| IETF CIPSO Working Group | 
 | 16 July, 1992 | 
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 |                  COMMERCIAL IP SECURITY OPTION (CIPSO 2.2) | 
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 | 1.    Status | 
 |  | 
 | This Internet Draft provides the high level specification for a Commercial | 
 | IP Security Option (CIPSO).  This draft reflects the version as approved by | 
 | the CIPSO IETF Working Group.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited. | 
 |  | 
 | This document is an Internet Draft.  Internet Drafts are working documents | 
 | of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas, and its Working | 
 | Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as | 
 | Internet Drafts. | 
 |  | 
 | Internet Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months. | 
 | Internet Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents | 
 | at any time.  It is not appropriate to use Internet Drafts as reference | 
 | material or to cite them other than as a "working draft" or "work in | 
 | progress." | 
 |  | 
 | Please check the I-D abstract listing contained in each Internet Draft | 
 | directory to learn the current status of this or any other Internet Draft. | 
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 | 2.    Background | 
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 | Currently the Internet Protocol includes two security options.  One of | 
 | these options is the DoD Basic Security Option (BSO) (Type 130) which allows | 
 | IP datagrams to be labeled with security classifications.  This option | 
 | provides sixteen security classifications and a variable number of handling | 
 | restrictions.  To handle additional security information, such as security | 
 | categories or compartments, another security option (Type 133) exists and | 
 | is referred to as the DoD Extended Security Option (ESO).  The values for | 
 | the fixed fields within these two options are administered by the Defense | 
 | Information Systems Agency (DISA). | 
 |  | 
 | Computer vendors are now building commercial operating systems with | 
 | mandatory access controls and multi-level security.  These systems are | 
 | no longer built specifically for a particular group in the defense or | 
 | intelligence communities.  They are generally available commercial systems | 
 | for use in a variety of government and civil sector environments. | 
 |  | 
 | The small number of ESO format codes can not support all the possible | 
 | applications of a commercial security option.  The BSO and ESO were | 
 | designed to only support the United States DoD.  CIPSO has been designed | 
 | to support multiple security policies.  This Internet Draft provides the | 
 | format and procedures required to support a Mandatory Access Control | 
 | security policy.  Support for additional security policies shall be | 
 | defined in future RFCs. | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 1] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | 3.    CIPSO Format | 
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 | Option type: 134 (Class 0, Number 6, Copy on Fragmentation) | 
 | Option length: Variable | 
 |  | 
 | This option permits security related information to be passed between | 
 | systems within a single Domain of Interpretation (DOI).  A DOI is a | 
 | collection of systems which agree on the meaning of particular values | 
 | in the security option.  An authority that has been assigned a DOI | 
 | identifier will define a mapping between appropriate CIPSO field values | 
 | and their human readable equivalent.  This authority will distribute that | 
 | mapping to hosts within the authority's domain.  These mappings may be | 
 | sensitive, therefore a DOI authority is not required to make these | 
 | mappings available to anyone other than the systems that are included in | 
 | the DOI. | 
 |  | 
 | This option MUST be copied on fragmentation.  This option appears at most | 
 | once in a datagram.  All multi-octet fields in the option are defined to be | 
 | transmitted in network byte order.  The format of this option is as follows: | 
 |  | 
 | +----------+----------+------//------+-----------//---------+ | 
 | | 10000110 | LLLLLLLL | DDDDDDDDDDDD | TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT | | 
 | +----------+----------+------//------+-----------//---------+ | 
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 |   TYPE=134    OPTION    DOMAIN OF               TAGS | 
 |               LENGTH    INTERPRETATION | 
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 |                 Figure 1. CIPSO Format | 
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 | 3.1    Type | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length.  Its value is 134. | 
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 | 3.2    Length | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length.  It is the total length of the option | 
 | including the type and length fields.  With the current IP header length | 
