Network Working Group M. Blinov Request for Comments: 4212 Guardeonic Solutions Category: Informational C. Adams University of Ottawa October 2005 Alternative Certificate Formats for the Public-Key Infrastructure Using X.509 (PKIX) Certificate Management Protocols Status of This Memo This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). IESG Note This document is not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard. The IETF disclaims any knowledge of the fitness of this document for any purpose, and in particular notes that it has not had IETF review for such things as security, congestion control, or inappropriate interaction with deployed protocols. The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at its discretion. Readers of this document should exercise caution in evaluating its value for implementation and deployment. Abstract The Public-Key Infrastructure using X.509 (PKIX) Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has defined a number of certificate management protocols. These protocols are primarily focused on X.509v3 public-key certificates. However, it is sometimes desirable to manage certificates in alternative formats as well. This document specifies how such certificates may be requested using the Certificate Request Message Format (CRMF) syntax that is used by several different protocols. It also explains how alternative certificate formats may be incorporated into such popular protocols as PKIX Certificate Management Protocol (PKIX-CMP) and Certificate Management Messages over CMS (CMC). Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 1] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 1. Introduction Full certificate life-cycle management in a Public-Key Infrastructure (PKI) requires protocol support in order to achieve automated processing and end user transparency. Such protocols require standardization in order to allow more than one vendor to supply various pieces -- End Entity (EE), Certification Authority (CA), Registration Authority (RA) -- in the PKI deployment of a single organization, or to allow multiple, independently-deployed PKIs to be interconnected usefully. The IETF PKIX (Public-Key Infrastructure using X.509) Working Group currently has several certificate management protocols and certificate request syntax specifications on the standards track. Although these specifications are primarily focused on X.509v3 public-key certificates, some of them can be easily extended to handle certificates in alternative formats as well. This document focuses on a popular certificate request syntax called CRMF (Certificate Request Message Format) [CRMF]. Although the original specification of CRMF is X.509-specific, extensions have already been proposed to allow for alternative certificate templates [CMP]. However, those extensions have only defined a framework; they did not define the exact format to be used for various certificate types. This document builds on top of the framework mentioned above and defines how CRMF can be used to request certificates of the following types: - X.509 attribute certificates [ATTCERT] - OpenPGP certificates [OPENPGP] The CRMF syntax is used by such popular protocols as PKIX-CMP (PKIX Certificate Management Protocol) [CMP] and CMC (Certificate Management Messages over CMS) [CMC]. This means that CRMF extensions proposed in this document enable these protocols to request certificates of the above types. However, it is not enough to be able to request a certificate. The protocol should be prepared to handle certificates of a particular type and, for example, return them to the user. This document proposes extensions to the PKIX-CMP and CMC protocols that are required to manage certificates in alternative formats. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 2] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119]. 2. Certificate Template One of the features of the CRMF format is its use of the CertTemplate construct, which allows a requester (EE, or RA acting on behalf of an EE) to specify as much or as little as they wish regarding the content of the requested certificate. It is explicitly noted that the CA has final authority over the actual certificate content; that is, the CA may alter certificate fields or may add, delete, or alter extensions according to its operating policy (if the resulting certificate is unacceptable to the EE or RA, then that certificate may be rejected and/or revoked prior to any publication/use). A similar flexibility in the request must be available for alternative certificate types as well. For this purpose, an AltCertTemplate extension was introduced in [CMP] as follows (where id-regCtrl = {1 3 6 1 5 5 7 5 1}, as defined in [CRMF]). CertRequest ::= SEQUENCE { certReqId INTEGER, certTemplate CertTemplate, controls Controls OPTIONAL } -- If certTemplate is an empty SEQUENCE (i.e., all fields -- omitted), then controls MAY contain the -- id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate control, specifying a template -- for a certificate other than an X.509v3 public-key -- certificate. Conversely, if certTemplate is not empty -- (i.e., at least one field is present), then controls -- MUST NOT contain id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate. The new -- control is defined as follows: id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-regCtrl 7} AltCertTemplate ::= AttributeTypeAndValue In this section, an AltCertTemplate is specified for each of the alternative certificate types defined in Section 1. 