program
============================

The `pkcipe' program must be run as _root_. (*Do not* make it setuid.)
`pkcipe' takes the following command line parameters:

`-c HOST:PORT'
     Run in client mode, connect to the given address.

`-t TIMEOUT'
     Set the timeout for each network read (default is 60 seconds).

`-r HOST'
     Give the host where the actual CIPE UDP packets are routed to. This
     option is necessary when the TCP connection is done via a SOCKS or
     other proxy (e.g. SSH redirection).

`-k KEYFILE'
     Specify the private key file. Default is `/etc/cipe/identity.priv'.

`-p PROTO'
     Set the PKCIPE protocol level to use. Currently there exists only
     the protocol level 2.

`-D DEBUG'
     Debug logging flags.

`-E'
     Log to standard error instead of syslog. For debugging purposes.

`IDENTITY'
     (non-option parameter) Specify the identity to use. Default is the
     host name.

The location of the `ciped' command to be run by PKCIPE, as well as the
auxiliary files read from and written to, is currently hardcoded at
compile time.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Examples,  Next: Protocol descriptions,  Prev: PKCIPE,  
Up: Top

Usage examples
**************

Here are some tips, examples and additional information on how to design
a network structure with CIPE and configure the devices accordingly.

* Menu:

* Tips::                General useful tips on CIPE configuration.
* Example 1::           The classic VPN setups.
* Example 2::           A PKCIPE setup.
* Connection modes::    Overview on different carrier network situations.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Tips,  Next: Example 1,  Prev: Examples,  Up: Examples

General tips
============

   * The IP address of a CIPE device and it's UDP carrier _must_ be
     different. Chose a "transit network" (e.g. 192.168 address) for
     the CIPE devices if these don't fit into existing structures.

   * The route to the UDP carrier ("peer" address) _can not_ go through
     the CIPE device. If both are on the same route (e.g. both are on
     the same network, IP-address-wise), add a host route to the "peer"
     address through the right device or gateway.

   * In Linux 2.0, the `route add -host $5 dev $1' in `ip-up' is
     required.  Without it the link won't work. This also means the
     `ip-up' script itself is mandatory.

   * Routes through a CIPE device should be set only in the `ip-up'
     script. Use case selections on `$1' or `$5' if you have several
     CIPE links. Use `route add ... gw $5', not `route add ... dev $1'.
     Remember that Linux deletes any routes through a device when this
     device goes down.

   * If you have a default route, the addresses reachable via the CIPE
     link are routed via the default when the link is down. This can
     defeat the purpose of an encrypted link. To guard against this,
     set a reject route to the affected addresses with higher metric in
     the system startup script.

   * On a system running `gated', gated is the only thing responsible
     for setting any routes and the routes through the CIPE device
     routes belong in `gated.conf' as static routes, or are to be set
     via a routing protocol. To gated, a CIPE link looks and behaves
     exactly like a dial-up link. It is strongly recommended to put
     `gdc interface' in `ip-up' as well as `ip-down' to tell gated
     about status changes.

   * The configuration of both ends of a link is symmetric. One side's
     `ipaddr' is the other's `ptpaddr', and one side's `me' is the
     other's `peer'. Since CIPE 0.5, `peer' is picked up dynamically
     and the real peer may be different from that set in the config
     file (but this config item must still be present, it should
     specify the other end's reverse as a reasonable default).

   * When designing a network structure, draw the CIPE links as if they
     were SLIP/PPP links. Build the routing with these links enabled.
     Then look at the picture as if the CIPE links weren't there, so
     you can see the routing needed for the UDP adresses.

   * Firewall rules which contain a device are independent of the
     device's existence. This means that they can be established before
     the module is loaded and `ciped' run, and that an explicit
     `device' option should be used if the device name is used in
     firewall rules.

