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- Network Working Group Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- Request for Comments: 1050 April 1988
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- RPC: Remote Procedure Call
- Protocol Specification
-
- STATUS OF THIS MEMO
-
- This RFC describes a standard that Sun Microsystems and others are
- using and is one we wish to propose for the Internet's consideration.
- This memo is not an Internet standard at this time. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
- 1. INTRODUCTION
-
- This document specifies a message protocol used in implementing Sun's
- Remote Procedure Call (RPC) package. The message protocol is
- specified with the eXternal Data Representation (XDR) language [9].
- This document assumes that the reader is familiar with XDR. It does
- not attempt to justify RPC or its uses. The paper by Birrell and
- Nelson [1] is recommended as an excellent background to and
- justification of RPC.
-
- 2. TERMINOLOGY
-
- This document discusses servers, services, programs, procedures,
- clients, and versions. A server is a piece of software where network
- services are implemented. A network service is a collection of one
- or more remote programs. A remote program implements one or more
- remote procedures; the procedures, their parameters, and results are
- documented in the specific program's protocol specification (see
- Appendix A for an example). Network clients are pieces of software
- that initiate remote procedure calls to services. A server may
- support more than one version of a remote program in order to be
- forward compatible with changing protocols.
-
- For example, a network file service may be composed of two programs.
- One program may deal with high-level applications such as file system
- access control and locking. The other may deal with low-level file
- IO and have procedures like "read" and "write". A client machine of
- the network file service would call the procedures associated with
- the two programs of the service on behalf of some user on the client
- machine.
-
-
-
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- 3. THE RPC MODEL
-
- The remote procedure call model is similar to the local procedure
- call model. In the local case, the caller places arguments to a
- procedure in some well-specified location (such as a result
- register). It then transfers control to the procedure, and
- eventually gains back control. At that point, the results of the
- procedure are extracted from the well-specified location, and the
- caller continues execution.
-
- The remote procedure call is similar, in that one thread of control
- logically winds through two processes -- one is the caller's process,
- the other is a server's process. That is, the caller process sends a
- call message to the server process and waits (blocks) for a reply
- message. The call message contains the procedure's parameters, among
- other things. The reply message contains the procedure's results,
- among other things. Once the reply message is received, the results
- of the procedure are extracted, and caller's execution is resumed.
-
- On the server side, a process is dormant awaiting the arrival of a
- call message. When one arrives, the server process extracts the
- procedure's parameters, computes the results, sends a reply message,
- and then awaits the next call message.
-
- Note that in this model, only one of the two processes is active at
- any given time. However, this model is only given as an example.
- The RPC protocol makes no restrictions on the concurrency model
- implemented, and others are possible. For example, an implementation
- may choose to have RPC calls be asynchronous, so that the client may
- do useful work while waiting for the reply from the server. Another
- possibility is to have the server create a task to process an
- incoming request, so that the server can be free to receive other
- requests.
-
- 4. TRANSPORTS AND SEMANTICS
-
- The RPC protocol is independent of transport protocols. That is, RPC
- does not care how a message is passed from one process to another.
- The protocol deals only with specification and interpretation of
- messages.
-
- It is important to point out that RPC does not try to implement any
- kind of reliability and that the application must be aware of the
- type of transport protocol underneath RPC. If it knows it is running
- on top of a reliable transport such as TCP/IP [6], then most of the
- work is already done for it. On the other hand, if it is running on
- top of an unreliable transport such as UDP/IP [7], it must implement
- its own retransmission and time-out policy as the RPC layer does not
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 2]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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-
- provide this service.
-
- Because of transport independence, the RPC protocol does not attach
- specific semantics to the remote procedures or their execution.
- Semantics can be inferred from (but should be explicitly specified
- by) the underlying transport protocol. For example, consider RPC
- running on top of an unreliable transport such as UDP/IP. If an
- application retransmits RPC messages after short time-outs, the only
- thing it can infer if it receives no reply is that the procedure was
- executed zero or more times. If it does receive a reply, then it can
- infer that the procedure was executed at least once.
-
- A server may wish to remember previously granted requests from a
- client and not regrant them in order to insure some degree of
- execute-at-most-once semantics. A server can do this by taking
- advantage of the transaction ID that is packaged with every RPC
- request. The main use of this transaction is by the client RPC layer
- in matching replies to requests. However, a client application may
- choose to reuse its previous transaction ID when retransmitting a
- request. The server application, knowing this fact, may choose to
- remember this ID after granting a request and not regrant requests
- with the same ID in order to achieve some degree of execute-at-most-
- once semantics. The server is not allowed to examine this ID in any
- other way except as a test for equality.
-
- On the other hand, if using a reliable transport such as TCP/IP, the
- application can infer from a reply message that the procedure was
- executed exactly once, but if it receives no reply message, it cannot
- assume the remote procedure was not executed. Note that even if a
- connection-oriented protocol like TCP is used, an application still
- needs time-outs and reconnection to handle server crashes.