 | restriction of 40 octets the value of this field MUST not exceed 40. | 
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 | 3.3    Domain of Interpretation Identifier | 
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 | This field is an unsigned 32 bit integer.  The value 0 is reserved and MUST | 
 | not appear as the DOI identifier in any CIPSO option.  Implementations | 
 | should assume that the DOI identifier field is not aligned on any particular | 
 | byte boundary. | 
 |  | 
 | To conserve space in the protocol, security levels and categories are | 
 | represented by numbers rather than their ASCII equivalent.  This requires | 
 | a mapping table within CIPSO hosts to map these numbers to their | 
 | corresponding ASCII representations.  Non-related groups of systems may | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 2] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | have their own unique mappings.  For example, one group of systems may | 
 | use the number 5 to represent Unclassified while another group may use the | 
 | number 1 to represent that same security level.  The DOI identifier is used | 
 | to identify which mapping was used for the values within the option. | 
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 | 3.4    Tag Types | 
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 | A common format for passing security related information is necessary | 
 | for interoperability.  CIPSO uses sets of "tags" to contain the security | 
 | information relevant to the data in the IP packet.  Each tag begins with | 
 | a tag type identifier followed by the length of the tag and ends with the | 
 | actual security information to be passed.  All multi-octet fields in a tag | 
 | are defined to be transmitted in network byte order.  Like the DOI | 
 | identifier field in the CIPSO header, implementations should assume that | 
 | all tags, as well as fields within a tag, are not aligned on any particular | 
 | octet boundary.   The tag types defined in this document contain alignment | 
 | bytes to assist alignment of some information, however alignment can not | 
 | be guaranteed if CIPSO is not the first IP option. | 
 |  | 
 | CIPSO tag types 0 through 127 are reserved for defining standard tag | 
 | formats.  Their definitions will be published in RFCs.  Tag types whose | 
 | identifiers are greater than 127 are defined by the DOI authority and may | 
 | only be meaningful in certain Domains of Interpretation.  For these tag | 
 | types, implementations will require the DOI identifier as well as the tag | 
 | number to determine the security policy and the format associated with the | 
 | tag.  Use of tag types above 127 are restricted to closed networks where | 
 | interoperability with other networks will not be an issue.  Implementations | 
 | that support a tag type greater than 127 MUST support at least one DOI that | 
 | requires only tag types 1 to 127. | 
 |  | 
 | Tag type 0 is reserved. Tag types 1, 2, and 5 are defined in this | 
 | Internet Draft.  Types 3 and 4 are reserved for work in progress. | 
 | The standard format for all current and future CIPSO tags is shown below: | 
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 | +----------+----------+--------//--------+ | 
 | | TTTTTTTT | LLLLLLLL | IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII | | 
 | +----------+----------+--------//--------+ | 
 |     TAG       TAG         TAG | 
 |     TYPE      LENGTH      INFORMATION | 
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 |     Figure 2:  Standard Tag Format | 
 |  | 
 | In the three tag types described in this document, the length and count | 
 | restrictions are based on the current IP limitation of 40 octets for all | 
 | IP options.  If the IP header is later expanded, then the length and count | 
 | restrictions specified in this document may increase to use the full area | 
 | provided for IP options. | 
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 | 3.4.1    Tag Type Classes | 
 |  | 
 | Tag classes consist of tag types that have common processing requirements | 
 | and support the same security policy.  The three tags defined in this | 
 | Internet Draft belong to the Mandatory Access Control (MAC) Sensitivity | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 3] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | class and support the MAC Sensitivity security policy. | 
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 | 3.4.2    Tag Type 1 | 
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 | This is referred to as the "bit-mapped" tag type.  Tag type 1 is included | 
 | in the MAC Sensitivity tag type class.  The format of this tag type is as | 
 | follows: | 
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 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+--------//---------+ | 
 | | 00000001 | LLLLLLLL | 00000000 | LLLLLLLL | CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC | | 
 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+--------//---------+ | 
