Cisco VPN Concentrator IKE resource exhaustion DoS Advisory 1. Overview NTA Monitor discovered a denial of service vulnerability in the Cisco VPN 3000 series concentrator products while performing a VPN security test for a customer in July 2005. The vulnerability affects Phase-1 of the IKE protocol. Both Main Mode and Aggressive Mode over both UDP and TCP transports are affected. The vulnerability allows an attacker to exhaust the IKE resources on a VPN concentrator by sending a high rate of IKE requests, which will prevent valid clients from connected or re-keying. The attack does not require a high bandwidth, so one attacker could potentially target many concentrators. This mechanism behind this vulnerability is similar to the well-known TCP SYN flood vulnerability. 2. Vulnerability Details The vulnerability allows an attacker to exhaust the IKE resources on a remote VPN concentrator by starting new IKE sessions faster than the concentrator expires them from its queue. By doing this, the attacker fills up the concentrator's queue, which prevents it from handling valid IKE requests. The exploit involves sending IKE Phase-1 packets containing an acceptable transform. It is not necessary to have valid credentials in order to exploit this vulnerability, as the problem occurs before the authentication stage. The vulnerability affects both Main Mode and Aggressive Mode, and both normal IKE over UDP and Cisco proprietary TCP-encapsulated IKE. In order to exploit the vulnerability, the attacker needs to send IKE packets at a rate which exceeds the Concentrator's IKE session expiry rate. Tests show that the target concentrator starts to be affected at a rate of 2 packets per second, and is becomes unusable at 10 packets per second. As a minimal Main Mode packet with a single transform is 112 bytes long, 10 packets per second corresponds to a data rate of slightly less than 9,000 bits per second. The concentrator will remain unable to process IKE requests as long as the flow of packets continues. Once the flow stops, the concentrator will return to normal operation as the negotiation queue drains. It is not normally possible to block public inbound access to the IKE service on the VPN concentrator, because it is required for remote access IPsec operation. As IKE normally uses the UDP transport protocol, the attacker may forge the packet's source IP address to avoid identification, or to prevent the victim from blocking the traffic with ingress filtering. In addition, IDS/IPS systems will probably not be able to detect the attack, because the packets are valid IKE packets. It is possible for attackers to detect and fingerprint Cisco VPN concentrators using the IKE fingerprinting techniques that we have previously published in VPN security white papers. Therefore users should not assume that their concentrator is invisible just because it's not published in the DNS and is not running any TCP services. The symptoms are that the target concentrator won't respond to IKE requests from any source when all the negotiation slots are filled. This means that new clients will be unable to connect, and Phase-1 re-keying attempts will fail. It is not known if Phase-2 re-keying is also affected. Traffic over existing VPN tunnels should not be affected until they need to re-key. The mechanism behind this vulnerability is similar to that behind the well-known TCP SYN flood issue. In both cases the target system has a stateful mechanism for recording outstanding negotiations, uses a fixed-size list to store negotiations in progress, and does not require any authentication in order to start a negotiation. 3. Example We are not planning to release examples of how to exploit this vulnerability until it has been addressed and users have had an opportunity to apply the fix or workaround. 4. Affected Versions The issue is believed to affect all models of Cisco VPN 3000 Concentrator: 3005, 3015, 3020, 3030, 3060 and 3080. It is suspected that other cisco products that support IKE may also be affected, but this has not been confirmed. 5. Solution There is no known fix or workaround at this time. 6. Timeline The vulnerability was first discovered on 4th July 2005, and was reported to Cisco's security team (PSIRT) the same day. Cisco responded on 9th August 2005, but no further progress has been made. 7. References NTA Monitor advisory http://www.nta-monitor.com/posts/2006/07/cisco-concentrator-dos.html Roy Hills NTA Monitor Ltd -- Roy Hills Tel: +44 1634 721855 NTA Monitor Ltd FAX: +44 1634 721844 14 Ashford House, Beaufort Court, Medway City Estate, Email: Roy.Hills@nta-monitor.com Rochester, Kent ME2 4FA, UK WWW: http://www.nta-monitor.com/