-
- There are other possibilities for transports besides datagram- or
- connection-oriented protocols. For example, a request-reply protocol
- such as VMTP [2] is perhaps the most natural transport for RPC.
-
- Note: At Sun, RPC is currently implemented on top of both TCP/IP and
- UDP/IP transports.
-
- 5. BINDING AND RENDEZVOUS INDEPENDENCE
-
- The act of binding a client to a service is NOT part of the remote
- procedure call specification. This important and necessary function
- is left up to some higher-level software. (The software may use RPC
- itself; see Appendix A.)
-
- Implementors should think of the RPC protocol as the jump-subroutine
- instruction ("JSR") of a network; the loader (binder) makes JSR
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 3]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- useful, and the loader itself uses JSR to accomplish its task.
- Likewise, the network makes RPC useful, using RPC to accomplish this
- task.
-
- 6. AUTHENTICATION
-
- The RPC protocol provides the fields necessary for a client to
- identify itself to a service and vice-versa. Security and access
- control mechanisms can be built on top of the message authentication.
- Several different authentication protocols can be supported. A field
- in the RPC header indicates which protocol is being used. More
- information on specific authentication protocols is in section 9:
- "Authentication Protocols".
-
- 7. RPC PROTOCOL REQUIREMENTS
-
- The RPC protocol must provide for the following:
-
- (1) Unique specification of a procedure to be called.
- (2) Provisions for matching response messages to request messages.
- (3) Provisions for authenticating the caller to service and
- vice-versa.
-
- Besides these requirements, features that detect the following are
- worth supporting because of protocol roll-over errors, implementation
- bugs, user error, and network administration:
-
- (1) RPC protocol mismatches.
- (2) Remote program protocol version mismatches.
- (3) Protocol errors (such as misspecification of a procedure's
- parameters).
- (4) Reasons why remote authentication failed.
- (5) Any other reasons why the desired procedure was not called.
-
- 7.1 RPC Programs and Procedures
-
- The RPC call message has three unsigned fields: remote program
- number, remote program version number, and remote procedure number.
- The three fields uniquely identify the procedure to be called.
- Program numbers are administered by some central authority (like
- Sun). Once an implementor has a program number, he can implement his
- remote program; the first implementation would most likely have the
- version number of 1. Because most new protocols evolve into better,
- stable, and mature protocols, a version field of the call message
- identifies which version of the protocol the caller is using.
- Version numbers make speaking old and new protocols through the same
- server process possible.
-
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- The procedure number identifies the procedure to be called. These
- numbers are documented in the specific program's protocol
- specification. For example, a file service's protocol specification
- may state that its procedure number 5 is "read" and procedure number
- 12 is "write".
-
- Just as remote program protocols may change over several versions,
- the actual RPC message protocol could also change. Therefore, the
- call message also has in it the RPC version number, which is always
- equal to two for the version of RPC described here.
-
- The reply message to a request message has enough information to
- distinguish the following error conditions:
-
- (1) The remote implementation of RPC does speak protocol version 2.
- The lowest and highest supported RPC version numbers are
- returned.
-
- (2) The remote program is not available on the remote system.
-
- (3) The remote program does not support the requested version number.
- The lowest and highest supported remote program version numbers
- are returned.
-
- (4) The requested procedure number does not exist. (This is usually
- a caller side protocol or programming error.)
-
- (5) The parameters to the remote procedure appear to be garbage
- from the server's point of view. (Again, this is usually
- caused by a disagreement about the protocol between client
- and service.)
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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-
- 7.2 Authentication
-
- Provisions for authentication of caller to service and vice-versa are
- provided as a part of the RPC protocol. The call message has two
- authentication fields, the credentials and verifier. The reply
- message has one authentication field, the response verifier. The RPC
- protocol specification defines all three fields to be the following
- opaque type:
-
- enum auth_flavor {
- AUTH_NULL = 0,
- AUTH_UNIX = 1,
- AUTH_SHORT = 2,
- AUTH_DES = 3
- /* and more to be defined */
- };
-
- struct opaque_auth {
- auth_flavor flavor;
- opaque body<400>;
- };
-
- In simple English, any "opaque_auth" structure is an "auth_flavor"
- enumeration followed by bytes which are opaque to the RPC protocol
- implementation.
-
- The interpretation and semantics of the data contained within the
- authentication fields is specified by individual, independent
- authentication protocol specifications. (Section 9 defines the
- various authentication protocols.)
-
- If authentication parameters were rejected, the response message
- contains information stating why they were rejected.
