<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.4 (Ruby 2.6.8) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-04" category="exp" submissionType="IETF" updates="5176, 6614, 7360" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.13.0 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="RADIUSv11">RADIUS ALPN and removing MD5</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-04"/>
    <author initials="A." surname="DeKok" fullname="Alan DeKok">
      <organization>FreeRADIUS</organization>
      <address>
        <email>aland@freeradius.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2024" month="February" day="26"/>
    <area>Internet</area>
    <workgroup>RADEXT Working Group</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <?line 68?>

<t>This document defines Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation Extensions for use with RADIUS/TLS and RADIUS/DTLS.  These extensions permit the negotiation of an additional application protocol for RADIUS over (D)TLS.  No changes are made to RADIUS/UDP or RADIUS/TCP.  The extensions allow the negotiation of a transport profile where the RADIUS shared secret is no longer used, and all MD5-based packet signing and attribute obfuscation methods are removed.  When this extension is used, the previous Authenticator field is repurposed to contain an explicit request / response identifier, called a Token.  The Token also allows more than 256 packets to be outstanding on one connection.</t>
      <t>This extension can be seen as a transport profile for RADIUS, as it is not an entirely new protocol.  It uses the existing RADIUS packet layout and attribute format without change.  As such, it can carry all present and future RADIUS attributes.  Implementation of this extension requires only minor changes to the protocol encoder and decoder functionality.  The protocol defined by this extension is named "RADIUS version 1.1", or "RADIUS/1.1".</t>
    </abstract>
    <note removeInRFC="true">
      <name>About This Document</name>
      <t>
        Status information for this document may be found at <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>
        Discussion of this document takes place on the
        RADEXT Working Group mailing list (<eref target="mailto:radext@ietf.org"/>),
        which is archived at <eref target="https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/radext/"/>.
        Subscribe at <eref target="https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/radext/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
        <eref target="https://github.com/radext-wg/draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11.git"/>.</t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 74?>

<section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>The RADIUS protocol <xref target="RFC2865"/> uses MD5 <xref target="RFC1321"/> to sign packets, and to obfuscate certain attributes.  Decades of cryptographic research has shown that MD5 is insecure, and that MD5 should no longer be used.  These discussions are most notably in <xref target="RFC6151"/>, and in <xref section="3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6421"/>, among others.  In addition, the reliance on MD5 for security makes it impossible to use RADIUS in a FIPS-140 compliant system, as FIPS-140 forbids systems from relying on insecure cryptographic methods for security.</t>
      <t>While RADIUS originally used UDP transport, additional transport protocols were defined for TCP (<xref target="RFC6613"/>), TLS (<xref target="RFC6614"/>), and DTLS (<xref target="RFC7360"/>).  However, those transport protocols still relied on MD5.  That is, the shared secret was used along with MD5, even when the RADIUS packets were being transported in (D)TLS.  At the time, the consensus of the RADEXT working group was that this continued use of MD5 was acceptable.  TLS was seen as a simple "wrapper" around RADIUS, while using a fixed shared secret.  The intention at the time was to allow the use of (D)TLS while making essentially no changes to the basic RADIUS encoding, decoding, signing, and packet validation.</t>
      <t>The ensuing years have shown that it is important for RADIUS to remove its dependency on MD5.  The continued use of MD5 is no longer acceptable in a security-conscious environment.  The use of MD5 in <xref target="RFC6614"/> and <xref target="RFC7360"/> adds no security or privacy over that provided by TLS.  It is time to remove the use of MD5 from RADIUS.</t>
      <t>This document defines an Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) <xref target="RFC7301"/> extension for RADIUS over (D)TLS which removes their dependency on MD5.  Systems which implement this transport profile can be more easily verified to be FIPS-140 compliant, as those systems can operate without the use of MD5.  This extension can best be understood as a transport profile for RADIUS, rather than a whole-sale revision of the RADIUS protocol.  A preliminary implementation has shown that only minor code changes are required to support RADIUS/1.1 on top of an existing RADIUS server.</t>
      <t>While this document permits MD5 to be removed when using (D)TLS transports, it makes no changes to UDP or TCP transports.  It is therefore RECOMMENDED that those transports only be used within secure networks, and only used in situations where FIPS compliance is not an issue.</t>
      <t>In most cases, using ALPN requires only a few modifications to the RADIUS/TLS protocol implementation:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>A method to set the list of supported ALPN protocols before the TLS handshake starts</li>
        <li>After the TLS handshake has completed, a method to query if ALPN has chosen a protocol, and if yes, which protocol was chosen.</li>
        <li>Changes to the packet encoder and decoder, so that the individual packets are not signed, and no attribute is encoded with the historic obfuscation methods.</li>
      </ul>
      <t>That is, the bulk of the ALPN protocol can be left to the underlying TLS implementation.  This document discusses the ALPN exchange in detail in order to give simplified descriptions for the reader, and so that the reader does not have to read or understand all of <xref target="RFC7301"/>.</t>
      <t>The detailed list of changes from historic TLS-based transports to RADIUS/1.1 is as follows:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>ALPN is used for negotiation of this extension,</li>
        <li>TLS 1.3 or later is required,</li>
        <li>All uses of the RADIUS shared secret have been removed,</li>
        <li>The now-unused Request and Response Authenticator fields have been repurposed to carry an opaque Token which identifies requests and responses,</li>
        <li>The functionality of the Identifier field has been replaced by the Token field, and the space previously taken by the Identifier field is now reserved and unused,</li>
        <li>The Message-Authenticator attribute (<xref section="3.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC3579"/>) is not sent in any packet, and if received is ignored,</li>
        <li>Attributes such as User-Password, Tunnel-Password, and MS-MPPE keys are sent encoded as "text" (<xref section="3.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>) or "octets" (<xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>), without the previous MD5-based obfuscation.  This obfuscation is no longer necessary, as the data is secured and kept private through the use of TLS,</li>
        <li>Future RADIUS specifications are forbidden from defining new cryptographic primitives,</li>
        <li>
          <xref target="RFC5176"/> is updated to allow the Error-Cause attribute to appear in Access-Reject packets.</li>
      </ul>
      <t>The following items are left unchanged from traditional TLS-based transports for RADIUS:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>The RADIUS packet header is the same size, and the Code and Length fields (<xref section="3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>) have the same meaning as before,</li>
        <li>The default 4K packet size is unchanged, although <xref target="RFC7930"/> can still be leveraged to use larger packets,</li>
        <li>All attributes which have simple encodings (i.e. without using MD5 obfuscation), all have the same encoding and meaning as before,</li>
        <li>As this extension is a transport profile for one "hop" (client to server connection), it does not impact any other connection used by a client or server.  The only systems which are aware that this transport profile is in use are the client and server who have negotiated the use of this extension on a particular shared connection,</li>
        <li>This extension uses the same ports (2083/tcp and 2083/udp) which are defined for RADIUS/TLS <xref target="RFC6614"/> and RADIUS/DTLS <xref target="RFC7360"/>.</li>
      </ul>
      <t>A major benefit of this extensions is that a home server which implement it can also be more easily verified for FIPS-140 compliance.  That is, a home server can remove all uses of MD4 and MD5, which means that those algorithms are provably not used for security purposes.  In that case, however, the home server will not support CHAP, MS-CHAP, or any authentication method which uses MD4 or MD5.  The choice of which authentication method to accept is always left to the home server.  This specification does not change any authentication method carried in RADIUS, and does not mandate (or forbid) the use of any authentication method for any system.</t>
      <t>As for proxies, there was never a requirement that proxies implement CHAP or MS-CHAP authentication.  So far as a proxy is concerned, attributes relating to CHAP and MS-CHAP are simply opaque data that is transported unchanged to the next hop.  It is therefore possible for a FIPS-140 compliant proxy to transport authentication methods which depend on MD4 or MD5, so long as that data is forwarded to a home server which supports those methods.</t>
      <t>We reiterate that the decision to support (or not) any authentication method is entirely site local, and is not a requirement of this specification.  The contents or meaning of any RADIUS attribute other than Message-Authenticator (and similar attributes) are not modified.  The only change to the Message-Authenticator attribute is that it is no longer used in RADIUS/1.1.</t>
      <t>Unless otherwise described in this document, all RADIUS requirements apply to this extension.  That is, this specification defines a transport profile for RADIUS.  It is not an entirely new protocol, and it defines only minor changes to the existing RADIUS protocol.  It does not change the RADIUS packet format, attribute format, etc.  This specification is compatible with all RADIUS attributes, past, present, and future.</t>
      <t>This specification is compatible with existing implementations of RADIUS/TLS and RADIUS/DTLS.  Systems which implement this standard can fall back to historic RADIUS/TLS if no ALPN signaling is performed, and the local configuration permits such fallback.</t>
      <t>This specification is compatible with all past and future RADIUS specifications.  There is no need for any RADIUS specification to mention this transport profile by name, or to make provisions for this specification.  This document defines how to transform RADIUS into RADIUS/1.1, and no further discussion of that transformation is necessary.</t>
      <t>We note that this document makes no changes to previous RADIUS specifications.  Existing RADIUS implementations can continue to be used without modification.  Where previous specifications are explicitly mentioned and updated, those updates or changes apply only when the RADIUS/1.1 transport profile is being used.</t>
      <t>In short, when negotiated on a connection, the RADIUS/1.1 transport profile permits implementations to avoid MD5 when signing packets, or when obfuscating certain attributes.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="terminology">
      <name>Terminology</name>
      <t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.
