coding: utf-8
title: Signed HTTP Exchanges Implementation Checkpoints docname: draft-yasskin-httpbis-origin-signed-exchanges-impl-latest category: std
ipr: trust200902
stand_alone: yes pi: [comments, sortrefs, strict, symrefs, toc]
name: Jeffrey Yasskin
organization: Google
email: jyasskin@chromium.org
- name: Kunihiko Sakamoto organization: Google email: ksakamoto@chromium.org
normative: CDDL: RFC8610 FETCH: target: https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/ title: Fetch author: org: WHATWG date: Living Standard POSIX: target: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/ title: The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7 author: - org: IEEE - org: The Open Group seriesinfo: name: IEEE value: 1003.1-2008, 2016 Edition date: 2016 TLS1.3: RFC8446 URL: target: https://url.spec.whatwg.org/ title: URL author: org: WHATWG date: Living Standard I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10: target: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10 title: Structured Headers for HTTP author: - name: Mark Nottingham - name: Poul-Henning Kamp seriesinfo: Internet-Draft: draft-ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10 date: 2019-04-17 I-D.ietf-httpbis-variants-05: target: https://tools.ietf.org/html/ietf-httpbis-variants-05 title: HTTP Representation Variants author: - name: Mark Nottingham seriesinfo: Internet-Draft: draft-ietf-httpbis-variants-05 date: 2019-03-25
informative: I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-03: target: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-03 title: Signed HTTP Exchanges author: - name: Jeffrey Yasskin seriesinfo: Internet-Draft: draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-03 date: 2018-03-05 I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-04: target: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-04 title: Signed HTTP Exchanges author: - name: Jeffrey Yasskin seriesinfo: Internet-Draft: draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-04 date: 2018-06-14 I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-05: target: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-05 title: Signed HTTP Exchanges author: - name: Jeffrey Yasskin seriesinfo: Internet-Draft: draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-05 date: 2019-01-23
--- abstract
This document describes checkpoints of draft-yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses to synchronize implementation between clients, intermediates, and publishers.
--- middle
Each version of this document describes a checkpoint of {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}} that can be implemented in sync by clients, intermediates, and publishers. It defines a technique to detect which version each party has implemented so that mismatches can be detected up-front.
Absolute URL : A string for which the URL parser ({{URL}}), when run without a base URL, returns a URL rather than a failure, and for which that URL has a null fragment. This is similar to the absolute-URL string concept defined by ({{URL}}) but might not include exactly the same strings.
Author : The entity that wrote the content in a particular resource. This specification deals with publishers rather than authors.
Publisher : The entity that controls the server for a particular origin {{?RFC6454}}. The publisher can get a CA to issue certificates for their private keys and can run a TLS server for their origin.
Exchange (noun) : An HTTP request URL, content negotiation information, and an HTTP response. This are encoded into the dedicated format in {{application-signed-exchange}}, which uses {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-variants-05}} to encode the content negotiation information. This is not quite the same meaning as defined by Section 8 of {{?RFC7540}}, which assumes the content negotiation information is embedded into HTTP request headers.
Intermediate : An entity that fetches signed HTTP exchanges from a publisher or another intermediate and forwards them to another intermediate or a client.
Client : An entity that uses a signed HTTP exchange and needs to be able to prove that the publisher vouched for it as coming from its claimed origin.
Unix time : Defined by {{POSIX}} section 4.16.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 {{!RFC2119}} {{!RFC8174}} when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
In the response of an HTTP exchange the server MAY include a Signature header
field ({{signature-header}}) holding a list of one or more parameterised
signatures that vouch for the content of the exchange. Exactly which content the
signature vouches for can depend on how the exchange is transferred
({{transfer}}).
The client categorizes each signature as "valid" or "invalid" by validating that signature with its certificate or public key and other metadata against the exchange's URL, response headers, and content ({{signature-validity}}). This validity then informs higher-level protocols.
Each signature is parameterised with information to let a client fetch assurance that a signed exchange is still valid, in the face of revoked certificates and newly-discovered vulnerabilities. This assurance can be bundled back into the signed exchange and forwarded to another client, which won't have to re-fetch this validity information for some period of time.
The Signature header field conveys a single signature for an exchange,
accompanied by information about how to determine the authority of and
refresh that signature. Each signature directly signs the exchange's URL and
response headers and identifies one of those headers that enforces the integrity
of the exchange's payload.
