network mobility

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Network Mobility Yanos Saravanos Avanthi Koneru

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Network Mobility. Yanos Saravanos Avanthi Koneru. Agenda. Introduction Problem Definition Benchmarks and Metrics Components of a mobile architecture Summary of MOBIKE and PANA Conclusion References. Yanos. Avanthi. Why Mobility Matters. Cell phones / PDAs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Network Mobility

Network Mobility

Yanos Saravanos

Avanthi Koneru

Page 2: Network Mobility

Agenda

Introduction Problem Definition Benchmarks and Metrics Components of a mobile architecture Summary of MOBIKE and PANA Conclusion References

Avanthi

Yanos

Page 3: Network Mobility

Why Mobility Matters

Cell phones / PDAs 692 million cell phones shipped in 2004 1.7 billion subscribers by end of 2005 Streaming multimedia Live TV

Page 4: Network Mobility

Real Mobility – Cellular Handoff

Hard handoff Connected to 1 base

station at all times Soft handoff

Connected to 2 base stations temporarily

http://www.iec.org/online/tutorials/cell_comm/topic03.html

Page 5: Network Mobility

Handoff Hysteresis

Only handoff when signal drops below a given threshold Signal could be lower than optimal Fewer handoffs

http://people.deas.harvard.edu/~jones/cscie129/nu_lectures/lecture7/cellular/handoff/handoff.html

Page 6: Network Mobility

Upcoming Cellular Networks

4G cellular networks being developed Uses ALL-IP network architecture Ability to use 802.11 base stations Highly scalable

Critical in emergency conditions

Page 7: Network Mobility

4G Network

http://www.eeng.dcu.ie/~arul/4G.html

Page 8: Network Mobility

Current Security Techniques

HTTP-based schemes Mobilestar

Point-Point Protocol (PPP) using EAP 802.1X

Page 9: Network Mobility

Issues with Current Authentication HTTP-based schemes

Requires user intervention PPP

Requires point-to-point link EAP requires extra encapsulation

802.1X Only works for 802 protocols Not widely deployment yet

Page 10: Network Mobility

Problem Definition

All current security protocols do not allow end user to move

New protocols must: Keep session during handoffs Allow integration between mobile networks

(802.11, cellular, etc) Not dramatically increase packet size

Page 11: Network Mobility

Benchmarks

Computational intensity Effect on throughput

Amount of overhead added to the packets QoS

Packet Loss, Delay Jitter

Page 12: Network Mobility

Goals for Mobility Support in IPv4 and IPv6.

Construction of fully fledged mobility protocol, which allows nodes to remain reachable while moving around in the Internet.

Enhancements that allow transparent routing of IP datagrams to mobile nodes in the Internet.

Page 13: Network Mobility

Elements of a mobile network architecture

“Computer Networking: A top-down approach featuring the Internet”, Kurose and Ross, 3rd edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.

Page 14: Network Mobility

Elements of a mobile network architecture

home network home agent foreign agent foreign address care-of address foreign (or visited) network correspondent permanent address

Page 15: Network Mobility

Indirect forwarding to a mobile node

“Computer Networking: A top-down approach featuring the Internet”, Kurose and Ross, 3rd edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.

Page 16: Network Mobility

Encapsulation and Decapsulation

“Computer Networking: A top-down approach featuring the Internet”, Kurose and Ross, 3rd edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.

Page 17: Network Mobility

Direct routing to a mobile user

“Computer Networking: A top-down approach featuring the Internet”, Kurose and Ross, 3rd edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.

Page 18: Network Mobility

Security for Mobility on IP

IP mobility introduces the need for extra security because the point of attachment is not fixed, so the link between the mobile node and its home network should be considered insecure.

In all potential mobile-IP scenarios, security will be a critical service enabler, ensuring that the mobile operator can communicate over IP without putting at risk the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of the home network and the information it contains.

Page 19: Network Mobility

Mechanisms to be reviewed

Mobility and Multihoming extension for IKEv2 (MOBIKE)

Protocol for carrying Authentication for Network Access (PANA)

Page 20: Network Mobility

MOBIKE - Background

IPSec SA IKEv2 Mobike

• The main scenario is making it possible for a VPN user to move from one address to another without re-establishing all security associations, or to use multiple interfaces simultaneously, such as where WLAN and GPRS are used simultaneously.

Page 21: Network Mobility

Establishing a Secure Negotiation Channel using IKEv2

Figure from Dr. Andreas Steffen, Secure Network Communication, Part IV, IP Security (IPsec).

Page 22: Network Mobility

Goals of the MOBIKE working group IKEv2 mobile IP support for IKE SAs. Support for changing and

authenticating the IKE SA endpoints IP addresses as requested by the host.