<?line -6?>
      </t>
      <t>The following list describes the terminology and abbreviations which are used in this document.</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>ALPN</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation, as defined in <xref target="RFC7301"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>historic RADIUS/TLS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>RADIUS/TLS as defined in <xref target="RFC6614"/> and <xref target="RFC7360"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>The Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service protocol, as defined in <xref target="RFC2865"/>, <xref target="RFC2866"/>, and <xref target="RFC5176"/> among others.</t>
          <t>While this protocol can be viewed as "RADIUS/1.0", for simplicity and historical compatibility, we keep the name "RADIUS".</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS/UDP</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>RADIUS over the User Datagram Protocol as define above.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS/TCP</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>RADIUS over the Transmission Control Protocol <xref target="RFC6613"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS/TLS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>RADIUS over the Transport Layer Security protocol <xref target="RFC6614"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS/DTLS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>RADIUS over the Datagram Transport Layer Security protocol  <xref target="RFC7360"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS over TLS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Either RADIUS/TLS or RADIUS/DTLS.  This terminology is used instead of alternatives such as "RADIUS/(D)TLS", or "either RADIUS/TLS or RADIUS/DTLS".</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>RADIUS/1.1</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>The transport profile defined in this document, which stands for "RADIUS version 1.1".  We use RADIUS/1.1 to refer interchangeably to TLS and DTLS transport.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>TLS</li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>The Transport Layer Security protocol.  Generally when we refer to TLS in this document, we are referring interchangeably to TLS or DTLS transport.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </section>
    <section anchor="the-radius11-transport-profile-for-radius">
      <name>The RADIUS/1.1 Transport profile for RADIUS</name>
      <t>This section describes the ALPN transport profile in detail.  It first gives the name used for ALPN, and then describes how ALPN is configured and negotiated by client and server.  It then concludes by discussing TLS issues such as what to do for ALPN during session resumption.</t>
      <section anchor="alpn-name-for-radius11">
        <name>ALPN Name for RADIUS/1.1</name>
        <t>The ALPN name defined for RADIUS/1.1 is as follows:</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>"radius/1.1"</t>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>The protocol defined by this specification.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Where ALPN is not configured or is not received in a TLS connection, systems supporting ALPN MUST NOT use RADIUS/1.1.</t>
        <t>Where ALPN is configured, the client signals support by sending the ALPN string "radius/1.1".  The server can accept this proposal and reply with the ALPN string "radius/1.1", or reject this proposal, and not reply with any ALPN string.  A full walk-through of the protocol negotiation is given below.</t>
        <t>Implementations MUST signal ALPN "radius/1.1" in order for it to be used in a connection.  Implementations MUST NOT have an administrative flag which causes a connection to use "radius/1.1", but which does not signal that protocol via ALPN.</t>
        <t>The next step in defining RADIUS/1.1 is to review how ALPN works.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="operation-of-alpn">
        <name>Operation of ALPN</name>
        <t>In order to provide a high-level description of ALPN for readers who are not familiar with the details of <xref target="RFC7301"/>, we provide a brief overview here.</t>
        <t>Once a system has been configured to support ALPN, it is negotiated on a per-connection basis as per <xref target="RFC7301"/>.  The negotiation proceeds as follows:</t>
        <t>1) The client sends an ALPN extension in the ClientHello.  This extension lists one or more application protocols by name.  These names are the protocols which the client is claiming to support.</t>
        <t>2) The server receives the extension, and validates the application protocol name(s) against the list it has configured.</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>If the server finds no acceptable common protocols (ALPN or otherwise), it closes the connection.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>3) Otherwise, the server returns a ServerHello with either no ALPN extension, or an ALPN extension containing only one named application protocol, which needs to be one of the names proposed by the client.</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>If the client did not signal ALPN, or the server does not accept the ALPN proposal, the server does not reply with any ALPN name.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>4) The client receives the ServerHello, validates the received application protocol (if any) against the name(s) it sent, and records which application protocol was chosen.</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>This check is necessary in order for the client to both know which protocol the server has selected, and to validate that the protocol sent by the server is one which is acceptable to the client.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The next step in defining RADIUS/1.1 is to define how ALPN is configured on the client and server, and to give more detailed requirements on its configuration and operation.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="configuration-of-alpn-for-radius11">
        <name>Configuration of ALPN for RADIUS/1.1</name>
        <t>Clients or servers supporting this specification can do so by extending their TLS configuration through the addition of a new configuration flag, called "Version" here.  The exact name given below does not need to be used, but it is RECOMMENDED that administrative interfaces or programming interfaces use a similar name in order to provide consistent terminology.  This flag controls how the implementation signals use of this protocol via ALPN.</t>
        <t>When set, this flag contains the list of permitted ALPN versions in humanly readable form.  The implementation may allow multiple values in one variable, or allow multiple variables, or instead use two configuration for "minimum" and "maximum" allowed versions.  We assume here that there is one variable, which can be configured as:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>unset,</li>
          <li>containing value "1.0" - require historic RADIUS/TLS</li>
          <li>containing values "1.0" and "1.1" - allow either historic RADIUS/TLS or RADIUS/1.1</li>
          <li>containing value "1.1" - require RADIUS/1.1.</li>
        </ul>
        <t>This configuration is also extensible to future ALPN names if that extension becomes necessary.  New versions can simply be added to the list.</t>
        <t>A more detailed definition of the variable and the meaning of the values is given below.</t>
        <t>Configuration Flag Name</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>Version</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Values</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>When the flag is unset, ALPN is not used.</t>
            <t>Any connection MUST use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
            <t>This flag is included here only for logical completeness.  Implementations of this specification SHOULD be configured to always use ALPN.</t>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>Client Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>The client MUST NOT send any protocol name via ALPN.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
                <t>Server Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>The server MUST NOT signal any protocol name via ALPN.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives an ALPN name from the client, it MUST NOT close the connection.  Instead, it simply does not reply with ALPN, and finishes the TLS connection setup as defined for historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>Note that if a client sends "radius/1.1", the client will see that the server failed to acknowledge this request, and will close the connection.  For any other client configuration, the connection will use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>"1.0" - send "radius/1.0", and use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>When the "Version" configuration flag is set to "1.0", the system will send the ALPN string "radius/1.0".  However, everything else about the connection is identical to historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                <t>This behavior is used to help administrators distinguish between systems which can use ALPN from ones which cannot use ALPN.  The act of sending the name "radius/1.0" is an implicit statement that the system is likely to also support "radius/1.1".</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>Client Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>The client MUST send only the ALPN string "radius/1.0".</t>
                    <t>The client will receive either no ALPN response from the server, or an ALPN response of "radius/1.0", or a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120).</t>
                    <t>If the connection remains open, the client MUST use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
                <t>Server Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>If the server receives no ALPN name from the client, it MUST use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives an ALPN name "radius/1.0" from the client, it MUST reply with ALPN "radius/1.0", and then use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>Note that the server may receive multiple ALPN names from the client.  So long as the server receives "radius/1.0", it can reply with "radius/1.0".</t>
                    <t>If the server receives one or more ALPN names from the client, but none of the names match "radius/1.0", it MUST reply with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and then close the TLS connection.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>"1.0, 1.1" - Negotiate historic RADIUS/TLS or RADIUS/1.1</t>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>This value MUST be the default setting for implementations which support this specification.</t>
                <t>Connections MAY use either historic RADIUS/TLS or RADIUS/1.1.</t>
                <t>Client Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>The client MUST send both "radius/1.0" and "radius/1.1" via ALPN.</t>
                    <t>If the client receives no ALPN response from the server, or an ALPN response of "radius/1.0", it MUST use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>If the client receives an ALPN response of "radius/1.1" from the server, it MUST use RADIUS/1.1.</t>
                    <t>Otherwise the client receives a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) from the server, and the connection is terminated.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
                <t>Server Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>If the server receives no ALPN name from the client, it MUST use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives one or more ALPN names from the client which include the ALPN name "radius/1.1", it MUST reply with ALPN "radius/1.1", and then use RADIUS/1.1.</t>
                    <t>Else, if the server receives one or more ALPN names from the client which include the ALPN name "radius/1.0" but not "radius/1.1", it MUST reply with ALPN "radius/1.0", and then use historic RADIUS/TLS.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives one or more ALPN names from the client, but none of the names match "radius/1.0" or "radius/1.1", it MUST reply with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and then MUST close the TLS connection.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>"1.1" -  Require the use of RADIUS/1.1</t>
            <t>Any connection MUST use RADIUS/1.1</t>
            <ul empty="true">
              <li>
                <t>Client Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>The client MUST send only the ALPN string "radius/1.1".</t>
                    <t>If the client receives no ALPN response from the server, or an ALPN response of anything other than "radius/1.1", it MUST close the TLS connection.</t>
                    <t>If the client receives an ALPN response of "radius/1.1" from the server, it MUST use RADIUS/1.1.</t>
                    <t>Otherwise the client receives a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) from the server, and the connection is terminated.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
                <t>Server Behavior</t>
                <ul empty="true">
                  <li>
                    <t>If the server receives no ALPN name from the client, it MAY reply with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and MUST close the TLS connection.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives an ALPN name "radius/1.0" from the client, it MUST reply with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and then MUST close the TLS connection.</t>
                    <t>Note that the server may receive multiple ALPN names from the client.  So long as the server receives an ALPN name "radius/1.1" from the client, it is deemed to match, and the connection MUST use RADIUS/1.1.</t>
                    <t>If the server receives one or more ALPN names from the client, but none of the names match "radius/1.1", it MUST reply with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and then close the TLS connection.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>By requiring the the default configuration to allow historic RADIUS/TLS, implementations will be compatible with both historic RADIUS/TLS connections, and with RADIUS/1.1 connections.  It is therefore the only default setting which will not result in connection errors.</t>
