--- Begin Message ---
Hi,
Could you post the attached non-WG draft?
Thanks,
Stephen.
--
____________________________________________________________
Stephen Farrell
Baltimore Technologies, tel: (direct line) +353 1 647 7406
61 Fitzwilliam Lane, fax: +353 1 647 7499
Dublin 2. mailto:stephen.farrell@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Ireland http://www.baltimore.com
INTERNET-DRAFT A. Arsenault
expires in six months Diversinet
S. Farrell
Baltimore Technologies
September 2000
Securely Available Credentials - Requirements
<draft-arsenault-sacred-reqs-00.txt>
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of [RFC2026].
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of
six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other
documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts
as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in
progress."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
Abstract
This document describes requirements to be placed on Securely
Available Credentials (sacred) protocols.
This is the initial draft of the sacred requirements specification
and is therefore highly likely to change substantially.
Discussion of this draft is taking place on the sacred list (see
http://www.imc.org/ietf-sacred for subscription information).
Table Of Contents
Status of this Memo.............................................1
Abstract........................................................1
Table Of Contents...............................................1
1. Introduction.................................................2
1.1 Background and Motivation..............................2
1.2 Working Group Organization and Documents...............4
1.3 Structure of This Document.............................4
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2. Framework Requirements.......................................4
2.1 Credential Server and Direct solutions.................4
2.2 User authentication....................................6
2.3 Credential Formats.....................................7
2.4 Transport Issues.......................................7
3. Protocol Requirements........................................7
3.1 General Protocol Requirements..........................7
3.2 Requirements for Credential Server-based solutions.....8
3.3 Requirements for Direct-Transfer Solutions.............9
4. Open Issues..................................................9
5. Security Considerations.....................................10
References.....................................................10
Authors' Addresses.............................................10
Full Copyright Statement.......................................11
1. Introduction.
"Credentials" are information that can be used to establish the
identity of an entity, or help that entity communicate securely.
Credentials include such things as private keys, trusted roots,
tickets, or the private part of a Personal Security Environment
(PSE)[RFC2459] - that is, information used in secure communication
on the Internet. Credentials are used to support various Internet
protocols, e.g. S/MIME, IPSec and TLS.
In simple models, users and other entities are provided with
credentials, and these credentials stay in one place. However, the
number, and more importantly the number of different types, of
devices that can be used to access the Internet is increasing. It
is now possible to access Internet services and accounts using
desktop computers, laptop computers, wireless phones, pagers,
personal digital assistants (PDAs) and other types of devices.
Further, many users want to access private information and secure
services from a number of different devices, and want access to the
same information from any device.
This draft identifies a set of requirements for credential mobility.
The Working Group will also produce companion documents, which
describe a framework for secure credential mobility, and a set of
protocols for accomplishing this goal.
The key words "MUST", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "RECOMMENDED", and "MAY"
in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
<<Editorial comments are in angle brackets, like this>>.
1.1 Background and Motivation
In simple models of Internet use, users and other entities are
provided with credentials, and these credentials stay in one place.
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For example, Mimi generates a public and private key on her desktop
computer, provides the public key to a Certification Authority (CA)
to be included in a certificate, and keeps the private key on her
computer. It never has to be moved.
However, the number, and more importantly the number of different
types, of devices that can be used to access the Internet is
increasing. It is now possible to access Internet services and
accounts using desktop computers, laptop computers, wireless phones,
pagers, personal digital assistants (PDAs) and other types of
devices. Further, many users want to access private information and
secure services from a number of different devices, and want access
to the same information from any device.
For example, Mimi may want to able to send signed e-mail messages
from her desktop computer when she is in the office, and from her
laptop computer when she is on the road, and she does not want
message recipients to know the difference. In order to do this, she
must somehow make her private key available on both devices - that
is, that credential must be moved.
Similarly, Will may want to retrieve and read encrypted e-mail from
either his wireless phone or from his two-way pager. He wants to
use whichever device he has with him at the moment, and does not
want to be denied access to his mail or to be unable to decrypt
important messages simply because he has the wrong device. Thus, he
must be able to have the same private key available on both devices.
It is generally accepted that the private key in these examples must
be transferred securely. In the first example, the private key
should not be exposed to anyone other than Mimi herself (and
ideally, it would not be directly exposed to her). Furthermore, it
must be transferred correctly. It must be transferred to the proper
device, and it must not be corrupted - improperly modified - during
transfer.
One way of accomplishing these goals is to put the credentials on
hardware tokens - e.g., smart cards, PCMCIA cards, or other devices.
There are a number of types of hardware tokens today that provide
secure storage for sensitive information, some degree of
authentication, and interfaces to a number of types of wireless
devices. Thus, in the second example above, Will could simply put
his private key on a smart card, always take the smart card with
him, and be assured that whichever device he uses to retrieve his e-
mail, he will have all of the information necessary to decrypt and
read messages.
