HTTPbis M. Bishop
Internet-Draft Akamai
Intended status: Standards Track May 24, 2018
Expires: November 25, 2018

GREASE for HTTP/2
draft-bishop-httpbis-grease-00

Abstract

Reserves several values in the HTTP/2 registries to exercise the requirement that clients and servers ignore unknown values.

Status of This Memo

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

[UseIt] observes that extension and negotiation mechanisms which aren’t exercised regularly can be found not to work when they are later employed by an extension to the protocol. [GREASE] is one mitigation which originated in TLS, registering multiple values in various TLS registries which can be sent prospectively by clients.

The common requirement of the different spaces described by these documents is the requirement that recipients ignore unrecognized values. By reserving a scattered set of codepoints to have no defined meaning, clients and servers can inject values from these ranges into connections on a regular basis and exercise this requirement.

HTTP/2 [HTTP2] frame types and settings employ a similar mechanism of ignoring unknown values. This makes HTTP/2 a good candidate to employ grease on connections. The need for such a technique was demonstrated recently by an HTTP/2 implementation which closed the connection upon receipt of an unknown setting.

2. Using GREASE in HTTP/2

2.1. GREASE for Frame Types

Frame types of the format 0xb + (0x1f * N) are reserved for use as grease. These frames have no semantic meaning, and SHOULD be send instead of using padding on DATA or HEADERS frames where possible. They MAY also be sent on connections where there is no application data currently being transferred. Endpoints MUST NOT consider these frames to have any meaning upon receipt.

Both the payload and length of the frames SHOULD be selected randomly, subject to implementation-defined limits on the length.

2.2. GREASE for SETTINGS

Settings values of the format 0x?a?a are reserved for use as grease. Such settings have no defined meaning. Endpoints SHOULD include at least one such setting in their initial SETTINGS frame, and MAY send new SETTINGS frames during the connection containing additional grease values. Endpoints MUST NOT consider such settings to have any meaning upon receipt.

Because the setting has no defined meaning, the value of the setting SHOULD be selected randomly.

3. Security Considerations

The ability to design, implement, and deploy new protocol mechanisms can be critical to security.

4. IANA Considerations

4.1. Frame Types

This document registers a range of entries in the “HTTP/2 Frame Type” registry defined in [HTTP2]. For each code of the format 0xb + (0x1f * N) for values of N in the range (0..7) (that is, 0xb, 0x2a, etc., through 0xe4), the following values should be registered:

Frame Type:
Reserved - GREASE
Specification:
This document

4.2. Settings

This document registers a range of entries in the “HTTP/2 Settings” registry defined in [HTTP2]. For each code of the format 0x?a?a where each ? is any octet (that is, 0x0a0a, 0x0a1a, etc. through 0xfafa), the following values should be registered:

Name:
Reserved - GREASE
Initial Value:
(undefined)
Specification:
This document

5. References

5.1. Normative References

[HTTP2] Belshe, M., Peon, R. and M. Thomson, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol Version 2 (HTTP/2)", RFC 7540, DOI 10.17487/RFC7540, May 2015.

5.2. Informative References

[GREASE] Benjamin, D., "Applying GREASE to TLS Extensibility", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-tls-grease-00, January 2017.
[UseIt] Thomson, M., "Long-term Viability of Protocol Extension Mechanisms", Internet-Draft draft-thomson-use-it-or-lose-it-01, March 2018.

Appendix A. Acknowledgements

This draft arose from a discussion in the QUIC WG with Lucas Pardue, Ryan Hamilton, and Martin Thomson.

Author's Address

Mike Bishop Akamai EMail: mbishop@evequefou.be