        <t>Once administrators verify that both ends of a connection support RADIUS/1.1, and that it has been negotiated successfully, the configurations SHOULD be updated to require RADIUS/1.1.  The connections should be monitored after this change to ensure that the systems continue to remain connected.  If there are connection issues, then the configuration should be reverted to using allow both "radius/1.0" and "radius/1.1" ALPN strings, until such time as the connection problems have been resolved.</t>
        <t>We reiterate that systems implementing this specification, but which are configured with setting that forbid RADIUS/1.1, will behave exactly the same as systems which do not implement this specification.  Systems implementing RADIUS/1.1 SHOULD NOT be configured by default to forbid that protocol.  That setting exists mainly for completeness, and to give administrators the flexibility to control their own deployments.</t>
        <t>While <xref target="RFC7301"/> does not discuss the possibility of the server sending a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) when the client does not use ALPN, we believe that this behavior is useful.  As such, servers MAY send a a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) when the client does not use ALPN.</t>
        <t>However, some TLS implementations may not permit an application to send a TLS alert of its choice, at a time of its choice.   This limitation means that it is not always possible for an application to send the TLS alert as discussed in the previous section.  The impact is that an implementation may attempt to connect, and then see that the connection fails, but not be able to determine why that failure has occurred.  Implementers and administrators should be aware that unexplained connection failures may be due to ALPN negotiation issues.</t>
        <t>The server MAY send this alert during the ClientHello, if it requires ALPN but does not receive it.  That is, there may not always be a need to wait for the TLS connection to be fully established before realizing that no common ALPN protocol can be negotiated.</t>
        <t>Where the client does perform signaling via ALPN and the server determines that there is no compatible application protocol name, then as per <xref section="3.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7301"/>, it MUST send a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120).</t>
        <t>Whether or not the server sent a TLS alert for no compatible ALPN, it MUST close the connection.  The above requirements on ALPN apply to both new sessions, and to resumed sessions.</t>
        <t>In contrast, there is no need for the client to signal that there are no compatible application protocol names.  The client sends zero or more protocol names, and the server responds as above.  From the point of view of the client, the list it sent results in either a connection failure, or a connection success.</t>
        <t>It is RECOMMENDED that the server logs a descriptive error in this situation, so that an administrator can determine why a particular connection failed.  The log message SHOULD include information about the other end of the connection, such as IP address, certificate information, etc.  Similarly, when the client receives a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" it SHOULD log a descriptive error message.  Such error messages are critical for helping administrators to diagnose connectivity issues.</t>
        <section anchor="using-protocol-error-for-application-signaling">
          <name>Using Protocol-Error for Application Signaling</name>
          <t>When it is not possible to send a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), then the only remaining method for one party to signal the other is to send application data inside of the TLS tunnel.  Therefore, for the situation when a one end of a connection determines that it requires ALPN while the other end does not support ALPN, the end requiring ALPN MAY send a Protocol-Error packet inside of the tunnel, and then close the connection.  If this is done, the Response Authenticator field of the Protocol-Error packet MUST be all zeros, as this packet is not in response to any request.  The Protocol-Error packet SHOULD contain a Reply-Message attribute with a textual string describing the cause of the error.  The packet SHOULD also contain an Error-Cause attribute, with value Unsupported Extension (406).</t>
          <t>An implementation sending this packet could bypass any RADIUS encoder, and simply write this packet as a predefined, fixed set of data to the TLS connection.  That process would likely be simpler than trying to call the normal RADIUS packet encoder to encode a reply packet without a request packet, and then trying to force the Response Authenticator to be all zeros.</t>
          <t>As this packet is an unexpected response packet, existing implementations will ignore it.  They may either log an error and close the connection, or they may discard the packet and leave the connection open.  If the connection remains open, the end supporting ALPN will close the connection, so there will be no side effects from sending the packet.  Therefore, while using a Protocol-Error packet in this way is unusual, it is both informative and safe.</t>
          <t>The purpose of this packet is not to have the other end of the connection automatically determine what went wrong, and fix it.  Instead, the packet is intended to be (eventually) seen by an administrator, who can then take remedial action.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="tabular-summary">
          <name>Tabular Summary</name>
          <t>The preceding text gives a large number of recommendations.  In order to give a simpler description of the outcomes, a table of possible behaviors for client/server values of the Version flag is given below.  This table and the names given below are for informational and descriptive purposes only.</t>
          <figure>
            <name>Possible outcomes for ALPN Negotiation</name>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
                             Server
             no ALPN  |   1.0    | 1.0, 1.1 |    1.1
Client    |--------------------------------------------
----------|
No ALPN   |   RadSec     RadSec     RadSec     Close-S
          |
1.0       |   RadSec     1.0        1.0        Alert
          |
1.0, 1.1  |   RadSec     1.0        1.1        1.1
          |
1.1       |   Close-C    Alert      1.1        1.1
]]></artwork>
          </figure>
          <t>The table entries above have the following meaning:</t>
          <ul empty="true">
            <li>
              <t>Alert</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>The client sends ALPN, and the server does not agree to the clients ALPN proposal.  The server replies with a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120), and then closes the TLS connection.</t>
                  <t>As the server replies with a TLS alert, the Protocol-Error packet is not used here.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>Close-C</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>The client sends ALPN, but the server does not respond with ALPN.  The client closes the connection.</t>
                  <t>As noted in the previous section, the client MAY send a Protocol-Error packet to the server before closing the connection.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>Close-S</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>The client does not send ALPN string(s), but the server requires ALPN.  The server closes the connection.</t>
                  <t>As noted in the previous section, the server MAY send a Protocol-Error packet to the client before closing the connection.  The server MAY also send a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) before closing the connection.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>RadSec</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>Historic RADIUS/TLS is used.  Either the client sends no ALPN proposal, or the client sends an ALPN proposal, and the server never replies with an ALPN string.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>1.0</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>The client sends the ALPN string "radius/1.0".  The server responds with the ALPN string "radius/1.0", and then historic RADIUS/TLS is used.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>1.1</t>
              <ul empty="true">
                <li>
                  <t>The client sends the ALPN string "radius/1.1.  The server ACKs with "radius/1.1", and then RADIUS/1.1 is used.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>Implementations should note that this table may be extended in future specifications.  The above text is informative, and does not mandate that only the above ALPN strings are used.  The actual ALPN negotiation takes place as defined in the preceding sections of this document, and in <xref target="RFC7301"/>.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="miscellaneous-items">
        <name>Miscellaneous Items</name>
        <t>Implementations of this specification MUST require TLS version 1.3 or later.</t>
        <t>The use of the ALPN string "radius/1.0" is technically unnecessary, as it is largely equivalent to not sending any ALPN string.  However, that value is useful for RADIUS administrators.  A system which sends the ALPN string "radius/1.0" is explicitly signaling that it supports ALPN negotiation, but that it is not currently configured to support RADIUS/1.1.  That information can be used by administrators to determine which devices are capable of ALPN.</t>
        <t>The use of the ALPN string "radius/1.0" also permits server implementations to send a TLS alert of "no_application_protocol" (120) when it cannot find a matching ALPN string.  Experiments with TLS library implementations suggest that in some cases it is possible to send that TLS alert when ALPN is not used.  However, such a scenario is not discussed on <xref target="RFC7301"/>, and is likely not universal.  As a result, ALPN as defined in <xref target="RFC7301"/> permits servers to send that TLS alert in situations where it would be otherwise forbidden, or perhaps unsupported.</t>
        <t>Finally, defining ALPN strings for all known RADIUS versions will make it easier to support additional ALPN strings if that functionality is ever needed.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="session-resumption">
        <name>Session Resumption</name>
        <t><xref section="3.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7301"/> states that ALPN is negotiated on each connection, even if session resumption is used:</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>When session resumption or session tickets <xref target="RFC5077"/> are used, the previous contents of this extension are irrelevant, and only the values in the new handshake messages are considered.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>In order to prevent down-bidding attacks, RADIUS systems which negotiate the "radius/1.1" protocol MUST associate that information with the session ticket, and enforce the use of "radius/1.1" on session resumption.  That is, if "radius/1.1" was negotiated for a session, both clients and servers MUST behave as if the RADIUS/1.1 flag was set to "require" for that session.</t>
        <t>A client which is resuming a "radius/1.1" connection MUST advertise only the capability to do "radius/1.1" for the resumed session.  That is, even if the client configuration allows historic RADIUS/TLS for new connections, it MUST signal "radius/1.1" when resuming a session which had previously negotiated "radius/1.1".</t>
        <t>Similarly, when a server does resumption for a session which had previously negotiated "radius/1.1",   If the client attempts to resume the sessions without signaling the use of RADIUS/1.1, the server MUST close the connection.  The server MUST send an appropriate TLS error, and also SHOULD log a descriptive message as described above.</t>
        <t>In contrast, there is no requirement for a client or server to force the use of <xref target="RFC6614"/> RADIUS/TLS on session resumption.  Clients are free to signal support for "radius/1.1" on resumed sessions, even if the original session did not negotiate "radius/1.1".  Servers are free to accept this request, and to negotiate the use of "radius/1.1" for such sessions.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="radius11-packet-and-attribute-formats">
      <name>RADIUS/1.1 Packet and Attribute Formats</name>
      <t>This section describes the application-layer data which is sent inside of (D)TLS when using the RADIUS/1.1 protocol.  Unless otherwise discussed herein, the application-layer data is unchanged from traditional RADIUS.  This protocol is only used when "radius/1.1" has been negotiated by both ends of a connection.</t>
      <section anchor="radius11-packet-format">
        <name>RADIUS/1.1 Packet Format</name>
        <t>When RADIUS/1.1 is used, the RADIUS header is modified from standard RADIUS.  While the header has the same size, some fields have different meaning.  The Identifier and the Request / Response Authenticator fields are no longer used in RADIUS/1.1.  Any operations which depend on those fields MUST NOT be performed.  As packet signing and security are handled by the TLS layer, RADIUS-specific cryptographic primitives are no longer in RADIUS/1.1.</t>
        <t>A summary of the RADIUS/1.1 packet format is shown below.  The fields are transmitted from left to right.</t>
        <figure anchor="Header">
          <name>The RADIUS/1.1 Packet Format</name>
          <artwork><![CDATA[
 0                   1                   2                   3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|     Code      |  Reserved-1   |            Length             |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|                             Token                             |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|                                                               |
|                           Reserved-2                          |
|                                                               |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|  Attributes ...
