[Docs] [txt|pdf] [Tracker] [WG] [Email] [Diff1] [Diff2] [Nits]
Versions: (draft-srisuresh-behave-nat-icmp)
00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11
12 RFC 5508
Intended Status: Best Current Practice
BEHAVE WG P. Srisuresh
Internet Draft Kazeon Systems
Expires: December 30, 2007 B. Ford
M.I.T.
S. Sivakumar
Cisco Systems
S. Guha
Cornell U.
June 30, 2007
NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP protocol
<draft-ietf-behave-nat-icmp-04.txt>
Status of this Memo
By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any
applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware
have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes
aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
Abstract
This document specifies the behavioral properties required of the
Network Address Translator (NAT) devices in conjunction with the
ICMP protocol. The objective of this memo is to make NAT devices
more predictable and compatible with diverse application protocols
that traverse the devices. Companion documents provide behavioral
recommendations specific to TCP, UDP and other protocols.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 1]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Table of Contents
1. Introduction and Scope .......................................
2. Terminology ..................................................
3. ICMP Query Handling ..........................................
3.1. ICMP Query Mapping ......................................
3.2. ICMP Query Session Timeouts .............................
4. ICMP Error Forwarding ........................................
4.1. ICMP Error Payload Validation ...........................
4.2. ICMP Error Packet Translation ...........................
4.2.1. ICMP Error Packet Received from External Realm ....
4.2.2. ICMP Error Packet Received from Private Realm .....
4.3. NAT Sessions Pertaining to ICMP Error Payload ...........
5. Hairpinning Support for ICMP packets .........................
6. Rejection of Outbound Flows Disallowed by NAT ................
7. Conformance to RFC 1812 ......................................
7.1. IP packet fragmentation .................................
7.1.1. Generating "Packet too Big" ICMP error Message ....
7.1.2. Forwarding "Packet too big" ICMP Error Message ....
7.2. Generating "Time Exceeded" Error Message ................
7.3. RFC 1812 Conformance Requirements summary ...............
8. Summary of Requirements ......................................
9. Security Considerations ......................................
10. IANA Considerations ..........................................
11. Acknowledgements .............................................
1. Introduction and Scope
As pointed out in RFC 3424 [UNSAF], NAT implementations vary
widely in terms of how they handle different traffic. The purpose
of this document is to define a specific set of requirements for NAT
behavior with regard to ICMP messages. The objective is to reduce
the unpredictability and brittleness the NAT devices (NATs)
introduce. This document is an adjunct to [BEH-UDP], [BEH-TCP], and
other protocol-specific BEHAVE document(s) in the future which
define requirements for NATs when handling protocol-specific
traffic.
The requirements of this specification apply to Traditional NATs as
described in [NAT-TRAD]. Traditional NAT has two variations, namely,
Basic NAT and Network Address Port Translator (NAPT). Of these, NAPT
is by far the most commonly deployed NAT device. NAPT allows
multiple private hosts to share a single public IP address
simultaneously.
This document only covers the ICMP aspects of NAT traversal,
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 2]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
specifically the traversal of ICMP Query Messages and ICMP Error
messages. Traditional NAT inherently mandates a certain level
of firewall-like functionality. However, firewall functionality in
general or any other middlebox functionality is out of the
scope of this document.
In some cases, ICMP Message traversal behavior on a NAT device may
be overridden by local administrative policies. Some administrators
may choose to entirely prohibit forwarding of ICMP error messages
across a NAT device. Some others may choose to prohibit ICMP query
based applications across a NAT device. These are local policies
and not within the scope of this document. For this reason, some
of the ICMP behave requirements listed in the document are preceded
with a constraint of local policy permitting.
This document focuses strictly on the behavior of the NAT device,
and not on the behavior of applications that traverse NATs. A
separate document [BEH-APP] provides recommendations for application
designers on how to make applications work robustly over NATs that
follow the behavioral requirements specified here and the adjunct
BEHAVE documents.
Per [RFC1812], ICMP is a control protocol that is considered to be
an integral part of IP, although it is architecturally layered upon
IP - it uses IP to carry its data end-to-end. As such, many of the
ICMP behavioral requirements discussed in this document apply to all
IP protocols.
In case a requirement in this document conflicts with
protocol-specific BEHAVE requirement(s), protocol specific BEHAVE
documents will take precedence. The authors are not aware of any
conflicts between this and any other IETF document at the time of
this writing.
Section 2 describes the terminology used throughout the document.
Sections 3 is focused on requirements concerning ICMP query based
applications traversing a NAT device. Sections 4 and 5 describe
requirements concerning ICMP error messages traversing a NAT
device. Sections 6 and 7 describe requirements concerning ICMP error
messages generated by a NAT device. Section 8 summarizes all the
requirements in one place. Section 9 has a discussion on security
considerations.
2. Terminology
Definitions for majority of the NAT terms used throughout the
document may be found in [NAT-TERM] and [BEH-UDP]. The term
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 3]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
"NAT Session" is adapted from [NAT-MIB] and denotes the entity
within a NAT device that represents the translation glue for a
session traversing the NAT device.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Section 3.2.2 of [RFC1122] broadly groups ICMP messages into two
classes, namely "ICMP Query" messages and "ICMP Error" messages.