The Signature header is a Structured Header as defined by
{{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}. Its value MUST be a parameterised list
(Section 3.4 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}), and the list MUST
contain exactly one element. Its ABNF is:
Signature = sh-param-list
The parameterised identifier in the list MUST have parameters named "sig", "integrity", "validity-url", "date", "expires", "cert-url", and "cert-sha256". This specification gives no meaning to the identifier itself, which can be used as a human-readable identifier for the signature. The present parameters MUST have the following values:
"sig"
: Byte sequence (Section 3.10 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) holding the signature of most of these parameters and the exchange's URL and response headers.
"integrity"
: A string (Section 3.8 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) containing a "/"-separated sequence of names starting with the lowercase name of the response header field that guards the response payload's integrity. The meaning of subsequent names depends on the response header field, but for the "digest" header field, the single following name is the name of the digest algorithm that guards the payload's integrity.
"cert-url"
: A string (Section 3.8 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) containing an absolute URL ({{terminology}}) with a scheme of "https" or "data".
"cert-sha256"
: Byte sequence (Section 3.10 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) holding the SHA-256 hash of the first certificate found at "cert-url".
{:#signature-validityurl} "validity-url"
: A string (Section 3.8 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) containing an absolute URL ({{terminology}}) with a scheme of "https".
"date" and "expires"
: An integer (Section 3.6 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) representing a Unix time.
The "cert-url" parameter is not signed, so intermediates can update it with a pointer to a cached version.
The following header is included in the response for an exchange with effective
request URI https://example.com/resource.html. Newlines are added for
readability.
Signature:
sig1;
sig=*MEUCIQDXlI2gN3RNBlgFiuRNFpZXcDIaUpX6HIEwcZEc0cZYLAIga9DsVOMM+g5YpwEBdGW3sS+bvnmAJJiSMwhuBdqp5UY=*;
integrity="digest/mi-sha256-03";
validity-url="https://example.com/resource.validity.1511128380";
cert-url="https://example.com/oldcerts";
cert-sha256=*W7uB969dFW3Mb5ZefPS9Tq5ZbH5iSmOILpjv2qEArmI=*;
date=1511128380; expires=1511733180The signature uses a secp256r1 certificate within https://example.com/.
It relies on the Digest response header with the mi-sha256-03 digest algorithm
to guard the integrity of the response payload.
The signature includes a "validity-url" that includes the first time the resource was seen. This allows multiple versions of a resource at the same URL to be updated with new signatures, which allows clients to avoid transferring extra data while the old versions don't have known security bugs.
The certificate at https://example.com/certs has a subjectAltName of
example.com, meaning
that if it and its signature validate, the exchange can be trusted as
having an origin of https://example.com/.
To sign an exchange's response headers, they need to be serialized into a byte string. Since intermediaries and distributors might rearrange, add, or just reserialize headers, we can't use the literal bytes of the headers as this serialization. Instead, this section defines a CBOR representation that can be embedded into other CBOR, canonically serialized ({{canonical-cbor}}), and then signed.
The CBOR representation of a set of response metadata and headers is the CBOR ({{!RFC7049}}) map with the following mappings:
- The byte string ':status' to the byte string containing the response's 3-digit status code, and
- For each response header field, the header field's lowercase name as a byte string to the header field's value as a byte string.
Given the HTTP exchange:
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Accept: */*
HTTP/1.1 200
Content-Type: text/html
Digest: mi-sha256-03=dcRDgR2GM35DluAV13PzgnG6+pvQwPywfFvAu1UeFrs=
Signed-Headers: "content-type", "digest"
<!doctype html>
<html>
...The cbor representation consists of the following item, represented using the extended diagnostic notation from {{CDDL}} appendix G:
{
'digest': 'mi-sha256-03=dcRDgR2GM35DluAV13PzgnG6+pvQwPywfFvAu1UeFrs=',
':status': '200',
'content-type': 'text/html'
}
The resource at a signature's cert-url MUST have the
application/cert-chain+cbor content type, MUST be canonically-encoded CBOR
({{canonical-cbor}}), and MUST match the following CDDL:
cert-chain = [
"📜⛓", ; U+1F4DC U+26D3
+ {
cert: bytes,
? ocsp: bytes,
? sct: bytes,
* tstr => any,
}
]
The first map (second item) in the CBOR array is treated as the end-entity certificate, and the client will attempt to build a path ({{?RFC5280}}) to it from a trusted root using the other certificates in the chain.
