Internet-Draft | Maintaining Robust Protocols | October 2022 |
Thomson & Schinazi | Expires 22 April 2023 | [Page] |
The main goal of the networking standards process is to enable the long term interoperability of protocols. This document describes active protocol maintenance, a means to accomplish that goal. By evolving specifications and implementations, it is possible to reduce ambiguity over time and create a healthy ecosystem.¶
The robustness principle, often phrased as "be conservative in what you send, and liberal in what you accept", has long guided the design and implementation of Internet protocols. However, it has been interpreted in a variety of ways. While some interpretations help ensure the health of the Internet, others can negatively affect interoperability over time. When a protocol is actively maintained, protocol designers and implementers can avoid these pitfalls.¶
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The robustness principle has been hugely influential in shaping the design of the Internet. As stated in the IAB document on Architectural Principles of the Internet [RFC1958], the robustness principle advises to:¶
Be strict when sending and tolerant when receiving. Implementations must follow specifications precisely when sending to the network, and tolerate faulty input from the network. When in doubt, discard faulty input silently, without returning an error message unless this is required by the specification.¶
This simple statement captures a significant concept in the design of interoperable systems. Many consider the application of the robustness principle to be instrumental in the success of the Internet as well as the design of interoperable protocols in general.¶
As described above, the robustness principle covers three scenarios:¶
No software is perfect, and failures can lead to unexpected behavior. Well-designed software strives to be resilient to such issues, whether they occur in the local software, or in software that it communicates with. In particular, it is critical for software to gracefully recover from these issues without aborting unrelated processing.¶
Since not all actors on the Internet are benevolent, networking software needs to be resilient to input that is intentionally crafted to cause unexpected consequences. For example, software must ensure that invalid input doesn't allow the sender to access data that it would otherwise not be allowed to.¶
It can be possible for an implementation to receive inputs that the specification did not prepare it for. This scenario excludes those cases where a the specification explicitly defines how a faulty message is handled. Instead, this refers to cases where handling is not defined or where there is some ambiguity in the specification. In this case, some interpretations of the robustness principle advocate that the implementation tolerate the faulty input and silently discard it. Some interpretations even suggest that a faulty or ambiguous message be processed according to the inferred intent of the sender.¶
The facets of the robustness principle that protect against defects or attack are understood to be necessary guiding principles for the design and implementation of networked systems. However, an interpretation that advocates for tolerating unexpected inputs is no longer considered best practice in all scenarios.¶
Time and experience shows that negative consequences to interoperability accumulate over time if implementations silently accept faulty input. This problem originates from an implicit assumption that it is not possible to effect change in a system the size of the Internet. When one assumes that changes to existing implementations are not presently feasible, tolerating flaws feels inevitable.¶
Many problems that this third aspect of the robustness principle was intended to solve can instead be better addressed by active maintenance. Active protocol maintenance is where a community of protocol designers, implementers, and deployers work together to continuously improve and evolve protocol specifications alongside implementations and deployments of those protocols. A community that takes an active role in the maintenance of protocols will no longer need to rely on the robustness principle to avoid interoperability issues.¶
There is good evidence to suggest that many important protocols are routinely maintained beyond their inception. In particular, a sizeable proportion of IETF activity is dedicated to the stewardship of existing protocols. This document serves primarily as a record of the hazards in applying the robustness principle too broadly, and offers an alternative strategy for handling interoperability problems in deployments.¶
Ideally, protocol implementations can be actively maintained so that unexpected conditions are proactively identified and resolved. Some deployments might still need to apply short-term mitigations for deployments that cannot be easily updated, but such cases need not be permanent. This is discussed further in Section 5.¶
The guidance in this document is intended for protocols that are deployed to the Internet. There are some situations in which this guidance might not apply to a protocol due to conditions on its implementation or deployment.¶
In particular, this guidance depends on an ability to update and deploy implementations. Being able to rapidly update implementations that are deployed to the Internet helps managing security risk but in reality some software deployments have lifecycles that make software updates either rare or altogether impossible.¶
Where implementations are not updated, there is no opportunity to apply the practices that this document recommends. In particular, some practices - such as those described in Section 5.1 - only exist to support the development of protocol maintenance and evolution. Employing this guidance is therefore only applicable where there is the possibility of improving deployments through timely updates of their implementations.¶
Good extensibility [EXT] can make it easier to respond to new use cases or changes in the environment in which the protocol is deployed.¶
