@node How to use TLS in application protocols @chapter How To Use @acronym{TLS} in Application Protocols This chapter is intended to provide some hints on how to use the @acronym{TLS} over simple custom made application protocols. The discussion below mainly refers to the @emph{TCP/IP} transport layer but may be extended to other ones too. @menu * Separate ports:: * Upward negotiation:: @end menu @node Separate ports @section Separate Ports Traditionally @acronym{SSL} was used in application protocols by assigning a new port number for the secure services. That way two separate ports were assigned, one for the non secure sessions, and one for the secured ones. This has the benefit that if a user requests a secure session then the client will try to connect to the secure port and fail otherwise. The only possible attack with this method is a denial of service one. The most famous example of this method is the famous ``HTTP over TLS'' or @acronym{HTTPS} protocol @xcite{RFC2818}. Despite its wide use, this method is not as good as it seems. This approach starts the @acronym{TLS} Handshake procedure just after the client connects on the ---so called--- secure port. That way the @acronym{TLS} protocol does not know anything about the client, and popular methods like the host advertising in HTTP do not work@footnote{See also the Server Name Indication extension on @ref{serverind}.}. There is no way for the client to say ``I connected to YYY server'' before the Handshake starts, so the server cannot possibly know which certificate to use. Other than that it requires two separate ports to run a single service, which is unnecessary complication. Due to the fact that there is a limitation on the available privileged ports, this approach was soon obsoleted. @node Upward negotiation @section Upward Negotiation Other application protocols@footnote{See LDAP, IMAP etc.} use a different approach to enable the secure layer. They use something called the ``TLS upgrade'' method. This method is quite tricky but it is more flexible. The idea is to extend the application protocol to have a ``STARTTLS'' request, whose purpose it to start the TLS protocols just after the client requests it. This is a really neat idea and does not require an extra port. This method is used by almost all modern protocols and there is even the @xcite{RFC2817} paper which proposes extensions to HTTP to support it. The tricky part, in this method, is that the ``STARTTLS'' request is sent in the clear, thus is vulnerable to modifications. A typical attack is to modify the messages in a way that the client is fooled and thinks that the server does not have the ``STARTTLS'' capability. See a typical conversation of a hypothetical protocol: @quotation (client connects to the server) CLIENT: HELLO I'M MR. XXX SERVER: NICE TO MEET YOU XXX CLIENT: PLEASE START TLS SERVER: OK *** TLS STARTS CLIENT: HERE ARE SOME CONFIDENTIAL DATA @end quotation And see an example of a conversation where someone is acting in between: @quotation (client connects to the server) CLIENT: HELLO I'M MR. XXX SERVER: NICE TO MEET YOU XXX CLIENT: PLEASE START TLS (here someone inserts this message) SERVER: SORRY I DON'T HAVE THIS CAPABILITY CLIENT: HERE ARE SOME CONFIDENTIAL DATA @end quotation As you can see above the client was fooled, and was dummy enough to send the confidential data in the clear. How to avoid the above attack? As you may have already thought this one is easy to avoid. The client has to ask the user before it connects whether the user requests @acronym{TLS} or not. If the user answered that he certainly wants the secure layer the last conversation should be: @quotation (client connects to the server) CLIENT: HELLO I'M MR. XXX SERVER: NICE TO MEET YOU XXX CLIENT: PLEASE START TLS (here someone inserts this message) SERVER: SORRY I DON'T HAVE THIS CAPABILITY CLIENT: BYE (the client notifies the user that the secure connection was not possible) @end quotation This method, if implemented properly, is far better than the traditional method, and the security properties remain the same, since only denial of service is possible. The benefit is that the server may request additional data before the @acronym{TLS} Handshake protocol starts, in order to send the correct certificate, use the correct password file@footnote{in @acronym{SRP} authentication}, or anything else!