- Each
certvalue MUST be a DER-encoded X.509v3 certificate ({{!RFC5280}}). Other key/value pairs in the same array item define properties of this certificate. - The first certificate's
ocspvalue MUST be a complete, DER-encoded OCSP response for that certificate (using the ASN.1 typeOCSPResponsedefined in {{!RFC6960}}). Subsequent certificates MUST NOT have anocspvalue. - Each certificate's
sctvalue if any MUST be aSignedCertificateTimestampListfor that certificate as defined by Section 3.3 of {{!RFC6962}}.
Loading a cert-url takes a forceFetch flag. The client MUST:
- Let
raw-chainbe the result of fetching ({{FETCH}})cert-url. IfforceFetchis not set, the fetch can be fulfilled from a cache using normal HTTP semantics {{!RFC7234}}. If this fetch fails, return "invalid". - Let
certificate-chainbe the array of certificates and properties produced by parsingraw-chainusing the CDDL above. If any of the requirements above aren't satisfied, return "invalid". Note that this validation requirement might be impractical to completely achieve due to certificate validation implementations that don't enforce DER encoding or other standard constraints. - Return
certificate-chain.
Within this specification, the canonical serialization of a CBOR item uses the following rules derived from Section 3.9 of {{?RFC7049}} with erratum 4964 applied:
- Integers and the lengths of arrays, maps, and strings MUST use the smallest possible encoding.
- Items MUST NOT be encoded with indefinite length.
- The keys in every map MUST be sorted in the bytewise lexicographic order of
their canonical encodings. For example, the following keys are correctly sorted:
- 10, encoded as 0A.
- 100, encoded as 18 64.
- -1, encoded as 20.
- "z", encoded as 61 7A.
- "aa", encoded as 62 61 61.
- [100], encoded as 81 18 64.
- [-1], encoded as 81 20.
- false, encoded as F4.
Note: this specification does not use floating point, tags, or other more complex data types, so it doesn't need rules to canonicalize those.
The client MUST parse the Signature header field as the parameterised list
(Section 4.2.5 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) described in
{{signature-header}}. If an error is thrown during this parsing or any of the
requirements described there aren't satisfied, the exchange has no valid
signatures. Otherwise, each member of this list represents a signature with
parameters.
The client MUST use the following algorithm to determine whether each signature with parameters is invalid or potentially-valid for an exchange's
requestUrl, a byte sequence that can be parsed into the exchange's effective request URI (Section 5.5 of {{!RFC7230}}),responseHeaders, a byte sequence holding the canonical serialization ({{canonical-cbor}}) of the CBOR representation ({{cbor-representation}}) of the exchange's response metadata and headers, andpayload, a stream of bytes constituting the exchange's payload body (Section 3.3 of {{!RFC7230}}). Note that the payload body is the message body with any transfer encodings removed.
Potentially-valid results include:
- The signed headers of the exchange so that higher-level protocols can avoid relying on unsigned headers, and
- Either a certificate chain or a public key so that a higher-level protocol can determine whether it's actually valid.
This algorithm accepts a forceFetch flag that avoids the cache when fetching
URLs. A client that determines that a potentially-valid certificate chain is
actually invalid due to an expired OCSP response MAY retry with forceFetch set
to retrieve an updated OCSP from the original server.
{:#force-fetch}
-
Let:
signaturebe the signature (byte sequence in the parameterised identifier's "sig" parameter).integritybe the signature's "integrity" parameter.validity-urlbe the signature's "validity-url" parameter.cert-urlbe the signature's "cert-url" parameter, if any.cert-sha256be the signature's "cert-sha256" parameter, if any.datebe the signature's "date" parameter, interpreted as a Unix time.expiresbe the signature's "expires" parameter, interpreted as a Unix time.
-
Set
publicKeyandsigning-algdepending on which key fields are present:- Assert:
cert-urlis present.- Let
certificate-chainbe the result of loading the certificate chain atcert-urlpassing theforceFetchflag ({{cert-chain-format}}). If this returns "invalid", return "invalid". - Let
main-certificatebe the first certificate incertificate-chain. - Set
publicKeytomain-certificate's public key. - If
publicKeyis an RSA key, return "invalid". - If
publicKeyis a key using the secp256r1 elliptic curve, setsigning-algto ecdsa_secp256r1_sha256 as defined in Section 4.2.3 of {{TLS1.3}}. - Otherwise, return "invalid".
