Network Working Group R. Barnes
Internet-Draft Cisco
Intended status: Informational J. Millican
Expires: July 15, 2019 Facebook
E. Omara
Google
K. Cohn-Gordon
University of Oxford
R. Robert
Wire
January 11, 2019
The Messaging Layer Security (MLS) Protocol
draft-ietf-mls-protocol-03
Abstract
Messaging applications are increasingly making use of end-to-end
security mechanisms to ensure that messages are only accessible to
the communicating endpoints, and not to any servers involved in
delivering messages. Establishing keys to provide such protections
is challenging for group chat settings, in which more than two
participants need to agree on a key but may not be online at the same
time. In this document, we specify a key establishment protocol that
provides efficient asynchronous group key establishment with forward
secrecy and post-compromise security for groups in size ranging from
two to thousands.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on July 15, 2019.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 1]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2019 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
publication of this document. Please review these documents
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Basic Assumptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4. Protocol Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. Ratchet Trees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.1. Tree Computation Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.2. Ratchet Tree Nodes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5.3. Blank Nodes and Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.4. Ratchet Tree Updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.5. Cryptographic Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.5.1. Curve25519, SHA-256, and AES-128-GCM . . . . . . . . 16
5.5.2. P-256, SHA-256, and AES-128-GCM . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.6. Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5.7. Group State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.8. Direct Paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
5.9. Key Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
6. Initialization Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
7. Handshake Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.1. Init . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.2. Add . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
7.3. Update . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
7.4. Remove . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
8. Sequencing of State Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
8.1. Server-Enforced Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
8.2. Client-Enforced Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
8.3. Merging Updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
9. Message Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
9.1. Application Key Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
9.1.1. Updating the Application Secret . . . . . . . . . . . 34
9.1.2. Application AEAD Key Calculation . . . . . . . . . . 34
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 2]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
9.2. Message Encryption and Decryption . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
9.2.1. Delayed and Reordered Application messages . . . . . 36
10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
10.1. Confidentiality of the Group Secrets . . . . . . . . . . 37
10.2. Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
10.3. Forward and post-compromise security . . . . . . . . . . 38
10.4. Init Key Reuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
11. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
12. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
13. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
13.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
13.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Appendix A. Tree Math . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
1. Introduction
DISCLAIMER: This is a work-in-progress draft of MLS and has not yet
seen significant security analysis. It should not be used as a basis
for building production systems.
RFC EDITOR: PLEASE REMOVE THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH The source for this
draft is maintained in GitHub. Suggested changes should be submitted
as pull requests at https://github.com/mlswg/mls-protocol.
Instructions are on that page as well. Editorial changes can be
managed in GitHub, but any substantive change should be discussed on
the MLS mailing list.
A group of agents who want to send each other encrypted messages
needs a way to derive shared symmetric encryption keys. For two
parties, this problem has been studied thoroughly, with the Double
Ratchet emerging as a common solution [doubleratchet] [signal].
Channels implementing the Double Ratchet enjoy fine-grained forward
secrecy as well as post-compromise security, but are nonetheless
efficient enough for heavy use over low-bandwidth networks.
For a group of size greater than two, a common strategy is to
unilaterally broadcast symmetric "sender" keys over existing shared
symmetric channels, and then for each agent to send messages to the
group encrypted with their own sender key. Unfortunately, while this
improves efficiency over pairwise broadcast of individual messages
and (with the addition of a hash ratchet) provides forward secrecy,
it is difficult to achieve post-compromise security with sender keys.
An adversary who learns a sender key can often indefinitely and
passively eavesdrop on that sender's messages. Generating and
distributing a new sender key provides a form of post-compromise
security with regard to that sender. However, it requires
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 3]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
computation and communications resources that scale linearly as the
size of the group.
In this document, we describe a protocol based on tree structures
that enable asynchronous group keying with forward secrecy and post-
compromise security. Based on earlier work on "asynchronous
ratcheting trees" [art], the mechanism presented here use a
asynchronous key-encapsulation mechanism for tree structures. This
mechanism allows the members of the group to derive and update shared
keys with costs that scale as the log of the group size.
1.1. Change Log
RFC EDITOR PLEASE DELETE THIS SECTION.
draft-02
o Removed ART (*)
o Allowed partial trees to avoid double-joins (*)
o Added explicit key confirmation (*)
draft-01
o Initial description of the Message Protection mechanism. (*)
o Initial specification proposal for the Application Key Schedule
using the per-participant chaining of the Application Secret
design. (*)
o Initial specification proposal for an encryption mechanism to
protect Application Messages using an AEAD scheme. (*)
o Initial specification proposal for an authentication mechanism of
Application Messages using signatures. (*)
o Initial specification proposal for a padding mechanism to
improving protection of Application Messages against traffic
analysis. (*)
o Inversion of the Group Init Add and Application Secret derivations
in the Handshake Key Schedule to be ease chaining in case we
switch design. (*)
o Removal of the UserAdd construct and split of GroupAdd into Add
and Welcome messages (*)
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 4]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
o Initial proposal for authenticating Handshake messages by signing
over group state and including group state in the key schedule (*)
o Added an appendix with example code for tree math
o Changed the ECIES mechanism used by TreeKEM so that it uses nonces
generated from the shared secret
draft-00
o Initial adoption of draft-barnes-mls-protocol-01 as a WG item.
2. Terminology
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.
Participant: An agent that uses this protocol to establish shared
cryptographic state with other participants. A participant is
defined by the cryptographic keys it holds. An application may
use one participant per device (keeping keys local to each device)
or sync keys among a user's devices so that each user appears as a
single participant.
Group: A collection of participants with shared cryptographic state.
Member: A participant that is included in the shared state of a
group, and has access to the group's secrets.
Initialization Key: A short-lived Diffie-Hellman key pair used to
introduce a new member to a group. Initialization keys are
published for individual participants (UserInitKey).
Leaf Key: A short-lived Diffie-Hellman key pair that represents a
group member's contribution to the group secret, so called because
the participants leaf keys are the leaves in the group's ratchet
tree.
Identity Key: A long-lived signing key pair used to authenticate the
sender of a message.
Terminology specific to tree computations is described in Section 5.
We use the TLS presentation language [RFC8446] to describe the
structure of protocol messages.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 5]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
3. Basic Assumptions
This protocol is designed to execute in the context of a Messaging
Service (MS) as described in [I-D.ietf-mls-architecture]. In
particular, we assume the MS provides the following services:
o A long-term identity key provider which allows participants to
authenticate protocol messages in a group. These keys MUST be
kept for the lifetime of the group as there is no mechanism in the
protocol for changing a participant's identity key.
o A broadcast channel, for each group, which will relay a message to
all members of a group. For the most part, we assume that this
channel delivers messages in the same order to all participants.
(See Section 8 for further considerations.)
o A directory to which participants can publish initialization keys,
and from which participant can download initialization keys for
other participants.
4. Protocol Overview
The goal of this protocol is to allow a group of participants to
exchange confidential and authenticated messages. It does so by
deriving a sequence of secrets and keys known only to group members.
Those should be secret against an active network adversary and should
have both forward and post-compromise secrecy with respect to
compromise of a participant.
We describe the information stored by each participant as a _state_,
which includes both public and private data. An initial state,
including an initial set of participants, is set up by a group
creator using the _Init_ algorithm and based on information pre-
published by the initial members. The creator sends the _GroupInit_
message to the participants, who can then set up their own group
state and derive the same shared secret. Participants then exchange
messages to produce new shared states which are causally linked to
their predecessors, forming a logical Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) of
states. Participants can send _Update_ messages for post-compromise
secrecy and new participants can be added or existing participants
removed from the group.