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 |     TAG       TAG      ALIGNMENT  SENSITIVITY    BIT MAP OF | 
 |     TYPE      LENGTH   OCTET      LEVEL          CATEGORIES | 
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 |             Figure 3. Tag Type 1 Format | 
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 | 3.4.2.1    Tag Type | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length and has a value of 1. | 
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 | 3.4.2.2    Tag Length | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length.  It is the total length of the tag type | 
 | including the type and length fields.  With the current IP header length | 
 | restriction of 40 bytes the value within this field is between 4 and 34. | 
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 | 3.4.2.3    Alignment Octet | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length and always has the value of 0.  Its purpose | 
 | is to align the category bitmap field on an even octet boundary.  This will | 
 | speed many implementations including router implementations. | 
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 | 3.4.2.4    Sensitivity Level | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length.  Its value is from 0 to 255.  The values | 
 | are ordered with 0 being the minimum value and 255 representing the maximum | 
 | value. | 
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 | 3.4.2.5    Bit Map of Categories | 
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 | The length of this field is variable and ranges from 0 to 30 octets.  This | 
 | provides representation of categories 0 to 239.  The ordering of the bits | 
 | is left to right or MSB to LSB.  For example category 0 is represented by | 
 | the most significant bit of the first byte and category 15 is represented | 
 | by the least significant bit of the second byte.  Figure 4 graphically | 
 | shows this ordering.  Bit N is binary 1 if category N is part of the label | 
 | for the datagram, and bit N is binary 0 if category N is not part of the | 
 | label.  Except for the optimized tag 1 format described in the next section, | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 4] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | minimal encoding SHOULD be used resulting in no trailing zero octets in the | 
 | category bitmap. | 
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 |         octet 0  octet 1  octet 2  octet 3  octet 4  octet 5 | 
 |         XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX . . . | 
 | bit     01234567 89111111 11112222 22222233 33333333 44444444 | 
 | number             012345 67890123 45678901 23456789 01234567 | 
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 |             Figure 4. Ordering of Bits in Tag 1 Bit Map | 
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 | 3.4.2.6    Optimized Tag 1 Format | 
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 | Routers work most efficiently when processing fixed length fields.  To | 
 | support these routers there is an optimized form of tag type 1.  The format | 
 | does not change.  The only change is to the category bitmap which is set to | 
 | a constant length of 10 octets.  Trailing octets required to fill out the 10 | 
 | octets are zero filled.  Ten octets, allowing for 80 categories, was chosen | 
 | because it makes the total length of the CIPSO option 20 octets.  If CIPSO | 
 | is the only option then the option will be full word aligned and additional | 
 | filler octets will not be required. | 
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 | 3.4.3    Tag Type 2 | 
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 | This is referred to as the "enumerated" tag type.  It is used to describe | 
 | large but sparsely populated sets of categories.  Tag type 2 is in the MAC | 
 | Sensitivity tag type class.  The format of this tag type is as follows: | 
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 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+-------------//-------------+ | 
 | | 00000010 | LLLLLLLL | 00000000 | LLLLLLLL | CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC | | 
 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+-------------//-------------+ | 
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 |     TAG       TAG      ALIGNMENT  SENSITIVITY         ENUMERATED | 
 |     TYPE      LENGTH   OCTET      LEVEL               CATEGORIES | 
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 |                 Figure 5. Tag Type 2 Format | 
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 | 3.4.3.1     Tag Type | 
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 | This field is one octet in length and has a value of 2. | 
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 | 3.4.3.2    Tag Length | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length. It is the total length of the tag type | 
