Network Working Group T. Herbert Internet-Draft SiPanda Intended status: Best Current Practice 26 September 2023 Expires: 29 March 2024 Limits on Sending and Processing IPv6 Extension Headers draft-ietf-6man-eh-limits-06 Abstract This specification defines various limits that may be applied to receiving, sending, and otherwise processing packets that contain IPv6 extension headers. The need for such limits is pragmatic to facilitate interoperability amongst hosts and routers in the presence of extension headers and thereby increasing the feasibility of deployment of extension headers. The limits described herein establish the minimum baseline of support for use of extension headers in the Internet. If it is known that all communicating parties for a particular communication, including destination hosts and any routers in the path, are capable of supporting more than the baseline then these default limits may be freely exceeded. Status of This Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on 29 March 2024. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2023 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/ license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 1] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1.1. Related work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1.2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2. Overview and motivation of extension header limits . . . . . 5 2.1. Types of nodes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.2. Types of limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.2.1. Limits on extension header length . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2.2. Limits on option length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2.3. Limits on number of extension headers . . . . . . . . 6 2.2.4. Limits on number of options . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2.5. Limits on padding options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 2.2.6. Limit on IPv6 header chain length . . . . . . . . . . 8 2.3. Actions when limits are exceeded . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 2.4. Design Philosophy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 3. Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 3.1. List of limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 3.2. Host requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 3.2.1. Source host requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 3.2.2. Receiving extension headers by destination hosts . . 15 3.3. Router requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.4. Intermediate destination requirements . . . . . . . . . . 19 4. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 5. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 1. Introduction Extension headers are a core component of the IPv6 protocol as specified in [RFC8200]. IPv6 extension headers were originally defined with few restrictions. For instance, there is no specified limit on the number of extension headers a packet may have, nor is there a limit on the length in bytes of extension headers in a packet (other than being limited by the MTU). Similarly, variable length extension headers typically do not have prescribed limits such as limits on the number of Hop-by-Hop or Destination options in a packet. The lack of limits essentially requires implementations to handle every conceivable usage of the protocol, including a myriad of Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 2] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 use cases those are obviously outside the realm of ever being realistic or useful in real world deployment. The lack of limits and the requirements for supporting a virtually open-ended protocol have led to a significant lack of support and deployment of extension headers [RFC7872]. Instead of attempting to satisfy the protocol requirements concerning extension headers, some router and middlebox vendors have opted to either invent and apply their own ad hoc limits, relegate packets with extension headers to slow path processing, or have gone so far as to summarily discard all packets with extension headers [RFC9098]. The net effect of this situation is that deployment and use of extension headers is underwhelming to the extent that they are sometimes considered unusable on the Internet, and hence IPv6 extension headers have not lived up to their potential as the extensibility mechanism of IPv6. As an example, consider that there is no limit on how many Hop-by-Hop or Destination options may be in an extension header in a packet, nor any limits as to how many options a receiver must process. A single 1500 byte MTU sized packet could legally contain a Hop-by-Hop Options header with over seven hundred two byte options. Currently, there is no use case for this other than a Denial of Service attack where an attacker simply creates packets with hundreds of small unknown Hop- by-Hop options with the two high order bits in the option type set to 00 meaning to skip the unknown option. Any node in the path that attempts to dutifully process all these options per the requirements of [RFC2460] could be easily overwhelmed by the processing needed to parse these options (this is true for both hardware or software implementations). This specification describes various limits that hosts and routers may apply to the processing of extension headers. The goal of establishing limits is to narrow the requirements to better match reasonable use cases thereby facilitating practical implementation. Subsequently, this increases the viability of extension headers as the extensibility mechanism of IPv6. 