In addition, there are ICMP messages, created after [RFC1122] that
do not fall under either category. We refer them as "Post-1122 ICMP
Messages". All three ICMP message classes are described as follows.
ICMP Query Messages - ICMP query messages are characterized by an
Identifier field in the ICMP header. The Identifier field used
by the ICMP Query messages is also referred as "Query Identifier" or
"Query Id", for short throughout the document. A Query Id is used by
query senders and responders as the equivalent of a TCP/UDP port to
identify an ICMP Query session.
ICMP Error Messages - ICMP error messages provide signaling for IP.
All ICMP error messages are characterized by the fact that they
embed the original datagram that triggered the ICMP error message.
The original datagram embedded within the ICMP Error payload is
also referred as "Embedded packet", throughout the document. Unlike
ICMP Query messages, ICMP error messages do not have a Query Id in
the ICMP header.
Post-1122 ICMP Messages - ICMP messages that do not fall under
either of the above two classes are referred as "Post-1122 ICMP
Messages" throughout the document. For example, discovery ICMP
messages ([RFC1256]) are "request/response" type ICMP messages.
However, they are not characterized as ICMP Query Messages as they
do not have an "Identifier" field within the messages. Likewise,
there are other ICMP messages defined in [RFC4065] that do not
fall in either of ICMP Query or ICMP Error message categories, but
will be referred as Post-1122 ICMP error messages. A NAT MAY drop
or appropriately handle a post-1122 ICMP messages.
3. ICMP Query Handling
This section lists the behavioral requirements for a NAT device
when processing ICMP Query packets. The following sub sections
discuss requirements specific to ICMP Query handling in detail.
3.1. ICMP Query Mapping
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 4]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
A NAT device MUST permit ICMP query based applications to be
initiated from private hosts to the external hosts. ICMP Query
mapping by NAT devices is necessary for current ICMP query based
applications to work. Specifically, a NAT device MUST transparently
forward any ICMP Query packets initiated from the nodes behind NAT
devices and the responses to these Query packets in the opposite
direction. As specified in [NAT-TRAD], this requires translating the
IP header. A NAPT device further translates the ICMP Query Id and
the associated checksum in the ICMP header prior to forwarding.
The mapping of ICMP Query identifier within the NAT device SHOULD
be external endpoint independent. Say, an internal host A sent an
ICMP query out to an external host B using Query Id X. And, say,
the NAT assigned this an external mapping of Query id X' on the
NAT's public address. If host A reused the Query Id X to send ICMP
queries to the same or different external host, the NAT device
SHOULD reuse the same Query Id mapping (i.e., map private host's
Query id X to Query id X' on NAT's public IP address) instead of
assigning a different mapping. This is similar to the "endpoint
independent mapping" requirement specified in the TCP and UDP
BEHAVE requirements [BEH-TCP, BEH-UDP].
Below is justification for making the endpoint independent mapping
for ICMP query IDs a SHOULD [RFC2119] requirement. ICMP Ping
([RFC1470]) and ICMP traceroute ([MS-TRCRT]) are two most commonly
known legacy applications built on top of ICMP query messages.
Neither of these applications require the ICMP Query Id to be
retained across different sessions with external hosts. But, that
may not be case with future applications. In the future, when an
end host application reuses the same Query identifier in sessions
with different target hosts, the end host application might require
that the endpoint identity (i.e., the tuple of IP address and Query
Identifier) appears the same across all its target hosts. Such a
requirement will be valid to make in an IP network without NAT
devices. When NAT devices enforce endpoint mapping that is external
host independent, the above assumption will be valid to make even in
a world with NAT devices. Given the dichotomy between legacy
applications not requiring endpoint independent mapping and future
applications that might require it, the requirement level is kept
at SHOULD [RFC2119].
REQ-1: When local policy permits, a NAT device MUST permit ICMP
queries and their associated responses, when the query is initiated
from a private host.
a) NAT mapping of ICMP Query identifiers SHOULD be external host
independent.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 5]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
3.2. ICMP Query Session Timeouts
When an application initiates an ICMP query that transits a NAT
device, the NAT associates a timer to the ICMP query NAT session.
This is so the ICMP query NAT session is freed up if the NAT session
remains idle for longer than the timeout set by the timer. Query
response times can vary. ICMP query based application are primarily
request/response driven. The ICMP Query session timeout requirement
is necessary for current ICMP query applications to work.
Ideally, the timeout should be set to Maximum Round Trip Time
(Maximum RTT). For the purposes of constraining the maximum RTT, the
Maximum Segment Lifetime (MSL), defined in [RFC793] could be
considered a guideline to set packet lifetime. Per [RFC793], MSL is
the maximum amount of time a TCP segment can exist in a network
before being delivered to the intended recipient. This is the maximum
duration an IP packet can be assumed to take to reach the intended
destination node before declaring that the packet will no longer be
delivered. For an application initiating ICMP query message and
waiting for a response for the query, the Maximum RTT could in
practice be constrained to be sum total of MSL for the Query message
and MSL for the response message. In other words, Maximum RTT could
be constrained to no more than 2x MSL. The recommended value for MSL
in [RFC793] is 120 seconds, even though several implementations set
this to 60 seconds or 30 seconds. When MSL is 120 seconds, the
Maximum RTT (2x MSL) would be 240 seconds.