The ability to extend a protocol is sometimes mistaken for an application of the robustness principle. After all, if one party wants to start using a new feature before another party is prepared to receive it, it might be assumed that the receiving party is being tolerant of new types of input.¶
A well-designed extensibility mechanism establishes clear rules for the handling of things like new messages or parameters. This depends on specifying the handling of malformed or illegal inputs so that implementations behave consistently in all cases that might affect interoperation. New messages or parameters thereby become entirely expected. If extension mechanisms and error handling are designed and implemented correctly, new protocol features can be deployed with confidence in the understanding of the effect they have on existing implementations.¶
In contrast, relying on implementations to consistently apply the robustness principle is not a good strategy for extensibility. Using undocumented or accidental features of a protocol as the basis of an extensibility mechanism can be extremely difficult, as is demonstrated by the case study in Appendix A.3 of [EXT].¶
A protocol could be designed to permit a narrow set of valid inputs, or it could be designed to treat a wide range of inputs as valid.¶
A more flexible protocol is more complex to specify and implement: variations - especially those that are not commonly used - can create potential interoperability hazards. In the absence of strong reasons to be flexible, a simpler protocol is more likely to successfully interoperate.¶
Where input is provided by users, allowing flexibility might serve to make the protocol more accessible, especially for non-expert users. HTML authoring [HTML] is an example of this sort of design.¶
In protocols where there are many participants that might generate messages based on data from other participants some flexibility might contribute to resilience of the system. A routing protocol is a good example of where this might be necessary.¶
In BGP [BGP], a peer generates UPDATE messages based on messages it receives from other peers. Peers can copy attributes without validation, potentially propagating invalid values. RFC 4271 mandated a session reset for invalid UPDATE messages, a requirement that was not widely implemented. In many deployments, peers would treat a malformed UPDATE in less stringent ways, such as by treating the affected route as having been withdrawn. Ultimately, RFC 7606 [BGP-REH] documented this practice and provided precise rules, including mandatory actions for different error conditions.¶
A protocol can explicitly allows for a range of valid expressions of the same semantics, with precise definitions for error handling. This is distinct from a protocol that relies on the application of the robustness principle. With the former, interoperation depends on specifications that capture all relevant details; whereas - as noted in Section 4.2 - interoperation in the latter depends more extensively on implementations making compatible decisions.¶
The context from which the robustness principle was developed provides valuable insights into its intent and purpose. The earliest form of the principle in the RFC series (the Internet Protocol specification [RFC0760]) is preceded by a sentence that reveals the motivation for the principle:¶
While the goal of this specification is to be explicit about the protocol there is the possibility of differing interpretations. In general, an implementation should be conservative in its sending behavior, and liberal in its receiving behavior.¶
This formulation of the principle expressly recognizes the possibility that the specification could be imperfect. This contextualizes the principle in an important way.¶
Imperfect specifications are unavoidable, largely because it is more important to proceed to implementation and deployment than it is to perfect a specification. A protocol benefits greatly from experience with its use. A deployed protocol is immeasurably more useful than a perfect protocol specification. This is particularly true in early phases of system design, to which the robustness principle is best suited.¶
As demonstrated by the IAB document on Successful Protocols [RFC5218], success or failure of a protocol depends far more on factors like usefulness than on technical excellence. Timely publication of protocol specifications, even with the potential for flaws, likely contributed significantly to the eventual success of the Internet.¶
This premise that specifications will be imperfect is correct. However, ignoring faulty or ambiguous input is almost always the incorrect solution to the problem.¶
Problems in other implementations can create an unavoidable need to temporarily tolerate unexpected inputs. However, this course of action carries risks.¶
Tolerating unexpected input might be an expedient tool for systems in early phases of deployment, such as was the case for the early Internet. Being lenient in this way defers the effort of dealing with interoperability problems and prioritizes progress. However, this deferral can amplify the ultimate cost of handling interoperability problems.¶
Divergent implementations of a specification emerge over time. When variations occur in the interpretation or expression of semantic components, implementations cease to be perfectly interoperable.¶
Implementation bugs are often identified as the cause of variation, though it is often a combination of factors. Using a protocol in ways that were not anticipated in the original design, or ambiguities and errors in the specification are often contributing factors. Disagreements on the interpretation of specifications should be expected over the lifetime of a protocol.¶
Even with the best intentions to maintain protocol correctness, the pressure to interoperate can be significant. No implementation can hope to avoid having to trade correctness for interoperability indefinitely.¶
An implementation that reacts to variations in the manner recommended in the robustness principle enters a pathological feedback cycle. Over time:¶
