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TCP/IP詳解·卷1:協(xié)議(英文版第2版)
《TCP/IP詳解》是已故網(wǎng)絡(luò)專家、著名技術(shù)作家W. Richard Stevens的傳世之作,內(nèi)容詳盡且極具權(quán)威,被譽為TCP/IP領(lǐng)域的不朽名著。
《TCP/IP詳解·卷1:協(xié)議(英文版第2版)》是《TCP/IP詳解》的第1卷,主要講述TCP/IP協(xié)議,結(jié)合大量實例講述TCP/IP協(xié)議族的定義原因,以及在各種不同的操作系統(tǒng)中的應(yīng)用及工作方式。第2版在保留Stevens卓越的知識體系和寫作風(fēng)格的基礎(chǔ)上,新加入的作者Kevin R. Fall結(jié)合其作為TCP/IP協(xié)議研究領(lǐng)域領(lǐng)導(dǎo)者的尖端經(jīng)驗來更新本書,反映了最新的協(xié)議和最佳的實踐方法。首先,他介紹了TCP/IP的核心目標和體系結(jié)構(gòu)概念,展示了它們?nèi)绾文苓B接不同的網(wǎng)絡(luò)和支持多個服務(wù)同時運行。接著,他詳細解釋了IPv4和IPv6網(wǎng)絡(luò)中的互聯(lián)網(wǎng)地址。然后,他采用自底向上的方式來介紹TCP/IP的結(jié)構(gòu)和功能:從鏈路層協(xié)議(如Ethernet和Wi-Fi),經(jīng)網(wǎng)絡(luò)層、傳輸層到應(yīng)用層。 書中依次全面介紹了ARP、DHCP、NAT、防火墻、ICMPv4/ICMPv6、廣播、多播、UDP、DNS等,并詳細介紹了可靠傳輸和TCP,包括連接管理、超時、重傳、交互式數(shù)據(jù)流和擁塞控制。此外,還介紹了安全和加密的基礎(chǔ)知識,闡述了當前用于保護安全和隱私的重要協(xié)議,包括EAP、IPsec、TLS、DNSSEC和DKIM。 本書適合任何希望理解TCP/IP協(xié)議如何實現(xiàn)的人閱讀,更是TCP/IP領(lǐng)域研究人員和開發(fā)人員的權(quán)威參考書。無論你是初學(xué)者還是功底深厚的網(wǎng)絡(luò)領(lǐng)域高手,本書都是案頭必備,將幫助你更深入和直觀地理解整個協(xié)議族,構(gòu)建更好的應(yīng)用和運行更可靠、更高效的網(wǎng)絡(luò)。 本書特色: ·W. Richard Stevens傳奇般的TCP/IP指南,現(xiàn)在被頂級網(wǎng)絡(luò)專家Kevin R. Fall更新,反映了新一代的基于TCP/IP的網(wǎng)絡(luò)技術(shù)。 ·展示每種協(xié)議的實際工作原理,并解釋其來龍去脈。 ·新增加的內(nèi)容包括RPC、訪問控制、身份認證、隱私保護、NFS、SMB/CIFS、DHCP、NAT、防火墻、電子郵件、Web、Web服務(wù)、無線、無線安全等。
Kevin R. Fall博士有超過25年的TCP/IP工作經(jīng)驗,并且是互聯(lián)網(wǎng)架構(gòu)委員會成員。他是互聯(lián)網(wǎng)研究任務(wù)組中延遲容忍網(wǎng)絡(luò)研究組(DTNRG)的聯(lián)席主席,該組致力于在極端和挑戰(zhàn)性能的環(huán)境中探索網(wǎng)絡(luò)。他是一位IEEE院士。
W. Richard Stevens博士(1951—1999)是國際知名的Unix和網(wǎng)絡(luò)專家,受人尊敬的技術(shù)作家和咨詢顧問。他教會了一代網(wǎng)絡(luò)專業(yè)人員使用TCP/IP的技能,使互聯(lián)網(wǎng)成為人們?nèi)粘I畹闹行。Stevens于1999年9月1日去世,年僅48歲。在短暫但精彩的人生中,他著有多部經(jīng)典的傳世之作,包括《TCP/IP 詳解》(三卷本)、《UNIX網(wǎng)絡(luò)編程》(兩卷本)以及《UNIX環(huán)境高級編程》。2000年他被國際權(quán)威機構(gòu)Usenix追授“終身成就獎”。
Foreword v
Chapter Introduction 1.1 Architectural Principles 1.1.1 Packets, Connections, and Datagrams 1.1.2 The End-to-End Argument and Fate Sharing 1.1.3 Error Control and Flow Control 1.2 Design and Implementation 1.2.1 Layering 1.2.2 Multiplexing, Demultiplexing, and Encapsulation in Layered Implementations 1.3 The Architecture and Protocols of the TCP/IP Suite 1.3.1 The ARPANET Reference Model 1.3.2 Multiplexing, Demultiplexing, and Encapsulation in TCP/IP 1.3.3 Port Numbers 1.3.4 Names, Addresses, and the DNS 1.4 Internets, Intranets, and Extranets 1.5 Designing Applications 1.5.1 Client/Server 1.5.2 Peer-to-Peer 1.5.3 Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) Preface to the Second Edition vii Adapted Preface to the First Edition xiii 1.6 Standardization Process 1.6.1 Request for Comments (RFC) 1.6.2 Other Standards 1.7 Implementations and Software Distributions 1.8 Attacks Involving the Internet Architecture 1.9 Summary 1.10 References Chapter The Internet Address Architecture 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Expressing IP Addresses 2.3 Basic IP Address Structure 2.3.1 Classful Addressing 2.3.2 Subnet Addressing 2.3.3 Subnet Masks 2.3.4 Variable-Length Subnet Masks (VLSM) 2.3.5 Broadcast Addresses 2.3.6 IPv6 Addresses and Interface Identifiers 2.4 CIDR and Aggregation 2.4.1 Prefixes 2.4.2 