Internet-Draft | Proxy Configuration PvDs | June 2023 |
Pauly | Expires 29 December 2023 | [Page] |
This document defines a mechanism for accessing provisioning domain information associated with a proxy, such a list of DNS zones that are accessible via an HTTP CONNECT proxy. It also defines a way to enumerate proxies that are associated with a known provisioning domain.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/tfpauly/privacy-proxy.¶
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HTTP proxies that use the CONNECT method Section 9.3.6 of [HTTP] (often referred to as "forward" proxies) allow clients to open connections to hosts via a proxy. These typically allow for TCP stream proxying, but can also support UDP proxying [CONNECTUDP] and IP packet proxying [CONNECTIP]. Such proxies are not just defined as hostnames and ports, but can use URI templates [URITEMPLATE].¶
In order to make use of multiple related proxies, clients need a way to understand which proxies are associated with one another.¶
Client can also benefit from learning about additional information associated with the proxy to optimize their proxy usage, such knowing that a proxy is configured to only allow access to a limited set of next hops.¶
These improvements to client behavior can be achieved through the use of Provisioning Domains. Provisioning Domains (PvDs) are defined in [PVD] as consistent sets of network configuration information, which can include proxy configuration details Section 2 of [PVD]. [PVDDATA] defines a JSON [JSON] format for describing Provisioning Domain Additional Information, which is an extensible dictionary of properties of the Provisioning Domain.¶
This document defines two mechanisms to use PvDs to help clients understand how to use proxies:¶
Other non-standard mechanisms for proxy configuration and discovery have been used historically, some of which are described in [RFC3040].¶
Proxy Auto Configuration (PAC) files Section 6.2 of [RFC3040] are Javascript scripts that take URLs as input and provide an output of a proxy configuration to use.¶
Web Proxy Auto-Discovery Protocol (WPAD) Section 6.4 of [RFC3040] allows networks to advertise proxies to use by advertising a PAC file. This solution squats on DHCP option 252.¶
These common (but non-standard) mechanisms only support defining proxies by hostname and port, and do not support configuring a full URI template [URITEMPLATE].¶
The mechanisms defined in this document are intended to offer a standard alternative that works for URI-based proxies and avoids dependencies on executing Javascript scripts, which can open up security vulnerabilities.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
This document defines a way to fetch PvD Additional Information associated with a particular proxy resource. This PvD describes the properties of the network accessible through the proxy.¶
Some HTTP forward proxies, like those used for UDP and IP proxying, are identified by URI templates that contains paths, such as "https://proxy.example.org/masque{?target_host,target_port}". For such cases, a client can fetch the PvD Additional Information by issuing a GET request Section 9.3.1 of [HTTP] to the proxy URI, with template variables removed, and setting the media type "application/pvd+json" [PVDDATA] in an Accept header.¶
For example, a client would issue the following request for the PvD associated with "https://proxy.example.org/masque{?target_host,target_port}":¶
:method = GET :scheme = https :authority = proxy.example.org :path = /masque accept = application/pvd+json¶
CONNECT forward proxies that proxy TCP streams do not contain a path. For such cases, a client can fetch the PvD Additional Information by issuing a GET request to the path "/". For example:¶
:method = GET :scheme = https :authority = proxy.example.org :path = / accept = application/pvd+json¶
PvD Additional Information is required to contain the "identifier", "expires", and "prefixes" keys.¶
For proxy PvDs as defined in this document, the "identifier" MUST match the hostname of the HTTP proxy. The "prefixes" array SHOULD be empty by default.¶
Split DNS configurations are cases where only a subset of domains is routed through a VPN tunnel or a proxy. For example, IKEv2 defines split DNS configuration in [IKEV2SPLIT].¶
PvD Additional Information can be used to indicate that a proxy PvD has a split DNS configuration.¶
Section 4.3 of [PVDDATA] defines the optional dnsZones
key, which contains
searchable and accessible DNS zones as an array of strings.¶
When present in a PvD Additional Information dictionary that is retrieved using a GET
request to the proxy URI as described in Section 2, domains in the dnsZones
array indicate specific zones that are accessible using the proxy. If a hostname is
not included in the enumerated zones, then a client SHOULD assume that the hostname
will not be accessible through the proxy.¶
Entries listed in dnsZones
MUST NOT expand the set of domains that a client is
willing to send to a particular proxy. The list can only narrow the list of domains