In practice, ICMP Ping ([RFC1470]) and ICMP traceroute ([MS-TRCRT]),
the two most commonly known legacy applications built on top of ICMP
query messages take less than 10 seconds to complete a round trip,
when the target node is operational on the network.
Setting the ICMP NAT session timeout to a very large duration (say,
240 seconds) could potentially tie up precious NAT resources such as
query mappings and NAT Sessions for the whole duration. On the other
hand, setting the timeout very low can result in premature freeing
of NAT resources and applications failing to complete gracefully.
The ICMP Query session timeout needs to be a balance between the two
extremes. 60 seconds timeout is a balance between the two extremes.
ICMP query session timer MUST not expire in less than 60 seconds. We
RECOMMEND however that the administrator(s) be allowed to configure
the timer.
REQ-2: An ICMP Query session timer MUST NOT expire in less than 60
seconds.
a) It is RECOMMENDED that the ICMP Query session timer be made
configurable.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 6]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
4. ICMP Error Forwarding
Many applications make use of ICMP error messages from end hosts and
intermediate devices to shorten application timeouts. Some
applications will not operate correctly without the receipt of ICMP
error messages. The following sub-sections discuss the requirements
a NAT device MUST conform to in order to ensure reliable forwarding.
4.1. ICMP Error Payload Validation
Appendix C of [ICMP-ATK] points out that newer revision end host
TCP stacks do not accept ICMP error messages with a mismatched
IP or TCP checksum in the embedded packet, if the embedded datagram
contains full IP packet and the TCP checksum can be calculated.
Whenever validation is possible, NAT devices should ensure that ICMP
Error payload is not corrupted. Only after the payload is validated,
should the NAT proceed to forward the ICMP error packet. This
requirement is meant primarily for future applications. Current
applications may not be checking for mismatched checksum.
If the IP checksum of the embedded packet does not validate, the
NAT device SHOULD simply drop the error packet. [ICMP] stipulates
that an ICMP error message should embed IP header and a minimum of
64 bits of the IP payload. Section 4.3.2.3 of [RFC1812] further
recommends that an ICMP error originator SHOULD include as much of
the original packet as possible in the payload without the length of
the ICMP datagram exceeding 576 bytes. If the embedded packet is a
complete IP packet, including the entire transport segment, and the
transport protocol of the embedded packet requires the recipient to
validate the checksum, the NAT device SHOULD validate the transport
checksum. If the transport protocol is UDP and the checksum is set to
zero, the UDP protocol does not require the recipient to validate
the UDP checksum. In the case the ICMP Error payload includes ICMP
extensions ([ICMP-EXT]), the NAT device SHOULD exclude the optional
zero-padding and the ICMP extensions when evaluating transport
checksum for the embedded packet. If the transport checksum fails,
the NAT device SHOULD drop the error packet. Readers are urged to
refer [ICMP-EXT] for identifying the presence of ICMP extensions in
an ICMP message.
When the IP packet embedded within the ICMP error message includes
IP options, the NAT device MUST NOT assume that the transport header
of the embedded packet is at a fixed offset (as would be the case
when there are no IP options associated with the packet) from the
start of the embedded packet. Specifically, the NAT device SHOULD
index past all IP options when locating the start of transport
header for the embedded packet.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 7]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
REQ-3: When an ICMP error packet is received, the NAT device
SHOULD do the following.
a) If the IP checksum of the embedded packet fails to validate, drop
the error packet; and
b) If the embedded packet includes IP options, traverse past the
IP options to locate the start of transport header for the embedded
packet; and
c) If the ICMP Error payload contains ICMP extensions([ICMP-EXT]),
exclude the optional zero-padding and the ICMP extensions when
evaluating transport checksum for the embedded packet; and
d) If the embedded packet contains the entire transport segment,
and the transport protocol of the embedded packet requires the
recipient to validate the transport checksum, and the checksum
fails to validate, drop the error packet.
4.2. ICMP Error Packet Translation
Section 4.3 of RFC 3022 describes the fields of an ICMP error
message that a NAT device translates. In this section, we describe
the requirements a NAT device MUST conform to while performing the
translations. Requirements identified in this section are necessary
for the current applications to work correctly.
Consider the following scenario in figure 1. Say, NAT-xy is a NAT
device connecting hosts in private and external networks.
Router-x and Host-x are in the external network. Router-y and
Host-y are in the private network. The subnets in the external
network are routable from the private as well as the external
domains. By contrast, the subnets in the private network are only
routable within the private domain. When Host-y initiated a session
to Host-x, let us say that the NAT device mapped the endpoint on
Host-y into Host-y' in the external network. The following
subsections describe the processing of ICMP error messages on the
NAT device(NAT-xy), when the NAT device receives an ICMP error
message in response to a packet pertaining to this session.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 8]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Host-x
|
---------------+-------------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-x |
+-------------+
External Network |
--------------------+--------+-------------------
| ^
| | (Host-y', Host-x)
| |
+-------------+
| NAT-xy |
+-------------+
|
Private Network |
----------------+------------+----------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-y |
+-------------+
|
----------------+-------+--------
| ^
| | (Host-y, Host-x)
| |
Host-y
Figure 1. A Session from a private host traversing a NAT device.
