ACE Working Group G. Selander
Internet-Draft J. Mattsson
Intended status: Standards Track F. Palombini
Expires: August 29, 2019 Ericsson AB
February 25, 2019
Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)
draft-selander-ace-cose-ecdhe-12
Abstract
This document specifies Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC), a
very compact, and lightweight authenticated Diffie-Hellman key
exchange with ephemeral keys. EDHOC provides mutual authentication,
perfect forward secrecy, and identity protection. A main use case
for EDHOC is to establish an OSCORE security context. EDHOC uses
COSE for cryptography, CBOR for encoding, and CoAP for transport. By
reusing existing libraries, the additional code footprint can be kept
very low.
Status of This Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Rationale for EDHOC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2. Terminology and Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . 5
2. Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3. EDHOC Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1. Cipher Suites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2. Ephemeral Public Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.3. Key Derivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
4. EDHOC Authenticated with Asymmetric Keys . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2. EDHOC Message 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.3. EDHOC Message 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.4. EDHOC Message 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5. EDHOC Authenticated with Symmetric Keys . . . . . . . . . . . 19
5.1. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
5.2. EDHOC Message 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.3. EDHOC Message 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.4. EDHOC Message 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
6. Error Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
6.1. EDHOC Error Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
7. Transferring EDHOC and Deriving Application Keys . . . . . . 23
7.1. Transferring EDHOC in CoAP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
7.2. Transferring EDHOC over Other Protocols . . . . . . . . . 26
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
8.1. EDHOC Cipher Suites Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
8.2. EDHOC Method Type Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
8.3. The Well-Known URI Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
8.4. Media Types Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
8.5. CoAP Content-Formats Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
9.1. Security Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
9.2. Cryptographic Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
9.3. Mandatory to Implement Cipher Suite . . . . . . . . . . . 29
9.4. Unprotected Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
9.5. Denial-of-Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
9.6. Implementation Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
9.7. Other Documents Referencing EDHOC . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Appendix A. Use of CBOR, CDDL and COSE in EDHOC . . . . . . . . 34
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A.1. CBOR and CDDL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
A.2. COSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Appendix B. Example Messages and Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
B.1. Message Sizes RPK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
B.2. Message Sizes Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
B.3. Message Sizes PSK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
B.4. Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Appendix C. Test Vectors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
1. Introduction
Security at the application layer provides an attractive option for
protecting Internet of Things (IoT) deployments, for example where
transport layer security is not sufficient
[I-D.hartke-core-e2e-security-reqs] or where the protocol needs to
work on a variety of underlying protocols. IoT devices may be
constrained in various ways, including memory, storage, processing
capacity, and energy [RFC7228]. A method for protecting individual
messages at the application layer suitable for constrained devices,
is provided by CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) [RFC8152]),
which builds on the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)
[I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis]. Object Security for Constrained RESTful
Environments (OSCORE) [I-D.ietf-core-object-security] is a method for
application-layer protection of the Constrained Application Protocol
(CoAP), using COSE.
In order for a communication session to provide forward secrecy, the
communicating parties can run an Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH)
key exchange protocol with ephemeral keys, from which shared key
material can be derived. This document specifies Ephemeral Diffie-
Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC), a lightweight key exchange protocol
providing perfect forward secrecy and identity protection.
Authentication is based on credentials established out of band, e.g.
from a trusted third party, such as an Authorization Server as
specified by [I-D.ietf-ace-oauth-authz]. EDHOC supports
authentication using pre-shared keys (PSK), raw public keys (RPK),
and public key certificates. After successful completion of the
EDHOC protocol, application keys and other application specific data
can be derived using the EDHOC-Exporter interface. A main use case
for EDHOC is to establish an OSCORE security context. EDHOC uses
COSE for cryptography, CBOR for encoding, and CoAP for transport. By
reusing existing libraries, the additional code footprint can be kept
very low. Note that this document focuses on authentication and key
establishment: for integration with authorization of resource access,
refer to [I-D.ietf-ace-oscore-profile].
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EDHOC is designed to work in highly constrained scenarios making it
especially suitable for network technologies such as Cellular IoT,
6TiSCH [I-D.ietf-6tisch-dtsecurity-zerotouch-join], LoRaWAN
[LoRa1][LoRa2]. These network technologies are characterized by
their low throughput, low power consumption, and small frame sizes.
Compared to the DTLS 1.3 handshake [I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13] with ECDH
and connection ID, the number of bytes in EDHOC is less than 1/4 when
PSK authentication is used and less than 1/3 when RPK authentication
is used, see Appendix B.
The ECDH exchange and the key derivation follow [SIGMA], NIST SP-
800-56A [SP-800-56A], and HKDF [RFC5869]. CBOR
[I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis] and COSE [RFC8152] are used to implement
these standards. The use of COSE enables use of future COSE
algorithms and headers designed for constrained IoT.
This document is organized as follows: Section 2 describes how EDHOC
builds on SIGMA-I, Section 3 specifies general properties of EDHOC,
including message flow, formatting of the ephemeral public keys, and
key derivation, Section 4 specifies EDHOC with asymmetric key
authentication, Section 5 specifies EDHOC with symmetric key
authentication, Section 6 specifies the EDHOC error message, and
Section 7 describes how EDHOC can be transferred in CoAP and used to
establish an OSCORE security context.
1.1. Rationale for EDHOC
Many constrained IoT systems today do not use any security at all,
and when they do, they often do not follow best practices. One
reason is that many current security protocols are not designed with
constrained IoT in mind. Constrained IoT systems often deals with
personal information, valuable business data, and actuators
interacting with the physical world. Not only do such systems need
security and privacy, they often need end-to-end protection with
source authentication and perfect-forward secrecy. EDHOC and OSCORE
[I-D.ietf-core-object-security] enables security following current
best practices to devices and systems where current security
protocols are impractical.
EDHOC is optimized for small message sizes and can therefore be sent
over a small number of radio frames. The message size of a key
exchange protocol may have a large impact on the performance of an
IoT deployment, especially in noisy environments. For example, in a
network bootstrapping setting a large number of devices turned on in
a short period of time may result in large latencies caused by
parallel key exchanges. Requirements on network formation time can
in constrained environments be translated into key exchange overhead.
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Power consumption for wireless devices is highly dependent on message
transmission, listening, and reception. For devices that only send a
few bytes occasionally, the battery lifetime may be significantly
reduced by a heavy key exchange protocol. Moreover, a key exchange
may need to be executed more than once, e.g. due to a device losing
power or rebooting for other reasons.
EDHOC is adapted to primitives and protocols designed for the
Internet of Things: EDHOC is built on CBOR and COSE which enables
small message overhead and efficient parsing in constrained devices.
EDHOC is not bound to a particular transport layer, but it is
recommended to transport the EDHOC message in CoAP payloads. By
reusing already existing IoT primitives in the device (CBOR, CoAP,
and COSE encryption and signature formats) the additional code
footprint can be kept very low.
EDHOC is not bound to a particular communication security protocol
but works off-the-shelf with OSCORE [I-D.ietf-core-object-security]
providing the necessary input parameters with required properties.
Since EDHOC builds on the same IoT primitives and protocols as OSCORE
(CoAP, CBOR, COSE encryption and signature formats) the device
footprint for EDHOC + OSCORE can be kept very low. The use of
compact native encoding formats reduces the need for a general-
purpose compression algorithm with associated footprint.
1.2. Terminology and Requirements Language
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.
The word "encryption" without qualification always refers to
authenticated encryption, in practice implemented with an
Authenticated Encryption with Additional Data (AEAD) algorithm, see
[RFC5116].
Readers are expected to be familiar with the terms and concepts
described in CBOR [I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis], COSE [RFC8152], and CDDL
[I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl]. The Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) to
express CBOR data structures [I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis]. The use of the
CDDL unwrap operator "~" is extended to unwrapping of byte strings.
It is the inverse of "bstr .cbor" that wraps a data item in a bstr,
i.e. ~ bstr .cbor T = T. Examples of CBOR and CDDL are provided in
Appendix A.1.
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2. Background
SIGMA (SIGn-and-MAc) is a family of theoretical protocols with a
large number of variants [SIGMA]. Like IKEv2 and (D)TLS 1.3, EDHOC
is built on a variant of the SIGMA protocol which provide identity
protection of the initiator (SIGMA-I), and like (D)TLS 1.3, EDHOC
implements the SIGMA-I variant as Sign-then-MAC. The SIGMA-I
protocol using an authenticated encryption algorithm is shown in
Figure 1.
