Defending TCP Against Spoofing Attacks
RFC 4953, “Defending TCP Against Spoofing Attacks”, is an Informational document published in July 2007 by J. Touch. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
Recent analysis of potential attacks on core Internet infrastructure indicates an increased vulnerability of TCP connections to spurious resets (RSTs), sent with forged IP source addresses (spoofing). TCP has always been susceptible to such RST spoofing attacks, which were indirectly protected by checking that the RST sequence number was inside the current receive window, as well as via the obfuscation of TCP endpoint and port numbers. For pairs of well-known endpoints often over predictable port pairs, such as BGP or between web servers and well-known large-scale caches, increases in the path bandwidth-delay product of a connection have sufficiently increased the receive window space that off-path third parties can brute-force generate a viable RST sequence number. The susceptibility to attack increases with the square of the bandwidth, and thus presents a significant vulnerability for recent high-speed networks. This document addresses this vulnerability, discussing proposed solutions at the transport level and their inherent challenges, as well as existing network level solutions and the feasibility of their deployment. This document focuses on vulnerabilities due to spoofed TCP segments, and includes a discussion of related ICMP spoofing attacks on TCP connections. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
What “Informational” means
Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.
The canonical text of RFC 4953 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 4952 Overview and Framework for Internationalized Email
- RFC 4954 SMTP Service Extension for Authentication
- RFC 4951 Fail Over Extensions for Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol "failover"
- RFC 4955 DNS Security Experiments
- RFC 4950 ICMP Extensions for Multiprotocol Label Switching
- RFC 4956 DNS Security Opt-In
- RFC 4949 Internet Security Glossary, Version 2
- RFC 4957 Link-Layer Event Notifications for Detecting Network Attachments