   * With PKCIPE, the location and content of the PID files from the
     `ip-up' sample scripts is mandatory as they are used as lock files.
     Omitting these can cause confusion when several instances of
     `pkcipe' run at the same time.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Example 1,  Next: Example 2,  Prev: Tips,  Up: Examples

Example 1
=========

This basic example shows how to connect hosts and networks with
unofficial network numbers through the Internet. Uses for this are
classic VPN setups:

  1. Connecting two unofficial subnets through an Internet link

  2. Connecting a branch office to the head office through a
     one-address dialup

  3. Connecting a mobile host with varying access points


               Internet               Internet
                  ^                      ^
                  |                      |                           hostz
                  |ppp0                  |eth1                  200.0.24.3
                  |200.0.24.65           |200.0.24.1                     |
     +---------routera                routerb         eth0 200.0.24.1    |
     |    eth0        \_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _/      \---------------+-------+---+
     |  10.0.1.1   cipcb0         cipcb0      eth0           |       |
   hosta           10.0.1.1      10.0.2.1     10.0.2.1       |       |
 10.0.1.88                                                hostx   hosty
                                                       10.0.2.5  10.0.2.6

As can be seen from the picture, a CIPE device and another network
device can have the same IP address if there are no overlapping routes
between them.

The CIPE devices are configured like this:

                   routera                   routerb
                   cipcb0                    cipcb0
ipaddr             10.0.1.1                  10.0.2.1
ptpaddr            10.0.2.1                  10.0.1.1
me                 200.0.24.65:9999          200.0.24.1:9999
peer               200.0.24.1:9999           200.0.24.65:9999
static routes      10.0.1.0/24 dev eth0      10.0.2.0/24 dev eth0
                   default dev ppp0          200.0.24.0/26 dev eth0
                                             default dev eth1
routes in ip-up    10.0.2.0/24 gw 10.0.2.1   10.0.1.0/24 gw 10.0.1.1

For case 3, assume `routera' to be the mobile host, think of `eth0'
missing and `ppp0' having a dynamic address. The `routerb' config
remains unchanged. For `routera' simply omit the `eth0' stuff, add the
`dynip' flag for ciped. `routerb' picks up its peer dynamically. This
even works when `routerb' is plugged behind a firewall and has to rely
on a SOCKS5 server for outside access. (Yes, this can be used to punch
holes into firewalls. No, it's not my intention to do anything about
it. Local policy issues have to be dealt with locally.)


File: cipe.info,  Node: Example 2,  Next: Connection modes,  Prev: Example 1,  
Up: Examples

Example 2
=========

This example shows how to set up PKCIPE. The overall setup is symmetric,
there are no designated servers and clients. However, one end has to
accept incoming TCP connections on a chosen port ("server mode") and
the other one has to connect to it ("client mode").

The basic configuration of a link is like this: assuming `routera' has
the address (of the CIPE device) `10.0.1.1' and `routerb' has the
address `10.0.2.1' like in Example 1. Each `/etc/cipe/pk/HOST' file
contains the public key of that host together with options applying to
that host:

On `routera', `/etc/cipe/pk/routerb' looks like this:

     -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
     (here is the public key of routerb)
     -----END PUBLIC KEY-----
     ipaddr  10.0.1.1
     ptpaddr 10.0.2.1

and on `routerb', `/etc/cipe/pk/routera' looks like this:

     -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
     (here is the public key of routera)
     -----END PUBLIC KEY-----
     ipaddr  10.0.2.1
     ptpaddr 10.0.1.1

This is all of the minimum configuration. Note that no `me' and `peer'
options are necessary. These are determined by `pkcipe'. It does not
matter which side runs `pkcipe' in server and which one in client mode.

In server mode, `pkcipe' has to be started via `inetd'. This requires
the following steps:
  1. Choose a port. (This is arbitrary, here I use 963.) Enter this
     port into `/etc/services' on _both_ machines, giving it a name:
          pkcipe       963/tcp

  2. Enter the parameters into `/etc/inetd.conf':
          pkcipe stream tcp nowait root /usr/local/sbin/pkcipe pkcipe
     or if using TCP Wrapper for access control:
          pkcipe stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/local/sbin/pkcipe
     Restart `inetd' after any change.

The other end then initiates the connection simply via
     pkcipe -c SERVER.MACHINE:pkcipe
It is possible to run this connection through NAT (masquerading) or via
SOCKS using a dynamic SOCKS library (`socksify'/`runsocks' script). In
the latter case it may be necessary to repeat the peer address in a `-r
SERVER.MACHINE' argument.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Connection modes,  Prev: Example 2,  Up: Examples

Connection modes
================

Here is in detail how it is possible to build CIPE links between
different classes of carriers. Those classes are, based on how they are
able to reach the Internet:

  1. Direct connection on a static IP address.

  2. Direct connection on a dynamic IP address.

  3. Indirect connection through a SOCKS server.

  4. Indirect connection through a NAT (masquerading) router.

This produces ten different combinations:

`1-1'
     Can be configured statically like in the simple example. Or any
     end may run a PKCIPE server and let the other end connect.