Aggregation 2.5 Special-Use Addresses 2.5.1 Addressing IPv4/IPv6 Translators 2.5.2 Multicast Addresses 2.5.3 IPv4 Multicast Addresses 2.5.4 IPv6 Multicast Addresses 2.5.5 Anycast Addresses 2.6 Allocation 2.6.1 Unicast 2.6.2 Multicast 2.7 Unicast Address Assignment 2.7.1 Single Provider/No Network/Single Address 2.7.2 Single Provider/Single Network/Single Address 2.7.3 Single Provider/Multiple Networks/Multiple Addresses 2.7.4 Multiple Providers/Multiple Networks/Multiple Addresses (Multihoming) Contents xvii 2.8 Attacks Involving IP Addresses 2.9 Summary 2.10 References Chapter Link Layer 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Ethernet and the IEEE LAN/MAN Standards 3.2.1 The IEEE LAN/MAN Standards 3.2.2 The Ethernet Frame Format 3.2.3 .1p/q: Virtual LANs and QoS Tagging 3.2.4 .1AX: Link Aggregation (Formerly .3ad) 3.3 Full Duplex, Power Save, Autonegotiation, and .1X Flow Control 3.3.1 Duplex Mismatch 3.3.2 Wake-on LAN (WoL), Power Saving, and Magic Packets 3.3.3 Link-Layer Flow Control 3.4 Bridges and Switches 3.4.1 Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) 3.4.2 .1ak: Multiple Registration Protocol (MRP) 3.5 Wireless LANs—IEEE .11(Wi-Fi) 3.5.1 .11 Frames 3.5.2 Power Save Mode and the Time Sync Function (TSF) 3.5.3 .11 Media Access Control 3.5.4 Physical-Layer Details: Rates, Channels, and Frequencies 3.5.5 Wi-Fi Security 3.5.6 Wi-Fi Mesh (802.11s) 3.6 Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) 3.6.1 Link Control Protocol (LCP) 3.6.2 Multi link PPP (MP) 3.6.3 Compression Control Protocol (CCP) 3.6.4 PPP Authentication 3.6.5 Network Control Protocols (NCPs) 3.6.6 Header Compression 3.6.7 Example 3.7 Loopback 3.8 MTU and Path MTU 3.9 Tunneling Basics 3.9.1 Unidirectional Links x viii Contents 3.10 Attacks on the Link Layer 3.11 Summary 3.12 References Chapter ARP: Address Resolution Protocol 4.1 Introduction 4.2 An Example 4.2.1 Direct Delivery and ARP 4.3 ARP Cache 4.4 ARP Frame Format 4.5 ARP Examples 4.5.1 Normal Example 4.5.2 ARP Request to a Nonexistent Host 4.6 ARP Cache Timeout 4.7 Proxy ARP 4.8 Gratuitous ARP and Address Conflict Detection (ACD) 4.9 The arp Command 4.10 Using ARP to Set an Embedded Device’s IPv4 Address 4.11 Attacks Involving ARP 4.12 Summary 4.13 References Chapter The Internet Protocol (IP) 5.1 Introduction 5.2 IPv4 and IPv6 Headers 5.2.1 IP Header Fields 5.2.2 The Internet Checksum 5.2.3 DS Field and ECN (Formerly Called the ToS Byte or IPv6 Traffic Class) 5.2.4 IP Options 5.3 IPv6 Extension Headers 5.3.1 IPv6 Options 5.3.2 Routing Header 5.3.3 Fragment Header 5.4 IP Forwarding 5.4.1 Forwarding Table 5.4.2 IP Forwarding Actions Contents xix 5.4.3 Examples 5.4.4 Discussion 5.5 Mobile IP 5.5.1 The Basic Model: Bidirectional Tunneling 5.5.2 Route Optimization (RO) 5.5.3 Discussion 5.6 Host Processing of IP Datagrams 5.6.1 Host Models 5.6.2 Address Selection 5.7 Attacks Involving IP 5.8 Summary 5.9 References Chapter System Configuration: DHCP and Autoconfiguration 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) 6.2.1 Address Pools and Leases 6.2.2 DHCP and BOOTP Message Format 6.2.3 DHCP and BOOTP Options 6.2.4 DHCP Protocol Operation 6.2.5 DHCPv6 6.2.6 