Party U Party V
| X_U |
+-------------------------------------------------------->|
| |
| X_V, AEAD( K_2; ID_CRED_V, Sig(V; CRED_V, X_U, X_V) ) |
|<--------------------------------------------------------+
| |
| AEAD( K_3; ID_CRED_U, Sig(U; CRED_U, X_V, X_U) ) |
+-------------------------------------------------------->|
| |
Figure 1: Authenticated encryption variant of the SIGMA-I protocol.
The parties exchanging messages are called "U" and "V". They
exchange identities and ephemeral public keys, compute the shared
secret, and derive symmetric application keys.
o X_U and X_V are the ECDH ephemeral public keys of U and V,
respectively.
o CRED_U and CRED_V are the credentials containing the public
authentication keys of U and V, respectively.
o ID_CRED_U and ID_CRED_V are data enabling the recipient party to
retrieve the credential of U and V, respectively
o Sig(U; . ) and S(V; . ) denote signatures made with the private
authentication key of U and V, respectively.
o AEAD(K; . ) denotes authenticated encryption with additional data
using the key K derived from the shared secret. The authenticated
encryption MUST NOT be replaced by plain encryption, see
Section 9.
In order to create a "full-fledged" protocol some additional protocol
elements are needed. EDHOC adds:
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o Explicit connection identifiers C_U, C_V chosen by U and V,
respectively, enabling the recipient to find the protocol state.
o An Authenticated Encryption with Additional Data (AEAD) algorithm
is used.
o Computationally independent keys derived from the ECDH shared
secret and used for encryption of different messages.
o Verification of a common preferred cipher suite (AEAD algorithm,
ECDH algorithm, ECDH curve, signature algorithm):
* U lists supported cipher suites in order of preference
* V verifies that the selected cipher suite is the first
supported cipher suite
o Method types and error handling.
o Transport of opaque application defined data.
EDHOC is designed to encrypt and integrity protect as much
information as possible, and all symmetric keys are derived using as
much previous information as possible. EDHOC is furthermore designed
to be as compact and lightweight as possible, in terms of message
sizes, processing, and the ability to reuse already existing CBOR,
COSE, and CoAP libraries.
To simplify for implementors, the use of CBOR and COSE in EDHOC is
summarized in Appendix A and example messages in CBOR diagnostic
notation are given in Appendix B.
3. EDHOC Overview
EDHOC consists of three flights (message_1, message_2, message_3)
that maps directly to the three messages in SIGMA-I, plus an EDHOC
error message. All EDHOC messages consists of a sequence of CBOR
encoded data items, where the first data item of message_1 is an int
specifying the method type (asymmetric, symmetric, error). The
messages may be viewed as a CBOR encoding of an indefinite-length
array without the first and last byte, see Appendix A.1.
While EDHOC uses the COSE_Key, COSE_Sign1, and COSE_Encrypt0
structures, only a subset of the parameters is included in the EDHOC
messages. After creating EDHOC message_3, Party U can derive
symmetric application keys, and application protected data can
therefore be sent in parallel with EDHOC message_3. The application
may protect data using the algorithms (AEAD, HKDF, etc.) in the
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selected cipher suite and the connection identifiers (C_U, C_V).
EDHOC may be used with the media type application/edhoc defined in
Section 8.
Party U Party V
| |
| ------------------ EDHOC message_1 -----------------> |
| |
| <----------------- EDHOC message_2 ------------------ |
| |
| ------------------ EDHOC message_3 -----------------> |
| |
| <----------- Application Protected Data ------------> |
| |
Figure 2: EDHOC message flow
The EDHOC message exchange may be authenticated using pre-shared keys
(PSK), raw public keys (RPK), or public key certificates. EDHOC
assumes the existence of mechanisms (certification authority, manual
distribution, etc.) for binding identities with authentication keys
(public or pre-shared). When a public key infrastructure is used,
the identity is included in the certificate and bound to the
authentication key by trust in the certification authority. When the
credential is manually distributed (PSK, RPK, self-signed
certificate), the identity and authentication key is distributed out-
of-band and bound together by trust in the distribution method.
EDHOC with symmetric key authentication is very similar to EDHOC with
asymmetric key authentication, the difference being that information
is only MACed, not signed.
EDHOC allows opaque application data (UAD and PAD) to be sent in the
EDHOC messages. Unprotected Application Data (UAD_1, UAD_2) may be
sent in message_1 and message_2 and can be e.g. be used to transfer
access tokens that are protected outside of EDHOC. Protected
application data (PAD_3) may be used to transfer any application data
in message_3.
Cryptographically, EDHOC does not put requirement on the lower
layers. EDHOC is not bound to a particular transport layer, and can
be used in environments without IP. It is recommended is to
transport the EDHOC message in CoAP payloads, see Section 7. An
implementation may support only Party U or only Party V.
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3.1. Cipher Suites
EDHOC cipher suites consists of a set of COSE algorithms: an AEAD
algorithm, an ECDH algorithm (including HKDF algorithm), an ECDH
curve, and a signature algorithm. The signature algorithm is not
used when EDHOC is authenticated with symmetric keys. Each cipher
suite is associated with an integer value. Currently two cipher
suites are defined.
0. AES-CCM-64-64-128, ECDH-SS + HKDF-256, X25519, and Ed25519
1. AES-CCM-64-64-128, ECDH-SS + HKDF-256, P-256, and ES256
Two additional numbers are registered for application defined cipher
suites. Application defined cipher suites MUST only use algorithms
specified for COSE, are not interoperable with other deployments and
can therefore only be used in local networks.
-24. First application defined cipher suite.
-23. Second application defined cipher suite.
3.2. Ephemeral Public Keys
The ECDH ephemeral public keys are formatted as a COSE_Key of type
EC2 or OKP according to Sections 13.1 and 13.2 of [RFC8152], but only
a subset of the parameters is included in the EDHOC messages. For
Elliptic Curve Keys of type EC2, compact representation as per
[RFC6090] MAY be used also in the COSE_Key. If the COSE
implementation requires an y-coordinate, any of the possible values
of the y-coordinate can be used, see Appendix C of [RFC6090]. COSE
[RFC8152] always use compact output for Elliptic Curve Keys of type
EC2.
3.3. Key Derivation
Key and IV derivation SHALL be performed as specified in Section 11
of [RFC8152] with the following input:
o The KDF SHALL be the HKDF [RFC5869] in the in the selected cipher
suite (SUITE).
o The secret (Section 11.1 of [RFC8152]) SHALL be the ECDH shared
secret as defined in Section 12.4.1 of [RFC8152].
o The salt (Section 11.1 of [RFC8152]) SHALL be the PSK when EDHOC
is authenticated with symmetric keys, and the empty byte string
when EDHOC is authenticated with asymmetric keys. Note that
[RFC5869] specifies that if the salt is not provided, it is set to
a string of zeros (see Section 2.2 of [RFC5869]). For
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implementation purposes, not providing the salt is the same as
setting the salt to the empty byte string.
o The fields in the context information COSE_KDF_Context
(Section 11.2 of [RFC8152]) SHALL have the following values:
* AlgorithmID is an int or tstr, see below
* PartyUInfo = PartyVInfo = ( null, null, null )
* keyDataLength is a uint, see below
* protected SHALL be a zero length bstr
* other is a bstr and SHALL be aad_2, aad_3, or exchange_hash;
see below
* SuppPrivInfo is omitted
where exchange_hash, in non-CDDL notation, is:
exchange_hash = H( bstr .cborseq [ aad_3, CIPHERTEXT_3 ] )
and where aad_2 and aad_3 are hashes of previous messages and data,
defined in Sections 4.3.1 and 4.4.1. H() is the hash function in the
HKDF, which takes a CBOR byte string (bstr) as input and produces a
CBOR byte string as output. The use of '.cborseq' is exemplified in
Appendix A.1.
We define EDHOC-Key-Derivation to be the function which produces the
output as described in [RFC5869] and [RFC8152] depending on the
variable input AlgorithmID, keyDataLength, and other:
output = EDHOC-Key-Derivation(AlgorithmID, keyDataLength, other)
For message_i the key, called K_i, SHALL be derived using other =
aad_i, where i = 2 or 3. The key SHALL be derived using AlgorithmID
set to the integer value of the AEAD in the selected cipher suite
(SUITE), and keyDataLength equal to the key length of the AEAD.
If the AEAD algorithm uses an IV, then IV_i for message_i SHALL be
derived using other = aad_i, where i = 2 or 3. The IV SHALL be
derived using AlgorithmID = "IV-GENERATION" as specified in
Section 12.1.2. of [RFC8152], and keyDataLength equal to the IV
length of the AEAD.