`1-2'
     The `1' end can run a PKCIPE server and let the `2' end connect.
     `pkcipe' gets the right IP addresses at both ends, later changes
     are handled automatically. (1)

`1-3'
     Like `1-2', with a `ping' in `ip-up' at the `3' end.  The `3' end
     does not know its effective (as seen by the other end) carrier
     address, so the PKCIPE exchange produces a wrong `peer' parameter
     at the `1' end. The `ping' corrects that by sending packets with
     the right address. (2)

`1-4'
     Like `1-3'.

`2-2'
     One end runs a PKCIPE server and publishes its current IP address
     using some external service (like a web server or dynamic DNS
     (3)). The other end fetches this address to connect to and proceeds
     like in `1-2'.

`2-3'
     Like `1-3', except that the `2' end uses an external service to
     publish its current address.

`2-4'
     Like `1-4', except that the `2' end uses an external service to
     publish its current address.

`3-3'
     This is not easily possible with the current code because neither
     end knows its effective carrier address (i.e. the SOCKS UDP
     relayer address) before the link is set up, and so neither side
     can send packets to the other. This information is available in
     the `ip-up' script, but transmitting it to the other end would
     need some means outside of CIPE.  It is planned that future
     versions will be able to handle this via extended capabilities of
     PKCIPE; this will also require an external service like dynamic
     DNS with a special setup.

`3-4'
     Like `3-3'.

`4-4'
     Not possible. Neither side gets to know its effective carrier
     address at all.

*Note Dynamic carrier::, for a more detailed explanation of some of
these configurations.

---------- Footnotes ----------

(1) It is also possible, but less convenient, to configure this
statically: The carrier address of the `2' end should be the special
dummy `127.0.0.1:9', and the `ip-up' script in `2' should have the
`ping' statement as in the sample. See also `1-3'.

(2) Static configuration like `1-2' is also possible.

(3) Dynamic DNS is easiest to handle because it does not need any
external scripts or special software for CIPE, only the dynamic DNS
client. There are some services which provide dynamic DNS free of
charge.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Protocol descriptions,  Next: Misc,  Prev: Examples,  
Up: Top

Protocol descriptions
*********************

* Menu:

* The CIPE Protocol::   Encrypted IP encapsulation used by CIPE.
* The PKCIPE Protocol::  Public-key based setup and key exchange.


File: cipe.info,  Node: The CIPE Protocol,  Next: The PKCIPE Protocol,  Prev: 
Protocol descriptions,  Up: Protocol descriptions

The CIPE protocol
=================

     This chapter is copied verbatim from the earlier documentation texts.

The primary goal of this software is to provide a facility for secure
(against eavesdropping, including traffic analsyis, and faked message
injection) subnetwork interconnection across an insecure packet network
such as the Internet.

1. Overview

This protocol was designed to be simple and efficient, and to work over
existing communication facilities, especially by encapsulation in UDP
packets. Compatibility with existing protocols such as the IPSEC RFCs
were not a concern. The first test implementation was done entirely on
the user level, while the now published one consists of a kernel module
and a user level program.

The CIPE model assumes a fixed link between two peers which exchange
datagrams (packetwise, not necessarily reliable). The most common way
of implementing such a thing is sending UDP messages between them.
(Another would be encapsulation in PPP, etc.)

Nothing that can be parameterized is inside the scope of this protocol
and implementation. This is delegated to either prior arrangement or a
yet-to-be-defined application level protocol. Most notably, this
involves exchanging a shared secret key by now, and it involves choice
of encryption algorithm.

The CIPE protocol consists of two parts: Encryption and checksumming of
the data packets and dynamic key exchange.

2. Packet encryption

Each IP datagram is taken as a whole, including headers. It is padded
at the end with zero to seven random octets so that the total length in
octets is congruent three modulo eight. The padded packet is appended
with one octet of the value P described below and the CRC-32 over the
packet built up so far, up to and including P. (This makes the complete
packet length a multiple of eight octets.)