-
- 7.3 Program Number Assignment
-
- Program numbers are given out in groups of hexadecimal 20000000
- (decimal 536870912) according to the following chart:
-
- 0 - 1fffffff defined by Sun
- 20000000 - 3fffffff defined by user
- 40000000 - 5fffffff transient
- 60000000 - 7fffffff reserved
- 80000000 - 9fffffff reserved
- a0000000 - bfffffff reserved
- c0000000 - dfffffff reserved
- e0000000 - ffffffff reserved
-
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 6]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- The first group is a range of numbers administered by Sun
- Microsystems and should be identical for all sites. The second range
- is for applications peculiar to a particular site. This range is
- intended primarily for debugging new programs. When a site develops
- an application that might be of general interest, that application
- should be given an assigned number in the first range. The third
- group is for applications that generate program numbers dynamically.
- The final groups are reserved for future use, and should not be used.
-
- 7.4 Other Uses of the RPC Protocol
-
- The intended use of this protocol is for calling remote procedures.
- That is, each call message is matched with a response message.
- However, the protocol itself is a message-passing protocol with which
- other (non-RPC) protocols can be implemented. Sun currently uses, or
- perhaps abuses, the RPC message protocol for the following two (non-
- RPC) protocols: batching (or pipelining) and broadcast RPC. These
- two protocols are discussed but not defined below.
-
- 7.4.1 Batching
-
- Batching allows a client to send an arbitrarily large sequence of
- call messages to a server; batching typically uses reliable byte
- stream protocols (like TCP/IP) for its transport. In the case of
- batching, the client never waits for a reply from the server, and the
- server does not send replies to batch requests. A sequence of batch
- calls is usually terminated by a legitimate RPC in order to flush the
- pipeline (with positive acknowledgement).
-
- 7.4.2 Broadcast RPC
-
- In broadcast RPC-based protocols, the client sends a broadcast packet
- to the network and waits for numerous replies. Broadcast RPC uses
- unreliable, packet-based protocols (like UDP/IP) as its transports.
- Servers that support broadcast protocols only respond when the
- request is successfully processed, and are silent in the face of
- errors. Broadcast RPC uses the Port Mapper RPC service to achieve
- its semantics. (See Appendix A for more information.)
-
- 8. THE RPC MESSAGE PROTOCOL
-
- This section defines the RPC message protocol in the XDR data
- description language. The message is defined in a top-down style.
-
- enum msg_type {
- CALL = 0,
- REPLY = 1
- };
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- /*
- * A reply to a call message can take on two forms:
- * The message was either accepted or rejected.
- */
- enum reply_stat {
- MSG_ACCEPTED = 0,
- MSG_DENIED = 1
- };
-
- /*
- * Given that a call message was accepted, the following is the
- * status of an attempt to call a remote procedure.
- */
- enum accept_stat {
- SUCCESS = 0, /* RPC executed successfully */
- PROG_UNAVAIL = 1, /* remote hasn't exported program */
- PROG_MISMATCH = 2, /* remote can't support version # */
- PROC_UNAVAIL = 3, /* program can't support procedure */
- GARBAGE_ARGS = 4 /* procedure can't decode params */
- };
-
- /*
- * Reasons why a call message was rejected:
- */
- enum reject_stat {
- RPC_MISMATCH = 0, /* RPC version number != 2 */
- AUTH_ERROR = 1 /* remote can't authenticate caller */
- };
-
- /*
- * Why authentication failed:
- */
- enum auth_stat {
- AUTH_BADCRED = 1, /* bad credentials (seal broken) */
- AUTH_REJECTEDCRED = 2, /* client must begin new session */
- AUTH_BADVERF = 3, /* bad verifier (seal broken) */
- AUTH_REJECTEDVERF = 4, /* verifier expired or replayed */
- AUTH_TOOWEAK = 5 /* rejected for security reasons */
- };
-
- /*
- * The RPC message:
- * All messages start with a transaction identifier, xid,
- * followed by a two-armed discriminated union. The union's
- * discriminant is a msg_type which switches to one of the two
- * types of the message. The xid of a REPLY message always
- * matches that of the initiating CALL message. NB: The xid
- * field is only used for clients matching reply messages with
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 8]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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-
- * call messages or for servers detecting retransmissions; the
- * service side cannot treat this id as any type of sequence
- * number.
- */
- struct rpc_msg {
- unsigned int xid;
- union switch (msg_type mtype) {
- case CALL:
- call_body cbody;
- case REPLY:
- reply_body rbody;
- } body;
- };
-
- /*
- * Body of an RPC request call:
- * In version 2 of the RPC protocol specification, rpcvers must
- * be equal to 2. The fields prog, vers, and proc specify the
- * remote program, its version number, and the procedure within
- * the remote program to be called. After these fields are two
- * authentication parameters: cred (authentication credentials)
- * and verf (authentication verifier). The two authentication
- * parameters are followed by the parameters to the remote
- * procedure, which are specified by the specific program
- * protocol.
- */
- struct call_body {
- unsigned int rpcvers; /* must be equal to two (2) */
- unsigned int prog;
- unsigned int vers;
- unsigned int proc;
- opaque_auth cred;
- opaque_auth verf;
- /* procedure specific parameters start here */
- };
-
- /*
- * Body of a reply to an RPC request:
- * The call message was either accepted or rejected.
