IPsec Pairwise Keys


Note


To achieve simplification and consistency, the Cisco SD-WAN solution has been rebranded as Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN. In addition, from Cisco IOS XE SD-WAN Release 17.12.1a and Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Release 20.12.1, the following component changes are applicable: Cisco vManage to Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager, Cisco vAnalytics to Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Analytics, Cisco vBond to Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Validator, and Cisco vSmart to Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Controller. See the latest Release Notes for a comprehensive list of all the component brand name changes. While we transition to the new names, some inconsistencies might be present in the documentation set because of a phased approach to the user interface updates of the software product.


Table 1. Feature History

Feature Name

Release Information

Description

Secure Communication Using Pairwise IPsec Keys

Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN Release 16.12.1b

This feature allows you to create and install private pairwise IPsec session keys for secure communication between an IPsec device and its peers.

The IPsec pairwise keys feature implements controller-based key exchange protocol between a device and controller.

Controller-based key exchange protocol is used to create a Gateway-to-Gateway VPN (RFC7018) in either a full-mesh topology or dynamic full-mesh topology.

The network devices set up a protected control-plane connection to the controller. The controller distributes policies to network devices. The network devices, in turn, communicate with each other through a secure data plane.

A pair of IPsec session keys (one encryption key and one decryption key) are configured for each pair of local and remote transport locations (TLOC).

Supported Platforms

The following platforms are supported for IPSec Pairwise Keys feature:

  • Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN devices

  • Cisco vEdge devices

Pairwise Keys

Key exchange method combined with authentication policies facilitate pairwise key creation between two network devices. You use a controller to distribute keying material and policies between network devices. The devices generate private pairwise keys with each other.

IPsec devices share public keys from the Diffie-Hellman (DH) algorithm with the controllers. The controllers relay the DH public keys to authorized peers of the IPsec device as defined by the centralized policy.

Network devices create and install private pairwise IPsec session keys to secure communication with their peers.

IPsec Security Association Rekey

Every rekeying IPsec device generates a new Diffie-Hellman (DH) pair and new IPsec security association pairs for each peer with which it is communicating. The new security association pairs are generated as a combination of the new DH private key and the DH public key of each peer. The IPsec device distributes the new DH public value to the controller, which forwards it to its authorized peers. Each peer continues to transmit to the existing security association, and subsequently, to new security associations.

During a simultaneous rekey, up to four pairs of IPsec Security Associations (SAs) can be temporarily created. These four pairs converge on a single rekey of a device.

An IPsec device can initiate a rekey due to reasons such as the local time or a volume-based policy, or the counter result of a cipher counter mode initialization vector nearing completion.

When you configure a rekey on a local inbound security association, it triggers a peer outbound and inbound security association rekey. The local outbound security association rekey is initiated after the IPsec device receives the first packet with the new Security Parameter Index (SPI) from a peer.


Note


  • A pairwise-key device can form IPsec sessions with both pairwise and nonpairwise devices.

  • The rekeying process requires higher control plane CPU usage, resulting in lower session scaling.


Configure IPSec Pairwise Keys

Configure IPsec Pairwise Keys Using Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager

  1. From the Cisco SD-WAN Manager menu, choose Configuration > Templates.

  2. Click Feature Templates and then click Add Template.


    Note


    In Cisco vManage Release 20.7.1 and earlier releases, Feature Templates is called Feature.


  3. From the Device Model drop-down menu, choose the type of device for which you are creating the template.

  4. From Basic Information, click Cisco Security feature template.

  5. From Basic Configuration, click On or Off from the IPsec pairwise-keying field.

  6. Alternatively, enter the pairwise key specific to the device in the Enter Key field.

  7. Click Save.

Configure Pairwise Keys and Enable Rekeying on the CLI

A pair of IPsec session keys is configured for each pair of local and remote transport locations.

The keys use AES-GCM-256 (AES_256_CBC for multicast) cipher to perform encryption. By default, a key is valid for 3600 seconds.

Configure Pairwise Keys

Use the following command to configure pairwise keys:
Device(config)# security ipsec pairwise-keying

Note


You must reboot the Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN device for the private-key configuration to take effect.


