The EAP Method Update (emu) WG in the Security Area of the IETF is undergoing
rechartering. The IESG has not made any determination yet. The following
draft charter was submitted, and is provided for informational purposes only.
Please send your comments to the IESG mailing list (i...@ietf.org) by
2024-05-24.

EAP Method Update (emu)
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Current status: Active WG

Chairs:
  Joseph Salowey <j...@salowey.net>
  Peter Yee <pe...@akayla.com>

Assigned Area Director:
  Paul Wouters <paul.wout...@aiven.io>

Security Area Directors:
  Paul Wouters <paul.wout...@aiven.io>
  Deb Cooley <debcool...@gmail.com>

Mailing list:
  Address: e...@ietf.org
  To subscribe: https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/emu
  Archive: https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/emu

Group page: https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/emu/

Charter: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/charter-ietf-emu/

The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) [RFC3748] is a network access
authentication framework used, for instance, in VPN and mobile networks. EAP
itself is a simple protocol and actual authentication happens in EAP methods.
Several EAP methods have been developed at the IETF and support for EAP
exists in a broad set of devices. Previous larger EAP-related efforts at the
IETF included rewriting the base EAP protocol specification and the
development of several standards track EAP methods.

EAP methods are generally based on existing security technologies such as
Transport Layer Security (TLS) and mobile network Authentication and Key
Agreement (AKA). Our understanding of security threats is continuously
evolving. This has driven the evolution of several of these underlying
technologies. As an example, IETF has standardized a new and improved version
of TLS in RFC 8446. The group will therefore provide guidance and update EAP
method specifications where necessary to enable the use of new versions of
these underlying technologies.

Out-of-band (OOB) refers to a separate communication channel independent of
the primary in-band channel over which the actual network communication takes
place. OOB channels are now used for authentication in a variety of protocols
and devices (draft-ietf-oauth-device-flow-13, WhatsApp Web, etc.). Many users
are accustomed to tapping NFC or scanning QR codes. However, EAP currently
does not have any standard methods that support authentication based on OOB
channels. The group will therefore work on an EAP method where authentication
is based on an out-of-band channel between the peer and the server.

EAP authentication is based on credentials available on the peer and the
server. However, some EAP methods use credentials that are time or domain
limited (such as EAP-POTP), and there may be a need for creating long term
credentials for re-authenticating the peer in a more general context. The
group will investigate minimal mechanisms with which limited-use EAP
authentication credentials can be used for creating general-use long-term
credentials.

EDHOC (Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE) is a very compact and lightweight
authenticated Diffie-Hellman key exchange with ephemeral keys that is
suitable in constrained environments in which many of the existing EAP
methods are not a good fit. EDHOC offers the useful properties of mutual
authentication, forward secrecy, and identity protection. The group will
accordingly produce a specification for an EAP method incorporating the EDHOC
mechanism (draft-ietf-lake-edhoc).

While TLS-based EAP mechanisms provide strong channel protections, if the
client does not authenticate and validate the server's credentials properly
(possibly owing to a lack of provisioned information necessary to undertake
that validation), an EAP mechanism running over TLS that relies on passwords
is vulnerable to client credential theft, much the same as password
authentication over plain TLS is. The FIDO Alliance and the W3C have
developed a passwordless authentication scheme known as FIDO2, which combines
elements of the W3C's WebAuthn and FIDO's CTAP standards. The group will
devise an EAP method suitable for use with passwordless authentication
schemes such as the CTAP2 version of FIDO2.

In summary, the working group shall produce the following documents:

* An update to enable the use of TLS 1.3 in the context of EAP-TLS (RFC
5216). This document will update the security considerations relating to
EAP-TLS, document the implications of using new vs. old TLS versions. It will
add any recently gained new knowledge on vulnerabilities and discuss the
possible implications of pervasive surveillance.

* Several EAP methods such EAP-TTLS and EAP-FAST use an outer TLS tunnel.
Provide guidance or update the relevant specifications explaining how those
EAP methods (PEAP/TTLS/TEAP) will work with TLS 1.3. This will also involve
maintenance work based on errata found in published specifications (such as
EAP-TEAP).

* Define session identifiers for fast re-authentication for EAP-SIM, EAP-AKA,
EAP-PEAP and EAP-AKA’. The lack of this definition is a recently discovered
bug in the original RFCs.

* Update the EAP-AKA' specification (RFC 5448) to ensure that its capability
to provide a cryptographic binding to network context stays in sync with
updates to the referenced 3GPP specifications. The document will also contain
any recently gained new knowledge on vulnerabilities or the possible
implications of pervasive surveillance.

* Gather experience regarding the use of large certificates and long
certificate chains in the context of TLS based EAP methods, as some
implementations and access networks may limit the number of EAP packet
exchanges that can be handled. Document operational recommendations or other
mitigation strategies to avoid issues.

* Define a standard EAP method for mutual authentication between a peer and a
server that is based on an out-of-band channel. The method itself should be
independent of the underlying OOB channel and shall support a variety of OOB
channels such as NFC, dynamically generated QR codes, audio, and visible
light.

* Define mechanisms by which EAP methods can support creation of long-term
credentials for the peer based on initial limited-use credentials.

* Develop an EAP method for use in constrained environments that wish to
leverage the EDHOC key exchange mechanism.

* Devise a passwordless EAP method that can incorporate use of CTAP2 or other
similar authentication mechanism.

The working group is expected to stay in close collaboration with the EAP
deployment community, the TLS working group (for work on TLS based EAP
methods), the FIDO Alliance, and the 3GPP security architecture group (for
EAP-AKA' work).

Milestones:

  May 2024 - WG adopts initial draft on an EAP method for use of EDHOC

  May 2024 - WG adopts initial draft on an EAP method for using FIDO CTAP2

  May 2024 - WG adopts an ancillary draft on use of the eap.arpa domain for
  use in other EAP methods



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