A flaw can become entrenched as a de facto standard. Any implementation of the protocol is required to replicate the aberrant behavior, or it is not interoperable. This is both a consequence of tolerating the unexpected, and a product of a natural reluctance to avoid fatal error conditions. Ensuring interoperability in this environment is often referred to as aiming to be "bug for bug compatible".¶
For example, in TLS [TLS], extensions use a tag-length-value format and can be added to messages in any order. However, some server implementations terminated connections if they encountered a TLS ClientHello message that ends with an empty extension. To maintain interoperability, client implementations were required to be aware of this bug and ensure that a ClientHello message ends in a non-empty extension.¶
Overapplication of the robustness principle therefore encourages a chain reaction that can create interoperability problems over time. In particular, tolerating unexpected behavior is particularly deleterious for early implementations of new protocols as quirks in early implementations can affect all subsequent deployments.¶
From observing widely deployed protocols, it appears there are two stable points on the spectrum between being strict versus permissive in the presence of protocol errors:¶
This happens because interoperability requirements for protocol implementations are set by other deployments. Specifications and - where they exist - test suites can guide the initial development of implementations. Ultimately, the need to interoperate with deployed implementations is a de facto conformance test suite that can supersede any formal protocol definition.¶
For widely used protocols, the massive scale of the Internet makes large-scale interoperability testing infeasible for all but a privileged few. The cost of building a new implementation using reverse engineering increases as the number of implementations and bugs increases. Worse, the set of tweaks necessary for wide interoperability can be difficult to discover. In the worst case, a new implementer might have to choose between deployments that have diverged so far as to no longer be interoperable.¶
Consequently, new implementations might be forced into niche uses, where the problems arising from interoperability issues can be more closely managed. However, restricting new implementations into limited deployments risks causing forks in the protocol. If implementations do not interoperate, little prevents those implementations from diverging more over time.¶
This has a negative impact on the ecosystem of a protocol. New implementations are key to the continued viability of a protocol. New protocol implementations are also more likely to be developed for new and diverse use cases and are often the origin of features and capabilities that can be of benefit to existing users.¶
The need to work around interoperability problems also reduces the ability of established implementations to change. An accumulation of mitigations for interoperability issues makes implementations more difficult to maintain and can constrain extensibility (see also the IAB document on the Long-Term Viability of Protocol Extension Mechanisms [RFC9170]).¶
Sometimes what appear to be interoperability problems are symptomatic of issues in protocol design. A community that is willing to make changes to the protocol, by revising or extending it, makes the protocol better in the process. Tolerating unexpected input instead conceals problems, making it harder, if not impossible, to fix them later.¶
The robustness principle can be highly effective in safeguarding against flaws in the implementation of a protocol by peers. Especially when a specification remains unchanged for an extended period of time, incentive to be tolerant of errors accumulates over time. Indeed, when faced with divergent interpretations of an immutable specification, the only way for an implementation to remain interoperable is to be tolerant of differences in interpretation and implementation errors.¶
Tolerating unexpected inputs from another implementation might seem logical, even necessary. But that conclusion relies on an assumption that existing specifications and implementations cannot change. Applying the robustness principle in this way disproportionately values short-term gains over the negative effects on future implementations and the protocol as a whole.¶
For a protocol to have sustained viability, it is necessary for both specifications and implementations to be responsive to changes, in addition to handling new and old problems that might arise over time. For example, when an implementer discovers a scenario where a specification defines some input as faulty but does not define how to handle that input, the implementer can provide significant value to the ecosystem by reporting the issue and helping evolve the specification.¶
Maintaining specifications so that they closely match deployments ensures that implementations are consistently interoperable and removes needless barriers for new implementations. Maintenance also enables continued improvement of the protocol. New use cases are an indicator that the protocol could be successful [RFC5218].¶
Protocol designers are strongly encouraged to continue to maintain and evolve protocol specifications beyond their initial inception and definition. This might require the development of revised specifications, extensions, or other supporting material that documents the current state of the protocol. Involvement of those who implement and deploy the protocol is a critical part of this process, as they provide input on their experience with how the protocol is used.¶
Most interoperability problems do not require revision of protocols or protocol specifications. For instance, the most effective means of dealing with a defective implementation in a peer could be to contact the developer responsible. It is far more efficient in the long term to fix one isolated bug than it is to deal with the consequences of workarounds.¶
Early implementations of protocols have a stronger obligation to closely follow specifications as their behavior will affect all subsequent implementations. In addition to specifications, later implementations will be guided by what existing deployments accept. Tolerance of errors in early deployments is most likely to result in problems. Protocol specifications might need more frequent revision during early deployments to capture feedback from early rounds of deployment.¶