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
]]></artwork>
        </figure>
        <t>Code</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Code field is one octet, and identifies the type of RADIUS packet.</t>
            <t>The meaning of the Code field is unchanged from previous RADIUS specifications.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Reserved-1</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Reserved-1 field is one octet.</t>
            <t>This field was previously used as the "Identifier" in historic RADIUS/TLS.  It is now unused, as the Token field replaces it both as the way to identify requests, and to associate responses with requests.</t>
            <t>When sending packets, the Reserved-1 field MUST be set to zero.  The Reserved-1 field MUST be ignored when receiving a packet.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Length</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Length field is two octets.</t>
            <t>The meaning of the Length field is unchanged from previous RADIUS specifications.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Token</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Token field is four octets, and aids in matching requests and
replies, as a replacement for the Identifier field.  The RADIUS server can detect a duplicate request if it receives
the same Token value for two packets on a particular connection.</t>
            <t>All values are possible for the Token field.  Implementations MUST treat the Token as an opaque blob when comparing Token values.</t>
            <t>Further requirements are given below in <xref target="sending-packets"/> for sending packets, and in <xref target="receiving-packets"/> for receiving packets.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Reserved-2</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Reserved-2 field is twelve (12) octets in length.</t>
            <t>These octets MUST be set to zero when sending a packet.</t>
            <t>These octets MUST be ignored when receiving a packet.</t>
            <t>These octets are reserved for future protocol extensions.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="the-token-field">
        <name>The Token Field</name>
        <t>This section describes in more detail how the Token field is used.</t>
        <section anchor="sending-packets">
          <name>Sending Packets</name>
          <t>The Token field MUST change for every new unique packet which is sent on the same connection. For DTLS transport, it is possible to retransmit duplicate packets, in which case the Token value MUST NOT be changed when a duplicate packet is (re)sent.  When the contents of a retransmitted packet change for any reason (such changing Acct-Delay-Time as discussed in <xref section="5.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2866"/>), the Token value MUST be changed.  Note that on reliable transports, packets are never retransmitted, and therefore every new packet which is sent has a unique Token value.</t>
          <t>We note that in previous RADIUS specifications, the Identifier field could have the same value for different types of packets on the same connection, e.g. for Access-Request and Accounting-Request.  This overlap required that RADIUS clients and servers track the Identifier field, not only on a per-connection basis, but also on a per-packet type basis.  This behavior adds complexity to implementations.</t>
          <t>In contrast, the Token field MUST be managed on a per-connection basis, and MUST NOT be managed for individual packet Codes.  That is, if a system sends multiple packet Codes over the same connection, the Token field MUST be managed independent of any packet Code.  For An implementation which sends both (for example) Access-Request and Accounting-Requests on the same connection is not compliant with this specification.</t>
          <t>Systems generating the Token can do so via any method they choose.  For simplicity, it is RECOMMENDED that the Token values be generated from a 32-bit counter which is unique to each connection.  Such a counter SHOULD be initialized to a random value, taken from a random number generator, whenever a new connection is opened.  The counter can then be incremented for every new packet that the client sends.</t>
          <t>The purpose for initializing the Token to a random counter is to aid administrators in debugging systems.  If the Token values always used the same sequence, then it would be possible to confuse multiple packets having the same Token value.  By instead starting with a random value, those values are more evenly distributed across the set of allowed values, and are therefore more likely to be unique.</t>
          <t>As there is no special meaning for the Token, there is no meaning when a counter "wraps" around from a high value back to zero.  The originating system can simply continue to increment the Token value without taking any special action in that situation.</t>
          <t>Once a RADIUS response to a request has been received and there is no need to track the packet any longer, the Token value MAY be reused. This re-use SHOULD be after a suitable delay to ensure that Token values do not conflict with outstanding packets.  Note that the counter method described above for generating Token values will automatically ensure a long delay between multiple uses of the same Token value.  The only cost for tracking Tokens is a single 32-bit counter.  Any other method of generating unique and non-conflicting Token values is likely to require substantially more resources to track outstanding Token values and their associated expiry times.</t>
          <t>If a RADIUS client has multiple independent subsystems which send packets to a server, each subsystem MAY open a new port that is unique to that subsystem.  There is no requirement that all packets go over one particular connection.  That is, despite the use of a 32-bit Token field, RADIUS/1.1 clients are still permitted to open multiple source ports as discussed in <xref target="RFC2865"/> Section 2.5.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="receiving-packets">
          <name>Receiving Packets</name>
          <t>A server which receives RADIUS/1.1 packets MUST perform packet deduplication for all situations where it is required by RADIUS.  Where RADIUS does not require deduplication (e.g. TLS transport), the server SHOULD NOT do deduplication.</t>
          <t>When using RADIUS/1.1, implementations MUST instead do deduplication only on the Token field, and not on any other field or fields in the packet header. A server MUST treat the Token as being an opaque field with no intrinsic meaning.  While the recommendation above is for the sender to use a counter, other implementations are possible, valid, and permitted.  For example, a system could use a pseudo-random number generator with a long period to generate unique values for the Token field.</t>
          <t>Where Token deduplication is done, it MUST be done on a per-connection basis.  If two packets which are received on different connections contain the same Token value, then those packets MUST be treated as distinct (i.e. different) packets.  Systems performing deduplication MAY still track the packet Code, Length, and Attributes which is associated with a Token value.  If it determines that the sender is re-using Token values for distinct outstanding packets, then an error should be logged, and the connection MUST be closed.</t>
          <t>Once a reply has been sent, a system doing deduplication SHOULD cache the replies as discussed in <xref section="2.2.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC5080"/>:</t>
          <ul empty="true">
            <li>
              <t>Each cache entry SHOULD be purged after a period of time.  This time
SHOULD be no less than 5 seconds, and no more than 30 seconds.  After
about 30 seconds, most RADIUS clients and end users will have given
up on the authentication request.  Therefore, there is little value
in having a larger cache timeout.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>This change from RADIUS means that the Identifier field is no longer useful for RADIUS/1.1.  The Reserved-1 field (previously used as the Identifier) MUST be set to zero for all RADIUS/1.1 packets.  RADIUS/1.1 Implementations MUST NOT examine this field or use it for packet tracking or deduplication.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="attribute-handling">
      <name>Attribute handling</name>
      <t>Most attributes in RADIUS have no special encoding "on the wire", or any special meaning between client and server.  Unless discussed in this section, all RADIUS attributes are unchanged in this specification.  This requirement includes attributes which contain a tag, as defined in <xref target="RFC2868"/>.</t>
      <section anchor="obfuscated-attributes">
        <name>Obfuscated Attributes</name>
        <t>As (D)TLS is used for this specification, there is no need to hide the contents of an attribute on a hop-by-hop basis.  The TLS transport ensures that all attribute contents are hidden from any observer.</t>
        <t>Attributes defined as being obfuscated via MD5 no longer have the obfuscation step applied when RADIUS/1.1 is used.  Instead, those attributes are simply encoded as their values, as with any other attribute.  Their encoding method MUST follow the encoding for the underlying data type, with any encryption / obfuscation step omitted.</t>
        <t>There are often concerns where RADIUS is used, that passwords are sent "in the clear" across the network.  This allegation was never true for RADIUS, which obfuscated passwords on the wire.  This allegation is definitely untrue when (D)TLS transport is used.  While passwords are encoded in packets as strings, the entire RADIUS exchange including packets, attributes (and thus passwords) are protected by TLS.  For the unsure reader this protocol is the same TLS which protects passwords used for web logins, e-mail reception and sending, etc.  As a result, any claims that passwords are sent "in the clear" are categorically false.</t>
        <t>There are risks from sending passwords over the network, even when they are protected by TLS.  One such risk comes from the common practice of multi-hop RADIUS routing.  As all security in RADIUS is on a hop-by-hop basis, every proxy which receives a RADIUS packet can see (and modify) all of the information in the packet.  Sites wishing to avoid proxies SHOULD use dynamic peer discovery <xref target="RFC7585"/>, which permits clients to make connections directly to authoritative servers for a realm.</t>
        <t>There are others ways to mitigate these risks.  One is by ensuring that the RADIUS over TLS session parameters are verified before sending the password, usually via a method such as verifying a server certificate.  That is, user passwords should only be sent to verified and trusted parties.  If the TLS session parameters are not verified, then it is trivial to convince the RADIUS client to send passwords to anyone.</t>
        <t>Another way to mitigate these risks is for the system being authenticated to use an authentication protocol which never sends passwords (e.g. EAP-pwd <xref target="RFC5931"/>), or which sends passwords protected by a TLS tunnel (e.g. EAP-TTLS <xref target="RFC5281"/>).  The processes to choose and configuring an authentication protocol are strongly site-dependent, so further discussion of these issues are outside of the scope of this document.  The goal here is to ensure that the reader has enough information to make an informed decision.</t>
        <t>We note that as the RADIUS shared secret is no longer used in this specification, it is no longer possible or necessary for any attribute to be obfuscated on a hop-by-hop basis using the previous methods defined for RADIUS.</t>
        <section anchor="user-password">
          <name>User-Password</name>
          <t>The User-Password attribute (<xref section="5.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>) MUST be encoded the same as any other attribute of data type 'string' (<xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>).</t>
          <t>The contents of the User-Password field MUST be at least one octet in length, and MUST NOT be more than 128 octets in length.  This limitation is maintained from <xref section="5.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/> for compatibility with legacy transports.</t>
