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This document specifies the remctl wire protocol, used to send commands and arguments to a remote system and receive the results of executing that command. The protocol uses GSS-API and Kerberos v5 for authentication, confidentiality, and integrity protection. Both the current (version 2) protocol and the older version 1 protocol are described. The version 1 protocol should only be implemented for backward compatibility.
1.
Basic Packet Format
2.
Network Protocol (version 2)
2.1.
Session Sequence
2.2.
Message Format
2.3.
Protocol Version Negotiation
2.4.
MESSAGE_COMMAND
2.5.
MESSAGE_OUTPUT and MESSAGE_STATUS
2.6.
MESSAGE_ERROR
2.7.
MESSAGE_QUIT
3.
Network Protocol (version 1)
4.
Security Considerations
Appendix A.
Acknowledgements
§
Author's Address
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The remctl network protocol consists of data packets sent from a client to a server or a server to a client over a TCP connection. Each packet has the following format:
1 byte flags 4 bytes length <length> data payload
The flag byte contains one or more of the following values, combined with binary xor:
0x01 TOKEN_NOOP 0x02 TOKEN_CONTEXT 0x04 TOKEN_DATA 0x08 TOKEN_MIC 0x10 TOKEN_CONTEXT_NEXT 0x20 TOKEN_SEND_MIC 0x40 TOKEN_PROTOCOL
Only TOKEN_CONTEXT, TOKEN_CONTEXT_NEXT, TOKEN_DATA, and TOKEN_PROTOCOL are used for version 2 packets. The other flags are used only with the legacy version 1 protocol.
The length field is a four-byte length in network byte order, specifying the number of octets in the following data payload.
The data payload is empty, the results of gss_accept_sec_context, the results of gss_init_sec_context, or a data payload protected with gss_wrap. The maximum size of the data payload of a remctl packet is constrained by the maximum message size in the GSS-API protocol, which for Kerberos v5 is 64KB.
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A remctl connection is always initiated by a client opening a TCP connection to a server. The protocol then proceeds as follows:
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All client and server messages will use the following format inside the data payload. This is the format of the message before passing it to gss_wrap for confidentiality and integrity protection.
1 byte protocol version 1 byte message type <command-specific data>
The protocol version for the version 2 protocol is 2. (Note that the version 1 protocol does not use this message format, and therefore a protocol version of 1 is invalid.) See below for protocol version negotiation.
The message type is one of the following constants:
1 MESSAGE_COMMAND 2 MESSAGE_QUIT 3 MESSAGE_OUTPUT 4 MESSAGE_STATUS 5 MESSAGE_ERROR 6 MESSAGE_VERSION
The first two message types are client messages and MUST NOT be sent by the server. The remaining message types are server messages and MUST NOT by sent by the client.
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If the server ever receives a message from a client that claims a protocol version higher than the server supports, the server MUST otherwise ignore the contents of the message and SHOULD respond with a message type of MESSAGE_VERSION and the following message payload:
1 byte highest supported version
The client MUST then either send only messages supported at that protocol version or lower or send MESSAGE_QUIT and close the connection.
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Most client messages will be of type MESSAGE_COMMAND, which has the following format:
1 byte keep-alive flag 1 byte continue status 4 bytes number of arguments 4 bytes argument length <length> argument ...
If the keep-alive flag is 0, the server SHOULD close the connection after processing the command. If it is 1, the server SHOULD leave the connection open (up to a timeout period) and wait for more commands. This is similar to HTTP keep-alive.
If the continue status is 1, it indicates that there is more data coming. The server should accept the data sent, buffer or process it, and wait for more data before responding. If the the continue status is 2, it indicates that this message is logically a part of the previous message (which MUST have had a continue status of 1 or 2) and still has more data coming. If the continue status is 3, it says that this message is logically part of the previous message, like 2, but it also says that this is the end of the command.
Number of arguments is a four-byte number in network byte order that gives the total number of command arguments. For each argument, there is then a length and argument data pair, where the length is a four-byte number in network byte order indicating the number of octets of data in the following argument. Both number of arguments and length may be 0.
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The server response to MESSAGE_COMMAND is zero or more MESSAGE_OUTPUT messages followed by either a MESSAGE_STATUS or a MESSAGE_ERROR response. Each MESSAGE_OUTPUT message has the following format:
1 byte output stream 4 bytes output length <length> output
The output stream is either 1 for standard output or 2 for standard error. Output length is a four-byte number in network byte order that specifies the length of the following output data.
The MESSAGE_STATUS message has the following format:
1 byte exit status
MESSAGE_STATUS indicates the command has finished and returns the final exit stauts of the command. Exit status is 0 for success and non-zero for failure, where the meaning of non-zero exit statuses is left to the application to define. (This is identical to a Unix command exit status.)
Unless the MESSAGE_COMMAND message from the client had the keep-alive flag set to 1, the server MUST close the network connection immediately after sending the MESSAGE_STATUS response message.
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At any point before sending MESSAGE_STATUS, the server may respond with MESSAGE_ERROR if some error occurred. This can be the first response after a MESSAGE_COMMAND, or it may be sent after one or more MESSAGE_OUTPUT messages. The format of MESSAGE_ERROR is as follows:
4 bytes error code 4 bytes message length <length> error message
The error code is a four-byte number in network byte order indicating the type of error. The error code may be one of the following values:
1 ERROR_INTERNAL Internal server failure 2 ERROR_BAD_TOKEN Invalid format in token 3 ERROR_UNKNOWN_MESSAGE Unknown message type 4 ERROR_BAD_COMMAND Invalid command format in token 5 ERROR_UNKNOWN_COMMAND Unknown command 6 ERROR_ACCESS Access denied
Additional error codes may be added without changing the version of the remctl protocol, so clients MUST accept error codes other than the ones above.
The message length is a four-byte number in network byte order that specifies the length in octets of the following error message. The error message is a free-form informational message intended for human consumption and MUST NOT be interpreted by an automated process. Software should instead use the error code.
Unless the MESSAGE_COMMAND message from the client had the keep-alive flag set to 1, the server MUST close the network connection immediately after sending the MESSAGE_ERROR response message. Otherwise, the server SHOULD still honor that flag, although the server MAY terminate the connection after an unreasonable number of errors.
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MESSAGE_QUIT is a way of terminating the connection cleanly if the client asked for keep-alive and then decided not to use it. There is no message body. Upon receiving this message, the server MUST immediately close the connection.
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The old network protocol supported only 64KB of data payload, only a single command and response, and had some additional unnecessary protocol components. It SHOULD NOT be used by clients, but MAY be supported by servers for backward compatibility. It is recognized by the server and client by the lack of TOKEN_PROTOCOL in the flags of the initial security context negotiation.
The old protocol always uses the following steps:
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The old protocol doesn't provide integrity protection for the flags, but since it always follows the same fixed sequence of operations, this should pose no security concerns in practice. The new protocol only uses the flag field outside of the encrypted section of the packet for initial negotiation and closes the connection if the flags aren't what was expected (avoiding a down-negotiation attack).
In the old protocol, the server calculated and sent a MIC back to the client, which then verified that the command as received by the server was correct. Not only does GSS-API already provide integrity protection, but this verification also happens after the server has already started running the command. It has been dropped in the new protocol.
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The original remctl protocol design was done by Anton Ushakov, with input from Russ Allbery and Roland Schemers. Thank you to David Hoffman and Mike Newton for their review of the version 2 remctl protocol.
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Russ Allbery | |
Stanford University | |
255 Panama Street, MC 4136 | |
Stanford, CA 94305-4136 | |
US | |
Email: | rra@stanford.edu |
URI: | http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/ |