Generic Bootstrapping Architecture
Encyclopedia

Introduction

In mobile phones, Generic Bootstrapping Architecture (GBA) is one technology enabling the authentication of a user. This authentication is possible if the user owns a valid identity on an HLR Home Location Register or a Home Subscriber Server

GBA is standardized at the 3GPP
3GPP
The 3rd Generation Partnership Project is a collaboration between groups of telecommunications associations, known as the Organizational Partners...

 (http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Specs/html-info/33220.htm) . The user authentication is instantiated by a shared secret, one in the smartcard inside the mobile phone and the other is on the HLR/HSS.

GBA authenticates by making a network component challenge the simcard card and verify that the answer is similar by the one predicted by the HLR/HSS.

Instead of asking the service provider to trust the BSF
Bootstrapping Server Function
A Bootstrapping Server Function is an intermediary element in Cellular networks which provides application independent functions for mutual authentication of user equipment and servers unknown to each other and for 'bootstrapping' the exchange of secret session keys afterwards...

 and relying on it for every authentication request, the BSF
Bootstrapping Server Function
A Bootstrapping Server Function is an intermediary element in Cellular networks which provides application independent functions for mutual authentication of user equipment and servers unknown to each other and for 'bootstrapping' the exchange of secret session keys afterwards...

 establishes a shared secret between the simcard card and the service provider. This shared secret is limited in time and for a specific domain.


Strong points

This solution has some strong points of certificate and shared secrets without having some of their weaknesses:

- There is no need for user enrollment phase nor secure deployment of keys, making this solution a very low cost one when compared to PKI.

- Another advantage is the ease with which the authentication method may be integrated into terminals and service providers, as it is based on HTTP's well known "Digest access authentication
Digest access authentication
Digest access authentication is one of the agreed upon methods a web server can use to negotiate credentials with a user's web browser. It uses encryption to send the password over the network which is safer than the Basic access authentication that sends plaintext.Technically digest...

". Every Web server already implement HTTP digest authentication and the effort to implement GBA on top of digest authentication is minimal. For example it could be implemented on SimpleSAMLPhP http://rnd.feide.no/simplesamlphp with 500 PHP lines of code and only a few tens of lines of code are Service Provider specific making it really easy to port it to another Web site.

- On device side is needed:
  • A Web browser (in fact an HTTP client) implementing digest authentication and the special case designed by a "3gpp" string in the HTTP header.
  • A means to dialog with a smartcard and signed the challenge sent by the BSF, either Bluetooth SAP or a Java or native application could be used to serve the request coming from the browser.

Technical overview

Actually, contents in this section are from external literature .

There are two ways to use GAA (Generic Authentication Architecture).
  • The first, GBA, is based on a shared secret between the client and server
  • The second, SSC, is based on public-private key pairs and digital certificates.


In the shared secret cases, the customer and the operator are first mutually authenticated through 3G and Authentication Key (AKA) and they agree on session keys which can then be used between the client and services that the customer wants to use.
This is called bootstrapping.
After that, the services can retrieve the session keys from the operator, and they can be used in some application specific protocol between the client and services.

Figure above shows the network GAA entities and interfaces between them. Optional entities are drawn with lines
network and borders dotted the scoreboard. The User Equipment (UE) is, for example, the user's mobile phone. The UE and
Bootstrapping function server (BSF) mutually authenticate themselves during the Ub (number [2] above) interface, using the Digest access authentication
Digest access authentication
Digest access authentication is one of the agreed upon methods a web server can use to negotiate credentials with a user's web browser. It uses encryption to send the password over the network which is safer than the Basic access authentication that sends plaintext.Technically digest...

 AKA
AKA (security)
AKA stands for the Authentication and Key Agreement. It is a security protocol used in 3G networks.AKA is also used for one-time password generation mechanism for Digest access authentication. AKA is a challenge-response based mechanism that uses symmetric cryptography.-AKA in CDMA:AKA –...

 protocol. The UE also communicates with the Network Application Functions (NAF), which are the implementation servers, over the Ua [4] interface, which can use any specific application protocol necessary.

BSF retrieves data from the subscriber from the Home Subscriber Server (HSS) during the Zh [3] interface, which uses the
Diameter Base Protocol. If there are several HSS in the network, BSF must first know which one to use. This can be done by either setting up a pre-defined HSS to BSF, or by querying the Subscriber Locator Function (SLF).
NAFs recover the key session of BSF during the Zn [5] interface, which also uses the diameter at the base Protocol. If
NAF is not in the home network, it must use a Zn-proxy to contact BSF .

Uses

  • The SPICE project developed an extended Use Case named "split terminal" where a user on a PC can authenticate with her mobile phone: http://www.ist-spice.org/demos/demo3.htm. The NAF was developed on SimpleSAMLPhP and a Firefox extension was developed to process the GBA digest authencation request from the BSF. Bluetooth SIM Access Profile was used between the Firefox browser and the mobile phone. Later a partner developed a "zero installation" concept.
  • The Fraunhofer Fokus http://www.fokus.fraunhofer.de developed an OpenID extension for Firefox which uses GBA authentication.Presentation at ICIN 2008 by Peter Weik
  • The Open Mobile Terminal Platform http://www.omtp.org references GBA in its Advanced Trusted Environment: OMTP TR1 recommendation, first released in May 2008.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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