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3.3.1. EDHOC-Exporter Interface
Application keys and other application specific data can be derived
using the EDHOC-Exporter interface defined as:
EDHOC-Exporter(label, length) =
EDHOC-Key-Derivation(label, 8 * length, exchange_hash)
The output of the EDHOC-Exporter function SHALL be derived using
other = exchange_hash, AlgorithmID = label, and keyDataLength = 8 *
length, where label is a tstr defined by the application and length
is a uint defined by the application. The label SHALL be different
for each different exporter value. An example use of the EDHOC-
Exporter is given in Section 7.1.1).
3.3.2. EDHOC PSK Chaining
An application using EDHOC may want to derive new PSKs to use for
authentication in future EDHOC exchanges. In this case, the new PSK
and KID SHOULD be derived as follows where length is the key length
(in bytes) of the AEAD Algorithm.
PSK = EDHOC-Exporter("EDHOC Chaining PSK", length)
KID = EDHOC-Exporter("EDHOC Chaining KID", 4)
4. EDHOC Authenticated with Asymmetric Keys
4.1. Overview
EDHOC supports authentication with raw public keys (RPK) and public
key certificates with the requirements that:
o Party U SHALL be able to retrieve Party V's public authentication
key using ID_CRED_V,
o Party V SHALL be able to retrieve Party U's public authentication
key using ID_CRED_U,
where ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V, is encoded in a COSE map, see
Appendix A.2. In the following we give some examples of possible
COSE map labels.
Raw public keys are most optimally stored as COSE_Key objects and
identified with a 'kid' value (see [RFC8152]):
o kid : ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V.
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Public key certificates can be identified in different ways, for
example (see [I-D.schaad-cose-x509]):
o by a hash value;
* x5t : ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V,
o by a URL;
* x5u : ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V,
o by a certificate chain;
* x5chain : ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V,
o or by a bag of certificates.
* x5bag : ID_CRED_x, for x = U or V.
In the latter two examples, ID_CRED_U and ID_CRED_V contains the
actual credential used for authentication. ID_CRED_U and ID_CRED_V
do not need to uniquely identify the public authentication key, but
doing so is recommended as the recipient may otherwise have to try
several public keys. ID_CRED_U and ID_CRED_V are transported in the
ciphertext, see Section 4.3.2 and Section 4.4.2.
The actual credentials CRED_U and CRED_V (e.g. a COSE_Key or a single
X.509 certificate) are signed by party U and V, respectively, see
Section 4.4.1 and Section 4.3.1. Party U and Party V MAY use
different type of credentials, e.g. one uses RPK and the other uses
certificate.
EDHOC with asymmetric key authentication is illustrated in Figure 3.
Party U Party V
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U, SUITE, X_U, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
| |
| C_U, C_V, X_V, AEAD(K_2; ID_CRED_V, Sig(V; CRED_V, aad_2), UAD_2) |
|<------------------------------------------------------------------+
| message_2 |
| |
| C_V, AEAD(K_3; ID_CRED_U, Sig(U; CRED_U, aad_3), PAD_3) |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_3 |
Figure 3: Overview of EDHOC with asymmetric key authentication.
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4.2. EDHOC Message 1
4.2.1. Formatting of Message 1
message_1 SHALL be a sequence of CBOR data items (see Appendix A.1)
as defined below
message_1 = (
TYPE : int,
C_U : bstr,
SUITES_U : suites,
SUITE : uint,
X_U : bstr,
? UAD_1 : bstr,
)
suites : int / [ 2* int ]
where:
o TYPE = 1
o C_U - variable length connection identifier
o SUITES_U - cipher suites which Party U supports, in order of
decreasing preference. If a single cipher suite is conveyed, an
int is used, if multiple cipher suites are conveyed, an array of
ints is used.
o SUITE - a single chosen cipher suite from SUITES_U (zero-based
index, i.e. 0 for the first or only, 1 for the second, etc.)
o X_U - the x-coordinate of the ephemeral public key of Party U
o UAD_1 - bstr containing unprotected opaque application data
4.2.2. Party U Processing of Message 1
Party U SHALL compose message_1 as follows:
o The supported cipher suites and the order of preference MUST NOT
be changed based on previous error messages. However, the list
SUITES_U sent to Party V MAY be truncated such that cipher suites
which are the least preferred are omitted. The amount of
truncation MAY be changed between sessions, e.g. based on previous
error messages (see next bullet), but all cipher suites which are
more preferred than the least preferred cipher suite in the list
MUST be included in the list.
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o Determine the cipher suite SUITE to use with Party V in message_1.
If Party U previously received from Party V an error message to
message_1 with diagnostic payload identifying a cipher suite that
U supports, then U SHALL use that cipher suite. Otherwise the
first cipher suite in SUITES_U MUST be used.
o Generate an ephemeral ECDH key pair as specified in Section 5 of
[SP-800-56A] using the curve in the cipher suite SUITE. Let X_U
be the x-coordinate of the ephemeral public key.
o Choose a connection identifier C_U and store it for the length of
the protocol. Party U MUST be able to retrieve the protocol state
using the connection identifier C_U and optionally other
information such as the 5-tuple. The connection identifier MAY be
used with a protocol for which EDHOC establishes application keys,
in which case C_U SHALL adhere to the requirements for that
protocol.
o Format message_1 as the sequence of CBOR data items specified in
Section 4.2.1 and encode it to a byte string (see Appendix A.1).
4.2.3. Party V Processing of Message 1
Party V SHALL process message_1 as follows:
o Decode message_1 (see Appendix A.1).
o Verify that the cipher suite SUITE is supported and that no prior
cipher suites in SUITES_U are supported.
o Validate that there is a solution to the curve definition for the
given x-coordinate X_U.
o Pass UAD_1 to the application.
If any verification step fails, Party V MUST send an EDHOC error
message back, formatted as defined in Section 6, and the protocol
MUST be discontinued. If V does not support the cipher suite SUITE,
then SUITES_V MUST include one or more supported cipher suites. If V
does not support the cipher suite SUITE, but supports another cipher
suite in SUITES_U, then SUITES_V MUST include the first supported
cipher suite in SUITES_U.
4.3. EDHOC Message 2
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4.3.1. Formatting of Message 2
message_2 SHALL be a sequence of CBOR data items (see Appendix A.1)
as defined below
message_2 = (
data_2,
CIPHERTEXT_2 : bstr,
)
data_2 = (
C_U : bstr / nil,
C_V : bstr,
X_V : bstr,
)
aad_2 : bstr
where aad_2, in non-CDDL notation, is:
aad_2 = H( bstr .cborseq [ message_1, data_2 ] )
where:
o C_V - variable length connection identifier
o X_V - the x-coordinate of the ephemeral public key of Party V
o H() - the hash function in the HKDF, which takes a CBOR byte
string (bstr) as input and produces a CBOR byte string as output.
The use of '.cborseq' is exemplified in Appendix A.1.
4.3.2. Party V Processing of Message 2
Party V SHALL compose message_2 as follows:
o Generate an ephemeral ECDH key pair as specified in Section 5 of
[SP-800-56A] using the curve in the cipher suite SUITE. Let X_V
be the x-coordinate of the ephemeral public key.
o Choose a connection identifier C_V and store it for the length of
the protocol. Party V MUST be able to retrieve the protocol state
using the connection identifier C_V and optionally other
information such as the 5-tuple. The connection identifier MAY be
used with a protocol for which EDHOC establishes application keys,
in which case C_V SHALL adhere to the requirements for that
protocol. To reduce message overhead, party V can set the message
field C_U in message_2 to null (still storing the actual value of
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C_U) if there is an external correlation mechanism (e.g. the Token
in CoAP) that enables Party U to correlate message_1 and
message_2.
o Compute COSE_Sign1 as defined in Section 4.4 of [RFC8152], using
the signature algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, the private
authentication key of Party V, and the following parameters
(further clarifications in Appendix A.2.2). The unprotected
header MAY contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* protected = bstr .cbor { abc : ID_CRED_V }
* payload = CRED_V
* external_aad = aad_2
* abc - any COSE map label that can identify a public
authentication key, see Section 4.1
* ID_CRED_V - a CBOR type that can be used with the COSE map
label. Enables the retrieval of the public authentication key
of Party V, see Section 4.1
* CRED_V - bstr credential containing the public authentication
key of Party V, see Section 4.1
Note that only 'protected' and 'signature' of the COSE_Sign1
object are used in message_2, see next bullet.
o Compute COSE_Encrypt0 as defined in Section 5.3 of [RFC8152], with
the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_2, IV_2, and the
following parameters (further clarifications in Appendix A.2.2).
