Re: [pkix] [smime] Support for email address internationalization in RFC5280 certificates

Wei Chuang <weihaw@google.com> Tue, 05 April 2016 20:13 UTC

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Date: Tue, 05 Apr 2016 13:05:56 -0700
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From: Wei Chuang <weihaw@google.com>
To: Jim Schaad <ietf@augustcellars.com>
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Cc: IETF PKIX <pkix@ietf.org>, Sean Leonard <dev+ietf@seantek.com>, IETF SMIME <smime@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [pkix] [smime] Support for email address internationalization in RFC5280 certificates
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On Tue, Apr 5, 2016 at 10:30 AM, Jim Schaad <ietf@augustcellars.com> wrote:

> It would also be a good way to have all existing implementations crash as
> they see an option in the choice they do not support.
>
>
>
> I agree with the use of the OtherName extension.
>

FWIW I pinged someone in OpenSSL about extending OtherName for
international email address, and the reply was that it won't be an issue to
support this modulo their long release cycle (about one a year), and
current OpenSSL won't of course recognize the extension but won't break
either.  Depending on the situation it may be possible to get a change
faster too, and of course supplying a patch could help.

-Wei



>
>
> Jim
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* pkix [mailto:pkix-bounces@ietf.org] *On Behalf Of *Russ Housley
> *Sent:* Tuesday, April 05, 2016 9:18 AM
> *To:* Sean Leonard <dev+ietf@seantek.com>
> *Cc:* IETF PKIX <pkix@ietf.org>; IETF SMIME <smime@ietf.org>
> *Subject:* Re: [pkix] [smime] Support for email address
> internationalization in RFC5280 certificates
>
>
>
> I am opposed to extending GeneralName with a new item in the CHOICE
> because the syntax in RFC5280.  That syntax is aligned with X.509.  We
> would need to work with ITU-T to make an addition to the CHOICE, otherwise
> the ITU-T could make a change to their specification in the future that
> causes interoperability problems.
>
>
>
> I am strongly opposed to changing the type of rfc822name.  As above, this
> syntax belongs to X.509.  In addition, this change would cause decode
> errors for existing software, and we have seen decode errors lead to very
> surprising user experiences.
>
>
>
> I believe that using the otherName extension mechanism does not have any
> of the problems with these two proposals.
>
>
>
> Russ
>
>
>
>
>
> On Apr 4, 2016, at 6:20 PM, Sean Leonard <dev+ietf@seantek.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> On Feb 7, 2016, at 12:15 PM, Wei Chuang <weihaw@google.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 5, 2016 at 4:46 PM, Peter Bowen <pzbowen@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Feb 4, 2016 at 11:05 AM, Wei Chuang <weihaw@google.com> wrote:
> > PKIX community,
> >
> > We've observed a limitation for specifying internationalized email
> addresses
> > as the local part which is restricted to essentially ASCII.  That is
> subject
> > or issuer email addresses which should be stored as subject-alt-name or
> > issuer-alt-name rfc822Name and are encoded as IA5String.  This is despite
> > the internationalization in email usage as specified by
> internationalization
> > of email headers in RFC6532 allowing Unicode in To, From, etc fields and
> > becoming fairly commonplace.  RFC5280 already specifies
> internationalization
> > of the domain but lacks any specification for the local-part.
>
>
>
> Up until now, I have tried to lay low on this topic. However, having
> reviewed the relevant standards and implementations in the field, I have my
> 22¢:
>
>
>
> The proposed methods are to create an otherName form and assign a new
> object identifier for it (A. Melnikov, ed., draft-ietf-pkix-eai-addresses-00),
> and to encode the local part in base64 with “:” as an escape signal (L.
> Baudoin, et. al., draft-lbaudoin-iemax-02). There is also a counterproposal
> on the agenda, which I will label as #3, to make rfc822Name a CHOICE
> {IA5String, UTF8String}. There are two other methods that deserve serious
> consideration. My 0.2¢ is on #4 and my 21.8¢ is on #5:
>
>
>
> *#4* Extend GeneralName with a new name type:
>
>
>
> GeneralName ::= CHOICE {
>
>   otherName [0] INSTANCE OF OTHER-NAME,
>
>   rfc822Name [1] IA5String,
>
>   dNSName [2] IA5String,
>
>   x400Address [3] ORAddress,
>
>   directoryName [4] Name,
>
>   ediPartyName [5] EDIPartyName,
>
>   uniformResourceIdentifier [6] IA5String,
>
>   iPAddress [7] OCTET STRING,
>
>   registeredID [8] OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
>
>   *eaiName [9] UTF8String*
>
>   ... }
>
>
>
> The advantage of this approach is that it conforms to X.509:2012, which
> uses … syntax to show that the CHOICE is extensible. However, the IETF
> invented GeneralName (RFC 2459), and the latest ASN.1 (RFC 5912) does not
> use … syntax for extensibility. (Basically I think most implementations
> would barf on this CHOICE, and would cause the overall ASN.1 decoding op to
> fail, meaning all places where GeneralName is directly encoded, would cause
> implementations to barf.)
>
>
>
> *#5* Change GeneralName so that rfc822Name is actually just UTF8String:
>
>
>
>    GeneralName ::= CHOICE {
>
>         otherName                   [0]  INSTANCE OF OTHER-NAME,
>
>         rfc822Name                  [1]  *UTF8String*,
>
>         dNSName                     [2]  IA5String,
>
>         x400Address                 [3]  ORAddress,
>
>         directoryName               [4]  Name,
>
>         ediPartyName                [5]  EDIPartyName,
>
>         uniformResourceIdentifier   [6]  IA5String,
>
>         iPAddress                   [7]  OCTET STRING,
>
>         registeredID                [8]  OBJECT IDENTIFIER
>
>    }
>
>
>
> GeneralName is in the IMPLICIT TAGS part of PKIX. That means that on the
> wire, a GeneralName will (almost always) just be serialized as the
>
> application tag in the choice, followed by the length and the data. The
> counterproposal of a CHOICE {IA5String, UTF8String} is flawed in that it
> will force ALL rfc822Names to include an additional tag UNIVERSAL 22 in the
> case of IA5String, because the choice is ambiguous without the tag (so a
> proper ASN.1 compiler will force the serialization and de-serialization of
> the tag). Note: UTF8String (in a CHOICE) would force serialization of the
> tag UNIVERSAL 12.
>
>
>
> With this proposal #5, UTF8String is just a superset of IA5String.
> Therefore, new implementations will “just work” with virtually no further
> coding. The high-octet data in UTF8String will violate expectations for
> older implementations that are looking for IA5String. But enforcement of
> octets 00-7F is almost never done in the decoding step, or if it is done,
> it does not cause the entire ASN.1 decoding op to fail. (Note: this would
> be an “ASN.1 value constraint violation.”) If most implementations will
> continue to decode the ASN.1 and simply skip over what it perceives to be
> “invalid ASCII” (or simply rejects that particular alternative when doing
> name comparisons), we are good to go. This basically mirrors the way that
> EAI itself works in RFCs 6530-6532.
>
>
>
> To test this, one would want to construct a signed certificate with
> “invalid” IA5String data that actually contains valid Unicode octets, and
> see what happens with various implementations.
>
>
>
> I am not saying that this is the “right” approach, but I do think that it
> deserves serious consideration when evaluating alternatives. An example of
> an advantage is that it should preserve name constraints with no additional
> coding.
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Sean
>
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