The protocol algorithms we specify here follow. Each algorithm
specifies both (i) how a participant performs the operation and (ii)
how other participants update their state based on it.
There are four major operations in the lifecycle of a group:
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 6]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
o Adding a member, initiated by a current member;
o Adding a member, initiated by the new member;
o Updating the leaf secret of a member;
o Removing a member.
Before the initialization of a group, participants publish
UserInitKey objects to a directory provided to the Messaging Service.
Group
A B C Directory Channel
| | | | |
| UserInitKeyA | | | |
|------------------------------------------->| |
| | | | |
| | UserInitKeyB | | |
| |---------------------------->| |
| | | | |
| | | UserInitKeyC | |
| | |------------->| |
| | | | |
When a participant A wants to establish a group with B and C, it
first downloads InitKeys for B and C. It then initializes a group
state containing only itself and uses the InitKeys to compute Welcome
and Add messages to add B and C, in a sequence chosen by A. The
Welcome messages are sent directly to the new members (there is no
need to send them to the group). The Add messages are broadcasted to
the Group, and processed in sequence by B and C. Messages received
before a participant has joined the group are ignored. Only after A
has received its Add messages back from the server does it update its
state to reflect their addition.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 7]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Group
A B C Directory Channel
| | | | |
| UserInitKeyB, UserInitKeyC | |
|<-------------------------------------------| |
|state.init() | | | |
| | | | |
| Add(A->AB) | | | |
|------------+ | | | |
| | | | | |
|<-----------+ | | | |
|state.add(B) | | | |
| | | | |
| Welcome(B) | | | |
|------------->|state.init() | | |
| | | | Add(AB->ABC) |
|--------------------------------------------------------------->|
| | | | |
| | | | Add(AB->ABC) |
|<---------------------------------------------------------------|
|state.add(C) |<------------------------------------------------|
| |state.add(C) |<---------------------------------|
| | | | |
| | Welcome(C) | | |
|---------------------------->|state.init() | |
| | | | |
Subsequent additions of group members proceed in the same way. Any
member of the group can download an InitKey for a new participant and
broadcast an Add message that the current group can use to update
their state and the new participant can use to initialize its state.
To enforce forward secrecy and post-compromise security of messages,
each participant periodically updates its leaf secret which
represents its contribution to the group secret. Any member of the
group can send an Update at any time by generating a fresh leaf
secret and sending an Update message that describes how to update the
group secret with that new information. Once all participants have
processed this message, the group's secrets will be unknown to an
attacker that had compromised the sender's prior leaf secret.
It is left to the application to determine the interval of time
between Update messages. This policy could require a change for each
message, or it could require sending an update every week or more.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 8]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Group
A B ... Z Directory Channel
| | | | |
| Update(A) | | | |
|---------------------------------------------------------->|
| | | | |
| | | | Update(A) |
|<----------------------------------------------------------|
|state.upd(A) |<-------------------------------------------|
| |state.upd(A) |<----------------------------|
| | |state.upd(A) | |
| | | | |
Users are removed from the group in a similar way, as an update is
effectively removing the old leaf from the group. Any member of the
group can generate a Remove message that adds new entropy to the
group state that is known to all members except the removed member.
After other participants have processed this message, the group's
secrets will be unknown to the removed participant. Note that this
does not necessarily imply that any member is actually allowed to
evict other members; groups can layer authentication-based access
control policies on top of these basic mechanism.
Group
A B ... Z Directory Channel
| | | | |
| | | Remove(B) | |
| | |---------------------------->|
| | | | |
| | | | Remove(B) |
|<----------------------------------------------------------|
|state.del(B) | |<----------------------------|
| | |state.del(B) | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
5. Ratchet Trees
The protocol uses "ratchet trees" for deriving shared secrets among a
group of participants.
5.1. Tree Computation Terminology
Trees consist of _nodes_. A node is a _leaf_ if it has no children,
and a _parent_ otherwise; note that all parents in our ratchet trees
have precisely two children, a _left_ child and a _right_ child. A
node is the _root_ of a tree if it has no parents, and _intermediate_
if it has both children and parents. The _descendants_ of a node are
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 9]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
that node, its children, and the descendants of its children, and we
say a tree _contains_ a node if that node is a descendant of the root
of the tree. Nodes are _siblings_ if they share the same parent.
A _subtree_ of a tree is the tree given by the descendants of any
node, the _head_ of the subtree. The _size_ of a tree or subtree is
the number of leaf nodes it contains. For a given parent node, its
_left subtree_ is the subtree with its left child as head
(respectively _right subtree_).
All trees used in this protocol are left-balanced binary trees. A
binary tree is _full_ (and _balanced_) if it its size is a power of
two and for any parent node in the tree, its left and right subtrees
have the same size. If a subtree is full and it is not a subset of
any other full subtree, then it is _maximal_.
A binary tree is _left-balanced_ if for every parent, either the
parent is balanced, or the left subtree of that parent is the largest
full subtree that could be constructed from the leaves present in the
parent's own subtree. Note that given a list of "n" items, there is
a unique left-balanced binary tree structure with these elements as
leaves. In such a left-balanced tree, the "k-th" leaf node refers to
the "k-th" leaf node in the tree when counting from the left,
starting from 0.
The _direct path_ of a root is the empty list, and of any other node
is the concatenation of that node with the direct path of its parent.
The _copath_ of a node is the list of siblings of nodes in its direct
path, excluding the root. The _frontier_ of a tree is the list of
heads of the maximal full subtrees of the tree, ordered from left to
right.
For example, in the below tree:
o The direct path of C is (C, CD, ABCD)
o The copath of C is (D, AB, EFG)
o The frontier of the tree is (ABCD, EF, G)
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 10]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
ABCDEFG
/ \
/ \
/ \
ABCD EFG
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
AB CD EF |
/ \ / \ / \ |
A B C D E F G
1 1 1
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2
Each node in the tree is assigned an _index_, starting at zero and
running from left to right. A node is a leaf node if and only if it
has an even index. The indices for the nodes in the above tree are
as follows:
o 0 = A
o 1 = AB
o 2 = B
o 3 = ABCD
o 4 = C
o 5 = CD
o 6 = D
o 7 = ABCDEFG
o 8 = E
o 9 = EF
o 10 = F
o 11 = EFG
o 12 = G
(Note that left-balanced binary trees are the same structure that is
used for the Merkle trees in the Certificate Transparency protocol
[I-D.ietf-trans-rfc6962-bis].)
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 11]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
5.2. Ratchet Tree Nodes
Ratchet trees are used for generating shared group secrets. In this
section, we describe the structure of a ratchet tree. A particular
instance of a ratchet tree is based on the following cryptographic
primitives, defined by the ciphersuite in use:
o A Diffie-Hellman finite-field group or elliptic curve
o A Derive-Key-Pair function that produces a key pair from an octet
string
o A hash function
A ratchet tree is a left-balanced binary tree, in which each node
contains up to three values:
o A secret octet string (optional)
o An asymmetric private key (optional)
o An asymmetric public key
The private key and public key for a node are derived from its secret
value using the Derive-Key-Pair operation.