 | including the type and length fields.  With the current IP header length | 
 | restriction of 40 bytes the value within this field is between 4 and 34. | 
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 | 3.4.3.3    Alignment Octet | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length and always has the value of 0.  Its purpose | 
 | is to align the category field on an even octet boundary.  This will | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 5] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | speed many implementations including router implementations. | 
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 | 3.4.3.4    Sensitivity Level | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length. Its value is from 0 to 255.  The values | 
 | are ordered with 0 being the minimum value and 255 representing the | 
 | maximum value. | 
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 | 3.4.3.5    Enumerated Categories | 
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 | In this tag, categories are represented by their actual value rather than | 
 | by their position within a bit field.  The length of each category is 2 | 
 | octets.  Up to 15 categories may be represented by this tag.  Valid values | 
 | for categories are 0 to 65534.  Category 65535 is not a valid category | 
 | value.  The categories MUST be listed in ascending order within the tag. | 
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 | 3.4.4    Tag Type 5 | 
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 | This is referred to as the "range" tag type.  It is used to represent | 
 | labels where all categories in a range, or set of ranges, are included | 
 | in the sensitivity label.  Tag type 5 is in the MAC Sensitivity tag type | 
 | class.  The format of this tag type is as follows: | 
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 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+------------//-------------+ | 
 | | 00000101 | LLLLLLLL | 00000000 | LLLLLLLL |  Top/Bottom | Top/Bottom  | | 
 | +----------+----------+----------+----------+------------//-------------+ | 
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 |     TAG       TAG      ALIGNMENT  SENSITIVITY        CATEGORY RANGES | 
 |     TYPE      LENGTH   OCTET      LEVEL | 
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 |                      Figure 6. Tag Type 5 Format | 
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 | 3.4.4.1     Tag Type | 
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 | This field is one octet in length and has a value of 5. | 
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 | 3.4.4.2    Tag Length | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length. It is the total length of the tag type | 
 | including the type and length fields.  With the current IP header length | 
 | restriction of 40 bytes the value within this field is between 4 and 34. | 
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 | 3.4.4.3    Alignment Octet | 
 |  | 
 | This field is 1 octet in length and always has the value of 0.  Its purpose | 
 | is to align the category range field on an even octet boundary.  This will | 
 | speed many implementations including router implementations. | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 6] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | 3.4.4.4    Sensitivity Level | 
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 | This field is 1 octet in length. Its value is from 0 to 255.  The values | 
 | are ordered with 0 being the minimum value and 255 representing the maximum | 
 | value. | 
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 | 3.4.4.5    Category Ranges | 
 |  | 
 | A category range is a 4 octet field comprised of the 2 octet index of the | 
 | highest numbered category followed by the 2 octet index of the lowest | 
 | numbered category.  These range endpoints are inclusive within the range of | 
 | categories.  All categories within a range are included in the sensitivity | 
 | label.  This tag may contain a maximum of 7 category pairs.  The bottom | 
 | category endpoint for the last pair in the tag MAY be omitted and SHOULD be | 
 | assumed to be 0.  The ranges MUST be non-overlapping and be listed in | 
 | descending order.  Valid values for categories are 0 to 65534.  Category | 
 | 65535 is not a valid category value. | 
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 | 3.4.5     Minimum Requirements | 
 |  | 
 | A CIPSO implementation MUST be capable of generating at least tag type 1 in | 
 | the non-optimized form.  In addition, a CIPSO implementation MUST be able | 
 | to receive any valid tag type 1 even those using the optimized tag type 1 | 
 | format. | 
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 | 4.    Configuration Parameters | 
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 | The configuration parameters defined below are required for all CIPSO hosts, | 
 | gateways, and routers that support multiple sensitivity labels.  A CIPSO | 