Updating IPsec SA gateway addresses. Support for changing the IP address associated to the tunnel mode IPsec SAs already in place, so that further traffic is sent to the new gateway address.

Multihoming support for IKEv2. Support for multiple IP addresses for IKEv2 SAs, and IPsec SAs created by the IKEv2. This should also include support for the multiple IP address for SCTP transport. This should also work together with the first two items, i.e those addresses should be able to be updated too.

Page 23: Network Mobility

Goals of the MOBIKE working group (..cntd)

Verification of changed or added IP addresses. Provide way to verify IP address either using static information, information from certificates, or through the use of a return routability mechanism.

Reduction of header overhead involved with mobility-related tunnels. This is a performance requirement in wireless environments.

Specification of PFKEY extensions to support the IPsec SA movements and tunnel overhead reduction.

Page 24: Network Mobility

PANA - Protocol for carrying Authentication for Network Access

a layer two agnostic network layer messaging protocol for authenticating IP hosts for network access

a transport protocol for authentication payload (e.g., EAP) between a client (IP based) and a server (agent) in the access network.

Client-server protocol

Page 25: Network Mobility

Why PANA? A scenario:

An IP-based device is required to authenticateitself to the network prior to being authorized to use it. This authentication usually requires a protocol that can support various authentication methods, dynamic service provider selection, and roaming clients. In the absence of such an authentication protocol on most of the link-layers, architectures have resorted to filling the gap by using a number of inadequate methods. Ex: PPPoE

PANA – a cleaner solution to the authentication problem.

Page 26: Network Mobility

Goals of PANA

To define a protocol that allows clients toauthenticate themselves to the access network using IP protocols.

To provide support for various authentication methods, dynamic service provider selection,and roaming clients.

Page 27: Network Mobility

Terminology

PANA Client (PaC) PANA Client Identifier (PaCI) Device Identifier (DI) PANA Authentication Agent (PAA) Enforcement Point (EP)

Page 28: Network Mobility

Protocol Overview

Discovery and handshake phase Authentication and authorization phase Access phase Re-authentication phase Termination phase

Page 29: Network Mobility

Conclusion

Utilizing the benefits of the opportunities provided by default in IPv6 for the design of Mobile IP support in IPv6.

Besides, these two protocols there are a lot of other security issues.

Focus on mechanisms which will be adopted in the design of IPv6.

Page 30: Network Mobility

References

“Security requirements for the introduction of mobility to IP”, Security for mobility in IP, EURESCOM, October 1999.

URL: http://www.eurescom.de/~pub-deliverables/P900-series/P912/D1/p912d1.pdf

“Security guidelines for the introduction of mobility to IP”, Security for mobility in IP, EURESCOM, March 2000. URL: http://www.eurescom.de/~pub-deliverables/P900-series/P912/D2/p912d2.pdf

Olivier Charles, “Security for Mobility on IP”, MTM 2000, Dublin, February 2000. URL: http://www.eurescom.de/~public-seminars/2000/MTM/12Charles/12aCharles/12Charles.pdf

SEQUI VPN Glossary, URL: http://www.sequi.com/SEQUI_VPN_Glossary.htm#IKE

“Computer Networking: A top-down approach featuring the Internet”, Kurose and Ross, 3rd edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.

Page 31: Network Mobility

References

Mobility for IPv4 (mip4), IETF Working Groups. URL:http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/mip4-charter.html

Mobility for IPv6 (mip6), IETF Working Groups. URL:http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/mip6-charter.html

D.Johnson, C. Perkins and J.Arkko, “Mobility Support in IPv6”, RFC 3775. URL:http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3775.txt

Arkko et al, “Using IPsec to Protect Mobile IPv6 Signaling Between Mobile Nodes and Home Agents”, RFC 3776. URL: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3776.txt

IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming (mobike), IETF Working Groups. URL:http://www1.ietf.org/proceedings_new/04nov/mobike.html

Page 32: Network Mobility

References

Jari Arkko, “Introduction to multihoming, address selection, failure detection, and recovery”, IETF Proceedings. URL:http://www1.ietf.org/proceedings_new/04nov/slides/mobike-1/sld1.htm

“Design of the MOBIKE protocol”, Internet Draft, draft-ietf-mobike-design-00.txt , June 2004. URL:http://www1.ietf.org/proceedings_new/04nov/IDs/draft-ietf-mobike-design-00.txt

Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol, Internet Draft, draft-ietf-ipsec-ikev2-17.txt, September 2004. URL:http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-ipsec-ikev2-17.txt

IKEv2 Mobility and Multihoming Protocol (MOBIKE), Internet Draft, draft-ietf-mobike-protocol-02.txt, September 2005. URL:http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-mobike-protocol-02.txt