RFC4793

From RFC-Wiki

Network Working Group M. Nystroem Request for Comments: 4793 RSA Security Category: Informational February 2007

    The EAP Protected One-Time Password Protocol (EAP-POTP)

Status of This Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

Abstract

This document describes a general Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) method suitable for use with One-Time Password (OTP) tokens, and offers particular advantages for tokens with direct electronic interfaces to their associated clients. The method can be used to provide unilateral or mutual authentication, and key material, in protocols utilizing EAP, such as PPP, IEEE 802.1X, and Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2).

Introduction

Scope

This document describes an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) [1] method suitable for use with One-Time Password (OTP) tokens, and offers particular advantages for tokens that are electronically connected to a user's computer, e.g., through a USB interface. The method can be used to provide unilateral or mutual authentication, and key material, in protocols utilizing EAP, such as PPP [10], IEEE 802.1X [11], and IKEv2 [12].

Background

A One-Time Password (OTP) token may be a handheld hardware device, a hardware device connected to a personal computer through an electronic interface such as USB, or a software module resident on a personal computer, which generates one-time passwords that may be used to authenticate a user towards some service. This document describes an EAP method intended to meet the needs of organizations wishing to use OTP tokens in an interoperable manner to authenticate users over EAP. The method is designed to be independent of particular OTP algorithms and to meet the requirements on modern EAP methods (see [13]).

The basic variant of this method provides client authentication only. This mode is only to be used within a secured tunnel. A more advanced variant provides mutual authentication, integrity protection of the exchange, protection against eavesdroppers, and establishment of authenticated keying material. Both variants allow for fast session resumption.

While this document also includes a profile of the general method for the RSA SecurID(TM) mechanism, it is described in terms of general constructions. It is therefore intended that the document will also serve as a framework for use with other OTP algorithms.

Note: The term "OTP" as used herein shall not be confused with the EAP OTP method defined in [1].

Rationale behind the Design

EAP-POTP has been designed with the intent that its messages and data elements be easily parsed by EAP implementations. This makes it easier to programmatically use the EAP method in the peer and the authenticator, reducing the need for user interactions and allowing for local generation of user prompts, when needed. In contrast, the Generic Token Card (GTC) method from [1], which uses text strings

generated by the EAP server, is intended to be interpreted and acted upon by humans. Furthermore, EAP-POTP allows for mutual authentication and establishment of keying material, which GTC does not. To retain the generic nature of GTC, the EAP-POTP method has been designed to support a wide range of OTP algorithms, with profiling expected for specific such algorithms. This document provides a profile of EAP-POTP for RSA SecurID tokens.

Relationship with EAP Methods in RFC 3748

The EAP OTP method defined in [1], which builds on [14], is an example of a particular OTP algorithm and is not related to the EAP method defined in this document, other than that a profile of EAP- POTP may be created for the OTP algorithm from [14].

The Generic Token Card EAP method defined in [1] is intended to work with a variety of OTP algorithms. The same is true for EAP-POTP, the EAP method defined herein. Advantages of profiling a particular OTP algorithm for use with EAP-POTP, compared to using EAP GTC, are described in Section 1.3.

Conventions Used in This Document

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", and "MAY", in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [2].

Authentication Model

The EAP-POTP method provides user authentication as defined below. Additionally, it may provide mutual authentication (authenticating the EAP server to the EAP client) and establish keying material.

There are basically three entities in the authentication method described here:

o A client, or "peer", using EAP terminology, acting on behalf of a

  user possessing an OTP token;

o A server, or "authenticator", using EAP terminology, to which the

  user needs to authenticate; and

o A backend authentication server, providing an authentication

  service to the authenticator.

The term "EAP server" is used here with the same meaning as in [1]. Any protocol used between the authenticator and the backend authentication server is outside the scope of this document, although

RADIUS [15] is a typical choice. It is assumed that the EAP client and the peer are located on the same host, and hence only the term "peer" is used in the following for these entities.

The EAP-POTP method assumes the use of a shared secret key, or "seed", which is known both by the user and the backend authentication server. The secret seed is stored on an OTP token that the user possesses, as well as on the authentication server.

In its most basic variant, the EAP-POTP method provides only one Service (namely, user authentication) where the user provides information to the authentication server so that the server can authenticate the user. A more advanced variant provides mutual authentication, protection against eavesdropping, and establishment of authenticated keying material.

Description of the EAP-POTP Method

Overview

Note: Since the EAP-POTP method is general in nature, the term "POTP-X" is used below as a placeholder for an EAP method type identifier, identifying the use of a particular OTP algorithm with EAP-POTP. As an example, in the case of using RSA SecurID tokens within EAP-POTP, the EAP method type shall be 32 (see Appendix A).

A typical EAP-POTP authentication is performed as follows (Appendix B provides more detailed examples):

a. The optional EAP Identity Request/Response is exchanged, as per

   RFC 3748 [1].  An identity provided here may alleviate the need
   for a "User Identifier" or a "Token Key Identifier" triplet
   (TLV), defined below, later in the exchange.

b. The EAP server sends an EAP-Request of type POTP-X with a Version

   TLV.  The Version TLV indicates the highest and lowest version of
   this method supported by the server.  The EAP server typically
   also includes an OTP TLV in the EAP-Request.  The OTP TLV
   instructs the peer to respond with the current OTP (possibly in
   protected form), and may contain a challenge and some other
   information, like server policies.  The EAP server should also
   include a Server-Info TLV in the request, and must do so if it
   supports session resumption.  The Server-Info TLV identifies the
   authentication server, contains an identifier for this (new)
   session, and may be used by the peer to find an already existing
   session with the EAP server.

c. The peer responds with an EAP-Response of type Nak (3) if it does

   not support POTP-X or if it does not support a version of this
   method that is also supported by the server, as indicated in the
   server's Version TLV.
   If the peer supports a version of this method that is also
   supported by the EAP server, the peer generates an EAP-Response
   of type POTP-X as follows:
   *  First, it generates a Version TLV, which indicates the peer's
      highest supported version within the range of versions offered
      by the server.  This Version TLV will be part of the EAP-
      Response to the EAP server.
   *  Next, if the peer's highest supported version equals that of
      the EAP server, and the EAP server sent a Server-Info TLV, the
      peer checks if it has a saved session with the EAP server.  If
      an existing session with the server is found, and session
      resumption is possible (the Server-Info TLV may explicitly
      disallow it), the peer calculates new session keys (if the
      session is a protected-mode session) and responds with a
      Resume TLV and the Version TLV.
   *  Otherwise, if the peer's highest supported version equals that
      of the EAP server, and the received EAP-Request message
      contains an OTP TLV, the peer requests (possibly through user
      interaction) the OTP token to calculate a one-time password
      based on the information in the received EAP-Request message
      (which could, for example, carry a challenge), the current
      token state (e.g., token time), a shared secret (the "seed"),
      and a user-provided PIN (note that, depending on the OTP token
      type, some of the information in the EAP-Request may not be
      used in the OTP calculation, and the PIN may be optional too).
      If the received OTP TLV has the P bit set (see below), the
      peer then combines the token-provided OTP with other
      information, and provides the combined data to a key
      derivation function.  The key derivation function generates
      several keys, of which one is used to calculate a Message
      Authentication Code (MAC) on the received message, together
      with some other information.  The resulting MAC, together with
      some additional information, is then placed in an OTP TLV
      (with the P bit set) that is sent in a response to the EAP
      server, together with the Version TLV.  If the P bit is not
      set in the received OTP TLV, the peer instead inserts the
      calculated OTP value directly in an OTP TLV, which then is
      sent to the EAP server together with the Version TLV.
   *  Finally, if the peer's highest supported version differs from
      the server's, or if the server did not provide any TLVs
      besides the Version TLV in its initial request, the peer just
      sends back the generated Version TLV as an EAP-Response to the
      EAP server.

d. If the EAP server receives an EAP-Response of type Nak (3), the

   session negotiation failed and the EAP server may try with
   another EAP method.  Otherwise, the EAP server checks the peer's
   supported version.  If the peer did not support the highest
   version supported by the server, the server will send a new EAP-
   Request with TLVs adjusted for that version.  Otherwise, assuming
   the EAP server did send additional TLVs in its initial EAP-
   Request, the EAP server will attempt to authenticate the peer
   based on the response provided in c).  Depending on the result of
   this authentication, the EAP server may do one of the following:
   *  send a new EAP-Request of type POTP-X to the peer indicating
      that session resumption was not possible, and ask for a new
      OTP (this would be the case when the peer responded with a
      Resume TLV, and the session indicated in the Resume TLV was
      not valid),
   *  send a new EAP-Request of type POTP-X to the peer (e.g., to
      ask for the next OTP),
   *  accept the authentication (and send an EAP-Request message
      containing a Confirm TLV to the peer if the received response
      has the P bit set or was a successful attempt at a protected-
      mode session resumption; otherwise, send an EAP-Success
      message to the peer), or
   *  fail the authentication (and send an EAP-Failure message --
      possibly preceded by an EAP-Request message of type
      Notification (2) -- to the peer).

e. If the peer receives an EAP-Success or an EAP-Failure message the

   protocol run is finished.  If the peer receives an EAP-Request of
   type Notification, it responds as specified by RFC 3748 [1].  If
   the peer receives an EAP-Request of type POTP-X with a Confirm
   TLV, it attempts to authenticate the EAP server using the
   provided data.  If the authentication is successful, the peer
   responds with an EAP-Response of type POTP-X with a Confirm TLV.
   If it is unsuccessful, the peer responds with an empty EAP-
   Response of type POTP-X.  If the peer receives an EAP-Request of
   type POTP-X containing some other TLVs, it continues as specified
   in c) above (though no version negotiation will take place in
   this case) or as described for those TLVs.

f. When an EAP server, which has sent an EAP-Request of type POTP-X

   with a Confirm TLV, receives an EAP-Response of type POTP-X with
   a Confirm TLV present, it can proceed in one of two ways: If it
   has detected that there is a need to send additional EAP-Requests
   of type POTP-X, it shall enter a "protected state", where, from
   then on, all POTP-X TLVs must be encrypted and integrity-
   protected before being sent (at this point, the parties shall
   have calculated a master session key as described in Section
   4.5).  One reason to continue the POTP-X conversation after
   exchange of the Confirm TLV could be that the user needs to
   update her OTP PIN; hence, the EAP server needs to send a New PIN
   TLV.  At that point, the handshake is back at step c) above
   (except for the version negotiation and the protection of all
   TLVs).  If there is no need to send additional EAP-Request
   packets, the EAP server shall instead send an EAP-Success method
   to the peer to indicate successful protocol completion.  The EAP
   server may not continue the conversation unless it indicates its
   intent to do so in the Confirm TLV.
   An EAP server, which has sent an EAP-Request of type POTP-X with
   a Confirm TLV and receives an EAP-Response of type POTP-X, which
   is empty (i.e., does not contain any TLVs), shall respond with an
   EAP-Failure and terminate the handshake.

As implied by the description, steps c) through f) may be carried out a number of times before completion of the exchange. One example of this is when the authentication server initially requests an OTP, accepts the response from the peer, performs an (intermediary) Confirm TLV exchange, requests the peer to select a new PIN, and finally asks the peer to authenticate with an OTP based on the new PIN (which again will be followed with a final Confirm TLV exchange).

Version Negotiation

The EAP-POTP method provides a version negotiation mechanism that enables implementations to be backward compatible with previous versions of the protocol. This specification documents the EAP-POTP protocol version 1. Version negotiation proceeds as follows:

a. In the first EAP-Request of type POTP-X, the EAP server MUST send

   a Version TLV in which it sets the "Highest" field to its highest
   supported version number, and the "Lowest" field to its lowest
   supported version number.  The EAP server MAY include other TLV
   triplets, as described below, that are compatible with the
   "Highest" supported version number to optimize the number of
   round-trips in the case of a peer supporting the server's
   "Highest" version number.

b. If the peer supports a version of the protocol that falls within

   the range of versions indicated by the EAP server, it MUST
   respond with an EAP-Response of type POTP-X that contains a
   Version TLV with the "Highest" field set to the highest version
   supported by the peer.  The peer MUST also respond to any TLV
   triplets included in the EAP-Request, if it supported the
   "Highest" supported version indicated in the server's Version
   TLV.
   The EAP peer MUST respond with an EAP-Response of type Nak (3) if
   it does not support a version that falls within the range of
   versions indicated by the EAP server.  This will allow the EAP
   server to use another EAP method for peer authentication.

c. When the EAP server receives an EAP-Response containing a Version

   TLV from the peer, but the "Highest" supported version field in
   the TLV differs from the "Highest" supported version field sent
   by the EAP server, or when the version is the same as the one
   originally proposed by the EAP server, but the EAP server did not
   include any TLV triplets in the initial request, the EAP server
   sends a new EAP-Request of type POTP-X with the negotiated
   version and TLV triplets as desired and described herein.

