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SYZYGY Engineering Mobile Networking Mobile-IP Mobile Networking Ad Hoc Network (APC) WP-N1-IP-701 Latest available information as of 03/26/2006 Will Ivancic 1 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Outline SYZYGY Engineering • • • • • Mobile Networking Solutions Mobile-IPv4 Operation (mip4) Mobile-IPv6 Operation (mip6) Networks In Motion (nemo) Mobile Nodes and Multiple Interfaces in IPv6 (monami6) • Ad Hoc Networks 2 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic What is Mobility? • Transportable – Telecommuter – Traveler – Relatively static once connected – Single point of connection – Connectivity • IPv6 Autoconfiguration • VPN SYZYGY Engineering • Mobile – Mobile Devices • PDAs • Cell Phones – Mobile Networks • Trains • Planes • Automobiles – Connectivity • Mobile-IP • Networks in Motion (NEMO) • Ad Hoc Networks 3 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Mobile Networking Solutions SYZYGY Engineering • Routing Protocols – Route Optimization – Convergence Time – Sharing Infrastructure – who owns the network? • Mobile-IP – Route Optimization • Optimization for MIPv6 • No Optimization for NEMOv6 (Basic) • Optimization can be problematic for security (if reverse tunneling is required) – Convergence Time – Sharing Infrastructure – Security – Relatively Easy to Secure • Domain Name Servers – Route Optimization – Convergence Time – Reliability 4 Source – Will Ivancic Mobility at What Layer? SYZYGY Engineering • Layer-2 (Radio Link) – Fast and Efficient – Proven Technology within the same infrastructure • Cellular Technology Handoffs • WiFi handoffs • Layer-3 (Network Layer) – Slower Handover between varying networks – Layer-3 IP address provides identity – Security Issues • Need to maintain address • Layer-4 (Transport Layer) – Research Area – Identity not tied to layer-3 IP address – Proposed Solutions • HIP – Host Identity Protocol • SCTP – Stream Control Transport Protocol 5 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Location Identifier SYZYGY Engineering Hello Bob, I am in I am in Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio Ohio HQ Keeps Track of Alice. What is the Weather like in Where is Alice’s Cleveland? Location Manager? Internet Alice (Mobile Node) Hello Alice Bob (Corresponding Node) © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Headquarters (Location Manager) 6 SYZYGY Engineering Moblile-IP Operation IPv4 7 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Mobile IPv4 Header Considerations IPv4 Header 20 bytes Version IHL Type of Service Identification Time to Live Protocol Total Length Flag s Fragment Offset Header Checksum Source Address Destination Address Options Padding SYZYGY Engineering • Source is always home network address! – Easy to secure due to consistent end-point! – But, results in topologically incorrect address when away from home. • Security Issue, Ingress and Egress Filtering • Reverse Tunneling – Fixes topologically incorrect addressing problem – Eases secure deployment. © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic 8 Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Foreign Agents Mobile Node “ ” Foreign Agent 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 Foreign Agent 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet Corresponding Node 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Bi-directional Tunnel if Reverse Tunneling Is specified. Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Foreign Agents Mobile Node “ ” Foreign Agent 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 Foreign Agent 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Corresponding Node Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Foreign Agents (Reverse Tunneling) Mobile Node “ ” Foreign Agent 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 Foreign Agent 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Corresponding Node Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Collocated Care-Of-Address DHCP or Connection Established Mobile Node “ ” Access Router 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 Access Router 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Bi-directional Tunnel if Reverse Tunneling Is specified. Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Collocated Care-Of-Address Mobile Node “ ” Access Router 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Access Router Mobile-IP (IPv4) using Collocated Care-Of-Address (Reverse Tunneling) Mobile Node “ ” Access Router 143.232.48.1 Home IP 128.183.13.103 Care-Off-Address 139.88.111.50 139.88.111.1 139.88.112.1 NASA Glenn 143.232.48.1 NASA Ames Internet or Intranet 128.183.13.1 NASA Goddard Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Access Router Mobile-Router (IPv4) Mobile Router 128.184.24.1 128.184.24.2 Virtual LAN Interface Bi-directional Tunnel if Reverse Tunneling Is specified. 