This packet is then encrypted through a 64-bit block cipher in CBC mode
with an IV as described below using either the static or the sending
dynamic key of the outbound interface (for definition of keys see
below). The default cipher algorithm is IDEA. The current
implementation also supports Blowfish with 128 bit key.

The encrypted packet is prepended with the IV block. The highest order
bit of the first octet of the IV is zero if the static key is used, one
if the dynamic key is used. The remaining 63 bits are random, but the
first 31 of them should not be all zeros (i.e. an IV/packet that starts
with hex 0000 0000 or 8000 0000 is not allowed). Such packets are
reserved for later protocol extensions.

The CRC is over the polynomial

     X^32+X^26+X^23+X^22+X^16+X^12+X^11+X^10+X^8+X^7+X^5+X^4+X^2+X^1+X^0
and represented in network byte order.

The value P is given as follows: bits 6,5,4 indicate the length of the
padding between the original packet end and P. Bits 2,1 are a type
code, indicating which kind of packet this is. The remaining bits 7,3,0
are reserved and must be zero.

The type codes are: 00 - data 01 - key exchange 10 - reserved 11 -
reserved

For decryption, first check the highest bit of the first octet and use
it to select the key. Decrypt the packet, calculate the CRC over the
packet minus the last four octets, compare that with the last four
octets. If valid, strip off the last octet as value P, strip off the
padding as given by bits 6,5,4 of P and process the packet as indicated
by bits 2,1 of P.

3. Key exchange

Every interface is associated with a static key, a sending dynamic key
and a receiving dynamic key. (An interface is an endpoint of a
connection, which may use protocols like UDP for transport but for the
purpose of CIPE are always point-to-point links.) On startup, only the
static key is valid. Encryption uses the static key if and only if the
sending dynamic key is invalid. The value 0 (all bits zero) for the
static key is reserved for future extensions and should not be used.

The dynamic key is set by a dialogue procedure involving messages with
type code bits 01. These are encrypted just like above. The packets
consist of a type octet followed by protocol data followed by a random
amount of padding random data, so that the packet is at least 64 octets
long. A key consists of 16 octets, a key CRC is the CRC-32 over the
key, transferred in network order.

The following messages exist:

NK_REQ: Type code 1, no data: Requests the peer to immediately start a
key negotiation (send NK_IND). This should be sent when a packet is
received encrypted with a dynamic key but no dynamic receive key is
valid. (Which can happen when the receiving side of a connection is
rebooted while the sending side remains running.)

NK_IND: Type code 2, data is new key followed by key CRC. Specifies a
new sending dynamic key for this sender. Requests the peer to
immediately answer with NK_ACK.

NK_ACK: Type code 3, data is CRC of the previously accepted key.
Confirms receipt of NK_IND.

The key negotiation procedure normally runs as follows: The sender
sends a NK_IND with the new key, then invalidates its own sending key.
Upon receipt of NK_IND, the receiver starts using this key as its
receiving key and sends a NK_ACK. When the sender receives NK_ACK, it
starts using the new key as its sending key. If either of NK_IND or
NK_ACK is lost in transmission, no new key will be used. The sender
should send a new NK_IND (with new key) if no matching NK_ACK is
received within a reasonable amount of time (current specification: 10
seconds).

If any of the checksums contained in the key negotiation data
mismatches the contained or stored key, this packet is ignored and no
further action taken.

A sending dynamic key should be invalidated after being used for a
certain period of time or amount of data and a new NK_IND sent. The
process is symmetric and both sides act independently for their own
sending key. The dynamic key lifetime should not exceed 15 minutes and
the amount of data sent using one dynamic key should not exceed 2^32
packets.

Optionally, the key exchange packets can be timestamped. The timestamp
is a 32bit unsigned integer in network order representing the UNIX time
of the sending host, placed in octets 56-59 (starting at zero) of the
key exchange packets. The receiver may be configured to ignore the
timestamp, or it may be configured to reject all key exchange packets
whose timestamp differs from the current UNIX time of the receiving host
by more than a defined amount. It is recommended that this timeout not
exceeds 30 seconds.