4.2.1. ICMP Error Packet Received from External Realm
Say, a packet from Host-y to Host-x triggered an ICMP error message
from one of Router-x or Host-x (both of which are in the external
domain). Such an ICMP error packet will have one of Router-x or
Host-x as the source IP address and Host-y' as the destination IP
address as described in figure 2 below.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 9]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Host-x
|
---------------+-------------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-x |
+-------------+
External Network |
--------------------+--------+-------------------
|
| | ICMP Error Packet to Host-y'
| v
+-------------+
| NAT-xy |
+-------------+
Private Network |
----------------+------------+----------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-y |
+-------------+
|
----------------+-------+--------
|
Host-y
Figure 2. ICMP error Packet Received from External Network
When the NAT device receives the ICMP error packet, the NAT device
MUST use the packet embedded within the ICMP error message (i.e.,
the IP packet from Host-y' to Host-x) to look up the NAT Session the
embedded packet belongs to. If the NAT device does not have an
active mapping for the embedded packet, the NAT SHOULD silently
drop the ICMP error packet. Otherwise, the NAT device MUST use
the matching NAT Session to translate the embedded packet. That is,
translate the source IP address of the embedded packet (e.g.,
Host-y' -> Host-y) and transport headers.
In addition, if the ICMP Error payload contains ICMP extensions
([ICMP-EXT]), the NATs are encouraged to support ICMP extension
objects. At the time of this writing, the authors are not aware
of any standard ICMP extension objects containing realm
specific information.
The NAT device MUST also use the matching NAT Session to translate
the destination IP address in the outer IP header. In the outer
header, the source IP address will remain unchanged because the
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 10]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
originator of the ICMP error message (Host-x or Router-x) is in
external domain and routable from the private domain.
REQ-4: If a NAT device receives an ICMP error packet from external
realm, and the NAT does not have an active mapping for the embedded
payload, the NAT SHOULD silently drop the ICMP error packet. If the
NAT has active mapping for the embedded payload and local policy
permits, then the NAT MUST do the following prior to forwarding the
packet.
a) Revert the IP and transport headers of the embedded IP packet to
their original form, using the matching mapping; and
b) Leave the ICMP error type and code unchanged; and
c) Modify the destination IP address of the outer IP header to be
same as the source IP address of the embedded packet after
translation.
4.2.2. ICMP Error Packet Received from Private Realm
Now, say, a packet from Host-x to Host-y triggered an ICMP error
message from one of Router-y or Host-y (both of which are in the
private domain). Such an ICMP error packet will have one of
Router-y or Host-y as the source IP address and Host-x as the
destination IP address as specified in figure 3 below.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 11]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Host-x
|
---------------+-------------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-x |
+-------------+
External Network |
--------------------+--------+-------------------
|
|
+-------------+
| NAT-xy |
+-------------+
| ^
| | ICMP Error Packet to Host-x
Private Network |
----------------+------------+----------------
|
+-------------+
| Router-y |
+-------------+
|
----------------+-------+--------
|
Host-y
Figure 3. ICMP Error Packet Received from Private Network
When the NAT device receives the ICMP error packet, the NAT device
MUST use the packet embedded within the ICMP error message (i.e.,
the IP packet from Host-x to Host-y) to look up the NAT Session the
embedded packet belongs to. If the NAT device does not have an
active mapping for the embedded packet, the NAT SHOULD silently
drop the ICMP error packet. Otherwise, the NAT device MUST use
the matching NAT Session to translate the embedded packet.
In addition, if the ICMP Error payload contains ICMP extensions
([ICMP-EXT]), the NATs are encouraged to support ICMP extension
objects. At the time of this writing, the authors are not aware
of any standard ICMP extension objects containing realm
specific information.
In the outer header, the destination IP address will remain
unchanged, as the IP addresses for Host-x is already in the external
domain. If the ICMP error message is generated by Host-y, the NAT
device must simply use the NAT Session to translate the source IP
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 12]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
address Host-y to Host-y'. If the ICMP error message is originated
by the intermediate node Router-y, translation of the source IP
address varies depending on whether Basic NAT or NAPT function
([NAT-TRAD]) is enforced by the NAT device. A NAT device enforcing
Basic NAT function has a pool of public IP addresses and enforces
address mapping (which is different from the endpoint mapping
enforced by NAPT) when a private node initiates an outgoing session
via the NAT device. So, if the NAT device has active mapping for
the IP address of the intermediate node Router-y, the NAT device
MUST translate the source IP address of the ICMP error packet with
the public IP address in the mapping. In all other cases, the NAT
device MUST simply use its own IP address in the external domain
to translate the source IP address.
