One document matched: draft-ietf-pkix-dhpop-00.txt


                                                                       


  Internet Draft                             Hemma Prafullchandra (XETI) 
  Expires in 6 months                             Jim Schaad (Microsoft) 
  February 25, 1999 
   
   
              Diffie-Hellman Proof-of-Possession Algorithms 
                      <draft-ietf-pkix-dhpop-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. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the 
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  as Internet-Drafts. 
   
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Abstract 
   
  This document describes two methods for producing a signature from a 
  Diffie-Hellman key pair.  This behavior is needed for such operations 
  as creating a signature of a PKCS #10 certification request.  These 
  algorithms are designed to provide a proof-of-possession rather than 
  general purpose signing.   
   
1. Introduction 
   
  PKCS #10 [RFC2314] defines a syntax for certification requests. It 
  assumes that the public key being requested for certification 
  corresponds to an algorithm that is capable of signing/encrypting. 
  Diffie-Hellman (DH) is a key agreement algorithm and as such cannot be 
  directly used for signing or encryption. 
   
  This document describes two new signing algorithms using the Diffie-
  Hellman key agreement process to provide a shared secret as the basis 
  of the signature.  In the first signature algorithm, the signature is 
  constructed for a specific recipient/verifier by using a public key of 




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  that verifier.  In the second signature algorithm, the signature is 
  constructed for arbitrary verifiers.  This is done by creating an 
  appropriate D-H key pair and encoding them as part of the signature 
  value. 
   
2. Terminology 
   
  The following definitions will be used in this document 
   
  DH certificate = a certificate whose SubjectPublicKey is a DH public 
  value and is signed with any signature algorithm (e.g. rsa or dsa). 
                    
3. DH Signature Process 
   
  The steps for creating a DH signature are: 
   
  1. An entity (E) chooses the group parameters for a DH key agreement. 
     In many cases this is done simply by selecting the group parameters 
     from a certificate for the recipient of the signature process 
     (static DH signatures) but they may be computed for other methods 
     (ephemeral DH signatures). 
   
     In the ephemeral DH signature scheme, a temporary DH key-pair is 
     generated using the group parameters, which may be computed or 
     acquired by some out-of-band means.  In the static DH signature 
     scheme, a certificate with the correct group parameters has to be 
     available. Let these common DH parameters be g and p; and let this 
     DH key-pair be known as the Recipient key pair (Rpub and Rpriv). 
      
     Rpub = g^x mod p         (where x=Rpriv, the private DH value and ^ 
     denotes exponentiation) 
   
  2. The entity generates a DH public/private key-pair using the 
     parameters from step 1. 
   
          For an entity E: 
           Epriv = DH private value = y 
           Epub  = DH public value  = g^y mod p 
   
  3. The signature computation process will then consist of: 
   
     a) The value to be signed is obtained. (For a RFC2314 object, the 
        value is the DER encoded certificationRequestInfo field 
        represented as an octet string.) This will be the `text' 
        referred to in [RFC2104], the data to which HMAC-SHA1 is 
        applied. 
      
     b) A shared DH secret is computed, as follows, 





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               shared secret = ZZ = g^xy mod p 
         
        [This is done by the entity E as g^(y.Rpub) and by the Recipient 
        as g^(x.Epub), where Rpub is retrieved from the Recipient's DH 
        certificate (or is the one that was locally generated by the 
        Entity) and Epub is retrieved from the actual certification 
        request. ] 
      
     c) A temporary key K is derived from the shared secret ZZ as 
        follows: 
         
           K = SHA1(LeadingInfo | ZZ | TrailingInfo), 
              where "|" means concatenation. 
      
     d) Compute HMAC-SHA1 over the data `text' as per [RFC2104] as: 
         
           SHA1(K XOR opad, SHA1(K XOR ipad, text)) 
   
         where, 
            opad (outer pad) = the byte 0x36 repeated 64 times and 
            ipad (inner pad) = the byte 0x5C repeated 64 times. 
   
         Namely, 
       (1) Append zeros to the end of K to create a 64 byte string 
            (e.g., if K is of length 16 bytes it will be appended with 
            48 zero bytes 0x00). 
       (2) XOR (bitwise exclusive-OR) the 64 byte string computed in 
            step (1) with ipad. 
       (3) Append the data stream `text' to the 64 byte string 
            resulting from step (2). 
       (4) Apply SHA1 to the stream generated in step (3). 
       (5) XOR (bitwise exclusive-OR) the 64 byte string computed in 
            step (1) with opad. 
       (6) Append the SHA1 result from step (4) to the 64 byte string 
            resulting from step (5). 
       (7) Apply SHA1 to the stream generated in step (6) and output 
            the result. 
   
         Sample code is also provided in [RFC2104]. 
   
     e) The output of (d) is encoded as a BIT STRING (the Signature 
        value). 
   
