Network Working Group C. Newman
Internet-Draft Oracle
Updates: 3501 (if approved) June 7, 2018
Intended status: Standards Track
Expires: December 9, 2018

IMAP UNAUTHENTICATE for Connection Reuse
draft-ietf-extra-imap-unauth-01

Abstract

This specification extends the Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) to allow an administrative client to reuse the same IMAP connection on behalf of multiple IMAP user identities.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on December 9, 2018.

Copyright Notice

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Modern IMAP [RFC3501] server deployments often have peer systems with administrative privilege that perform actions on behalf of IMAP end-users. For example, a voice mail gateway can use IMAP to store a user's voicemail and mark that voicemail as \Seen when the user listens to it via the phone interface. These systems can issue the IMAP AUTHENTICATE command with administrative credentials to act on behalf of other users. However, with the IMAP base specification, these specialized IMAP clients must close the connection and create a new connection for each user. For efficiency reasons, it is desirable for these clients to reuse the same connection, particularly if SSL has been negotiated. This specification proposes the UNAUTHENTICATE command to achieve this goal.

The IMAP state machine described in section 3 of RFC 3501 does not have a transition from authenticated or selected state to not authenticated state. The UNAUTHENTICATE command adds a transition from authenticated or selected state to not authenticated state.

2. Conventions Used in This Document

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

3. UNAUTHENTICATE Command

[RFC5246] layer. Upon completion, the server connection is placed in not authenticated state. This represents transition 7 in the State Machine Diagram.

Arguments:
None
Responses:
no specific response for this command
Result:
OK - completed, now in not authenticated state
BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

This command directs the server to reset all connection state, except for state at the TLS

If a mailbox was selected, the mailbox ceases to be selected but no expunge event is generated. If a SASL [RFC4422] security layer was active, the server terminates its outgoing security layer immediately after sending the CRLF following the OK response. The client's outgoing security layer terminates immediately after the CRLF following the UNAUTHENTICATE command. Note that a BAD response only occurs if UNAUTHENTICATE is issued in an invalid state, is not advertised by the server, or does not follow the command syntax in the specification, and a NO response is not permitted. As a result, specification-compliant implementations will interoperate across security layer termination.

After sending this command, the client is free to issue a new AUTHENTICATE or LOGIN command as permitted based on the server's capabilities. If no SASL security layer was active, the client is permitted to pipeline the UNAUTHENTICATE command with a subsequent AUTHENTICATE command. If the IMAP server also advertises SASL-IR [RFC4959], this permits an administrative client to re-authenticate in one round trip. Because of this pipelining optimization, a server advertising UNAUTHENTICATE is not permitted to respond to the UNAUTHENTICATE command with a NO response if it is unable to reset state associated with the connection. Servers MAY close the connection with an untagged BYE response if this preferably rare situation occurs.

Servers MAY choose to advertise the UNAUTHENTICATE capability only after authentication has completed. As a result, clients may need to issue an IMAP CAPABILITY command after authentication in order to determine the availability of UNAUTHENTICATE.

The IMAP ID [RFC2971] command provides properties about the client primarily for use in server log or audit files. Because IMAP ID is not related to application authentication or user identity in any way and caching it for the duration of the client connection can be useful, the interaction between IMAP ID and the UNAUTHENTICATE command is implementation defined.

4. Interactions

This section describes interactions between this extension and other IMAP extensions or usage models.

4.1. Stateful Extensions

The connection state for the following list of IMAP extensions MUST be reset if both the specified extension is advertised and the UNAUTHENTICATE command is advertised and used. This list may not be complete; the requirement to reset connection state applies to all current and future extensions except STARTTLS and ID. Additional requirements apply to specific stateful extensions as follows:

4.2. Client Certificates, SASL EXTERNAL and imaps

When a TLS [RFC5246] security layer is negotiated either via the STARTTLS command or use of the imaps port [RFC8314], IMAP servers may be configured to request a client certificate and IMAP clients may provide one. Client credentials at the TLS layer do not normally impact the application layer without use of the SASL EXTERNAL mechanism [RFC4422] in an IMAP AUTHENTICATE command that directs the server to use the provided client certificate to authenticate as the specified IMAP user. The UNAUTHENTICATE command breaks any application-level binding of the TLS client credentials but does not discard the client credentials. As a result, an administrative client may use a client certificate with administrative privilege to act on behalf of multiple IMAP users in the same connection via the EXTERNAL mechanism and the UNAUTHENTICATE command.