However, hardware tokens are not appropriate for every environment.
They cost more than software-only solutions, and the additional
security they provide may not be worth the incremental cost. Not all
devices have interfaces for the same hardware tokens. And hardware
tokens are subject to different failure modes than typical computers
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- it is not at all unusual for a smart card to be lost or stolen; or
for a PCMCIA card to physically break.
Thus, it is appropriate to develop a complementary (?) software-
based solution that allows credentials to be moved from one device
to another, and provides a level of security sufficient for its
environments. While we recognize that the level of security
provided by a software solution may not be as high as that provided
by the hardware solutions discussed above, and some organizations
may not consider it sufficient at all, we believe that a worthwhile
solution can be developed.
In the remainder of this draft we present a set of requirements for
the secure transfer of software-based credentials.
1.2 Working Group Organization and Documents
<<This section can be filled in more completely as work progresses
and we know more about what the rest of the documents are. Note:
sacred is not as yet an IETF working group, but is expected to
become one in the near future.>>
The Securely Available Credentials (sacred) Working Group is working
on a set of protocols for the standardization of the secure transfer
of credentials among devices. A general framework is being
developed that will give an abstract definition of protocols which
can meet the credential-transfer requirements. This framework will
allow for the development of a set of protocols, which may vary from
one another in some respects. Specific protocols which conform to
the framework can then be developed.
Work is being done on a number of documents. This document
identifies the requirements for the general framework, as well as
the requirements for specific protocols. Another document will
describe the protocol framework. Still others will define the
protocols themselves.
1.3 Structure of This Document
Section 1 of this document provides an introduction to the problem
being solved by this working group. Section 2 describes requirements
on the framework. Section 3 identifies the overall requirements for
secure credential-transfer protocols, and separate requirements for
the two different classes of solutions. Section 4 addresses
remaining issues. Section 5 identifies Security Considerations.
2. Framework Requirements
This section describes requirements that the sacred framework has to
meet, as opposed to requirements that are to be met by a specific
protocol that uses the framework.
2.1 Credential Server and Direct solutions
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There are at least two different ways to solve the problem of secure
credential transfer between devices. One class of solutions uses a
"credential server" as an intermediate node, and the other class
provides direct transfer between devices.
A "credential server" can be likened to a server that sits in front
of a repository where credentials can be securely stored for later
retrieval. The credential server is active in the protocol, that is,
it implements security enforcing functionality.
To transfer credentials securely from one end device to another is a
straightforward two-step process. Users can have their credentials
securely "uploaded" from one device, e.g., a wireless phone, to the
credential server. They can be stored on the credential server, and
"downloaded" when needed using another device; e.g., a two-way
pager.
The advantages of a credential server approach to credential
transfer are two-fold:
1. It provides a conceptually clean and straightforward approach.
For all end devices, there is one protocol, with a set of
actions defined to transfer credentials from the device to the
server, and another set of actions defined to transfer
credentials from the server to the device. Furthermore, this
protocol involves clients (the devices) and a server (the
credential server), like many other Internet protocols; thus,
the design of this protocol is likely to be familiar to most
people familiar with most other Internet protocols.
2. It provides for a place where credentials can be securely stored
for arbitrary lengths of time. Given a reasonable-quality server
operating under generally accepted practices, it is unlikely the
credentials will be permanently lost due to a hardware failure.
This contrasts with systems where credentials are only stored on
end devices, in which a failure of or the loss of the device
could mean that the credentials are lost forever.
However, the credential server approach has some potential
disadvantages, too:
1. It might be somewhat expensive to maintain and run the
credential server, particularly if there are stringent
requirements on availability and reliability of the server.
2. The credential server may have to be "trusted" in some sense and
also introduces a point of potential vulnerability. (See the
Security Considerations section for some of the issues.) Good
protocol and system design will limit the vulnerability that
exists at the credential server, but at a minimum, someone with
access to the credential server will be able to delete
credentials and thus deny the sacred service to system users.
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Thus, some users may prefer a different class of solution, in which
credentials are transferred directly from one device to another. In
this case "directly" may not mean from one device to another,
without any other device participating in the transaction. Rather,
it simply means that the transfer is "direct" from the view of the
credential-transfer protocol; there is no intermediate credential
server involved which is active in security terms. It may be the
case that at lower protocol layers, an arbitrary number of other
devices are involved in moving bits around.
For example, consider the case where Mimi sends a message from her
wireless phone containing the credentials in question, and retrieves
it using her two-way pager. In getting from one place to another,
the bits of the message cross the wireless phone network to a base
station. These bits are likely transferred over the wired phone
network to a message server run by the wireless phone operator, and
are transferred from there over the Internet to a message server run
by the paging operator. From the paging operator they are
transferred to a base station and then finally to Mimi’s pager.