 | host is defined to be the origination or destination system for an IP | 
 | datagram.  A CIPSO gateway provides IP routing services between two or more | 
 | IP networks and may be required to perform label translations between | 
 | networks.  A CIPSO gateway may be an enhanced CIPSO host or it may just | 
 | provide gateway services with no end system CIPSO capabilities.  A CIPSO | 
 | router is a dedicated IP router that routes IP datagrams between two or more | 
 | IP networks. | 
 |  | 
 | An implementation of CIPSO on a host MUST have the capability to reject a | 
 | datagram for reasons that the information contained can not be adequately | 
 | protected by the receiving host or if acceptance may result in violation of | 
 | the host or network security policy.  In addition, a CIPSO gateway or router | 
 | MUST be able to reject datagrams going to networks that can not provide | 
 | adequate protection or may violate the network's security policy.  To | 
 | provide this capability the following minimal set of configuration | 
 | parameters are required for CIPSO implementations: | 
 |  | 
 | HOST_LABEL_MAX - This parameter contains the maximum sensitivity label that | 
 | a CIPSO host is authorized to handle.  All datagrams that have a label | 
 | greater than this maximum MUST be rejected by the CIPSO host.  This | 
 | parameter does not apply to CIPSO gateways or routers.  This parameter need | 
 | not be defined explicitly as it can be implicitly derived from the | 
 | PORT_LABEL_MAX parameters for the associated interfaces. | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 7] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | HOST_LABEL_MIN - This parameter contains the minimum sensitivity label that | 
 | a CIPSO host is authorized to handle.  All datagrams that have a label less | 
 | than this minimum MUST be rejected by the CIPSO host.  This parameter does | 
 | not apply to CIPSO gateways or routers.  This parameter need not be defined | 
 | explicitly as it can be implicitly derived from the PORT_LABEL_MIN | 
 | parameters for the associated interfaces. | 
 |  | 
 | PORT_LABEL_MAX - This parameter contains the maximum sensitivity label for | 
 | all datagrams that may exit a particular network interface port.  All | 
 | outgoing datagrams that have a label greater than this maximum MUST be | 
 | rejected by the CIPSO system.  The label within this parameter MUST be | 
 | less than or equal to the label within the HOST_LABEL_MAX parameter.  This | 
 | parameter does not apply to CIPSO hosts that support only one network port. | 
 |  | 
 | PORT_LABEL_MIN - This parameter contains the minimum sensitivity label for | 
 | all datagrams that may exit a particular network interface port.  All | 
 | outgoing datagrams that have a label less than this minimum MUST be | 
 | rejected by the CIPSO system.  The label within this parameter MUST be | 
 | greater than or equal to the label within the HOST_LABEL_MIN parameter. | 
 | This parameter does not apply to CIPSO hosts that support only one network | 
 | port. | 
 |  | 
 | PORT_DOI - This parameter is used to assign a DOI identifier value to a | 
 | particular network interface port.  All CIPSO labels within datagrams | 
 | going out this port MUST use the specified DOI identifier.  All CIPSO | 
 | hosts and gateways MUST support either this parameter, the NET_DOI | 
 | parameter, or the HOST_DOI parameter. | 
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 | NET_DOI - This parameter is used to assign a DOI identifier value to a | 
 | particular IP network address.  All CIPSO labels within datagrams destined | 
 | for the particular IP network MUST use the specified DOI identifier.  All | 
 | CIPSO hosts and gateways MUST support either this parameter, the PORT_DOI | 
 | parameter, or the HOST_DOI parameter. | 
 |  | 
 | HOST_DOI - This parameter is used to assign a DOI identifier value to a | 
 | particular IP host address.  All CIPSO labels within datagrams destined for | 
 | the particular IP host will use the specified DOI identifier.  All CIPSO | 
 | hosts and gateways MUST support either this parameter, the PORT_DOI | 
 | parameter, or the NET_DOI parameter. | 
 |  | 
 | This list represents the minimal set of configuration parameters required | 
 | to be compliant.  Implementors are encouraged to add to this list to | 
 | provide enhanced functionality and control.  For example, many security | 
 | policies may require both incoming and outgoing datagrams be checked against | 
 | the port and host label ranges. | 
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 | 4.1    Port Range Parameters | 
 |  | 
 | The labels represented by the PORT_LABEL_MAX and PORT_LABEL_MIN parameters | 
 | MAY be in CIPSO or local format.  Some CIPSO systems, such as routers, may | 
 | want to have the range parameters expressed in CIPSO format so that incoming | 
 | labels do not have to be converted to a local format before being compared | 