Some server implementations using the imaps port will request and use a TLS client certificate to authenticate immediately as the default IMAP identity associated with that certificate. These implementations indicate this behavior by using the PREAUTH greeting as indicated by transition 2 in the State Machine Diagram. As a result, TLS client certificates can not be used for administrative proxy authentication with the imaps port unless the UNAUTHENTICATE command is also advertised. In that case, an administrative client can respond to the PREAUTH greeting with an UNAUTHENTICATE command and then issue an AUTHENTICATE EXTERNAL command.

5. Revised State Machine

                   +----------------------+
                   |connection established|
                   +----------------------+
                              ||
                              \/
            +--------------------------------------+
            |          server greeting             |
            +--------------------------------------+
                      || (1)       || (2)        || (3)
                      \/           ||            ||
            +-----------------+    ||            ||
            |Not Authenticated|<===||=========++ ||
            +-----------------+    ||     (7) || ||
             || (8)   || (4)       ||         || ||
             ||       \/           \/         || ||
             ||     +----------------+        || ||
             ||     |                |========++ ||
             ||     | Authenticated  |<=++    || ||
             ||     +----------------+  ||    || ||
             ||       || (8)   || (5)   ||(6) || ||
             ||       ||       \/       ||    || ||
             ||       ||    +--------+  ||    || ||
             ||       ||    |Selected|==++    || ||
             ||       ||    |        |========++ ||
             ||       ||    +--------+           ||
             ||       ||       || (8)            ||
             \/       \/       \/                \/
            +--------------------------------------+
            |               Logout                 |
            +--------------------------------------+
                              ||
                              \/
                +-------------------------------+
                |both sides close the connection|
                +-------------------------------+

Revised IMAP state machine transitions:

  1. connection without pre-authentication (OK greeting)
  2. pre-authenticated connection (PREAUTH greeting)
  3. rejected connection (BYE greeting)
  4. successful LOGIN or AUTHENTICATE command
  5. successful SELECT or EXAMINE command
  6. CLOSE, UNSELECT [RFC3691] or failed SELECT or EXAMINE command
  7. UNAUTHENTICATE command
  8. LOGOUT command, server shutdown, or connection closed

6. Formal Syntax

The following syntax specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) as described in [RFC5234]. Amended terms are defined in [RFC3501].

  capability     =/ "UNAUTHENTICATE"

  command-auth   =/ "UNAUTHENTICATE"

  command-select =/ "UNAUTHENTICATE"

7. IANA Considerations

The IANA shall add the UNAUTHENTICATE capability to the IMAP4 Capabilities Registry.

8. Security Considerations

The original IMAP state machine was designed to allow a server implementation approach where each IMAP authentication identity matches an operating system identity and the server revokes all administrative privilege once authentication completes. This extension is not compatible with that implementation approach. However, that approach has significant performance costs on Unix systems, and this extension is designed for environments where efficiency is a relatively high priority deployment goal. So this extension is appropriate for some deployments but may not be appropriate for the most security sensitive environments.

IMAP server implementations are complicated and can retain a lot of state related to an authenticated user. Server implementers need to take care to reset all server state such that authentication as a subsequent user does not inherit any data or privileges from the previous user. State data associated with a user can include cached identity information such as group membership used to evaluate access control lists [RFC4314], active notifications [RFC5465], access to per-user data such as flags, etc.

IMAP server systems are often deployed in a two-tier model where a server-side IMAP proxy routes to an IMAP back-end which handles all connections for a subset of possible users. Some IMAP proxies enter a pass-through mode after authentication. The UNAUTHENTICATE command, if enabled, would allow a client to bypass any security restrictions present in the proxy layer but not in the back-end server layer on a subsequent authentication. As a result, IMAP server implementations of this extension MUST provide a way to disable it when it is not needed. Use of an IMAP proxy that processes the UNAUTHENTICATE command at the proxy layer eliminates this concern. Another option to mitigate this concern is for servers to only enable the UNAUTHENTICATE extension if the supplied authentication credentials were associated with an administrative identity.