The protected header SHALL be empty. The unprotected header MAY
contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* plaintext = bstr .cborseq [ ~protected, signature, ? UAD_2 ]
* external_aad = aad_2
* UAD_2 = bstr containing opaque unprotected application data
Note that protected and signature in the plaintext are taken from
the COSE_Sign1 object, and that that only 'ciphertext' of the
COSE_Encrypt0 object are used in message_2, see next bullet.
o Format message_2 as the sequence of CBOR data items specified in
Section 4.3.1 and encode it to a byte string (see Appendix A.1).
CIPHERTEXT_2 is the COSE_Encrypt0 ciphertext.
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4.3.3. Party U Processing of Message 2
Party U SHALL process message_2 as follows:
o Decode message_2 (see Appendix A.1).
o Retrieve the protocol state using the connection identifier C_U
and optionally other information such as the 5-tuple.
o Validate that there is a solution to the curve definition for the
given x-coordinate X_V.
o Decrypt and verify COSE_Encrypt0 as defined in Section 5.3 of
[RFC8152], with the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_2,
and IV_2.
o Verify COSE_Sign1 as defined in Section 4.4 of [RFC8152], using
the signature algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE and the public
authentication key of Party V.
If any verification step fails, Party U MUST send an EDHOC error
message back, formatted as defined in Section 6, and the protocol
MUST be discontinued.
4.4. EDHOC Message 3
4.4.1. Formatting of Message 3
message_3 SHALL be a sequence of CBOR data items (see Appendix A.1)
as defined below
message_3 = (
data_3,
CIPHERTEXT_3 : bstr,
)
data_3 = (
C_V : bstr / nil,
)
aad_3 : bstr
where aad_3, in non-CDDL notation, is:
aad_3 = H( bstr .cborseq [ aad_2, CIPHERTEXT_2, data_3 ] )
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4.4.2. Party U Processing of Message 3
Party U SHALL compose message_3 as follows:
o To reduce message overhead, party U can set the message field C_V
in message_3 to null (still storing the actual value of C_V) if
there is an external correlation mechanism (e.g. the Token in
CoAP) that enables Party V to correlate message_2 and message_3.
o Compute COSE_Sign1 as defined in Section 4.4 of [RFC8152], using
the signature algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, the private
authentication key of Party U, and the following parameters. The
unprotected header MAY contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* protected = bstr .cbor { abc : ID_CRED_U }
* payload = CRED_U
* external_aad = aad_3
* abc - any COSE map label that can identify a public
authentication key, see Section 4.1
* ID_CRED_U - a CBOR type that can be used with the COSE map
label. Enables the retrieval of the public authentication key
of Party U, see Section 4.1
* CRED_U - bstr credential containing the public authentication
key of Party U, see Section 4.1
Note that only 'protected' and 'signature' of the COSE_Sign1
object are used in message_3, see next bullet.
o Compute COSE_Encrypt0 as defined in Section 5.3 of [RFC8152], with
the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_3, and IV_3 and
the following parameters. The protected header SHALL be empty.
The unprotected header MAY contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* plaintext = bstr .cborseq [ ~protected, signature, ? PAD_3 ]
* external_aad = aad_3
* PAD_3 = bstr containing opaque protected application data
Note that protected and signature in the plaintext are taken from
the COSE_Sign1 object, and that only 'ciphertext' of the
COSE_Encrypt0 object are used in message_3, see next bullet.
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o Format message_3 as the sequence of CBOR data items specified in
Section 4.4.1 and encode it to a byte string (see Appendix A.1).
CIPHERTEXT_3 is the COSE_Encrypt0 ciphertext.
o Pass the connection identifiers (C_U, C_V) and the negotiated
cipher suite SUITE to the application. The application can now
derive application keys using the EDHOC-Exporter interface.
4.4.3. Party V Processing of Message 3
Party V SHALL process message_3 as follows:
o Decode message_3 (see Appendix A.1).
o Retrieve the protocol state using the connection identifier C_V
and optionally other information such as the 5-tuple.
o Decrypt and verify COSE_Encrypt0 as defined in Section 5.3 of
[RFC8152], with the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_3,
and IV_3.
o Verify COSE_Sign1 as defined in Section 4.4 of [RFC8152], using
the signature algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE and the public
authentication key of Party U.
If any verification step fails, Party V MUST send an EDHOC error
message back, formatted as defined in Section 6, and the protocol
MUST be discontinued.
o Pass PAD_3, the connection identifiers (C_U, C_V), and the
negotiated cipher suite SUITE to the application. The application
can now derive application keys using the EDHOC-Exporter
interface.
5. EDHOC Authenticated with Symmetric Keys
5.1. Overview
EDHOC supports authentication with pre-shared keys. Party U and V
are assumed to have a pre-shared key (PSK) with a good amount of
randomness and the requirement that:
o Party V SHALL be able to retrieve the PSK using KID.
KID may optionally contain information about how to retrieve the PSK.
KID does not need to uniquely identify the PSK, but doing so is
recommended as the recipient may otherwise have to try several PSKs.
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EDHOC with symmetric key authentication is illustrated in Figure 4.
Party U Party V
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U, SUITE, X_U, KID, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
| |
| C_U, C_V, X_V, AEAD(K_2; aad_2, UAD_2) |
|<------------------------------------------------------------------+
| message_2 |
| |
| C_V, AEAD(K_3; aad_3, PAD_3) |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_3 |
Figure 4: Overview of EDHOC with symmetric key authentication.
EDHOC with symmetric key authentication is very similar to EDHOC with
asymmetric key authentication. In the following subsections the
differences compared to EDHOC with asymmetric key authentication are
described.
5.2. EDHOC Message 1
5.2.1. Formatting of Message 1
message_1 SHALL be a sequence of CBOR data items (see Appendix A.1)
as defined below
message_1 = (
TYPE : int,
C_U : bstr,
SUITES_U : suites,
SUITE : uint,
X_U : bstr,
KID : bstr,
? UAD_1 : bstr,
)
where:
o TYPE = 2
o KID - bstr enabling the retrieval of the pre-shared key
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5.3. EDHOC Message 2
5.3.1. Processing of Message 2
o COSE_Sign1 is not used.
o COSE_Encrypt0 is computed as defined in Section 5.3 of [RFC8152],
with the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_2, IV_2, and
the following parameters. The protected header SHALL be empty.
The unprotected header MAY contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* external_aad = aad_2
* plaintext = h'' / UAD_2
* UAD_2 = bstr containing opaque unprotected application data
5.4. EDHOC Message 3
5.4.1. Processing of Message 3
o COSE_Sign1 is not used.
o COSE_Encrypt0 is computed as defined in Section 5.3 of [RFC8152],
with the AEAD algorithm in the cipher suite SUITE, K_3, IV_3, and
the following parameters. The protected header SHALL be empty.
The unprotected header MAY contain parameters (e.g. 'alg').
* external_aad = aad_3
* plaintext = h'' / PAD_3
* PAD_3 = bstr containing opaque protected application data
6. Error Handling
6.1. EDHOC Error Message
This section defines a message format for the EDHOC error message,
used during the protocol. An EDHOC error message can be send by both
parties as a response to any non-error EDHOC message. After sending
an error message, the protocol MUST be discontinued. Errors at the
EDHOC layer are sent as normal successful messages in the lower
layers (e.g. CoAP POST and 2.04 Changed). An advantage of using
such a construction is to avoid issues created by usage of cross
protocol proxies (e.g. UDP to TCP).
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error SHALL be a sequence of CBOR data items (see Appendix A.1) as
defined below
error = (
TYPE : int,
ERR_MSG : tstr,
? SUITES_V : suites,
)
suites : int / [ 2* int ]
where:
o TYPE = 0
o ERR_MSG - text string containing the diagnostic payload, defined
in the same way as in Section 5.5.2 of [RFC7252]
o SUITES_V - cipher suites from SUITES_U or the EDHOC cipher suites
registry that V supports. Note that SUITEs_V contains the values
from the EDHOC cipher suites registry and not indexes.
6.1.1. Example Use of EDHOC Error Message with SUITES_V
Assuming that Party U supports the five cipher suites {0, 1, 2, 3, 4}
in decreasing order of preference, Figures 5 and 6 show examples of
how Party U can truncate SUITES_U and how SUITES_V is used by Party V
to give Party U information about the cipher suites that Party V
supports. In Figure 5, Party V supports cipher suite 1 but not
cipher suite 0.
