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		    A Proposal for a Standardized
		 Kerberos Password Changing Protocol

		   **DRAFT**  **DRAFT**  **DRAFT**

			   by Theodore Ts'o
			  September 7, 1995
				   
Rationale
=========

Currently, the Kerberos administration server which is being shipped
with the Beta Kerberos V5 distributions from MIT has not been of
sufficient quality for vendors to ship it in their products.  Hence,
many vendors are creating and deploying proprietary administration
servers.  In general, this is not a big problem --- relatively few
users are Kerberos administrators and thus the Kerberos administration
clients are used by relatively few users.

There is a big exception to this, however, which is the functionality of
a user being able to change his or her own password.  Application
programs may want to include this functionality in their programs; it
would be desireable for there to be a standardized protocol for doing
this.  Standardized Kerberos desktop management programs (such as
Cornell's Authman) would also benefit from a standardized protocol; this
way, they will do not need to implement many vendor-specific Kerberos
administration protocols.  Similarily, at least one terminal server
vendor has come to expressing their concern that there was not a
standardized password changing protocol, since they wanted their product
to offer this functionality.

This protocol is designed to address these concerns.


Protocol Description
====================

The protocol used by the password changing protocol is intentionally
very simple.  This is to encourage its widespread implementation, even
in cases where there are size constraints (i.e., in a terminal server).

The protocol will use a TCP stream connection using port 464.  The
symbolic name of this port is kpasswd:

		kpasswd		464/tcp


The following encoding standards are used throughout.

Integers are sent as 4 byte objects, where the most significant byte
is sent first, and the least signifcant byte is sent last.  (i.e.,
standard Internet network byte order.)

Protocol data units (PDU's) are sent across using the following
encoding.  First, the size of the PDU is sent as a 4 byte integer,
followed by the PDU itself.  PDU's used by the protocol will be either a
KRB_AP_REQ message, a KRB_AP_REP message, a "command request" PDU, or a
"command response" PDU.  (The last two PDU's are encoded using a
KRB_PRIV message.  For definitions of the KRB_AP_REQ, KRB_AP_REP, and
KRB_PRIV message, see the Kerberos V5 protocol specification found in
RFC 1510.)

The PDU's which are encoded using the KRB_PRIV message must include the
sequence number field --- the client and server must fill in each
successive PDU that it sends with a monotonically increasing sequence
number.  The initial sequence number in each direction are negotiated in
the KRB_AP_REQ and KRB_AP_REP messages.

The size of a Protoocl Data Unit SHOULD not exceed 16,384 bytes.  If an
implementation receives a PDU which is larger that 16,384 bytes, the
implementation MAY consider this a fatal error and terminate the TCP
connection.  An implementation MUST be able to receive PDU's of at least
16,384 bytes.

The "command request" PDU
-------------------------

The "command request" PDU is sent from the client to server.  This PDU
uses the following structure: First, the number of arguments, sent
across as an integer.  The number of arguments MUST be greater than
zero.  It is then followed by the arguments themselves, which are
encoded as an integer length followed by the value of the argument.

The first argument is "command name".  The command name is a NETASCII
string, and it may not contain an ASCII null.  Command names are case
insentive.  Valid command names are defined below; any site-, or vendor-
specific extensions to this protocol should use command names which
begin with the letter 'X'.

The other arguments (if any) are dependent on the command specified by
the first argument.

In other words:

	Number of Arguments (integer, must be greater than zero)
		Arg size 1 (integer)
		Arg data 1 (octet string, command name)
		...
		Arg size N (integer)
		Arg data N (octet string)

This structure is then encrypted using the Kerberos V5 KRB_PRIV message.

The "command reply" PDU
-----------------------

In response to a "command request" PDU, the server will send to the
client a "command reply" PDU.  The structure of a "command reply" PDU is
as follows:

	status code (integer)
	Number of reply components (integer, may be zero)
		Arg size 1 (integer)
		Arg data 1 (octet string)
		...
		Arg size N (integer)
		Arg data N (octet string)

This structure is then encrypted using the Kerberos V5 KRB_PRIV message.

The status code may be one of the following values:

# Symbolic name			Meaning

0 SUCCESS		The command was executed without any errors
1 CMD_UNKNOWN		Command not recognized
2 PW_UNACCEPT		The password chosen by the user is unnacceptable.
3 BAD_PW		The old password furnished by the user is not correct.
4 NOT_IN_TKT		The ticket used to authenticate to the server
				did not have the TKT_FLAG_INITIAL flag set.
5 CANT_CHANGE		The server is not able to change the password
				due to no fault of the user.  (For
				example, the database may be in
				read-only mode for maintance reasons.)
6 LANG_NOT_SUPPORTED	The requested language is not supported.

The error codes below 127, and above 256 are reserved for future
expansion.  Local extensions of this protocol should use error codes
between 128 and 255.