The version negotiation procedure guarantees that the EAP peer and server will agree to the highest version supported by both parties. If version negotiation fails, use of EAP-POTP will not be possible, and another mutually acceptable EAP method will need to be negotiated if authentication is to proceed.

The EAP-POTP version field may be modified in transit by an attacker. It is therefore important that EAP entities only accept EAP-POTP versions according to an explicit policy.

Cryptographic Algorithm Negotiation

Cryptographic algorithms are negotiated through the use of the Crypto Algorithm TLV. EAP-POTP provides a default digest algorithm (SHA-256) [3], a default encryption algorithm (AES-CBC) [4] , and a default MAC algorithm (HMAC) [5], and these algorithms MUST be supported by all EAP-POTP implementations. An EAP server that does not want to make use of any other algorithms than the default ones need not send a Crypto Algorithm TLV. An EAP server that does want to negotiate use of some other algorithms MUST send the Crypto Algorithm TLV in the initial EAP-Request of type POTP-X that also contains an OTP TLV with the P bit set. The TLV MUST NOT be present in any other EAP-Request in the session. (The two exceptions to this are 1) if the client attempted a session resumption that failed and therefore did not evaluate a sent Crypto Algorithm TLV, or 2) if the

Crypto Algorithm TLV was part of the initial message from the EAP server, and the client negotiated another EAP-POTP version than the highest one supported by the EAP server. When either of these cases apply, the server MUST include the Crypto Algorithm TLV in the first EAP-Request that also contains an OTP TLV with the P bit set subsequent to the failed session resumption / protocol version negotiation.) In the Crypto Algorithm TLV, the EAP server suggests some combination of digest, encryption, and MAC algorithms. (If the server only wants to negotiate a particular class of algorithms, then suggestions for the other classes need not be present, since the default applies.)

The peer MUST include a Crypto Algorithm TLV in an EAP-Response if and only if an EAP-Request of type POTP-X has been received containing a Crypto Algorithm TLV, it was legal for that EAP-Request to contain a Crypto Algorithm TLV, the peer does not try to resume an existing session, and the peer and the EAP server agree on at least one algorithm not being the default one. If the peer does not supply a value for a particular class of algorithms in a responding Crypto Algorithm TLV, then the default algorithm applies for that class. When resuming an existing session (see the next section), there is no need for the peer to negotiate since the session already is associated with a set of algorithms. Servers MUST fail a session (i.e., send an EAP-Failure) if they receive an EAP-Response TLV containing both a Resume TLV and a Crypto Algorithm TLV.

Clearly, EAP servers and peers MUST NOT suggest any other algorithms than the ones their policy allows them to use. Policies may also restrict what combinations of cryptographic algorithms are acceptable.

Session Resumption

This method makes use of session identifiers and server identifiers to allow for improved efficiency in the case where a peer repeatedly attempts to authenticate to an EAP server within a short period of time. This capability is particularly useful for support of wireless roaming.

In order to help the peer find a session associated with the EAP server, an EAP server that supports session resumption MUST send a Server-Info TLV containing a server identifier in its initial EAP- Request of type POTP-X that also contains an OTP TLV. The identifier may then be used by the peer for lookup purposes.

It is left to the peer whether or not to attempt to continue a previous session, thus shortening the negotiation. Typically, the peer's decision will be made based on the time elapsed since the

previous authentication attempt to that EAP server. If the peer decides to attempt to resume a session with the EAP server, it sends a Resume TLV identifying the chosen session and other contents, as described below, to the EAP server.

Based on the session identifier chosen by the peer, and the time elapsed since the previous authentication, the EAP server will decide whether to allow the session resumption, or continue with a new session.

o If the EAP server is willing to resume a previously established

  session, it MUST authenticate the peer based on the contents of
  the Resume TLV.  If the authentication succeeds, the handshake
  will continue in one of two ways:
  *  If the session is a protected-mode session, then the server
     MUST respond with a request containing a Confirm TLV.  If the
     Confirm TLV authenticates the EAP server, then the peer
     responds with an empty Confirm TLV, to which the EAP server
     responds with an EAP-Success message.  If the Confirm TLV does
     not authenticate the EAP server, the peer responds with an
     empty EAP-Response of type POTP-X.
  *  If the session is not a protected-mode session, i.e., it is a
     session created from a basic-mode peer authentication, then the
     server MUST respond with an EAP-Success message.
  If the authentication of the peer fails, the EAP server SHOULD
  send another EAP-Request containing an OTP TLV and a Server-Info
  TLV with the N bit set to indicate that no session resumption is
  possible.  The EAP server MAY also send an EAP-Failure message,
  possibly preceded by an EAP-Request of type Notification (2), in
  which case, the EAP run will terminate.

o If the EAP server is not willing or able to resume a previously

  established session, it will respond with another EAP-Request
  containing an OTP TLV and a Server-Info TLV with the N bit set
  (indicating no session resumption).

Sessions SHOULD NOT be maintained longer than the security of the exchange which created the session permits. For example, if it is estimated that an attacker could be successful in brute-force searching for the OTP in 24 hours, then EAP-POTP session lifetimes should be clearly less than this value.

Key Derivation and Session Identifiers

The EAP-POTP method described herein makes use of a key derivation function denoted "PBKDF2". PBKDF2 is described in [6], Section 5.2. The PBKDF2 PRF SHALL be set to the negotiated MAC algorithm. The default MAC algorithm, which MUST be supported, is HMAC-SHA256. HMAC is defined in [5], and SHA-256 is defined in [3]. HMAC-SHA256 is the HMAC construct from [5] with SHA-256 as the hash function H. The output length of HMAC-SHA256, when used as a PRF for PBKDF2, shall be 32 octets (i.e., the full output length).

The output from PBKDF2 as described here will consist of five keys (see Section 4.11.3 for details on how to calculate these keys):

o K_MAC, a MAC key used for mutual authentication and integrity

  protection,

o K_ENC, an encryption key used to protect certain data during the

  authentication,

o SRK, a session resumption key only used for session resumption

  purposes,

o MSK, a Master Session Key, as defined in [1], and

o EMSK, an Extended Master Session Key, also as defined in [1].

  For the default algorithms, K_MAC, K_ENC, and SRK SHALL be 16
  octets.  For other cases, the key lengths will be as determined by
  the negotiated algorithms.  The MSK and the EMSK SHALL each be 64
  octets, in conformance with [1].  Therefore, in the case of
  default algorithms, the "dkLen" parameter from Section 5.2 of [6]
  SHALL be set to 176 (the combined length of K_MAC, K_ENC, SRK,
  MSK, and EMSK).

[1] and [16] define usage of the MSK and the EMSK . For a particular use case, see also Appendix C.

Error Handling and Result Indications

EAP does not allow for the sending of an EAP-Response of type Nak (3) within a method after the initial EAP-Request and EAP-Response pair of that particular method has been exchanged (see [1], Section 2.1). Instead, when a peer is unable to continue an EAP-POTP session, the peer MAY respond to an outstanding EAP-Request by sending an empty EAP-Response of type POTP-X rather than immediately terminating the conversation. This allows the EAP server to log the cause of the error.

To ensure that the EAP server receives the empty EAP-Response, the peer SHOULD wait for the EAP server to reply before terminating the conversation. The EAP server MUST reply with an EAP-Failure.

When EAP-POTP is run in protected mode, the exchange of the Confirm TLV (Section 4.11.6) serves as a success result indication; when the peer receives a Confirm TLV, it knows that the EAP server has successfully authenticated it. Similarly, when the EAP server receives the Confirm TLV response from the peer, it knows that the peer has authenticated it. In protected mode, the peer will not accept an EAP-Success packet unless it has received and validated a Confirm TLV. The Confirm TLV sent from the EAP server to the peer is a "protected result indication" as defined in [1], as it is integrity protected and cannot be replayed. The Confirm TLV sent from the peer to the EAP server is, however, not a protected result indication. An empty EAP-POTP response sent from the peer to the EAP server serves as a failure result indication.

Use of the EAP Notification Method

Except where explicitly allowed in the following, the EAP Notification method MUST NOT be used within an EAP-POTP session. The EAP Notification method MAY be used within an EAP-POTP session in the following situations:

o The EAP server MAY send an EAP-Request of type Notification (2)

  when it has received an EAP-Response containing an OTP TLV and is
  unable to authenticate the user.  In this case, once the EAP-
  Response of type Notification is received, the EAP server MAY
  retry the authentication and send a new EAP-Request containing an
  OTP TLV, or it MAY fail the session and send an EAP-Failure
  message.

o The EAP server MAY send an EAP-Request of type Notification (2)

  when it has received an unacceptable New PIN TLV.  In this case,
  once the EAP-Response of type Notification is received, the EAP
  server MAY retry the PIN update and send a new EAP-Request with a
  New PIN TLV, or it MAY fail the session and send an EAP-Failure
  message.

Protection against Brute-Force Attacks

Since OTPs may be relatively short, it is important to slow down an attacker sufficiently so that it is economically unattractive to brute-force search for an OTP, given an observed EAP-POTP handshake in protected mode. One way to do this is to do a high number of iterated hashes in the PBKDF2 function. Another is for the client to include a value ("pepper") unknown to the attacker in the hash

computation. Whereas a traditional "salt" value normally is sent in the clear, this "pepper" value will not be sent in the clear, but may instead be transferred to the EAP server in encrypted form. In practice, the procedure is as follows:

a. The EAP server indicates in its OTP TLV whether it supports

   pepper searching.  Additionally, it may indicate to the peer that
   a new pepper shall be chosen.

b. If the peer supports the use of pepper, the peer checks whether

   it already has established a shared pepper with this server:
   If it does have a pepper stored for this server, and the server
   did not indicate that a new pepper shall be generated, then it
   uses the existing pepper value, as specified in Section 4.11.3
   below, to calculate an OTP TLV response.  In this case, the
   iteration count shall be kept to a minimum, as the security of
   the scheme is provided through the pepper, and efficiency
   otherwise is lost.
   If the peer does not have a pepper stored for this server, but
   the server indicated support for pepper searching, or the server
   indicated that a new pepper shall be generated, then the peer
   generates a random and uniformly distributed pepper of sufficient
   length (the maximum length supported by the server is provided in
   the server's OTP TLV), and includes the new pepper in the PBKDF2
   computation.
   If the peer does not have a pepper stored for this server, and
   the server did not indicate support for pepper searching, then a
   pepper will not be used in the response computation.
   Clearly, if the peer itself does not support the use of pepper,
   then a pepper will not be used in the response computation.

c. The EAP server may, in its subsequent Confirm TLV, provide a

   pepper to the peer for later use.  In this case, the pepper will
   be substantially longer than a peer-chosen pepper, and encrypted
   with a key derived from the PBKDF2 computation.

The above procedure allows for pepper updates to be initiated by either side, e.g., based on policy. Since the pepper can be seen as a MAC key, its lifetime should be limited.

An EAP server that is not capable of storing pepper values for each user it is authenticating may still support the use of pepper; the cost for this will be the extra computation time to do pepper searches. This cost is still substantially lower than the cost for

an attacker, however, since the server already knows the underlying OTP.

MAC Calculations in EAP-POTP

Introduction

In protected mode, EAP-POTP uses MACs for authentication purposes, as well as to ensure the integrity of protocol sessions. This section defines how the MACs are calculated and the rationale for the design.

MAC Calculation

In protected mode, and when resuming a previous session, rather than sending authenticating credentials (such as one-time passwords or shared keys) directly, evidence of knowledge of the credentials is sent. This evidence is a MAC on the hash of (certain parts of) EAP- POTP messages exchanged so far in a session using a key K_MAC:

mac = MAC(K_MAC, msg_hash(msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n))

where

"MAC" is the negotiated MAC algorithm, "K_MAC" is a key derived as specified in Section 4.5, and "msg_hash(msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n)" is the message hash defined below of messages msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n.

Message Hash Algorithm

To compute a message hash for the MAC, given a sequence of EAP messages msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n, the following operations shall be carried out:

a. Re-transmitted messages are removed from the sequence of

   messages.
   Note: The resulting sequence of messages must be an alternating
   sequence of EAP Request and EAP Response messages.

b. The contents (i.e., starting with the EAP "Type" field and

   excluding the EAP "Code", "Identifier", and "Length" fields) of
   each message, msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n, is concatenated together.

c. User identifier TLVs MUST NOT be included in the hash (this is to

   allow for a backend service that does not know about individual
   user names), i.e., any such TLV is removed from the message in
   which it appeared.

d. The resulting string is hashed using the negotiated hash

   algorithm.