- */
- union reply_body switch (reply_stat stat) {
- case MSG_ACCEPTED:
- accepted_reply areply;
- case MSG_DENIED:
- rejected_reply rreply;
- } reply;
-
- /*
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 9]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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-
- * Reply to an RPC request that was accepted by the server:
- * there could be an error even though the request was accepted.
- * The first field is an authentication verifier that the server
- * generates in order to validate itself to the caller. It is
- * followed by a union whose discriminant is an enum
- * accept_stat. The SUCCESS arm of the union is protocol
- * specific. The PROG_UNAVAIL, PROC_UNAVAIL, and GARBAGE_ARGS
- * arms of the union are void. The PROG_MISMATCH arm specifies
- * the lowest and highest version numbers of the remote program
- * supported by the server.
- */
- struct accepted_reply {
- opaque_auth verf;
- union switch (accept_stat stat) {
- case SUCCESS:
- opaque results[0];
- /*
- * procedure-specific results start here
- */
- case PROG_MISMATCH:
- struct {
- unsigned int low;
- unsigned int high;
- } mismatch_info;
- default:
- /*
- * Void. Cases include PROG_UNAVAIL, PROC_UNAVAIL,
- * and GARBAGE_ARGS.
- */
- void;
- } reply_data;
- };
-
- /*
- * Reply to an RPC request that was rejected by the server:
- * The request can be rejected for two reasons: either the
- * server is not running a compatible version of the RPC
- * protocol (RPC_MISMATCH), or the server refuses to
- * authenticate the caller (AUTH_ERROR). In case of an RPC
- * version mismatch, the server returns the lowest and highest
- * supported RPC version numbers. In case of refused
- * authentication, failure status is returned.
- */
- union rejected_reply switch (reject_stat stat) {
- case RPC_MISMATCH:
- struct {
- unsigned int low;
- unsigned int high;
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 10]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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- } mismatch_info;
- case AUTH_ERROR:
- auth_stat stat;
- };
-
- 9. AUTHENTICATION PROTOCOLS
-
- As previously stated, authentication parameters are opaque, but
- open-ended to the rest of the RPC protocol. This section defines
- some "flavors" of authentication implemented at (and supported by)
- Sun. Other sites are free to invent new authentication types, with
- the same rules of flavor number assignment as there is for program
- number assignment.
-
- 9.1 Null Authentication
-
- Often calls must be made where the caller does not know who he is or
- the server does not care who the caller is. In this case, the flavor
- value (the discriminant of the opaque_auth's union) of the RPC
- message's credentials, verifier, and response verifier is
- "AUTH_NULL". The bytes of the opaque_auth's body are undefined. It
- is recommended that the opaque length be zero.
-
- 9.2 UNIX Authentication
-
- The caller of a remote procedure may wish to identify himself as he
- is identified on a UNIX(tm) system. The value of the credential's
- discriminant of an RPC call message is "AUTH_UNIX". The bytes of the
- credential's opaque body encode the the following structure:
-
- struct auth_unix {
- unsigned int stamp;
- string machinename<255>;
- unsigned int uid;
- unsigned int gid;
- unsigned int gids<10>;
- };
-
- The "stamp" is an arbitrary ID which the caller machine may generate.
- The "machinename" is the name of the caller's machine (like
- "krypton"). The "uid" is the caller's effective user ID. The "gid"
- is the caller's effective group ID. The "gids" is a counted array of
- groups which contain the caller as a member. The verifier
- accompanying the credentials should be of "AUTH_NULL" (defined
- above).
-
- The value of the discriminant of the response verifier received in
- the reply message from the server may be "AUTH_NULL" or "AUTH_SHORT".
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 11]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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-
- In the case of "AUTH_SHORT", the bytes of the response verifier's
- string encode an opaque structure. This new opaque structure may now
- be passed to the server instead of the original "AUTH_UNIX" flavor
- credentials. The server keeps a cache which maps shorthand opaque
- structures (passed back by way of an "AUTH_SHORT" style response
- verifier) to the original credentials of the caller. The caller can
- save network bandwidth and server cpu cycles by using the new
- credentials.
-
- The server may flush the shorthand opaque structure at any time. If
- this happens, the remote procedure call message will be rejected due
- to an authentication error. The reason for the failure will be
- "AUTH_REJECTEDCRED". At this point, the caller may wish to try the
- original "AUTH_UNIX" style of credentials.
-
- 9.3 DES Authentication
-
- UNIX authentication suffers from two major problems:
-
- (1) The naming is too UNIX oriented.
- (2) There is no verifier, so credentials can easily be faked.
-
- DES authentication attempts to fix these two problems.
-
- 9.3.1 Naming
-
- The first problem is handled by addressing the caller by a simple
- string of characters instead of by an operating system specific
- integer. This string of characters is known as the "netname" or
- network name of the caller. The server is not allowed to interpret
- the contents of the caller's name in any other way except to identify
- the caller. Thus, netnames should be unique for every caller in the
- Internet.