REQ-5: If a NAT device receives an ICMP error packet from private
realm, and the NAT does not have an active mapping for the embedded
payload, the NAT SHOULD silently drop the ICMP error packet. If the
NAT has active mapping for the embedded payload and local policy
permits, then the NAT MUST do the following prior to forwarding the
packet.
a) Revert the IP and transport headers of the embedded
IP packet to their original form, using the matching mapping; and
b) Leave the ICMP error type and code unchanged; and
c) If the NAT enforces Basic NAT function ([NAT-TRAD]), and the NAT
has active mapping for the IP address that sent the ICMP error,
translate the source IP address of the ICMP error packet with the
public IP address in the mapping. In all other cases, translate the
source IP address of the ICMP error packet with its own public IP
address.
4.3. NAT Sessions Pertaining to ICMP Error Payload
While processing an ICMP error packet pertaining to an ICMP Query
or Query response message, a NAT device MUST NOT refresh or delete
the NAT Session that pertains to the embedded payload within the
ICMP error packet. This is in spite of the fact that the NAT device
uses the NAT Session to translate the embedded payload. This ensures
that the NAT Session will not be modified if someone is able to
spoof ICMP error messages for the session. [ICMP-ATK] lists a number
of potential ICMP attacks that may be attempted by malicious users
on the network. This requirement is necessary for current
applications to work correctly.
REQ-6: While processing an ICMP error packet pertaining to an ICMP
Query or Query response message, a NAT device MUST NOT refresh or
delete the NAT Session that pertains to the embedded payload within
the ICMP error packet.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 13]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
5. Hairpinning Support for ICMP packets
[BEH-UDP] and [BEH-TCP] mandate support for hairpinning for UDP and
TCP sessions respectively on NAT devices. A NAT device needs to
support hairpinning for ICMP Query sessions as well. Specifically,
ICMP query hairpinning MUST be supported on Basic NATs. Say, for
example, individual private hosts register their NAT assigned
external IP address with a rendezvous server. Other hosts that wish
to initiate ICMP Query sessions to the registered hosts might do so
using the public address registered with the Rendezvous server. For
this reason, Basic NAT devices MUST support the traversal of
hairpinned ICMP query sessions. This requirement is necessary for
current applications to work correctly.
Packets belonging to any of the hairpinned sessions could in turn
trigger ICMP error messages directed to the source of hairpinned
IP packets. Such hairpinned ICMP error messages will traverse the
NAT devices enroute. All NAT devices (i.e., Basic NAT as well as
NAPT devices) MUST support the traversal of hairpinned ICMP error
messages. Specifically, the NAT device must translate not only the
embedded hairpinned packet, but also the outer IP header that is
hairpinned. This requirement is necessary for current applications
to work correctly.
A hairpinned ICMP error message is received from a node in private
network. As such, the ICMP error processing requirement specified
in Req-5 is applicable in its entirety in processing the ICMP
error message. In addition, the NAT device MUST translate the
destination IP address of the outer IP header to be same as the
source IP address of the embedded IP packet after the translation.
REQ-7: NAT devices enforcing Basic NAT ([NAT-TRAD]) MUST support the
traversal of hairpinned ICMP query sessions. All NAT devices (i.e.,
Basic NAT as well as NAPT devices) MUST support the traversal of
hairpinned ICMP error messages.
a) When forwarding a hairpinned ICMP error message, the NAT device
MUST translate the destination IP address of the outer IP header to
be same as the source IP address of the embedded IP packet after
the translation.
6. Rejection of Outbound Flows Disallowed by NAT
A NAT device typically permits all outbound sessions. However,
a NAT device may disallow some outbound sessions due to resource
constraints or administration considerations. For example, a NAT
device may not permit the first packet of a new outbound session,
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 14]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
if the NAT device is out of resources (out of addresses or TCP/UDP
ports or NAT Session resources) to set up a state for the session,
or, the specific session is administratively restricted by the NAT
device.
When the first packet of an outbound flow is prohibited by a NAT
device due to resource constraints or administration considerations,
the NAT device SHOULD send ICMP destination unreachable message.
Section 5.2.7.1 of [RFC1812] recommends routers to use ICMP code 13
(Communication administratively prohibited) when they
administratively filter packets. ICMP code 13 is a soft error and
is on par with other soft error codes generated in response to
transient events such as 'network unreachable' (ICMP type=3,
code=0). A NAT device SHOULD use ICMP code 13 when generating an
ICMP error message. This requirement is meant primarily for future
use. Current applications do not require this for them to work
correctly.
Some NAT designers opt to never reject an outbound flow. When a
NAT runs short of resources, they prefer to steal a resource
from an existing NAT Session rather than reject the outbound flow.
Such a design choice may appear conformant to REQ-8 below. However,
the design choice is in violation of the spirit of both REQ-8 and
REQ-2. Such a design choice is strongly discouraged.
REQ-8: When a NAT device is unable to establish a NAT Session for a
new transport-layer (TCP, UDP, ICMP, etc.) flow due to resource
constraints or administrative restrictions, the NAT device SHOULD
send an ICMP destination unreachable message, with a code of 13
(Communication administratively prohibited) to the sender, and drop
the original packet.
7. Conformance to RFC 1812
A NAT device is inherently an intermediate router that forwards
IP packets between private and external realms. As such, the NAT
device MUST conform to all the requirements of a router, as
specified in [RFC1812]. Section 5.2.7.1 of [RFC1812] states that
a router MUST also be able to generate ICMP Destination Unreachable
messages and SHOULD choose a response code that most closely matches
the reason the message is being generated.