Party U Party V
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U {0, 1, 2}, SUITE {0}, X_U, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
| |
| TYPE, ERR_MSG, SUITES_V {1} |
|<------------------------------------------------------------------+
| error |
| |
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U {0, 1}, SUITE {1}, X_U, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
Figure 5: Example use of error message with SUITES_V.
In Figure 6, Party V supports cipher suite 2 but not cipher suites 0
and 1.
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Party U Party V
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U {0, 1}, SUITE {0}, X_U, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
| |
| TYPE, ERR_MSG, SUITES_V {2, 4} |
|<------------------------------------------------------------------+
| error |
| |
| TYPE, C_U, SUITES_U {0, 1, 2}, SUITE {2}, X_U, UAD_1 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------>|
| message_1 |
Figure 6: Example use of error message with SUITES_V.
As Party U's list of supported cipher suites and order of preference
is fixed, and Party V only accepts message_1 if the selected cipher
suite SUITE is the first cipher suite in SUITES_U that Party V
supports, the parties can verify that the selected cipher suite SUITE
is the most preferred (by Party U) cipher suite supported by both
parties. If SUITE is not the first cipher suite in SUITES_U that
Party V supports, Party V will discontinue the protocol.
7. Transferring EDHOC and Deriving Application Keys
7.1. Transferring EDHOC in CoAP
It is recommended is to transport EDHOC as an exchange of CoAP
[RFC7252] messages. CoAP is a reliable transport that can preserve
packet ordering and handle message duplication. CoAP can also
perform fragmentation and protect against denial of service attacks.
It is recommended to carry the EDHOC flights in Confirmable messages,
especially if fragmentation is used.
By default, the CoAP client is Party U and the CoAP server is Party
V, but the roles SHOULD be chosen to protect the most sensitive
identity, see Section 9. By default, EDHOC is transferred in POST
requests and 2.04 (Changed) responses to the Uri-Path: "/.well-known/
edhoc", but an application may define its own path that can be
discovered e.g. using resource directory
[I-D.ietf-core-resource-directory].
By default, the message flow is as follows: EDHOC message_1 is sent
in the payload of a POST request from the client to the server's
resource for EDHOC. EDHOC message_2 or the EDHOC error message is
sent from the server to the client in the payload of a 2.04 (Changed)
response. EDHOC message_3 or the EDHOC error message is sent from
the client to the server's resource in the payload of a POST request.
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If needed, an EDHOC error message is sent from the server to the
client in the payload of a 2.04 (Changed) response.
An example of a successful EDHOC exchange using CoAP is shown in
Figure 7.
Client Server
| |
+--------->| Header: POST (Code=0.02)
| POST | Uri-Path: "/.well-known/edhoc"
| | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_1
| |
|<---------+ Header: 2.04 Changed
| 2.04 | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_2
| |
+--------->| Header: POST (Code=0.02)
| POST | Uri-Path: "/.well-known/edhoc"
| | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_3
| |
|<---------+ Header: 2.04 Changed
| 2.04 |
| |
Figure 7: Transferring EDHOC in CoAP
The exchange in Figure 7 protects the client identity against active
attackers and the server identity against passive attackers. An
alternative exchange that protects the server identity against active
attackers and the client identity against passive attackers is shown
in Figure 8.
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Client Server
| |
+--------->| Header: POST (Code=0.02)
| POST | Uri-Path: "/.well-known/edhoc"
| |
|<---------+ Header: 2.04 Changed
| 2.04 | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_1
| |
+--------->| Header: POST (Code=0.02)
| POST | Uri-Path: "/.well-known/edhoc"
| | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_2
| |
|<---------+ Header: 2.04 Changed
| 2.04 | Content-Format: application/edhoc
| | Payload: EDHOC message_3
| |
Figure 8: Transferring EDHOC in CoAP
To protect against denial-of-service attacks, the CoAP server MAY
respond to the first POST request with a 4.01 (Unauthorized)
containing an Echo option [I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag]. This
forces the initiator to demonstrate its reachability at its apparent
network address. If message fragmentation is needed, the EDHOC
messages may be fragmented using the CoAP Block-Wise Transfer
mechanism [RFC7959].
7.1.1. Deriving an OSCORE Context from EDHOC
When EDHOC is used to derive parameters for OSCORE
[I-D.ietf-core-object-security], the parties must make sure that the
EDHOC connection identifiers are unique, i.e. C_V MUST NOT be equal
to C_U. The CoAP client and server MUST be able to retrieve the
OCORE protocol state using its chosen connection identifier and
optionally other information such as the 5-tuple. In case that the
CoAP client is party U and the CoAP server is party V:
o The client's OSCORE Sender ID is C_V and the server's OSCORE
Sender ID is C_U, as defined in this document
o The AEAD Algorithm and the HMAC-based Key Derivation Function
(HKDF) are the AEAD and HKDF algorithms in the cipher suite SUITE.
o The Master Secret and Master Salt are derived as follows where
length is the key length (in bytes) of the AEAD Algorithm.
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Master Secret = EDHOC-Exporter("OSCORE Master Secret", length)
Master Salt = EDHOC-Exporter("OSCORE Master Salt", 8)
7.2. Transferring EDHOC over Other Protocols
EDHOC may be transported over a different transport than CoAP. In
this case the lower layers need to handle message loss, reordering,
message duplication, fragmentation, and denial of service protection.
8. IANA Considerations
8.1. EDHOC Cipher Suites Registry
IANA has created a new registry titled "EDHOC Cipher Suites".
TODO
8.2. EDHOC Method Type Registry
IANA has created a new registry titled "EDHOC Method Type".
TODO
8.3. The Well-Known URI Registry
IANA has added the well-known URI 'edhoc' to the Well-Known URIs
registry.
o URI suffix: edhoc
o Change controller: IETF
o Specification document(s): [[this document]]
o Related information: None
8.4. Media Types Registry
IANA has added the media type 'application/edhoc' to the Media Types
registry.
o Type name: application
o Subtype name: edhoc
o Required parameters: N/A
o Optional parameters: N/A
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o Encoding considerations: binary
o Security considerations: See Section 7 of this document.
o Interoperability considerations: N/A
o Published specification: [[this document]] (this document)
o Applications that use this media type: To be identified
o Fragment identifier considerations: N/A
o Additional information:
* Magic number(s): N/A
* File extension(s): N/A
* Macintosh file type code(s): N/A
o Person & email address to contact for further information: See
"Authors' Addresses" section.
o Intended usage: COMMON
o Restrictions on usage: N/A
o Author: See "Authors' Addresses" section.
o Change Controller: IESG
8.5. CoAP Content-Formats Registry
IANA has added the media type 'application/edhoc' to the CoAP
Content-Formats registry.
o Media Type: application/edhoc
o Encoding:
o ID: TBD42
o Reference: [[this document]]
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9. Security Considerations
9.1. Security Properties
EDHOC inherits its security properties from the theoretical SIGMA-I
protocol [SIGMA]. Using the terminology from [SIGMA], EDHOC provides
perfect forward secrecy, mutual authentication with aliveness,
consistency, peer awareness, and identity protection. As described
in [SIGMA], peer awareness is provided to Party V, but not to Party
U.
EDHOC with asymmetric authentication offers identity protection of
Party U against active attacks and identity protection of Party V
against passive attacks. The roles should be assigned to protect the
most sensitive identity, typically that which is not possible to
infer from routing information in the lower layers.
Compared to [SIGMA], EDHOC adds an explicit method type and expands
the message authentication coverage to additional elements such as
algorithms, application data, and previous messages. This protects
against an attacker replaying messages or injecting messages from
another session.
EDHOC also adds negotiation of connection identifiers and downgrade
protected negotiation of cryptographic parameters, i.e. an attacker
cannot affect the negotiated parameters. A single session of EDHOC
does not include negotiation of cipher suites, but it enables Party V
to verify that the selected cipher suite is the most preferred cipher
suite by U which is supported by both U and V.
As required by [RFC7258], IETF protocols need to mitigate pervasive
monitoring when possible. One way to mitigate pervasive monitoring
is to use a key exchange that provides perfect forward secrecy.
EDHOC therefore only supports methods with perfect forward secrecy.
To limit the effect of breaches, it is important to limit the use of
symmetrical group keys for bootstrapping. EDHOC therefore strives to
make the additional cost of using raw-public keys and self-signed
certificates as small as possible. Raw-public keys and self-signed
certificates are not a replacement for a public key infrastructure,
but SHOULD be used instead of symmetrical group keys for
bootstrapping.