- Let
- Assert:
-
If
expiresis more than 7 days (604800 seconds) afterdate, return "invalid". -
If the current time is before
dateor afterexpires, return "invalid". -
Let
messagebe the concatenation of the following byte strings. This matches the {{TLS1.3}} format to avoid cross-protocol attacks if anyone uses the same key in a TLS certificate and an exchange-signing certificate.-
A string that consists of octet 32 (0x20) repeated 64 times.
-
A context string: the ASCII encoding of "HTTP Exchange 1 b3".
Note: As this is a snapshot of a draft of {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}, it uses a distinct context string.
-
A single 0 byte which serves as a separator.
-
If
cert-sha256is set, a byte holding the value 32 followed by the 32 bytes of the value ofcert-sha256. Otherwise a 0 byte. -
The 8-byte big-endian encoding of the length in bytes of
validity-url, followed by the bytes ofvalidity-url. -
The 8-byte big-endian encoding of
date. -
The 8-byte big-endian encoding of
expires. -
The 8-byte big-endian encoding of the length in bytes of
requestUrl, followed by the bytes ofrequestUrl. -
The 8-byte big-endian encoding of the length in bytes of
responseHeaders, followed by the bytes ofresponseHeaders.
-
-
If
cert-urlis present and the SHA-256 hash ofmain-certificate'scert_datais not equal tocert-sha256(whose presence was checked when theSignatureheader field was parsed), return "invalid".Note that this intentionally differs from TLS 1.3, which signs the entire certificate chain in its Certificate Verify (Section 4.4.3 of {{TLS1.3}}), in order to allow updating the stapled OCSP response without updating signatures at the same time.
-
If
signatureis not a valid signature ofmessagebypublicKeyusingsigning-alg, return "invalid". -
If
headers, interpreted according to {{cbor-representation}}, does not contain aContent-Typeresponse header field (Section 3.1.1.5 of {{!RFC7231}}), return "invalid".Clients MUST interpret the signed payload as this specified media type instead of trying to sniff a media type from the bytes of the payload, for example by attaching an
X-Content-Type-Options: nosniffheader field ({{FETCH}}) to the extracted response. -
If
integritydoes not match "digest/mi-sha256-03", return "invalid". -
If
payloaddoesn't match the integrity information in the header described byintegrity, return "invalid". -
Return "potentially-valid" with
certificate-chain.
Note that the above algorithm can determine that an exchange's headers are
potentially-valid before the exchange's payload is received. Similarly, if
integrity identifies a header field and parameter like Digest: mi-sha256-03
({{?I-D.thomson-http-mice}})
that can incrementally validate the payload, early parts of the payload can be
determined to be potentially-valid before later parts of the payload.
Higher-level protocols MAY process parts of the exchange that have been
determined to be potentially-valid as soon as that determination is made but
MUST NOT process parts of the exchange that are not yet potentially-valid.
Similarly, as the higher-level protocol determines that parts of the exchange
are actually valid, the client MAY process those parts of the exchange and MUST
wait to process other parts of the exchange until they too are determined to be
valid.
Both OCSP responses and signatures are designed to expire a short time after they're signed, so that revoked certificates and signed exchanges with known vulnerabilities are distrusted promptly.
This specification provides no way to update OCSP responses by themselves. Instead, clients need to re-fetch the "cert-url" to get a chain including a newer OCSP response.
The "validity-url" parameter of the signatures provides a way to fetch new signatures or learn where to fetch a complete updated exchange.
Each version of a signed exchange SHOULD have its own validity URLs, since each version needs different signatures and becomes obsolete at different times.
The resource at a "validity-url" is "validity data", a CBOR map matching the following CDDL ({{CDDL}}):
validity = {
? signatures: [ + bytes ]
? update: {
? size: uint,
}
]
The elements of the signatures array are parameterised identifiers (Section
4.2.6 of {{I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure-10}}) meant to replace the signatures
within the Signature header field pointing to this validity data. If the
signed exchange contains a bug severe enough that clients need to stop using the
content, the signatures array MUST NOT be present.
If the the update map is present, that indicates that a new version of the
signed exchange is available at its effective request URI (Section 5.5 of
{{!RFC7230}}) and can give an estimate of the size of the updated exchange
(update.size). If the signed exchange is currently the most recent version,
the update SHOULD NOT be present.