          <t>Note that the User-Password attribute is not of data type 'text'.  The original reason in <xref target="RFC2865"/> was because the attribute was encoded as an opaque and obfuscated binary blob.  We maintain that data type here, even though the attribute is no longer obfuscated.  The contents of the User-Password attribute do not have to be printable text, or UTF-8 data as per the definition of the 'text' data type in <xref section="3.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>.</t>
          <t>However, implementations should be aware that passwords are often printable text, and where the passwords are printable text, it can be useful to store and display them as printable text.  Where implementations can process non-printable data in the 'text' data type, they MAY use the data type 'text' for User-Password.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="chap-challenge">
          <name>CHAP-Challenge</name>
          <t><xref section="5.3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/> allows for the CHAP challenge to be taken from either the CHAP-Challenge attribute (<xref section="5.40" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>), or the Request Authenticator field.  Since RADIUS/1.1 connections no longer use a Request Authenticator field, it is no longer possible to use the Request Authenticator field as the CHAP-Challenge when this transport profile is used.</t>
          <t>Clients which send CHAP-Password attribute (<xref section="5.3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>) in an Access-Request packet over a RADIUS/1.1 connection MUST also include a CHAP-Challenge attribute (<xref section="5.40" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>).</t>
          <t>Proxies may need to receive Access-Request packets over a non-RADIUS/1.1 transport and then forward those packets over a RADIUS/1.1 connection.  In that case, if the received Access-Request packet contains a CHAP-Password attribute but no CHAP-Challenge attribute, the proxy MUST create a CHAP-Challenge attribute in the proxied packet using the contents from the incoming Request Authenticator of the received packet.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="tunnel-password">
          <name>Tunnel-Password</name>
          <t>The Tunnel-Password attribute (<xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2868"/>) MUST be encoded the same as any other attribute of data type 'string' which contains a tag, such as Tunnel-Client-Endpoint (<xref section="3.3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2868"/>).  Since the attribute is no longer obfuscated in RADIUS/1.1, there is no need for a Salt field or Data-Length fields as described in <xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2868"/>, and the textual value of the password can simply be encoded as-is.</t>
          <t>Note that the Tunnel-Password attribute is not of data type 'text'.  The original reason in <xref target="RFC2868"/> was because the attribute was encoded as an opaque and obfuscated binary blob.  We maintain that data type here, even though the attribute is no longer obfuscated.  The contents of the Tunnel-Password attribute do not have to be printable text, or UTF-8 data as per the definition of the 'text' data type in <xref section="3.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>.</t>
          <t>However, implementations should be aware that passwords are often printable text, and where the passwords are printable text, it can be useful to store and display them as printable text.  Where implementations can process non-printable data in the 'text' data type, they MAY use the data type 'text' for Tunnel-Password.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="vendor-specific-attributes">
          <name>Vendor-Specific Attributes</name>
          <t>Any Vendor-Specific attribute which uses similar obfuscation MUST be encoded as per their base data type.  Specifically, the MS-MPPE-Send-Key and MS-MPPE-Recv-Key attributes (<xref section="2.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2548"/>) MUST be encoded as any other attribute of data type 'string' (<xref section="3.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>).</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="message-authenticator">
        <name>Message-Authenticator</name>
        <t>The Message-Authenticator attribute (<xref section="3.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC3579"/>) MUST NOT be sent over a RADIUS/1.1 connection.  That attribute is not used or needed in RADIUS/1.1.</t>
        <t>If the Message-Authenticator attribute is received over a RADIUS/1.1 connection, the attribute MUST be silently discarded, or treated as an "invalid attribute", as defined in <xref section="2.8" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6929"/>.  That is, the Message-Authenticator attribute is no longer used to sign packets for the RADIUS/1.1 transport.  Its existence (or not) in this transport is meaningless.</t>
        <t>We note that any packet which contains a Message-Authenticator attribute can still be processed.  There is no need to discard an entire packet simply because it contains a Message-Authenticator attribute.  Only the Message-Authenticator attribute itself is ignored.</t>
        <t>For proxies, the Message-Authenticator attribute was always defined as being created and consumed on a "hop by hop" basis.  That is, a proxy which received a Message-Authenticator attribute from a client would never forward that attribute as-is to another server.  Instead, the proxy would either suppress, or re-create, the Message-Authenticator attribute in the outgoing request.  This existing behavior is leveraged in RADIUS/1.1 to suppress the use of Message-Authenticator over a RADIUS/1.1 connection.</t>
        <t>A proxy may receive an Access-Request packet over a RADIUS/1.1 connection, and then forward that packet over a RADIUS/UDP or a RADIUS/TCP connection.  In that situation, the proxy SHOULD add a Message-Authenticator attribute to every Access-Request packet which is sent over an insecure transport protocol.</t>
        <t>The original text in <xref section="3.3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC3579"/>, "Note 1" paragraph required that the Message-Authenticator attribute be present for certain Access-Request packets.  It also required the use of Message-Authenticator when the Access-Request packet contained an EAP-Message attribute.  Experience has shown that some RADIUS clients never use the Message-Authenticator, even for the situations where its use is suggested.</t>
        <t>When the Message-Authenticator attribute is missing from Access-Request packets, it is often possible to trivially forge or replay those packets.  As such, this document RECOMMENDS that RADIUS clients always include Message-Authenticator in Access-Request packets when using UDP or TCP transport.  As the scope of this document is limited to defining RADIUS/1.1, we cannot mandate that behavior here.  Instead, we can note that there are no known negatives to this behavior, and there are definite positives, such as increased security.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="message-authentication-code">
        <name>Message-Authentication-Code</name>
        <t>Similarly, the Message-Authentication-Code attribute defined in <xref section="3.3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6218"/> MUST NOT be sent over a RADIUS/1.1 connection.  That attribute MUST be treated the same as Message-Authenticator, above.</t>
        <t>As the Message-Authentication-Code attribute is no longer used in RADIUS/1.1, the related MAC-Randomizer attribute <xref section="3.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6218"/> is also no longer used.  It MUST also be treated the same way as Message-Authenticator, above.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="chap-ms-chap-etc">
        <name>CHAP, MS-CHAP, etc.</name>
        <t>While some attributes such as CHAP-Password, etc. depend on insecure cryptographic primitives such as MD5, these attributes are treated as opaque blobs when sent between a RADIUS client and server.  The contents of the attributes are not obfuscated, and they do not depend on the RADIUS shared secret.  As a result, these attributes are unchanged in RADIUS/1.1.</t>
        <t>A server implementing this specification can proxy CHAP, MS-CHAP, etc. without any issue.  A home server implementing this specification can authenticate CHAP, MS-CHAP, etc. without any issue.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="original-packet-code">
        <name>Original-Packet-Code</name>
        <t><xref section="4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7930"/> defines an Original-Packet-Code attribute.  This attribute is needed because otherwise it is impossible to correlate the Protocol-Error response packet with a particular request packet.  The definition in <xref section="4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7930"/> describes the reasoning behind this need:</t>
        <ul empty="true">
          <li>
            <t>The Original-Packet-Code contains the code
from the request that generated the protocol error so that clients
can disambiguate requests with different codes and the same ID.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>This attribute is no longer needed in RADIUS/1.1.  The Identifier field is unused, so it impossible for two requests to have the "same" ID.  Instead, the Token field permits clients and servers to correlate requests and responses, independent of the Code being used.</t>
        <t>Therefore, the Original-Packet-Code attribute (<xref section="4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7930"/>) MUST NOT be sent over a RADIUS/1.1 connection.  That attribute is not used or needed over RADIUS/1.1 connections.</t>
        <t>If the Original-Packet-Code attribute is received over a RADIUS/1.1 connection, the attribute MUST either be silently discarded, or be treated an as "invalid attribute", as defined in <xref section="2.8" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6929"/>.  That is, existence of the Token field means that the Original-Packet-Code attribute is not needed in RADIUS/1.1 to correlate Protocol-Error replies with outstanding requests.</t>
        <t>We note that any packet which contains an Original-Packet-Code attribute can still be processed.  There is no need to discard an entire packet simply because it contains an Original-Packet-Code attribute.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="other-considerations">
      <name>Other Considerations</name>
      <t>Most of the differences between RADIUS and RADIUS/1.1 are in the packet header and attribute handling, as discussed above.  The remaining issues are a small set of unrelated topics, and are discussed here.</t>
      <section anchor="status-server">
        <name>Status-Server</name>
        <t><xref section="2.6.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6613"/>, and by extension <xref target="RFC7360"/>, suggest that the Identifier value zero (0) be reserved for use with Status-Server as an application-layer watchdog.  This practice MUST NOT be used for RADIUS/1.1, as the Identifier field is not used in this transport profile.</t>
        <t>The rationale for reserving one value of the Identifier field was the limited number of Identifiers available (256), and the overlap in Identifiers between Access-Request packets and Status-Server packets.  If all 256 Identifier values had been used to send Access-Request packets, then there would be no Identifier value available for sending a Status-Server packet.</t>
        <t>In contrast, the Token field allows for 2^32 outstanding packets on one RADIUS/1.1 connection.  If there is a need to send a Status-Server packet, it is nearly always possible to allocate a new value for the Token field.  If instead there are 2^32 outstanding packets for one connection, then it is likely that something has gone catastrophically wrong.  In that case, the safest way forward is likely to just close the connection.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="proxies">
        <name>Proxies</name>