The contents of a parent node are computed from one of its children
as follows:
parent_secret = Hash(child_secret)
parent_private, parent_public = Derive-Key-Pair(parent_secret)
The contents of the parent are based on the latest-updated child.
For example, if participants with leaf secrets A, B, C, and D join a
group in that order, then the resulting tree will have the following
structure:
H(H(D))
/ \
H(B) H(D)
/ \ / \
A B C D
If the first participant subsequently changes its leaf secret to be
X, then the tree will have the following structure.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 12]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
H(H(X))
/ \
H(X) H(D)
/ \ / \
X B C D
5.3. Blank Nodes and Resolution
A node in the tree may be _blank_, indicating that no value is
present at that node. The _resolution_ of a node is an ordered list
of non-blank nodes that collectively cover all non-blank descendants
of the node. The nodes in a resolution are ordered according to
their indices.
o The resolution of a non-blank node is a one element list
containing the node itself
o The resolution of a blank leaf node is the empty list
o The resolution of a blank intermediate node is the result of
concatinating the resolution of its left child with the resolution
of its right child, in that order
For example, consider the following tree, where the "_" character
represents a blank node:
_
/ \
/ \
_ CD
/ \ / \
A _ C D
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
In this tree, we can see all three of the above rules in play:
o The resolution of node 5 is the list [CD]
o The resolution of node 2 is the empty list []
o The resolution of node 3 is the list [A, CD]
5.4. Ratchet Tree Updates
In order to update the state of the group such as adding and removing
participants, MLS messages are used to make changes to the group's
ratchet tree. The participant proposing an update to the tree
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 13]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
transmits a representation of a set of tree nodes along the direct
path from a leaf to the root. Other participants in the group can
use these nodes to update their view of the tree, aligning their copy
of the tree to the sender's.
To perform an update for a leaf, the sender transmits the following
information for each node in the direct path from the leaf to the
root:
o The public key for the node
o Zero or more encrypted copies of the node's secret value
The secret value is encrypted for the subtree corresponding to the
node's non-updated child, i.e., the child not on the direct path.
There is one encrypted secret for each public key in the resolution
of the non-updated child. In particular, for the leaf node, there
are no encrypted secrets, since a leaf node has no children.
The recipient of an update processes it with the following steps:
1. Compute the updated secret values * Identify a node in the direct
path for which the local participant is in the subtree of the
non-updated child * Identify a node in the resolution of the non-
updated child for which this node has a private key * Decrypt the
secret value for the direct path node using the private key from
the resolution node * Compute secret values for ancestors of that
node by hashing the decrypted secret
2. Merge the updated secrets into the tree * Replace the public keys
for nodes on the direct path with the received public keys * For
nodes where an updated secret was computed in step 1, replace the
secret value for the node with the updated value
For example, suppose we had the following tree:
G
/ \
/ \
E _
/ \ / \
A B C D
If an update is made along the direct path B-E-G, then the following
values will be transmitted (using pk(X) to represent the public key
corresponding to the secret value X and E(K, S) to represent public-
key encryption to the public key K of the secret value S):
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 14]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
+------------+--------------------------+
| Public Key | Ciphertext(s) |
+------------+--------------------------+
| pk(G) | E(pk(C), G), E(pk(D), G) |
| | |
| pk(E) | E(pk(A), E) |
| | |
| pk(B) | |
+------------+--------------------------+
5.5. Cryptographic Objects
Each MLS session uses a single ciphersuite that specifies the
following primitives to be used in group key computations:
o A hash function
o A Diffie-Hellman finite-field group or elliptic curve
o An AEAD encryption algorithm [RFC5116]
The ciphersuite must also specify an algorithm "Derive-Key-Pair" that
maps octet strings with the same length as the output of the hash
function to key pairs for the asymmetric encryption scheme.
Public keys used in the protocol are opaque values in a format
defined by the ciphersuite, using the following types:
opaque DHPublicKey<1..2^16-1>;
opaque SignaturePublicKey<1..2^16-1>;
Cryptographic algorithms are indicated using the following types:
enum {
ecdsa_secp256r1_sha256(0x0403),
ed25519(0x0807),
(0xFFFF)
} SignatureScheme;
enum {
P256_SHA256_AES128GCM(0x0000),
X25519_SHA256_AES128GCM(0x0001),
(0xFFFF)
} CipherSuite;
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 15]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
5.5.1. Curve25519, SHA-256, and AES-128-GCM
This ciphersuite uses the following primitives:
o Hash function: SHA-256
o Diffie-Hellman group: Curve25519 [RFC7748]
o AEAD: AES-128-GCM
Given an octet string X, the private key produced by the Derive-Key-
Pair operation is SHA-256(X). (Recall that any 32-octet string is a
valid Curve25519 private key.) The corresponding public key is
X25519(SHA-256(X), 9).
Implementations SHOULD use the approach specified in [RFC7748] to
calculate the Diffie-Hellman shared secret. Implementations MUST
check whether the computed Diffie-Hellman shared secret is the all-
zero value and abort if so, as described in Section 6 of [RFC7748].
If implementers use an alternative implementation of these elliptic
curves, they SHOULD perform the additional checks specified in
Section 7 of [RFC7748]
Encryption keys are derived from shared secrets by taking the first
16 bytes of H(Z), where Z is the shared secret and H is SHA-256.
5.5.2. P-256, SHA-256, and AES-128-GCM
This ciphersuite uses the following primitives:
o Hash function: P-256
o Diffie-Hellman group: secp256r1 (NIST P-256)
o AEAD: AES-128-GCM
Given an octet string X, the private key produced by the Derive-Key-
Pair operation is SHA-256(X), interpreted as a big-endian integer.
The corresponding public key is the result of multiplying the
standard P-256 base point by this integer.
P-256 ECDH calculations (including parameter and key generation as
well as the shared secret calculation) are performed according to
[IEEE1363] using the ECKAS-DH1 scheme with the identity map as key
derivation function (KDF), so that the shared secret is the
x-coordinate of the ECDH shared secret elliptic curve point
represented as an octet string. Note that this octet string (Z in
IEEE 1363 terminology) as output by FE2OSP, the Field Element to
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 16]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Octet String Conversion Primitive, has constant length for any given
field; leading zeros found in this octet string MUST NOT be
truncated.
(Note that this use of the identity KDF is a technicality. The
complete picture is that ECDH is employed with a non-trivial KDF
because MLS does not directly use this secret for anything other than
for computing other secrets.)
Clients MUST validate remote public values by ensuring that the point
is a valid point on the elliptic curve. The appropriate validation
procedures are defined in Section 4.3.7 of [X962] and alternatively
in Section 5.6.2.3 of [keyagreement]. This process consists of three
steps: (1) verify that the value is not the point at infinity (O),
(2) verify that for Y = (x, y) both integers are in the correct
interval, (3) ensure that (x, y) is a correct solution to the
elliptic curve equation. For these curves, implementers do not need
to verify membership in the correct subgroup.
Encryption keys are derived from shared secrets by taking the first
16 bytes of H(Z), where Z is the shared secret and H is SHA-256.