  The signature verification process requires the Recipient to carry out 
  steps (a) through (d) and then simply compare the result of step (d) 
  with what it received as the signature component. If they match then 
  the following can be concluded: 
   





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      1) The Entity possesses the private key corresponding to the 
  public key in the certification request because it needed the private 
  key to calculate the shared secret; and 
      2) For the static signature scheme, that only the Recipient that 
  the entity sent the request to could actually verify the request 
  because they would require their own private key to compute the same 
  shared secret. In the case where the recipient is a Certification 
  Authority, this protects the Entity from rogue CAs. 
   
4.  Static DH Signature 
   
  In the static DH Signature scheme, the public key used in the key 
  agreement process of step 2 is obtained from the entity that will be 
  verifying the signature (i.e. the recipient).  In the case of a 
  certification request, the public key would normally be extracted from 
  a certificate issued to the CA with the appropriate key parameters. 
   
  The values used in step 3c for "LeadingInfo" and the "TrailingInfo" 
  are: 
   
     LeadingInfo ::= Subject Distinguished Name from certificate 
     TrailingInfo ::= Issuer Distinguished Name from certificate 
   
  The ASN.1 structures associated with the static Diffie-Hellman 
  signature algorithms are: 
   
     id-dhPop-static-HMAC-SHA1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-pkix id-alg(6) 
     <TBD> } 
      
     DhPopStatic ::= SEQUENCE { 
         issuerAndSerial IssuerAndSerialNumber OPTIONAL, 
         hashValue       MessageDigest 
     } 
   
     issuerAndSerial is the issuer name and serial number of the 
     certificate from which the public key was obtained.  The 
     issuerAndSerial field is omitted if the public key did not come 
     from a certificate. 
      
     hashValue contains the result of the SHA-1 HMAC operation in step 
     3d. 
      
  DhPopStatic is encoded as a BIT STRING and is the signature value 
  (i.e. encodes the above sequence instead of the raw output from 3d). 
   
5. Discrete Logarithm Signature 
   
  The use of a single set of parameters for an entire public key 
  infrastructure allows all keys in the group to be attacked together. 




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  For this reason we need to create a proof of possession for Diffie-
  Hellman keys that does not require the use of a common set of 
  parameters.   
   
  The method outlined in this document is the same as used by the 
  Digital Signature Algorithm, but we have removed the restrictions 
  imposed by the [FIPS-186] standard.  The use of this method does 
  impose some additional restrictions on the set of keys that may be 
  used, however if the key generation algorithm documented in [DH-X9.42] 
  is used the required restrictions are met.  The additional 
  restrictions are the requirement for the existence of a q parameter.  
  Adding the q parameter is generally accepted as a good practice as it 
  allows for checking of small group attacks. 
   
  The following definitions are used in the rest of this section: 
   
     p is a large prime 
     g = h(p-1)/q mod p , 
        where h is any integer 1 < h < p-1 such that h(p-1) mod q > 1 
        (g has order q mod p) 
     q is a large prime 
     j is a large integer such that p = qj + 1 
   
     x is a randomly or pseudo-randomly generated integer with 1 < x < q 
     y = g^x mod p 
   
  Note: These definitions match the ones in [DH-X9.42]. 
   
5.1 Expanding the Digest Value 
   
  Besides the addition of a q parameter, [FIPS-186] also imposes size 
  restrictions on the parameters.  The length of q must be 160-bits 
  (matching output of the SHA-1 digest algorithm) and length of p must 
  be 1024-bits.  The size restriction on p is eliminated in this 
  document, but the size restriction on q is replaced with the 
  requirement that q must be at least 160-bits.  (The size restriction 
  on q is identical with that in [DH-X9.42].) 
   
  Given that there is not a random length-hashing algorithm, a hash 
  value of the message will need to be derived such that the hash is in 
  the range from 0 to q-1.  If the length of q is greater than 160-bits 
  then a method must be provided to expand the hash length. 
   
  The method for expanding the digest value used in this section does 
  not add any additional security beyond the 160-bits provided by SHA.  
  The value being signed is increased mainly to enhance the difficulty 
  of reversing the signature process. 
   
  This algorithm produces m the value to be signed. 




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  Let L = the size of q (i.e. 2^L <= q < 2^(L+1)). 
  Let M be the original message to be signed. 
   
  1. Compute d = SHA-1(M), the SHA-1 digest of the original message. 
 
  2. If L == 160 then m = d. 
 
  3. If L @ 160 then follow steps (a) through (d) below. 
 
     a) 
        Set n = L / 160, where / represents integer division, 
       consequently, if L = 200, n = 1. 
     b) Set m = d, the initial computed digest value. 
     c) For i = 0 to n -
                       - 1 
            m = m | SHA(d),  where "|" means concatenation. 
     d) m = LEFTMOST(m, L-1), where LEFTMOST returns the L-1 left most 
        bits of m. 
 
  Thus the final result of the process meets the criteria that 0 <= m < 
  q. 
 