-
- It is up to each operating system's implementation of DES
- authentication to generate netnames for its users that insure this
- uniqueness when they call upon remote servers. Operating systems
- already know how to distinguish users local to their systems. It is
- usually a simple matter to extend this mechanism to the network. For
- example, a UNIX user at Sun with a user ID of 515 might be assigned
- the following netname: "unix.515@sun.com". This netname contains
- three items that serve to insure it is unique. Going backwards,
- there is only one naming domain called "sun.com" in the Internet.
- Within this domain, there is only one UNIX user with user ID 515.
- However, there may be another user on another operating system, for
- example VMS, within the same naming domain that, by coincidence,
- happens to have the same user ID. To insure that these two users can
- be distinguished, we add the operating system name. So, one user is
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 12]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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- "unix.515@sun.com" and the other is "vms.515@sun.com".
-
- The first field is actually a naming method rather than an operating
- system name. It just happens that today, there is almost a one-to-
- one correspondence between naming methods and operating systems. If
- the world could agree on a naming standard, the first field could be
- the name of that standard, instead of an operating system name.
-
- 9.3.2 DES Authentication Verifiers
-
- Unlike UNIX authentication, DES authentication does have a verifier
- so the server can validate the client's credential (and vice-versa).
- The contents of this verifier is primarily an encrypted timestamp.
- The server can decrypt this timestamp, and if it is close to what the
- real time is, then the client must have encrypted it correctly. The
- only way the client could encrypt it correctly is to know the
- "conversation key" of the RPC session. And, if the client knows the
- conversation key, then it must be the real client.
-
- The conversation key is a DES [5] key which the client generates and
- notifies the server of in its first RPC call. The conversation key
- is encrypted using a public key scheme in this first transaction.
- The particular public key scheme used in DES authentication is
- Diffie-Hellman [3], with 128-bit keys. The details of this
- encryption method are described later.
-
- The client and the server need the same notion of the current time in
- order for all of this to work. If network time synchronization
- cannot be guaranteed, then client can synchronize with the server
- before beginning the conversation, perhaps by consulting the Internet
- Time Server (TIME [4]).
-
- The way a server determines if a client timestamp is valid is
- somewhat complicated. For any other transaction but the first, the
- server just checks for two things:
-
- (1) the timestamp is greater than the one previously seen from
- the same client.
-
- (2) the timestamp has not expired.
-
- A timestamp is expired if the server's time is later than the sum of
- the client's timestamp, plus what is known as the client's "window".
- The "window" is a number the client passes (encrypted) to the server
- in its first transaction. You can think of it as a lifetime for the
- credential.
-
- This explains everything but the first transaction. In the first
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 13]
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- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
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- transaction, the server checks only that the timestamp has not
- expired. If this was all that was done though, then it would be
- quite easy for the client to send random data in place of the
- timestamp with a fairly good chance of succeeding. As an added
- check, the client sends an encrypted item in the first transaction
- known as the "window verifier" which must be equal to the window
- minus 1, or the server will reject the credential.
-
- The client too, must check the verifier returned from the server to
- be sure it is legitimate. The server sends back to the client the
- encrypted timestamp it received from the client, minus one second.
- If the client gets anything different than this, it will reject it.
-
- 9.3.3 Nicknames and Clock Synchronization
-
- After the first transaction, the server's DES authentication
- subsystem returns in its verifier to the client an integer "nickname"
- which the client may use in its further transactions instead of
- passing its netname, encrypted DES key, and window every time. The
- nickname is most likely an index into a table on the server which
- stores for each client its netname, decrypted DES key, and window.
-
- Though they originally were synchronized, the client's and server's
- clocks can get out of sync again. When this happens, the client RPC
- subsystem most likely will get back "RPC_AUTHERROR" at which point it
- should resynchronize.
-
- A client may still get the "RPC_AUTHERROR" error even though it is
- synchronized with the server. The reason is that the server's
- nickname table is a limited size, and it may flush entries whenever
- it wants. A client should resend its original credential in this
- case and the server will give it a new nickname. If a server
- crashes, the entire nickname table gets flushed, and all clients will
- have to resend their original credentials.
-
- 9.3.4 DES Authentication Protocol Specification (in XDR language)
-
- /*
- * There are two kinds of credentials: one in which the client uses
- * its full network name, and one in which it uses its "nickname"
- * (just an unsigned integer) given to it by the server. The
- * client must use its fullname in its first transaction with the
- * server, in which the server will return to the client its
- * nickname. The client may use its nickname in all further
- * transactions with the server. There is no requirement to use the
- * nickname, but it is wise to use it for performance reasons.
