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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Login ProposalThe recent plugfest highlighted areas of the login procedure that could be improved. With this in mind, Bob Russell, Marjorie Krueger, and myself have been working on a proposal for the Login procedure. Our goals were to keep it inline as much as possible with 0.7 of the specification and to ensure connectivity can be maintained amongst target and initiators. I believe we have meet all the goals we set out to do. I have also attached a Login Reference Model (in the form of c code) which backs up our proposal. Please note that the reference model is only a reference model and should not be considered as, or be part of the iSCSI specification. Cheers Matthew Burbridge Marjorie Krueger Bob Russell ++++++++++++++++++++++++ The Login Proposal: Definitions: FBit means "I have nothing (more) to negotiate" Request: The first occurrence of a Text Parameter from the initiator or the target. A request MUST be answered with a reply. Reply: A Text Parameter that is a response to a Request. Negotiation: A request followed by a response. 1.1 Actions at the Initiator The initiator starts the login phase by sending a Login Command PDU. The IIN MUST be present in the login command. The SessionType MUST be present if the session type is Discovery, Boot or CopyManager. It MAY be present if SessionType=Normal. The ITN MUST be present unless SessionType=Discovery when it is optional. The initiator MUST NOT send operational text parameters in the login command. The table below defines the parameter present in the login command. SessionType SessionType IIN ITN Present in Present in Present in Login? Login? Login? Normal Optional Yes Yes Boot Yes Yes Yes CopyManager Yes Yes Yes Discovery Yes Yes Optional SecurityContextComplete=yes MUST NOT be present in the login command Operational Parameters MUST NOT be present in the login command At anytime the initiator MAY terminate the login killing the TCP connection. If the initiator requires security negotiation it MUST send one or more security parameters: (AuthMethod, HeaderDigest, DataDigest) in the login command. Fbit Security Parameters Description Present 0 No Initiator has no security parameters to negotiate but has operational parameters to negotiate. 0 Yes The initiator wants to negotiate security. 1 No The initiator has no security parameters to negotiate and no operational parameters to negotiate. 1 Yes ILLEGAL. Target must reject login (Login Status = 0200) 1.2 Actions at the Target On receipt of the Login Command the target MUST respond according to the rules below: If the InitiatorName is not present the target MUST reject the login by sending a Login Response with FBit=1 and StatusCode=0200. Similary, if the SessionType is not Discovery and the TargetName is not present the target MUST reject the login by sending a Login Response with FBit=1 and StatusCode=0200. It both cases the target should kill the TCP connection after the login response has successfully been sent. At anytime the target MAY terminate the login by sending a login response with the FBit set to 1 and a non-zero StatusCode. The target should kill the TCP connection after the login response has successfully been sent. If the login command contains security parameters, the target MUST enter the security phase of the login. It MUST send response to those security parameters and MAY start negotiating security parameters if the parameters that it wants to negotiate are not in the Login command. The target responses with a Text Response (F=0). If the login command does not contain security parameters the target MUST perform one of the two actions below: a) If the target requires security negotiation to be performed, then it MUST enter the security phase and MUST send a text response containing one or more security parameters and F=0. b) If the target does not require security negotiation (and therefore neither does the initiator) it MUST perform one of the actions defined by the table below. Initiator Target has Action FBit params to negotiate 0 No Send Text Response with F=1 (Initiator only wants to negotiate operational parameters). 0 Yes Send Text Response with operation params If all parameters can be sent in a single response then F=1 else F=0 (Both target and initiator want to negotiate operational parameters). 1 No Send Login Response with F=1. (Neither target nor initiator want to negotiate operational parameters). 1 Yes Send Text Response. If all parameters can be sent in a single response then F=1 else F=0 (Target only wants to negotiate operational parameters). 1.3 General Rules If an initiator or target has text parameters (security or operational) to negotiate then it MUST send them at the earliest opportunity and it MUST NOT send an empty text command. An initiator or target MUST respond to the a text parameter request with a text parameter response in the next text PDU to be sent. Once an initiator or target has completed initiating negotiations (security or operational) it MUST not initiate any more of the same type (security or operational). In other words it can not go backwards. Operational Parameters MUST NOT be negotiated during the security phase. Security Parameters MUST NOT be negotiated during the operartional phase. When a party has no more text parameters to negotiate then the FBit MUST be set in the PDU containing the last text parameter request and all subsequent PDUs. For example: if an initiator only wants to negotiate "InitialR2T=yes" and no others, then it MUST set the FBit to 1 in the commands containing "InitialR2T=yes". Once the FBit has been set to 1, it MUST not be set back to 0. Also, if the FBit is 1 then the party MUST not instigate anymore text parameter negotiations. It can only respond to requests from the other party. If FMarker=yes then SFMarkInt and RFMarkInt MUST be present in the same Text PDU as FMarker=yes. If FMarker=no then SHOULD NOT be present. If they are then the remote party MUST reply to them and echo the values sent in the initial PDU. 1.4 Completion of Security Phase [Authors note: This section has been extracted from v0.7 but I have made some clarifications to the version 0.7 spec. - Changes in CAPITALS] -Every party in the security negotiation MUST [Added MUST] indicate that it has completed building its security context (has all the required information) by sending the key=value pair: SecurityContextComplete=yes The other party either offers some more SECURITY parameters or answers with the same: SecurityContextComplete=yes The party that is ready MUST [Added MUST] keep sending the SecurityContextComplete=yes pair (in addition to new security Parameter REPLYS if required) until the handshake is complete. Once the party has set SecurityContextComplete=yes it MUST not instigate anymore negotiations but it MUST respond to any requests from the other pary. If the initiator has been the last to complete the SECUIRTY PHASE it MUST NOT start sending operational parameters within the same text command; a text response including only SecurityContextComplete=yes concludes the security sub-phase. If the target has been the last to complete the SECURITY PHASE, the initiator can start the operational parameter negotiation with the next text command; the security negotiation sub-phase ends with the target text response. The SecurityContextComplete handshake MUST be performed if any of negotiating parties has offered a security/integrity item (even if it is not selected). All PDUs sent after the security negotiation sub phase MUST be built using the agreed security. This proposal removes from 0.7 of the spec: Partial Login response: It no longer coveys any information. OpParamReset: No longer required as operational parameters can not be negotiated during security phase. Keep: SecurityContextComplete=yes. This is how 0.7 works. If people disagree then we can vote and change it. Matthew Burbridge Senior Development Engineer NIS-Bristol Hewlett Packard Telnet: 312 7010 E-mail: matthewb@bri.hp.com
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