If both the signatures and update fields are present, clients can use the
estimated size to decide whether to update the whole resource or just its
signatures.
For example, say a signed exchange whose URL is https://example.com/resource
has the following Signature header field (with line breaks included and
irrelevant fields omitted for ease of reading).
Signature:
sig1;
sig=*MEUCIQ...*;
...
validity-url="https://example.com/resource.validity.1511157180";
cert-url="https://example.com/oldcerts";
date=1511128380; expires=1511733180At 2017-11-27 11:02 UTC, sig1 has expired, so the client needs to fetch
https://example.com/resource.validity.1511157180 (the validity-url of
sig1) if it wishes to update that signature. This URL might contain:
{
"signatures": [
'sig1; '
'sig=*MEQCIC/I9Q+7BZFP6cSDsWx43pBAL0ujTbON/+7RwKVk+ba5AiB3FSFLZqpzmDJ0NumNwN04pqgJZE99fcK86UjkPbj4jw==*; '
'validity-url="https://example.com/resource.validity.1511157180"; '
'integrity="digest/mi-sha256-03"; '
'cert-url="https://example.com/newcerts"; '
'cert-sha256=*J/lEm9kNRODdCmINbvitpvdYKNQ+YgBj99DlYp4fEXw=*; '
'date=1511733180; expires=1512337980'
],
"update": {
"size": 5557452
}
}
This indicates that the client could fetch a newer version at
https://example.com/resource (the original URL of the exchange), or that the
validity period of the old version can be extended by replacing the original
signature with the new signature provided. The signature of the updated signed
exchange would be:
Signature:
sig1;
sig=*MEQCIC...*;
...
validity-url="https://example.com/resource.validity.1511157180";
cert-url="https://example.com/newcerts";
date=1511733180; expires=1512337980The Accept-Signature request header is not used.
To determine whether to trust a cross-origin exchange, the client takes a
Signature header field ({{signature-header}}) and the exchange's
requestUrl, a byte sequence that can be parsed into the exchange's effective request URI (Section 5.5 of {{!RFC7230}}),responseHeaders, a byte sequence holding the canonical serialization ({{canonical-cbor}}) of the CBOR representation ({{cbor-representation}}) of the exchange's response metadata and headers, andpayload, a stream of bytes constituting the exchange's payload body (Section 3.3 of {{!RFC7230}}).
The client MUST parse the Signature header into a list of signatures according
to the instructions in {{signature-validity}}, and run the following algorithm
for each signature, stopping at the first one that returns "valid". If any
signature returns "valid", return "valid". Otherwise, return "invalid".
- If the signature's "validity-url" parameter is not
same-origin
with
requestUrl, return "invalid". - Use {{signature-validity}} to determine the signature's validity for
requestUrl,responseHeaders, andpayload, gettingcertificate-chainback. If this returned "invalid" or didn't return a certificate chain, return "invalid". - Let
responsebe the response metadata and headers parsed out ofresponseHeaders. - If Section 3 of {{!RFC7234}} forbids a shared cache from storing
response, return "invalid". - If
response's headers contain an uncached header field, as defined in {{uncached-headers}}, return "invalid". - Let
authoritybe the host component ofrequestUrl. - Validate the
certificate-chainusing the following substeps. If any of them fail, re-run {{signature-validity}} once over the signature with theforceFetchflag set, and restart from step 2. If a substep fails again, return "invalid".-
Use
certificate-chainto validate that its first entry,main-certificateis trusted asauthority's server certificate ({{!RFC5280}} and other undocumented conventions). Letpathbe the path that was used from themain-certificateto a trusted root, including themain-certificatebut excluding the root. -
Validate that
main-certificatehas the CanSignHttpExchanges extension ({{cross-origin-cert-req}}). -
Validate that either
main-certificatehas a Validity Period no longer than 90 days, or that the current date is 2019-08-01 or before andmain-certificatewas issued on 2019-05-01 or before. -
Validate that
main-certificatehas anocspproperty ({{cert-chain-format}}) with a valid OCSP response whose lifetime (nextUpdate - thisUpdate) is less than 7 days ({{!RFC6960}}). Note that this does not check for revocation of intermediate certificates, and clients SHOULD implement another mechanism for that. -
Validate that valid SCTs from trusted logs are available from any of:
- The
SignedCertificateTimestampListinmain-certificate'ssctproperty ({{cert-chain-format}}), - An OCSP extension in the OCSP response in
main-certificate'socspproperty, or - An X.509 extension in the certificate in
main-certificate'scertproperty,
as described by Section 3.3 of {{!RFC6962}}.