10.2.2.1 Roaming Interface 128.184.26.1 MR Loopback Virtual Interface COA 139.88.100.1 Tunnel-0 139.88.100.1 FA WAN Tunnel-1 Foreign Agent 139.88.112.1 Internet WAN Internet 128.183.13.1 Internet WAN Home Agent 128.184.25.1 HA Loopback Virtual Interface Source – Will Ivancic Mobile Router (Mobile Node) Corresponding Node Mobile-Router (IPv4) Mobile Router (Reverse Tunneling) 128.184.24.1 Virtual LAN Interface 10.2.2.1 Roaming Interface 139.88.100.1 FA WAN Tunnel-1 Foreign Agent 139.88.112.1 Internet WAN Internet 128.183.13.1 Internet WAN Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Mobile Router (Mobile Node) 128.184.26.1 MR Loopback Virtual Interface COA 139.88.100.1 Tunnel-0 128.184.25.1 HA Loopback Virtual Interface 128.184.24.2 Corresponding Node Mobile-Router (IPv4) Collocated Care-Of-Address 128.184.24.1 Virtual LAN Interface 128.184.24.2 Mobile Router (Mobile Node) 10.2.2.1 Roaming Interface 128.184.26.1 MR Loopback Virtual Interface COA 139.88.100.1 Tunnel-0 139.88.100.1 FA WAN Tunnel-1 Foreign Agent 139.88.112.1 Internet WAN Internet 128.183.13.1 Internet WAN No Foreign Agent No Second Tunnel Home Agent 128.184.25.1 HA Loopback Virtual Interface Source – Will Ivancic Corresponding Node Mobile-Router (IPv4) Collocated Care-Of-Address 128.184.24.1 Virtual LAN Interface 10.2.2.1 Roaming Interface Tunnel-0 139.88.100.1 Access Router 139.88.112.1 Internet WAN Internet 128.183.13.1 Internet WAN Home Agent 128.184.25.1 HA Loopback Virtual Interface Source – Will Ivancic Corresponding Node 128.184.24.2 Mobile Router (Mobile Node) 128.184.26.1 MR Loopback Virtual Interface COA 139.88.100.1 SYZYGY Engineering Mobile Networking Additional Features •Geographically Distributed Home Agents •Asymmetrical Pathing 19 Source – Will Ivancic Secondary Home Agent (reparenting the HA) Primary Home Agent X SYZYGY Engineering Secondary Home Agent Reparenting Home Agent Helps resolve triangular routing Problem over long distances Source – Will Ivancic 20 Emergency Backup (Hub / Spoke Network) SYZYGY Engineering If primary control site becomes physically inaccessible but can be electronically connected, a secondary site can be established. If primary control site is physically incapacitated, there is no backup capability. 21 Source – Will Ivancic Secondary Home Agent (Fully Meshed Network) SYZYGY Engineering If primary control site is physically incapacitated, a second or third or forth site take over automatically. 3 5 1 2 4 22 Source – Will Ivancic Asymmetrical Pathing DVB Satellite SYZYGY Engineering MilStar, Globalstar, Others Mobile Router Internet Foreign Agent Foreign Agent Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic 23 SYZYGY Engineering Securing Mobile and Wireless Networks Some ways may be “better” than others! 24 Source – Will Ivancic Constraints / Tools SYZYGY Engineering • Policy • Architecture • Protocols 25 Source – Will Ivancic IPv4 Utopian Operation SYZYGY Engineering CN US Coast Guard Operational Network (Private Address Space) US Coast Guard Mobile Network Public Internet HA FA Triangular Routing MR 26 Source – Will Ivancic IPv4 Mobile-IP Addressing SYZYGY Engineering • Source Address is obtained from – Foreign Agent – Static Collocated Care-of-Address (CCoA) – DHCP via Access Router (Dynamic CCoA) • Private Address space is not routable via the Open Internet • Topologically Incorrect Addresses should be blocked via Ingress or Egress filtering 27 Source – Will Ivancic IPv4 “Real World” Operation SYZYGY Engineering CN US Coast Guard Operational Network (Private Address Space) US Coast Guard Mobile Network Public Internet FA MR Source – Will Ivancic P R O X y HA Proxy had not originated the Glenn Research Center request; therefore, thePolicy: USCG Requires 3DES encryption. No UDP, IPSec, etc… response isEgress squelched. Ingress orNo Filtering stops WEP is notstopped acceptable due to Mobile-IP its tracks. Peer-to-peer networking Transmission due tointopologically known deficiencies. What’s your policy? becomes problematic at best. Incorrect source address. IPv6 Corrects this problem. 28 Current Solution – Reverse Tunneling SYZYGY Engineering CN Adds Overhead and kills route optimization. US Coast Guard Mobile Network US Coast Guard Operational Network (Private Address Space) Public Internet FA MR P R O X y HA Anticipate similar problems for IPv6. 29 Source – Will Ivancic Shared Network Infrastructure SYZYGY Engineering MR MR ACME Shipping Canadian Coast Guard FA FA Public Internet MR HA US Coast Guard M R US Navy Source – Will Ivancic HA Encrypting wireless links HA makes it very difficult to ACME share infrastructure. SHIPPING HA This is a policy issue. 