Using DHCP with Relays 6.2.7 DHCP Authentication 6.2.8 Reconfigure Extension 6.2.9 Rapid Commit 6.2.10 Location Information (LCI and LoST) 6.2.11 Mobility and Handoff Information (MoS and ANDSF) 6.2.12 DHCP Snooping 6.3 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) 6.3.1 Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses 6.3.2 IPv6 SLAAC for Link-Local Addresses 6.4 DHCP and DNS Interaction 6.5 PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) 6.6 Attacks Involving System Configuration 6.7 Summary 6.8 References xx Contents Chapter Firewalls and Network Address Translation (NAT) 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Firewalls 7.2.1 Packet-Filtering Firewalls 7.2.2 Proxy Firewalls 7.3 Network Address Translation (NAT) 7.3.1 Traditional NAT: Basic NAT and NAPT 7.3.2 Address and Port Translation Behavior 7.3.3 Filtering Behavior 7.3.4 Servers behind NATs 7.3.5 Hairpinning and NAT Loopback 7.3.6 NAT Editors 7.3.7 Service Provider NAT (SPNAT) and Service Provider IPv6 Transition 7.4 NAT Traversal 7.4.1 Pinholes and Hole Punching 7.4.2 UNilateral Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) 7.4.3 Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) 7.4.4 Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) 7.4.5 Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) 7.5 Configuring Packet-Filtering Firewalls and NATs 7.5.1 Firewall Rules 7.5.2 NAT Rules 7.5.3 Direct Interaction with NATs and Firewalls: UPnP, NAT-PMP, and PCP 7.6 NAT for IPv4/IPv6 Coexistence and Transition 7.6.1 Dual-Stack Lite (DS-Lite) 7.6.2 IPv4/IPv6 Translation Using NATs and ALGs 7.7 Attacks Involving Firewalls and NATs 7.8 Summary 7.9 References Chapter ICMPv4 and ICMPv6: Internet Control Message Protocol 8.1 Introduction 8.1.1 Encapsulation in IPv4 and IPv6 8.2 ICMP Messages 8.2.1 ICMPv4 Messages Contents xxi 8.2.2 ICMPv6 Messages 8.2.3 Processing of ICMP Messages 8.3 ICMP Error Messages 8.3.1 Extended ICMP and Multipart Messages 8.3.2 Destination Unreachable (ICMPv4 Type , ICMPv6 Type ) and Packet Too Big (ICMPv6 Type ) 8.3.3 Redirect (ICMPv4 Type , ICMPv6 Type ) 8.3.4 ICMP Time Exceeded (ICMPv4 Type , ICMPv6 Type ) 8.3.5 Parameter Problem (ICMPv4 Type , ICMPv6 Type ) 8.4 ICMP Query/Informational Messages 8.4.1 Echo Request/Reply (ping) (ICMPv4 Types /8, ICMPv6 Types 129/128) 8.4.2 Router Discovery: Router Solicitation and Advertisement (ICMPv4 Types , ) 8.4.3 Home Agent Address Discovery Request/Reply (ICMPv6 Types 144/145) 8.4.4 Mobile Prefix Solicitation/Advertisement (ICMPv6 Types /147) 8.4.5 Mobile IPv6 Fast Handover Messages (ICMPv6 Type ) 8.4.6 Multicast Listener Query/Report/Done (ICMPv6 Types 130/131/132) 8.4.7 Version Multicast Listener Discovery (MLDv2) (ICMPv6 Type ) 8.4.8 Multicast Router Discovery (MRD) (IGMP Types /49/50, ICMPv6 Types /152/153) 8.5 Neighbor Discovery in IPv6 8.5.1 ICMPv6 Router Solicitation and Advertisement (ICMPv6 Types 133, ) 8.5.2 ICMPv6 Neighbor Solicitation and Advertisement (IMCPv6 Types 135, ) 8.5.3 ICMPv6 Inverse Neighbor Discovery Solicitation/Advertisement (ICMPv6 Types /142) 8.5.4 Neighbor Unreachability Detection (NUD) 8.5.5 Secure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) 