1.1. Related work Some of the problems of unlimited extension headers have been addressed in certain aspects. [RFC8200] relaxed the requirement that all nodes in the path must process all Hop-by-Hop options in a packet to be: NOTE: While [RFC2460] required that all nodes must examine and Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 3] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 process the Hop-by-Hop Options header, it is now expected that nodes along a packet's delivery path only examine and process the Hop-by-Hop Options header if explicitly configured to do so. Section 5.3 of [RFC8504] defines a number of limits that hosts may apply to processing extension headers. For instance: A host MAY set a limit on the maximum number of non-padding options allowed in a Destination Options header or Hop-by-Hop Options header. If this feature is supported, the maximum number SHOULD be configurable, and the default value SHOULD be set to 8. [RFC8883] defines a set of ICMP errors that may be sent if a limit concerning extension headers is exceeded and a node discards a packet as a result. [RFC8883] allows both hosts and routers to send such messages (effectively acknowledging that some routers discard packets with extension headers even though such behavior is non-conformant with [RFC8200]). [RFC7872] presents real-world data regarding the extent to which packets with IPv6 Extension Headers (EHs) are discarded in the Internet. [RFC9098] summarizes the operational implications of IPv6 extension headers, and attempts to analyze reasons why packets with IPv6 extension headers are often discarded in the public Internet. This specification sets the minimal upper bounds on the number of Hop-by-Hop options that a node is expected to process. The lower bound is discussed in [I-D.ietf-6man-hbh-processing]. 1.2. Terminology This section provides definitions for some terms used in this specification. Node: A device that implements IPv6 Router: A node that forwards IPv6 packets Router processing routing headers: A router that processes a routing header and is addressed by the Destination Address of a packet with a Routing header where the Destination Address is not the address of the last segment in the Routing header Router not processing routing headers: A router that forwards Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 4] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 packets without processing a routing header. This type of node is not explicitly addressed by the Destination Address in a packet except in the case that router is performing Network Address Translation (NAT) and the Destination Address is translated prior to forwarding packets Host: any node that is not a router Source host: A host that orginates and sends an IPv6 packet. Only a source host can create the extension headers in a packet. In, the abscence of NAT, a source host can be indentfied by the Source Address of a packet Destination host: A host that is the final destination of a forwarded IP packet. In the absence of NAT, a destination host can be identified by the Destination Address when there is no Routing header present; or the by address of the last segment in when a Routing header is present Header chain: The set of consecutive protocol headers in a packet that precede the transport payload IPv6 header chain: The IPv6 header and the set of following IPv6 Extension Headers that precede the transport layer in a packet 2. Overview and motivation of extension header limits This specification considers extension header limits in three dimensions: 1) The types of nodes that may process extension headers and the requirements specific to each type, 2) The types of limits that may be applied, 3) The action taken when a limit is exceeded. 2.1. Types of nodes For the purposes of describing handling of extension headers, this specification considers three types of node in an IPv6 network: * Hosts (both a host sending extension headers, an a destination host receiving extension headers) * Routers not processing routing headers * Routers processing routing headers 2.2. Types of limits The limits and requirements for handling extension headers defined in this specification fall into the following categories: Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 5] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 * Limits on extension header length * Limits on option length * Limits on number of extension headers * Limits on number of options * Limits on padding for extension headers with options * Limits on the length of the IPv6 header chain 2.2.1. Limits on extension header length [RFC8504] defines limits that may be defined for the length of an extension header. Those limits are extended to be applicable to routers. 2.2.2. Limits on option length A node may establish a limit on the length of individual Hop-by-Hop or Destination options. Conceivably, such a limit could apply to all option types, or length limits may be specific to individual options. 2.2.3. Limits on number of extension headers A node may define a limit on the number of extension headers it will process. 2.2.4. Limits on number of options Limits may be established for the number of options sent or received; these limits are specifically applicable to Hop-by-Hop Options headers and Destination Options headers. The need for this limit arises from the fact that [RFC8200] does not specify a limit. Requiring nodes to process packets with tens or hundreds of options has no foreseeable use cases in deployment except as a denial of service attack. [RFC8504] has proposed such a limit for host processing of a Hop-by-Hop Options header or Destination Options header with a default of eight options. This specification extends that limit to be applicable to routers. Specific limits may be established for the number of non-padding options or the number of all options including padding. To derive a limit for the total number options in an extension header, one can assume that at most one padding option is used between two non-padding options (an explicit limit on consecutive padding options is described below). With this assumption, we can Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 6] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 extrapolate a reasonable limit on the number of all options that should be twice the limit of the number of non-padding options. Per [RFC8504], the recommended default limit for the number of non- padding options is eight, so this specification establishes a default limit of sixteen options including padding options. The choice of sixteen options as a default limit attempts to strike a balance between allowing extensibility and maintaining reasonable expectations for node processing requirements. With regards to extensibility, at the time of writing, it is observed that in the almost thirty year history of IPv6 there are only thirteen defined non-deprecated Destination options and Hop-by-Hop options and three temporarily assigned options. Current evidence suggests that having more than one Destination option or Hop-by-Hop option in a extension header is rare, and extrapolating that point with the rate of new options being defined, suggests a limit of eight non-padding options allows for sufficient extensibility in the foreseeable future. With regards to processing requirements, TLVs, such as Hop-by-Hop options and Destination options, have historically been considered difficult to process efficiently due to their serial processing requirements and combinatorial nature. TLV processing has been a particularly acute problem for ASIC based hardware devices. Recently, there is a strong trend in programmable implementation, even in high performance routers, towards using emerging programming frameworks such as P4. Programmable implementations are better equipped to handle TLVs, at least for a reasonably small number of them. It might also be pointed out that the need to efficiently process TLVs exists in other protocols, for instance processing TCP requires processing of TLVs in the form of TCP options which are an intrinsic part of the protocol. 2.2.5. Limits on padding options [RFC8200] defines PAD1 and PADN options that respectively provide one byte or N bytes of padding in a Hop-by-Hop Options or Destination Options header. The purpose of padding is to properly align the following non-padding option to its expected alignment, or to add padding after the last Destination or Hop-by-Hop option so that the length of the extension header is a multiple of eight bytes as required by [RFC8200]. [RFC8504] defines host limits on the number of bytes used for consecutive padding where the amount of padding between options or at the end of the extension header is no more than seven bytes; this limit is sufficient to align any following data after the padding to eight bytes. These limits are extended by this specification to be applicable to routers. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 7] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 This specification allows a receiving node to set a requirement that consecutive padding options must not present in a packet; which in turn requires a sender not to place consecutive padding options in a packet. The rationale for this limit is that a PAD1 or PADN option is able to provide one to 257 bytes of padding, so a single padding option is sufficient for expected use cases of padding. When the sender creates options, it can compute the amount of padding necessary to satisfy the alignment requirements of the following data. If one byte of padding is needed a PAD1 option is used, if more than one byte of padding is needed then an appropriate PADN option is used. 2.2.6. Limit on IPv6 header chain length Intermediate nodes often perform deep packet inspection (DPI) in order to implement various functions in the network. Routers perform DPI when they inspect packets beyond the IPv6 header or beyond the Hop-by-Hop Options header if present. Some router implementations must inspect the transport layer headers in order to process and forward the packet, and if the transport layer headers are not readable a packet might be discarded. Even if a transport layer header is in plain text within a packet, some devices may not be capable of reading it if the header is too deep in the packet. Hardware devices often have constraints on how much of the headers in a packet can be parsed for DPI. A typical design is that some portion of the beginning of a received packet is loaded for header parsing into a specialized memory buffer called the "parsing buffer". The size of a parsing buffer is often fixed per device or line cards installed in a chassis. To derive a size limit for the IPv6 header chain, we need to take into account headers in a packet that might be subject to DPI which include the link layer header through at least the pertinent fields of the transport layer header. The most common required transport layer information is the transport layer port numbers which typically occupy the first four bytes of the transport headers (in TCP, UDP, SCTP, DCCP, etc.). Inspection of port numbers may be needed for stateless load balancing as well as port filtering. There are middleboxes that may need to inspect more of transport layer headers or the transport payload, however those can be considered specialized devices that perform work beyond simple packet forwarding and filtering and hence should have more capabilities for DPI. In addition to limits on the length of the IP header chain, it is conceivable that there could be a limit on the length of the whole header chain in a packet. The whole header chain would comprise the IPv6 header chain as well as any headers that are part of network Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 8] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 encapsulation that precede the innermost transport layer. The definition of such a limit is out of scope for this specification, however [RFC8883] defines an ICMP Destination Unreachable message with code 8 (Headers Too Long) that may be sent when a