Design Rationale

The reason for excluding the "Identifier" field is that the actual, transmitted "Identifier" field is not always known to the EAP method layer. The reason for excluding the "Length" field is to allow the possibility for an intermediary to remove or replace a Username TLV (e.g., for anonymity or service reasons) before passing a received response on to an authentication server. While this on the surface may appear as bad security practice, it may in practice only result in denial of service, something which always may be achieved by an attacker able to modify messages in transit. By excluding the "Code" field, the hash is simply calculated on applicable sent and received message contents. Excluding the "Code" field is regarded as harmless since the hash is to be made on the sequence of POTP-X messages, all having alternating (known) Code values, namely 1 (Request) and 2 (Response).

Implementation Considerations

To save on storage space, each EAP entity may partially hash messages as they are sent and received (e.g., HashInit(); HashUpdate(message 1); ...; HashUpdate(message n-1); HashFinal(message n)). This reduces the amount of state needed for this purpose to the internal state required for the negotiated hash algorithm.

4.10. EAP-POTP Packet Format

A summary of the EAP-POTP packet format is shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.

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 | Identifier | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Type | Reserved | TLV-based EAP-POTP message ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Code

  1 - Request
  2 - Response

Identifier

  The Identifier field is 1 octet and aids in matching responses
  with requests.  For a more detailed description of this field and
  how to use it, see [1].

Length

  The Length field is 2 octets and indicates the length of the EAP
  packet including the Code, Identifier, Length, Type, Version,
  Flags, and TLV-based EAP-POTP message fields.

Type

  Identifies use of a particular OTP algorithm with EAP-POTP.

Reserved

  This octet is reserved for future use.  It SHALL be set to zero
  for this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this octet for this
  version of EAP-POTP.

TLV-based EAP-POTP message

This field will contain 0, 1, or more Type-Length-Value triplets defined as follows (this is similar to the EAP-TLV TLVs defined in PEAPv2 [17], and the explanation of the generic fields is borrowed from that document).

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Value ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  0 - Non-mandatory TLV
  1 - Mandatory TLV
  The TLVs within EAP POTP-X are used to carry parameters between
  the EAP peer and the EAP server.  An EAP peer may not necessarily
  implement all the TLVs supported by an EAP server, and to allow
  for interoperability, a special TLV allows an EAP server to
  discover if a TLV is supported by the EAP peer.
  The mandatory bit in a TLV indicates that if the peer or server
  does not support the TLV, it MUST send a NAK TLV in response; all
  other TLVs in the message MUST be ignored.  If an EAP peer or
  server finds an unsupported TLV that is marked as non-mandatory
  (i.e., optional), it MUST NOT send a NAK TLV on this ground only.
  The mandatory bit does not imply that the peer or server is
  required to understand the contents of the TLV.  The appropriate
  response to a supported TLV with content that is not understood is
  defined by the specification of the particular TLV.

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of the EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  The following TLV types are defined for use with EAP-POTP:
   0 - Reserved for future use
   1 - Version
   2 - Server-Info
   3 - OTP
   4 - NAK
   5 - New PIN
   6 - Confirm
   7 - Vendor-Specific
   8 - Resume
   9 - User Identifier
  10 - Token Key Identifier
  11 - Time Stamp
  12 - Counter
  13 - Keep-Alive
  14 - Protected
  15 - Crypto Algorithm
  16 - Challenge
  These TLVs are defined in the following.  With the exception of
  the NAK TLV, a particular TLV type MUST NOT appear more than once
  in a message of type POTP-X.

Length

  The length of the Value field in octets.

Value

  The value of the TLV.

4.11. EAP-POTP TLV Objects

4.11.1. Version TLV

The Version TLV carries information about the supported EAP-POTP method version.

This TLV MUST be present in the initial EAP-Request of type POTP-X from the EAP server and in the initial response of type POTP-X from the peer. It MUST NOT be present in any subsequent EAP-Request or EAP-Response in the session. The Version TLV MUST be supported by all peers, and all EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV. The version negotiation procedure is described in detail in Section 4.2.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved | Highest | Lowest | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  1

Length

  3 in EAP-Requests, 2 in EAP-Responses

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  This octet MUST be set to zero for this
  version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this octet for this version of
  EAP-POTP.

Highest

  This field contains an unsigned integer representing the highest
  protocol version supported by the sender.  If a value provided by
  a peer to an EAP server falls between the server's "Highest" and
  "Lowest" supported version (inclusive), then that value will be
  the negotiated version for the authentication session.

Lowest

  This field contains an unsigned integer representing the lowest
  version acceptable by the EAP server.  The field MUST be present
  in an EAP-Request.  The field MUST NOT be present in an EAP-
  Response.  A peer SHALL respond to an EAP-Request of type POTP-X
  with an EAP-Response of type Nak (3) if the peer's highest
  supported version is lower than the value of this field.

This document defines version 1 of the protocol. Therefore, EAP server implementations conforming to this document SHALL set the "Highest" field to 1. Peer implementations conforming to this document SHALL set the "Highest" field to 1.

4.11.2. Server-Info TLV

The Server-Info TLV carries information about the EAP server and the session (when applicable). It provides one piece in the framework for fast session resumption.

This TLV SHOULD always be present in an EAP-Request of type POTP-X that also carries an OTP TLV, as long as the peer has not been authenticated, and MUST be present in such a request if the server supports session resumption. It MUST NOT be present in any other EAP-Request of type POTP-X or in any EAP-Response packets. This TLV type MUST be supported by all peers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV (this is not to say that all peers need to support session resumption, only that they cannot respond to this TLV with a NAK TLV).

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved |N| Session Identifier | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Session Identifier (continued) | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Sess.Id (cont.)| Nonce ... (16 octets) +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Server Identifier ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  2

Length

  25 + length of Server Identifier field

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  All 7 bits MUST be set to zero for this
  version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version of
  EAP-POTP.

N

  The N bit signals that the peer MUST NOT attempt to resume any
  session it has stored associated with this server.

Session Identifier

  An 8-octet identifier for the session about to be negotiated.
  Note that, in the case of session resumption, this session
  identifier will not be used (the session identifier for the
  resumed session will continue to be used).

Nonce

  A 16-octet nonce chosen by the server.  During session resumption,
  this nonce is used when calculating new K_ENC, K_MAC, SRK, MSK,
  and EMSK keys as specified below.

Server Identifier

  An identifier for the authentication server.  The peer MAY use
  this identifier to search for a stored session associated with
  this server, or to associate the session to be negotiated with the
  server.  The value of the identifier SHOULD be chosen so as to
  reduce the risk of collisions with other EAP server identifiers as
  much as possible.  One possibility is to use the DNS name of the
  EAP server.  The identifier MAY also be used by the peer to select
  a suitable key on the OTP token (when there are multiple keys
  available).
  The identifier MUST NOT be longer than 128 octets.  The identifier
  SHALL be a UTF-8 [7] encoded string of printable characters
  (without any terminating NULL character).

4.11.3. OTP TLV

In an EAP-Request, the OTP TLV is used to request an OTP (or a value derived from an OTP) from the peer. In an EAP-Response, the OTP TLV carries an OTP or a value derived from an OTP.

This TLV type MUST be supported by all peers and all EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV. The OTP TLV MUST NOT be present in an EAP-Request of type POTP-X that contains a New PIN TLV. Further, the OTP TLV MUST NOT be present in an EAP-Response of type POTP-X unless the preceding EAP- Request of type POTP-X contained an OTP TLV and it was valid for it to do so. Finally, an OTP TLV MUST NOT be present in an EAP- Response of type POTP-X that also contains a Resume TLV. The OTP TLV is defined as follows:

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved |A|P|C|N|T|E|S| Pepper Length |Iteration Count| +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Iteration Count (cont.) | Auth. Data | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Authentication Data (cont.) ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  3

Length

  7 + length of Authentication Data field

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  All 9 bits SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore these bits for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

A

  The A bit MUST be set in an EAP-Request if and only if the request
  immediately follows an EAP-Response of type POTP-X containing a
  New PIN TLV (see Section 4.11.5), and the new PIN in the response
  was accepted by the EAP server.  In this case, the A bit signals
  that the EAP-server has accepted the PIN, and that the peer SHALL
  use the newly established PIN when calculating the response (when
  applicable).  The A bit MUST NOT be set if the S bit is set.  If a
  request has both the S bit and the A bit set, the peer SHALL
  regard the request as invalid, and return an empty POTP-X EAP-
  Response message.
  In an EAP-Response, the A bit, when set, indicates that the OTP
  was calculated with the use of the newly selected user PIN.  The A
  bit MUST be set in a response if and only if the EAP-Request which
  triggered the response contained an OTP TLV with the A bit set.

P

  In an EAP-Request, the P bit indicates that the OTP in the
  response MUST be protected.  Use of this bit also indicates that
  mutual authentication will take place, as well as generation of
  keying material.  It is RECOMMENDED to always set the P bit.  If a
  peer receives an EAP-Request with an OTP TLV that does not have
  the P bit set, and the peer's policy dictates protected mode, the
  peer MUST respond with an empty POTP-X EAP-Response message.  All
  peers MUST support protected mode.
  In an EAP-Response, this bit indicates that the provided OTP has
  been protected (see below).  The P bit MUST be set in a response
  (and hence the OTP MUST be protected) if and only if the EAP-
  Request that triggered the response contained an OTP TLV with the
  P bit set.
  In an 802.1x EAP over LAN (EAPOL) environment (this includes
  wireless LAN environments), the P bit MUST be set, or,
  alternatively, the EAP-POTP method MUST be carried out inside an
  authenticated tunnel that provides a cryptographic binding with
  inner EAP methods such as the one provided by PEAPv2 [17].

C

  The C bit carries meaning only when the OTP algorithm in question
  makes use of server challenges.  For other OTP algorithms, the C
  bit SHALL always be set to zero.
  In an EAP-Request, the C bit ("Combine") indicates that the OTP
  SHALL be calculated using both the provided challenge and internal
  state (e.g., current token time).  The OTP SHALL be calculated
  based only on the provided challenge (and the shared secret) if
  the C bit is not set, and a challenge is present.  The returned
  OTP SHALL always be calculated based on the peer's current state
  (and the shared secret) if no challenge is present.  If the C bit
  is set but no challenge is provided, the peer SHALL regard the
  request as invalid, and return an empty POTP-X EAP-Response
  message.
  In an EAP response, this bit indicates that the provided OTP has
  been calculated using a provided challenge and the token state.
  The C bit MUST be set in a response if and only if the EAP-Request
  that triggered the response contained an OTP TLV with the C bit
  set and a challenge.

N

  In an EAP-Request, the N bit, when set, indicates that the OTP to
  calculate SHALL be based on the next token "state", and not the
  current one.  As an example, for a time-based token, this means
  the next time slot.  For an event-based token, this could mean the
  next counter value, if counter values are used.  This bit will
  normally not be set in initial EAP-Request messages, but may be
  set in subsequent ones.  Further, the N bit carries no meaning in
  an EAP-Request if a challenge is present and the C bit is not set,
  and SHALL be set to 0, in this case.  If a request that has the N
  bit set also contains a challenge, but does not have the C bit
  set, the peer SHALL regard the request as invalid, and return an
  empty POTP-X EAP-Response message.  Note that setting the N bit in
  an EAP-Request will normally advance the internal state of the
  token.
  In an EAP-Response, the N bit, when set, indicates that the OTP
  was calculated based on the next token "state" (as explained
  above), and not the current one.  The N bit MUST be set in a
  response if and only if the EAP-Request that triggered the
  response contained an OTP TLV with the N bit set.

T

  The T bit only carries meaning for OTP methods normally
  incorporating a user PIN in the OTP computation.
  In an EAP-Request, the T bit, when set, indicates that the OTP to
  calculate MUST NOT include a user PIN.
  In an EAP-Response, the T bit, when set, indicates that the OTP
  was calculated without the use of a user PIN.  The T bit MUST be
  set in a response if and only if the EAP-Request that triggered
  the response contained an OTP TLV with the T bit set.  Note that
  client policy may prohibit PIN-less calculations; in these cases,
  the client MAY respond with an empty POTP-X EAP response message.