4. Security considerations

The packets that actually get transmitted don't carry any usable
information related to the original IP datagram other than its length,
padded to a multiple of 8. This should effectively guard against most
aspects of traffic analysis. The only information visible prior
(attempt) to decrypting the packet is the bit that tells whether the
static or dynamic key was used. Because the static key has a
potentially long lifetime it is expected to be used as rarely as
possible. It is normally used only in the short period of time during a
key exchange. The dynamic key is changed often. These precautions are
there because the application is prone to known and chosen plaintext
attacks and the intention is to inhibit feeding of large amounts of
data through one key.

Because the type code and padding length are encrypted with the packet,
they can not be deduced from the ciphertext. Especially, it is not
possible to determine whether the packet is a data or key exchange
packet. (Usually, the last packet of a sequence of dynamic key packets
followed by a sequence of static key packets is a NK_IND, but the
NK_ACK and a possible second NK_IND can't be guessed this way, so there
is no provision to tell whether the key exchange succeeded.  However,
this is a small but real weakness.)

The CRC serves as a check whether the encryption key was valid - i.e.
some sort of signature for authenticity of the packet. Additionally,
data packets should still have to form valid IP headers (with their own
16-bit checksum) and key exchange packets carry their own checksum as
defined above.

IP packets carry some known or easily guessable plaintext in certain
positions of their header. Potential exploitation of this fact should
be mitigated by the limited key usage described above. The use of a
random IV for each packet means at least that identical (retransmitted)
packets encrypt to different ciphertexts.

The protocol gives only limited protection against replay attacks. A
packet remains valid as long as the key it is encrypted with remains
valid. However, active exploitation is unlikely as the packet carries
no indication of its meaning. (Except for the note about sequences and
NK_IND above. Replay of NK_IND could be dangerous. Possible remedy:
store the last N accepted key CRCs [for large-ish N] and refuse to
accept NK_INDs with the same CRC as an already stored one.)

If the timestamp of key exchange packets is used, it should guard
against replay of key exchange packets. However, this requires that the
clocks of both machines are in sync.

Denial of service attacks are possible e.g. by sending large amounts of
bogus packets, which should affect performance only. A vulnerability
against disruption of the key generation process exists if the sender
is overrun with bogus packets so that it fails to process the NK_ACK,
effectively being forced to use its static sending key for a prolonged
period of time. A possible way out of this problem is to stop sending
data completely after a long burst of static key sends, sending only
NK_INDs and resuming only after a valid NK_ACK has been processed.
Then this attack would become a simple denial-of-service.

5. Practical test, Conclusion

The mentioned prototype implementations, one on the user level and one
as a kernel module, have been in use for several months now on a live
network, where they provide a transparent connection between
subnetworks through an insecure transit network based on UDP
encapsulation. This does work flawlessly. However, it is too early to
draw final conclusions about the feasibility of this approach.

It is planned to replace the simple secret key based key exchange
process described above by a signed Diffie-Hellman scheme, which would
eliminate the need for secret keys.

6. Appendix: New protocol for control messages in CIPE 1.3

CIPE 1.3 has added control messages. These are transmitted as key
exchange messages with a type code of 0x70 or higher. They may, but
don't need to carry a timestamp.

CT_DUMMY: Type code 0x70. Dummy/keepalive message, should be ignored by
the receiver.

CT_DEBUG: Type code 0x71. Debug message. The data is a string which the
receiver should log.

CT_PING: Type code 0x72. Echo request. Receiver should immediately
answer with a CT_PONG.

CT_PONG: Type code 0x73. Echo reply. Data should be copied from the
CT_PING message.

CT_KILL: Type code 0x74. Requests the peer to exit. Data is a string
which should be logged, indicating the reason.

Strings sent in control packets should not exceed 254 octets in length.
They should be terminated with a zero octet, after which random padding
may follow. If the messages are timestamped, the string must not exceed
a length of 54 octets, so a timestamp can be placed at octet 56.

CIPE 1.5 has added the following control messages. Because they are
expected to be evaluated without even knowing if a matching key exists,
they are sent as unencrypted control messages (see next section).

CT_CONFREQ: Type code 0x75. Tells the peer the fixed (compile-time)
configuration parameters. The receiver should compare this to its own
parameters, warn the user on any mismatch, and in any case immediately
reply with a CT_CONF message.

