RE: WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension

"Stefan Santesson" <stefans@microsoft.com> Wed, 25 May 2005 14:45 UTC

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Subject: RE: WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension
Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 14:49:10 +0100
Message-ID: <BF9309599A71984CAC5BAC5ECA6299440272BA48@EUR-MSG-11.europe.corp.microsoft.com>
Thread-Topic: WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension
Thread-Index: AcVhBrzVcfnlDPymT/ae2CZ3lJTg4AAKSlig
From: Stefan Santesson <stefans@microsoft.com>
To: Denis Pinkas <Denis.Pinkas@bull.net>, Russ Housley <housley@vigilsec.com>
Cc: ietf-pkix@imc.org
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Denis,

I discussed this with Russ and our conclusion is that if this resolves
your last call issues, then we can live with deleting these sentences.


Stefan Santesson
Program Manager, Standards Liaison
Windows Security
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-ietf-pkix@mail.imc.org
[mailto:owner-ietf-pkix@mail.imc.org]
> On Behalf Of Denis Pinkas
> Sent: den 25 maj 2005 00:47
> To: Russ Housley
> Cc: ietf-pkix@imc.org
> Subject: Re: WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension
> 
> 
> Russ,
> 
> Two points:
> 
> 1. The current text in the security considerations section contains
>     text which suggest a solution to the problem but which is not.
>     At least the two following sentences SHALL be deleted:
> 
>     " As means of reducing problems and security issues related to
issuer
>     name collisions, CA names SHOULD be formed in a way that reduce
the
>     likelihood of name collisions.  Implementations validating CRLs
>     MUST ensure that the certification path of the target certificate
>     and the CRL issuer certification path used to validate the target
>     certificate, terminate at the same trust anchor".
> 
> 2. We strongly agree that 3280bis MUST address this issue and
currently
>     it does not do it correctly (otherwise we would not have this
>     loooong discussion), ... that we can continue within the scope
>     of 3280bis.
> 
> Denis
> 
> > Julien & Tom:
> >
> > Two points:
> >
> > 1.  I understand this scenario.  The change that you advocate as a
> > countermeasure will prevent Indirect CRLs from working in scenarios
that
> > are intended.
> >
> > 2.  This observation has noting to do with the CRL AIA extension.
The
> > attacker is inserting the bogus revocation information into the
> > repository.  Any relying party that uses that repository (when using
the
> > CRL AIA extension or any other configuration information to locate
it)
> > will get the bogus revocation information.
> >
> > If this is a concern, then it needs to be addressed in RFC3280bis,
not
> > here.
> >
> > Russ
> >
> > At 12:38 PM 5/24/2005, Julien Stern wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, May 24, 2005 at 10:36:16AM -0400, Tom Gindin wrote:
> >> >
> >> >         There is one scenario permitted by the "same trust
anchor"
> rule
> >> > for CRL signers which seems to me to be a serious security hole.
> >> Let us
> >> > assume a valid CA which is a direct subordinate of one of the
RP's
> >> trust
> >> > anchors.  This CA issues separate CRL's and ARL's, in a quite
usual
> >> way,
> >> > and issues cross certificates.  After months or years of
operation,
> it
> >> > revokes one of its cross certificates because the subject's
operator
> >> has
> >> > gone rogue.  That rogue subject then issues a fraudulent CRL
Signing
> >> > certificate with the DN that the superior certificate has been
using
> to
> >> > sign ARL's, a public key which it has newly generated, and
various
> >> > extensions including an SKID.  It then issues an updated copy of
an
> old
> >> > ARL under the fraudulent CRL signer's certificate and with an
AKID
> >> > matching the fraudulent signer's SKID.  If the rogue can break
into
> the
> >> > repository where the CRL is expected, this fraudulently issued
CRL
> will
> >> > probably be validated whether it contains an AIA or not.  It will
> >> > certainly pass the "same trust anchor" condition.
> >> >         This scenario, in which a rogue CA issues an ARL
certifiying
> >> that
> >> > its primary certificate has not been revoked and gets the ARL