E

  In an EAP-Request, the E bit, when set, indicates that the peer
  MUST NOT use any stored pepper value associated with this server
  in the PBKDF2 computation.  Rather, it MUST generate a new pepper
  (if supported by the peer) and/or use the iteration count
  parameter to protect the OTP (if the server's Max Pepper Length is
  0, then the peer MUST rely on the iteration count only to protect
  the OTP).  This bit will usually not be set in initial EAP-Request
  messages, but may be set in subsequent ones, e.g., if the server,
  upon receipt of an OTP TLV with a pepper identifier, detects that
  it does not have a pepper with that identifier in storage.  This
  bit carries no meaning, and MUST be set to zero, when the P bit is
  not set.  If a request has the E bit set but not the P bit, a peer
  SHALL regard the request as invalid, and return an empty POTP-X
  EAP-Response message.
  In an EAP-Response, the E bit indicates that the response has been
  calculated without use of any stored pepper value.

S

  In an EAP-Request, the S bit ("Same"), when set, indicates that
  the peer SHOULD calculate its response based on the same OTP value
  as was used for the preceding response.  This bit MAY be set when
  the EAP server has received an OTP TLV from the peer protected
  with a pepper, of which the server is no longer in possession.
  Since the server has not attempted validation of the provided
  data, there is no need for the EAP peer to retrieve a new OTP
  value.  This bit carries no meaning, and MUST be set to zero, when
  the E bit is not set.  A peer SHALL regard a request where the S
  bit is set, but not the E bit, as invalid, and return an empty
  POTP-X EAP-Response message.  Further, the S bit MUST NOT be set
  when the A bit also is set; see above.
  In an EAP-Response, the S bit is never set.

Pepper Length

  This octet SHALL be present if and only if the P bit is set.  When
  present, it contains an unsigned integer, having a value between 0
  and 255 (inclusive).  In an EAP-Request, the integer represents
  the maximum length (in bits) of a client-generated pepper the
  server is prepared to search for.  Peers MUST NOT generate peppers
  longer than this value.  If the value is set to zero, it means the
  peer MUST NOT generate a pepper for the PBKDF2 calculation.  In an
  EAP-Response, it indicates the length of the used pepper.

Iteration Count

  These 4 octets SHALL be present if and only if the P bit is set.
  When present, they contain an unsigned, 4-octet integer in network
  byte order.  In an EAP-Request, the integer represents the maximum
  iteration count the peer may use in the PBKDF2 computation.  Peers
  MUST NOT use iteration counts higher than this value.  In an EAP-
  Response, it indicates the actual iteration count used.

Note regarding the Pepper Length and Iteration Count parameters: A peer MUST compare these policy parameters provided by the EAP server with local policy and MUST NOT continue the handshake if use of the EAP server's suggested parameters would result in a lower security than the client's acceptable policy. If the security given by the EAP server's provided policy parameters surpasses the security level given by the peer's local policy, the client SHOULD use the server's parameters (subject to reason - active attackers could otherwise mount simple denial-of-service attacks against peers or servers, e.g., by providing unreasonably high values for the iteration count). Note that the server-provided parameters only apply to the case where the peer cannot use or does not have a previously provided server- provided pepper. If a peer cannot continue the handshake due to the server's policy being unacceptable, it MUST return an empty POTP-X EAP-Response message.

Authentication Data

EAP-Request: In an EAP-Request, the Authentication Data field, when

  present, contains an optional "challenge".  The challenge is an
  octet string that SHOULD be uniquely generated for each request in
  which it is present (i.e., it is a "nonce"), and SHOULD be 8
  octets or longer.  To avoid fragmentation (i.e., EAP messages
  longer than the minimum EAP MTU size; see [1]), the challenge MUST
  NOT be longer than 64 octets.  When the challenge is not present,
  the OTP will be calculated on the current token state only.  The
  peer MAY ignore a provided challenge if and only if the OTP token
  the peer is interacting with is not capable of including a
  challenge in the OTP calculation.  In this case, EAP server
  policies will determine whether or not to accept a provided OTP
  value.

EAP-Response: The following applies to the Authentication Data field

  in an EAP-Response:
  *  When the P bit is not set, the peer SHALL directly place the
     OTP value calculated by the token in the Authentication Data
     field.  In this case, the EAP server MUST NOT send a Confirm
     TLV upon successful authentication of the peer (instead, it
     sends an EAP-Success message).
  *  When the P bit is set, the peer SHALL populate this field as
     follows.  After the token has calculated the OTP value, the
     peer SHALL compute:
        K_MAC | K_ENC | MSK | EMSK | SRK = PBKDF2(otp, salt | pepper
        | auth_id, iteration_count, key_length)
        where
        "|" denotes concatenation,
        "otp" is the already computed OTP value,
        "salt" is a 16-octet nonce,
        "pepper" is an optional nonce (at most, 255 bits long, and,
        if necessary, padded to be a multiple of 8 bits long; see
        below) included to complicate the task of finding a matching
        "otp" value for an attacker,
        "auth_id" is an identifier (at most, 255 octets in length)
        for the authenticator (i.e., the network access server) as
        reported by lower layers and as specified below,
        "iteration_count" is an iteration count chosen such that the
        computation time on the peer is acceptable (based on the
        server's indicated policy and the peer's local policy),
        while an attacker, having observed the response and
        initiating a search for a matching OTP, will be sufficiently
        slowed down.  The "iteration_count" value MUST be chosen to
        provide a suitable level of protection (e.g., at least
        100,000) unless a server-provided pepper is being used, in
        which case, it SHOULD be 1.
        "key_length" is the combined length of the desired key
        material, in octets.  When the default algorithms are used,
        key_length is 176.
        The "pepper" values are only included in PBKDF2 calculations
        and are never sent to EAP servers (though the peers do send
        their length, in bits).  The purpose of the pepper values
        are, as mentioned above, to slow down an attacker's search
        for a matching OTP, while not slowing down the peer (which
        iterated hashes do).  If the pepper has been generated by
        the peer, and the chosen pepper length in bits is not a
        multiple of 8, then the pepper value SHALL be padded to the
        left, with '0' bits to the nearest multiple of 8 before
        being used in the PBKDF2 calculation.  This is to ensure the
        input to the calculation consists only of whole octets.  As
        an example, if the chosen pepper length is 4, the pepper
        value will be padded to the left, with 4 '0' bits to form an
        octet before being used in the PBKDF2 calculation.
        When pepper is used, it is RECOMMENDED that the length of
        the pepper and the iteration count are chosen in such a way
        that it is computationally infeasible/unattractive for an
        attacker to brute-force search for the given OTP within the
        lifetime of that OTP.
        As mentioned previously, a peer MUST NOT include a newly
        generated pepper value in the PBKDF2 computation if the
        server did not indicate its support for pepper searching in
        this session.  If the server did not indicate support for
        pepper searching, then the PBKDF2 computation MUST be
        carried out with a sufficiently higher number of iterations
        so as to compensate for the lack of pepper (see further
        Appendix D).
        A server may, in an earlier session, have transferred a
        pepper value to the peer in a Confirm TLV (see below).  When
        this is the case, and the peer still has that pepper value
        stored for this server, the peer MUST NOT generate a new
        pepper but MUST, instead, use this transferred pepper value
        in the PBKDF2 calculations.  The only exception to this is
        when a local policy (e.g., timer) dictates that the peer
        must switch to a new pepper (and the server indicated
        support for pepper searching).
        The following applies to the auth_id component:
        -  For dial-up, "auth_id" SHALL be either the empty string
           or the phone number called by the peer.  The phone number
           SHALL be specified in the form of a URL conformant with
           RFC 3966 [8], e.g., "tel:+16175550101".  Processing of
           received phone numbers SHALL be conformant with RFC 3966
           (this assumes that "tel" URIs will be shorter than 256
           octets, which would normally be the case).
        -  For use with IEEE 802.1X, "auth_id" SHALL be either the
           empty string or the MAC address of the authenticator in
           canonical binary format (6 octets).
        -  For IP-based EAP, "auth_id" SHALL be either the empty
           string or the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the authenticator
           as seen by the peer and in binary format (4 or 16 octets,
           respectively).  As an example, the IPv4 address
           "192.0.2.5" would be represented as (in hex) C0 00 02 05,
           whereas the IPv6 address "2001:DB8::101" would be
           represented as (in hex) 20 01 0D B8 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
           00 00 00 01 01.
        Note: Use of the authenticator's identifying information
        within the computation aids in protection against man-in-
        the-middle attacks, where a rogue authenticator seeks to
        intercept and forward the Authentication Data in order to
        impersonate the peer at a legitimate authenticator (but see
        also the discussion around spoofed authenticator addresses
        in Section 6).  For these reasons, a peer SHOULD NOT set the
        auth_id component to the empty string unless it is unable to
        learn the identifying information of the authenticator.  In
        these cases, the EAP server's policy will determine whether
        or not the session may continue.
        As an example, when otp = "12345678", salt =
        0x54434534543445435465768789099880, pepper is not used,
        auth_id = "192.0.2.5", iteration_count = 2000 (decimal), and
        key_length = 176 (decimal), the input to the PBKDF2
        calculation will be (first two parameters in hex, line wrap
        for readability):
        (3132333435363738, 54434534543445435465768789099880 |
        c0000205, 2000, 176)
        As described, when the default algorithms are used, K_MAC is
        the first 16 octets of the output from PBKDF2, K_ENC the
        next 16 octets, MSK the following 64 octets, EMSK the next
        64 octets, and SRK the final 16 octets.  Using K_MAC, the
        peer calculates:
        mac = MAC(K_MAC, msg_hash(msg_1, msg_2, ..., msg_n))
        as specified in Section 4.9 and where msg_1, msg_2, ...,
        msg_n is a sequence of all EAP messages of type POTP-X
        exchanged so far in this session, as sent and received by
        the peer (for the peer's initial MAC, it will typically be
        just one message: the EAP server's initial EAP-Request of
        type POTP-X).
        The peer then places the first 16 octets of "mac" in the
        Authentication Data field, followed by the "salt" value,
        followed by one octet representing the length of the
        "auth_id" value in octets, followed by the actual "auth_id"
        value in binary form, and optionally followed by a pepper
        identifier (only when the peer made use of a pepper value
        previously provided by the EAP server).  Pepper identifiers,
        when present, are always 4 octets.  All variables SHALL be
        present in the form they were input to the PBKDF2 algorithm.
        This will result in the Authentication Data field being 33 +
        (length of auth_id in octets) + (4, for pepper identifier,
        when present) octets in length.
        Continuing the previous example, the Authentication Data
        field will be populated with (in hex, line wrap for
        readability):
        < 16 octets of mac > | 54434534543445435465768789099880 |
        04 | c0000205
        Note: Since in this case (i.e., when the P bit is set)
        successful authentication of the peer by the EAP server will
        be followed by the transmission of an EAP-Request of type
        POTP-X containing a Confirm TLV for mutual authentication,
        the peer MUST save either all the input parameters to the
        PBKDF2 computation or the keys K_MAC, K_ENC, SRK, MSK, and
        EMSK (recommended, since they will be used later).  This is
        because the peer cannot be guaranteed to be able to generate
        the same OTP value again.  For the same reason (the Confirm-
        TLV from the EAP server), the peer MUST also store either
        the hash of the contents of the sent EAP-Response or the
        EAP-Response itself (but see the note above about not
        including any User Identifier TLVs in the hash computation).
        Given a set of possible OTP values, the authentication
        server verifies an authentication request from the peer by
        computing
        K_MAC' | K_ENC' | MSK' | EMSK' | SRK' = PBKDF2 (otp',
          salt | pepper' | auth_id, iteration_count, key_length)
        for each possible OTP value otp' and each possible pepper
        value pepper' , and the provided values for salt,
        authenticator identity, and iteration count, as well as the
        applicable key length (default: 176).  Note: Doing the
        computation for each possible pepper value implements the
        pepper search mentioned elsewhere in this document.  Note
        also that the EAP server may accept more than one OTP value
        at a given time, e.g., due to clock drift in the token.  If
        the given pepper length is not a multiple of 8, each tested
        pepper value will be padded to the left to the nearest
        multiple of 8, in the same manner as was done by the peer.
        If the server already shares a secret pepper value with this
        peer, then obviously there will only be one possible pepper
        value, and the server will find it based on the
        pepper_identifier provided by the peer.  The server SHALL
        send a new EAP-Request of type POTP-X with an OTP TLV with
        the E bit set if the peer provided a pepper identifier
        unknown to the server.
        For each K_MAC', the EAP server computes
        mac' = MAC(K_MAC', msg_hash(msg_1', msg_2', ..., msg_n'))
        where MAC is the negotiated MAC algorithm, msg_hash is the
        message hash algorithm defined in Section 4.9, and msg_1',
        msg_2', ... msg_n' are the same messages on which the peer
        calculated its message hash, but this time, as sent and
        received by the EAP server.  If the first 16 octets of mac'
        matches the first 16 octets in the Authentication Data field
        of the EAP-Response in question, and the provided
        authenticator identity is acceptable (e.g., matches the EAP
        server's view of the authenticator's identity), then the
        peer is authenticated.
        If the authentication is successful, the authentication
        server then attempts to authenticate itself to the peer by
        use of the Confirm TLV (see below).  If the authentication
        fails, the EAP server MAY send another EAP-Request of type
        POTP-X containing an OTP TLV to the peer, or it MAY send an
        EAP-Failure message (in both cases, possibly preceded by an
        EAP-Request of type Notification).