- */
- enum authdes_namekind {
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- ADN_FULLNAME = 0,
- ADN_NICKNAME = 1
- };
-
- /*
- * A 64-bit block of encrypted DES data
- */
- typedef opaque des_block[8];
-
- /*
- * Maximum length of a network user's name
- */
- const MAXNETNAMELEN = 255;
-
- /*
- * A fullname contains the network name of the client, an encrypted
- * conversation key, and the window. The window is actually a
- * lifetime for the credential. If the time indicated in the
- * verifier timestamp plus the window has past, then the server
- * should expire the request and not grant it. To insure that
- * requests are not replayed, the server should insist that
- * timestamps are greater than the previous one seen, unless it is
- * the first transaction. In the first transaction, the server
- * checks instead that the window verifier is one less than the
- * window.
- */
- struct authdes_fullname {
- string name<MAXNETNAMELEN>; /* name of client */
- des_block key; /* PK encrypted conversation key */
- unsigned int window; /* encrypted window */
- };
-
- /*
- * A credential is either a fullname or a nickname
- */
- union authdes_cred switch (authdes_namekind adc_namekind) {
- case ADN_FULLNAME:
- authdes_fullname adc_fullname;
- case ADN_NICKNAME:
- unsigned int adc_nickname;
- };
-
- /*
- * A timestamp encodes the time since midnight, January 1, 1970.
- */
- struct timestamp {
- unsigned int seconds; /* seconds */
- unsigned int useconds; /* and microseconds */
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- };
-
- /*
- * Verifier: client variety
- * The window verifier is only used in the first transaction. In
- * conjunction with a fullname credential, these items are packed
- * into the following structure before being encrypted:
- *
- * struct {
- * adv_timestamp; -- one DES block
- * adc_fullname.window; -- one half DES block
- * adv_winverf; -- one half DES block
- * }
- * This structure is encrypted using CBC mode encryption with an
- * input vector of zero. All other encryptions of timestamps use
- * ECB mode encryption.
- */
- struct authdes_verf_clnt {
- timestamp adv_timestamp; /* encrypted timestamp */
- unsigned int adv_winverf; /* encrypted window verifier */
- };
-
- /*
- * Verifier: server variety
- * The server returns (encrypted) the same timestamp the client
- * gave it minus one second. It also tells the client its nickname
- * to be used in future transactions (unencrypted).
- */
- struct authdes_verf_svr {
- timestamp adv_timeverf; /* encrypted verifier */
- unsigned int adv_nickname; /* new nickname for client */
- };
-
- 9.3.5 Diffie-Hellman Encryption
-
- In this scheme, there are two constants "PROOT" and "MODULUS". The
- particular values Sun has chosen for these for the DES authentication
- protocol are:
-
- const PROOT = 2;
- const MODULUS = "b520985fb31fcaf75036701e37d8b857"; /* in hex */
-
- The way this scheme works is best explained by an example. Suppose
- there are two people "A" and "B" who want to send encrypted messages
- to each other. So, A and B both generate "secret" keys at random
- which they do not reveal to anyone. Let these keys be represented as
- SK(A) and SK(B). They also publish in a public directory their
- "public" keys. These keys are computed as follows:
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- PK(A) = ( PROOT ** SK(A) ) mod MODULUS
- PK(B) = ( PROOT ** SK(B) ) mod MODULUS
-
- The "**" notation is used here to represent exponentiation. Now,
- both A and B can arrive at the "common" key between them, represented
- here as CK(A, B), without revealing their secret keys.
-
- A computes:
-
- CK(A, B) = ( PK(B) ** SK(A)) mod MODULUS
-
- while B computes:
-
- CK(A, B) = ( PK(A) ** SK(B)) mod MODULUS
-
- These two can be shown to be equivalent:
-
- (PK(B) ** SK(A)) mod MODULUS = (PK(A) ** SK(B)) mod MODULUS
-
- We drop the "mod MODULUS" parts and assume modulo arithmetic to
- simplify things:
-
- PK(B) ** SK(A) = PK(A) ** SK(B)
-
- Then, replace PK(B) by what B computed earlier and likewise for
- PK(A).
-
- ((PROOT ** SK(B)) ** SK(A) = (PROOT ** SK(A)) ** SK(B)
-
- which leads to:
-
- PROOT ** (SK(A) * SK(B)) = PROOT ** (SK(A) * SK(B))
-
- This common key CK(A, B) is not used to encrypt the timestamps used
- in the protocol. Rather, it is used only to encrypt a conversation
- key which is then used to encrypt the timestamps. The reason for
- doing this is to use the common key as little as possible, for fear
- that it could be broken. Breaking the conversation key is a far less
- serious offense, since conversations are relatively short-lived.
-
- The conversation key is encrypted using 56-bit DES keys, yet the
- common key is 128 bits. To reduce the number of bits, 56 bits are
- selected from the common key as follows. The middle-most 8-bytes are
- selected from the common key, and then parity is added to the lower
- order bit of each byte, producing a 56-bit key with 8 bits of parity.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- 10. RECORD MARKING STANDARD
-
- When RPC messages are passed on top of a byte stream protocol (like
- TCP/IP), it is necessary, or at least desirable, to delimit one
- message from another in order to detect and possibly recover from
- user protocol errors. This is called record marking (RM). Sun uses
- this RM/TCP/IP transport for passing RPC messages on TCP streams.