2.1. X.509 Attribute Certificate CertTemplate A CertTemplate for an X.509 attribute certificate can be used by simply defining an object identifier (OID) and corresponding value for use in the id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate control. These are specified as follows. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 3] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 OID: id-acTemplate OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate 1} Value: AttCertTemplate ::= SEQUENCE { version AttCertVersion OPTIONAL, holder Holder OPTIONAL, issuer AttCertIssuer OPTIONAL, signature AlgorithmIdentifier OPTIONAL, serialNumber CertificateSerialNumber OPTIONAL, attrCertValidityPeriod OptionalAttCertValidity OPTIONAL, attributes SEQUENCE OF Attribute OPTIONAL, issuerUniqueID UniqueIdentifier OPTIONAL, extensions Extensions OPTIONAL } OptionalAttCertValidity ::= SEQUENCE { notBeforeTime GeneralizedTime OPTIONAL, notAfterTime GeneralizedTime OPTIONAL } -- at least one must be present 2.2. OpenPGP Certificate CertTemplate Similar to certificate templates defined above, a CertTemplate for an OpenPGP certificate can be used by defining an object identifier (OID) and corresponding value for use in the id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate control. These are specified as follows: OID: id-openPGPCertTemplateExt OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-regCtrl-altCertTemplate 2} Value: OpenPGPCertTemplateExtended ::= SEQUENCE { nativeTemplate OpenPGPCertTemplate, controls Controls OPTIONAL } OpenPGPCertTemplate ::= OCTET STRING -- contains the OpenPGP CertTemplate data structure defined -- below (binary format without Radix-64 conversions) -- encoded as an ASN.1 OCTET STRING Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 4] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 2.2.1. OpenPGP CertTemplate Data Structure Similar to the X.509 CertTemplate, the OpenPGP CertTemplate is an OpenPGP certificate (OpenPGP Transferable Public Key) [OPENPGP] with all fields optional. The essential elements of an OpenPGP CertTemplate are: - Zero or one Public Key packet. - Zero or more Direct Key Self Signature packets. - Zero or more Certification Signature packets (only if no User ID packets are present). - Zero or more User ID packets. - After each User ID packet, zero or more Certification Signature packets. - Zero or more Subkey packets. - After each Subkey packet, zero or one Subkey Binding Signature packet. Each packet in the OpenPGP CertTemplate MUST be a syntactically correct OpenPGP packet. This will enable conformant implementations to use existing PGP libraries for building and parsing OpenPGP CertTemplates. The following implications of this rule should be explicitly noted: - Fields for which the OpenPGP specification defines a set of permitted values (e.g., the signature type or the public key algorithm fields of the Signature packet) MUST have a value from the defined set. Even if the requester does not have any particular preferences for, for example, the signature algorithm, it MUST choose one value that is the most desirable. Rationale: An alternative solution could be to define extra "any" values, but this would be a modification of the OpenPGP syntax, which is not considered appropriate in this document. - All subpackets of the Signature packet defined by the OpenPGP specification as mandatory (e.g., the creation time and the issuer's key id subpackets) MUST be present even though they do not make much sense in the context of a certificate request. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 5] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 - The number of MPIs at the end of the Key Material and the Signature packets MUST match the number defined by the OpenPGP specification for the given algorithm (the algorithm is controlled by the value of the "algorithm" field). For example, there should be 2 MPIs for DSA signatures. Note that the OpenPGP specification does not define validation rules for the content of those MPIs. Though it is not considered appropriate here to define extra "any" values for fields of enumerated types, such values can still be defined for some other fields where the OpenPGP specification is not that strict. The following extra values are defined in the context of the OpenPGP CertTemplate. Note that these definitions do not modify the syntax of OpenPGP packets, and existing PGP libraries can still be used to generate and parse them. - For fields representing time (e.g., signature creation time): the value of zero means "any time". - For fields holding key IDs: the value of 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF means "any key id". - For signature fields: the "any signature" value is encoded as a sequence of MPIs such that: * the number of MPIs matches the number of MPIs defined by the OpenPGP specification for the given algorithm, and * the value of each MPI is 0xFF. A Signature packet with the "any" value in the signature fields is called a Signature Template. Example: The "any signature" value for a DSA signature would look like [00 08 FF 00 08 FF] - For key material fields: the "any key" value is encoded as a sequence of MPIs such that: * the number of MPIs matches the number of MPIs defined by the OpenPGP specification for the given algorithm, and * the value of at least one of the MPIs is a bit string with all its bits set to 1. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 6] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 A Key Material packet with the "any" value in the key material fields is called a Key Template. (See Key Template section for further details.) Example: The "any key" value for a DSA public key may look like [00 08 FF 00 10 FF FF 00 10 85 34 00 08 FF] The following rules apply to the sequence of packets within the OpenPGP CertTemplate: - If the Public Key packet is omitted from the OpenPGP CertTemplate, then this CertTemplate does not constrain the value of the public key (i.e., it refers to "any" public key). - The order of Signature packets following a User ID packet and the order of User ID packets within the CertTemplate are not important. - If an OpenPGP CertTemplate does not contain any User ID packets, then it refers to "any" user IDs that are relevant to a given request. 2.2.2. OpenPGP CertTemplate in Certificate Requests Since an OpenPGP certificate can have several certification signatures, the OpenPGP CertTemplate uses Signature Templates to define where certification signatures should occur. The values of the fields of the Signature Templates define the parameters of the new certification signatures. The following rules apply: - A Signature Template that is present in the list of signatures following a User ID packet requests that the CA certify this User ID and the public key and replace the Signature Template with the new certification signature. The Signature Template does not mandate the exact place of the certification signature within the list. The certification signature may be inserted at any position within the list of signatures (following the certified User ID packet). - A Signature Template may be present in the OpenPGP CertTemplate without any preceding User ID packet. In this case, it is assumed that the CA knows the ID(s) of the user by some other means. A Signature Template without a preceding User ID requests that the CA insert all known User IDs of the user into the OpenPGP certificate and certify each of them. The Signature Template defines the parameters of these certification signatures. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 7] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 - If an OpenPGP CertTemplate contains no Signature Templates, then the CA is requested to certify all User IDs that are present in the OpenPGP CertTemplate. Such a CertTemplate does not define parameters of the certification signatures explicitly, but the CA SHOULD use parameters of the certification self-signatures (if present in the CertTemplate) as a guide (e.g., key flags fields). - If neither Signature Templates nor User IDs are present in the OpenPGP CertTemplate, then the CA is expected to know the ID(s) of the user by some other means. In this case, the CertTemplate requests that the CA insert these User IDs into the OpenPGP certificate and certify each of them. The parameters of the certification signatures are left to the CA. If several certification signatures have to be produced according to an OpenPGP CertTemplate, and any of them cannot be granted (even with modifications) for whatever reason, then the whole request with this OpenPGP CertTemplate MUST be rejected. The client SHOULD provide enough information in its request that the CA could produce a complete OpenPGP certificate. For example, the client SHOULD include in the template all relevant subkeys with their binding signatures so that the CA can include them in the resultant OpenPGP certificate as well. Rationale: In some environments, the CA/RA is responsible for publishing certificates. 