I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. For background on
Gen-ART, please see the FAQ at
<http://wiki.tools.ietf.org/area/gen/trac/wiki/GenArtfaq>.
Please resolve these comments along with any other Last Call comments
you may receive.
Document: draft-ietf-pcp-anycast-06
Reviewer: Robert Sparks
Review Date: 04Jun15
IETF LC End Date: 11Jun15
IESG Telechat date: Not yet scheduled
Summary: On the right track, but has issues that should be discussed
This draft reads easily, but there are a few things that might need more
attention.
It could be that these have been beaten to death already, but if so, it
would be better if the document gave pointers to places where others
with the questions wouldn't be left wondering.
Issues:
1) The document recommends hard-coding these addresses into
applications. In the spirit (at least) of BCP 105 (RFC4085), shouldn't
the recommendation be more "have their configuration set by default to
this well known value"?
2) Section 3 punts on some really hard things that deserve more
discussion in this document, or this document should point to a good
discussion elsewhere. It's fine that the document doesn't solve the
synchronization or coordination problems it hints at, but it should make
it more clear that these problems will exist, and are important to
consider when deploying a new node that joins this anycast address. In
particular, without careful synchronization and coordination,
applications like VoIP using PCP controlled resources will be disrupted.
The current text really does not convey that message.
3) Aren't there some new security issues with just having the well-known
address? At a minimum, it's an attractive target, and the guidance in
18.3.1 of RFC6887 may be particularly relevant. More subtly, would it
make it easier to construct packets that look enough like PCP to be
disruptive to send from compromised nodes participating in a DDos Attack
from inside an administrative domain? Would it make it easier for an
attacker that has partially compromised a host influence the firewall
between him and that host, making finishing the compromise even easier?
(Especially compared to a PCP server that was configured at the client
that wasn't just the default router).
4) It would help to expand on the 3rd paragraph of section 5.2. In very
simple scenarios (like having a home router start responding to this
address), it's easy to see the tradeoffs between automatic configuration
and securing the pcp commands. But it would help if the document talked
through the consequences of not using pcp-authentication in more complex
environments (using something like a departmentalized university, or
several distinct administrative domains behind a common CGN as an
example perhaps?)