Kerberos 5 Release 1.8.1
The MIT Kerberos Team announces the availability of the
krb5-1.8.1 release. The detached PGP
signature is available without going through the download
page, if you wish to verify the authenticity of a distribution
you have obtained elsewhere.
Please see the README file for a
more complete list of changes.
You may also see the current full
list
of fixed bugs tracked in our RT bugtracking system.
DES transition
The krb5-1.8 release disables single-DES cryptosystems by
default. As a result, you may need to add the libdefaults
setting "allow_weak_crypto = true" to communicate with existing
Kerberos infrastructures if they do not support stronger
ciphers.
The Data Encryption Standard (DES) is widely recognized as
weak. The krb5-1.7 release contains measures to encourage sites
to migrate away from using single-DES cryptosystems. Among
these is a configuration variable that enables "weak" enctypes,
which now defaults to "false" beginning with krb5-1.8. The
krb5-1.8 release includes additional measures to ease the
transition away from single-DES. These additional measures
include:
- enctype config enhancements (so you can do "DEFAULT +des", etc.)
- new API to allow applications (e.g. AFS) to explicitly reenable weak
crypto
- easier kadmin history key changes
Major changes in 1.8.1
This is primarily a bugfix release.
- MITKRB5-SA-2010-002 CVE-2010-0628 denial of service in SPNEGO
- Support IPv6 in kpasswd client.
- Fix an authorization data type number assignment that
conflicted with an undocumented Microsoft usage.
Major changes in 1.8
The krb5-1.8 release contains a large number of changes,
featuring improvements in the following broad areas:
- Code quality
- Developer experience
- Performance
- End-user experience
- Administrator experience
- Protocol evolution
Code quality:
- Move toward test-driven development -- new features have
test code, or at least written testing procedures.
- Remove applications to a separate distribution to simplify
independent maintenance.
- Increase conformance to coding style
- "The great reindent"
- Selective refactoring
Developer experience
- Crypto modularity -- vendors can more easily substitute their own
crypto implementations, which might be hardware-accelerated or
validated to FIPS 140, for the builtin crypto implementation that
has historically shipped as part of MIT Kerberos. Currently, only
an OpenSSL provider is included, but others are planned for the
future.
- Move toward improved KDB interface
- Improved API for verifying and interrogating authorization data
Performance:
- Investigate and remedy repeatedly-reported performance bottlenecks.
- Encryption performance -- new crypto API with opaque key structures,
to allow for optimizations such as caching of derived keys
End-user experience:
- Reduce DNS dependence by implementing an interface that allows
client library to track whether a KDC supports service principal
referrals.
Administrator experience:
- Disable DES by default -- this reduces security exposure from using
an increasingly insecure cipher.
- More versatile crypto configuration, to simplify migration away from
DES -- new configuration syntax to allow inclusion and exclusion of
specific algorithms relative to a default set.
- Account lockout for repeated login failures -- mitigates online
password guessing attacks, and helps with some enterprise regulatory
compliance.
- Bridge layer to allow Heimdal HDB modules to act as KDB backend
modules. This provides a migration path from a Heimdal to an MIT
KDC.
Protocol evolution:
- FAST enhancements -- preauthentication framework enhancements to
allow a client to securely negotiate the use of FAST with a KDC of
unknown capabilities.
- Microsoft Services for User (S4U) compatibility: S4U2Self, also
known as "protocol transition", allows for service to ask a KDC for
a ticket to themselves on behalf of a client authenticated via a
different means; S4U2Proxy allows a service to ask a KDC for a
ticket to another service on behalf of a client.
- Anonymous PKINIT -- allows the use of public-key cryptography to
anonymously authenticate to a realm
- Support doing constrained delegation similar to Microsoft's
S4U2Proxy without the use of the Windows PAC. This functionality
uses a protocol compatible with Heimdal.
Known Bugs
Known bugs reported against krb5-1.8.1 are listed
here.
Please note that the HTML versions of these documents are
converted from texinfo, and that the conversion is imperfect.
If you want PostScript or GNU info versions, please download
the documentation tarball.
You may retrieve the Kerberos 5 Release 1.8.1 source from
here.
If you need to acquire the sources from some other distribution
site, you may verify them against the detached
PGP signature for krb5-1.8.1.
$Id: krb5-1.8.1.html,v 1.2 2010/04/08 22:05:20 tlyu Exp $
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