4.11.4. NAK TLV

Presence of this TLV indicates that the peer did not support a received TLV with the M bit set. This TLV may occur 0, 1, or more times in an EAP-Response of type POTP-X. Each occurrence flags the non-support of a particular received TLV.

The NAK TLV MUST be supported by all peers and all EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV. Receipt of a NAK TLV by an EAP server MAY cause an authentication to fail, and the EAP server to send an EAP-Failure message to the peer.

Note: The definition of the NAK TLV herein matches the definition made in [17], and has the same type number. Field descriptions are copied from that document, with some minor modifications.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Vendor-Id | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | NAK-Type | TLVs ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  4

Length

  6 + cumulative total length of embedded TLVs

Vendor-Id

  The Vendor-Id field is 4 octets, and contains the Vendor-Id of the
  TLV that was not supported.  The high-order octet is 0 and the
  low-order 3 octets are the Structure of Management Information
  (SMI) Network Management Private Enterprise Code of the Vendor in
  network byte order.  The Vendor-Id field MUST be zero for TLVs
  that are not Vendor-Specific TLVs.  For Vendor-Specific TLVs, the
  Vendor-ID MUST be set to the SMI code.

NAK-Type

The type of the unsupported TLV. The TLV MUST have been included in the most recently received EAP message.

TLVs

This field contains a list of TLVs, each of which MUST NOT have the mandatory bit set. These optional TLVs can be used in the future to communicate why the offending TLV was determined to be unsupported.

4.11.5. New PIN TLV

In an EAP-Request, the New PIN TLV is used to request a new user PIN from the peer. The EAP server MAY provide a new PIN, as described below. In an EAP-Response, the New PIN TLV carries a chosen new user PIN. This TLV may be used by an EAP server when policy dictates that the peer (user) needs to change a PIN associated with the OTP Token.

This TLV type SHOULD be supported by peers and EAP servers conforming to this specification. The New PIN TLV MUST NOT be sent by an EAP server unless the peer has been authenticated. If the peer was authenticated in protected mode, then the New PIN TLV MUST NOT be present in an EAP-Request until after the exchange of the Confirm TLV (i.e., until after mutual authentication has occurred and keys are in place to protect the TLV). The New PIN TLV MUST be sent by a peer if and only if the EAP-Request that triggered the response contained a New PIN TLV, it was valid for the EAP server to send such a TLV in that request, and the TLV is supported by the peer.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved |Q|A| PIN Length | PIN ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Min. PIN Length|Max. PIN Length| +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  5

Length

  2 + length of the PIN field (as specified in the PIN Length field)
    + (0, 1, or 2)
  Note: The final term above is
  -  0 if none of the optional Min. / Max. PIN Length fields is
       present in the TLV,
  -  1 if only the Min. PIN Length field is present in the TLV,
  -  2 if both of these optional fields are present in the TLV.

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  All six bits SHALL be set to zero for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore these bits for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

Q

  The Q bit, when set in an EAP-Request, indicates that an
  accompanying PIN is required, i.e., the peer (user) is not free to
  choose another PIN.  When the Q bit is set, there MUST be an
  accompanying PIN and the provided PIN MUST be used in subsequent
  OTP generations.  A peer SHALL respond with an empty POTP-X EAP-
  Response message if the Q bit is set but there is not any
  accompanying PIN.  When the Q bit is not set, any provided PIN is
  suggested only, and the peer is free to choose another PIN,
  subject to local policy.
  The Q bit carries no meaning, and SHALL be set to zero, in an EAP-
  Response.

A

  This bit allows methods that distinguish between two different PIN
  types (e.g., decimal vs. alphanumeric) to designate whether the
  augmented set is to be used (when set) or not (when not set).  The
  A bit carries no meaning, and SHALL be set to zero, in an EAP-
  Response.

PIN Length

  This field contains an unsigned integer representing the length of
  the provided PIN (this implies that the maximum length of a PIN
  will be 255 octets).

PIN

  In an EAP-Request, subject to the setting of the Q bit, the PIN
  field MAY be empty.  If empty, the peer (user) will need to choose
  a PIN subject to local and (any) provided policy.  When the PIN
  field is not empty, it MUST consist of UTF-8 encoded printable
  characters without a terminating NULL character.
  In an EAP-Response, the PIN value SHALL consist of a UTF-8 encoded
  string of printable characters without a terminating NULL
  character.
  The peer accepts a PIN suggested by the EAP server by replying
  with the same PIN, but MAY replace it with another one, depending
  on the server's setting of the Q bit.  The length of the PIN is
  application-dependent, as are any other requirements for the PIN,
  e.g., allowed characters.  The peer MUST be prepared to receive a
  repeated request for a new PIN, as described above, if the EAP
  server, for some reason does not accept the received PIN.  Such a
  request MAY be preceded by an EAP-Request of type Notification (2)
  providing information to the user about the reason for the
  rejection.  Mechanisms for transferring knowledge about PIN
  requirements from the EAP server to the peer (beyond those
  specified for this TLV, such as maximal and minimal PIN length)
  are outside the scope of this document.  However, some information
  MAY be provided in notification messages transferred from the EAP
  server to the peer, as per above.

Min. PIN Length

  This field MAY be present in an EAP-Request.  This field MUST NOT
  be present in an EAP-Response.  It SHALL be interpreted as an
  unsigned integer in network byte order representing the minimum
  length allowed for a new PIN.

Max. PIN Length

  This field MUST NOT be present in an EAP-Request unless the Min.
  PIN Length field is present, in which case it MAY be present.  The
  field MUST NOT be present in an EAP-Response.  It SHALL be
  interpreted as an unsigned integer in network byte order
  representing the maximum length allowed for a new PIN.  The value
  of this field, when present, MUST be equal to, or larger than, the
  value of the Min. PIN Length field.

4.11.6. Confirm TLV

Presence of this TLV in a request indicates that the EAP server has successfully authenticated the peer and now attempts to authenticate itself to the peer. Presence of this TLV in a response indicates that the peer successfully authenticated the EAP server, and that calculated keys (K_MAC, K_ENC, MSK, EMSK, and SRK) now become available for use.

The Confirm TLV MUST NOT appear together with any other TLV in an EAP-Request message of type POTP-X and MUST NOT be sent unless the peer has been authenticated through an OTP TLV with the P bit set or through a Resume TLV for which the underlying session was established in protected mode. The Confirm TLV MUST be present in an EAP- Response if and only if the request that triggered the response contained a Confirm TLV, it was legal for it to do so, and the Confirm TLV authenticated the EAP server to the peer. If the peer was not able to authenticate the server, then it MUST send an empty (i.e., no TLVs present) EAP-Response of type POTP-X.

An EAP server MUST send an EAP-Success message after receiving an EAP-Response of type POTP-X containing a valid Confirm TLV, sent in response to an EAP-Request containing a Confirm TLV where the C bit was not set. A peer MUST NOT accept an EAP-Success message when it has sent an OTP TLV with the P bit set unless it has received an acceptable Confirm TLV from the EAP server.

This TLV type MUST be supported by all peers and EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved |C| Authentication Data ... (16 octets) +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Pepper Identifier | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | IV ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Encrypted Pepper ... (16 octets) +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  6

Length

  17 or 37 + length of IV in requests, 1 in responses.

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  These 7 bits SHALL be set to zero (0)
  for this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore these bits for this
  version of EAP-POTP.

C

  The C bit, when set in an EAP-Request, indicates that the EAP
  server intends to send more EAP-Requests of type POTP-X in this
  session, after receipt of a Confirm TLV from the peer.
  The C bit carries no meaning in EAP-Responses, and MUST NOT be set
  within them.
  Note: An EAP-Response containing a Confirm TLV, sent in response
  to an EAP-Request containing a Confirm TLV that did not have the C
  bit set, MUST be followed by an EAP-Success message from the EAP
  server concluding the handshake.  However, when the C bit was set
  in an EAP-Request, the EAP server MAY send another EAP-Request
  (containing, for example, a New PIN TLV wrapped in a Protected
  TLV) rather than an EAP-Success message.  Therefore, peers MUST
  NOT assume that the only EAP message following an EAP-Response of
  type POTP-X containing a Confirm TLV is EAP-Success.  The C bit
  gives EAP servers a way to indicate their intent to follow the
  Confirm TLV with more requests, and allows the peer's state
  machine to adapt to this.

Authentication Data

EAP-Request:

     In a request, this field consists of the first 16 octets of
     (see also Section 4.11.3):
     mac_a = MAC(K_MAC', msg_hash(trig_msg))
     where
     MAC is the negotiated MAC algorithm,
     "K_MAC'" has been calculated as described in Section 4.11.3 or
     (in the case of session resumption) Section 4.11.8, and
     "msg_hash" is the message hash algorithm defined in Section
     4.9, and "trig_msg" the latest EAP-Response of type POTP-X
     received from the peer (the one which triggered this request).
     Given a saved or recomputed value for K_MAC, the peer
     authenticates the EAP server by computing
     mac = MAC(K_MAC, msg_hash(trig_msg'))
     where "msg_hash(trig_msg')" is the peer's hash of the EAP-
     Response message that it sent to the server (and that the
     server calculated its message hash on).  If the first 16 octets
     of mac matches the first 16 octets in the Authentication Data
     field of the EAP-Request in question, then the EAP server is
     authenticated.

EAP-Response:

     Not used in this version, and SHALL NOT be present in EAP-
     Responses.

Pepper Identifier

  In an EAP-Request, the truncated MAC MAY optionally be followed by
  an encrypted pepper and its identifier.  This initial, 4-octet
  field identifies a pepper generated by the server.
  For this version of EAP-POTP, this field SHALL NOT be present in
  EAP-Responses.

IV (Initialization Vector)

  An initialization vector for the encryption.  The length of the
  vector is dependent on the negotiated encryption algorithm.  For
  example, for AES-CBC, it SHALL be 16 octets.  The IV is only
  present if a pepper is present, and the negotiated encryption
  algorithm makes use of an IV.  This field SHALL NOT be present in
  EAP-Response messages for this version of EAP-POTP.

Encrypted Pepper

  When present in an EAP-Request, this will be a uniformly
  distributed and randomly chosen 16-octet pepper generated by the
  EAP server and encrypted with the negotiated encryption algorithm,
  using K_ENC as the encryption key and possibly (depending on the
  encryption algorithm) using an IV (stored in the IV field).  This
  field MUST be present if and only if the Pepper Identifier field
  is present.
  EAP servers are RECOMMENDED to include a freshly generated
  encrypted pepper (and a corresponding Pepper Identifier) in every
  Confirm TLV.
  This field SHALL NOT be present in EAP-Response messages for this
  version of EAP-POTP.

When a new pepper is generated by the server and transferred in encrypted form to the peer, then this new pepper value will be stored in the EAP server upon receipt of the Confirm TLV from the peer, and SHOULD be stored with its identifier and associated with the EAP server and the current user in the peer upon receipt of the EAP- Success message. If the peer already had a pepper stored for the EAP server, it SHALL replace it with the newly received one.

4.11.7. Vendor-Specific TLV

The Vendor-Specific TLV is available to allow vendors to support their own extended attributes not suitable for general usage. A Vendor-Specific TLV can contain one or more inner TLVs, referred to as Vendor TLVs. The TLV-type of a Vendor TLV will be defined by the vendor. All the Vendor TLVs inside a single Vendor-Specific TLV SHALL belong to the same vendor.

This TLV type MAY be sent by EAP servers, as well as by peers, and MUST be supported by all entities conforming to this specification. Conforming implementations may not support specific Vendor TLVs inside a Vendor-Specific TLV, however. They MAY, in this case, respond to the Vendor TLVs with a NAK TLV containing the appropriate Vendor-ID and Vendor TLV type.

The presence of a Vendor-Specific TLV in an EAP-Request or EAP- Response of type POTP-X MUST NOT violate any existing rules for coexistence of TLVs in such requests or responses. If it does, then it will result in an EAP-Failure (when the peer made the violation) or an empty EAP-POTP response (when the EAP-server made the violation). It is left to the definition of specific Vendor-Specific TLVs to further constrain when they are allowed to appear. In

particular, EAP-POTP implementations may have policies that completely disallow use of the Vendor-Specific TLV before protected mode mutual authentication has occurred (since the Protected TLV, Section 4.11.15, then can be used to protect all TLVs).

