RFC 927 (rfc927) - Page 2 of 4


TACACS user identification Telnet option



Alternative Format: Original Text Document





RFC 927                                                    December 1984
TUID Telnet Option


   IAC DON'T TUID

      The sender (the TELNET server) refuses to accept the recipient's
      (the TELNET user) authentication of the user.

   IAC SB TUID  IAC SE

      The sender (the TELNET user) sends the UUID  of the user on
      whose behalf the connection is established to the host to which he
      is connected.  The  is a 32 bit binary number.

3. Default

   WON'T TUID

      A TELNET user host (the initiator of a TELNET connection) not
      implementing or using the TUID option will reply WON'T TUID to a
      DO TUID.

   DON'T TUID

      A TELNET server host (the recipient of a TELNET connection) not
      implementing or using the TUID option reply DON'T TUID to a WILL
      TUID.

4. Motivation for the Option

   Under TACACS (the TAC Access Control System) a user must be
   authenticated (give a correct name/password pair) to a TAC before he
   can connect to a host via the TAC.  To avoid a second authentication
   by the target host, the TAC can pass along the user's proven identity
   (his UUID) to the that host.  Hosts may accept the TAC's
   authentication of the user or not, at their option.

   The same option can be used between any pair of cooperating hosts for
   the purpose of double login avoidance.

5. Description for the Option

   At the time that a host establishes a TELNET connection for a user to
   another host, if the latter supports the TUID option and wants to
   receive the user's UUID, it sends an IAC DO TUID to the the user's
   host.  If the user's host supports the TUID option and wants to
   authenticate the user by sending the user's UUID, it responds IAC
   WILL TUID; otherwise it responds with IAC WON'T TUID.  If both the
   user and server TELNETs agree, the user TELNET will then send the
   UUID to the server TELNET by sub-negotiation.


Anderson