8.5.6 ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery (ND) Options 8.6 Translating ICMPv4 and ICMPv6 8.6.1 Translating ICMPv4 to ICMPv6 8.6.2 Translating ICMPv6 to ICMPv4 8.7 Attacks Involving ICMP x xii Contents 8.8 Summary 8.9 References Chapter Broadcasting and Local Multicasting (IGMP and MLD) 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Broadcasting 9.2.1 Using Broadcast Addresses 9.2.2 Sending Broadcast Datagrams 9.3 Multicasting 9.3.1 Converting IP Multicast Addresses to MAC/Ethernet Addresses 9.3.2 Examples 9.3.3 Sending Multicast Datagrams 9.3.4 Receiving Multicast Datagrams 9.3.5 Host Address Filtering 9.4 The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery Protocol (MLD) 9.4.1 IGMP and MLD Processing by Group Members (“Group Member Part”) 9.4.2 IGMP and MLD Processing by Multicast Routers (“Multicast Router Part”) 9.4.3 Examples 9.4.4 Lightweight IGMPv3 and MLDv2 9.4.5 IGMP and MLD Robustness 9.4.6 IGMP and MLD Counters and Variables 9.4.7 IGMP and MLD Snooping 9.5 Attacks Involving IGMP and MLD 9.6 Summary 9.7 References Chapter User Datagram Protocol (UDP) and IP Fragmentation 10.1 Introduction 10.2 UDP Header 10.3 UDP Checksum 10.4 Examples 10.5 UDP and IPv6 10.5.1 Teredo: Tunneling IPv6 through IPv4 Networks Contents xxiii 10.6 UDP-Lite 10.7 IP Fragmentation 10.7.1 Example: UDP/IPv4 Fragmentation 10.7.2 Reassembly Timeout 10.8 Path MTU Discovery with UDP 10.8.1 Example 10.9 Interaction between IP Fragmentation and ARP/ND 10.10 Maximum UDP Datagram Size 10.10.1 Implementation Limitations 10.10.2 Datagram Truncation 10.11 UDP Server Design 10.11.1 IP Addresses and UDP Port Numbers 10.11.2 Restricting Local IP Addresses 10.11.3 Using Multiple Addresses 10.11.4 Restricting Foreign IP Address 10.11.5 Using Multiple Servers per Port 10.11.6 Spanning Address Families: IPv4 and IPv6 10.11.7 Lack of Flow and Congestion Control 10.12 Translating UDP/IPv4 and UDP/IPv6 Datagrams 10.13 UDP in the Internet 10.14 Attacks Involving UDP and IP Fragmentation 10.15 Summary 10.16 References Chapter Name Resolution and the Domain Name System (DNS) 11.1 Introduction 11.2 The DNS Name Space 11.2.1 DNS Naming Syntax 11.3 Name Servers and Zones 11.4 Caching 11.5 The DNS Protocol 11.5.1 DNS Message Format 11.5.2 The DNS Extension Format (EDNS0) 11.5.3 UDP or TCP 11.5.4 Question (Query) and Zone Section Format 11.5.5 Answer, Authority, and Additional Information Section Formats 11.5.6 Resource Record Types x xiv Contents 11.5.7 Dynamic Updates (DNS UPDATE) 11.5.8 Zone Transfers and DNS NOTIFY 11.6 Sort Lists, Round-Robin, and Split DNS 11.7 Open DNS Servers and DynDNS 11.8 Transparency and Extensibility 11.9 Translating DNS from IPv4 to IPv6 (DNS64) 11.10 LLMNR and mDNS 11.11 LDAP 11.12 Attacks on the DNS 11.13 Summary 11.14 References Chapter TCP: The Transmission Control Protocol (Preliminaries) 12.1 Introduction 12.1.1 ARQ and Retransmission 12.1.2 Windows of Packets and Sliding Windows 12.1.3 Variable Windows: Flow Control and Congestion Control 12.1.4 Setting the Retransmission Timeout 12.2 Introduction to TCP 12.2.1 The TCP Service Model 12.2.2 Reliability in TCP 12.3 TCP