30 SYZYGY Engineering IPv6 Mobile-IP 31 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Mobile-IPv6 SYZYGY Engineering • No "foreign agent“ routers • Route optimization is a fundamental part of the protocol • Mobile IPv6 route optimization can operate securely even without pre-arranged security associations • Route optimization coexists efficiently with routers that perform "ingress filtering" • The movement detection mechanism in Mobile IPv6 provides bidirectional confirmation of a mobile node's ability to communicate with its default router in its current location • Most packets sent to a mobile node while away from home in Mobile IPv6 are sent using an IPv6 routing header rather than IP encapsulation 32 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Mobile-IPv6 SYZYGY Engineering • Modes for communications between the mobile node and a correspondent node – Bidirectional tunneling • Does not require Mobile IPv6 support from the correspondent node – “Route Optimization“ • Requires the mobile node to register its current binding at the correspondent node. • Packets from the correspondent node can be routed directly to the care-of address of the mobile node 33 Source – Will Ivancic IPv6 Extension Headers SYZYGY Engineering 34 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Source-Routed Packet Topologically Correct Address SYZYGY Engineering Source Address = mobile node’s care-of-address Destination Address = correspondent node’s address If we loose contact, Home knows where I am. 35 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Routing in Mobile IPv6 SYZYGY Engineering Correspondent which knows the care-of address Mobile Node “visiting” a foreign link Source Routing Tunneling Home Agent Correspondent which does not know the care-of address 36 Mobile-IPv6 using Reverse Tunneling Mobile Node “ ” Access Router Access Router Internet or Intranet Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Mobile-IPv6 using Route Optimization Mobile Node “ ” Access Router Access Router Internet or Intranet Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic Mobile-IPv6 Binding Updates Binding Updates Access Router Mobile Node “ ” Internet or Intranet Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic x The number of Binding Updates is A Scalability Problem for Mobile Networks Access Router Mobile IPv6 Security SYZYGY Engineering • Binding Updates use IPsec extension headers, or by the use of the Binding Authorization Data option • Prefix discovery is protected through the use of IPsec extension headers • Mechanisms related to transporting payload packets - such as the Home Address destination option and type 2 routing header have been specified in a manner which restricts their use in attacks 40 Source – Will Ivancic SYZYGY Engineering NEMO NEtworks in Motion http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/nemocharter.html http://www.nal.motlabs.com/nemo/ 41 Source – Will Ivancic Networks In Motion (NEMO) SYZYGY Engineering • Working Group established in IETF in December 2002 • Concerned with managing the mobility of an entire network, which changes, as a unit, its point of attachment to the Internet and thus its reachability in the topology. 42 Source – Will Ivancic Goals SYZYGY Engineering • Standardizing some basic support mechanisms based on the bidirectional tunneling approach – Competed January 2005 • Study the possible approaches and issues with providing more optimal routing – Ongoing as of January 2006 43 Source – Will Ivancic Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol (RFC 3963) SYZYGY Engineering • The basic solution MUST use bi-directional tunnels • MNNs MUST be reachable at a permanent IP address and name. • MUST maintain continuous sessions (both unicast and multicast) between MNNs and arbitrary CNs after IP handover of (one of) the MRs. • The solution MUST not require modifications to any node other than MRs and HAs. • The solution MUST support fixed nodes, mobile hosts and mobile routers in the mobile network. • The solution MUST not prevent the proper operation of Mobile IPv6 (i.e. the solution MUST support MIPv6-enabled MNNs and MUST also allow MNNs to receive and process Binding Updates from arbitrary Mobile Nodes.) • The solution MUST treat all the potential configurations the same way (whatever the number of subnets, MNNs, nested levels of MRs, egress interfaces, ...) • The solution MUST support mobile networks attaching to other mobile networks (nested mobile networks). 