Note, however, NAT devices also function as hosts on the Internet
and are bound by the conformance requirements in [RFC1122].
Protocol-specific BEHAVE documents ([BEH-UDP], [BEH-TCP]) identify
instances where a NAT device should deviate from RFC 1122. As such,
the host behavior requirements of NAT devices specified in the
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 15]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
protocol-specific BEHAVE drafts take precedence over RFC 1122.
The focus of this section is on conformance to router requirements.
The following sub sections identify specific instances where a NAT
device would be expected to conform to RFC 1812.
7.1. IP packet fragmentation
Many networking applications (which include TCP as well as UDP based
applications) depend on ICMP error messages from the network to
perform end-to-end path MTU discovery [PMTU]. Once path MTU is
discovered, an application that chooses to avoid fragmentation may
do so by originating IP packets that fit within the Path MTU enroute
and setting the DF (Don't Fragment) bit in the IP header, so the
intermediate nodes enroute do not fragment the IP packets. The
following sub-sections discuss the need for NAT devices to honor the
DF bit in the IP header and be able to generate "Packet too big"
ICMP error message when they cannot forward the IP packet without
fragmentation. Also discussed is the need to seamlessly forward
ICMP error messages generated by other intermediate devices.
7.1.1. Generating "Packet too Big" ICMP error Message
When a router is unable to forward a datagram because it exceeds
the MTU of the next-hop network and its Don't Fragment (DF) bit is
set, the router is required by [RFC1812] to return an ICMP
Destination Unreachable message to the source of the datagram, with
the Code indicating "fragmentation needed and DF set". Further,
[PMTU] states that the router MUST include the MTU of that next-hop
network in the low-order 16 bits of the ICMP header field that is
labeled "unused" in the ICMP specification[ICMP].
A NAT device MUST honor the DF bit in the IP header of the
packets that transit the device. If the DF bit is set and the
MTU on the forwarding interface of the NAT device is such that
the IP datagram cannot be forwarded without fragmentation, the
NAT device MUST issue a "packet too big" ICMP message (ICMP
type 3, Code 4) with a suggested MTU back to the sender and
drop the original IP packet. The sender will usually resend after
taking the appropriate corrective action.
If the DF bit is not set and the MTU on the forwarding interface
of the NAT device mandates fragmentation, the NAT device MUST
fragment the packet and forward the fragments [RFC1812].
7.1.2. Forwarding "Packet too big" ICMP Error Message
This is flip side of the argument for the above section. By virtue
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 16]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
of the address translation NAT performs, NAT may end up being the
recipient of "Packet too big" message.
When NAT device is the recipient of "Packet too big" ICMP message
from the network, the NAT device MUST forward the ICMP message back
to the intended recipient, pursuant to the previously stated
requirements REQ-3, REQ-4, REQ-5 and REQ-6.
7.2. Generating "Time Exceeded" Error Message
Section 5.2.7.3 of RFC 1812 says that a router MUST generate
"Time Exceeded" ICMP error message when it discards a packet due
to an expired TTL field. A router MAY have a per-interface option
to disable origination of these messages on that interface, but that
option MUST default to allowing the messages to be originated.
7.3. RFC 1812 Conformance Requirements summary
The requirements outlined in sections 7.1 and 7.2 are necessary for
the current applications to work correctly. The following summarizes
the requirements specified in sections 7.1 and 7.2,
REQ-9: A NAT device MUST conform to RFC 1812 in IP packet handling.
Below are specific instances where a NAT device MUST conform to
RFC 1812.
a) A NAT MUST honor the DF bit in the IP header. If the DF bit is set
on a transit IP packet and the NAT device cannot forward the packet
without fragmentation, the NAT device MUST send a "Packet too big"
ICMP message (ICMP type 3, Code 4) with a suggested MTU back to the
sender and drop the original IP packet. If the DF-bit is clear and
MTU mandates fragmentation, the NAT device MUST fragment the packet
and forward the fragments.
b) A NAT device MUST, by default, generate "Time Exceeded" ICMP
error message when it discards a packet due to an expired TTL field,
unless explicitly configured otherwise.
8. Summary of Requirements
This section summarizes the requirements discussed in the preceding
sections.
REQ-1: When local policy permits, a NAT device MUST permit ICMP
queries and their associated responses, when the query is initiated
from a private host.
a) NAT mapping of ICMP Query identifiers SHOULD be external host
independent.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 17]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
REQ-2: An ICMP Query session timer MUST NOT expire in less than 60
seconds.
a) It is RECOMMENDED that the ICMP Query session timer be made
configurable.
REQ-3: When an ICMP error packet is received, the NAT device
SHOULD do the following.
a) If the IP checksum of the embedded packet fails to validate, drop
the error packet; and
b) If the embedded packet includes IP options, traverse past the
IP options to locate the start of transport header for the embedded
packet; and
c) If the ICMP Error payload contains ICMP extensions([ICMP-EXT]),
exclude the optional zero-padding and the ICMP extensions when
evaluating transport checksum for the embedded packet; and
d) If the embedded packet contains the entire transport segment,
and the transport protocol of the embedded packet requires the
recipient to validate the transport checksum, and the checksum
fails to validate, drop the error packet.