2.2.3. Key Templates and Central Key Generation The OpenPGP CertTemplate can also be used to request certification of centrally-generated keys. This is accomplished by using Key Templates. If the Public Key packet of an OpenPGP CertTemplate is a Key Template, then this OpenPGP CertTemplate requests that the CA/RA generate the key pair prior to certifying it. Fields of the Key Template define parameters of the new key pair as follows (see examples in the Appendix): - The "public key algorithm" field specifies the algorithm to be used for the key generation. - MPI fields with the value of 0xFF ([00 08 FF]) specify that no constraint is placed on the corresponding part of the key. - MPI fields that contain any other bit strings in which all bits are set to 1, specify that the corresponding part of the key should be of the same length as the length of the MPI (e.g., the length of the public modulus n of the RSA key). Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 8] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 - MPI fields that contain any other values specify that the corresponding part of the key should be of the given value (key generation parameters). In order to return a complete OpenPGP certificate, in addition to certifying the new key and the User ID, the CA (or RA) SHOULD also create a self-signature (i.e., sign the new public key and the User ID with the new private key) and include it after the User ID packet. This SHOULD be done for all User IDs certified by the CA. If a Subkey packet of an OpenPGP CertTemplate is a Key Template, then this OpenPGP CertTemplate requests that the CA/RA generate a subkey. Fields of the Key Template define parameters of the new subkey. The new subkey obviously does not have to be certified. However, the CA/RA SHOULD produce the binding signature and include it after the subkey, if the CA/RA knows the user's primary private key (e.g., it was centrally generated as well). Note that if the CA/RA does not know the user's primary private key, then the resultant OpenPGP certificate returned from the CA/RA to the client will be incomplete (i.e., there will be no binding signature for the subkey). It will be the responsibility of the client to produce and add the binding signature and to publish the final OpenPGP certificate. If an OpenPGP CertTemplate contains neither PublicKey/Subkey packets nor Key Template packets, then it requests that the CA generate keys/subkeys according to the CA's policies. 2.2.4. OpenPGPCertTemplateExtended The OpenPGPCertTemplateExtended structure enables additional extensions and controls to be added to the basic OpenPGP CertTemplate. 2.2.5. OpenPGP CertTemplate Required Profile A conformant implementation is REQUIRED to support OpenPGP CertTemplates that are valid OpenPGP certificates, i.e., that have the following structure (see examples in the Appendix): - One Public Key packet (not a Key Template). - Zero or more Direct Key Self Signature packets (without Signature Templates). - One or more User ID packets. - After each User ID packet, zero or more Certification Signature packets (without Signature Templates). Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 9] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 - Zero or more Subkey packets (without Key Templates). - After each Subkey packet, one Subkey Binding Signature packet (not a Signature Template). A conformant implementation is REQUIRED to recognise Key Templates and Signature Templates and is REQUIRED to either support them or reject requests containing them if it does not. 3. Proof-of-Possession A CRMF request includes a Proof-of-Possession (POP) field that contains proof that an End Entity has possession of the private key corresponding to the public key for which a certificate is requested. The following rule applies to this field (with modifications from [CMP]): * NOTE: If CertReqMsg certReq certTemplate (or the * altCertTemplate control) contains the subject and * publicKey values, then poposkInput MUST be omitted * and the signature MUST be computed on the DER-encoded * value of CertReqMsg certReq (or the DER-encoded value * of AltCertTemplate). An OpenPGP CertTemplate is considered to satisfy the conditions of this note if it has a Public Key packet (not a Key Template) and at least one User ID packet. 