5.6. Credentials
A member of a group authenticates the identities of other
participants by means of credentials issued by some authentication
system, e.g., a PKI. Each type of credential MUST express the
following data:
o The public key of a signature key pair
o The identity of the holder of the private key
o The signature scheme that the holder will use to sign MLS messages
Credentials MAY also include information that allows a relying party
to verify the identity / signing key binding.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 17]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
enum {
basic(0),
x509(1),
(255)
} CredentialType;
struct {
opaque identity<0..2^16-1>;
SignatureScheme algorithm;
SignaturePublicKey public_key;
} BasicCredential;
struct {
CredentialType credential_type;
select (credential_type) {
case basic:
BasicCredential;
case x509:
opaque cert_data<1..2^24-1>;
};
} Credential;
5.7. Group State
Each participant in the group maintains a representation of the state
of the group:
struct {
uint8 present;
switch (present) {
case 0: struct{};
case 1: T value;
}
} optional<T>;
struct {
opaque group_id<0..255>;
uint32 epoch;
optional<Credential> roster<1..2^32-1>;
optional<PublicKey> tree<1..2^32-1>;
opaque transcript_hash<0..255>;
} GroupState;
The fields in this state have the following semantics:
o The "group_id" field is an application-defined identifier for the
group.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 18]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
o The "epoch" field represents the current version of the group key.
o The "roster" field contains credentials for the occupied slots in
the tree, including the identity and signature public key for the
holder of the slot.
o The "tree" field contains the public keys corresponding to the
nodes of the ratchet tree for this group. The length of this
vector MUST be "2*size + 1", where "size" is the length of the
roster, since this is the number of nodes in a tree with "size"
leaves, according to the structure described in Section 5.
o The "transcript" field contains the list of "GroupOperation"
messages that led to this state.
When a new member is added to the group, an existing member of the
group provides the new member with a Welcome message. The Welcome
message provides the information the new member needs to initialize
its GroupState.
Different group operations will have different effects on the group
state. These effects are described in their respective subsections
of Section 7. The following rules apply to all operations:
o The "group_id" field is constant
o The "epoch" field increments by one for each GroupOperation that
is processed
o The "transcript_hash" is updated by a GroupOperation message
"operation" in the following way:
transcript\_hash\_[n] = Hash(transcript\_hash\_[n-1] || operation)
When a new one-member group is created (which requires no
GroupOperation), the "transcript_hash" field is set to an all-zero
vector of length Hash.length.
5.8. Direct Paths
As described in Section 5.4, each MLS message needs to transmit node
values along the direct path from a leaf to the root. The path
contains a public key for the leaf node, and a public key and
encrypted secret value for intermediate nodes in the path. In both
cases, the path is ordered from the leaf to the root; each node MUST
be the parent of its predecessor.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 19]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
struct {
DHPublicKey ephemeral_key;
opaque ciphertext<0..255>;
} ECIESCiphertext;
struct {
DHPublicKey public_key;
ECIESCiphertext node_secrets<0..2^16-1>;
} RatchetNode
struct {
RatchetNode nodes<0..2^16-1>;
} DirectPath;
The length of the "node\_secrets" vector MUST be zero for the first
node in the path. For the remaining elements in the vector, the
number of ciphertexts in the "node\_secrets" vector MUST be equal to
the length of the resolution of the corresponding copath node. Each
ciphertext in the list is the encryption to the corresponding node in
the resolution.
The ECIESCiphertext values encoding the encrypted secret values are
computed as follows:
o Generate an ephemeral DH key pair (x, x*G) in the DH group
specified by the ciphersuite in use
o Compute the shared secret Z with the node's other child
o Derive a key and nonce as described below
o Encrypt the node's secret value using the AEAD algorithm specified
by the ciphersuite in use, with the following inputs:
* Key: The key derived from Z
* Nonce: The nonce derived from Z
* Additional Authenticated Data: The empty octet string
* Plaintext: The secret value, without any further formatting
o Encode the ECIESCiphertext with the following values:
* ephemeral_key: The ephemeral public key x*G
* ciphertext: The AEAD output
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 20]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
key = HKDF-Expand(Secret, ECIESLabel("key"), Length)
nonce = HKDF-Expand(Secret, ECIESLabel("nonce"), Length)
Where ECIESLabel is specified as:
struct {
uint16 length = Length;
opaque label<12..255> = "mls10 ecies " + Label;
} ECIESLabel;
Decryption is performed in the corresponding way, using the private
key of the resolution node and the ephemeral public key transmitted
in the message.
5.9. Key Schedule
Group keys are derived using the HKDF-Extract and HKDF-Expand
functions as defined in [RFC5869], as well as the functions defined
below:
Derive-Secret(Secret, Label, State) =
HKDF-Expand(Secret, HkdfLabel, Hash.length)
Where HkdfLabel is specified as:
struct {
uint16 length = Length;
opaque label<6..255> = "mls10 " + Label;
GroupState state = State;
} HkdfLabel;
The Hash function used by HKDF is the ciphersuite hash algorithm.
Hash.length is its output length in bytes. In the below diagram:
o HKDF-Extract takes its Salt argument from the top and its IKM
argument from the left
o Derive-Secret takes its Secret argument from the incoming arrow
When processing a handshake message, a participant combines the
following information to derive new epoch secrets:
o The init secret from the previous epoch
o The update secret for the current epoch
o The GroupState object for current epoch
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 21]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Given these inputs, the derivation of secrets for an epoch proceeds
as shown in the following diagram:
init_secret_[n-1] (or 0)
|
V
update_secret -> HKDF-Extract = epoch_secret
|
+--> Derive-Secret(., "app", GroupState_[n])
| = application_secret
|
+--> Derive-Secret(., "confirm", GroupState_[n])
| = confirmation_key
|
V
Derive-Secret(., "init", GroupState_[n])
|
V
init_secret_[n]
6. Initialization Keys
In order to facilitate asynchronous addition of participants to a
group, it is possible to pre-publish initialization keys that provide
some public information about a user. UserInitKey messages provide
information about a potential group member, that a group member can
use to add this user to a group asynchronously.
A UserInitKey object specifies what ciphersuites a client supports,
as well as providing public keys that the client can use for key
derivation and signing. The client's identity key is intended to be
stable throughout the lifetime of the group; there is no mechanism to
change it. Init keys are intended to be used a very limited number
of times, potentially once. (see Section 10.4). UserInitKeys also
contain an identifier chosen by the client, which the client MUST
assure uniquely identifies a given UserInitKey object among the set
of UserInitKeys created by this client.
The init_keys array MUST have the same length as the cipher_suites
array, and each entry in the init_keys array MUST be a public key for
the DH group defined by the corresponding entry in the cipher_suites
array.
The whole structure is signed using the client's identity key. A
UserInitKey object with an invalid signature field MUST be considered
malformed. The input to the signature computation comprises all of
the fields except for the signature field.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 22]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
struct {
opaque user_init_key_id<0..255>;
CipherSuite cipher_suites<0..255>;
DHPublicKey init_keys<1..2^16-1>;
Credential credential;
opaque signature<0..2^16-1>;
} UserInitKey;
7. Handshake Messages
Over the lifetime of a group, its state will change for:
o Group initialization
o A current member adding a new participant
o A current participant updating its leaf key
o A current member deleting another current member
In MLS, these changes are accomplished by broadcasting "handshake"
messages to the group. Note that unlike TLS and DTLS, there is not a
consolidated handshake phase to the protocol. Rather, handshake
messages are exchanged throughout the lifetime of a group, whenever a
change is made to the group state. This means an unbounded number of
interleaved application and handshake messages.