        <t>A RADIUS proxy normally decodes and then re-encodes all attributes, included obfuscated ones.  A RADIUS proxy will not generally rewrite the content of the attributes it proxies (unless site-local policy requires such a rewrite).  While some attributes may be modified due to administrative or policy rules on the proxy, the proxy will generally not rewrite the contents of attributes such as User-Password, Tunnel-Password, CHAP-Password, MS-CHAP-Password, MS-MPPE keys, etc.  All attributes are therefore transported through a RADIUS/1.1 connection without changing their values or contents.</t>
        <t>A proxy may negotiate RADIUS/1.1 (or not) with a particular client or clients, and it may negotiate RADIUS/1.1 (or not) with a server or servers it connect to, in any combination.  As a result, this specification is fully compatible with all past, present, and future RADIUS attributes.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="crypto-agility">
        <name>Crypto-Agility</name>
        <t>The crypto-agility requirements of <xref target="RFC6421"/> are addressed in <xref section="C" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6614"/>, and in <xref section="10.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7360"/>.  This specification makes no changes from, or additions to, those specifications.  The use of ALPN, and the removal of MD5 has no impact on security or privacy of the protocol.</t>
        <t>RADIUS/TLS has been widely deployed in at least eduroam <xref target="RFC7593"/> and <xref target="EDUROAM"/> and in OpenRoaming <xref target="OPENROAMING"/>.  RADIUS/DTLS has seen less adoption, but it is known to be supported in many RADIUS clients and servers.</t>
        <t>It is RECOMMENDED that all implementations of RADIUS over TLS be updated to support this specification.  The effort to implement this specification is minimal, and once implementations support it, administrators can gain the benefit of it with little or no configuration changes.  This specification is backwards compatible with <xref target="RFC6614"/> and <xref target="RFC7360"/>.  It is only potentially subject to down-bidding attacks if implementations do not enforce ALPN negotiation correctly on session resumption.</t>
        <t>All crypto-agility needed or used by this specification is implemented in TLS.  This specification also removes all cryptographic primitives from the application-layer protocol (RADIUS) being transported by TLS.  As discussed in the following section, this specification also bans the development of all new cryptographic or crypto-agility methods in the RADIUS protocol.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="error-cause-attribute">
        <name>Error-Cause Attribute</name>
        <t>The Error-Cause attribute is defined in <xref target="RFC5176"/>. The "Table of Attributes" section given in <xref section="3.6" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC5176"/> permits that attribute to appear in CoA-NAK and Disconnect-NAK packets.  As no other packet type is listed, the implication is that the Error-Cause attribute cannot appear in any other packet.  <xref target="RFC7930"/> also permits Error-Cause to appear in Protocol-Error packets.</t>
        <t>However, <xref section="2.6.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC5080"/> suggests that Error-Cause may appear in Access-Reject packets.  No explanation is given for this change from <xref target="RFC5176"/>.  There is not even an acknowledgment that this suggestion is a change from any previous specification.  We correct that issue here.</t>
        <t>This specification updates <xref target="RFC5176"/> to allow the Error-Cause attribute to appear in Access-Reject packets.  It is RECOMMENDED that implementations include the Error-Cause attribute in Access-Reject packets where appropriate.</t>
        <t>That is, the reason for sending the Access-Reject packet (or Protocol-Error packet) may match a defined Error-Cause value.  In that case, it is useful for implementations to send an Error-Cause attribute with that value.  This behavior can help RADIUS system administrators debug issues in complex proxy chains.</t>
        <t>For example, a proxy may normally forward Access-Request packets which contain EAP-Message attributes.  The proxy can determine if the contents of the EAP-Message are invalid, for example if the first octet has value larger than 4.  In that case, there may be no benefit to forwarding the packet, as the home server will reject it.  It may then then possible for the proxy (with the knowledge and consent of involved parties) to immediately reply with an Access-Reject containing an Error-Cause attribute with value 202 for "Invalid EAP Packet (Ignored)".</t>
        <t>Another possibility is that if a proxy is configured to forward packets for a particular realm, but it has determined that there are no available connections to the next hop for that realm.  In that case, it may be possible for the proxy (again with the knowledge and consent of involved parties) to reply with an Access-Reject containing an Error-Cause attribute with value 502 for "Request Not Routable (Proxy)"</t>
        <t>These examples are given only for illustrative and informational purposes.  While it is useful to return an informative value for the Error-Cause attribute, proxies can only modify the traffic they forward with the explicit knowledge and consent of all involved parties.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="future-standards">
        <name>Future Standards</name>
        <t>Future work may define new attributes, packet types, etc.  It is important to be able to do such work without requiring that every new standard mention RADIUS/1.1 explicitly.  Instead, this document defines a mapping from RADIUS to RADIUS/1.1 which covers all RADIUS practices and cryptographic primitives in current use.  As a result, any new standard which uses the existing RADIUS practices can simply inherit that mapping, and they do not need to mention RADIUS/1.1 explicitly.</t>
        <t>We reiterate that this specification defines a new transport profile for RADIUS.  It does not define a completely new protocol.  Any future specification which defines a new attribute MUST define it for RADIUS/UDP first, after which those definitions can be applied to this transport profile.</t>
        <t>New specifications MAY define new attributes which use the obfuscation methods for User-Password as defined in <xref section="5.2" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2865"/>, or for Tunnel-Password as defined in <xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC2868"/>.  There is no need for those specifications to describe how those new attributes are transported in RADIUS/1.1.  Since RADIUS/1.1 does not use MD5, any obfuscated attributes will by definition be transported as their underlying data type, "text" (<xref section="3.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>) or "string" (<xref section="3.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8044"/>).</t>
        <t>New RADIUS specifications MUST NOT define attributes which can only be transported via RADIUS over TLS.  The RADIUS protocol has no way to signal the security requirements of individual attributes.  Any existing implementation will handle these new attributes as "invalid attributes" (<xref section="2.8" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC6929"/>), and could forward them over an insecure link.  As RADIUS security and signaling is hop-by-hop, there is no way for a RADIUS client or server to even know if such forwarding is taking place.  For these reasons and more, it is therefore inappropriate to define new attributes which are only secure if they use a secure transport layer.</t>
        <t>The result is that specifications do not need to mention this transport profile, or make any special provisions for dealing with it.  This specification defines how RADIUS packet encoding, decoding, signing, and verification are performed when using RADIUS/1.1.  So long as any future specification uses the existing encoding, etc. schemes defined for RADIUS, no additional text in future documents is necessary in order to be compatible with RADIUS/1.1.</t>
        <t>We note that it is theoretically possible for future standards to define new cryptographic primitives for use with RADIUS/UDP.  In that case, those documents would likely have to describe how to transport that data in RADIUS/1.1.  We believe that such standards are unlikely to be published, as other efforts in the RADEXT working group are forbidding such updates to RADIUS.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="implementation-status">
      <name>Implementation Status</name>
      <t>(This section to be removed by the RFC editor.)</t>
      <t>This specification is being implemented (client and server) in the FreeRADIUS project which is hosted on GitHub at https://github.com/FreeRADIUS/freeradius-server/tree/v3.2.x  The code implementation "diff" is approximately 1,000 lines, including build system changes and changes to configuration parsers.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="privacy-considerations">
      <name>Privacy Considerations</name>
      <t>This specification requires secure transport for RADIUS, and this has all of the privacy benefits of RADIUS/TLS <xref target="RFC6614"/> and RADIUS/DTLS <xref target="RFC7360"/>.  All of the insecure uses of RADIUS have been removed.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>The primary focus of this document is addressing security considerations for RADIUS.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>IANA is requested to update the "TLS Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) Protocol IDs" registry with two new entries:</t>
      <artwork><![CDATA[
Protocol: RADIUS/1.0
Id. Sequence: 0x72 0x61 0x64 0x69 0x75 0x73 0x2f 0x31 0x2e 0x30
    ("radius/1.0")
Reference:  This document

Protocol: RADIUS/1.1
Id. Sequence: 0x72 0x61 0x64 0x69 0x75 0x73 0x2f 0x31 0x2e 0x31
    ("radius/1.1")
Reference:  This document
]]></artwork>
    </section>
    <section anchor="acknowledgments">
      <name>Acknowledgments</name>
      <t>In hindsight, the decision to retain MD5 for RADIUS over TLS was likely wrong.  It was an easy decision to make in the short term, but it has caused ongoing problems which this document addresses.</t>
      <t>Thanks to Bernard Aboba, Karri Huhtanen, Heikki Vatiainen, Alexander Clouter, Michael Richardson, Hannes Tschofenig, Matthew Newton, and Josh Howlett for reviews and feedback.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="changelog">
      <name>Changelog</name>
      <t>(This section to be removed by the RFC editor.)</t>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-sradius-00</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Initial Revision</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-00</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Use ALPN from RFC 7301, instead of defining a new port.  Drop the name "SRADIUS".</t>
          <t>Add discussion of Original-Packet-Code</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-01</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Update formatting.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-02</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Add Flag field and description.</t>
          <t>Minor rearrangements and updates to text.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-03</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Remove Flag field and description based on feedback and expected use-cases.</t>
          <t>Use "radius/1.0" instead of "radius/1"</t>
          <t>Consistently refer to the specification as "RADIUSv11", and consistently quote the ALPN name as "radius/1.1"</t>
          <t>Add discussion of future attributes and future crypto-agility work.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-04</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Remove "radius/1.0" as it is unnecessary.</t>
          <t>Update Introduction with more historical background, which motivates the rest of the section.</t>
          <t>Change Identifier field to be reserved, as it is entirely unused.</t>
          <t>Update discussion on clear text passwords.</t>
          <t>Clarify discussion of Status-Server, User-Password, and Tunnel-Password.</t>
          <t>Give high level summary of ALPN, clear up client / server roles, and remove "radius/1.0" as it is unnecessary.</t>
          <t>Add text on RFC6421.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-dekok-radext-radiusv11-05</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Clarify naming.  "radius/1.1" is the ALPN name.  "RADIUS/1.1" is the transport profile.</t>