44 Source – Will Ivancic Work In Progress • • • • SYZYGY Engineering Route Optimization Load Sharing (monami) Policy Based Routing (monami) Multiple Home Agents from different Service Providers – Security Issues – Desirable for some applications (i.e. air traffic control, airline maintenance, entertainment) 45 Source – Will Ivancic Basic Mobile Network Support for IPv6 Mobile Network Binding Nodes Update Mobile Network Access Router Internet or Intranet Corresponding Node Home Agent Source – Will Ivancic x Access Router SYZYGY Engineering Mobile Nodes and Multiple Interfaces in IPv6 (monami6) 47 monami6 SYZYGY Engineering • Produce standard track specifications to the straight-forward problems associated with the simultaneous use of multiple addresses for either mobile hosts using Mobile IPv6 or mobile routers using NEMO Basic Support and their variants (FMIPv6, HMIPv6, etc) • Provide standardized support for simultaneous differentiated use of multiple access technologies – 802.11*, 802.16, 802.20, UMTS, Bluetooth and others • WG Deliverables: – – – – Documentation of motivations for a node using multiple interfaces and the scenarios where it may end up with multiple global addresses on its interfaces [Informational] Analysis document explaining what are the limitations for mobile hosts using multiple simultaneous Care-of Addresses and Home Agent addresses using Mobile IPv6, whether issues are specific to Mobile IPv6 or not [Informational]. A protocol extension to Mobile IPv6 (RFC 3775) and NEMO Basic Support (RFC 3963) to support the registration of multiple Care-of Addresses at a given Home Agent address [Standard Track]. A "Flow/binding policies exchange" solution for an exchange of policies from the mobile host/router to the Home Agent and from the Home Agent to the mobile host/router influencing the choice of the Care-of Address and Home Agent address [Standard Track]. 48 Policy-Base Routing Airline Example P-DATA SYZYGY Engineering P-DATA High speed link P-DATA P-DATA AOC Home Agent int1 ATC Low latency link AOC AOC P-DATA ATC int2 int3 Routing Policy P-DATA Reliable link ATC ATC AOC Routing Policy P-DATA: Passenger Data (Non-Critical Information) AOC: Airline Operations Control (2nd Highest Priority) ATC: Air Traffic Management (Highest Priority - Safety of Flight) 49 Policy-Base Routing Airline Example P-DATA SYZYGY Engineering High speed link P-DATA AOC Home Agent int1 ATC Low latency link AOC P-DATA int3 Routing Policy ATC int2 Reliable link ATC ATC Routing Policy P-DATA: Passenger Data (Non-Critical Information) AOC: Airline Operations Control (2nd Highest Priority) ATC: Air Traffic Management (Highest Priority - Safety of Flight) 50 Policy-Base Routing Airline Example P-DATA SYZYGY Engineering High speed link P-DATA AOC P-DATA AOC int1 ATC P-DATA ATC Home Agent P-DATA Low latency link P-DATA int3 Routing Policy AOC int2 Reliable link ATC Routing Policy P-DATA: Passenger Data (Non-Critical Information) AOC: Airline Operations Control (2nd Highest Priority) ATC: Air Traffic Management (Highest Priority - Safety of Flight) 51 SYZYGY Engineering Mobile Ad Hoc Networks (MANET) 52 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic MANET Characteristics SYZYGY Engineering • What is Mobile Ad-Hoc Networking (MANET) – Self-configuring and self-organizing network of mobile nodes usually connected via wireless links – Consists of mobile platforms / nodes (e.g., a router with multiple hosts) which are free to move about arbitrarily. – Initial research and development based on mutual trust and cooperation – MANET routing is a layer-3, network layer technology. • Dynamic, changing,random, multi-hop topologies may require traversing multiple links to reach a destination • May have frequent network partitions and merging • Routing may change because of mobility (or wireless link dynamics – fading) • Routing functionality need to support robust and efficient operation • May require energy-constrained operation Source: Albert Young - Boeing 53 MANET Characteristics SYZYGY Engineering • Bandwidth constrained,variable capacity wireless links • Effective throughput is much less than a radio maximum transmission rate after accounting for the effects of multiple access, fading, noise, propagation path loss and interference • Limited physical security – Increased possibility of eavesdropping, spoofing, and denial-of-service attacks • Ad-hoc network clusters can operate autonomously or be attached at some point(s) to the fixed Internet –Stub network • The decentralized nature of network control in MANETs provides additional robustness against the single points of failure of more centralized approaches. • Equipped with wireless transceivers using antennas which may be omni-directional (broadcast),directional (point-topoint), possibly electronically steerable or a combination. Source: Albert Young - Boeing 54 Applications SYZYGY Engineering • Sensor Webs – Forest Fires Monitoring – Pollution Monitoring – Environmental Monitoring • Inexpensive alternatives or enhancements to cellbased mobile network infrastructures. • Military networking for robust, IP-compliant data services within mobile wireless communication networks consist of highly-dynamic autonomous topology