Certainly, there are devices other than the original wireless phone
and ultimate pager that are involved in the credential transfer, in
the sense that they transmit bits from one place to another.
However, to all devices except the pager and the wireless phone,
what is being transferred is an un-interpreted and unprocessed set
of bits. No security-related decisions are made, and no actions are
taken based on the fact that this message contains credentials, at
any of the intermediate nodes. They exist simply to forward bits.
Thus, we consider this to be a "direct" transfer of credentials.
Solutions involving the direct transfer of credentials from one
device to another are potentially somewhat more complex than the
credential-server approach, owing to the large number of different
devices and formats that may have to be supported. Complexity is
also added due to the fact that each device may in turn have to
exhibit the behavior of both a client and a server.
We believe that both classes of solutions are useful in certain
environments, and thus that the sacred framework will have to define
solutions for both. The extent to which elements of the above
solutions overlap remains to be determined.
This all leads to our first set of requirements:
F1. The framework MUST support both "credential server" and
"direct" solutions.
F2. The "credential server" and "direct" solutions SHOULD use
the same technology as far as possible.
2.2 User authentication
There is a wide range of deployment options for credential mobility
solutions. In many of these cases, it is useful to be able to re-use
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an existing user authentication scheme, for example where passwords
have previously been established, it may be more secure to re-use
these than try to manage a whole new set of passwords. Different
devices may also limit the types of user authentication scheme that
are possible, e.g. not all mobile devices are practically capable of
carrying out asymmetric cryptography.
F3. The framework MUST allow for protocols which support
different user authentication schemes
2.3 Credential Formats
Today there is no single standard format for credentials and this is
not likely to change in the near future. There are a number of
fairly widely deployed formats, e.g. [PGP], [PKCS#12] that have to
be supported. This means that the framework has to allow for
protocols supporting any credential format.
F4. The details of the actual credential type or format MUST be
opaque, that is, the protocol MUST NOT depend on the
internal structure of any credential type or format
<<Open issue: Should we place any structure on credentials or really
just regard them as octet strings? The latter is simpler, except
that perhaps a password is used both to authenticate to a credential
server *and* to encrypt the private parts of a pkcs#12 file.>>
2.4 Transport Issues
Different devices allow for different transport layer possibilities,
e.g. current WAP 1.x devices do not support TCP. For this reason the
framework has to be transport "agnostic".
F5. The framework MUST allow use of different transports.
<<Do we really need this? Couldn't we pick one and leave whatever
doesn't fit to be worked on later? If we pick one, possiblities
would include: directly over TCP or UDP or even SCTP, on top of
HTTP, or SMTP or even FTP or BEEP. >>
3. Protocol Requirements
In this section, we identify the requirements for secure credential-
transfer solutions. We will begin by identifying those requirements
that must be met by all solutions. Then, we will identify additional
requirements that must be met by solutions involving a credential
server, followed by additional requirements that must be met by
solutions involving direct transfer of credentials.
3.1 General Protocol Requirements
Looking again at the examples described in Section 1.1, we can
readily see that there are a number of requirements that must apply
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to the transfer of credentials if the ultimate goal of supporting
the Internet security protocols (e.g., TLS, IPSec, S/MIME) is to be
met. For example, the credentials must remain confidential at all
times; it is unacceptable for nodes other than the end-user’s
device(s) to see the credentials in any readable, cleartext form.
These, then, are the requirements that apply to all secure
credential-transfer solutions:
G1. Credential transfer both to and from a device MUST be
supported.
G2. Credentials MUST never be present in cleartext at any device
other than the end user's.
G3. All transferred credentials SHOULD be authenticated in some
way (e.g., digitally signed or MAC-ed).
G4. All transferred credentials MUST be integrity protected in
some way (e.g., digitally signed or MAC-ed).
G5. The protocol MUST support a range of cryptographic
algorithms, including symmetric and asymmetric algorithms,
hash algorithms, and MAC algorithms.
G6. The protocol MUST support the use of various credential
types and formats (e.g., X.509, PGP, PKCS12, ...).
G7. One mandatory to support credential format MUST be defined.
G8. One mandatory to support user authentication scheme MUST be
defined.
G9. Credentials MAY be labelled with a text handle to allow the
end user to select amongst a set of credentials or to name a
particular credential.
G10. Full I18N support is REQUIRED (via UTF8 support).
G11. The protocol MUST NOT be vulnerable to any spoofing attacks
(e.g. server spoofing). <<Open issue: how much detail needed
here? Probably deserves a section of its own.>>
G12. The protocol MUST be able to support privacy, that is,
anonymity for the client.