Note: This TLV type has the same definition and TLV type number as the Vendor-Specific TLV in [17], and the description of it is largely borrowed from that document.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Vendor-Id | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Vendor TLVs ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  7

Length

  4 + cumulative total length of inner Vendor TLVs

Vendor-ID

  The Vendor-Id field is 4 octets.  The high-order octet SHALL be
  set to 0, and the low-order 3 octets SHALL be set to the SMI
  Network Management Private Enterprise Code (see [18]) of the
  Vendor in network byte order.

Vendor TLVs

  This field shall contain vendor-specific TLVs, in a format defined
  by the vendor.  To avoid fragmentation (i.e., EAP messages longer
  than the minimum EAP MTU size), the field SHOULD NOT be longer
  than 256 octets.

To ensure interoperability when an EAP entity (peer or server) from vendor A sends a vendor-specific TLV that is not understood by the recipient EAP entity from vendor B, the vendor A entity SHALL, upon receipt of the NAK TLV from the recipient, refrain from usage of the vendor-specific TLV in question for the rest of the handshake, and MUST NOT fail the session due to the receipt of the NAK TLV for the Vendor TLV (i.e., it SHALL continue as if the vendor-specific TLV had not been sent). Additionally, all implementations conformant with this document SHOULD allow use of vendor-specific extensions to be turned off via configuration.

4.11.8. Resume TLV

The Resume TLV MAY be sent by a peer to an authentication server to attempt session resumption.

This TLV type MUST only be sent in response to an EAP-Request of type POTP-X containing a Server-Info TLV allowing session resumption. The Resume TLV MUST be supported by all EAP servers that send a Server- Info TLV allowing session resumption.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved | Session Identifier | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Session Identifier (continued) | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Sess.Id (cont.)| Authentication Data | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Authentication Data (cont.) ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  0 - Non-mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  8

Length

  45

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  This octet SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this octet for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

Session Identifier

  An 8-octet identifier for the session the peer is trying to
  resume.

Authentication Data

  Upon receipt of the Server-Info TLV, and if the N bit is not set,
  the peer searches for any stored sessions associated with the
  server identified by the Server Name field.  If a stored session
  is found, the peer generates a random, 16-octet nonce, "c_nonce",
  and calculates:
  K_MAC | K_ENC | MSK | EMSK | SRK = PBKDF2(base_key, c_nonce |
  s_nonce, iteration_count, key_length)
  where
  "|" denotes concatenation,
  "base_key" is either the current SRK for the session (if the
  session was created in protected mode) or the OTP used when the
  session was created (if the session was created in basic mode),
  "c_nonce" is the generated 16-octet nonce,
  "s_nonce" is the server nonce from the Server-Info TLV,
  "iteration_count" is the iteration count as determined by local
  policy, and
  "key_length" is the combined length of the desired key material,
  in octets.  When the default algorithms are used, key_length is
  176.
  The iteration count need only be 1 (one) when resuming a session
  established in protected mode, but MUST be chosen to provide a
  suitable level of protection when resuming a session established
  in basic mode (see also Section 4.11.3).
  Note: Session resumption for basic mode MUST only be carried out
  in a server-authenticated and protected tunnel that also provides
  a cryptographic binding for inner EAP methods.
  The peer then calculates:
  mac = MAC(K_MAC, msg_hash(resume_req))
  where
  "MAC" is the negotiated MAC algorithm, and
  "msg_hash(resume_req) is the message hash algorithm defined in
  Section 4.9 applied on resume_req, the EAP server's EAP-Request of
  type POTP-X containing the Server-Info TLV that allowed session
  resumption.
  The peer then places the first 16 octets of the MAC value,
  followed by the c_nonce value, followed by the iteration count
  value (as a 4-byte unsigned integer in network byte order), in the
  Authentication Data field.  As an example, when c_nonce =
  0x2b3b1b12babdebebfb43bd7bdfbeb8df and iteration_count = 1, the
  Authentication Data field will be populated with (in hex):
  < 16 octets of mac > | 2b3b1b12babdebebfb43bd7bdfbeb8df | 00000001
  The server authenticates the peer by performing the corresponding
  calculations.  If the authentication is successful, the server
  MUST send an EAP-Request of type POTP-X containing a Confirm TLV
  to the peer.  If the authentication fails, the server MUST either
  send an EAP-Request of type POTP-X containing an OTP TLV and a
  Server-Info TLV, where the Server-Info TLV indicates that session
  resumption is not possible, or send an EAP-Failure.
  When resuming in basic mode, all calculated keys SHALL be
  discarded after the MAC has been calculated and verified.  When
  resuming in protected mode, the new SRK will replace the stored
  SRK, and the new MSK and EMSK will be exported upon successful
  completion of the method.

4.11.9. User Identifier TLV

The User Identifier TLV carries an identifier, typically the username, for the holder of the OTP token used to generate the OTP.

At least one of the User Identifier TLV and the Token Key Identifier TLV SHOULD be present in the session's first EAP-Response of type POTP-X that also carries an OTP TLV unless a suitable identity has been provided in a preceding EAP-Response of type Identity (1) or is determined by some other means (see [1], Section 2). Use of the User Identifier TLV and/or the Token Key Identifier TLV is RECOMMENDED even when an EAP-Response of type Identity (1) has been sent. If a peer sends both a User Identifier TLV and a Token Key Identifier TLV, then the EAP server SHALL interpret the Token Key Identifier TLV as specifying a particular token key for the given user. The EAP server MUST respond with an EAP-Failure if it cannot find a token key for the provided user.

This TLV type is sent by peers and MUST be supported by all EAP servers conforming to this specification. The User Identifier TLV MUST NOT be present in a response that does not also carry an OTP TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | User Identifier ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  9

Length

  Length of User Identifier, >= 1

User Identifier

  The value SHALL be an UTF-8 encoded string representing the holder
  of the token (MUST NOT be NULL-terminated).  The string MUST be
  less than 128 octets in length.

4.11.10. Token Key Identifier TLV

The Token Key Identifier TLV carries an identifier for the token key used to generate the OTP.

At least one of the User Identifier TLV and the Token Key Identifier TLV SHOULD be present in the session's first EAP-Response of type POTP-X, which also carries the OTP TLV unless a suitable identity has been provided in a preceding EAP-Response of type Identity (1) or is determined by some other means (see [1], Section 2). Use of the User Identifier TLV and/or the Token Key Identifier TLV is RECOMMENDED even when an EAP-Response of type Identity (1) has been sent. If a peer sends both a User Identifier TLV and a Token Key Identifier TLV, then the EAP server SHALL interpret the Token Key Identifier TLV as specifying a particular token key for the given user. The EAP server MUST respond with an EAP-Failure if it cannot find a token key corresponding to the provided token key identifier.

This TLV type is sent by peers and MUST be supported by all EAP servers conforming to this specification. The Token Key Identifier TLV MUST NOT be present in a response that does not also carry an OTP TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Token Key Identifier ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  10

Length

  Length of Token Key Identifier, >= 1

Token Key Identifier

  An identifier for the OTP token key used to generate the OTP.  The
  field MUST be less than 128 octets in length.

4.11.11. Time Stamp TLV

The Time Stamp TLV MAY be sent by peers to simplify authentications. When present, it carries the time as reported by the OTP Token.

An EAP server conformant with this specification SHOULD support (i.e., recognize) this TLV, but need not be able to process or act on it. An EAP server that does not support this TLV, but receives an EAP-Response with the TLV present, MAY ignore the value. The Time Stamp TLV MUST NOT be present in any EAP-Responses of type POTP-X other than those that also carries an OTP TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Time Stamp ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  0 - Non-mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  11

Length

  Length of Time Stamp field, >= 20 (depending on precision)

Time Stamp

  The time, as reported by the OTP token, at which the OTP used for
  the accompanying OTP TLV was calculated.  The field SHALL contain
  a UTF-8 encoded value of the XML simple type "dateTime", with time
  zone information and precision down to at least seconds, e.g.,
  "2004-06-16T15:20:02Z".

4.11.12. Counter TLV

The Counter TLV MAY be sent by peers to simplify authentications. When present, it carries the token counter value, as reported by the OTP Token.

An EAP server conformant with this specification SHOULD support (i.e., recognize) this TLV, but need not be able to process or act on it. An EAP server that does not support this TLV, but receives an EAP-Response with the TLV present, MAY ignore the value. The Counter TLV MUST NOT be present in any EAP-Responses of type POTP-X other than those that also carries an OTP TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Counter ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  0 - Non-mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  12

Length

  Length of Counter field, >= 1 (depending on precision)

Counter

  The counter value, as reported by the OTP token, at which the OTP
  used for the accompanying OTP TLV was calculated.  The counter
  value SHALL be represented as an unsigned integer in network-byte
  order, e.g., a counter value of 1030 may be sent as the 2 octets
  (in hex) 04 06.

4.11.13. Challenge TLV

The Challenge TLV carries the challenge used by the token to calculate the OTP, as reported by the token to the peer. The Challenge TLV MUST be sent by a peer if and only if the challenge otherwise would be unknown to the EAP server (e.g., the token or peer modified a received challenge or generated its own challenge).

An EAP server conformant with this specification SHOULD support (i.e., recognize) this TLV, but need not be able to process or act on it. An EAP server that does not support this TLV, but receives an EAP-Response with the TLV present, MAY ignore the value. The Challenge TLV MUST NOT be present in any EAP-Responses of type POTP-X other than those that also carry an OTP TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Challenge ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  0 - Non-mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  16

Length

  Length of Challenge field, >= 1

Challenge

  The challenge value that was used to calculate the OTP used for
  the accompanying OTP TLV.

4.11.14. Keep-Alive TLV

The Keep-Alive is used to avoid EAP-POTP timeouts.

The Keep-Alive TLV MAY be sent by a peer to avoid timeouts when the peer has received an EAP-Request containing an OTP TLV or a New PIN TLV and is waiting for a response from the user.

An EAP-Request containing a Keep-Alive TLV MUST be sent by an EAP server when the server receives an EAP-Response containing a Keep- Alive TLV, and the server has an outstanding request that did not contain a Keep-Alive TLV. In this situation, the server does not need to re-transmit its latest outstanding request, but, due to the synchronous nature of EAP, it needs to send another request. Re- transmission of the latest outstanding request could be confusing for the peer since the request would get a new Identifier value. The Keep-Alive TLV MAY also be sent by an EAP server when the server detects that its processing time will exceed some locally configured threshold and may cause a network timeout. In this case, the peer MUST respond with an EAP-Response containing a Keep-Alive TLV.

This TLV type MUST be supported by all peers and all EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV. The Keep-Alive TLV MUST NOT be sent in any other situations than the ones described above. The Keep-Alive TLV MUST NOT be sent together with any other TLVs defined herein. Implementations SHOULD also follow recommendations made in Section 4.3 of [1].

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

Reserved for future use. This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for this version. Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version of EAP- POTP.

TLV Type

  13

Length

  0

4.11.15. Protected TLV

The Protected TLV SHALL be used to encrypt individual or multiple TLVs after successful exchange of the Confirm TLV (i.e., as soon as calculated keys have been confirmed). The Protected TLV therefore wraps "ordinary" TLVs.

This TLV type may be sent by EAP servers as well as by peers and MUST be supported by all peers conforming to this specification. It SHOULD be supported by all EAP servers conforming to this specification (it need not be supported if a server never will have a need to continue a POTP-X conversation after exchange of the Confirm TLV).

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Message Authentication Code ... (16 octets) +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | IV ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Encrypted TLVs ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  14

Length

  >32

Message Authentication Code (MAC)

  This field integrity-protects the TLV.  The MAC SHALL be
  calculated over the IV and the Encrypted TLVs field in the
  following manner:
  mac = MAC(K_MAC, iv | encrypted_tlvs)
  where
  MAC is the negotiated MAC algorithm, "iv" is the IV field's value,
  and "encrypted_tlvs" is the value of the Encrypted TLVs field.
  The first 16 octets of the MAC is placed in the Message
  Authentication Code field.
  Recipients MUST verify the MAC.  If the verification fails, the
  conversation SHALL be terminated (i.e., peers send an empty POTP-X
  EAP-Response message, and EAP servers send an EAP-Failure message
  possibly preceded by an EAP-Request of type Notification).

