Chapter 3. Protocols
The previous two chapters introduced the major concepts that underlie the Kerberos authentication system, and presented a short, high-level discussion of how Kerberos performs its magic. This chapter continues that discussion by drilling down into the nitty-gritty of the Kerberos protocol and presenting it on a fundamental level.
Creating a protocol that verifies the identity of two endpoints on a network given an underlying network that provides no security is a daunting task. Kerberos was designed under the assumption that attackers can read, copy, and create network traffic at will.
As you now know, there are two versions of Kerberos that are currently in wide usage: Kerberos 4 and Kerberos 5. This chapter covers the protocol details of both. While the concepts and protocol design of both Kerberos 4 and 5 are very similar, there are major differences between their byte-level protocol and implementation.
The original Kerberos 4 protocol was never published apart from the Kerberos 4 source distribution. As such, the Kerberos 4 source code from MIT is the only official documentation of the Kerberos 4 protocol. On the other hand, the newer Kerberos 5 protocol is extensively documented in RFC 1510, and also through a series of documents that are collectively known as the Kerberos Clarifications.
The basic operation of Kerberos is based on a paper published in 1978 by Needham and Schroeder. Since the Needham-Schroeder protocol is the basis upon which Kerberos is built, ...
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