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I had a bit of a weird problem last night -- when trying to remove BGP from a VRF on a 7600 running 12.2(33)SRC2, I tried:
ar01.tn5(config)#router bgp 65302
ar01.tn5(config-router)#no address-family ipv4 vrf SRC2-TEST
ar01.tn5(config-router)#exit
ar01.tn5(config)#exit
One would expect that this would stop BGP redistributing the VRF routes for the VRF SRC2-TEST. In fact, what happens is that the VRF starts reporting 'debugging-style' messages:
ar01.tn5#sh run vrf SRC2-TEST
Building configuration...
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
% BGP context has not been initialized properly.
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
% BGP context not been initialized properly.
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
% Topology SRC2-TEST::VPNv4 Unicast::base is currently being deconfigured.
Current configuration : 340 bytes
ip vrf SRC2-TEST
description :c=CORE:x=rjs test for ar01.tn5 issues:
rd 5413:1020
export map EXPORT-MAP-SRC2-TEST
route-target export 5413:1020
route-target import 5413:1022
!
!
ip route vrf SRC2-TEST 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
!
router bgp 65302
!
address-family ipv4 vrf SRC2-TEST
redistribute static
exit-address-family
end
And you then can't get rid of the BGP from the VRF. It turns out the fix for this is to remove the VRF itself -- or, rather than removing the address-family itself, remove the contents of the address family. I'm not entirely sure that this is designed behaviour -- and I couldn't seem to find any further results for it. I guess it needs to be put into TAC as another Cisco weird.
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Last Friday, Andy Davidson, Jonathan Oddy, and I pushed out some research that has some quite worrying repercussions. Whilst I've heard from a lot of people privately about this matter, there's a big flaw here, and as Andy posted on his blog (which is much more informative than mine, I think!), this is a big problem.
The reason, I think, that we're getting limited public discussion of this exploit (I hesitate to call it an exploit, it's a flaw really, because it's actually a result of the RFC that the problem exists), is because the implementations of 4-byte AS support that are out there already are generally not standards compliant. Let's run down the list:
Maybe there are a couple of interesting points here, why are most vendors not actually complying with this RFC, does this mean that they've spotted what Andy, Jonathan and I have reported on, and dropped this requirement? If this is the case, then I wonder, when IETF IDR is so full of people with @juniper.net, and @cisco.com addresses - why did this ever appear in the first place?
This is a serious flaw in the standards, and despite the fact that today, we reported on how the issue has actually come to pass, this is going to remain open, unless we fix the RFC.
The issue here is, with most (if not all) BGP attributes, there's almost an expectation that the immediate neighbour will sanity-check what their peer has sent - if it's one hop away, you can generally interact directly with that neighbour, and work out what the problem is, there's no-one harmed, as just one session is dropped, by two networks sharing some adjacency. A case in point of this, is the problem that we saw with Cisco not obeying the RFC relating to sending UPDATES before KeepAlives in BGP conversations ( CSCsu84268). As far as I saw, this bug only affected directly connected neighbours, and hence there was no major impact. Now, let's consider what happens the case of the AS4_PATH problem we reported. AS4_PATH is optional transitive in BGP, hence, if you hand it to a non-AS4 speaker, the router will just transmit it along to the peers it advertises the route to. This is a reasonably neat solution, one would think, as AS4 information is transmitted, but it doesn't require every router in the path between two AS4 speakers to understand it, yet they can still get the same information as they could if the path was completely made up of AS4 speakers. Furthermore, by appending 23456 to AS_PATH, then even the non-AS4 speakers understand that there was some AS in this path. However, this also means that if I announce, to a non-AS4 speaker, a completely invalid AS4_PATH, they don't know anything about it, or the contents, and hence can't sanity check it. This results in me being able to tunnel my AS4_PATH across the internet.
Great, so now I've described, in some more chatty language, what we wrote on NANOG, and C-NSP. What does this mean to any operator? Well, if I take a prefix, originate it, and then announce it to the internet, then I can get the first AS4 speaker I find to tear down whatever session they learned my prefix on. If I combine this with injecting some ASNs into the path, so that some networks don't accept it (due to loop prevention), then I can probably work out a way to get _my_ copy of the update across to you. In IOS's logs, you can't even tell who originated that prefix, and it doesn't seem to show the whole AS_PATH/AS4_PATH either. Say I send two prefixes that you learn one via one transit provider, and the other via another, I'll disconnect your full table connectivity.
This isn't even a bug, this is a flaw in the standard. I'd really like to get this fixed, and the way to do that is to get a bunch of operator experience/views, and take it to the IETF. So, if this concerns you (or you're going to need to deploy a new point release -- like 12.0(32)S12 is, or maybe need hardware support with 12.2SRE...), please put some pressure on your vendor, or drop me a note at rjs@eng.gxn.net.