- The
-
- Return "valid".
Hop-by-hop and other uncached headers MUST NOT appear in a signed exchange. These will eventually be listed in {{?I-D.ietf-httpbis-cache}}, but for now they're listed here:
- Hop-by-hop header fields listed in the Connection header field (Section 6.1 of {{!RFC7230}}).
- Header fields listed in the no-cache response directive in the Cache-Control header field (Section 5.2.2.2 of {{!RFC7234}}).
- Header fields defined as hop-by-hop:
- Connection
- Keep-Alive
- Proxy-Connection
- Trailer
- Transfer-Encoding
- Upgrade
- Stateful headers as defined below.
As described in Section 6.1 of {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}, a publisher can cause problems if they sign an exchange that includes private information. There's no way for a client to be sure an exchange does or does not include private information, but header fields that store or convey stored state in the client are a good sign.
A stateful response header field modifies state, including authentication status, in the client. The HTTP cache is not considered part of this state. These include but are not limited to:
Authentication-Control, {{?RFC8053}}Authentication-Info, {{?RFC7615}}Clear-Site-Data, {{?W3C.WD-clear-site-data-20171130}}Optional-WWW-Authenticate, {{?RFC8053}}Proxy-Authenticate, {{?RFC7235}}Proxy-Authentication-Info, {{?RFC7615}}Public-Key-Pins, {{?RFC7469}}Sec-WebSocket-Accept, {{?RFC6455}}Set-Cookie, {{?RFC6265}}Set-Cookie2, {{?RFC2965}}SetProfile, {{?W3C.NOTE-OPS-OverHTTP}}Strict-Transport-Security, {{?RFC6797}}WWW-Authenticate, {{?RFC7235}}
We define a new X.509 extension, CanSignHttpExchanges to be used in the certificate when the certificate permits the usage of signed exchanges. When this extension is not present the client MUST NOT accept a signature from the certificate as proof that a signed exchange is authoritative for a domain covered by the certificate. When it is present, the client MUST follow the validation procedure in {{cross-origin-trust}}.
CanSignHttpExchanges ::= NULLNote that this extension contains an ASN.1 NULL (bytes 05 00) because some
implementations have bugs with empty extensions.
Leaf certificates without this extension need to be revoked if the private key is exposed to an unauthorized entity, but they generally don't need to be revoked if a signing oracle is exposed and then removed.
CA certificates, by contrast, need to be revoked if an unauthorized entity is able to make even one unauthorized signature.
Certificates with this extension MUST be revoked if an unauthorized entity is able to make even one unauthorized signature.
Starting 2019-05-01, certificates with this extension MUST have a Validity Period no greater than 90 days.
Conforming CAs MUST NOT mark this extension as critical.
Starting 2019-05-01, a conforming CA MUST NOT issue certificates with this extension unless, for each dNSName in the subjectAltName extension of the certificate to be issued:
- An "issue" or "issuewild" CAA property ({{!RFC6844}}) exists that authorizes the CA to issue the certificate; and
- The "cansignhttpexchanges" parameter ({{caa-cansignhttpexchanges}}) is present on the property and is equal to "yes"
Clients MUST NOT accept certificates with this extension in TLS connections (Section 4.4.2.2 of {{TLS1.3}}).
This draft of the specification identifies the CanSignHttpExchanges extension with the id-ce-canSignHttpExchangesDraft OID:
id-ce-google OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { 1 3 6 1 4 1 11129 }
id-ce-canSignHttpExchangesDraft OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-ce-google 2 1 22 }This OID might or might not be used as the final OID for the extension, so certificates including it might need to be reissued once the final RFC is published.
Some certificates have already been issued with this extension and with validity periods longer than 90 days. These certificates will not immediately be treated as invalid. Instead:
- Clients MUST reject certificates with this extension that were issued after 2019-05-01 and have a Validity Period longer than 90 days.
- After 2019-08-01, clients MUST reject all certificates with this extension that have a Validity Period longer than 90 days.