Neglect can quickly produce the negative consequences this document describes. Restoring the protocol to a state where it can be maintained involves first discovering the properties of the protocol as it is deployed, rather than the protocol as it was originally documented. This can be difficult and time-consuming, particularly if the protocol has a diverse set of implementations. Such a process was undertaken for HTTP [HTTP] after a period of minimal maintenance. Restoring HTTP specifications to relevance took significant effort.¶
Maintenance is most effective if it is responsive, which is greatly affected by how rapidly protocol changes can be deployed. For protocol deployments that operate on longer time scales, temporary workarounds following the spirit of the robustness principle might be necessary. For this, improvements in software update mechanisms ensure that the cost of reacting to changes is much lower than it was in the past. Alternatively, if specifications can be updated more readily than deployments, details of the workaround can be documented, including the desired form of the protocols once the need for workarounds no longer exists and plans for removing the workaround.¶
A well-specified protocol includes rules for consistent handling of aberrant conditions. This increases the chances that implementations will have consistent and interoperable handling of unusual conditions.¶
Choosing to generate fatal errors for unspecified conditions instead of attempting error recovery can ensure that faults receive attention. This intolerance can be harnessed to reduce occurrences of aberrant implementations.¶
Intolerance toward violations of specification improves feedback for new implementations in particular. When a new implementation encounters a peer that is intolerant of an error, it receives strong feedback that allows the problem to be discovered quickly.¶
To be effective, intolerant implementations need to be sufficiently widely deployed that they are encountered by new implementations with high probability. This could depend on multiple implementations deploying strict checks.¶
This does not mean that intolerance of errors in early deployments of protocols has the effect of preventing interoperability. On the contrary, when existing implementations follow clearly-specified error handling, new implementations or features can be introduced more readily as the effect on existing implementations can be easily predicted; see also Section 2.1.¶
Any intolerance also needs to be strongly supported by specifications, otherwise they encourage fracturing of the protocol community or proliferation of workarounds; see Section 5.2.¶
Intolerance can be used to motivate compliance with any protocol requirement. For instance, the INADEQUATE_SECURITY error code and associated requirements in HTTP/2 [HTTP/2] resulted in improvements in the security of the deployed base.¶
A notification for a fatal error is best sent as explicit error messages to the entity that made the error. Error messages benefit from being able to carry arbitrary information that might help the implementer of the sender of the faulty input understand and fix the issue in their software. QUIC error frames [QUIC] are an example of a fatal error mechanism that helped implementers improve software quality throughout the protocol lifecycle.¶
Stateless protocol endpoints might generate denial-of-service attacks if they send an error messages in response to every message that is received from an unauthenticated sender. These implementations might need to silently discard these messages.¶
Any protocol participant that is affected by changes arising from maintenance might be excluded if they are unwilling or unable to implement or deploy changes that are made to the protocol.¶
Deliberate exclusion of problematic implementations is an important tool that can ensure that the interoperability of a protocol remains viable. While compatible changes are always preferable to incompatible ones, it is not always possible to produce a design that protects the ability of all current and future protocol participants to interoperate. Developing and deploying changes that risk exclusion of previously interoperating implementations requires some care, but changes to a protocol should not be blocked on the grounds of the risk of exclusion alone.¶
Exclusion is a direct goal when choosing to be intolerant of errors (see Section 5.1). Exclusionary actions are employed with the deliberate intent of protecting future interoperability.¶
Excluding implementations or deployments can lead to a fracturing of the protocol system that could be more harmful than any divergence that might arise from tolerating the unexpected. The IAB document on Uncoordinated Protocol Development Considered Harmful [RFC5704] describes how conflict or competition in the maintenance of protocols can lead to similar problems.¶
Careless implementations, lax interpretations of specifications, and uncoordinated extrapolation of requirements to cover gaps in specification can result in security problems. Hiding the consequences of protocol variations encourages the hiding of issues, which can conceal bugs and make them difficult to discover.¶
The consequences of the problems described in this document are especially acute for any protocol where security depends on agreement about semantics of protocol elements. For instance, use of unsafe security mechanisms, such as weak primitives [MD5] or obsolete mechanisms [SSL3], are good examples of where forcing exclusion (Section 5.2) can be desirable.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
Constructive feedback on this document has been provided by a surprising number of people including, but not limited to: Bernard Aboba, Brian Carpenter, Stuart Cheshire, Mark Nottingham, Russ Housley, Eric Rescorla, Henning Schulzrinne, Job Snijders, Robert Sparks, Brian Trammell, Dave Thaler, and Anne Van Kesteren.¶