IV

  An initialization vector for the encryption; see below.  The
  length of the vector is dependent on the negotiated encryption
  algorithm, e.g., for AES-CBC, it shall be 16 octets.  For some
  encryption algorithms, there may not be any initialization vector.
  An IV, when present, shall be randomly chosen and non-predictable.

Encrypted TLVs

  This field SHALL contain one or more encrypted POTP-X TLVs.  The
  encryption algorithm SHALL be as negotiated; use K_ENC as the
  encryption key, and use the IV field as the initialization vector
  (when applicable), to encrypt the concatenation of all the TLVs to
  be protected.

4.11.16. Crypto Algorithm TLV

The Crypto Algorithm TLV allows for negotiation of cryptographic algorithms. Cryptographic Algorithm negotiation is described in detail in Section 4.3.

This TLV MUST be present in the initial EAP-Request of type POTP-X that also carries an OTP TLV indicating protected mode, assuming the EAP server wants to negotiate use of any other algorithms than the default ones. It MAY also be present in an EAP-Request of type POTP-X that carries an OTP TLV that is sent as a result of a failed session resumption (in this case, the peer has not yet responded to this TLV), or when the Crypto Algorithm TLV was part of the initial message from the EAP server, and the client negotiated another EAP- POTP version than the highest one supported by the EAP server. The Crypto Algorithm TLV MUST NOT be present in any other EAP-Requests. Further, the Crypto Algorithm TLV MUST NOT be present in an EAP- Response of type POTP-X unless the preceding EAP-Request also contained it, and it was legal for it to do so. This TLV MUST be supported by all peers and all EAP servers conforming to this specification and MUST NOT be responded to with a NAK TLV.

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |M|R| TLV Type | Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Reserved |Hash Alg.Length| Hash Algorithms ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Encr.Alg.Length| Encryption Algorithms ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |MAC Alg. Length| MAC Algorithms ... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

M

  1 - Mandatory TLV

R

  Reserved for future use.  This bit SHALL be set to zero (0) for
  this version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this bit for this version
  of EAP-POTP.

TLV Type

  15

Length

  >=4 (at least one class of algorithms and one algorithm for that
  class needs to be present)

Reserved

  Reserved for future use.  This octet MUST be set to zero for this
  version.  Recipients SHALL ignore this octet for this version of
  EAP-POTP.

Hash Alg. Length

  The length of the Hash Algorithms field in octets.

Hash Algorithms

  Each octet pair of this field represents a hash algorithm as
  follows.  An EAP server MAY supply several suggestions for hash
  algorithms.  Each algorithm MUST appear only once.  The algorithms
  SHALL be supplied in order of priority.  Peers MUST supply, at
  most, one algorithm (if none is present, the default applies).
  The defined values are:
    Value

Octet 1 Octet 2 Hash algorithm


------- ----------------------------------

0x00 0x00 Reserved 0x00 0x01 SHA-1 0x00 0x02 SHA-224 0x00 0x03 SHA-256 (default) 0x00 0x04 SHA-384 0x00 0x05 SHA-512 0x80 - Vendor-specific (or experimental)

  As indicated, values 0x8000 and higher are for proprietary
  vendor-specific algorithms.  Values in the range 0x0006 - 0x7fff
  are to be assigned through IANA; see Section 7.

Encr Alg. Length

  The length of the Encryption Algorithms field in octets.

Encryption Algorithms

  Each octet pair of this field represents an encryption algorithm
  as follows.  An EAP server MAY supply several suggestions for
  encryption algorithms.  Each algorithm MUST appear only once.  The
  algorithms SHALL be supplied in order of priority.  Peers MUST
  supply, at most, one algorithm (if none is present, the default
  applies).  The defined values are:
    Value

Octet 1 Octet 2 Encryption algorithm


------- ------------------------

0x00 0x00 Reserved 0x00 0x01 AES-CBC (default) with 128-bit keys and 16-octet IVs 0x00 0x02 3DES-CBC with 112-bit keys and 8-octet IVs 0x80 - Vendor-specific

  As indicated, values 0x8000 and higher are for vendor-specific
  proprietary algorithms.  Values in the range 0x0003 - 0x7fff are
  to be assigned through IANA; see Section 7.

MAC Alg. Length

  The length of the MAC Algorithms field in octets.

MAC Algorithms

  Each octet pair of this field represents a MAC algorithm as
  follows.  An EAP server MAY supply several suggestions for MAC
  algorithms.  Each algorithm MUST appear only once.  The algorithms
  SHALL be supplied in order of priority.  Peers MUST supply, at
  most, one algorithm (if none is present, the default applies).
  The defined values are:
    Value

Octet 1 Octet 2 MAC algorithm


------- -----------------

0x00 0x00 Reserved 0x00 0x01 HMAC (default) 0x80 - Vendor-specific

  As indicated, values 0x8000 and higher are for vendor-specific
  proprietary algorithms.  Values in the range 0x0002 - 0x7fff are
  to be assigned through IANA; see Section 7.
  When HMAC is negotiated, the hash algorithm used for HMAC SHALL be
  the negotiated hash algorithm.

EAP Key Management Framework Considerations

In line with recommendations made in [16], EAP-POTP defines the following identifiers to be associated with generated key material:

  Peer-ID: The combined contents of the User Identifier TLV and the
  Token Key Identifier TLV.
  Server-ID: The contents of the Server Identifier field of the
  Server-Info TLV.
  Method-ID: The identifier of the established session (i.e., the
  contents of the Session Identifier field of the Server-Info TLV
  that defined the session).

Security Considerations

Security Claims

In conformance with RFC 3748 [1], the following security claims are made for the EAP-POTP method:

Authentication mechanism: Generic OTP Ciphersuite negotiation: Yes (No in basic variant) Mutual authentication: Yes (No in basic variant) Integrity protection: Yes (No in basic variant) Replay protection: Yes (see below) Confidentiality: Only in the OTP protection variant, and

                          then only OTP values and any information
                          sent after exchange of the Confirm TLV

Key derivation: Yes (No in basic variant) Key strength: Depends on size of OTP value, strength of

                          underlying shared secret, strength and
                          characteristics of OTP algorithm, pepper
                          length, iteration count, and whether the
                          method is used within a tunnel such as
                          PEAPv2.  For some illustrative examples,
                          and a further discussion of this, see
                          Appendix D.

Dictionary attack prot.: N/A (Human-selected passwords not used) Fast reconnect: Yes Crypt. binding: N/A (EAP-POTP is not a tunnel method) Session independence: Yes Fragmentation: N/A (Packets shall not exceed MTU of 1020) Channel binding: Yes (No in basic variant) Acknowledged S/F: Yes State Synchronization: Yes (No in basic variant)

Passive and Active Attacks

The basic variant (i.e., when the protection of OTPs and mutual authentication is not used) of this EAP method does not provide session privacy, session integrity, server authentication, or protection from active attacks. In particular, man-in-the-middle attacks, where an attacker acts as an authenticator in order to acquire a valid OTP, are possible.

Similarly, the basic variant of this EAP method does not protect against session hijacking taking place after authentication. Nor does it, in itself, protect against replay attacks, where the attacker gains access by replaying a previous valid request, but see also the next subsection. When PIN codes are transmitted, they are sent without protection and are also subject to replay attacks.

In order to protect against these attacks, the peer MUST only use the basic variant of this method over a server-authenticated and confidentiality-protected connection. This can be achieved via use of, PEAPv2 [17], for example.

When the OTP protection variant is used, however, the EAP method provides privacy for OTPs and new PINs, negotiation of cryptographic algorithms, mutual authentication, and protection against replay attacks and protocol version downgrades. It also provides protection against man-in-the-middle attacks, not due to the infeasibility for a man-in-the-middle to solve for a valid OTP given an OTP TLV, but due to the computational expense of finding the OTP in the limited time period during which it is valid (this is mainly true for tokens, including the current time in their OTP calculations, or when a sent challenge has a certain lifetime). It should be noted, however, that a retrieved OTP, even if "old" and invalid, still may divulge some information about the user's PIN. Clearly, this is also true for the basic variant. Implementations of this EAP method, where user PINs are sent with OTPs, are therefore RECOMMENDED to ensure regular user PIN changes, regardless of whether the protected variant or the basic variant is employed.

It should also be noted that, while it is possible for a rogue access point, e.g., to clone MAC addresses, and hence mount a man-in-the- middle attack, such an access point will not be able to calculate the session keys MSK and EMSK. This demonstrates the importance of using the derived key material properly to protect a subsequent session.

Protected mode protects against version downgrade attacks due to the HMAC both parties transmit in this mode. As described, each party calculates the HMAC on sent and received EAP-POTP handshake messages. If an attacker were to modify a Version TLV, this would be reflected

in a difference between the calculated MACs (since the recipient of the Version TLV received a different value than the sender sent). Unless the attacker knows K_MAC, he cannot calculate the correct MAC, and hence the difference will be detected.

The OTP protection variant also protects against session hijacking, if the derived key material is used (directly or indirectly) to protect a subsequent session. For these reasons, use of the OTP protection variant is RECOMMENDED.

However, it should be noted that not even the OTP protection variant provides privacy for user names and/or token key identifiers. EAP- POTP MUST be used within a secure tunnel such as the one provided by PEAPv2 [17] if privacy for these parameters is required.

When resuming sessions created in the basic variant (which MUST only take place within a protected tunnel), the peer is authenticated by demonstrating knowledge of not just a valid session identifier, but also the OTP used when the session was created. Server nonces prevent replay attacks, but there still remains some likelihood of an attacker guessing the correct combination of session identifier and OTP value. Assuming OTPs with entropy about 32 bits, this means that the likelihood of succeeding with such an attack is about 1/2^48 due to the birthday paradox. Servers allowing session resumption for the basic variant MUST protect against such attacks, e.g., by keeping track of the rate of failed resumption attempts.

Denial-of-Service Attacks

An active attacker may replace the iteration count value in OTP TLVs sent by the peer to slow down an authentication server. Authentication servers SHOULD protect against this, e.g., by disregarding OTP TLVs with an iteration count value higher than some number that is preset or dynamically set (depending on load).

The Use of Pepper

As described in Section 4.8, the use of pepper will slow down an attacker's search for a matching OTP. The ability to transfer a pepper value in encrypted form from the EAP server to the peer means that, even though there may be an initial computational cost for the EAP server to authenticate the peer, subsequent authentications will be efficient, while at the same time more secure, since a pre-shared, 128-bit-long pepper value will not be easily found by an attacker. An attacker, observing an EAP-Request containing an OTP TLV calculated using a pepper chosen by the peer, may, however, depending on available resources, be able to successfully attack that particular EAP-POTP session, since it most likely will be based on a

relatively short pepper value or only an iteration count. Once the correct OTP has been found, eavesdropping on the EAP server's Confirm TLV will potentially give the attacker access to the longer, server- provided pepper for the remaining lifetime of that pepper value. For this reason, initial exchanges with EAP servers SHOULD occur in a secure environment (e.g., in a PEAPv2 tunnel offering cryptographic binding with inner EAP methods). If initial exchanges do not occur in a secure environment, the iteration count MUST be significantly higher than for messages where a pre-shared pepper is used. The lifetime of the shared pepper must also be calculated with this in mind. Finally, the peer and the EAP server MUST store the pepper value securely and associated with the user.

The Race Attack

In the case of fragmentation of EAP messages, it is possible (in the basic variant of this method) for an attacker to listen to most of an OTP, guess the remainder, and then race the legitimate user to complete the authentication. Conforming backend authentication server implementations MUST protect against this race condition. One defense against this attack is outlined below and borrowed from [14]; implementations MAY use this approach or MAY select an alternative defense. Note that the described defense relies on the user providing the identity in response to an initial Identity EAP- Request.

One possible defense is to prevent a user from starting multiple simultaneous authentication sessions. This means that once the legitimate user has initiated authentication, an attacker would be blocked until the first authentication process has completed. In this approach, a timeout is necessary to thwart a denial-of-service attack.

IANA Considerations

General

This document is a description of a general EAP method for OTP tokens. It also defines EAP method 32 as a profile of the general method. Extending the set of EAP-POTP TLVs or the set of EAP-POTP cryptographic algorithms shall be seen as revisions of the protocol and hence shall require an RFC that updates or obsoletes this document.

Cryptographic Algorithm Identifier Octets

A new registry for EAP-POTP cryptographic algorithm identifier octets has been created. The initial contents of this registry are as specified in Section 4.11.16.

Assignment of new values for hash algorithms, encryption algorithms, and MAC algorithms in the Crypto Algorithm TLV MUST be done through IANA with "Specification Required" and "IESG Approval" (see [9] for the meaning of these terms).