9. Privacy Considerations

For the most part, this extension will have no impact on the privacy considerations already present in an IMAP implementation. However, if this extension were used between data centers, it could improve end-user privacy by increasing the difficultly of traffic analysis due to connection re-use.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC3501] Crispin, M., "INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL - VERSION 4rev1", RFC 3501, DOI 10.17487/RFC3501, March 2003.
[RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017.

10.2. Informative References

[RFC2971] Showalter, T., "IMAP4 ID extension", RFC 2971, DOI 10.17487/RFC2971, October 2000.
[RFC3691] Melnikov, A., "Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) UNSELECT command", RFC 3691, DOI 10.17487/RFC3691, February 2004.
[RFC4314] Melnikov, A., "IMAP4 Access Control List (ACL) Extension", RFC 4314, DOI 10.17487/RFC4314, December 2005.
[RFC4422] Melnikov, A. and K. Zeilenga, "Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)", RFC 4422, DOI 10.17487/RFC4422, June 2006.
[RFC4959] Siemborski, R. and A. Gulbrandsen, "IMAP Extension for Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) Initial Client Response", RFC 4959, DOI 10.17487/RFC4959, September 2007.
[RFC4978] Gulbrandsen, A., "The IMAP COMPRESS Extension", RFC 4978, DOI 10.17487/RFC4978, August 2007.
[RFC5161] Gulbrandsen, A. and A. Melnikov, "The IMAP ENABLE Extension", RFC 5161, DOI 10.17487/RFC5161, March 2008.
[RFC5182] Melnikov, A., "IMAP Extension for Referencing the Last SEARCH Result", RFC 5182, DOI 10.17487/RFC5182, March 2008.
[RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August 2008.
[RFC5255] Newman, C., Gulbrandsen, A. and A. Melnikov, "Internet Message Access Protocol Internationalization", RFC 5255, DOI 10.17487/RFC5255, June 2008.
[RFC5267] Cridland, D. and C. King, "Contexts for IMAP4", RFC 5267, DOI 10.17487/RFC5267, July 2008.
[RFC5464] Daboo, C., "The IMAP METADATA Extension", RFC 5464, DOI 10.17487/RFC5464, February 2009.
[RFC5465] Gulbrandsen, A., King, C. and A. Melnikov, "The IMAP NOTIFY Extension", RFC 5465, DOI 10.17487/RFC5465, February 2009.
[RFC6855] Resnick, P., Newman, C. and S. Shen, "IMAP Support for UTF-8", RFC 6855, DOI 10.17487/RFC6855, March 2013.
[RFC7162] Melnikov, A. and D. Cridland, "IMAP Extensions: Quick Flag Changes Resynchronization (CONDSTORE) and Quick Mailbox Resynchronization (QRESYNC)", RFC 7162, DOI 10.17487/RFC7162, May 2014.
[RFC8314] Moore, K. and C. Newman, "Cleartext Considered Obsolete: Use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) for Email Submission and Access", RFC 8314, DOI 10.17487/RFC8314, January 2018.

Appendix A. Design Considerations

The author deliberately choose to add a separate UNAUTHENTICATE command instead of allowing the LOGIN or AUTHENTICATE commands to be issued when the connection is in a state other than unauthenticated state. The primary reason for this choice is because the code that transitions from not authenticated state to authenticated state in a server is often the most security sensitive code as it needs to assume and handle unconditionally hostile attackers. That sensitive code is simpler if it only handles a single server state (unauthenticated) and the state transition is as simple as possible. Smaller and simpler code is easier to audit and write in a secure way.

A secondary reason to have a separate command is that it is simpler to enable or disable the feature with that design. See the discussion in the security considerations section recommending implementations provide a way to disable this extension.

Appendix B. Acknowledgements

Thanks to Fred Batty for implementing UNAUTHENTICATE, and to Cyrus Daboo for constructive suggestions to improve this draft.

Author's Address

Chris Newman Oracle 440 E. Huntington Dr., Suite 400 Arcadia, CA 91006 US EMail: chris.newman@oracle.com