- One RPC message fits into one RM record.
-
- A record is composed of one or more record fragments. A record
- fragment is a four-byte header followed by 0 to (2**31)-1 bytes of
- fragment data. The bytes encode an unsigned binary number; as with
- XDR integers, the byte order is from highest to lowest. The number
- encodes two values -- a boolean which indicates whether the fragment
- is the last fragment of the record (bit value 1 implies the fragment
- is the last fragment) and a 31-bit unsigned binary value which is the
- length in bytes of the fragment's data. The boolean value is the
- highest-order bit of the header; the length is the 31 low-order bits.
- (Note that this record specification is NOT in XDR standard form!)
-
- 11. THE RPC LANGUAGE
-
- Just as there was a need to describe the XDR data-types in a formal
- language, there is also need to describe the procedures that operate
- on these XDR data-types in a formal language as well. We use the RPC
- Language for this purpose. It is an extension to the XDR language.
- The following example is used to describe the essence of the
- language.
-
- 11.1 An Example Service Described in the RPC Language
-
- Here is an example of the specification of a simple ping program:
-
- /*
- * Simple ping program
- */
- program PING_PROG {
- /*
- * Latest and greatest version
- */
- version PING_VERS_PINGBACK {
- void
- PINGPROC_NULL(void) = 0;
-
- /*
- * Ping the caller, return the round-trip time
- * (in microseconds). Returns -1 if the operation
- * timed out.
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- */
- int
- PINGPROC_PINGBACK(void) = 1;
- } = 2;
-
- /*
- * Original version
- */
- version PING_VERS_ORIG {
- void
- PINGPROC_NULL(void) = 0;
- } = 1;
- } = 1;
-
- const PING_VERS = 2; /* latest version */
-
- The first version described is PING_VERS_PINGBACK with two
- procedures, PINGPROC_NULL and PINGPROC_PINGBACK. PINGPROC_NULL takes
- no arguments and returns no results, but it is useful for computing
- round-trip times from the client to the server and back again. By
- convention, procedure 0 of any RPC protocol should have the same
- semantics, and never require any kind of authentication. The second
- procedure is used for the client to have the server do a reverse ping
- operation back to the client, and it returns the amount of time (in
- microseconds) that the operation used. The next version,
- PING_VERS_ORIG, is the original version of the protocol and it does
- not contain PINGPROC_PINGBACK procedure. It is useful for
- compatibility with old client programs, and as this program matures
- it may be dropped from the protocol entirely.
-
- 11.1 The RPC Language Specification
-
- The RPC language is identical to the XDR language, except for the
- added definition of a "program-def" described below.
-
- program-def:
- "program" identifier "{"
- version-def
- version-def *
- "}" "=" constant ";"
-
- version-def:
- "version" identifier "{"
- procedure-def
- procedure-def *
- "}" "=" constant ";"
-
- procedure-def:
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- type-specifier identifier "(" type-specifier ")"
- "=" constant ";"
-
- 11.2 Syntax Notes
-
- (1) The following keywords are added and cannot be used as
- identifiers: "program" and "version";
-
- (2) A version name cannot occur more than once within the scope
- of a program definition. Nor can a version number occur more
- than once within the scope of a program definition.
-
- (3) A procedure name cannot occur more than once within the scope
- of a version definition. Nor can a procedure number occur
- more than once within the scope of version definition.
-
- (4) Program identifiers are in the same name space as constant
- and type identifiers.
-
- (5) Only unsigned constants can be assigned to programs, versions,
- and procedures.
-
- APPENDIX A: PORT MAPPER PROGRAM PROTOCOL
-
- The port mapper program maps RPC program and version numbers to
- transport-specific port numbers. This program makes dynamic binding
- of remote programs possible.
-
- This is desirable because the range of reserved port numbers is very
- small, and the number of potential remote programs is very large. By
- running only the port mapper on a reserved port, the port numbers of
- other remote programs can be ascertained by querying the port mapper.
-
- The port mapper also aids in broadcast RPC. A given RPC program will
- usually have different port number bindings on different machines, so
- there is no way to directly broadcast to all of these programs. The
- port mapper, however, does have a fixed port number. So, to
- broadcast to a given program, the client actually sends its message
- to the port mapper located at the broadcast address. Each port
- mapper that picks up the broadcast then calls the local service
- specified by the client. When the port mapper gets the reply from
- the local service, it sends the reply on back to the client.