An MLS handshake message encapsulates a specific "key exchange"
message that accomplishes a change to the group state. It also
includes a signature by the sender of the message over the GroupState
object representing the state of the group after the change has been
made.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 23]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
enum {
init(0),
add(1),
update(2),
remove(3),
(255)
} GroupOperationType;
struct {
GroupOperationType msg_type;
select (GroupOperation.msg_type) {
case init: Init;
case add: Add;
case update: Update;
case remove: Remove;
};
} GroupOperation;
struct {
uint32 prior_epoch;
GroupOperation operation;
uint32 signer_index;
opaque signature<1..2^16-1>;
opaque confirmation<1..2^8-1>;
} Handshake;
The high-level flow for processing a Handshake message is as follows:
1. Verify that the "prior_epoch" field of the Handshake message is
equal the "epoch" field of the current GroupState object.
2. Use the "operation" message to produce an updated, provisional
GroupState object incorporating the proposed changes.
3. Look up the public key for slot index "signer_index" from the
roster in the current GroupState object (before the update).
4. Use that public key to verify the "signature" field in the
Handshake message, with the updated GroupState object as input.
5. If the signature fails to verify, discard the updated GroupState
object and consider the Handshake message invalid.
6. Use the "confirmation_key" for the new group state to compute the
finished MAC for this message, as described below, and verify
that it is the same as the "finished_mac" field.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 24]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
7. If the the above checks are successful, consider the updated
GroupState object as the current state of the group.
The "signature" and "confirmation" values are computed over the
transcript of group operations, using the transcript hash from the
provisional GroupState object:
signature_data = GroupState.transcript_hash
Handshake.signature = Sign(identity_key,
signature_data)
confirmation_data = GroupState.transcript_hash ||
Handshake.signature
Handshake.confirmation = HMAC(confirmation_key,
confirmation_data)
HMAC [RFC2104] uses the Hash algorithm for the ciphersuite in use.
Sign uses the signature algorithm indicated by the signer's
credential in the roster.
[[ OPEN ISSUE: The Add and Remove operations create a "double-join"
situation, where a participants leaf key is also known to another
participant. When a participant A is double-joined to another B,
deleting A will not remove them from the conversation, since they
will still hold the leaf key for B. These situations are resolved by
updates, but since operations are asynchronous and participants may
be offline for a long time, the group will need to be able to
maintain security in the presence of double-joins. ]]
[[ OPEN ISSUE: It is not possible for the recipient of a handshake
message to verify that ratchet tree information in the message is
accurate, because each node can only compute the secret and private
key for nodes in its direct path. This creates the possibility that
a malicious participant could cause a denial of service by sending a
handshake message with invalid values for public keys in the ratchet
tree. ]]
7.1. Init
[[ OPEN ISSUE: Direct initialization is currently undefined. A
participant can create a group by initializing its own state to
reflect a group including only itself, then adding the initial
participants. This has computation and communication complexity O(N
log N) instead of the O(N) complexity of direct initialization. ]]
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 25]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
7.2. Add
In order to add a new member to the group, an existing member of the
group must take two actions:
1. Send a Welcome message to the new member
2. Send an Add message to the group (including the new member)
The Welcome message contains the information that the new member
needs to initialize a GroupState object that can be updated to the
current state using the Add message. This information is encrypted
for the new member using ECIES. The recipient key pair for the ECIES
encryption is the one included in the indicated UserInitKey,
corresponding to the indicated ciphersuite.
struct {
opaque group_id<0..255>;
uint32 epoch;
optional<Credential> roster<1..2^32-1>;
optional<PublicKey> tree<1..2^32-1>;
opaque transcript_hash<0..255>;
opaque init_secret<0..255>;
} WelcomeInfo;
struct {
opaque user_init_key_id<0..255>;
CipherSuite cipher_suite;
ECIESCiphertext encrypted_welcome_info;
} Welcome;
Note that the "init_secret" in the Welcome message is the
"init_secret" at the output of the key schedule diagram in
Section 5.9. That is, if the "epoch" value in the Welcome message is
"n", then the "init_secret" value is "init_secret_[n]". The new
member can combine this init secret with the update secret
transmitted in the corresponding Add message to get the epoch secret
for the epoch in which it is added. No secrets from prior epochs are
revealed to the new member.
Since the new member is expected to process the Add message for
itself, the Welcome message should reflect the state of the group
before the new user is added. The sender of the Welcome message can
simply copy all fields except the "leaf_secret" from its GroupState
object.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 26]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[[ OPEN ISSUE: The Welcome message needs to be sent encrypted for the
new member. This should be done using the public key in the
UserInitKey, either with ECIES or X3DH. ]]
[[ OPEN ISSUE: The Welcome message needs to be synchronized in the
same way as the Add. That is, the Welcome should be sent only if the
Add succeeds, and is not in conflict with another, simultaneous Add.
]]
An Add message provides existing group members with the information
they need to update their GroupState with information about the new
member:
struct {
UserInitKey init_key;
} Add;
A group member generates this message by requesting a UserInitKey
from the directory for the user to be added, and encoding it into an
Add message.
The new participant processes Welcome and Add messages together as
follows:
o Prepare a new GroupState object based on the Welcome message
o Process the Add message as an existing participant would
An existing participant receiving a Add message first verifies the
signature on the message, then updates its state as follows:
o Increment the size of the group
o Verify the signature on the included UserInitKey; if the signature
verification fails, abort
o Append an entry to the roster containing the credential in the
included UserInitKey
o Update the ratchet tree by adding a new leaf node for the new
member, containing the public key from the UserInitKey in the Add
corresponding to the ciphersuite in use
o Update the ratchet tree by setting to blank all nodes in the
direct path of the new node, except for the leaf (which remains
set to the new member's public key)
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 27]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
The update secret resulting from this change is an all-zero octet
string of length Hash.length.
On receipt of an Add message, new participants SHOULD send an update
immediately to their key. This will help to limit the tree structure
degrading into subtrees, and thus maintain the protocol's efficiency.
7.3. Update
An Update message is sent by a group participant to update its leaf
key pair. This operation provides post-compromise security with
regard to the participant's prior leaf private key.
struct {
DirectPath path;
} Update;
The sender of an Update message creates it in the following way:
o Generate a fresh leaf key pair
o Compute its direct path in the current ratchet tree
An existing participant receiving a Update message first verifies the
signature on the message, then updates its state as follows:
o Update the cached ratchet tree by replacing nodes in the direct
path from the updated leaf using the information contained in the
Update message
The update secret resulting from this change is the secret for the
root node of the ratchet tree.
7.4. Remove
A Remove message is sent by a group member to remove one or more
participants from the group.
struct {
uint32 removed;
DirectPath path;
} Remove;
The sender of a Remove message generates it as as follows:
o Generate a fresh leaf key pair
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 28]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
o Compute its direct path in the current ratchet tree, starting from
the removed leaf
An existing participant receiving a Remove message first verifies the
signature on the message, then verifies its identity proof against
the identity tree held by the participant. The participant then
updates its state as follows:
o Update the roster by setting the credential in the removed slot to
the null optional value
o Update the ratchet tree by replacing nodes in the direct path from
the removed leaf using the information in the Remove message
o Update the ratchet tree by setting to blank all nodes in the
direct path from the removed leaf to the root
The update secret resulting from this change is the secret for the
root node of the ratchet tree after the second step (after the third
step, the root is blank).
8. Sequencing of State Changes
[[ OPEN ISSUE: This section has an initial set of considerations
regarding sequencing. It would be good to have some more detailed
discussion, and hopefully have a mechanism to deal with this issue.