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Further to my previous post - I presented this issue at LINX65 - video and slides can be found below.
Video
Fixed Slides - LINX's PowerPoint install seems to have corrupted my slides on the day.
Comments and feedback are most welcome.
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I've had a couple of mails relating to this PSN, which again references the research that Andy Davidson, Jonathan Oddy and I did last year. It seems that some of the sources of the initial mailing list posts we made are gone (particularly the merit.edu one that is referenced from both Juniper's site and most other places). For that reason, I've included both the mails that we sent to NANOG/C-NSP/J-NSP last year here.
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 12:57:19 +0000
From: Rob Shakir
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net, nanog@nanog.org
Subject: BGP Session Teardown due to AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE in AS4_PATH
Message-ID: <20090116125718.GB26415@bronze.eng.gxn.net>
Strict RFC 4893 (4-byte ASN support) BGP4 implementations are vulnerable to a
session reset by distant (not directly connected) ASes. This vulnerability is a
feature of the standard, and unless immediate action is taken an increasingly
significant number of networks will be open to attack. Accidental triggering of
this vulnerability has already been seen in the wild, although the limited
number of RFC 4893 deployments has limited its effect.
Summary:
It is possible to cause BGP sessions to remotely reset by injecting invalid data
into the AS4_PATH attribute provided to store 4-byte ASN paths. Since AS4_PATH
is an optional transitive attribute, the invalid data will be transited through
many intermediate ASes which will not examine the content. To be vulnerable, an
operator does not have to be actively using 4-byte AS support. This problem was
first reported by Andy Davidson on NANOG in December 2008 [0], furthermore we
have been able to demonstrate that a device running Cisco IOS release
12.0(32)S12 behaves as per this description.
Details:
When a prefix is learnt from a BGP neighbour that does not support 4-byte ASNs,
the AS4_PATH attribute is retained, and appended to UPDATE messages sent to
other neighbours [1, 3]. RFC4893 specifies that AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE and
AS_CONFED_SET are invalid in an AS4_PATH, the intention of which is to ensure
that an AS with a mix of AS4-aware BGP speakers, and AS4-unaware BGP speakers
does not propagate confederation AS paths outside of the confederation [1, 3].
Upon receiving an invalid BGP UPDATE message, a BGP speaker must send a
NOTIFICATION message [2, 6.3], after a NOTIFICATION message, the BGP connection
is closed [2, 4.5].
Analysis of the Reported Path:
On 10th December 2008, a BGP update was propagated with illegal/invalid
confederation attributes in the AS4_PATH. When this update was received by AS4
aware BGP speakers, the RFCs described above were interpreted literally and the
session was torn down. Because the illegal attributes were learned on a transit
session, an affected network can have global reachability impaired.
Please note that the analysis of this path describes what we expect to have
happened in this case, it has not been confirmed by any of the ASNs involved.
91.207.218.0/23
Path Attributes - Origin: Incomplete
Flags: 0x40 (Well-known, Transitive, Complete)
Origin: Incomplete (2)
AS_PATH: xx xx 35320 23456 (13 bytes)
AS4_PATH: (65044 65057) 196629 (7 bytes)
In this data, the AS_PATH indicates that a prefix is announced by an AS4 speaker
(as indicated by AS23456) and propagated through by AS35320. The AS4_PATH data
shows that the AS4 originator is AS196629, the rest of this path is an
AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE [3, 5]. It would appear that in this case, AS196629 peers
with AS35320, which is AS4-aware on this border. The prefix is then propagated
through AS35320, with the AS4 aware routers appending their ASN to the
AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE. This is in contravention of RFC 4893 [1, 3]. The border
which announces this route to AS35320's upstream does not appear to be
AS4-aware. During normal announcements, the BGP speaker on a border with an
upstream ASN that is not part of the confederation will remove the left-most
AS_CONFED_SETs or AS_CONFED_SEQUENCEs that exist in the AS_PATH [3, 6.1] and
replace them with the confederation identifier. However, due to the fact that
both AS_CONFED_SET and AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE are invalid in an AS4_PATH, then no
such action is taken on the border between an AS4 aware AS, and a non-AS4 aware
AS. In addition, since the AS35320 border is not AS4 aware, then it does not
update the AS4_PATH.
This malformed UPDATE is then sent to AS35320's upstream, if there are no
AS4-aware routers in the path between the AS35320 border, and an AS receiving
this update, the AS4_PATH will not have been analysed. The first AS4-aware
router to receive this update will reset the session towards the neighbour from
whom it receives the update.