4. Protocol-specific Issues This section explains how alternative certificate formats may be incorporated into such popular protocols as PKIX-CMP and CMC. 4.1. PKIX-CMP In PKIX-CMP, the ASN.1 [ASN1] construct, and corresponding comment for a certificate is given as follows. CMPCertificate ::= CHOICE { x509v3PKCert Certificate } -- This syntax, while bits-on-the-wire compatible with the -- standard X.509 definition of "Certificate", allows the -- possibility of future certificate types (such as X.509 -- attribute certificates, WAP WTLS certificates, or -- other kinds of certificates) within this certificate Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 10] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 -- management protocol, should a need ever arise to support -- such generality. Building on this framework, this document expands the above CHOICE construct as follows. CMPCertificate ::= CHOICE { x509v3PKCert Certificate, x509v2AttCert [0] AttributeCertificate, -- defined in [ATTCERT] openPGPCert [2] OpenPGPCert } OpenPGPCert ::= OCTET STRING -- contains the OpenPGP certificate (OpenPGP Transferable -- Public Key) data structure from the OpenPGP specification -- [OPENPGP] (binary format without Radix-64 conversions), -- encoded as an ASN.1 OCTET STRING Expanding the CHOICE construct as above allows X.509 attribute certificates and OpenPGP certificates to be used within the PKIX-CMP management messages. In the future, this construct may be expanded further (in subsequent revisions of this document) to accommodate other certificate types, if this is found to be necessary. 4.2. CMC The CMC protocol uses the CMS (Cryptographic Message Syntax) syntax [CMS], which defines the certificate type as CertificateChoices ::= CHOICE { certificate Certificate, extendedCertificate [0] IMPLICIT ExtendedCertificate, -- Obsolete v1AttrCert [1] IMPLICIT AttributeCertificateV1, -- Obsolete v2AttrCert [2] IMPLICIT AttributeCertificateV2 } Similar to PKIX-CMP, this CHOICE can be extended to include additional types of certificates as follows. CertificateChoices ::= CHOICE { certificate Certificate, extendedCertificate [0] IMPLICIT ExtendedCertificate, -- Obsolete v1AttrCert [1] IMPLICIT AttributeCertificateV1, -- Obsolete v2AttrCert [2] IMPLICIT AttributeCertificateV2, openPGPCert [3] IMPLICIT OpenPGPCert } Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 11] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 This allows both X.509 attribute certificates and OpenPGP certificates to be used within the CMC management messages. In the future, this construct may be expanded further (in subsequent revisions of this document) to accommodate other certificate types, if this is found to be necessary. The CMC specification defines certain constraints on the subject and publicKey fields of the CRMF's CertTemplate structure. The same constraints should apply to the AltCertTemplate structure if alternative certificate types are used. For example, the CMC specification mandates that When CRMF message bodies are used in the Full Enrollment Request message, each CRMF message MUST include both the subject and publicKey fields in the CertTemplate. If alternative certificate types are used, this should be extended as When CRMF message bodies are used in the Full Enrollment Request message, each CRMF message MUST include both the subject and publicKey fields in the CertTemplate (or in the altCertTemplate control). 5. Security Considerations 5.1. Protection of Alternative Certificate Templates This document defines extensions to the CRMF format, so security considerations from the CRMF specification [CRMF] apply here as well. In particular, the security of alternative certificate templates relies upon the security mechanisms of the protocol or process used to communicate with CAs. Exact security requirements depend on a particular PKI deployment, but integrity protection and message origin authentication are typically required for certification requests. The CMP and CMC certificate management protocols mentioned in this document provide both integrity protection and message origin authentication for request messages (which includes certificate templates as well). Confidentiality may also be required where alternative certificate templates contain subscriber-sensitive information. The CMC protocol allows the content of request messages to be encrypted. CMP does not include confidentiality mechanisms for certification requests, but if confidentiality is needed, it can be achieved with a lower-layer security protocol (e.g., TLS or IPsec). Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 12] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 5.2. Request Authorisation In order to make a decision as to whether a request should be accepted, a CA should normally be able to compare the (authenticated) name of the sender of the request with the request subject name. For example, an End Entity may be allowed to request additional certificates for himself/herself. In this case, the CA will accept a request if the Sender is equal to the Subject (of course, other conditions will have to be checked as well before the certificate is granted). If a PGP certificate is requested using the extensions proposed here, the Sender field of the request will be encoded as an ASN.1 GeneralName (in both CMP and CMC), while the Subject will be represented as a PGP UserID. Since the PGP UserID is effectively an unrestricted octet string, it is not always trivial to compare these two types. It is possible that an attacker may try to submit requests with specially crafted UserIDs (e.g., that include obscure characters) in order to trick the CA comparison algorithm and obtain a PGP certificate with a UserID that belongs to someone else. In these circumstances, it is safer for the CA, when building the PGP certificate's UserID, to completely rebuild the UserID based on the content of the authenticated Sender name rather than take the UserID from the request. To achieve this, additional information about the End Entity may be required at the CA (e.g., the EE's email address). 