packet is discarded because the aggregate length of the whole header chain exceeds a limit. This specification specifies that the minimum supported limit for IPv6 header chains is 104 bytes. The value is derived by assuming that nodes have the ability to process at least the first 128 bytes of a packet (that is they have a parsing buffer that contains at least 128 bytes). The 128 byte parsing buffer would be expected to at least contain: * 16 bytes for a Layer 2 header (for instance an Ethernet header) * 40 bytes for the IPv6 header * 64 bytes for the extension headers * 8 bytes for the transport layer (i.e the first eight bytes of the transport layer header) This scheme thus establishes a requirement that all Internet devices must be capable of correctly processing packets with up to sixty-four bytes of extension headers, and subsequently it establishes a requirement that a host shouldn't send packets with more than sixty- four bytes of extension headers. Note that this establishes a global baseline requirement across the Internet; within a limited domain higher limits could be applied. 128 bytes is likely the minimal useful parsing buffer size in deployment today. Devices performing a very narrow DPI could conceptually use a smaller parsing buffer, for instance that could be as small as sixty-four bytes which accommodates an L2 header, IPv6 header, and eight bytes of transport header; however, such a device would be extremely limited in capabilities and if they do exist they are likely legacy devices that will eventually be decommissioned. Many routers now have the capability to perform DPI into encapsulation headers which implies they already have a larger parsing buffer than this baseline minimum. Similar to limiting the number of options allowing in a packet, setting a limit for the IP header length chain is a tradeoff between extensibility and feasible implementation. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 9] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 For extensibility, the pertinent extension headers contributing to the sixty-four byte limit are mostly the Hop-by-Hop Options header and Destination Options header. The Routing header is really intended for limited domains and not the Internet (for instance, the SRv6 Routing header is confined to a Segment Routing Domain), and therefore would be subject to a domain specific limit for IP header chain length. The Encryption header may be used on the Internet, however encryption obfuscates the encapsulated transport headers such that such that routers can't inspect them regardless of their position in a packet. Fragmentation may be used in the Internet, however only the first fragment of a fragmented packet contains transport layer headers that could be read by an Intermediate node. In any case, the Fragment header is only four bytes so that would not be a particularly large portion of a sixty-four byte limit. The Authentication header is usable on the Internet and does allow transport layer headers to be in readable in plain text. The Authentication header is relatively large, typically thirty-two bytes or more, so it would contribute significantly to a limit on IP header chain length. However, the use of the Authentication header without encryption is likely rare on the Internet. Individual Hop-by-Hop or Destination options may also be categorized as being intended for use over the Internet or just in limited domains. For instance, the IOAM Hop-by-Hop option is intended for use in limited domains. Paring this down, the types of extension headers and Destination and Hop-by-Hop options that might be used outside of limited domains are fairly limited. Options that are intended for use over the public Internet could be defined to be small and compact to promote not exceeding a sixty-four byte limit on extension headers, whereas options constrained to a limited domain could be larger since larger limits might be assumed. 2.3. Actions when limits are exceeded For each limit that is defined, an action is specified for when the limit is exceeded. The appropriate action depends on whether the processing node is a host, a router not processing routing headers, or a router processing routing headers. For a host, the typical action to take when a limit is exceeded is to discard the packet. This is appropriate since a host is required to process all of the headers in a packet, and if a limit is exceeded then it cannot process the packet so there is no other alternative but to discard. For routers not processing routing headers, the typical action to take when a limit is exceeded is to stop processing headers at the point the limit is reached and to forward the packet on. If a router Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 10] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 processing routing headers needs to access transport layer information it may continue inspecting extension headers, but not processing them, after a limit has been reached for the purposes of locating the transport layer header. [RFC8200] and [I-D.ietf-6man-hbh-processing] allow that routers may not process the Hop-by-Hop Options headers, therefore a router processing routing headers may ignore all of the Hop-by-Hop options in a packet. This specification expands on that requirement to allow an to process some arbitrary subset of consecutive Hop-by-Hop options in the TLV list and to ignore the following ones. In the case of an egregious violation of a limit, for instance an attacker sends three hundred options in a packet, the host can decide if the appropriate response is to discard (the host must process all options). Note that this provision motivates the sender to place Hop-by-Hop options in the extension header so that those considered more important are placed first. It should also be noted that [RFC8504] sets a default limit of eight; this specification adds a counterpart for sending hosts that they shouldn't send more than eight Hop-by-Hop options by default. With regards to extension header processing, routers processing routing headers have characteristics of both hosts and and routers not processing routing headers. If a limit is exceeded related to Hop-by-Hop options then the suggested action in this specification is to assume the same processing of limits as routers not processing routing headers. If limits are exceeded that affect the processing specific to the destination, such as limits on a Destination Options header before the Routing header, then the action should be to discard packet as would be done for a destination host processing Destination Options. 