]]
Each handshake message is premised on a given starting state,
indicated in its "prior_epoch" field. If the changes implied by a
handshake messages are made starting from a different state, the
results will be incorrect.
This need for sequencing is not a problem as long as each time a
group member sends a handshake message, it is based on the most
current state of the group. In practice, however, there is a risk
that two members will generate handshake messages simultaneously,
based on the same state.
When this happens, there is a need for the members of the group to
deconflict the simultaneous handshake messages. There are two
general approaches:
o Have the delivery service enforce a total order
o Have a signal in the message that clients can use to break ties
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 29]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
As long as handshake messages cannot be merged, there is a risk of
starvation. In a sufficiently busy group, a given member may never
be able to send a handshake message, because he always loses to other
members. The degree to which this is a practical problem will depend
on the dynamics of the application.
It might be possible, because of the non-contributivity of
intermediate nodes, that update messages could be applied one after
the other without the Delivery Service having to reject any handshake
message, which would make MLS more resilient regarding the
concurrency of handshake messages. The Messaging system can decide
to choose the order for applying the state changes. Note that there
are certain cases (if no total ordering is applied by the Delivery
Service) where the ordering is important for security, ie. all
updates must be executed before removes.
Regardless of how messages are kept in sequence, implementations MUST
only update their cryptographic state when valid handshake messages
are received. Generation of handshake messages MUST be stateless,
since the endpoint cannot know at that time whether the change
implied by the handshake message will succeed or not.
8.1. Server-Enforced Ordering
With this approach, the delivery service ensures that incoming
messages are added to an ordered queue and outgoing messages are
dispatched in the same order. The server is trusted to resolve
conflicts during race-conditions (when two members send a message at
the same time), as the server doesn't have any additional knowledge
thanks to the confidentiality of the messages.
Messages should have a counter field sent in clear-text that can be
checked by the server and used for tie-breaking. The counter starts
at 0 and is incremented for every new incoming message. If two group
members send a message with the same counter, the first message to
arrive will be accepted by the server and the second one will be
rejected. The rejected message needs to be sent again with the
correct counter number.
To prevent counter manipulation by the server, the counter's
integrity can be ensured by including the counter in a signed message
envelope.
This applies to all messages, not only state changing messages.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 30]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
8.2. Client-Enforced Ordering
Order enforcement can be implemented on the client as well, one way
to achieve it is to use a two step update protocol: the first client
sends a proposal to update and the proposal is accepted when it gets
50%+ approval from the rest of the group, then it sends the approved
update. Clients which didn't get their proposal accepted, will wait
for the winner to send their update before retrying new proposals.
While this seems safer as it doesn't rely on the server, it is more
complex and harder to implement. It also could cause starvation for
some clients if they keep failing to get their proposal accepted.
8.3. Merging Updates
It is possible in principle to partly address the problem of
concurrent changes by having the recipients of the changes merge
them, rather than having the senders retry. Because the value of
intermediate node is determined by its last updated child, updates
can be merged by recipients as long as the recipients agree on an
order - the only question is which node was last updated.
Recall that the processing of an update proceeds in two steps:
1. Compute updated secret values by hashing up the tree
2. Update the tree with the new secret and public values
To merge an ordered list of updates, a recipient simply performs
these updates in the specified order.
For example, suppose we have a tree in the following configuration:
H(H(D))
/ \
H(B) H(D)
/ \ / \
A B C D
Now suppose B and C simultaneously decide to update to X and Y,
respectively. They will send out updates of the following form:
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 31]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Update from B Update from C
============= =============
H(H(X)) H(H(Y))
/ \
H(X) H(Y)
\ /
X Y
Assuming that the ordering agreed by the group says that B's update
should be processed before C's, the other participants in the group
will overwrite the root value for B with the root value from C, and
all arrive at the following state:
H(H(Y))
/ \
H(X) H(Y)
/ \ / \
A X Y D
9. Message Protection
The primary purpose of the handshake protocol is to provide an
authenticated group key exchange to participants. In order to
protect Application messages sent among those participants, the
Application secret provided by the Handshake key schedule is used to
derive encryption keys for the Message Protection Layer.
Application messages MUST be protected with the Authenticated-
Encryption with Associated-Data (AEAD) encryption scheme associated
with the MLS ciphersuite. Note that "Authenticated" in this context
does not mean messages are known to be sent by a specific participant
but only from a legitimate member of the group. To authenticate a
message from a particular member, signatures are required. Handshake
messages MUST use asymmetric signatures to strongly authenticate the
sender of a message.
Each participant maintains their own chain of Application secrets,
where the first one is derived based on a secret chained from the
Epoch secret. As shown in Section 5.9, the initial Application
secret is bound to the identity of each participant to avoid
collisions and allow support for decryption of reordered messages.
Subsequent Application secrets MUST be rotated for each message sent
in order to provide stronger cryptographic security guarantees. The
Application Key Schedule use this rotation to generate fresh AEAD
encryption keys and nonces used to encrypt and decrypt future
Application messages. In all cases, a participant MUST NOT encrypt
more than expected by the security bounds of the AEAD scheme used.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 32]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Note that each change to the Group through a Handshake message will
cause a change of the Group Secret. Hence this change MUST be
applied before encrypting any new Application message. This is
required for confidentiality reasons in order for Members to avoid
receiving messages from the group after leaving, being added to, or
excluded from the Group.
9.1. Application Key Schedule
After computing the initial Application Secret shared by the group,
each Participant creates an initial Participant Application Secret to
be used for its own sending chain:
application_secret
|
V
Derive-Secret(., "app sender", [sender])
|
V
application_secret_[sender]_[0]
Note that [sender] represent the uint32 value encoding the index of
the participant in the ratchet tree.
Updating the Application secret and deriving the associated AEAD key
and nonce can be summarized as the following Application key schedule
where each participant's Application secret chain looks as follows
after the initial derivation:
application_secret_[sender]_[N-1]
|
+--> HKDF-Expand-Label(.,"nonce", "", nonce_length)
| = write_nonce_[sender]_[N-1]
|
+--> HKDF-Expand-Label(.,"key", "", key_length)
| = write_key_[sender]_[N-1]
V
Derive-Secret(., "app upd","")
|
V
application_secret_[sender]_[N]
The Application context provided together with the previous
Application secret is used to bind the Application messages with the
next key and add some freshness.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 33]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[[OPEN ISSUE: The HKDF context field is left empty for now. A proper
security study is needed to make sure that we do not need more
information in the context to achieve the security goals.]]
[[ OPEN ISSUE: At the moment there is no contributivity of
Application secrets chained from the initial one to the next
generation of Epoch secret. While this seems safe because
cryptographic operations using the application secrets can't affect
the group init_secret, it remains to be proven correct. ]]
9.1.1. Updating the Application Secret
The following rules apply to an Application Secret:
o Senders MUST only use the Application Secret once and
monotonically increment the generation of their secret. This is
important to provide Forward Secrecy at the level of Application
messages. An attacker getting hold of a Participant's Application
Secret at generation [N+1] will not be able to derive the
Participant's Application Secret [N] nor the associated AEAD key
and nonce.
o Receivers MUST delete an Application Secret once it has been used
to derive the corresponding AEAD key and nonce as well as the next
Application Secret. Receivers MAY keep the AEAD key and nonce
around for some reasonable period.
o Receivers MUST delete AEAD keys and nonces once they have been
used to successfully decrypt a message.