REQ-4: If a NAT device receives an ICMP error packet from external
realm, and the NAT does not have an active mapping for the embedded
payload, the NAT SHOULD silently drop the ICMP error packet. If the
NAT has active mapping for the embedded payload and local policy
permits, then the NAT MUST do the following prior to forwarding the
packet.
a) Revert the IP and transport headers of the embedded IP packet to
their original form, using the matching mapping; and
b) Leave the ICMP error type and code unchanged; and
c) Modify the destination IP address of the outer IP header to be
same as the source IP address of the embedded packet after
translation.
REQ-5: If a NAT device receives an ICMP error packet from private
realm, and the NAT does not have an active mapping for the embedded
payload, the NAT SHOULD silently drop the ICMP error packet. If the
NAT has active mapping for the embedded payload and local policy
permits, then the NAT MUST do the following prior to forwarding the
packet.
a) Revert the IP and transport headers of the embedded
IP packet to their original form, using the matching mapping; and
b) Leave the ICMP error type and code unchanged; and
c) If the NAT enforces Basic NAT function ([NAT-TRAD]), and the NAT
has active mapping for the IP address that sent the ICMP error,
translate the source IP address of the ICMP error packet with the
public IP address in the mapping. In all other cases, translate the
source IP address of the ICMP error packet with its own public IP
address.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 18]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
REQ-6: While processing an ICMP error packet pertaining to an ICMP
Query or Query response message, a NAT device MUST NOT refresh or
delete the NAT Session that pertains to the embedded payload within
the ICMP error packet.
REQ-7: NAT devices enforcing Basic NAT ([NAT-TRAD]) MUST support the
traversal of hairpinned ICMP query sessions. All NAT devices (i.e.,
Basic NAT as well as NAPT devices) MUST support the traversal of
hairpinned ICMP error messages.
a) When forwarding a hairpinned ICMP error message, the NAT device
MUST translate the destination IP address of the outer IP header to
be same as the source IP address of the embedded IP packet after
the translation.
REQ-8: When a NAT device is unable to establish a NAT Session for a
new transport-layer (TCP, UDP, ICMP, etc.) flow due to resource
constraints or administrative restrictions, the NAT device SHOULD
send an ICMP destination unreachable message, with a code of 13
(Communication administratively prohibited) to the sender, and drop
the original packet.
REQ-9: A NAT device MUST conform to RFC 1812 in IP packet handling.
Below are specific instances where a NAT device MUST conform to
RFC 1812.
a) A NAT MUST honor the DF bit in the IP header. If the DF bit is set
on a transit IP packet and the NAT device cannot forward the packet
without fragmentation, the NAT device MUST send a "Packet too big"
ICMP message (ICMP type 3, Code 4) with a suggested MTU back to the
sender and drop the original IP packet. If the DF-bit is clear and
MTU mandates fragmentation, the NAT device MUST fragment the packet
and forward the fragments.
b) A NAT device MUST, by default, generate "Time Exceeded" ICMP
error message when it discards a packet due to an expired TTL field,
unless explicitly configured otherwise.
9. Security Considerations
This document does not introduce any new security concerns related
to ICMP error message handling in the NAT devices. However, the
document does propose counter measures to mitigate security concerns
that already exist with ICMP error messages.
[ICMP-ATK] lists a number of ICMP attacks that can be directed
against end host TCP stacks and suggests remedies to counter the
attacks. [TCP-SOFT] describes improvements to the handling of
ICMP error messages in many of the existing TCP/IP stacks, including
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 19]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Linux. Section 4 of this document describes a number of measures by
which NAT devices should validate and update the embedded payload
in ICMP error messages prior to forwarding. These measures ensure
that NATs forward the ICMP error messages reliably, as stipulated
in [ICMP-ATK].
For example, a rogue entity could bombard the NAT device with a
large number of ICMP errors. If the NAT device did not
validate the legitimacy of the ICMP error packets, the ICMP errors
would be forwarded directly to the end nodes. End hosts not capable
of defending themselves against such bogus ICMP error attacks could
be adversely impacted by such attacks. Req-3 recommends validating
embedded payload prior to forwarding. Checksum validation by itself
does not protect end hosts from attacks. However, checksum
validation mitigates end hosts from malformed ICMP error attacks.
Req-4 and Req-5 further mandate that when a NAT device does not find
a mapping selection for the embedded payload, the NAT should drop
the ICMP error packets, without forwarding.
A rogue source could also try and send bogus ICMP error messages for
the active NAT sessions, with an intent to destroy the sessions.
Req-6 averts such an attack by ensuring that an ICMP error message
does not effect the state of a session on the NAT device.
Req-8 recommends a NAT device sending ICMP error message when the
NAT device is unable to create a NAT session due to lack of
resources. Some administrators may choose not to have the NAT device
send ICMP error message, as doing so could confirm to a malicious
attacker that the attack has succeeded. For this reason, sending
of the specific ICMP error message stated in REQ-8 should be
left to the discretion of the NAT device administrator.