-
- A.1 Port Mapper Protocol Specification (in RPC Language)
-
-
- const PMAP_PORT = 111; /* portmapper port number */
-
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- /*
- * A mapping of (program, version, protocol) to port number
- */
- struct mapping {
- unsigned int prog;
- unsigned int vers;
- unsigned int prot;
- unsigned int port;
- };
-
- /*
- * Supported values for the "prot" field
- */
- const IPPROTO_TCP = 6; /* protocol number for TCP/IP */
- const IPPROTO_UDP = 17; /* protocol number for UDP/IP */
-
- /*
- * A list of mappings
- */
- struct *pmaplist {
- mapping map;
- pmaplist next;
- };
- /*
- * Arguments to callit
- */
- struct call_args {
- unsigned int prog;
- unsigned int vers;
- unsigned int proc;
- opaque args<>;
- };
- /*
- * Results of callit
- */
- struct call_result {
- unsigned int port;
- opaque res<>;
- };
-
- /*
- * Port mapper procedures
- */
- program PMAP_PROG {
- version PMAP_VERS {
- void
- PMAPPROC_NULL(void) = 0;
-
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- bool
- PMAPPROC_SET(mapping) = 1;
-
- bool
- PMAPPROC_UNSET(mapping) = 2;
-
- unsigned int
- PMAPPROC_GETPORT(mapping) = 3;
-
- pmaplist
- PMAPPROC_DUMP(void) = 4;
-
- call_result
- PMAPPROC_CALLIT(call_args) = 5;
- } = 2;
- } = 100000;
-
- A.2 Port Mapper Operation
-
- The portmapper program currently supports two protocols (UDP/IP and
- TCP/IP). The portmapper is contacted by talking to it on assigned
- port number 111 (SUNRPC [8]) on either of these protocols. The
- following is a description of each of the portmapper procedures:
-
- PMAPPROC_NULL:
-
- This procedure does no work. By convention, procedure zero of
- any protocol takes no parameters and returns no results.
-
- PMAPPROC_SET:
-
- When a program first becomes available on a machine, it
- registers itself with the port mapper program on the same
- machine. The program passes its program number "prog", version
- number "vers", transport protocol number "prot", and the port
- "port" on which it awaits service request. The procedure
- returns a boolean response whose value is "TRUE" if the
- procedure successfully established the mapping and "FALSE"
- otherwise. The procedure refuses to establish a mapping if one
- already exists for the tuple "(prog, vers, prot)".
-
- PMAPPROC_UNSET:
-
- When a program becomes unavailable, it should unregister itself
- with the port mapper program on the same machine. The
- parameters and results have meanings identical to those of
- "PMAPPROC_SET". The protocol and port number fields of the
- argument are ignored.
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 22]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- PMAPPROC_GETPORT:
-
- Given a program number "prog", version number "vers", and
- transport protocol number "prot", this procedure returns the
- port number on which the program is awaiting call requests. A
- port value of zeros means the program has not been registered.
- The "port" field of the argument is ignored.
-
- PMAPPROC_DUMP:
-
- This procedure enumerates all entries in the port mapper's
- database. The procedure takes no parameters and returns a list
- of program, version, protocol, and port values.
-
- PMAPPROC_CALLIT:
-
- This procedure allows a caller to call another remote procedure
- on the same machine without knowing the remote procedure's port
- number. It is intended for supporting broadcasts to arbitrary
- remote programs via the well-known port mapper's port. The
- parameters "prog", "vers", "proc", and the bytes of "args" are
- the program number, version number, procedure number, and
- parameters of the remote procedure. Note:
-
- (1) This procedure only sends a response if the procedure
- was successfully executed and is silent (no response)
- otherwise.
-
- (2) The port mapper communicates with the remote program
- using UDP/IP only.
-
- The procedure returns the remote program's port number, and the
- bytes of results are the results of the remote procedure.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- [1] Birrel, A. D., and Nelson, B. J., "Implementing Remote
- Procedure Calls", XEROX CSL-83-7, October 1983.
-
- [2] Cheriton, D., "VMTP: Versatile Message Transaction Protocol",
- Version 0.7, RFC-1045, Stanford University, February 1988.
-
- [3] Diffie & Hellman, "Net Directions in Cryptography", IEEE
- Transactions on Information Theory IT-22, November 1976.
-
- [4] Postel, J., and Harrenstien, K., "Time Protocol", RFC-868,
- Network Information Center, SRI, May 1983.
-
-
-
-
- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 23]
-
- RFC 1050 Remote Procedure Call April 1988
-
-
- [5] National Bureau of Standards, "Data Encryption Standard",
- Federal Information Processing Standards Publication 46,
- January 1977.
-
- [6] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol - DARPA Internet
- Program Protocol Specification", RFC-793; Network Information
- Center, SRI, September 1981.
-
- [7] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", RFC-768, Network
- Information Center, SRI, August 1980.
-
- [8] Reynolds, J. and Postel, J.; "Assigned Numbers", RFC-1010,
- Network Information Center, SRI, May 1987.
-
- [9] Sun Microsystems; "XDR: External Data Representation
- Standard", RFC-1014; Sun Microsystems, June 1987.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
-
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-
-
-
-
-
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- Sun Microsystems, Inc. [Page 24]
-