Cesc wrote:
Hi,
Klaus, i think that you hit the fountain of truth :)
As of now, ser-tls only provides transport layer authentication. Not
more. Who is allowed to authenticate? all those you trust, that is, all
those with the cert signed by the CAs you trust. If you picked a
ruthless CA that would give away certs to
hacking.incorporated.com
<http://hacking.incorporated.com> ... sorry :)
So, in current ser, there is no domain comparison between the requested
domain (request URI) and the domain in the certificate (for outgoing
TLS)? This should be done by TLS part automatically in t_relay()
NAPTR-->TLS
SRV
A/AAAA lookups
TLS handshake
validate signature in certifiacte
* validate domains in certifiacte with requests domain
(host domain or SIP domain?)
send request
* If I understand correctly, this part is missing in current implementation
Now, for sip message authentication and authorization
you need to lift
the authentication information from TLS up to the application (ser). It
is not difficult, it just needs a few lines of code for that (all the
certs exchanged are within reach for as long as the tls connection stays
up). Here is where the tls_tools module's functions (to be written) come
into play:
- tls_check_from/to()
- tls_check_cn_trusted()
- ...
Let's focus on this - which tls_ functions do we need? I guess these are
only required for incoming SIP/TLS requests. Outgoing should be handled
as described above.
- a function to verify if the incoming SIP request was received via a
TLS link with client certificate or not.
if (tls_client_has_certificate()) ...
Then we need some funtions to authorize the user. I'm yet not sure how
to do this best.
Version A:
1. Validate the From: domain in the SIP request against the domain
name in the certificate. This is not easy, as the hostname is typically
different then SIP domain (e.g. sip:alice@atlanta.com is hosted on
sip.atlanta.com). Also, which domain to use if there are several in the
certificate (Subject, Subject Alternative Name, ...)
2. If 1. succeded, verify that the domain in From is one of your
trusted peers.
Version B:
1. Validate the domain in the certificate against a local whitelist
of known trusted peers. E.g. I could have all the public certificates of
the trusted peers stored locally, or just having a database table with
the hostname (as in the certificate) of the trusted peers.
if (tls_is_from_trusted()) ..
Comments welcome!
regards
klaus
connection reuse?
So, let's say we want to set up a tls test network
(which we do).
We don't want to pay for the certs, so we should generate a root cert
(say, "openser.org <http://openser.org>"). It would be even better if
some nice CA whose cert is signed by a recognized root would do sign
that for us ... anyone with connections? :) This would ease transition
and compatibility issues ...
The root cert provides certs for each domain (
providerX.com,
providerY.net, ... )
Now, we all can authenticate each other.
With the tools for sip authentication and authorization, you can decide
who you allow to do what in your proxy ...
Regards,
Cesc
On 10/12/05, *Klaus Darilion* <klaus.mailinglists(a)pernau.at
<mailto:klaus.mailinglists@pernau.at>> wrote:
Nils Ohlmeier wrote:
Klaus, if you do not trust
badguy.com
<http://badguy.com>
although he has a valid singed
certificate from a CA which you trust, then you
can throw away TLS
completely.
There is a big difference between authentication and authorization.
1. I have to authenticate the peer. Using TLS and certifiactes is fine.
2. I have to authorize the peer. Some peers will be e.g. routed
different. You would this this like:
if (message is from trusted peer) {
....
So I need to check the certificate in ser.cfg somehow, or associate the
domain in the From header with the domain in the certificate.
Or do I miss the point?
regards
klaus
The hole model only works because the trust in
inherited from the
CA when you
get a singed certificate.
If you do not trust any CA, except your own, then you created
your own trust
database which is hard to maintain. No matter
what is the base of the
trustworthyness (IP; certificate signed by you; shared secret or
signed
certificate for IPSec) maintaining the trust
database (or however
you call
it) is a real pain, that is the reason why you
should trust
someone else to
do this job.