that the client is willing to send through the proxy. For example, if the client
has a local policy to only send requests for "example.com" to a proxy
"proxy.example.com", and the dnsZones
array contains "internal.example.com" and
"other.company.com", the client would end up only proxying "internal.example.com"
through the proxy.¶
Given a proxy URI template "https://proxy.example.org/masque{?target_host,target_port}", which in this case is for UDP proxying, the client could request PvD additional information with the following request:¶
:method = GET :scheme = https :authority = proxy.example.org :path = /masque accept = application/pvd+json¶
If the proxy has a PvD definition for this proxy, it could return the following response to indicate a PvD that has one accessible zone, "internal.example.org".¶
:status = 200 content-type = application/pvd+json content-length = 135 { "identifier": "proxy.example.org.", "expires": "2023-06-23T06:00:00Z", "prefixes": [], "dnsZones": ["internal.example.org"] }¶
The client could then choose to use this proxy only for accessing names that fall within the "internal.example.org" zone.¶
PvD Additional Information can also be used to list proxies that are associated with a particular PvD. This association represents availability of a proxy, but does not indicate any policy of the PvD that requires clients to use a proxy or not.¶
This document defines a new PvD Additional Information key, proxies
, that
is an array of strings that is a list of proxy URIs (or URI templates
[URITEMPLATE]). The new key is registered in Section 5.¶
The kind of proxy is implied by the URI scheme and any template variables.
For example, since UDP proxying [CONNECTUDP] has the URI template variables
target_host
and target_port
, the URI
"https://proxy.example.org:4443/masque{?target_host,target_port}" implies
that the proxy supports UDP proxying.¶
When a PvD that contains the proxies
key is fetched from a known proxy URI,
using the method described in Section 2, the proxies list describes
equivalent proxies (potentially supporting other protocols) that can be used
in addition to the known proxy.¶
Such cases are useful for informing clients of related proxies as a discovery method, with the assumption that the client already is aware of one proxy.¶
When a PvD that contains the proxies
key is fetched from the well-known
PvD URI (".well-known/pvd"), the list allows enumeration of proxies
that apply to the entire PvD identifier. There are two use cases this can
support: configuring proxies from an FQDN and configuring proxies from a
network.¶
Many historical methods of configuring a proxy only allow configuring a single FQDN hostname for the proxy. A client can attempt to fetch the PvD information from the well-known URI to learn the list of complete URIs that support non-default protocols, such as [CONNECTUDP] and [CONNECTIP].¶
For example, if a user has configured a proxy with the name "proxy.example.com", the client can fetch "https://proxy.example.com/.well-known/pvd" to detect a list of associated proxies.¶
[PVDDATA] defines how PvD Additional Information is discovered based
on network advertisements using Router Advertisements [RFC4861]. A network
defining its configuration via PvD information can include the proxies
key to inform clients of a list of proxies available on the network.¶
Policy for whether or not clients use the proxies is implementation-specific and might depend on other keys defined in the PvD Additional Information.¶
Given a known FQDN "company.example.org", which was discovered from a PvD Router Advertisement option, a client could request PvD additional information with the following request:¶
:method = GET :scheme = https :authority = company.example.org :path = /.well-known/pvd accept = application/pvd+json¶
If the proxy has a PvD definition for this FQDN, it could return the following response to indicate a PvD that has two related proxy URIs.¶
:status = 200 content-type = application/pvd+json content-length = 222 { "identifier": "company.example.org.", "expires": "2023-06-23T06:00:00Z", "prefixes": ["2001:db8:cafe::/48"], "proxies": ["https://proxy.example.org","https://proxy.example.org/masque{?target_host,target_port}"] }¶
The client could then choose to use the available proxies, and could look up the PvD Additional Information files on those URIs, depending on client policy for using proxies.¶
Configuration advertised via PvD Additional Information, such DNS zones or associated proxies, can only be safely used when fetched over a secure TLS-protected connection, and the client has validated that that the hostname of the proxy, the identifier of the PvD, and the validated hostname identity on the certificate all match.¶
This document registers a new key in the "Additional Information PvD Keys" registry.¶
JSON Key: proxies¶
Description: Array of proxy URIs associated with this PvD¶
Type: Array of strings¶
Example: ["https://proxy.example.com", "https://proxy.example.com/masque{?target_host,tcp_port}"]¶