Locator/ID Separation Protocol Security
RFC 9303, “Locator/ID Separation Protocol Security”, is a Proposed Standard document published in October 2022 by F. Maino, V. Ermagan, A. Cabellos, D. Saucez. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This memo specifies Locator/ID Separation Protocol Security (LISP-SEC), a set of security mechanisms that provides origin authentication, integrity, and anti-replay protection to the LISP's Endpoint-ID-to-Routing-Locator (EID-to-RLOC) mapping data conveyed via the mapping lookup process. LISP-SEC also enables verification of authorization on EID-Prefix claims in Map-Reply messages.
What “Proposed Standard” means
An entry-level standards-track specification: stable, peer-reviewed and a solid basis for implementation, though it may still evolve before becoming an Internet Standard.
The canonical text of RFC 9303 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in HTML,TXT,PDF,XML.
- RFC 9302 Locator/ID Separation Protocol Map-Versioning
- RFC 9304 Locator/ID Separation Protocol : Shared Extension Message and IANA Registry for Packet Type Allocations
- RFC 9301 Locator/ID Separation Protocol Control Plane
- RFC 9305 Locator/ID Separation Protocol Generic Protocol Extension
- RFC 9300 The Locator/ID Separation Protocol
- RFC 9306 Vendor-Specific LISP Canonical Address Format
- RFC 9299 An Architectural Introduction to the Locator/ID Separation Protocol
- RFC 9307 Report from the IAB Workshop on Analyzing IETF Data 2021