5.3. PGP Parser Software components that implement the proposed extensions (e.g., CMP or CMC servers) will necessarily increase in complexity. If a "standard" server is expected to be able to parse ASN.1 streams, the "extended" server is required to be able to parse PGP streams as well. A PGP parser code may introduce new security vulnerabilities that can be exploited by an attacker to mount a DoS attack or gain access to the server. In order to reduce the consequences of a successful attack, it is recommended that the CMP or CMC servers be run on a separate machine from the main CA server. These protocol servers should not have access to the main CA key and should not have write access to the CA store. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 13] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 Appendix A. Examples of OpenPGP CertTemplates This Appendix presents examples of OpenPGP CertTemplates that are used for requesting OpenPGP certificates from a CA. A1. Simple Certificate Request Alice requests an OpenPGP certificate for her public key accompanied by a subkey. The content of the OpenPGP CertTemplate in the request is as follows. This CertTemplate conforms to the OpenPGP CertTemplate Required Profile. 0000: 99 01 A2 === Pub Key packet === 0003: 04 3C 58 27 A2 11 ver 4, created 30 Jan 2002, DSA 0009: 00 E3 FB 9D .. 2B EF DSA prime p 008B: 00 A0 FF 7E .. BA 71 DSA group order q 00A1: 03 FF 68 BC .. 56 71 DSA group generator g 0123: 03 FE 38 1F .. F2 63 DSA public key value y 01A5: B4 19 === User ID packet === 01A7: 41 6C .. 6D 3E "Alice <alice@example.com>" 01C0: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (self-signature) === 01C3: 04 10 11 02 ver 4, gen cert, DSA, SHA1 01C7: 00 09 05 02 3C 58 27 A2 02 1B 03 created 30 Jan 2002, key usage: sign data and certify other keys 01D2: 00 0A 09 10 43 5C .. 06 77 issuer key id 01DE: 5A C2 left 16 bits of signed hash value 01E0: 00 A0 EB 00 .. 1B 75 DSA value r 01F6: 00 A0 F4 E4 .. A8 3D DSA value s 020C: B9 02 0D === Public Subkey packet === 020F: 04 3C 58 27 A2 10 ver 4, created 30 Jan 2002, Elgamal (encrypt-only) algorithm 0215: 08 00 F6 42 .. 0B 3B Elgamal prime p 0317: 00 02 02 Elgamal group generator g 031A: 07 FE 37 BA .. DF 21 Elgamal public key value y 041C: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (subkey binding) === 041F: 04 18 11 02 ver 4, subkey binding, DSA, SHA1 0423: 00 09 05 02 3C 58 27 A2 02 1B 0C created 30 Jan 2002, key usage: encrypt communications and storage 042E: 00 0A 09 10 43 5C .. 06 77 issuer key id 043A: C7 DE left 16 bits of signed hash value 043C: 00 9E 21 33 .. 39 1B DSA value r 0452: 00 9F 64 D7 .. 63 08 DSA value s 0468: Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 14] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 CA certifies Alice's User ID and the public key and creates the following OpenPGP certificate: 0000: 99 01 A2 === Pub Key packet === 0003: <the same as in the request> 01A5: B4 19 === User ID packet === 01A7: <the same as in the request> 01C0: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (self-signature) === 01C3: <the same as in the request> 020C: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (certification) === 020F: 04 13 11 02 ver 4, positive cert, DSA, SHA1 0213: 00 09 05 02 3C 58 28 1A 02 1B 03 created 30 Jan 2002, key usage: sign data and certify other keys 021E: 00 0A 09 10 F0 0D .. 1F CA issuer key id 022A: 06 DF left 16 bits of signed hash value 022C: 00 9F 57 2D .. 26 E3 DSA value r 0242: 00 A0 B3 02 .. CE 65 DSA value s 0258: B9 02 0D === Public Subkey packet === 025B: <the same as in the request> 0468: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (subkey binding) === 046B: <the same as in the request> 04B4: A2. Certificate Request with Central Key Generation Alice requests that the CA generate an RSA key pair that will be used for signing, an RSA key pair that will be used for encryption, and requests that the CA certify these keys. The RSA keys are requested to be 2048 bits long with the public exponent 65537. The content of the OpenPGP CertTemplate in the request is as follows: 0000: 99 01 0D === Pub Key packet (Template) === 0003: 04 FF FF FF FF 01 ver 4, any creation date, RSA 0009: 08 00 FF FF .. FF FF RSA public modulus n - given length 010B: 00 11 01 00 01 RSA public exponent e 0110: B4 19 === User ID packet === 0112: 41 6C .. 