RE: Secdir last call review of draft-ietf-pce-stateful-hpce-11

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You had me at the mention of beer.

Actually, that would be a useful conversation both in a PCE context and in a wider SDN context. (Always said that the SDN architecture was missing a bit of security work).

I'd also love us to have some clarity about TCP-AO. It's like we were all told we must use TCP-AO in our protocol specifications as the silver bullet, and now the shiny outer layer has tarnished a bit. But that is worthy of a separate thread.

Best,
Adrian

-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Farrell via Datatracker <noreply@xxxxxxxx> 
Sent: 27 August 2019 23:32
To: secdir@xxxxxxxx
Cc: pce@xxxxxxxx; ietf@xxxxxxxx; draft-ietf-pce-stateful-hpce.all@xxxxxxxx
Subject: Secdir last call review of draft-ietf-pce-stateful-hpce-11

Reviewer: Stephen Farrell
Review result: Has Nits


Hiya,

This draft doesn't define new protocol but rather describes a way to use existing 
PCE stuff in what I guess is a new way. 

The nit I see is the usual, presumably fictional, reference to TCP-AO.  I mean, if
nobody actually does that, why bother? Esp. if you have a TLS option that's (I
hope) less fictional. (Is TLS less fictional for PCEP btw?) OTOH, I guess that
nearly everyone now knows that referring to TCP-AO is just a figleaf to try keep
security nerds happy, so maybe it's ok that we all suspend disbelief;-( 

Other than that, I did have two questions that occurred to me, but that are by 
no means a reason to hold up this draft - if answers required some action, it'd
almost certainly not be something that'd be fixed here. But I'm still curious:-)

1. Has anyone spent any significant amount of time/effort attempting to 
attack an H-PCE network  as a PCEP speaker? (And written that up:-) It 
looks to me like there're enough moving parts here that any real stateful 
hierarchical PCE  network could be fairly likely to have interestingly
exploitable problems in the face of such an attacker.

2. I see a reference to SPEAKER-IDENTITY-TLV. I wondered if the 
ability to e.g. use different SubjectAltNames in x.509 certificates
might create the potential for some kind of deliberate or accidental
loops to be created somewhere. 

Again, there's no reason to hold this up to try answer (or even to
understand) those questions. I'd be happy to chat over a beer with 
someone  at IETF106 about 'em as that might be easier than a bunch 
of mail. 

Cheers,
S.






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