Barry Shein wrote:
And it was observed that routing around damage could at least in theory have utility in a situation where circuit facilities were being damaged in warfare so long as some route between two points remained.
So these two goals are not mutually exclusive by any means.
The point of the text was to point out that "operating in warfare environments" was not the top level goal. The recent John Day¿s "Patterns in Network Architecture" provides more insights in this aspec.
As a result, many protocol specifications focus only on the operational aspects of the protocols they specify, and overlook their security implications.
This is a non-sequitar and not a result at all. Neither goal implied security, only integrity.
This was not an oversight, security was, and to a great extent still is, thought to be a higher-level function than packetizing and packet routing, with a few exceptions where a potential security flaw truly lies in the protocol (e.g., poor choice of packet sequence numbers.)
I don't really understand what you mean. Attacks such as syn-floods and others are clearly issues that lie in the protocol design. And while it is understood that security was not a goal two or three decades ago, one would expect that it should be a goal nowadays, and that the specs should have been updated accordingly.
For some reason, much of the effort of the security community on the Internet protocols did not result in official documents (RFCs) being issued by the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force).
(for some reason?)
To the best of my knowledge the reason is quite simple: That is not what RFCs are used for tho occasionally some summary of the state of the art appears in an RFC.
Not sure what you mean. Only *few* years ago there was some work published within the IETF about well-known issues such as, e.g., syn-floods. Think about any TCP/IP-based security issue, and most likely you will not be able to find any information about it within the RFC series. Talk with anybody that works day-to-day implementing the TCP/IP protocols, and most likely the comment you'll get about the current situation is a PITA. A few years ago I published an I-D on ICMP attacks against TCP (draft-ietf-tcpm-icmp-attacks, which is close to be published as an RFC, I believe). Known issues... but the counter-measures were not clear. The reult? Vulnerability advisories from many vendors, including Cisco, Microsoft, and the security-concious OpenBSD. I don't think it should be that hard to implement the protocols in a security-conscious way from the IETF specs. And that is the area in which this CPNI document (and the preivous "Security Assessment of the Internet Protocol") tries to help. Kind regards, -- Fernando Gont e-mail: fernando@gont.com.ar || fgont@acm.org PGP Fingerprint: 7809 84F5 322E 45C7 F1C9 3945 96EE A9EF D076 FFF1