The border which announces this route to AS35320's upstream does not appear to
be AS4-aware; If it were a strict AS4 implementation it would reset the BGP
session due to the malformed AS4_PATH, and a broken implementation that treats
AS4_PATH as an equivalent of the AS_PATH would sanitise the AS4_PATH. This
allows the AS4_PATH containing an AS_CONFED_SET to be passed to neighbouring
networks.
This escape of an AS_CONFED_SET from a network with only partial AS4 support is
exactly the situation that RFC 4893 attempts to avoid by forbidding the presence
of an AS_CONFED_SET in the AS4_PATH. In the ideal world the neighbouring network
receiving an UPDATE containing this obviously malformed AS4_PATH would reset the
session, preventing further propagation and isolating the broken network.
Unfortunately the vast majority of networks do not support AS4 so pass on this
malformed AS4_PATH to their neighbours. The first AS4-aware router to receive
this update will reset the session towards the neighbour from whom it received
the update.
Cisco IOS Behaviour:
In a lab environment, a Cisco 7200 running IOS 12.0(32)S12, which is able to
support 4-byte ASNs, was peered with a Cisco 2811 running 12.4(19). When the BGP
session to the upstream 2811 is established by the 7200, the following log
messages are observed:
*Jan 16 11:29:58.531: %BGP-5-ADJCHANGE: neighbor 193.239.32.2 Up
*Jan 16 11:30:02.595: %BGP-6-ASPATH: Invalid AS path (65044 65048 65062) 3.21 23456 received from 193.239.32.2: Confederation found in AS4_PATH
*Jan 16 11:30:02.595: %BGP-5-ADJCHANGE: neighbor 193.239.32.2 Down BGP Notification sent
*Jan 16 11:30:02.595: %BGP-3-NOTIFICATION: sent to neighbor 193.239.32.2 3/1 (update malformed) 27
bytes E0111803 030000FE 140000FE 180000FE 26 FFFF FFFF FFFF FFFF FFFF FFFF FFFF FFFF 0050 0200 0000
3540 0101 0240 020C 0205 3D25 2114 89F8 5BA0 5BA0 4003 04C1 EF20 02E0 1118 0303 0000 FE14 0000
FE18 0000 FE26 0202 0003 0015 0000 5BA0 175B CFDA
The configuration on the 7200 is as follows:
router bgp 65123
no synchronization
bgp log-neighbor-changes
neighbor 193.239.32.2 remote-as 15653
no auto-summary
The BGP session will continue to be reset each time the invalid AS4_PATH is
received.
Possible Impact:
During a BGP conversation, it is expected that a neighbour's UPDATE messages are
sanitised by the immediate neighbour, during a 'normal' BGP conversation, if a
BGP speaker receives an invalid UPDATE, it will teardown the session, and this
invalid UPDATE will not propagate any further. In the case of optional
transitive attributes such as AS4_PATH, this invalid update can be transited
through many ASes, as the content of the invalid attribute in the UPDATE message
is not examined.
In a hypothetical scenario, an AS4 aware service provider (A) has a transit
provider (T) that is not AS4 aware. BGP speaker B, a large distance from A has a
bug affecting their equipment that introduces an AS_CONFED_SET in the AS4_PATH.
Since B's updates are propagated through to A via T, A will tear down the
session to T due to the malformed attribute. This is an out of proportion
reaction as the update may affect only one prefix in a full BGP table. If this
update is also propagated through A's other transit providers A may lose
full-table visibility until one of their transit providers filters the route.
Examining the UPDATE message to establish which route caused session teardown
may be a non-trivial activity.
Conclusion:
Whilst this description may be applied to invalid data in any optional
transitive element, it has a greater impact with AS4_PATH due to the large
number of BGP speakers that currently do not examine any 4-byte ASN data in an
UPDATE. There has been a discussion of this matter on the IETF IDR mailing list
[4], however, due to availability of Cisco IOS containing AS4 support
(12.0(32)S12), and an observation of this problem 'in the wild', we believe that
it is of operational concern to those that are planning on deployment of
AS4-aware platforms [5].
Any input from the operational community relating to this problem is much
appreciated, either publicly, or privately.
Regards,
Andy Davidson, NetSumo (andy.davidson@netsumo.com),
Jonathan Oddy, Hostway UK (jonathan.oddy@hostway.co.uk),
Rob Shakir, GX Networks (rjs@eng.gxn.net)
References:
[0]: Andy Davidson - 91.207.218.0/23 prefix in DFZ - AS3.21 / AS196629 -
announced with AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE in AS4_PATH - propagated by 35320,
http://markmail.org/message/3ofvjyggayfxezna
[1]: rfc4893: BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space
[2]: rfc4271: A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)
[3]: rfc3054: Autonomous System Confederations for BGP
[4]: Kaliraj Vairavakkalai, Juniper Networks, [Idr] RFC-4893 handling malformed
AS4_PATH attributes,
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/idr/current/msg03368.html
[5]: http://as4.cluepon.net/index.php/Software_Support
Thanks to Will Hargrave (LONAP) for assistance with this document.
Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2009 10:14:24 +0000
From: Rob Shakir
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: BGP Session Teardown due to AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE in AS4_PATH
Message-ID: <20090121101424.GB5577@bronze.eng.gxn.net>
References: <20090116125718.GB26415@bronze.eng.gxn.net>
Hi,
Further to the initial research sent to NANOG, after discussions with a number
of operators, we have compiled some recommendations on the handling of invalid
AS4_PATH attributes.
Any feedback on these recommendations is appreciated:
As discussed on the IETF IDR list last month, there are concerns relating to the
treatment of AS_CONFED_SET/SEQUENCE in AS4_PATH as described in RFC4893 [0].
Since the last post to that thread the situation has been made more urgent with
the release of Cisco IOS 12.0(32)S12, which responds to malformed AS4_PATH
attributes by sending a NOTIFICATION to the neighbour, and tearing down the BGP
adjacency. This behaviour seems to be required by RFC4721 section 6.3, as there
is no alternative error handling defined in RFC4893. As posted last Friday [1],
and discussed on the IDR list, this strict implementation introduces a new
attack vector by which a BGP session can be torn down due to a an attribute
populated by a distant BGP neighbour. These malformed attributes have already
been seen in the wild as a result of a error in Juniper's implementation of
RFC4893.
Following discussions with a number of operators, we have attempted to generate
some recommendations relating to the behaviour that would be operationally most
useful when treating the invalid data in the AS4_PATH optional transitive
attribute.
There are two cases to consider when an invalid AS4_PATH is received:
(1) A path to the prefix is not already known from that neighbour.
(2) A path to the prefix has already been learnt from that neighbour;
In case (1) we recommend that the BGP speaker should discard the UPDATE and log
the fact. The log entry should include the received AS_PATH and
AS4_PATH to aid in debugging.
In case (2) we recommend that the BGP speaker should treat the UPDATE as a
withdrawal of existing path to the prefix. As per case (1) a log entry should be
raised to indicate that this has occurred.
It is quite possible that in both cases this behaviour may result in the BGP
speaker no longer having a valid path to the destination. We foresee that this
lack of a prefix in a BGP speaker's routing table may cause some operational
load initially, however, we feel that this is acceptable, considering the
alternate behaviours.
Should a prefix be injected into the global table with an invalid AS4_PATH, and
should the newly advertised (invalid) path be selected by all upstreams
available to a given ASN then this ASN will lose reachability to the prefix.
Whilst this can be abused we do not see this as more serious than the existing
possibility of malicious injection and blackholing of a prefix by a 3rd party.
As long as the rejection of paths due to invalid AS4_PATHs is clearly reported
to the administrator the source of the problem can be clearly identified.
We consider that attempting to extract a valid AS4 or AS_PATH from the invalid
UPDATE is a mistake since this allows the propagation of invalid BGP data. In
addition, incorrect implementation of this comparatively complex mechanism by a
vendor may result in loops. By explicitly not installing prefixes with invalid
AS_PATH or AS4_PATH into the routing table, the possibility of loops caused by
these invalid paths is avoided.
The defined behaviour in RFC4893 and RFC4271 has significantly harmful effects
and it seems only by virtue of the fact that the implementations of many vendors
do not strictly comply with the RFCs that this problem has not had the same
impact for every vendor. At the current time, however, one cannot deploy a
4-byte capable Cisco IOS device, or an OpenBGP (current stable release) router
into the global table, without risking teardown of a every session via which a
global table is learnt.
Further discussion of this issue would be much appreciated, as a common and
consistent approach to rectifying the problem will benefit network operators far
more than individual vendor implementing their own solution. Should a consensus
be reached an update to the RFC is required in order to ensure that future
implementations do not exhibit this harmful behaviour.
Kind regards,
Andy Davidson (NetSumo), andy.davidson@netsumo.com
Jonathan Oddy (HostWay), jonathan.oddy@hostway.co.uk
Rob Shakir (GX Networks), rjs@eng.gxn.net
[0]: http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/idr/current/msg03368.html
[1]: http://www.merit.edu/mail.archives/nanog/msg14345.html
Many thanks to David Freedman (Claranet) for assistance in developing the
recommendations in this document.
In addition to this - it looks like there's some fairly interesting coverage of another Juniper PSN at this blog.
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