Unfortunately, ICMP messages are sometimes blocked at network
boundaries due to local security policy. Thus, some of the
requirements in this document allow local policy to override the
recommendations of this document. Blocking such ICMP messages is
known to break some protocol features (most notably Path MTU
Discovery) and some applications (e.g., ping, traceroute), and
such blocking is NOT RECOMMENDED.
10. IANA Considerations
There are no IANA considerations.
11. Acknowledgements
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 20]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
The authors wish to thank Fernando Gont, Dan Wing, Carlos Pignataro,
Philip Matthews and members of the BEHAVE work group for doing a
thorough review of the document and providing valuable input and
offering generous amount of their time in shaping the ICMP
requirements. Their valuable feedback makes this document a better
read. The authors highly appreciate that. Dan Wing and Fernando Gont
have been a steady source of inspiration throughout, for each rev of
the document. Fernando Gont spent many hours preparing slides and
presenting the document in the IETF on behalf of the authors. For
this, the authors are grateful to Fernando. The authors also thank
and sincerely appreciate Dan Tappan and Carlos Pignataro, the
authors of the [ICMP-EXT] document for their feedback on operational
experience with ICMP extensions across NAT devices.
Normative References
[BEH-UDP] F. Audet and C. Jennings, "NAT Behavioral Requirements for
Unicast UDP", RFC 4787, January 2007.
[ICMP] Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", STD 5,
RFC 792, September 1981.
[ICMP-EXT] Bonica, R., Gan, D., Nikander, P., Tappan, D., and
Pignataro, C., "Extended ICMP to Support Multi-part
Messages", RFC 4884, April 2007.
[NAT-MIB] Rohit, R., Srisuresh, P., Raghunarayan, R., Pai, N.,
and Wang, C., "Definitions of Managed Objects for Network
Address Translators (NAT)", RFC 4008, March 2005.
[RFC793] "Transmission Control Protocol DARPA Internet Program
Protocol Specification", RFC 793, September 1981.
[RFC1812] Baker, F., "Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers",
RFC 1812, June 1995.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
Informative References
[BEH-APP] Ford, B., Srisuresh, P., and Kegel, D., "Application Design
Guidelines for Traversal through Network Address
Translators", draft-ford-behave-app-05.txt (Work In
Progress), March 2007.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 21]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
[BEH-TCP] Guha, S., Biswas, K., Ford, B., Sivakumar, S., and
Srisuresh, P., "NAT Behavioral Requirements for TCP",
draft-ietf-behave-tcp-07.txt (Work In Progress),
April 2007.
[ICMP-ATK] Gont, F., "ICMP attacks against TCP",
draft-ietf-tcpm-icmp-attacks-02.txt (Work In Progress),
May 2007.
[MS-TRCRT] Microsoft Support, "How to use the Tracert
command-line utility to troubleshoot TCP/IP problems
in Windows", http://support.microsoft.com/kb/162326,
October, 2006.
[NAT-TERM] Srisuresh, P. and Holdrege, M., "IP Network Address
Translator (NAT) Terminology and Considerations", RFC 2663,
August 1999.
[NAT-TRAD] Srisuresh, P., and Egevang, K., "Traditional IP Network
Address Translator (Traditional NAT)", RFC 3022,
January 2001.
[PMTU] Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU discovery", RFC 1191,
November 1990.
[RFC1122] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
Communication Layers", RFC 1122, October 1989.
[RFC1256] Deering, S., "ICMP Router Discovery Messages", RFC1256,
September 1991.
[RFC1470] Stine, R., "FYI on a Network Management Tool Catalog: Tools
for Monitoring and Debugging TCP/IP Internets and
Interconnected Devices", RFC 1470, June 1993.
[RFC4065] Kempf, J., "Instructions for Seamoby and Experimental
Mobility Protocol IANA Allocations", RFC 4065, July 2005.
[TCP-SOFT] Gont, F., "TCP's Reaction to Soft Errors",
draft-ietf-tcpm-tcp-soft-errors-06.txt (Work In Progress),
June 2007.
[UNSAF] Daigle, L., and IAB, "IAB Considerations for UNilateral
Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address
Translation", RFC 3424, November 2002.
Author's Addresses:
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 22]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
Pyda Srisuresh
Kazeon Systems, Inc.
1161 San Antonio Rd.
Mountain View, CA 94043
U.S.A.
Phone: (408)836-4773
E-mail: srisuresh@yahoo.com
Bryan Ford
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02139
U.S.A.
Phone: (617) 253-5261
E-mail: baford@mit.edu
Web: http://www.brynosaurus.com/
Senthil Sivakumar
Cisco Systems, Inc.
7100-8 Kit Creek Road
PO Box 14987
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-4987
U.S.A.
Phone: +1 919 392 5158
Email: ssenthil@cisco.com
Saikat Guha
Cornell University
331 Upson Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853
U.S.A.
Email: saikat@cs.cornell.edu
Intellectual Property Statement
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 23]
Internet-Draft NAT Behavioral Requirements for ICMP June 2007
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at
ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
retain all their rights.
This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND
THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Acknowledgment
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
IETF Trust.
Srisuresh, et. al. [Page 24]
Html markup produced by rfcmarkup 1.129d, available from
https://tools.ietf.org/tools/rfcmarkup/