A CAA parameter "cansignhttpexchanges" is defined for the "issue" and "issuewild" properties defined by {{!RFC6844}}. The value of this parameter, if specified, MUST be "yes".
A signed exchange can be transferred in several ways, of which three are described here.
Same-origin responses are not implemented.
Cross origin push is not implemented.
To allow signed exchanges to be the targets of <link rel=prefetch> tags, we
define the application/signed-exchange content type that represents a signed
HTTP exchange, including a request URL, response metadata
and header fields, and a response payload.
When served over HTTP, a response containing an application/signed-exchange
payload MUST include at least the following response header fields, to reduce
content sniffing vulnerabilities:
- Content-Type: application/signed-exchange;v=version
- X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
This content type consists of the concatenation of the following items:
-
8 bytes consisting of the ASCII characters "sxg1-b3" followed by a 0 byte, to serve as a file signature. This is redundant with the MIME type, and recipients that receive both MUST check that they match and, if they don't, either stop parsing or redirect to the
fallbackUrlin the next two entries.Note: As this is a snapshot of a draft of {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}, it uses a distinct file signature.
-
2 bytes storing a big-endian integer
fallbackUrlLength. -
fallbackUrlLengthbytes holding afallbackUrl, which MUST UTF-8 decode to an absolute URL with a scheme of "https".Note: The byte location of the fallback URL is intended to remain invariant across versions of the
application/signed-exchangeformat so that parsers encountering unknown versions can always find a URL to redirect to. -
3 bytes storing a big-endian integer
sigLength. If this is larger than 16384 (16*1024), parsing MUST fail. -
3 bytes storing a big-endian integer
headerLength. If this is larger than 524288 (512*1024), parsing MUST fail. -
sigLengthbytes holding theSignatureheader field's value ({{signature-header}}). -
headerLengthbytes holdingsignedHeaders, the canonical serialization ({{canonical-cbor}}) of the CBOR representation of the response headers of the exchange represented by theapplication/signed-exchangeresource ({{cbor-representation}}), excluding theSignatureheader field. -
The payload body (Section 3.3 of {{!RFC7230}}) of the exchange represented by the
application/signed-exchangeresource.Note that the use of the payload body here means that a
Transfer-Encodingheader field inside theapplication/signed-exchangeheader block has no effect. ATransfer-Encodingheader field on the outer HTTP response that transfers this resource still has its normal effect.
To determine whether to trust a cross-origin exchange stored in an
application/signed-exchange resource, pass the Signature header field's
value, fallbackUrl as the effective request URI, signedHeaders, and the
payload body to the algorithm in {{cross-origin-trust}}.
If the signed response headers include a Variants-04 header field, the client
MUST use the cache behavior algorithm in Section 4 of
{{I-D.ietf-httpbis-variants-05}} to check that the signed response is an
appropriate representation for the request the client is trying to fulfil. If
the response is not an appropriate representation, the client MUST treat the
signature as invalid. Note the mismatch between the name of the header field and
the version of the Variants draft.
An example application/signed-exchange file representing a possible signed
exchange with https://example.com/ follows, with lengths represented by
descriptions in <>s, CBOR represented in the extended diagnostic format
defined in Appendix G of {{CDDL}}, and most of the Signature header field and
payload elided with a ...:
sxg1-b3\0<2-byte length of the following url string>
https://example.com/<3-byte length of the following header
value><3-byte length of the encoding of the
following map>sig1; sig=*...; integrity="digest/mi-sha256-03"; ...{
':status': '200',
'content-type': 'text/html'
}<!doctype html>\r\n<html>...
All of the security considerations from Section 6 of {{!I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}} apply.
Normally, when a client fetches https://o1.com/resource.js,
o1.com learns that the client is interested in the resource. If
o1.com signs resource.js, o2.com serves it as
https://o2.com/o1resource.js, and the client fetches it from there,
then o2.com learns that the client is interested, and if the client
executes the Javascript, that could also report the client's interest back to
o1.com.
Often, o2.com already knew about the client's interest, because it's the
entity that directed the client to o1resource.js, but there may be cases where
this leaks extra information.
For non-executable resource types, a signed response can improve the privacy situation by hiding the client's interest from the original publisher.
