xref: /freebsd/crypto/heimdal/doc/misc.texi (revision 81ad6265)
1@c $Id$
2
3@node Things in search for a better place, Kerberos 4 issues, Applications, Top
4@chapter Things in search for a better place
5
6@section Making things work on Ciscos
7
8Modern versions of Cisco IOS has some support for authenticating via
9Kerberos 5. This can be used both by having the router get a ticket when
10you login (boring), and by using Kerberos authenticated telnet to access
11your router (less boring). The following has been tested on IOS
1211.2(12), things might be different with other versions. Old versions
13are known to have bugs.
14
15To make this work, you will first have to configure your router to use
16Kerberos (this is explained in the documentation). A sample
17configuration looks like the following:
18
19@example
20aaa new-model
21aaa authentication login default krb5-telnet krb5 enable
22aaa authorization exec krb5-instance
23kerberos local-realm FOO.SE
24kerberos srvtab entry host/router.foo.se 0 891725446 4 1 8 012345678901234567
25kerberos server FOO.SE 10.0.0.1
26kerberos instance map admin 15
27@end example
28
29This tells you (among other things) that when logging in, the router
30should try to authenticate with kerberised telnet, and if that fails try
31to verify a plain text password via a Kerberos ticket exchange (as
32opposed to a local database, RADIUS or something similar), and if that
33fails try the local enable password. If you're not careful when you
34specify the `login default' authentication mechanism, you might not be
35able to login at all. The `instance map' and `authorization exec' lines
36says that people with `admin' instances should be given `enabled' shells
37when logging in.
38
39The numbers after the principal on the `srvtab' line are principal type,
40time stamp (in seconds since 1970), key version number (4), keytype (1 ==
41des), key length (always 8 with des), and then the key.
42
43To make the Heimdal KDC produce tickets that the Cisco can decode you
44might have to turn on the @samp{encode_as_rep_as_tgs_rep} flag in the
45KDC. You will also have to specify that the router can't handle anything
46but @samp{des-cbc-crc}. This can be done with the @samp{del_enctype}
47command of @samp{kadmin}.
48
49This all fine and so, but unless you have an IOS version with encryption
50(available only in the U.S) it doesn't really solve any problems. Sure
51you don't have to send your password over the wire, but since the telnet
52connection isn't protected it's still possible for someone to steal your
53session. This won't be fixed until someone adds integrity to the telnet
54protocol.
55
56A working solution would be to hook up a machine with a real operating
57system to the console of the Cisco and then use it as a backwards
58terminal server.
59