The user text in the reply message is generally some sort of
explanatory text, which should be displayed to the user.


Connection Establishment
========================

When a connection is made the password changing client exchanges the
following PDU's:

Client				Server
------				------

KRB_AP_REQ      ------->

		<-------        KRB_AP_REP

KRB_AP_REQ and KRB_AP_REP are the respective Kerberos V5 messages.  The
client will autenticate to the server using the service name
changepw/<REALMNAME>@<REALMNAME>, where <REALMNAME> should be
substituted with the name of the Kerberos realm of the password changing
server.  The client MUST set the MUTUAL-REQUIRED flag in the KRB_AP_REQ
message, which indicates that server shall send a KRB_AP_REP message for
the purposes of establishing mutual authentication between the client
and the server.

Protocol Commands
==================

After the connection is established, the client may then send any
number of "command request" PDUs; after each command request PDU is
sent, the client should wait for a "command reply" PDU from the
server.

If after 30 seconds inactivity, the client does not send a "command
request" PDU, the server MAY elect to terminate the TCP connection.

The following commands defined in this standard: 

	QUIT
	CHECKPW
	CHANGEPW
	MOTD (*)
	MIME (*)
	LANGUAGE (*)

The commands marked with a (*) are optional; servers may or may not
elect to support these commands.  If the commands are not supported, the
server shall return a status code of CMD_UNKNOWN.

The quit command
----------------

The name of this command is "QUIT", and it takes no arguments.  The
response to this command must be the error code "NO_ERROR".  There may
be an optional reply component, which will consist of user text which
should be displayed to the user.  After processing this command, the
server will terminate the connection.

Kerberos password changing servers MUST implement this command.


The check password command
---------------------------

The name of this command is "CHECKPW", and it takes one argument,
which is a proposed password.  The server will evaluate this password
according to its criteria and return either an NO_ERROR or PW_UNACCEPT
error code.  

There may be an optional reply component which consists of user text
which should be displayed to the user.  It will typically explain why
the password was unacceptable.

Kerberos password changing servers MUST implement this command.


The change password command
---------------------------

The name of this command is "CHANGEPW", and it takes two arguments.  The
first argument is the old password, and the second password is the new
password.  The response from this command will generally be one of the
following error codes: NO_ERROR, PW_UNACCEPT, BAD_PW, NOT_IN_TKT,
CANT_CHANGE.

This command changes the password of the Kerberos principal which the
client used to authenticate to the server.  For security reasons, the
server should check to make sure that the ticket used to authenticate to
the server had the TKT_FLG_INITIAL flag set; if this flag is not set in
the ticket, then when the client attempts to use the "CHANGEPW" command,
the server should return the NOT_IN_TKT error.

There may be an optional reply component which consists of user text
which should be displayed to the user, explaining why the password was
unacceptable or why the user's password could not be changed.

Kerberos password changing servers MUST implement this command.


The Message of the Day command
------------------------------

The name of this command is "MOTD", and it takes zero or one additional
arguments.  The optional argument is a magic token passed back from a
previous MOTD command.  If this magic token is sent, the server MAY use
it to determine use it to determine what (if any) messages should be
displayed to the user.

This command returns one or two reply components.  The first reply
component is a magic token; the magic token shall be a NETASCII string
which may not contain an ASCII null character, and its length shall be
less than 64 characters.  A client MAY store this magic token between
invocations of the client, and send it to the server the next time the
MOTD command is requested.

The second (optional) reply component contains text which should be
displayed to the user.

Kerberos password changing servers MAY optionally implement this command.


The MIME command
----------------

The name of this command is "MIME", and it takes zero additional
arguments.

This command indicates that the client is willing to accept
MIME-enhanced textual messages in place of the standard NETASCII textual
messages.

If this command is not sent, the server MUST send all textual messages
using NETASCII, with <CR><LF> used as a line breaks, and line lengths no
more than 80 characters.  If this command is sent, and the server
returns a status code of SUCCESS, the server MUST send textual messages
as MIME-enhanced textual messages.  The server may refuse to send MIME
messages by sending a status code of CMD_UNKNOWN.

Kerberos password changing servers MAY optionally implement this command.


The Language Command
---------------------

The name of this command is "LANGUAGE", and it takes one additional
argument, which indicates the language that the textual messages should
be sent back in.  This additional argument must be consist of NETASCII
characters, with ASCII nulls not allowed.  The argument shall be case
insensitive.  What constitute valid arguments to this command are a
local matter.  [Since ISO apparently doesn't have a standard way of
referring to different languages or dialects.]

This command indicates that the client would prefer that textual
messages be sent back using the requested language.  If the server does
not support the requested language, the server may refuse the request by
sending the error code LANG_NOT_SUPPORTED.

Kerberos password changing servers MAY optionally implement this command.


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