Header and Encapsulation 12.4 Summary 12.5 References Chapter TCP Connection Management 13.1 Introduction 13.2 TCP Connection Establishment and Termination 13.2.1 TCP Half-Close 13.2.2 Simultaneous Open and Close 13.2.3 Initial Sequence Number (ISN) 13.2.4 Example 13.2.5 Timeout of Connection Establishment 13.2.6 Connections and Translators 13.3 TCP Options 13.3.1 Maximum Segment Size (MSS) Option Contents xxv 13.3.2 Selective Acknowledgment (SACK) Options 13.3.3 Window Scale (WSCALE or WSOPT) Option 13.3.4 Timestamps Option and Protection against Wrapped Sequence Numbers (PAWS) 13.3.5 User Timeout (UTO) Option 13.3.6 Authentication Option (TCP-AO) 13.4 Path MTU Discovery with TCP 13.4.1 Example 13.5 TCP State Transitions 13.5.1 TCP State Transition Diagram 13.5.2 TIME_WAIT (2MSL Wait) State 13.5.3 Quiet Time Concept 13.5.4 FIN_WAIT_2 State 13.5.5 Simultaneous Open and Close Transitions 13.6 Reset Segments 13.6.1 Connection Request to Nonexistent Port 13.6.2 Aborting a Connection 13.6.3 Half-Open Connections 13.6.4 TIME-WAIT Assassination (TWA) 13.7 TCP Server Operation 13.7.1 TCP Port Numbers 13.7.2 Restricting Local IP Addresses 13.7.3 Restricting Foreign Endpoints 13.7.4 Incoming Connection Queue 13.8 Attacks Involving TCP Connection Management 13.9 Summary 13.10 References Chapter TCP Timeout and Retransmission 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Simple Timeout and Retransmission Example 14.3 Setting the Retransmission Timeout (RTO) 14.3.1 The Classic Method 14.3.2 The Standard Method 14.3.3 The Linux Method 14.3.4 RTT Estimator Behaviors 14.3.5 RTTM Robustness to Loss and Reordering x xvi Contents 14.4 Timer-Based Retransmission 14.4.1 Example 14.5 Fast Retransmit 14.5.1 Example 14.6 Retransmission with Selective Acknowledgments 14.6.1 SACK Receiver Behavior 14.6.2 SACK Sender Behavior 14.6.3 Example 14.7 Spurious Timeouts and Retransmissions 14.7.1 Duplicate SACK (DSACK) Extension 14.7.2 The Eifel Detection Algorithm 14.7.3 Forward-RTO Recovery (F-RTO) 14.7.4 The Eifel Response Algorithm 14.8 Packet Reordering and Duplication 14.8.1 Reordering 14.8.2 Duplication 14.9 Destination Metrics 14.10 Repacketization 14.11 Attacks Involving TCP Retransmission 14.12 Summary 14.13 References Chapter TCP Data Flow and Window Management 15.1 Introduction 15.2 Interactive Communication 15.3 Delayed Acknowledgments 15.4 Nagle Algorithm 15.4.1 Delayed ACK and Nagle Algorithm Interaction 15.4.2 Disabling the Nagle Algorithm 15.5 Flow Control and Window Management 15.5.1 Sliding Windows 15.5.2 Zero Windows and the TCP Persist Timer 15.5.3 Silly Window Syndrome (SWS) 15.5.4 Large Buffers and Auto-Tuning 15.6 Urgent Mechanism 15.6.1 Example 15.7 Attacks Involving Window Management Contents xxvii 15.8 Summary 15.9 References Chapter TCP Congestion Control 16.1 Introduction 16.1.1 Detection of Congestion in TCP 16.1.2 Slowing Down a TCP Sender 16.2 The Classic Algorithms 16.2.1 Slow Start 16.2.2 Congestion Avoidance 16.2.3 Selecting between Slow Start and Congestion Avoidance 16.2.4 Tahoe, Reno, and Fast Recovery 16.2.5 Standard TCP 16.3 Evolution of the Standard Algorithms 16.3.1 NewReno 16.3.2 TCP Congestion Control