3.2 Requirements for Credential Server-based solutions
The following requirements assume that there is a credential server
from which credentials are downloaded to the end user device, and to
which credentials are uploaded from an end user device.
S1. Credential downloads (to an end user) and upload (to the
credential server) MUST be supported.
S2. Credentials MUST only be downloadable following user
authentication.
S3. It MUST be possible to ensure the authenticity of a
credential during upload.
S4. Different end user devices MAY be used to
download/upload/manage the same set of credentials.
S5. The credential server MUST NOT have easy access to the
cleartext credentials.
S6. Credential servers MUST be authenticated to the user for all
operations except (possibly) download.
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S7. It MUST be possible to authenticate the credential server to
the user prior to download (if the user is able to verify
the authentication).
S8. The user SHOULD only have to enter a single secret value in
order to download and use a credential.
S9. Sharing of secrets across multiple servers MUST be possible,
so that penetration of some servers does not expose the
private parts of a credential ("m-from-n" operation).
S10. The protocol MUST support "away-from-home" operation, where
the user enters both a name and a domain (e.g.
RoamingStephen@xxxxxxxxxxxx) and the domain can be used in
order to locate the user's credential server.
S11. Users MUST be able to manage their credentials stored on the
credential server.
S12. The user MUST be able to retrieve a list of their
credentials stored on a server; add credentials to the
server; delete credentials from the server.
S13. Client-initiated authentication information (e.g. password)
change MUST be supported.
S14. The user SHOULD be able to retrieve a list of
accesses/changes to their credentials.
3.3 Requirements for Direct-Transfer Solutions
The following requirements apply to solutions supporting the
"direct" transfer of credentials from one device to another. (See
Section 2 for the note on the meaning of "direct" in this case.)
D1. It SHOULD be possible for the receiving device to
authenticate that the credential package indeed came from
the purported sending device.
D2. In order for a sender to know that a credential has been
received by a recipient, it SHOULD be possible for the
receiving device to send an acknowledgment of credential
receipt back to the sending device, and for the sending
device to authenticate this acknowledgment.
4. Open Issues
This document is intended to foster discussion of the requirements
for secure credential transfer solutions. However, the authors
recognize that there are many issues that remain to be resolved.
Some of the most pressing are:
Vulnerabilities: Which attacks can/should the framework and protocol
protect against? What do we depend on the end user device for?
Robustness: Credential stores should not unacceptably increase the
potential for denial-of-service or other attacks.
Performance: Users should not typically have to wait too long for
access to credentials.
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Bootstrapping: The use of, e.g. TLS server authentication as a way
of having the client authenticate the credential server, depends on
the client having a (set of) trusted root(s). As the protocol may be
providing these roots, there may be some hard bootstrapping issues.
Finally, we note that whether or not the user authentication,
credential protection and specific credential formats should be
separated, or should be intertwined, is an open issue that warrants
careful consideration.
5. Security Considerations
Mobile credentials will never be as secure as a "pure" hardware-
based solution, because of potential attacks through the operating
system of the end-user device. However, an acceptable level of
security may be accomplished through some simple means. One should
keep in mind, however, that platforms to which credentials are
downloaded usually cannot be regarded as tamper-resistant, and it
therefore is not too hard to analyze contents of their memories.
Further, storage of private keys, even if they are encrypted, on a
credential server, will be unacceptable in some environments.
<<Probably should mention something about denial-of-service attacks
on credential servers. It’s not a huge deal, but we should at least
acknowledge it.>>
References
[PGP] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., & Thayer, R.,
"OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 2440.
[PKCS12] "PKCS #12 v1.0: Personal Information Exchange Syntax
Standard", RSA Laboratories, June 24, 1999.
[CMS] Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax", RFC 2630
[PKCS15] "PKCS #15 v1.1: Cryptographic Token Information Syntax
Standard," RSA Laboratories, June 2000.
[RFC2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
3", RFC 2026.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", RFC 2119.
[RFC2459] Housley, R., Ford, W., Polk, T, & Solo, D., "Internet
Public Key Infrastructure - X.509 Certificate and CRL
profile", RFC 2459.
[RFC2616] "R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J. Mogul,, H. Frysyk, L.
Masinter, P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer
Protocol - HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616.
Authors' Addresses
Alfred Arsenault
Diversinet Corp.
P.O. Box 6530
Ellicott City, MD 21042
Arsenault & Farrell [Page 10]
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USA
tel: +1 410-480-2052
email: aarsenault@xxxxxxxxx
Stephen Farrell,
Baltimore Technologies,
61/62 Fitzwilliam Lane,
Dublin 2,
IRELAND
tel: +353-1-647-3000
email: stephen.farrell@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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