9.1.2. Application AEAD Key Calculation
The Application AEAD keying material is generated from the following
input values:
o The Application Secret value;
o A purpose value indicating the specific value being generated;
o The length of the key being generated.
Note, that because the identity of the participant using the keys to
send data is included in the initial Application Secret, all
successive updates to the Application secret will implicitly inherit
this ownership.
All the traffic keying material is recomputed whenever the underlying
Application Secret changes.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 34]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
9.2. Message Encryption and Decryption
The Group participants MUST use the AEAD algorithm associated with
the negotiated MLS ciphersuite to AEAD encrypt and decrypt their
Application messages and sign them as follows:
struct {
opaque content<0..2^32-1>;
opaque signature<0..2^16-1>;
uint8 zeros[length_of_padding];
} ApplicationPlaintext;
struct {
uint8 group[32];
uint32 epoch;
uint32 generation;
uint32 sender;
opaque encrypted_content<0..2^32-1>;
} Application;
The Group identifier and epoch allow a device to know which Group
secrets should be used and from which Epoch secret to start computing
other secrets and keys. The participant identifier is used to derive
the participant Application secret chain from the initial shared
Application secret. The application generation field is used to
determine which Application secret should be used from the chain to
compute the correct AEAD keys before performing decryption.
The signature field allows strong authentication of messages:
struct {
uint8 group[32];
uint32 epoch;
uint32 generation;
uint32 sender;
opaque content<0..2^32-1>;
} MLSSignatureContent;
The signature used in the MLSPlaintext is computed over the
MLSSignatureContent which covers the metadata information about the
current state of the group (group identifier, epoch, generation and
sender's Leaf index) to prevent Group participants from impersonating
other participants. It is also necessary in order to prevent cross-
group attacks.
[[ TODO: A preliminary formal security analysis has yet to be
performed on this authentication scheme.]]
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 35]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[[ OPEN ISSUE: Currently, the group identifier, epoch and generation
are contained as meta-data of the Signature. A different solution
could be to include the GroupState instead, if more information is
required to achieve the security goals regarding cross-group attacks.
]]
[[ OPEN ISSUE: Should the padding be required for Handshake messages
? Can an adversary get more than the position of a participant in the
tree without padding ? Should the base ciphertext block length be
negotiated or is is reasonable to allow to leak a range for the
length of the plaintext by allowing to send a variable number of
ciphertext blocks ? ]]
Application messages SHOULD be padded to provide some resistance
against traffic analysis techniques over encrypted traffic. [CLINIC]
[HCJ16] While MLS might deliver the same payload less frequently
across a lot of ciphertexts than traditional web servers, it might
still provide the attacker enough information to mount an attack. If
Alice asks Bob: "When are we going to the movie ?" the answer
"Wednesday" might be leaked to an adversary by the ciphertext length.
An attacker expecting Alice to answer Bob with a day of the week
might find out the plaintext by correlation between the question and
the length.
Similarly to TLS 1.3, if padding is used, the MLS messages MUST be
padded with zero-valued bytes before AEAD encryption. Upon AEAD
decryption, the length field of the plaintext is used to compute the
number of bytes to be removed from the plaintext to get the correct
data. As the padding mechanism is used to improve protection against
traffic analysis, removal of the padding SHOULD be implemented in a
"constant-time" manner at the MLS layer and above layers to prevent
timing side-channels that would provide attackers with information on
the size of the plaintext.
9.2.1. Delayed and Reordered Application messages
Since each Application message contains the Group identifier, the
epoch and a message counter, a participant can receive messages out
of order. If they are able to retrieve or recompute the correct AEAD
decryption key from currently stored cryptographic material
participants can decrypt these messages.
For usability, MLS Participants might be required to keep the AEAD
key and nonce for a certain amount of time to retain the ability to
decrypt delayed or out of order messages, possibly still in transit
while a decryption is being done.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 36]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[[TODO: Describe here or in the Architecture spec the details.
Depending on which Secret or key is kept alive, the security
guarantees will vary.]]
10. Security Considerations
The security goals of MLS are described in [I-D.ietf-mls-
architecture]. We describe here how the protocol achieves its goals
at a high level, though a complete security analysis is outside of
the scope of this document.
10.1. Confidentiality of the Group Secrets
Group secrets are derived from (i) previous group secrets, and (ii)
the root key of a ratcheting tree. Only group members know their
leaf private key in the group, therefore, the root key of the group's
ratcheting tree is secret and thus so are all values derived from it.
Initial leaf keys are known only by their owner and the group
creator, because they are derived from an authenticated key exchange
protocol. Subsequent leaf keys are known only by their owner.
[[TODO: or by someone who replaced them.]]
Note that the long-term identity keys used by the protocol MUST be
distributed by an "honest" authentication service for parties to
authenticate their legitimate peers.
10.2. Authentication
There are two forms of authentication we consider. The first form
considers authentication with respect to the group. That is, the
group members can verify that a message originated from one of the
members of the group. This is implicitly guaranteed by the secrecy
of the shared key derived from the ratcheting trees: if all members
of the group are honest, then the shared group key is only known to
the group members. By using AEAD or appropriate MAC with this shared
key, we can guarantee that a participant in the group (who knows the
shared secret key) has sent a message.
The second form considers authentication with respect to the sender,
meaning the group members can verify that a message originated from a
particular member of the group. This property is provided by digital
signatures on the messages under identity keys.
[[ OPEN ISSUE: Signatures under the identity keys, while simple, have
the side-effect of preclude deniability. We may wish to allow other
options, such as (ii) a key chained off of the identity key, or (iii)
some other key obtained through a different manner, such as a
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 37]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
pairwise channel that provides deniability for the message
contents.]]
10.3. Forward and post-compromise security
Message encryption keys are derived via a hash ratchet, which
provides a form of forward secrecy: learning a message key does not
reveal previous message or root keys. Post-compromise security is
provided by Update operations, in which a new root key is generated
from the latest ratcheting tree. If the adversary cannot derive the
updated root key after an Update operation, it cannot compute any
derived secrets.
10.4. Init Key Reuse
Initialization keys are intended to be used only once and then
deleted. Reuse of init keys is not believed to be inherently
insecure [dhreuse], although it can complicate protocol analyses.
11. IANA Considerations
TODO: Registries for protocol parameters, e.g., ciphersuites
12. Contributors
o Benjamin Beurdouche
INRIA
benjamin.beurdouche@ens.fr
o Karthikeyan Bhargavan
INRIA
karthikeyan.bhargavan@inria.fr
o Cas Cremers
University of Oxford
cas.cremers@cs.ox.ac.uk
o Alan Duric
Wire
alan@wire.com
o Srinivas Inguva
Twitter
singuva@twitter.com
o Albert Kwon
MIT
kwonal@mit.edu
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 38]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
o Eric Rescorla
Mozilla
ekr@rtfm.com
o Thyla van der Merwe
Royal Holloway, University of London
thyla.van.der@merwe.tech
13. References
13.1. Normative References
[IEEE1363]
"IEEE Standard Specifications for Password-Based Public-
Key Cryptographic Techniques", IEEE standard,
DOI 10.1109/ieeestd.2009.4773330, n.d..
[RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-
Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2104, February 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2104>.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC5116] McGrew, D., "An Interface and Algorithms for Authenticated
Encryption", RFC 5116, DOI 10.17487/RFC5116, January 2008,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5116>.