9.2. Cryptographic Considerations
The security of the SIGMA protocol requires the MAC to be bound to
the identity of the signer. Hence the message authenticating
functionality of the authenticated encryption in EDHOC is critical:
authenticated encryption MUST NOT be replaced by plain encryption
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only, even if authentication is provided at another level or through
a different mechanism. EDHOC implements SIGMA-I using the same Sign-
then-MAC approach as TLS 1.3.
To reduce message overhead EDHOC does not use explicit nonces and
instead rely on the ephemeral public keys to provide randomness to
each session. A good amount of randomness is important for the key
generation, to provide aliveness, and to protect against interleaving
attacks. For this reason, the ephemeral keys MUST NOT be reused, and
both parties SHALL generate fresh random ephemeral key pairs.
The choice of key length used in the different algorithms needs to be
harmonized, so that a sufficient security level is maintained for
certificates, EDHOC, and the protection of application data. Party U
and V should enforce a minimum security level.
The data rates in many IoT deployments are very limited. Given that
the application keys are protected as well as the long-term
authentication keys they can often be used for years or even decades
before the cryptographic limits are reached. If the application keys
established through EDHOC need to be renewed, the communicating
parties can derive application keys with other labels or run EDHOC
again.
9.3. Mandatory to Implement Cipher Suite
Cipher suite number 1 (AES-CCM-64-64-128, ECDH-SS + HKDF-256, X25519,
Ed25519) is mandatory to implement. For many constrained IoT devices
it is problematic to support more than one cipher suites, so some
deployments with P-256 may not support the mandatory cipher suite.
This is not a problem for local deployments.
9.4. Unprotected Data
Party U and V must make sure that unprotected data and metadata do
not reveal any sensitive information. This also applies for
encrypted data sent to an unauthenticated party. In particular, it
applies to UAD_1, ID_CRED_V, UAD_2, and ERR_MSG in the asymmetric
case, and KID, UAD_1, and ERR_MSG in the symmetric case. Using the
same KID or UAD_1 in several EDHOC sessions allows passive
eavesdroppers to correlate the different sessions. The communicating
parties may therefore anonymize KID. Another consideration is that
the list of supported cipher suites may be used to identify the
application.
Party U and V must also make sure that unauthenticated data does not
trigger any harmful actions. In particular, this applies to UAD_1
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and ERR_MSG in the asymmetric case, and KID, UAD_1, and ERR_MSG in
the symmetric case.
9.5. Denial-of-Service
EDHOC itself does not provide countermeasures against Denial-of-
Service attacks. By sending a number of new or replayed message_1 an
attacker may cause Party V to allocate state, perform cryptographic
operations, and amplify messages. To mitigate such attacks, an
implementation SHOULD rely on lower layer mechanisms such as the Echo
option in CoAP [I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag] that forces the
initiator to demonstrate reachability at its apparent network
address.
9.6. Implementation Considerations
The availability of a secure pseudorandom number generator and truly
random seeds are essential for the security of EDHOC. If no true
random number generator is available, a truly random seed must be
provided from an external source. If ECDSA is supported,
"deterministic ECDSA" as specified in [RFC6979] is RECOMMENDED.
The referenced processing instructions in [SP-800-56A] must be
complied with, including deleting the intermediate computed values
along with any ephemeral ECDH secrets after the key derivation is
completed. The ECDH shared secret, keys (K_2, K_3), and IVs (IV_2,
IV_3) MUST be secret. Implementations should provide countermeasures
to side-channel attacks such as timing attacks.
Party U and V are responsible for verifying the integrity of
certificates. The selection of trusted CAs should be done very
carefully and certificate revocation should be supported. The
private authentication keys MUST be kept secret.
Party U and V are allowed to select the connection identifiers C_U
and C_V, respectively, for the other party to use in the ongoing
EDHOC protocol as well as in a subsequent application protocol (e.g.
OSCORE [I-D.ietf-core-object-security]). The choice of connection
identifier is not security critical in EDHOC but intended to simplify
the retrieval of the right security context in combination with using
short identifiers. If the wrong connection identifier of the other
party is used in a protocol message it will result in the receiving
party not being able to retrieve a security context (which will
terminate the protocol) or retrieve the wrong security context (which
also terminates the protocol as the message cannot be verified).
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9.7. Other Documents Referencing EDHOC
EDHOC has been analyzed in several other documents. A formal
verification of EDHOC was done in [SSR18], an analysis of EDHOC for
certificate enrollment was done in [Kron18], the use of EDHOC in
LoRaWAN is analyzed in [LoRa1] and [LoRa2], the use of EDHOC in IoT
bootstrapping is analyzed in [Perez18], and the use of EDHOC in
6TiSCH is described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-dtsecurity-zerotouch-join].
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis]
Bormann, C. and P. Hoffman, "Concise Binary Object
Representation (CBOR)", draft-ietf-cbor-7049bis-05 (work
in progress), January 2019.
[I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl]
Birkholz, H., Vigano, C., and C. Bormann, "Concise data
definition language (CDDL): a notational convention to
express CBOR and JSON data structures", draft-ietf-cbor-
cddl-07 (work in progress), February 2019.
[I-D.ietf-core-echo-request-tag]
Amsuess, C., Mattsson, J., and G. Selander, "Echo and
Request-Tag", draft-ietf-core-echo-request-tag-03 (work in
progress), October 2018.
[I-D.ietf-core-object-security]
Selander, G., Mattsson, J., Palombini, F., and L. Seitz,
"Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments
(OSCORE)", draft-ietf-core-object-security-15 (work in
progress), August 2018.
[I-D.schaad-cose-x509]
Schaad, J., "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE):
Headers for carrying and referencing X.509 certificates",
draft-schaad-cose-x509-03 (work in progress), December
2018.
[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>.
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[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>.
[RFC6090] McGrew, D., Igoe, K., and M. Salter, "Fundamental Elliptic
Curve Cryptography Algorithms", RFC 6090,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6090, February 2011,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6090>.
[RFC6979] Pornin, T., "Deterministic Usage of the Digital Signature
Algorithm (DSA) and Elliptic Curve Digital Signature
Algorithm (ECDSA)", RFC 6979, DOI 10.17487/RFC6979, August
2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6979>.
[RFC7252] Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained
Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7252,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.
[RFC7959] Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby, Ed., "Block-Wise Transfers in
the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7959,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7959, August 2016,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7959>.
[RFC8152] Schaad, J., "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE)",
RFC 8152, DOI 10.17487/RFC8152, July 2017,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8152>.
[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>.
[SIGMA] Krawczyk, H., "SIGMA - The 'SIGn-and-MAc' Approach to
Authenticated Diffie-Hellman and Its Use in the IKE-
Protocols (Long version)", June 2003,
<http://webee.technion.ac.il/~hugo/sigma-pdf.pdf>.
[SP-800-56A]
Barker, E., Chen, L., Roginsky, A., Vassilev, A., and R.
Davis, "Recommendation for Pair-Wise Key-Establishment
Schemes Using Discrete Logarithm Cryptography",
NIST Special Publication 800-56A Revision 3, April 2018,
<https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-56Ar3>.
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10.2. Informative References
[CborMe] Bormann, C., "CBOR Playground", May 2018,
<http://cbor.me/>.
[I-D.hartke-core-e2e-security-reqs]
Selander, G., Palombini, F., and K. Hartke, "Requirements
for CoAP End-To-End Security", draft-hartke-core-e2e-
security-reqs-03 (work in progress), July 2017.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-dtsecurity-zerotouch-join]
Richardson, M., "6tisch Zero-Touch Secure Join protocol",
draft-ietf-6tisch-dtsecurity-zerotouch-join-03 (work in
progress), October 2018.
[I-D.ietf-ace-oauth-authz]
Seitz, L., Selander, G., Wahlstroem, E., Erdtman, S., and
H. Tschofenig, "Authentication and Authorization for
Constrained Environments (ACE) using the OAuth 2.0
Framework (ACE-OAuth)", draft-ietf-ace-oauth-authz-21
(work in progress), February 2019.
[I-D.ietf-ace-oscore-profile]
Palombini, F., Seitz, L., Selander, G., and M. Gunnarsson,
"OSCORE profile of the Authentication and Authorization
for Constrained Environments Framework", draft-ietf-ace-
oscore-profile-07 (work in progress), February 2019.