6D 3E "Alice <alice@example.com>" 012B: 89 00 23 === Signature packet (Template) === 012E: 04 10 11 02 ver 4, gen cert, DSA, SHA1 0132: 00 09 05 02 FF FF FF FF 02 1B 03 any creation date, key usage: sign data and certify other keys 013D: 00 0A 09 10 FF FF .. FF FF issuer key id - any 0149: 05 3A left 16 bits of signed hash value 014B: 00 08 FF DSA value r - any 014E: 00 08 FF DSA value s - any Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 15] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 0151: 99 01 0D === Public Subkey packet (Template) === 0154: 04 FF FF FF FF 01 ver 4, any creation date, RSA 015A: 08 00 FF FF .. FF FF RSA public modulus n - given length 025C: 00 11 01 00 01 RSA public exponent e 0261: 89 00 20 === Signature packet (Template) === 0264: 04 18 01 02 ver 4, subkey binding, RSA, SHA1 0268: 00 09 05 02 FF FF FF FF 02 1B 0C any creation date, key usage: encrypt communications and storage 0273: 00 0A 09 10 FF FF .. FF FF issuer key id - any 027F: 12 E6 left 16 bits of signed hash value 0281: 00 08 FF RSA signature value - any 0284: CA generates keys, certifies Alice's User ID and the public key, and creates the following OpenPGP certificate: 0000: 99 01 0D === Pub Key packet === 0003: 04 3C 5A A5 BB 01 ver 4, created 01 Feb 2002, RSA 0009: 08 00 C7 21 .. 5B EB RSA public modulus n 010B: 00 11 01 00 01 RSA public exponent e 0110: B4 19 === User ID packet === 0112: 41 6C .. 6D 3E "Alice <alice@example.com>" 012B: 89 01 1F === Signature packet (self-signature) === 012E: 04 10 01 02 ver 4, gen cert, RSA, SHA1 0132: 00 09 05 02 3C 5A A5 BB 02 1B 03 created 01 Feb 2002, key usage: sign data and certify other keys 014D: 00 0A 09 10 8E AF .. 1A 18 issuer key id 0149: 3B 21 left 16 bits of signed hash value 014B: 07 FE 2F 1D .. C0 81 RSA signature value 024D: 89 00 49 === Signature packet (certification) === 0250: 04 13 11 02 ver 4, positive cert, DSA, SHA1 0254: 00 09 05 02 3C 5A A5 DC 02 1B 03 created 01 Feb 2002, key usage: sign data and certify other keys 025F: 00 0A 09 10 F0 0D .. 1F CA issuer key id 026B: BA C2 left 16 bits of signed hash value 026D: 00 9F 5E 58 .. 30 B3 DSA value r 0283: 00 A0 D1 D7 .. 5A AF DSA value s 0299: 99 01 0D === Public Subkey packet === 029C: 04 3C 5A A5 C5 01 ver 4, created 01 Feb 2002, RSA 02A2: 08 00 C3 03 .. 8C 53 RSA public modulus n 03A4: 00 11 01 00 01 RSA public exponent e 03A9: 89 01 1F === Signature packet (subkey binding) === 03AC: 04 18 01 02 ver 4, subkey binding, RSA, SHA1 Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 16] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 03B0: 00 09 05 02 3C 5A A5 C5 05 1B 0C created 01 Feb 2002, key usage: encrypt communications and storage 03BB: 00 0A 09 10 8E AF .. 1A 18 issuer key id 03C7: C8 44 left 16 bits of signed hash value 03C9: 07 FB 04 D7 .. 75 BE RSA signature value 04CB: Normative References [ASN1] CCITT Recommendation X.208: Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1), 1988. [ATTCERT] Farrell, S. and R. Housley, "An Internet Attribute Certificate Profile for Authorization", RFC 3281, April 2002. [CMC] Myers, M., Liu, X., Schaad, J., and J. Weinstein, "Certificate Management Messages over CMS", RFC 2797, April 2000. [CMS] Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)", RFC 3852, July 2004. [CMP] Adams, C., Farrell, S., Kause, T., and T. Mononen, "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Certificate Management Protocol (CMP)", RFC 4210, September 2005. [CRMF] Schaad, J., "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Certificate Request Message Format (CRMF)", RFC 4211, September 2005. [OPENPGP] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., and R. Thayer, "OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 2440, November 1998. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 17] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 Authors' Addresses Mikhail Blinov Guardeonic Solutions Fitzwilliam Court, Leeson Close Dublin 2, Ireland EMail: mikblinov@online.ie Carlisle Adams School of Information Technology and Engineering (SITE) University of Ottawa 800 King Edward Avenue P.O. Box 450, Stn A Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1N 6N5 EMail: cadams@site.uottawa.ca Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 18] RFC 4212 Alternative Certificate Formats October 2005 Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78 and at www.rfc-editor.org/copyright.html, and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights. 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Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at http://www.ietf.org/ipr. The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf- ipr@ietf.org. Acknowledgement Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the Internet Society. Blinov & Adams Informational [Page 19]