          <t>Clarify that future specifications do not need to make provisions for dealing with this transport profile.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Typos and word smithing.</t>
          <t>Define and use "RADIUS over TLS" instead of RADIUS/(D)TLS.</t>
          <t>Many cleanups and rework based on feedback from Matthew Newton.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-00</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>No changes from previous draft.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-01</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Move to "experimental" based on WG feedback.</t>
          <t>Many cleanups based on review from Matthew Newton</t>
          <t>Removed requirement for supporting TLS-PSK.</t>
          <t>This document does not deprecate new cryptographic work in RADIUS.  The "deprecating insecure transports" document does that.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-02</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Note that we also update RFC 7930</t>
          <t>Minor updates to text.</t>
          <t>Add text explaining why "allow" is the default, and how to upgrade to "require"</t>
          <t>Discuss the use of the TLS alert "no_application_protocol" (120), and its limitations.</t>
          <t>Suggest the use of Protocol-Error as an application signal when it is not possible to send a "no_application_protocol" TLS alert.</t>
          <t>Update discussion of Message-Authenticator, and suggest that RADIUS/1.1 proxies always add Message-Authenticator to Access-Request packets being sent over UDP or TCP.</t>
          <t>Add term "historic RADIUS/TLS" as it is simpler than more awkward "6614 or 7360".</t>
          <t>Re-add ALPN "radius/1.0" based on comments from Heikki.  It signals that the system is ALPN-capable, among other.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-03</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Rename to "RADIUS ALPN and removing MD5"</t>
          <t>Add a few things missed when re-adding "radius/1.0"</t>
          <t>Clarify wording in a number of places.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>draft-ietf-radext-radiusv11-04</t>
      <ul empty="true">
        <li>
          <t>Address github issues 3..9</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references>
      <name>References</name>
      <references anchor="sec-normative-references">
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="BCP14">
          <front>
            <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
            <author fullname="B. Leiba" initials="B." surname="Leiba"/>
            <date month="May" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8174"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8174"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2865">
          <front>
            <title>Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)</title>
            <author fullname="C. Rigney" initials="C." surname="Rigney"/>
            <author fullname="S. Willens" initials="S." surname="Willens"/>
            <author fullname="A. Rubens" initials="A." surname="Rubens"/>
            <author fullname="W. Simpson" initials="W." surname="Simpson"/>
            <date month="June" year="2000"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a protocol for carrying authentication, authorization, and configuration information between a Network Access Server which desires to authenticate its links and a shared Authentication Server. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2865"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2865"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6421">
          <front>
            <title>Crypto-Agility Requirements for Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS)</title>
            <author fullname="D. Nelson" initials="D." role="editor" surname="Nelson"/>
            <date month="November" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo describes the requirements for a crypto-agility solution for Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS). This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6421"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6421"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6929">
          <front>
            <title>Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) Protocol Extensions</title>
            <author fullname="A. DeKok" initials="A." surname="DeKok"/>
            <author fullname="A. Lior" initials="A." surname="Lior"/>
            <date month="April" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) protocol is nearing exhaustion of its current 8-bit Attribute Type space. In addition, experience shows a growing need for complex grouping, along with attributes that can carry more than 253 octets of data. This document defines changes to RADIUS that address all of the above problems.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6929"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6929"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7301">
          <front>
            <title>Transport Layer Security (TLS) Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation Extension</title>
            <author fullname="S. Friedl" initials="S." surname="Friedl"/>
            <author fullname="A. Popov" initials="A." surname="Popov"/>
            <author fullname="A. Langley" initials="A." surname="Langley"/>
            <author fullname="E. Stephan" initials="E." surname="Stephan"/>
            <date month="July" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a Transport Layer Security (TLS) extension for application-layer protocol negotiation within the TLS handshake. For instances in which multiple application protocols are supported on the same TCP or UDP port, this extension allows the application layer to negotiate which protocol will be used within the TLS connection.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7301"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7301"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8044">
          <front>
            <title>Data Types in RADIUS</title>
            <author fullname="A. DeKok" initials="A." surname="DeKok"/>
            <date month="January" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RADIUS specifications have used data types for two decades without defining them as managed entities. During this time, RADIUS implementations have named the data types and have used them in attribute definitions. This document updates the specifications to better follow established practice. We do this by naming the data types defined in RFC 6158, which have been used since at least the publication of RFC 2865. We provide an IANA registry for the data types and update the "RADIUS Attribute Types" registry to include a Data Type field for each attribute. Finally, we recommend that authors of RADIUS specifications use these types in preference to existing practice. This document updates RFCs 2865, 3162, 4072, 6158, 6572, and 7268.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8044"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8044"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2119">
          <front>
            <title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
            <date month="March" year="1997"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification. These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2119"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2119"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8174">
          <front>
            <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
            <author fullname="B. Leiba" initials="B." surname="Leiba"/>
            <date month="May" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8174"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8174"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC1321">
          <front>
            <title>The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm</title>
            <author fullname="R. Rivest" initials="R." surname="Rivest"/>
            <date month="April" year="1992"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the MD5 message-digest algorithm. The algorithm takes as input a message of arbitrary length and produces as output a 128-bit "fingerprint" or "message digest" of the input. This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1321"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1321"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2548">
          <front>
            <title>Microsoft Vendor-specific RADIUS Attributes</title>
            <author fullname="G. Zorn" initials="G." surname="Zorn"/>
            <date month="March" year="1999"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the set of Microsoft vendor-specific RADIUS attributes. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2548"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2548"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2866">
          <front>
            <title>RADIUS Accounting</title>
            <author fullname="C. Rigney" initials="C." surname="Rigney"/>
            <date month="June" year="2000"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a protocol for carrying accounting information between a Network Access Server and a shared Accounting Server. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2866"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2866"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2868">
          <front>
            <title>RADIUS Attributes for Tunnel Protocol Support</title>
            <author fullname="G. Zorn" initials="G." surname="Zorn"/>
            <author fullname="D. Leifer" initials="D." surname="Leifer"/>
            <author fullname="A. Rubens" initials="A." surname="Rubens"/>
            <author fullname="J. Shriver" initials="J." surname="Shriver"/>
            <author fullname="M. Holdrege" initials="M." surname="Holdrege"/>
            <author fullname="I. Goyret" initials="I." surname="Goyret"/>
            <date month="June" year="2000"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a set of RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service) attributes designed to support the provision of compulsory tunneling in dial-up networks. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2868"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2868"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3579">
          <front>
            <title>RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service) Support For Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)</title>
            <author fullname="B. Aboba" initials="B." surname="Aboba"/>
            <author fullname="P. Calhoun" initials="P." surname="Calhoun"/>
            <date month="September" year="2003"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) support for the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), an authentication framework which supports multiple authentication mechanisms. In the proposed scheme, the Network Access Server (NAS) forwards EAP packets to and from the RADIUS server, encapsulated within EAP-Message attributes. This has the advantage of allowing the NAS to support any EAP authentication method, without the need for method- specific code, which resides on the RADIUS server. While EAP was originally developed for use with PPP, it is now also in use with IEEE 802. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3579"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3579"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5176">
          <front>
            <title>Dynamic Authorization Extensions to Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Chiba" initials="M." surname="Chiba"/>
            <author fullname="G. Dommety" initials="G." surname="Dommety"/>
            <author fullname="M. Eklund" initials="M." surname="Eklund"/>
            <author fullname="D. Mitton" initials="D." surname="Mitton"/>
            <author fullname="B. Aboba" initials="B." surname="Aboba"/>