2.4. Design Philosophy The limits defined in this specification are applicable to both senders and receivers. With a few exceptions as described below, the limits described herein are optional to configure and enforce. If a limit is configurable there is a suggested default value. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 11] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 A sender of extension headers should generally be conservative in its use of extension headers to maximize the chances of packets being delivered to their destination. Default values for sending limits are assumed to be useful in arbitrary environment such as the public Internet, that is they can be considered "baseline limits". These limits may be relaxed if a sender has a priori information that all possible nodes in path will properly handle packets that exceed the baseline limits. In particular, if a sender is sending in a limited domain, it might be known that all nodes in the limited domain have sufficient capabilities to handle packets exceeding the baseline limits. Specific mechanisms for a host to determine that baseline limits for extension headers may be exceeded are out of scope for this specification. Conceivably, this determination could be done by configuration, capabilities probing, or applying historical knowledge that all routers in the path and the destination node are capable of handling packets that exceed the baseline limits. Receivers of extension headers should be liberal in accepting packets with extension headers, however per this specification they may ignore extension headers or options within extension headers (in accordance with [RFC8200]). In particular, the philosophy of this specification is that routers should not discard packets with extension headers solely on the basis that they don't have sufficient capabilities to process all the headers in a packet. As such, routers may define arbitrarily restrictive limits on what they process with regards to extension headers as long as the action taken when those limits are exceeded is to ignore items beyond the limit. Hosts are more constrained in this regard since they generally can't correctly process a packet without processing all the headers, so when limits are exceeded on a host, packets should be discarded. It should be noted that hosts typically have more processing capabilities than routers, so it is expected that they should be able to support higher limits for processing extension headers. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 12] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 This specification does specify one hard requirement for receiving nodes, namely nodes must be able to properly handle packets having an IPv6 header chain length up to 104 bytes. This requirement acknowledges that some routers perform deep packet inspection to extract information from transport layer headers [RFC9098]. Often a node that requires parsing transport layer information will have a fixed sized "parsing buffer" to contain packet headers. If the transport layer headers within a packet are beyond the extent of the parsing buffer then an implementation might take some detrimental action such as arbitrarily discarding packets. To this end, this specification requires that any router that requires access to to transport layer header must minimally be able to parse at least 128 bytes of headers, from which the 104 byte limit for the IP header chain is derived. 3. Requirements This section lists the normative requirements related to sending and processing extension headers. The requirements in this section extends the limits described in section 5.3 of [RFC8504] by making them to be applicable to routers as well as hosts. 3.1. List of limits The set of limits that a node may apply when processing extension headers include: * Too many non-padding or padding options * Extension header too big * Option too big * Too many consecutive padding options * Too many consecutive bytes of padding * Extension header chain too long * Aggregate header chain too long * Too many extension headers Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 13] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 3.2. Host requirements 3.2.1. Source host requirements The requirements are: * A source host SHOULD NOT send more than 8 non-padding options in a Destination Options header unless it has explicit knowledge that the destination host and all routers processing routing headers in the case of a Destination Options header before the routing header in the path, are able to process a greater number of options. * A source host SHOULD NOT send more than 8 non-padding options in a Hop-by-Hop Options header unless it has explicit knowledge that the destination host is able to process a greater number of options. * A source host SHOULD NOT send more than 8 non-padding options in a Hop-by-Hop Options header unless it has explicit knowledge that all possible routers in the path are able to process a greater number of options or will ignore options that exceeds their limit. * A source host SHOULD NOT send a packet with an extension header larger than 64 bytes unless it has explicit knowledge that all nodes that might process the extension