[I-D.ietf-core-resource-directory]
Shelby, Z., Koster, M., Bormann, C., Stok, P., and C.
Amsuess, "CoRE Resource Directory", draft-ietf-core-
resource-directory-19 (work in progress), January 2019.
[I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13]
Rescorla, E., Tschofenig, H., and N. Modadugu, "The
Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Protocol Version
1.3", draft-ietf-tls-dtls13-30 (work in progress),
November 2018.
[Kron18] Krontiris, A., "Evaluation of Certificate Enrollment over
Application Layer Security", May 2018,
<https://www.nada.kth.se/~ann/exjobb/
alexandros_krontiris.pdf>.
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[LoRa1] Sanchez-Iborra, R., Sanchez-Gomez, J., Perez, S.,
Fernandez, P., Santa, J., Hernandez-Ramos, J., and A.
Skarmeta, "Enhancing LoRaWAN Security through a
Lightweight and Authenticated Key Management Approach",
June 2018,
<https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021899/pdf/
sensors-18-01833.pdf>.
[LoRa2] Sanchez-Iborra, R., Sanchez-Gomez, J., Perez, S.,
Fernandez, P., Santa, J., Hernandez-Ramos, J., and A.
Skarmeta, "Internet Access for LoRaWAN Devices Considering
Security Issues", June 2018,
<https://ants.inf.um.es/~josesanta/doc/GIoTS1.pdf>.
[Perez18] Perez, S., Garcia-Carrillo, D., Marin-Lopez, R.,
Hernandez-Ramos, J., Marin-Perez, R., and A. Skarmeta,
"Architecture of security association establishment based
on bootstrapping technologies for enabling critical IoT
infrastructures", October 2018, <http://www.anastacia-
h2020.eu/publications/Architecture_of_security_association
_establishment_based_on_bootstrapping_technologies_for_ena
bling_critical_IoT_infrastructures.pdf>.
[RFC7228] Bormann, C., Ersue, M., and A. Keranen, "Terminology for
Constrained-Node Networks", RFC 7228,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7228, May 2014,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7228>.
[RFC7258] Farrell, S. and H. Tschofenig, "Pervasive Monitoring Is an
Attack", BCP 188, RFC 7258, DOI 10.17487/RFC7258, May
2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7258>.
[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>.
[SSR18] Bruni, A., Sahl Joergensen, T., Groenbech Petersen, T.,
and C. Schuermann, "Formal Verification of Ephemeral
Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)", November 2018,
<https://www.springerprofessional.de/en/formal-
verification-of-ephemeral-diffie-hellman-over-cose-
edhoc/16284348>.
Appendix A. Use of CBOR, CDDL and COSE in EDHOC
This Appendix is intended to simplify for implementors not familiar
with CBOR [I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis], CDDL [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl], COSE
[RFC8152], and HKDF [RFC5869].
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A.1. CBOR and CDDL
The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)
[I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis] is a data format designed for small code size
and small message size. CBOR builds on the JSON data model but
extends it by e.g. encoding binary data directly without base64
conversion. In addition to the binary CBOR encoding, CBOR also has a
diagnostic notation that is readable and editable by humans. The
Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl] provides
a way to express structures for protocol messages and APIs that use
CBOR. [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl] also extends the diagnostic notation.
CBOR data items are encoded to or decoded from byte strings using a
type-length-value encoding scheme, where the three highest order bits
of the initial byte contain information about the major type. CBOR
supports several different types of data items, in addition to
integers (int, uint), simple values (e.g. null), byte strings (bstr),
and text strings (tstr), CBOR also supports arrays [] of data items
and maps {} of pairs of data items. Some examples are given below.
For a complete specification and more examples, see
[I-D.ietf-cbor-7049bis] and [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl]. We recommend
implementors to get used to CBOR by using the CBOR playground
[CborMe].
Diagnostic Encoded Type
------------------------------------------------------------------
1 0x01 unsigned integer
24 0x1818 unsigned integer
-24 0x37 negative integer
-25 0x3818 negative integer
null 0xf6 simple value
h'12cd' 0x4212cd byte string
'12cd' 0x4431326364 byte string
"12cd" 0x6431326364 text string
<< 1, 2, null >> 0x430102f6 byte string
[ 1, 2, null ] 0x830102f6 array
[_ 1, 2, null ] 0x9f0102f6ff array (indefinite-length)
( 1, 2, null ) 0x0102f6 group
{ 4: h'cd' } 0xa10441cd map
------------------------------------------------------------------
All EDHOC messages consist of a sequence of CBOR encoded data items.
While an EDHOC message in itself is not a CBOR data item, it may be
viewed as the CBOR encoding of an indefinite-length array [_
message_i ] without the first byte (0x9f) and the last byte (0xff),
for i = 1, 2 and 3. The same applies to the EDHOC error message.
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The message format specification uses the constructs '.cbor',
'.cborseq' and '~' enabling conversion between different CDDL types
matching different CBOR items with different encodings. Some
examples are given below.
A type (e.g. an uint) may be wrapped in a byte string (bstr), and
back again:
CDDL Type Diagnostic Encoded
------------------------------------------------------------------
uint 24 0x1818
bstr .cbor uint << 24 >> 0x421818
~ bstr .cbor uint 24 0x1818
------------------------------------------------------------------
An array, say of an uint and a byte string, may be converted into a
byte string (bstr):
CDDL Type Diagnostic Encoded
--------------------------------------------------------------------
bstr h'cd' 0x41cd
[ uint, bstr ] [ 24, h'cd' ] 0x82181841cd
bstr .cborseq [ uint, bstr ] << 24, h'cd' >> 0x44181841cd
--------------------------------------------------------------------
A.2. COSE
CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) [RFC8152] describes how to
create and process signatures, message authentication codes, and
encryption using CBOR. COSE builds on JOSE, but is adapted to allow
more efficient processing in constrained devices. EDHOC makes use of
COSE_Key, COSE_Encrypt0, COSE_Sign1, and COSE_KDF_Context objects.
A.2.1. Encryption and Decryption
The COSE parameters used in COSE_Encrypt0 (see Section 5.2 of
[RFC8152]) are constructed as described below. Note that "i" in
"K_i", "IV_i" and "aad_i" is a variable with value i = 2 or 3,
depending on whether the calculation is made over message_2 or
message_3.
o The secret key K_i is a CBOR bstr, generated with the EDHOC-Key-
Derivation function as defined in Section 3.3.
o The initialization vector IV_i is a CBOR bstr, also generated with
the EDHOC-Key-Derivation function as defined in Section 3.3.
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o The plaintext is a CBOR bstr. If the application data (UAD and
PAD) is omitted, then plaintext = h'' in the symmetric case, and
plaintext = << ~protected, signature >> in the asymmetric case.
For instance, if protected = h'a10140' and signature = h'050607'
(CBOR encoding 0x43050607), then plaintext = h'a1014043050607'.
o The external_aad is a CBOR bstr. It is always set to aad_i.
COSE constructs the input to the AEAD [RFC5116] as follows:
o The key K is the value of the key K_i.
o The nonce N is the value of the initialization vector IV_i.
o The plaintext P is the value of the COSE plaintext. E.g. if the
COSE plaintext = h'010203', then P = 0x010203.
o The associated data A is the CBOR encoding of:
[ "Encrypt0", h'', aad_i ]
This equals the concatenation of 0x8368456e63727970743040 and the
CBOR encoding of aad_i. For instance if aad_2 = h'010203' (CBOR
encoding 0x43010203), then A = 0x8368456e6372797074304043010203.
A.2.2. Signing and Verification
The COSE parameters used in COSE_Sign1 (see Section 4.2 of [RFC8152])
are constructed as described below. Note that "i" in "aad_i" is a
variable with values i = 2 or 3, depending on whether the calculation
is made over message_2 or message_3. Note also that "x" in
"ID_CRED_x" and "CRED_x" is a variable with values x = U or V,
depending on whether it is the credential of U or of V that is used
in the relevant protocol message.
o The key is the private authentication key of U or V. This may be
stored as a COSE_KEY object or as a certificate.
o The protected parameter is a map { abc : ID_CRED_x } wrapped in a
byte string.
o The payload is a bstr containing the CBOR encoding of a COSE_KEY
or a single certificate.
o external_aad = aad_i.