            <date month="January" year="2008"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a currently deployed extension to the Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) protocol, allowing dynamic changes to a user session, as implemented by network access server products. This includes support for disconnecting users and changing authorizations applicable to a user session. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5176"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5176"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6151">
          <front>
            <title>Updated Security Considerations for the MD5 Message-Digest and the HMAC-MD5 Algorithms</title>
            <author fullname="S. Turner" initials="S." surname="Turner"/>
            <author fullname="L. Chen" initials="L." surname="Chen"/>
            <date month="March" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document updates the security considerations for the MD5 message digest algorithm. It also updates the security considerations for HMAC-MD5. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6151"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6151"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6218">
          <front>
            <title>Cisco Vendor-Specific RADIUS Attributes for the Delivery of Keying Material</title>
            <author fullname="G. Zorn" initials="G." surname="Zorn"/>
            <author fullname="T. Zhang" initials="T." surname="Zhang"/>
            <author fullname="J. Walker" initials="J." surname="Walker"/>
            <author fullname="J. Salowey" initials="J." surname="Salowey"/>
            <date month="April" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a set of vendor-specific RADIUS Attributes designed to allow both the secure transmission of cryptographic keying material and strong authentication of any RADIUS message. These attributes have been allocated from the Cisco vendor-specific space and have been implemented by multiple vendors. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6218"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6218"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6613">
          <front>
            <title>RADIUS over TCP</title>
            <author fullname="A. DeKok" initials="A." surname="DeKok"/>
            <date month="May" year="2012"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Remote Authentication Dial-In User Server (RADIUS) protocol has, until now, required the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) as the underlying transport layer. This document defines RADIUS over the Transmission Control Protocol (RADIUS/TCP), in order to address handling issues related to RADIUS over Transport Layer Security (RADIUS/TLS). It permits TCP to be used as a transport protocol for RADIUS only when a transport layer such as TLS or IPsec provides confidentiality and security. This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6613"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6613"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6614">
          <front>
            <title>Transport Layer Security (TLS) Encryption for RADIUS</title>
            <author fullname="S. Winter" initials="S." surname="Winter"/>
            <author fullname="M. McCauley" initials="M." surname="McCauley"/>
            <author fullname="S. Venaas" initials="S." surname="Venaas"/>
            <author fullname="K. Wierenga" initials="K." surname="Wierenga"/>
            <date month="May" year="2012"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies a transport profile for RADIUS using Transport Layer Security (TLS) over TCP as the transport protocol. This enables dynamic trust relationships between RADIUS servers. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6614"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6614"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7360">
          <front>
            <title>Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) as a Transport Layer for RADIUS</title>
            <author fullname="A. DeKok" initials="A." surname="DeKok"/>
            <date month="September" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The RADIUS protocol defined in RFC 2865 has limited support for authentication and encryption of RADIUS packets. The protocol transports data in the clear, although some parts of the packets can have obfuscated content. Packets may be replayed verbatim by an attacker, and client-server authentication is based on fixed shared secrets. This document specifies how the Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) protocol may be used as a fix for these problems. It also describes how implementations of this proposal can coexist with current RADIUS systems.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7360"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7360"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7585">
          <front>
            <title>Dynamic Peer Discovery for RADIUS/TLS and RADIUS/DTLS Based on the Network Access Identifier (NAI)</title>
            <author fullname="S. Winter" initials="S." surname="Winter"/>
            <author fullname="M. McCauley" initials="M." surname="McCauley"/>
            <date month="October" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies a means to find authoritative RADIUS servers for a given realm. It is used in conjunction with either RADIUS over Transport Layer Security (RADIUS/TLS) or RADIUS over Datagram Transport Layer Security (RADIUS/DTLS).</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7585"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7585"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7593">
          <front>
            <title>The eduroam Architecture for Network Roaming</title>
            <author fullname="K. Wierenga" initials="K." surname="Wierenga"/>
            <author fullname="S. Winter" initials="S." surname="Winter"/>
            <author fullname="T. Wolniewicz" initials="T." surname="Wolniewicz"/>
            <date month="September" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the architecture of the eduroam service for federated (wireless) network access in academia. The combination of IEEE 802.1X, the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), and RADIUS that is used in eduroam provides a secure, scalable, and deployable service for roaming network access. The successful deployment of eduroam over the last decade in the educational sector may serve as an example for other sectors, hence this document. In particular, the initial architectural choices and selection of standards are described, along with the changes that were prompted by operational experience.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7593"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7593"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7930">
          <front>
            <title>Larger Packets for RADIUS over TCP</title>
            <author fullname="S. Hartman" initials="S." surname="Hartman"/>
            <date month="August" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The RADIUS-over-TLS experiment described in RFC 6614 has opened RADIUS to new use cases where the 4096-octet maximum size limit of a RADIUS packet proves problematic. This specification extends the RADIUS-over-TCP experiment (RFC 6613) to permit larger RADIUS packets. This specification compliments other ongoing work to permit fragmentation of RADIUS authorization information. This document registers a new RADIUS code, an action that required IESG approval.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7930"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7930"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="EDUROAM" target="https://eduroam.org">
          <front>
            <title>eduroam</title>
            <author initials="" surname="eduroam" fullname="eduroam">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="OPENROAMING" target="https://wballiance.com/openroaming/">
          <front>
            <title>OpenRoaming: One global Wi-Fi network</title>
            <author initials="W. B." surname="Alliance" fullname="Wireless Broadband Alliance">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5077">
          <front>
            <title>Transport Layer Security (TLS) Session Resumption without Server-Side State</title>
            <author fullname="J. Salowey" initials="J." surname="Salowey"/>
            <author fullname="H. Zhou" initials="H." surname="Zhou"/>
            <author fullname="P. Eronen" initials="P." surname="Eronen"/>
            <author fullname="H. Tschofenig" initials="H." surname="Tschofenig"/>
            <date month="January" year="2008"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a mechanism that enables the Transport Layer Security (TLS) server to resume sessions and avoid keeping per-client session state. The TLS server encapsulates the session state into a ticket and forwards it to the client. The client can subsequently resume a session using the obtained ticket. This document obsoletes RFC 4507. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5077"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5077"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5931">
          <front>
            <title>Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) Authentication Using Only a Password</title>
            <author fullname="D. Harkins" initials="D." surname="Harkins"/>
            <author fullname="G. Zorn" initials="G." surname="Zorn"/>
            <date month="August" year="2010"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo describes an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) method, EAP-pwd, which uses a shared password for authentication. The password may be a low-entropy one and may be drawn from some set of possible passwords, like a dictionary, which is available to an attacker. The underlying key exchange is resistant to active attack, passive attack, and dictionary attack. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5931"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5931"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5281">
          <front>
            <title>Extensible Authentication Protocol Tunneled Transport Layer Security Authenticated Protocol Version 0 (EAP-TTLSv0)</title>
            <author fullname="P. Funk" initials="P." surname="Funk"/>
            <author fullname="S. Blake-Wilson" initials="S." surname="Blake-Wilson"/>
            <date month="August" year="2008"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>EAP-TTLS is an EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol) method that encapsulates a TLS (Transport Layer Security) session, consisting of a handshake phase and a data phase. During the handshake phase, the server is authenticated to the client (or client and server are mutually authenticated) using standard TLS procedures, and keying material is generated in order to create a cryptographically secure tunnel for information exchange in the subsequent data phase. During the data phase, the client is authenticated to the server (or client and server are mutually authenticated) using an arbitrary authentication mechanism encapsulated within the secure tunnel. The encapsulated authentication mechanism may itself be EAP, or it may be another authentication protocol such as PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP, or MS-CHAP-V2. Thus, EAP-TTLS allows legacy password-based authentication protocols to be used against existing authentication databases, while protecting the security of these legacy protocols against eavesdropping, man-in-the-middle, and other attacks. The data phase may also be used for additional, arbitrary data exchange. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5281"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5281"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5080">
          <front>
            <title>Common Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) Implementation Issues and Suggested Fixes</title>
            <author fullname="D. Nelson" initials="D." surname="Nelson"/>
            <author fullname="A. DeKok" initials="A." surname="DeKok"/>
            <date month="December" year="2007"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes common issues seen in Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) implementations and suggests some fixes. Where applicable, ambiguities and errors in previous RADIUS specifications are clarified. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5080"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5080"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