header are capable of processing a larger header. * A source host SHOULD NOT send a packet with a Destination option in a Destination Option header or Hop-by-Hop option in a Hop-by- Hop Option header with Data Length greater than 60 bytes unless it has explicit knowledge that all nodes that might process the option are capable of processing options with a larger Data Length. * A source host SHOULD NOT send a packet with an IPv6 header chain larger than 104 bytes unless it has explicit knowledge that all nodes in the path that might need to parse the transport layer of packets are capable of properly handling packets with larger header chains. This requirement is equivalently stated as a host SHOULD NOT send a packet with more than 64 bytes of aggregate extension headers, or a host SHOULD not send a packet where the offset of the plain text transport layer is greater than 108 bytes in the packet. * A source host SHOULD NOT set more than one consecutive pad option, either PAD1 or PADN, in a Destination Options header or Hop-by-Hop Options header. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 * A source host SHOULD NOT send a PadN option in a Hop-by-Hop Options header or Destination Options header with total length of more than seven bytes. * A source host SHOULD NOT send more than 16 (padding or non- padding) options in a Destination Options header unless it has explicit knowledge that the destination host and all routers processing routing headers in the path in the case of a Destination Options header before the routing header, are able to process a greater number of options. Note that if the above requirements on a host sending non-padding Destination options and requirements on option padding are met, then this requirement is implicitly satisfied. * A source host node SHOULD NOT send more than 16 options (padding or non-padding) in a Hop-by-Hop Options header unless it has explicit knowledge that the destination host is able to process a greater number of options. Note that if the above requirements on a host sending non-padding Hop-by-Hop options and requirements on padding are met, then this requirement is implicitly satisfied. 3.2.2. Receiving extension headers by destination hosts Per [RFC8200], a destination host that receives a packet with extension headers must process all the extension headers in the packet before accepting the payload and processing the payload. As described in [RFC8504] a destination host may establish limits on the processing of extension headers. This specification reiterates and updates those requirements to allow for a host to send an RFC8883 error if a limit has been exceeded. * Per [RFC8504], a destination host MAY set a limit on the maximum number of non-padding options allowed in a Destination Options header or Hop-by-Hop Options header. If this limit is supported then the maximum number SHOULD be configurable, the limit SHOULD be greater than or equal to 8, and the default value SHOULD be set to 8. The limits for Destination Options headers and Hop-by-Hop Options headers MAY be separately configurable. If a packet is received and the number of Destination or Hop-by-Hop options exceeds the limit, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A destination host MAY set a limit on the maximum number of Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 options (padding or non-padding) allowed in a Destination Options header or Hop-by-Hop Options header. If this limit is supported then the maximum number SHOULD be configurable and the limit SHOULD be greater than or equal to 16. The limits for Destination Options headers and Hop-by-Hop Options headers MAY be separately configurable. If a packet is received and the number of Destination or Hop-by-Hop options exceeds the limit, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * Per [RFC8504], a destination host MAY set a limit on the length of a Destination Options header or a Hop-by-Hop Options header. If this limit is supported then the limit SHOULD be configurable and the limit SHOULD be greater than or equal to 64 bytes. The length limits for different extension headers MAY be separately configurable. If a packet is received and the length of an extension header exceeds the limit, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 6 (Extension Header Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A destination host node MAY set a limit on the Data Length of a Hop-by-Hop or Destination option. If this limit is supported then the limit SHOULD be configurable, and the limit SHOULD be greater than or equal to 60 bytes. The limits for Destination options and Hop-by-Hop options MAY be separately configurable. If a packet is received and a Hop-by-Hop or Destination option has a length that exceeds the limit, then the host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 10 (Option Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * Per [RFC8504], a destination host MAY limit the number of consecutive PAD1 options in a Destination Options header or Hop- by-Hop Options header to 7. If a packet is received and there are more than 7 consecutive PAD1 options present, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * Per [RFC8504], a destination host MAY limit the number of bytes in a PADN option to be less than 8. If a packet is received an a PADN option is present that has a length greater than 7, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 10 (Option Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A destination host MAY set a limit on the maximum length of a Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 16] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 Destination Options header or Hop-by-Hop Options header. This value SHOULD be configurable, and if the limit is set then the limit SHOULD be greater than or equal to 64 bytes. If a packet is received and the length of the Destination Options header or Hop- by-Hop