COSE constructs the input to the Signature Algorithm as follows:
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o The key is the private authentication key of U or V.
o The message to be signed M is the CBOR encoding of:
[ "Signature1", << { abc : ID_CRED_x } >>, aad_i, CRED_x ]
For instance, if abc = 4 (CBOR encoding 0x04), ID_CRED_U = h'1111'
(CBOR encoding 0x421111), aad_3 = h'222222' (CBOR encoding
0x43222222), and CRED_U = h'55555555' (CBOR encoding
0x4455555555), then M =
0x846a5369676e61747572653145A104421111432222224455555555.
A.2.3. Key Derivation
Assuming use of the mandatory-to-implement algorithms HKDF SHA-256
and AES-CCM-16-64-128, the extract phase of HKDF produces a
pseudorandom key (PRK) as follows:
PRK = HMAC-SHA-256( salt, ECDH shared secret )
where salt = 0x in the asymmetric case and salt = PSK in the
symmetric case. As the output length L is smaller than the hash
function output size, the expand phase of HKDF consists of a single
HMAC invocation, and K_i and IV_i are therefore the first 16 and 13
bytes, respectively, of
output parameter = HMAC-SHA-256( PRK, info || 0x01 )
where || means byte string concatenation, and info is the CBOR
encoding of
COSE_KDF_Context = [
AlgorithmID,
[ null, null, null ],
[ null, null, null ],
[ keyDataLength, h'', aad_i ]
]
If AES-CCM-16-64-128 then AlgorithmID = 10 and keyDataLength = 128
for K_i, and AlgorithmID = "IV-GENERATION" (CBOR encoding
0x6d49562d47454e45524154494f4e) and keyDataLength = 104 for IV_i.
Hence, if aad_2 = h'aaaa' then
K_2 = HMAC-SHA-256( PRK, 0x840a83f6f6f683f6f6f68318804042aaaa01 )
IV_2 = HMAC-SHA-256( PRK, 0x846d49562d47454e45524154494f4e
83f6f6f683f6f6f68318804042aaaa01 )
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Appendix B. Example Messages and Sizes
This appendix gives an estimate of the message sizes of EDHOC with
different authentication methods. It also gives examples of messages
and plaintexts in CBOR diagnostic notation and hexadecimal to help
implementors. Note that the examples in this appendix are not test
vectors, the cryptographic parts are just replaced with byte strings
of the same length.
B.1. Message Sizes RPK
B.1.1. message_1
message_1 = (
1,
h'c3',
0,
0,
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f'
)
message_1 (39 bytes):
01 41 C3 00 00 58 20 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C
0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F
B.1.2. message_2
plaintext = <<
{ 4 : 'acdc' },
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f202122232425262728292a2b2c2d2e2f303132333435363738393a3b
3c3d3e3f'
>>
The protected header map is 7 bytes. The length of plaintext is 73
bytes so assuming a 64-bit MAC value the length of ciphertext is 81
bytes.
message_2 = (
null,
h'c4',
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f',
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f202122232425262728292a2b2c2d2e2f303132333435363738393a3b
3c3d3e3f404142434445464748494a4b4c4d4e4f50'
)
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message_2 (120 bytes):
F6 41 C4 58 20 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E
0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 58 51 00
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 3A 3B 3C
3D 3E 3F 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 4A 4B 4C 4D 4E 4F 50
B.1.3. message_3
The plaintext and ciphertext in message_3 are assumed to be of equal
sizes as in message_2.
message_3 = (
h'c4',
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f202122232425262728292a2b2c2d2e2f303132333435363738393a3b
3c3d3e3f404142434445464748494a4b4c4d4e4f50'
)
message_3 (85 bytes):
41 C4 58 51 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37
38 39 3A 3B 3C 3D 3E 3F 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 4A 4B
4C 4D 4E 4F 50
B.2. Message Sizes Certificates
When the certificates are distributed out-of-band and identified with
the x5t header and a SHA256/64 hash value, the protected header map
will be 13 bytes instead of 7 bytes (assuming labels in the range
-24...23).
protected = << { TDB1 : [ TDB6, h'0001020304050607' ] } >>
When the certificates are identified with the x5chain header, the
message sizes depends on the size of the (truncated) certificate
chains. The protected header map will be 3 bytes + the size of the
certificate chain (assuming a label in the range -24...23).
protected = << { TDB3 : h'0001020304050607...' } >>
B.3. Message Sizes PSK
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B.3.1. message_1
message_1 = (
2,
h'c3',
0,
0,
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f',
'abba'
)
message_1 (44 bytes):
02 41 C3 00 00 58 20 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C
0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F
44 61 63 64 63
B.3.2. message_2
Assuming a 0 byte plaintext and a 64-bit MAC value the ciphertext is
8 bytes
message_2 = (
null,
h'c4',
h'000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d
1e1f',
h'0001020304050607'
)
message_2 (46 bytes):
F6 41 C4 58 20 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E
0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 48 61 62
63 64 65 66 67 68
B.3.3. message_3
The plaintext and ciphertext in message_3 are assumed to be of equal
sizes as in message_2.
message_3 = (
h'c4',
h'0001020304050607'
)
message_3 (11 bytes):
41 C4 48 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07
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B.4. Summary
The previous estimates of typical message sizes are summarized in
Figure 9.
=====================================================================
PSK RPK x5t x5chain
---------------------------------------------------------------------
message_1 44 39 39 39
message_2 46 120 126 116 + Certificate chain
message_3 11 85 91 81 + Certificate chain
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Total 101 244 256 236 + Certificate chains
=====================================================================
Figure 9: Typical message sizes in bytes
In practice, most devices only have a few keys, so in deployments
where assignment of key identifiers (KID, ID_CRED_V, ID_CRED_U) can
be coordinated, the key identifiers can typically be much smaller
(e.g. 1 byte).
Figure 10 compares the message sizes of EDHOC with the DTLS 1.3
handshake [I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13] with connection ID. The comparison
uses a minimum number of extensions and offered algorithms/cipher
suites, 4 bytes key identifiers, 1 byte connection IDs, no DTLS
message fragmentation, and DTLS RPK SubjectPublicKeyInfo with point
compression.
=====================================================================
Flight #1 #2 #3 Total
---------------------------------------------------------------------
DTLS 1.3 RPK + ECDHE 150 373 213 736
DTLS 1.3 PSK + ECDHE 187 190 57 434
DTLS 1.3 PSK 137 150 57 344
---------------------------------------------------------------------
EDHOC RPK + ECDHE 39 120 85 244
EDHOC PSK + ECDHE 44 46 11 101
=====================================================================
Figure 10: Comparison of message sizes in bytes with Connection ID
In reality the total overhead will be larger due to mechanisms for
fragmentation, retransmission, and packet ordering. The overhead of
fragmentation is roughly proportional to the number of fragments,
while the expected overhead due to retransmission in noisy
environments is a superlinear function of the flight sizes.
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Connection ID is not supported with TLS 1.3. Figure 11 compares the
message sizes of EDHOC with the DTLS 1.3 [I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13] and
TLS 1.3 [RFC8446] handshakes without connection ID.
=====================================================================
Flight #1 #2 #3 Total
---------------------------------------------------------------------
DTLS 1.3 RPK + ECDHE 144 364 212 722
DTLS 1.3 PSK + ECDHE 181 183 56 420
DTLS 1.3 PSK 131 143 56 330
---------------------------------------------------------------------
TLS 1.3 RPK + ECDHE 129 322 194 645
TLS 1.3 PSK + ECDHE 166 157 50 373
TLS 1.3 PSK 116 117 50 283
---------------------------------------------------------------------
EDHOC RPK + ECDHE 38 119 84 241
EDHOC PSK + ECDHE 44 45 10 98
=====================================================================
Figure 11: Comparison of message sizes in bytes without Connection ID
Appendix C. Test Vectors
This appendix provides a wealth of test vectors to ease
implementation and ensure interoperability.
TODO: This section needs to be updated.
Acknowledgments
The authors want to thank Alessandro Bruni, Theis Groenbech Petersen,
Dan Harkins, Klaus Hartke, Alexandros Krontiris, Ilari Liusvaara,
Karl Norrman, Salvador Perez, Michael Richardson, Thorvald Sahl
Joergensen, Jim Schaad, Carsten Schuermann, Ludwig Seitz, Valery
Smyslov, and Rene Struik for reviewing and commenting on intermediate
versions of the draft. We are especially indebted to Jim Schaad for
his continuous reviewing and implementation of different versions of
the draft.
Authors' Addresses
Goeran Selander
Ericsson AB
Email: goran.selander@ericsson.com
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John Mattsson
Ericsson AB
Email: john.mattsson@ericsson.com
Francesca Palombini
Ericsson AB
Email: francesca.palombini@ericsson.com
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