The data in this packet is the following structure (shown here including
the type code:)

(Octet 0    the type code)
1-3         filler, ignored
4-8         the ASCII letters "CIPE"
9           the protocol version, here 3 or 4
10          letter indicating the encryption algorithm ("b" or "i")
11-12       Major/minor number of the software release
13          1 if the implementation uses a correct key parser,
            0 for the broken key interpretation of CIPE <1.4
This structure may be extended in the future.

CT_CONF: Type code 0x76. Identical to CT_CONFREQ except that it does not
solicit a response.

7. Appendix: New protocol for unencrypted control messages in CIPE 1.5

Starting with CIPE 1.5, control messages of certain kinds may be sent in
the clear without any encryption at all. These are sent as a packet
starting with an all-zeros IV (i.e. 8 zero bytes for IDEA and Blowfish),
after which the actual message follows. The packet may carry a
timestamp; the position of the timestamp is calculated starting with
(i.e. including) the all-zeros IV.

Receivers must treat a packet starting with an IV with its first 32
bits zero as unencrypted control message. They should discard with a
warning any unencrypted control message which would affect the proper
operation of the daemon or the keying, especially CT_KILL and all KX_
messages.

A. Appendix: Errata

The IV specification originally said: "The remaining 63 bits are random,
but the first 15 of them should not be all zeros (i.e. an IV/packet that
starts with hex 0000 0000 or 8000 0000 is not allowed)." This is
inconsistent. The hex numbers are correct and the right number of bits
is 31. This has been corrected in the text above.


File: cipe.info,  Node: The PKCIPE Protocol,  Prev: The CIPE Protocol,  Up: 
Protocol descriptions

The PKCIPE Protocol
===================

To be written.


File: cipe.info,  Node: Misc,  Next: Concept Index,  Prev: Protocol 
descriptions,  Up: Top

Odds and ends
*************

   * Ideas and code for this project came from various parts of the
     Linux 2.0.12 kernel, most notably the `ipip' protocol, the
     `new_tunnel' driver, and the `udp' protocol.

   * NOTE: This software contains a data encryption facility. Use of it
     is restricted by law in some countries including France and
     Russia. In the United States of America it is not allowed to
     export such systems without special permission. The IDEA algorithm
     included herein is patented and subject to licensing conditions at
     least in parts of Europe and America (see
     <http://www.ascom.ch/systec>).

   * A note on the Blowfish algorithm: For historical reasons (a bug in
     the original i386 assembler implementation), CIPE uses a variant
     of the Blowfish algorithm where the plaintext and ciphertext data
     words are interpreted as little-endian. This means it is Blowfish
     with an added initial and final permutation. This does not affect
     the cryptographic properties of the algorithm.

   * A Windows port of the CIPE protocol is being developed. It is
     found at <http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net>.

   * To Do list for future development:
        - Profiling and optimization for speed. Check C implementation
          of IDEA for possible optimization.

        - Make IDEA run in constant time to harden against timing
          attack? This would impose a serious performance penalty. It
          is at least possible in C and i486 and higher; probably not
          for the i386. The Blowfish algorithm always runs in constant
          time (at least the assembler implementation).

        - Test various combinations of crypto algorithm and
          implementation selected.

        - Implement all of the attack protections outlined in the
          protocol chapter. (Keeping log of recent keys and
          timestamping is implemented.)

        - Implement dummy packet generation.

   * There is a mailing list for CIPE users and development.  To
     subscribe, send mail to <address@hidden> containing the line
          subscribe cipe-l
     in the message body. Please subscribe before posting to the list.

   * The Encryption HOWTO covers various methods on disk and network
     encryption. See <http://EncryptionHOWTO.sourceforge.net/>.