Options header exceeds the length limit, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 6 (Extension Header Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A destination host node MAY set a limit on the maximum length of the IPv6 header chain, or equivalently a host MAY set a limit on the aggregate length of extension headers in a packet. If the limit is used then it SHOULD be greater than or equal to 104 bytes, or, equivalently, the limit on aggregate header extension length SHOULD be greater than or equal to 64 bytes. If a packet is received and the aggregate length of the IPv6 header chain exceeds the limit, then the destination host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 7 (Extension Header Chain Too Long) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A destination host MAY disallow consecutive padding options, either PAD1 or PADN, to be present in a packet. If packet is received with consecutive padding options that are disallowed by the host, then the host SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. 3.3. Router requirements The following common requirements are established for routers including both routers not processing routing headers and routers not processing routing headers. The limits described in this section should all be configurable and there are no default values specified if the limits are set. * If a router needs to parse the transport layer to deduce the transport layer port numbers, it MUST be able to correctly forward packets that contain an IPv6 header chain of 104 or fewer bytes, or equivalently an router MUST be able to process a packet with an aggregate length of extension headers less than or equal to 64 bytes, or equivalently the router must be able to parse the port numbers of a transport layer header in plaintext when the offset of the transport layer header in the packet is equal to or less than 120 bytes. * Per [RFC8200] a router MAY be configured not to process Hop-by-Hop Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 17] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 Options headers. If a router is configured as such and a packet with a Hop-by-Hop Options header is received, the extension header MUST be be skipped and the packet MUST otherwise be properly processed and forwarded. * A router MAY limit the number of non-padding Hop-by-Hop options that it processes. If a packet is received with a Hop-by-Hop Options header having a number of non-padding options than exceeds the limit, then the router SHOULD stop processing the Hop-by-Hop Option header and ignore any Hop-by-Hop options beyond the limit. It is NOT RECOMMENDED that a router discards the packet because the limit is exceeded, however if it does then the router MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * A router MAY limit the number of Hop-by-Hop options (padding or non-padding) that it processes. If a packet is received with a Hop-by-Hop Options header having a number of non-padding and padding options that exceeds the limit, then the router SHOULD stop processing the Hop-by-Hop Options header and ignore any Hop- by-Hop options beyond the limit. It is NOT RECOMMENDED that the router discards the packet because the limit is exceeded, however if it does then the router MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header), [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * If a router encounters an unknown Hop-by-Hop option and the two high order bits are not 00 then the router SHOULD immediately stop processing the Hop-by-Hop Options header and ignore any Hop-by-Hop options beyond the unknown option. A router node MAY either elect to discard the packet per the requirements of [RFC8200] and [I-D.ietf-6man-hbh-processing], or the router MAY forward the packet and effectively disregard the high order two bits in the option type. The motivation for this requirement is to simplify processing at routers. Note, that if the high order two bits are non-zero for an option that is unknown to the destination host then the packet will be discarded since the destination host is required to process all Hop-by-Hop options in a packet or to discard a packet if its limit for maximum number of options to process is exceeded. If a router elects to discard the packet and the high two order bits of the option type are 10 or are 11 and the packet's Destination Address was not a multicast address, then the router MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 2 (Unrecognized Option Type) [RFC8200] to the packet's source address. * A router MAY set a limit on the maximum length of a Hop-by-Hop Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 18] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 Options header. If a packet is received with a Hop-by-Hop Options header having a length that exceeds the limit, then the router SHOULD stop processing the Hop-by-Hop Option header and ignore any Hop-by-Hop options beyond the limit. It is NOT RECOMMENDED that the router discards the packet because the limit is exceeded, however if it does then the router MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 6 (Extension Header Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. 3.4. Intermediate destination requirements The following are requirements specific to routers processing routing headers pertaining to the processing of a Destination Options header before the Routing header. * A router processing routing headers MAY limit the maximum length of a Destination Options header before the Routing header. This value SHOULD be configurable, and the default is to accept options of any length. If a limit is defined, it MUST be at least 64 bytes. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header having a length that exceeds the limit, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 6 (Extension Header Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * An router processing routing headers MAY limit the number of non- padding options in a Destination Options header before the Routing header. If this limit is supported then the maximum number SHOULD be configurable and the limit MUST be greater than or equal to 8. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header that contains more non-padding options than the limit, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * An router processing routing headers node MAY limit the number of options (padding or non-padding) in a Destination Options header before the Routing header. If this limit is supported then the maximum number SHOULD be configurable and the limit MUST be greater than or equal to 16. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header that contains more non-padding options than the limit, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 6 (Extension Header Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 19] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 * An router processing routing headers MAY limit the total number bytes in consecutive PAD1 options in a Destination Options header before the Routing header to 7. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header that contains more than seven consecutive PAD1 options and the limit is enabled, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 9 (Too Many Options in Extension Header) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * An router processing routing headers MAY limit the number of bytes in a PADN option in a Destination Option header before the Routing header to be less than 8. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header that more contains a PADN option with more than seven bytes, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 10 (Option Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. * An router processing routing headers MAY set a limit for the maximum length of a Destination Options header before the Routing header. If this limit is supported then the limit SHOULD be configurable and the limit MUST be greater than or equal to 64 bytes. If packet is received with a Destination Options header before the Routing header with a length that exceeds the limit, then the router processing routing headers SHOULD discard the packet and MAY send an ICMP Parameter Problem message with code 10 (Option Too Big) [RFC8883] to the packet's source address. 4. Security Considerations Security issues with IPv6 Hop-by-Hop options are well known and have been documented in several places, including [RFC6398], [RFC6192], [RFC7045] and [RFC9098]. Of particular concern is a Distributed Denial-of-Service attack (DDOS) wherein an attacker sends many Hop-by-Hop options or Destination options in a packet for the purposes of forcing receivers to consume inordinate resources processing packets. Since there is no hard limit on the number of options in an extension header, it is conceivable that an attacker could craft MTU sized packets with hundreds of small Hop-by-Hop or Destination options where the option type is chosen to be one that will be unknown to the receiver and the higher order type bits are set to 00 to indicate that an unknown option is ignored. A receiver attempting to process all the options in such packet would require a lot of resources as TLV processing is notoriously hard to do efficiently (in either hardware or software). Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 20] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 This specification addresses the DDOS concern of extension headers and options in extension headers by allowing receivers to configure limits the number of extension headers or options that they process. Such limits cap the amount of processing needed for extension headers and hence mitigate the DDOS concerns of extension headers. This specification does not otherwise introduce any new security concerns. 5. Acknowledgments The author would like to thank Brian Carpenter, Bob Hinden, Nick Hilliard, Gorry Fairhurst, Darren Dukes, and Vasilenko Eduard for their comments and suggestions that improved this specification. 6. References 6.1. Normative References [RFC8200] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification", STD 86, RFC 8200, DOI 10.17487/RFC8200, July 2017, . [RFC8504] Chown, T., Loughney, J., and T. Winters, "IPv6 Node Requirements", BCP 220, RFC 8504, DOI 10.17487/RFC8504, January 2019, . [RFC8883] Herbert, T., "ICMPv6 Errors for Discarding Packets Due to Processing Limits", RFC 8883, DOI 10.17487/RFC8883, September 2020, . 6.2. Informative References [I-D.ietf-6man-hbh-processing] Hinden, R. M. and G. Fairhurst, "IPv6 Hop-by-Hop Options Processing Procedures", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-6man-hbh-processing-09, 4 July 2023, . [RFC2460] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, DOI 10.17487/RFC2460, December 1998, . [RFC6192] Dugal, D., Pignataro, C., and R. Dunn, "Protecting the Router Control Plane", RFC 6192, DOI 10.17487/RFC6192, March 2011, . Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 21] Internet-Draft Extension Header Limits September 2023 [RFC6398] Le Faucheur, F., Ed., "IP Router Alert Considerations and Usage", BCP 168, RFC 6398, DOI 10.17487/RFC6398, October 2011, . [RFC7045] Carpenter, B. and S. Jiang, "Transmission and Processing of IPv6 Extension Headers", RFC 7045, DOI 10.17487/RFC7045, December 2013, . [RFC7872] Gont, F., Linkova, J., Chown, T., and W. Liu, "Observations on the Dropping of Packets with IPv6 Extension Headers in the Real World", RFC 7872, DOI 10.17487/RFC7872, June 2016, . [RFC9098] Gont, F., Hilliard, N., Doering, G., Kumari, W., Huston, G., and W. Liu, "Operational Implications of IPv6 Packets with Extension Headers", RFC 9098, DOI 10.17487/RFC9098, September 2021, . Author's Address Tom Herbert SiPanda Santa Clara, CA, United States of America Email: tom@herbertland.com Herbert Expires 29 March 2024 [Page 22]