66 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
66 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
PPP Support for Microsoft's CHAP-81
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===================================
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Frank Cusack frank@google.com
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Some text verbatim from README.MSCHAP80,
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by Eric Rosenquist, rosenqui@strataware.com
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INTRODUCTION
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First, please read README.MSCHAP80; almost everything there applies here.
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MS-CHAP was basically devised by Microsoft because rather than store
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plaintext passwords, they (Microsoft) store the md4 hash of passwords.
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It provides no advantage over standard CHAP, since the hash is used
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as plaintext-equivalent. (Well, the Change-Password packet is arguably
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an advantage.) It does introduce a significant weakness if the LM hash
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is used. Additionally, the format of the failure packet potentially
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gives information to an attacker. The weakness of the LM hash is partly
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addressed in RFC 2433, which deprecates its use.
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MS-CHAPv2 adds 2 benefits to MS-CHAP. (1) The LM hash is no longer
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used. (2) Mutual authentication is required. Note that the mutual
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authentication in MS-CHAPv2 is different than the case where both PPP
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peers require authentication from the other; the former proves that
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the server has access to the client's password, the latter proves that
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the server has access to a secret which the client also has -- which
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may or may not be the same as the client's password (but should not be
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the same, per RFC 1994). Whether this provides any actual benefit is
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outside the scope of this document. The details of MS-CHAPv2 can be
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found in the document:
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<http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2759.txt>
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BUILDING THE PPPD
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In addition to the requirements for MS-CHAP, MS-CHAPv2 uses the SHA-1
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hash algorithm. A public domain implementation is provided with pppd.
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TROUBLESHOOTING
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Assuming that everything else has been configured correctly for PPP and
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CHAP, the MS-CHAPv2-specific problems you're likely to encounter are mostly
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related to your Windows NT account and its settings. A Microsoft server
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returns error codes in its CHAP response. The following are extracted from
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RFC 2759:
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646 ERROR_RESTRICTED_LOGON_HOURS
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647 ERROR_ACCT_DISABLED
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648 ERROR_PASSWD_EXPIRED
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649 ERROR_NO_DIALIN_PERMISSION
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691 ERROR_AUTHENTICATION_FAILURE
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709 ERROR_CHANGING_PASSWORD
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You'll see these in your pppd log as a line similar to:
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Remote message: E=649 No dialin permission
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Previously, pppd would log this as:
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Remote message: E=649 R=0
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Now, the text message is logged (both for MS-CHAP and MS-CHAPv2).
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