File: cipe.info,  Node: Concept Index,  Prev: Misc,  Up: Top

Concept Index
*************

* Menu:

* /etc/cipe directory:                   Install.
* autoloading of modules:                insmod.
* Blowfish <1>:                          Misc.
* Blowfish:                              The CIPE Protocol.
* Branch office -- head office:          Example 1.
* Bridging:                              Protocols and ciphers.
* carrier network:                       Routing.
* CIPE link:                             How CIPE works.
* ciped:                                 Components.
* Classic VPN setup:                     Example 1.
* command line options:                  Specifying options.
* Compiling modules:                     Prerequisites.
* CRC:                                   The CIPE Protocol.
* daemon name:                           Program Names.
* debugging level:                       insmod.
* Denial of service attack:              The CIPE Protocol.
* Designing network structure:           Tips.
* device names:                          Program Names.
* devices, number of:                    insmod.
* dynamic addresses <1>:                 Connection modes.
* dynamic addresses:                     Dynamic carrier.
* Dynamic DNS:                           Connection modes.
* Encrypted tunneling:                   Routing.
* Encryption HOWTO:                      Misc.
* Ethernet:                              Protocols and ciphers.
* firewall rules <1>:                    Tips.
* firewall rules:                        Internals.
* gated:                                 Tips.
* Hole in firewall:                      Example 1.
* IDEA:                                  The CIPE Protocol.
* identity:                              Public Keys.
* inetd:                                 Example 2.
* IP address syntax:                     Specifying options.
* IP-in-IP tunneling:                    Routing.
* IPIP:                                  How CIPE works.
* IPSEC <1>:                             The CIPE Protocol.
* IPSEC:                                 Routing.
* Kernel IP forwarding option <1>:       Prerequisites.
* Kernel IP forwarding option:           Internals.
* Kernel versions:                       Prerequisites.
* Key exchange:                          The CIPE Protocol.
* Legal issues:                          Misc.
* link key:                              How CIPE works.
* Mailing list:                          Misc.
* masquerading:                          Connection modes.
* Mobile host:                           Example 1.
* modprobe command:                      insmod.
* module name:                           Program Names.
* module parameters:                     insmod.
* NAT:                                   Connection modes.
* net_device structure:                  Compilation errors.
* network device:                        Components.
* Network layers:                        Network layers.
* Obtaining the CIPE package:            Installation.
* OpenSSL:                               Prerequisites.
* options file:                          Specifying options.
* Packet encryption:                     The CIPE Protocol.
* PGP:                                   Network layers.
* PKCIPE, modes:                         Example 2.
* PKCIPE, over SOCKS:                    Example 2.
* pkcipe, program <1>:                   Example 2.
* pkcipe, program:                       Components.
* pppd:                                  Components.
* reject route:                          Tips.
* Setting routes:                        Tips.
* SO_BINDTODEVICE:                       Compilation errors.
* SOCKS <1>:                             Connection modes.
* SOCKS:                                 SOCKS.
* SSH:                                   Network layers.
* SSL:                                   Network layers.
* To Do list:                            Misc.
* traffic analysis:                      Routing.
* transit network:                       Tips.
* tunnel driver:                         Internals.
* UDP:                                   How CIPE works.
* Unofficial subnets:                    Example 1.
* VPN:                                   Routing.
* Windows:                               Misc.



Tag Table:
Node: Top72
Node: Introduction3645
Node: Network layers4056
Node: Routing5820
Ref: Routing-Footnote-18285
Node: How CIPE works8376
Node: Components9602
Node: Internals10540
Ref: Internals-Footnote-112935
Node: Installation13035
Node: Prerequisites13855
Node: Protocols and ciphers17934
Node: Advanced compiling19677
Node: Install21420
Node: Compilation errors22522
Node: Run23401
Node: Program Names23768
Node: insmod24851
Node: ciped26167
Node: Configuration28166
Node: Specifying options28711
Node: Parameter list30148
Node: Keys in older CIPE34468
Node: SOCKS35741
Ref: SOCKS-Footnote-136830
Node: Dynamic carrier37128
Ref: Dynamic carrier-Footnote-139374
Node: Error handling39437
Node: PKCIPE40621
Node: How it works41259
Node: Public Keys42140
Ref: Public Keys-Footnote-143803
Node: pkcipe invocation43850
Node: Examples45029
Node: Tips45533
Node: Example 148553
Node: Example 251115
Node: Connection modes53287
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-155766
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-256018
Ref: Connection modes-Footnote-356073
Node: Protocol descriptions56282
Node: The CIPE Protocol56557
Node: The PKCIPE Protocol70103
Node: Misc70261
Node: Concept Index72693

End Tag Table




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