To prevent network operators other than o1.com or o2.com from learning which
exchanges were read, clients SHOULD only load exchanges fetched over a transport
that's protected from eavesdroppers. This can be difficult to determine when the
exchange is being loaded from local disk, but when the client itself requested
the exchange over a network it SHOULD require TLS ({{TLS1.3}}) or a
successor transport layer, and MUST NOT accept exchanges transferred over plain
HTTP without TLS.
This depends on the following IANA registrations in {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}:
- The
Signatureheader field - The application/cert-chain+cbor media type
This document also modifies the registration for:
Type name: application
Subtype name: signed-exchange
Required parameters:
-
v: A string denoting the version of the file format. ({{!RFC5234}} ABNF:
version = DIGIT/%x61-7A) The version defined in this specification isb3. When used with theAcceptheader field (Section 5.3.1 of {{!RFC7231}}), this parameter can be a comma (,)-separated list of version strings. ({{!RFC5234}} ABNF:version-list = version *( "," version )) The server is then expected to reply with a resource using a particular version from that list.Note: As this is a snapshot of a draft of {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}, it uses a distinct version number.
Magic number(s): 73 78 67 31 2D 62 33 00
The other fields are the same as the registration in {{?I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses}}.
--- back
draft-03
Vs. draft-02
- Updates to match {{I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-05}}.
- UTF-8 decode the fallback URL.
- Define a CAA parameter to opt into certificate issuance, which CAs need to enforce after May 1.
- Limit lifetimes of certificates issued after May 1 to 90 days.
- Accept-Signature and same-origin responses are removed.
Vs. {{I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-05}}:
- Versions in file signatures and context strings are "b3".
- Signed exchanges can only be transmitted in the application/signed-exchange format, not HTTP/2 Push or plain HTTP request/response pairs.
- The Accept-Signature request header isn't used.
- Removed non-normative sections.
- Only 1 signature is supported.
- Removed support for ed25519 signatures.
- The above UTF-8 decoding.
- The above CAA parameter and certificate lifetimes.
- Versioned the Variants header field at draft-ietf-httpbis-variants-05 (but spelled Variants-04) and the mi-sha256 digest algorithm at draft-thomson-http-mice-03.
- Allow mismatches between the MIME type and file signature to redirect to the fallback URL.
draft-02
Vs. draft-01:
- Define absolute URLs, and limit the schemes each instance can use.
- Update to mice-03 including the Digest header.
- Define the "integrity" field of the Signature header to include the digest algorithm.
- Put a fallback URL at the beginning of the
application/signed-exchangeformat, and remove ':url' key from the CBOR representation of the exchange's request and response metadata and headers. - The new signed message format which embeds the exact bytes of the CBOR representation of the exchange's request and response metadata and headers.
- When validating the signature validity, move the
payloadintegrity check steps to after verifyingheader. - Versions in file signatures and context strings are "b2".
draft-01
Vs. {{I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-04}}:
- The MI header and mi-sha256 content-encoding are renamed to MI-Draft2 and mi-sha256-draft2 in case {{?I-D.thomson-http-mice}} changes.
- Signed exchanges cannot be transmitted using HTTP/2 Push.
- Removed non-normative sections.
- The mi-sha256 encoding must have records <= 16kB.
- The signature must be <=16kB long.
- The HTTP request and response headers together must be <=512kB.
- Versions in file signatures and context strings are "b1".
- Only 1 signature is supported.
- Removed support for ed25519 signatures.
draft-00
Vs. {{I-D.yasskin-http-origin-signed-responses-03}}:
- Removed non-normative sections.
- Only 1 signature is supported.
- Only 2048-bit RSA keys are supported.
- The certificate chain resource uses the TLS 1.3 Certificate message format rather than a CBOR-based format.
- OCSP responses and SCTs are not checked.
- Certificates without the CanSignHttpExchanges extension are allowed.
- The signature string starts with 64 0x20 octets like the TLS 1.3 signature format.
- The application/http-exchange+cbor format is replaced with a more specialized application/signed-exchange format.
- Signed exchanges can only be transmitted using the application/signed-exchange format, not HTTP/2 Push or plain HTTP request/response pairs.
- Only the MI payload-integrity header is supported.
- The mi-sha256 encoding must have records <= 16kB.
- The Accept-Signature header isn't used.
- Require absolute URLs.
Thanks to Andrew Ayer, Devin Mullins, Ilari Liusvaara, Justin Schuh, Mark Nottingham, Mike Bishop, Ryan Sleevi, and Yoav Weiss for comments that improved this draft.