Intellectual Property Considerations

RSA, RSA Security, and SecurID are either registered trademarks or trademarks of RSA Security Inc. in the United States and/or other countries. The names of other products and services mentioned may be the trademarks of their respective owners.

Acknowledgments

This document was improved by comments from, and discussion with, a number of RSA Security employees. Simon Josefsson drafted the initial versions of an RSA SecurID EAP method while working for RSA Laboratories. The inspiration for the TLV-type of information exchange comes from [17]. Special thanks to Oliver Tavakoli of Funk Software who provided numerous useful comments and suggestions, Randy Chou of Aruba Networks for good suggestions in the session resumption area, and Jim Burns of Meetinghouse who provided inspiration for the Protected TLV. Thanks also to the IESG reviewers, Pasi Eronen, David Black, and Uri Blumenthal, for insightful comments that helped to improve the document, and to Alfred Hoenes for a thorough editorial review.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

[1] Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Aboba, B., Carlson, J., and H.

     Levkowetz, Ed., "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC
     3748, June 2004.

[2] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement

     Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

[3] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Secure Hash

     Standard", FIPS 180-2, February 2004.

[4] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Specification

     for the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)", FIPS 197, November
     2001.

[5] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-Hashing

     for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, February 1997.

[6] Kaliski, B., "PKCS #5: Password-Based Cryptography Specification

     Version 2.0", RFC 2898, September 2000.

[7] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD

     63, RFC 3629, November 2003.

[8] Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers", RFC 3966,

     December 2004.

[9] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA

     Considerations Section in RFCs", RFC 2434, October 1998.

10.2. Informative References

[10] Simpson, W., Ed., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD 51,

     RFC 1661, July 1994.

[11] The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.,

     "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks --
     Port-Based Network Access Control", IEEE 802.1X-2001, July
     2001.

[12] Kaufman, C., Ed., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol", RFC

     4306, December 2005.

[13] Stanley, D., Walker, J., and B. Aboba, "Extensible

     Authentication Protocol (EAP) Method Requirements for Wireless
     LANs", RFC 4017, March 2005.

[14] Haller, N., Metz, C., Nesser, P., and M. Straw, "A One-Time

     Password System", STD 61, RFC 2289, February 1998.

[15] Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson, "Remote

     Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)", RFC 2865, June
     2000.

[16] Aboba, B., Simon, D., Eronen, P., and H. Levkowetz, Ed.,

     "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) Key Management
     Framework", Work in Progress, October 2006.

[17] Palekar, A., Simon, D., Zorn, G., Salowey, J., Zhou, H., and S.

     Josefsson, "Protected EAP Protocol (PEAP) Version 2", Work in
     Progress, October 2004.

[18] Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, "Private Enterprise

     Numbers", December 2006.

[19] Zorn, G., "Microsoft Vendor-specific RADIUS Attributes", RFC

     2548, March 1999.

Appendix A. Profile of EAP-POTP for RSA SecurID

Note: The RSA SecurID product is a hardware token card (or software emulation thereof) produced by RSA Security Inc., which is used for end-user authentication.

The EAP method type identifier for the RSA SecurID profile of EAP- POTP is 32.

Peers and EAP servers implementing the SecurID profile of EAP-POTP SHALL conform to all EAP-POTP normative requirements in this Document. In addition, the New PIN TLV and the Protected TLV MUST be supported by peers.

Appendix B. Examples of EAP-POTP Exchanges

This appendix is non-normative. In the examples, "V1", "V2", "V3", etc., stand for arbitrary values of the correct type.

B.1. Basic Mode, Unilateral Authentication

This mode should only be used within a secured tunnel. The peer identifies itself with a User Identifier TLV.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=0,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=0,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Authentication Data=V1

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V2

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.2. Basic Mode, Session Resumption

This example illustrates successful resumption of a basic mode session. It must be carried out only in a protected tunnel.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=0,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V1
                                       Server  Identifier=V2
                                       Nonce=V3

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

Resume TLV: Session Identifier=V4 (indicating earlier, basic mode, session) Authentication Data=V5

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.3. Mutual Authentication without Session Resumption

In this case, the peer uses the token key identifier, in addition to the user identifier. The initial EAP-Identity exchange may also provide user information, or may be restricted to only general domain information. Pepper is not used, but will be used in a subsequent session since the server provides the peer with an encrypted pepper in its Confirm TLV. Absence of the Crypto Algorithm TLV indicates use of default cryptographic algorithms.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V1
                                       Server  Identifier=V2
                                       Nonce=V3
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=0
                                       Iteration Count=V4

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=0 Iteration Count=V4 Authentication Data=V5

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V6

Token Key Identifier TLV: Token Key Identifier=V7

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V8
                                       Pepper Identifier=V9
                                       Encrypted Pepper=V10

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.4. Mutual Authentication with Transfer of Pepper

The difference between this example and the previous one is that the peer makes use of an existing pepper in the PBKDF2 computation. The EAP server provides a new pepper to the peer in the Confirm TLV. Note that the peer had not been able to use a pepper in the response calculation unless it had found the existing pepper, since the server specified a maximum (new) pepper length of zero.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V1
                                       Server  Identifier=V2
                                       Nonce=V3
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=0
                                       Iteration Count=V4

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V5 Iteration Count=V6 Authentication Data=V7 (includes a pepper identifier)

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V8

Token Key Identifier TLV: Token Key Identifier=V9

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V10
                                       Pepper Identifier=V11
                                       Encrypted Pepper=V12

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.5. Failed Mutual Authentication

This example differs from the previous one in that the peer is not able to authenticate the server. Therefore, it sends an empty EAP- Response of type POTP-X, which the EAP server acknowledges by responding with an EAP-Failure. Pepper is not used.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V5

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V1 Iteration Count=V2 Authentication Data=V6

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V7

Token Key Identifier TLV: Token Key Identifier=V8

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V9

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

(no data)

                                    <- EAP-Failure

B.6. Session Resumption

This example illustrates successful session resumption.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V5

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

Resume TLV: Session Identifier=V6 (indicating earlier, protected mode, session) Authentication Data=V7

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V8

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.7. Failed Session Resumption

This example illustrates a failed session resumption, followed by a complete mutual authentication. The user is identified through the User Identifier TLV. The client is able to reuse an older pepper. The server sends a new pepper for subsequent use in its Confirm TLV. The server suggests some non-default cryptographic algorithms, but the client only supports the default ones.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V5
                                       Crypto Algorithm TLV:
                                       Hash Alg. Length=V6
                                       Hash Algorithms=V7
                                       Encr. Alg. Length=V8
                                       Encr. Algorithms=V9
                                       MAC Alg. Length=V10
                                       MAC Algorithms=V11

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

Resume TLV: Session Identifier=V12 (indicating earlier session) Authentication Data=V13

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V14
                                       Iteration Count=V15
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=1 (no resumption)
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V16

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=1,T=1,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V17 Iteration Count=V18 Authentication Data=V19 (with pepper identifier)

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V20

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V21
                                       Pepper Identifier=V22
                                       Encrypted Pepper=V23

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.8. Mutual Authentication, and New PIN Requested.

In this example, the user is also requested to select a new PIN. The new PIN is allowed to be alphanumeric, and must be at least 6 characters long. The user selects another PIN than the one suggested by the server. The token key is identified through a combination of the user identifier and the token key identifier. While waiting for the user input, to avoid network timeouts, the peer sends an EAP- Response containing a Keep-Alive TLV to the EAP server. The EAP server responds by sending an EAP-Request containing a Keep-Alive TLV back to the peer. Note that all TLVs exchanged after the Confirm TLV exchange are wrapped in the Protected TLV. Absence of the Crypto Algorithm TLV indicates use of default cryptographic algorithms.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V5

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V6

Iteration Count=V7 Authentication Data=V8 (with pepper identifier)

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V9

Token Key Identifier TLV: Token Key Identifier=V10

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=1
                                       Authentication Data=V11

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Protected TLV:
                                       MAC=V12
                                       IV=V13
                                       Encrypted TLVs=V14
                                       (Contains:
                                       New PIN TLV:
                                       Q=0,A=1
                                       PIN=V15
                                       Min. PIN Length=6)

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Protected TLV: MAC=V16 IV=V17 Encrypted TLVs=V18 (Contains: Keep-Alive TLV: (no data))

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Protected TLV:
                                       MAC=V19
                                       IV=V20
                                       Encrypted TLVs=V21
                                       (Contains:
                                       Keep-Alive TLV:
                                       (no data))

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Protected TLV: MAC=V22 IV=V23 Encrypted TLVs=V24 (Contains: New PIN TLV: Q=0,A=0 PIN=V25)

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Protected TLV:
                                       MAC=V26
                                       IV=V27
                                       Encrypted TLVs=V28
                                       (Contains:
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2)

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Protected TLV MAC=V29 IV=V30 Encrypted TLVs=V31 (Contains: OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V6 Iteration Count=V7 Authentication Data=V31)

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Protected TLV
                                       MAC=V32
                                       IV=V33
                                       Encrypted TLVs=V34
                                       (Contains:
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V35)

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Protected TLV MAC=V36 IV=V37 Encrypted TLVs=V38 (Contains: Confirm TLV: (no data))

                                    <- EAP-Success

B.9. Use of Next OTP Mode

In this example, the peer is requested to provide a second OTP to the EAP server.

Peer EAP server

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=Identity

EAP-Response -> Type=Identity

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Version TLV:
                                       Highest=0,Lowest=0
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2
                                       Server-Info TLV:
                                       N=0
                                       Session Identifier=V3
                                       Server  Identifier=V4
                                       Nonce=V5

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Version TLV: Highest=0

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=0,T=0,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V6 Iteration Count=V7 Authentication Data=V8

User Identifier TLV: User Identifier=V9

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       OTP TLV:
                                       P=1,C=0,N=1,T=1,E=0,R=0
                                       Pepper Length=V1
                                       Iteration Count=V2

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

OTP TLV: P=1,C=0,N=1,T=1,E=0,R=0 Pepper Length=V6 Iteration Count=V7 Authentication Data=V10

                                    <- EAP-Request
                                       Type=OTP-X
                                       Confirm TLV:
                                       C=0
                                       Authentication Data=V11

EAP-Response -> Type=OTP-X

Confirm TLV: (no data)

                                    <- EAP-Success

Appendix C. Use of the MPPE-Send/Receive-Key RADIUS Attributes

C.1. Introduction

This section describes how to populate the MPPE-Send-Key and the MPPE-Receive-Key RADIUS attributes defined in [19], using an MSK established in EAP-POTP.

C.2. MPPE Key Attribute Population

Once the EAP-POTP MSK has been generated, it is used as follows to populate the MPPE-Send-Key and the MPPE-Receive-Key attributes:

Use the initial 32 octets of the MSK as the value for the "Key" sub- field in the plaintext "String" field of the MPPE-Send-Key attribute, and use the final 32 octets of the MSK as the "Key" sub-field in the plaintext "String" field of the MPPE-Receive-Key attribute (Note: "Send" and "Receive" here refer to the Authenticator; for the peer, they are reversed).

Appendix D. Key Strength Considerations

D.1. Introduction

As described in Section 6, the strength of keys generated in EAP-POTP protected mode depends on a number of factors. This appendix provides examples of actual key strengths achieved under various assumptions.

It should be noted that, while some of the examples indicate that the strength of generated keys is relatively weak, the strength applies only to those EAP-POTP sessions between a peer and an EAP server that do not share a pepper. Once a pepper, provided by an EAP server to a peer, has been established, future sessions using this pepper will provide full-strength keys.

D.2. Example 1: 6-Digit One-Time Passwords

In this example we assume the following:

  OTPs are six decimal digits long;
  4-digit PINs are added to generated OTPs; and
  OTP hardening (iteration count and pepper searching combined)
  effectively adds 10 bits of entropy.  One way of achieving this
  without use of pepper searching is to have the iteration count in
  PBKDF2 set to 1,000,000.

The effective key strength then becomes roughly:

log_2(10**6) + log_2(10**4) + log_2(2**10) = 43 bits

The above assumes that the entropy of the underlying shared secret is >43 bits and that there are no other weaknesses in the OTP algorithm.

D.3. Example 2: 8-Digit One-Time Passwords

In this example we assume the following:

  OTPs are eight decimal digits long;
  4-character alphanumeric PINs are added to generated OTPs; and
  OTP hardening (iteration count and pepper searching combined)
  effectively adds 10 bits of entropy.

The effective key strength then becomes roughly:

log_2(10**8) + log_2(26**4) + log_2(2**10) = 55 bits

The above assumes that the entropy of the underlying shared secret is >55 bits and that there are no other weaknesses in the OTP algorithm.

Author's Address

Magnus Nystroem RSA Security

EMail: [email protected]

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