[RFC5869] Krawczyk, H. and P. Eronen, "HMAC-based Extract-and-Expand
Key Derivation Function (HKDF)", RFC 5869,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5869, May 2010,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5869>.
[RFC7748] Langley, A., Hamburg, M., and S. Turner, "Elliptic Curves
for Security", RFC 7748, DOI 10.17487/RFC7748, January
2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7748>.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[RFC8446] Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 39]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[X962] ANSI, "Public Key Cryptography For The Financial Services
Industry: The Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm
(ECDSA)", ANSI X9.62, 1998.
13.2. Informative References
[art] Cohn-Gordon, K., Cremers, C., Garratt, L., Millican, J.,
and K. Milner, "On Ends-to-Ends Encryption: Asynchronous
Group Messaging with Strong Security Guarantees", January
2018, <https://eprint.iacr.org/2017/666.pdf>.
[CLINIC] Miller, B., Huang, L., Joseph, A., and J. Tygar, "I Know
Why You Went to the Clinic: Risks and Realization of HTTPS
Traffic Analysis", Privacy Enhancing Technologies pp.
143-163, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-08506-7_8, 2014.
[dhreuse] Menezes, A. and B. Ustaoglu, "On reusing ephemeral keys in
Diffie-Hellman key agreement protocols", International
Journal of Applied Cryptography Vol. 2, pp. 154,
DOI 10.1504/ijact.2010.038308, 2010.
[doubleratchet]
Cohn-Gordon, K., Cremers, C., Dowling, B., Garratt, L.,
and D. Stebila, "A Formal Security Analysis of the Signal
Messaging Protocol", 2017 IEEE European Symposium on
Security and Privacy (EuroS&P),
DOI 10.1109/eurosp.2017.27, April 2017.
[HCJ16] Husak, M., Čermak, M., Jirsik, T., and P.
Čeleda, "HTTPS traffic analysis and client
identification using passive SSL/TLS fingerprinting",
EURASIP Journal on Information Security Vol. 2016,
DOI 10.1186/s13635-016-0030-7, February 2016.
[I-D.ietf-trans-rfc6962-bis]
Laurie, B., Langley, A., Kasper, E., Messeri, E., and R.
Stradling, "Certificate Transparency Version 2.0", draft-
ietf-trans-rfc6962-bis-30 (work in progress), November
2018.
[keyagreement]
Barker, E., Chen, L., Roginsky, A., and M. Smid,
"Recommendation for Pair-Wise Key Establishment Schemes
Using Discrete Logarithm Cryptography", National Institute
of Standards and Technology report,
DOI 10.6028/nist.sp.800-56ar2, May 2013.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 40]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
[signal] Perrin(ed), T. and M. Marlinspike, "The Double Ratchet
Algorithm", n.d.,
<https://www.signal.org/docs/specifications/
doubleratchet/>.
Appendix A. Tree Math
One benefit of using left-balanced trees is that they admit a simple
flat array representation. In this representation, leaf nodes are
even-numbered nodes, with the n-th leaf at 2*n. Intermediate nodes
are held in odd-numbered nodes. For example, a 11-element tree has
the following structure:
X
X
X X X
X X X X X
X X X X X X X X X X X
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
This allows us to compute relationships between tree nodes simply by
manipulating indices, rather than having to maintain complicated
structures in memory, even for partial trees. The basic rule is that
the high-order bits of parent and child nodes have the following
relation (where "x" is an arbitrary bit string):
parent=01x => left=00x, right=10x
The following python code demonstrates the tree computations
necessary for MLS. Test vectors can be derived from the diagram
above.
# The largest power of 2 less than n. Equivalent to:
# int(math.floor(math.log(x, 2)))
def log2(x):
if x == 0:
return 0
k = 0
while (x >> k) > 0:
k += 1
return k-1
# The level of a node in the tree. Leaves are level 0, their
# parents are level 1, etc. If a node's children are at different
# level, then its level is the max level of its children plus one.
def level(x):
if x & 0x01 == 0:
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 41]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
return 0
k = 0
while ((x >> k) & 0x01) == 1:
k += 1
return k
# The number of nodes needed to represent a tree with n leaves
def node_width(n):
return 2*(n - 1) + 1
# The index of the root node of a tree with n leaves
def root(n):
w = node_width(n)
return (1 << log2(w)) - 1
# The left child of an intermediate node. Note that because the
# tree is left-balanced, there is no dependency on the size of the
# tree. The child of a leaf node is itself.
def left(x):
k = level(x)
if k == 0:
return x
return x ^ (0x01 << (k - 1))
# The right child of an intermediate node. Depends on the size of
# the tree because the straightforward calculation can take you
# beyond the edge of the tree. The child of a leaf node is itself.
def right(x, n):
k = level(x)
if k == 0:
return x
r = x ^ (0x03 << (k - 1))
while r >= node_width(n):
r = left(r)
return r
# The immediate parent of a node. May be beyond the right edge of
# the tree.
def parent_step(x):
k = level(x)
b = (x >> (k + 1)) & 0x01
return (x | (1 << k)) ^ (b << (k + 1))
# The parent of a node. As with the right child calculation, have
# to walk back until the parent is within the range of the tree.
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 42]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
def parent(x, n):
if x == root(n):
return x
p = parent_step(x)
while p >= node_width(n):
p = parent_step(p)
return p
# The other child of the node's parent. Root's sibling is itself.
def sibling(x, n):
p = parent(x, n)
if x < p:
return right(p, n)
elif x > p:
return left(p)
return p
# The direct path from a node to the root, ordered from the root
# down, not including the root or the terminal node
def direct_path(x, n):
d = []
p = parent(x, n)
r = root(n)
while p != r:
d.append(p)
p = parent(p, n)
return d
# The copath of the node is the siblings of the nodes on its direct
# path (including the node itself)
def copath(x, n):
d = dirpath(x, n)
if x != sibling(x, n):
d.append(x)
return [sibling(y, n) for y in d]
# Frontier is is the list of full subtrees, from left to right. A
# balance binary tree with n leaves has a full subtree for every
# power of two where n has a bit set, with the largest subtrees
# furthest to the left. For example, a tree with 11 leaves has full
# subtrees of size 8, 2, and 1.
def frontier(n):
st = [1 << k for k in range(log2(n) + 1) if n & (1 << k) != 0]
st = reversed(st)
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 43]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
base = 0
f = []
for size in st:
f.append(root(size) + base)
base += 2*size
return f
# Leaves are in even-numbered nodes
def leaves(n):
return [2*i for i in range(n)]
# The resolution of a node is the collection of non-blank
# descendants of this node. Here the tree is represented by a list
# of nodes, where blank nodes are represented by None
def resolve(tree, x, n):
if tree[x] != None:
return [x]
if level(x) == 0:
return []
L = resolve(tree, left(x), n)
R = resolve(tree, right(x, n), n)
return L + R
Authors' Addresses
Richard Barnes
Cisco
Email: rlb@ipv.sx
Jon Millican
Facebook
Email: jmillican@fb.com
Emad Omara
Google
Email: emadomara@google.com
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 44]
Internet-Draft MLS January 2019
Katriel Cohn-Gordon
University of Oxford
Email: me@katriel.co.uk
Raphael Robert
Wire
Email: raphael@wire.com
Barnes, et al. Expires July 15, 2019 [Page 45]