5.2 Signature Computation Algorithm 
 
  The signature algorithm produces the pair of values (r, s), which is 
  the signature. The signature is computed as follows: 
 
  Given m, the value to be signed, as well as the parameters defined 
  earlier in section 5. 
 
   1. Generate a random or pseudorandom integer k, such that 0 < k^-1 < 
      q. 
    
   2. Compute r = (g^k mod p) mod q. 
 
   3. If r is zero, repeat from step 1. 
 
   4. Compute s = (k^-1 (m + xr)) mod q. 
 
   5. If s is zero, repeat from step 1. 
 
      
5.3 Signature Verification Algorithm 
   
  The signature verification process is far more complicated than is 
  normal for the Digital Signature Algorithm, as some assumptions about 
  the validity of parameters cannot be taken for granted. 
   
  Given a message m to be validated, the signature value pair (r, s) and 
  the parameters for the key. 




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   1. Perform a strong verification that p is a prime number. 
    
   2. Perform a strong verification that q is a prime number. 
 
   3. Verify that q is a factor of p-1, if any of the above checks fail 
      then the signature cannot be verified and must be considered a 
      failure. 
 
   4. Verify that r and s are in the range [1, q-1]. 
 
   5. Compute w = (s^-1) mod q. 
 
   6. Compute u1 = m*w mod q. 
 
   7. Compute u2 = r*w mod q. 
 
   8. Compute v = ((g^u1 * y^u2) mod p) mod q. 
 
   9. Compare v and r, if they are the same then the signature verified 
      correctly. 
         
   
5.4 ASN Encoding 
   
  The signature is encoded using  
   
      id-alg-dhPOP OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-pkix id-alg(6) <TBD> } 
   
  The parameters for id-alg-dhPOP are encoded as DomainParameters 
  (imported from [PROFILE]).  The parameters may be omitted in the 
  signature, as they must exist in the associated key request. 
   
  The signature value pair r and s are encoded using Dss-Sig-Value 
  (imported from [PROFILE]).  
 
 
5. Security Considerations 
      
  All the security in this system is provided by the secrecy of the 
  private keying material. If either sender or recipient private keys 
  are disclosed, all messages sent or received using that key are 
  compromised. Similarly, loss of the private key results in an 
  inability to read messages sent using that key. 
   
  Selection of parameters can be of paramount importance.  In the 
  selection of parameters one must take into account the community/ 
  group of entities that one wishes to be able to communicate with.  In 
  choosing a set of parameters one must also be sure to avoid small 




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  groups.  [FIPS-186] Appendixes 2 and 3 contain information on the 
  selection of parameters.  The practices outlined in this document will 
  lead to better selection of parameters. 
 
6. Open Issues 
   
  There are no known open issues. 
   
7. References 
   
  [FIPS-186]  Federal Information Processing Standards Publication (FIPS  
              PUB) 186, "Digital Signature Standard", 1994 May 19. 
   
  [RFC2314]   B. Kaliski, "PKCS #10: Certification Request Syntax v1.5", 
              RFC 2314, October 1997 
   
  [RFC2104]   H. Krawczyk, M. Bellare, R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-Hashing 
              for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, February 1997. 
   
  [PROFILE]   R. Housley, W. Ford, W. Polk, D. Solo, "Internet 
              X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Certificate and CRL 
              Profile", RFC 2459, January 1999.  
   
  [DH-X9.42]  E. Rescorla, "Diffie-Hellman Key Agreement Method". 
              (currently draft-ietf-smime-x942-*.txt) 
   
8. Author's Addresses 
   
  Hemma Prafullchandra 
  XETI Inc. 
  5150 El Camino Real, #A-32 
  Los Altos, CA 94022 
  (640) 694-6812 
  hemma@xeti.com 
   
  Jim Schaad 
  Microsoft Corporation 
  One Microsoft Way 
  Redmond, WA 98052-6399 
  (425) 936-3101 
  jimsch@microsoft.com 
   
   
Appendix A.  ASN.1 Module 
   
  DH-Sign DEFINITIONS IMPLICIT TAGS ::= 
   
  BEGIN 
   




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  --EXPORTS ALL  
  -- The types and values defined in this module are exported for use in 
  -- the other ASN.1 modules. Other applications may use them for their 
  -- own purposes. 
   
  IMPORTS 
     IssuerAndSerialNumber, MessageDigest 
     FROM CryptographicMessageSyntax { iso(1) member-body(2) 
          us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) 
          modules(0) cms(1) } 
   
     Dss-Sig-Value, DomainParameters 
     FROM PKIX1Explicit88 {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6)  
          internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) 
          id-pkix1-explicit-88(1)}; 
   
     id-dhSig-static-HMAC-SHA1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-pkix id-alg(6) 
     <TBD> } 
      
     DhSigStatic ::= SEQUENCE { 
         IssuerAndSerial IssuerAndSerialNumber OPTIONAL, 
         hashValue       MessageDigest 
     } 
      
     id-alg-dhPOP OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-pkix id-alg(6) <TBD> } 
      
  END 
   
   
























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