> >> accepted, is
> >> > possible under "same trust anchor" but not under "signed by path
> >> member".
> >>
> >> I agree with the validity of this scenario. I believe this is very
> >> close to the issue I attempted to bring on the list a short time
ago.
> >> Of course, it assumes the existence of a rogue CA at some point in
> time.
> >>
> >> Note that the CRL could be directly inserted into a "long term"
> >> signature (according to RFC3126 for example). This does not require
> >> a repository break-in and makes the "attack" even more realistic.
> >>
> >> Regards.
> >>
> >> --
> >> Julien Stern
> >>
> >> >
> >> >                 Tom Gindin
> >> >
> >> > ----- Forwarded by Tom Gindin/Watson/IBM on 05/24/2005 10:13 AM
-----
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > Tom Gindin
> >> > 05/23/2005 10:46 PM
> >> >
> >> >         To:     wpolk@nist.gov
> >> >         cc:     housley@vigilsec.com, ietf-pkix@imc.org,
> kent@bbn.com,
> >> > stefans@microsoft.com
> >> >         From:   Tom Gindin/Watson/IBM@IBMUS
> >> >         Subject:        Re: WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension
> >> >
> >> >         Tim:
> >> >
> >> >         I should probably have brought this up earlier, but are
we
> >> certain
> >> > that "same trust anchor" is a strong enough check that the CRL
> >> signer is
> >> > the one expected by the issuing CA?  While I was not in San Diego
> when
> >> > this wording was included in the 3280 series, I do not really
think
> >> that
> >> > that check is strong enough.  I would suggest instead that the
CRL
> >> > signer's certificate needs to be directly issued by one of the
CA's
> >> in the
> >> > certification path back to the trust anchor used for the
> certificate's
> >> > verification, or by that anchor itself, unless people have
practical
> >> > experience with CA structures which that rule would prohibit.
> >> Forcing the
> >> > CRL to be issued by the CA itself (as I understand Denis to have
> >> > suggested) prohibits the reasonable case where the CRL is issued
by a
> >> > hierarchical superior, so it is IMHO too strict.
> >> >         I am personally not sure, FWIW, that a CRL should be
> >> permitted to
> >> > be signed by a second-cousin certificate of the issuer's
> >> certificate.  By
> >> > analogy to the use of the terms in families, "sibling"
certificates
> >> would
> >> > have the same issuer, "first-cousin" certificates would be issued
by
> >> > siblings, and "second-cousin" certificates would be issued by
first
> >> > cousins - so they are both three levels down from the same trust
> >> anchor,
> >> > or from the last common CA in their paths.  This issue is not
newly
> >> caused
> >> > by CRL AIA, since the same issue can arise with CRL's containing
only
> >> > AKID.  AIA only allows RP's to build a path (whether right or
wrong)
> >> more
> >> > quickly.
> >> >         In any case, nothing more than a note in Security
> >> Considerations
> >> > is appropriate in any of our RFC's other than 3280 and its
successor.
> >> >
> >> >         Tom Gindin
> >> > P.S. -  The above views are mine, and not necessarily those of my
> >> employer
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > Tim Polk <tim.polk@nist.gov>
> >> > Sent by: owner-ietf-pkix@mail.imc.org
> >> > 05/10/2005 05:27 PM
> >> >
> >> >         To:     ietf-pkix@imc.org
> >> >         cc:     kent@bbn.com, stefans@microsoft.com,
> >> housley@vigilsec.com
> >> >         Subject:        WG Last Call: AIA CRL extension
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > This message initiates working group Last Call for the
specification
> >> > "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Authority Information
> Access
> >> > CRL
> >> > Extension".  While some issues raised in the working group are
> >> unresolved,
> >> >
> >> > the editors believe that rough consensus supports the current
> >> > specification.
> >> >
> >> > The URL for this Internet-Draft is:
> >> >
> >> > http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-pkix-crlaia-01.txt
> >> >
> >> > Last Call will run for (at least) two weeks. That is, Last Call
will
> >> not
> >> > close before May 24.
> >> >
> >> > Thanks,
> >> >
> >> > Tim Polk
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>