with SACK 16.3.3 Forward Acknowledgment (FACK) and Rate Halving 16.3.4 Limited Transmit 16.3.5 Congestion Window Validation (CWV) 16.4 Handling Spurious RTOs—the Eifel Response Algorithm 16.5 An Extended Example 16.5.1 Slow Start Behavior 16.5.2 Sender Pause and Local Congestion (Event ) 16.5.3 Stretch ACKs and Recovery from Local Congestion 16.5.4 Fast Retransmission and SACK Recovery (Event ) 16.5.5 Additional Local Congestion and Fast Retransmit Events 16.5.6 Timeouts, Retransmissions, and Undoing cwnd Changes 16.5.7 Connection Completion 16.6 Sharing Congestion State 16.7 TCP Friendliness 16.8 TCP in High-Speed Environments 16.8.1 HighSpeed TCP (HSTCP) and Limited Slow Start 16.8.2 Binary Increase Congestion Control (BIC and CUBIC) 16.9 Delay-Based Congestion Control 16.9.1 Vegas 16.9.2 FAST x xviii Contents 16.9.3 TCP Westwood and Westwood+ 16.9.4 Compound TCP 16.10 Buffer Bloat 16.11 Active Queue Management and ECN 16.12 Attacks Involving TCP Congestion Control 16.13 Summary 16.14 References Chapter TCP Keepalive 17.1 Introduction 17.2 Description 17.2.1 Keepalive Examples 17.3 Attacks Involving TCP Keepalives 17.4 Summary 17.5 References Chapter Security: EAP, IPsec, TLS, DNSSEC, and DKIM 18.1 Introduction 18.2 Basic Principles of Information Security 18.3 Threats to Network Communication 18.4 Basic Cryptography and Security Mechanisms 18.4.1 Cryptosystems 18.4.2 Rivest, Shamir, and Adleman (RSA) Public Key Cryptography 18.4.3 Diffie-Hellman-Merkle Key Agreement (aka Diffie-Hellman or DH) 18.4.4 Signcryption and Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) 18.4.5 Key Derivation and Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) 18.4.6 Pseudorandom Numbers, Generators, and Function Families 18.4.7 Nonces and Salt 18.4.8 Cryptographic Hash Functions and Message Digests 18.4.9 Message Authentication Codes (MACs, HMAC, CMAC, and GMAC) 18.4.10 Cryptographic Suites and Cipher Suites 18.5 Certificates, Certificate Authorities (CAs), and PKIs 18.5.1 Public Key Certificates, Certificate Authorities, and X.509 18.5.2 Validating and Revoking Certificates 18.5.3 Attribute Certificates Contents xxix 18.6 TCP/IP Security Protocols and Layering 18.7 Network Access Control: .1X, .1AE, EAP, and PANA 18.7.1 EAP Methods and Key Derivation 18.7.2 The EAP Re-authentication Protocol (ERP) 18.7.3 Protocol for Carrying Authentication for Network Access (PANA) 18.8 Layer IP Security (IPsec) 18.8.1 Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol 18.8.2 Authentication Header (AH) 18.8.3 Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) 18.8.4 Multicast 18.8.5 L2TP/IPsec 18.8.6 IPsec NAT Traversal 18.8.7 Example 18.9 Transport Layer Security (TLS and DTLS) 18.9.1 TLS .2 18.9.2 TLS with Datagrams (DTLS) 18.10 DNS Security (DNSSEC) 18.10.1 DNSSEC Resource Records 18.10.2 DNSSEC Operation 18.10.3 Transaction Authentication (TSIG, TKEY, and SIG(0)) 18.10.4 DNSSEC with DNS64 18.11 DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) 18.11.1 DKIM Signatures 18.11.2 Example 18.12 Attacks on Security Protocols 18.13 Summary 18.14 References Glossary of Acronyms Index
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