 | against the range.  If multiple DOIs are supported by one of these CIPSO | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 8] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | systems then multiple port range parameters would be needed, one set for | 
 | each DOI supported on a particular port. | 
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 | The port range will usually represent the total set of labels that may | 
 | exist on the logical network accessed through the corresponding network | 
 | interface.  It may, however, represent a subset of these labels that are | 
 | allowed to enter the CIPSO system. | 
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 | 4.2    Single Label CIPSO Hosts | 
 |  | 
 | CIPSO implementations that support only one label are not required to | 
 | support the parameters described above.  These limited implementations are | 
 | only required to support a NET_LABEL parameter.  This parameter contains | 
 | the CIPSO label that may be inserted in datagrams that exit the host.  In | 
 | addition, the host MUST reject any incoming datagram that has a label which | 
 | is not equivalent to the NET_LABEL parameter. | 
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 | 5.    Handling Procedures | 
 |  | 
 | This section describes the processing requirements for incoming and | 
 | outgoing IP datagrams.  Just providing the correct CIPSO label format | 
 | is not enough.  Assumptions will be made by one system on how a | 
 | receiving system will handle the CIPSO label.  Wrong assumptions may | 
 | lead to non-interoperability or even a security incident.  The | 
 | requirements described below represent the minimal set needed for | 
 | interoperability and that provide users some level of confidence. | 
 | Many other requirements could be added to increase user confidence, | 
 | however at the risk of restricting creativity and limiting vendor | 
 | participation. | 
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 | 5.1    Input Procedures | 
 |  | 
 | All datagrams received through a network port MUST have a security label | 
 | associated with them, either contained in the datagram or assigned to the | 
 | receiving port.  Without this label the host, gateway, or router will not | 
 | have the information it needs to make security decisions.  This security | 
 | label will be obtained from the CIPSO if the option is present in the | 
 | datagram.  See section 4.1.2 for handling procedures for unlabeled | 
 | datagrams.  This label will be compared against the PORT (if appropriate) | 
 | and HOST configuration parameters defined in section 3. | 
 |  | 
 | If any field within the CIPSO option, such as the DOI identifier, is not | 
 | recognized the IP datagram is discarded and an ICMP "parameter problem" | 
 | (type 12) is generated and returned.  The ICMP code field is set to "bad | 
 | parameter" (code 0) and the pointer is set to the start of the CIPSO field | 
 | that is unrecognized. | 
 |  | 
 | If the contents of the CIPSO are valid but the security label is | 
 | outside of the configured host or port label range, the datagram is | 
 | discarded and an ICMP "destination unreachable" (type 3) is generated | 
 | and returned.  The code field of the ICMP is set to "communication with | 
 | destination network administratively prohibited" (code 9) or to | 
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 | Internet Draft, Expires 15 Jan 93                                 [PAGE 9] | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | "communication with destination host administratively prohibited" | 
 | (code 10).  The value of the code field used is dependent upon whether | 
 | the originator of the ICMP message is acting as a CIPSO host or a CIPSO | 
 | gateway.  The recipient of the ICMP message MUST be able to handle either | 
 | value.  The same procedure is performed if a CIPSO can not be added to an | 
 | IP packet because it is too large to fit in the IP options area. | 
 |  | 
 | If the error is triggered by receipt of an ICMP message, the message | 
 | is discarded and no response is permitted (consistent with general ICMP | 
 | processing rules). | 
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 | 5.1.1    Unrecognized tag types | 
 |  | 
 | The default condition for any CIPSO implementation is that an | 
 | unrecognized tag type MUST be treated as a "parameter problem" and | 
 | handled as described in section 4.1.  A CIPSO implementation MAY allow | 
 | the system administrator to identify tag types that may safely be | 
 | ignored.  This capability is an allowable enhancement, not a | 
 | requirement. | 
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 | 5.1.2    Unlabeled Packets | 
 |  | 
 | A network port may be configured to not require a CIPSO label for all | 
 | incoming  datagrams.  For this configuration a CIPSO label must be | 
 | assigned to that network port and associated with all unlabeled IP | 
 | datagrams.  This capability might be used for single level networks or | 
 | networks that have CIPSO and non-CIPSO hosts and the non-CIPSO hosts | 