segments. • Homeland Security – Scenarios requiring rapidly-deployable communications with survivable, efficient dynamic networking 55 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Status of MANET SYZYGY Engineering • Defense Programs are extremely interested in MANETs – Self-Organizing, robust, self-healing – Major research funding source. • IETF MANET working – Promoting a few “experimental” deployments (a reactive and a proactive routing technique) – Using mature components from previous work on experimental reactive and proactive protocols, the WG will develop two Standards track routing protocol specifications: • Reactive MANET Protocol (RMP) • Proactive MANET Protocol (PMP) – Develop a scoped forwarding protocol that can efficiently flood data packets to all participating MANET nodes. The primary purpose of this mechanism is a simplified best effort multicast forwarding function. 56 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Deployments (Sampling – Many others are available) SYZYGY Engineering • Dynamic MANET On-demand (DYMO) routing protocol – http://moment.cs.ucsb.edu/dymo/index.php • Ad hoc On Demand Distance Vector (AODV) – http://www.nmsl.cs.ucsb.edu/~krishna/aodv-linksys/ – http://w3.antd.nist.gov/wctg/aodv_kernel/ – http://crl.se/?go=aodv6 • Optimized Link State Routing Protocol (OLSR) – Navy Research Lab, INRIA (fr), NIIGATA (jp), GRC, LRI (fr), Communication Research Centre in Canada, UniK University • URL for all sources: http://hipercom.inria.fr/olsr/#code • http://www.olsr.org/ • Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) – http://www.monarch.cs.rice.edu/dsr-impl.html – http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/grid/software.html#install – http://core.it.uu.se/AdHoc/DsrUUImpltp://core.it.uu.se/AdHoc/DsrUUImpl 57 Routing Standards and Research SYZYGY Engineering • One Size Does Not Fit All! No single routing protocol works well in all environments – Which approach to choose depends on the traffic and mobility patterns, and QoS requirements – Proactive routing protocols Optimized Link State Routing (OLSR), Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) extension • Applicable for relatively stable networks • Suitable for large and dense networks – Reactive routing protocol Ad Hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV), Dynamic Source Routing protocol (DSR), Dynamic MANET On-demand (DYMO) • Enables reactive, multihop routing between participating nodes that wish to communicate. • Applicable to highly dynamic networks – Motivation is for interoperability with the wired – Modification (e.g. neighbor establishment) and scalability enhancements to OSPFv3 that is designed for IPv6 – Specifically in reducing the size of Hello packets, and optimizing flooding of routing updates. 58 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Benefits of IPv6 in MANETs SYZYGY Engineering • IPv6 couple together with MANET offers ease and speed of deployment, and decreased dependence on infrastructure • Provide End-to-End Global Addressing • Autoconfiguration of link-local addresses • Possible End-to-End Security with integrated IPSec • Support for source routing • Full support of mobility • No broadcast traffic to hamper wireless network efficiency • Potential support of real-time delivery of data with QoS • Potential to utilize Anycast addressing 59 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Challenges SYZYGY Engineering • Denial of Service – DAD DoS, Uncooperative Router, etc… – Neighbor Discovery trust and threats • Network Discovery – Reachback, DNS, Key Manager • Security – – – – IPSec / HAIPES tunnel end-points Security Policies in a dynamic environment Is layer-2 encryption sufficient security? Insecure routing • Attackers may inject erroneous routing information to divert network traffic, or make routing inefficient • Key Management – Lack of key distribution mechanism – Hard to guarantee access to any particular node (e.g. obtain a secret key) 60 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Challenges SYZYGY Engineering • Duplicate Address Discovery – Not suitable for multi-hop ad hoc networks that have dynamic network topology – Need to address situation where two MANET partitions merge • Radio Technology – Layer-2 media access often incompatible with layer-3 MANET routing protocol • Battery exhaustion threat – A malicious node may interact with a mobile node very often trying to drain the mobile node’s battery • Testing of Applications • Integrating MANET into the Internet 61 © 2004 Syzygy Engineering – Will Ivancic Integrating MANET into the Internet SYZYGY Engineering • Unicast Address Autoconfiguration • Multicast Address Autoconfiguration • Multicast Name Resolution • Service Discovery • Global Connectivity between MANET and Internet Source: http://www.adhoc.6ants.net/ 62