Configure Rekeying for IPsec Pairwise Keys

Use the following command to configure rekeying for pairwise keys:
Device(config)# security ipsec pwk-sym-rekey

Verify IPsec Pairwise Keys on a Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN Device

Use the following command to verify the outbound connections for pairwise keys:

Device# show sdwan ipsec pwk outbound-connections
                                                                                                                               REMOTE                  SA    PKEY  NONCE   PKEY    SS   E-KEY   AH
 SOURCE IP    Source Port  SOURCE IP   DEST Port LOCAL TLOC ADDRESS  REMOTE TLOC COLOR  REMOTE TLOC ADDRESS   REMOTE TLOC COLOR     PWK-SPI  INDEX      ID      HASH   HASH   HASH   HASH  AUTH
----------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------------+--------+----------------+----------------+----------------+----------------+---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+----
10.168.11.3   12346    192.168.90.3      12346    10.1.0.2                 lte              10.1.0.1          private1          000000   202    0       6668          17B0   F5A5  true
10.168.11.3   12346    192.168.92.6      12346    10.1.0.2                 lte              10.1.0.6          default           00A001   52     10      0ED6   AF12   0A09   8030  true
10.168.12.3   12346    192.168.90.3      12346    10.1.0.2                 blue             10.1.0.1          private1          000000   205    0       6668          17B0   F5A5  true
10.168.12.3   12346    192.168.92.6      12346    10.1.0.2                 blue             10.1.0.6          default           00A001   55     10      0ED6   AF12   B9B7   BE29  true

Use the following command to verify the inbound connections on IPsec pairwise keys:

Device# show sdwan ipsec pwk inbound-connections

                                          SOURCE                                             DEST        LOCAL            LOCAL            REMOTE           REMOTE                  SA    PKEY  NONCE   PKEY    SS   D-KEY   AH
               SOURCE IP                   PORT                   DEST IP                    PORT     TLOC ADDRESS      TLOC COLOR      TLOC ADDRESS      TLOC COLOR     PWK-SPI  INDEX    ID    HASH   HASH   HASH   HASH  AUTH
----------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------------+--------+----------------+----------------+----------------+----------------+---------+------+------+------+------+------+------+----
192.168.90.3                             12346    10.168.11.3                              12346    10.1.0.2          lte              10.1.0.1          private1          000000   2      1       5605   70C7   17B0   F5A5  true
192.168.92.6                             12346    10.168.11.3                              12346    10.1.0.2          lte              10.1.0.6          default           00100B   52     1       5605   70C7   CCC2   C9E1  true
192.168.90.3                             12346    10.168.12.3                              12346    10.1.0.2          blue             10.1.0.1          private1          000000   5      1       B9F9   5C75   17B0   F5A5  true
192.168.92.6                             12346    10.168.12.3                              12346    10.1.0.2          blue             10.1.0.6          default           00100B   55     1       B9F9   5C75   A0F8   7B6B  true

Device# show sdwan ipsec pwk local-sa

                                                                                   SA   PKEY  NONCE PKEY
TLOC-ADDRESS     TLOC-COLOR     SOURCE-IP   SOURCE PORT     SPI   INDEX  ID  
---------------+---------------+---------------------------------------+-------+-------+-----+-----+-----+-----
10.1.0.2         lte             10.168.11.3    12346           257     6     1     5605  70C7
10.1.0.2         blue            10.168.12.3    12346           257     3     1     B9F9  5C75
Device# show platform hardware qfp active feature ipsec da spi

g_hash_idx  Flow id  QFP SA hdl  source IP                                sport  dest IP                                  dport  SA ptr      spi/old                crypto_hdl/old
-----------+--------+-----------+----------------------------------------+------+----------------------------------------+------+-----------+----------------------+-------------------------------------
1541        3        11          192.168.90.3                             12346  192.168.92.6                             12346  0x312b84f0  0x00000115/0x00000114  0x0000000031fbfa80/0x0000000031fbd520
6661        131      36          10.168.12.3                              12346  192.168.92.6                             12346  0x312b9990  0x0000b001/0x0000a001  0x0000000031fbe380/0x0000000031fbc9a0
7429        117      6           10.168.11.3                              12346  192.168.92.6                             12346  0x312b9300  0x0000b001/0x0000a001  0x0000000031fbd970/0x0000000031fbb580
   
 
           System id    Wan int Wan ip 
Yubei-cedge     5102    Gi2.xxx Sub 10.168.xxx
Yubei-tsn       5108    Gi0/0/1 192.168.92.8
Yubei-ovld      5106    Gi0/0/0 192.168.92.6
Yubei-1ng       5107    Gi0/0/0 192.168.92.7
Yubei-utah      5104    Gi0/0/0 192.168.92.4
Yubei-vedge     5101    ge0/0   192.168.90.3

Use the following command to display IPsec pairwise keys information on a Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN device:

Device# show sdwan security-info

security-info authentication-type "AH_SHA1_HMAC SHA1_HMAC"
security-info rekey 86400
security-info replay-window 512
security-info encryption-supported "AES_GCM_256 (and AES_256_CBC for multicast)"
security-info fips-mode Enabled
security-info pairwise-keying Enabled

Debug Commands on Cisco IOS XE Catalyst SD-WAN Devices

Use the following debug commands for debugging issues related to IPsec pairwise keys:

debug plat soft sdwan ftm pwk [dump | log]
debug plat soft sdwan ttm pwk [dump | log]
debug plat soft sdwan vdaemon pwk [dump | log]