 | all operate at the same label. | 
 |  | 
 | If a CIPSO option is required and none is found, the datagram is | 
 | discarded and an ICMP "parameter problem" (type 12) is generated and | 
 | returned to the originator of the datagram.  The code field of the ICMP | 
 | is set to "option missing" (code 1) and the ICMP pointer is set to 134 | 
 | (the value of the option type for the missing CIPSO option). | 
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 | 5.2    Output Procedures | 
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 | A CIPSO option MUST appear only once in a datagram.  Only one tag type | 
 | from the MAC Sensitivity class MAY be included in a CIPSO option.  Given | 
 | the current set of defined tag types, this means that CIPSO labels at | 
 | first will contain only one tag. | 
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 | All datagrams leaving a CIPSO system MUST meet the following condition: | 
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 |         PORT_LABEL_MIN <= CIPSO label <= PORT_LABEL_MAX | 
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 | If this condition is not satisfied the datagram MUST be discarded. | 
 | If the CIPSO system only supports one port, the HOST_LABEL_MIN and the | 
 | HOST_LABEL_MAX parameters MAY be substituted for the PORT parameters in | 
 | the above condition. | 
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 | The DOI identifier to be used for all outgoing datagrams is configured by | 
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 | the administrator.  If port level DOI identifier assignment is used, then | 
 | the PORT_DOI configuration parameter MUST contain the DOI identifier to | 
 | use.  If network level DOI assignment is used, then the NET_DOI parameter | 
 | MUST contain the DOI identifier to use.  And if host level DOI assignment | 
 | is employed, then the HOST_DOI parameter MUST contain the DOI identifier | 
 | to use.  A CIPSO implementation need only support one level of DOI | 
 | assignment. | 
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 | 5.3    DOI Processing Requirements | 
 |  | 
 | A CIPSO implementation MUST support at least one DOI and SHOULD support | 
 | multiple DOIs.  System and network administrators are cautioned to | 
 | ensure that at least one DOI is common within an IP network to allow for | 
 | broadcasting of IP datagrams. | 
 |  | 
 | CIPSO gateways MUST be capable of translating a CIPSO option from one | 
 | DOI to another when forwarding datagrams between networks.  For | 
 | efficiency purposes this capability is only a desired feature for CIPSO | 
 | routers. | 
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 | 5.4    Label of ICMP Messages | 
 |  | 
 | The CIPSO label to be used on all outgoing ICMP messages MUST be equivalent | 
 | to the label of the datagram that caused the ICMP message.  If the ICMP was | 
 | generated due to a problem associated with the original CIPSO label then the | 
 | following responses are allowed: | 
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 |   a.  Use the CIPSO label of the original IP datagram | 
 |   b.  Drop the original datagram with no return message generated | 
 |  | 
 | In most cases these options will have the same effect.  If you can not | 
 | interpret the label or if it is outside the label range of your host or | 
 | interface then an ICMP message with the same label will probably not be | 
 | able to exit the system. | 
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 | 6.    Assignment of DOI Identifier Numbers                                   = | 
 |  | 
 | Requests for assignment of a DOI identifier number should be addressed to | 
 | the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). | 
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 | 7.    Acknowledgements | 
 |  | 
 | Much of the material in this RFC is based on (and copied from) work | 
 | done by Gary Winiger of Sun Microsystems and published as Commercial | 
 | IP Security Option at the INTEROP 89, Commercial IPSO Workshop. | 
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 | 8.    Author's Address | 
 |  | 
 | To submit mail for distribution to members of the IETF CIPSO Working | 
 | Group, send mail to: cipso@wdl1.wdl.loral.com. | 
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 | CIPSO INTERNET DRAFT                                         16 July, 1992 | 
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 | To be added to or deleted from this distribution, send mail to: | 
 | cipso-request@wdl1.wdl.loral.com. | 
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 | 9.    References | 
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 | RFC 1038, "Draft Revised IP Security Option", M. St. Johns, IETF, January | 
 | 1988. | 
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 | RFC 1108, "U.S. Department of Defense Security Options | 
 | for the Internet Protocol", Stephen Kent, IAB, 1 March, 1991. | 
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