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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 11:13:18 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 11:13:18 +0000 |
commit | 9e7e4ab6617fef1d1681fc2d3e02554264ccc954 (patch) | |
tree | 336445493163aa0370cb7830d97ebd8819b2e2c5 /PROTOCOL.certkeys | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | openssh-upstream.tar.xz openssh-upstream.zip |
Adding upstream version 1:8.4p1.upstream/1%8.4p1upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'PROTOCOL.certkeys')
-rw-r--r-- | PROTOCOL.certkeys | 314 |
1 files changed, 314 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/PROTOCOL.certkeys b/PROTOCOL.certkeys new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1fce870 --- /dev/null +++ b/PROTOCOL.certkeys @@ -0,0 +1,314 @@ +This document describes a simple public-key certificate authentication +system for use by SSH. + +Background +---------- + +The SSH protocol currently supports a simple public key authentication +mechanism. Unlike other public key implementations, SSH eschews the use +of X.509 certificates and uses raw keys. This approach has some benefits +relating to simplicity of configuration and minimisation of attack +surface, but it does not support the important use-cases of centrally +managed, passwordless authentication and centrally certified host keys. + +These protocol extensions build on the simple public key authentication +system already in SSH to allow certificate-based authentication. The +certificates used are not traditional X.509 certificates, with numerous +options and complex encoding rules, but something rather more minimal: a +key, some identity information and usage options that have been signed +with some other trusted key. + +A sshd server may be configured to allow authentication via certified +keys, by extending the existing ~/.ssh/authorized_keys mechanism to +allow specification of certification authority keys in addition to +raw user keys. The ssh client will support automatic verification of +acceptance of certified host keys, by adding a similar ability to +specify CA keys in ~/.ssh/known_hosts. + +All certificate types include certification information along with the +public key that is used to sign challenges. In OpenSSH, ssh-keygen +performs the CA signing operation. + +Certified keys are represented using new key types: + + ssh-rsa-cert-v01@openssh.com + ssh-dss-cert-v01@openssh.com + ecdsa-sha2-nistp256-cert-v01@openssh.com + ecdsa-sha2-nistp384-cert-v01@openssh.com + ecdsa-sha2-nistp521-cert-v01@openssh.com + ssh-ed25519-cert-v01@openssh.com + +Two additional types exist for RSA certificates to force use of +SHA-2 signatures (SHA-256 and SHA-512 respectively): + + rsa-sha2-256-cert-v01@openssh.com + rsa-sha2-512-cert-v01@openssh.com + +These RSA/SHA-2 types should not appear in keys at rest or transmitted +on their wire, but do appear in a SSH_MSG_KEXINIT's host-key algorithms +field or in the "public key algorithm name" field of a "publickey" +SSH_USERAUTH_REQUEST to indicate that the signature will use the +specified algorithm. + +Protocol extensions +------------------- + +The SSH wire protocol includes several extensibility mechanisms. +These modifications shall take advantage of namespaced public key +algorithm names to add support for certificate authentication without +breaking the protocol - implementations that do not support the +extensions will simply ignore them. + +Authentication using the new key formats described below proceeds +using the existing SSH "publickey" authentication method described +in RFC4252 section 7. + +New public key formats +---------------------- + +The certificate key types take a similar high-level format (note: data +types and encoding are as per RFC4251 section 5). The serialised wire +encoding of these certificates is also used for storing them on disk. + +#define SSH_CERT_TYPE_USER 1 +#define SSH_CERT_TYPE_HOST 2 + +RSA certificate + + string "ssh-rsa-cert-v01@openssh.com" + string nonce + mpint e + mpint n + uint64 serial + uint32 type + string key id + string valid principals + uint64 valid after + uint64 valid before + string critical options + string extensions + string reserved + string signature key + string signature + +DSA certificate + + string "ssh-dss-cert-v01@openssh.com" + string nonce + mpint p + mpint q + mpint g + mpint y + uint64 serial + uint32 type + string key id + string valid principals + uint64 valid after + uint64 valid before + string critical options + string extensions + string reserved + string signature key + string signature + +ECDSA certificate + + string "ecdsa-sha2-nistp256-cert-v01@openssh.com" | + "ecdsa-sha2-nistp384-cert-v01@openssh.com" | + "ecdsa-sha2-nistp521-cert-v01@openssh.com" + string nonce + string curve + string public_key + uint64 serial + uint32 type + string key id + string valid principals + uint64 valid after + uint64 valid before + string critical options + string extensions + string reserved + string signature key + string signature + +ED25519 certificate + + string "ssh-ed25519-cert-v01@openssh.com" + string nonce + string pk + uint64 serial + uint32 type + string key id + string valid principals + uint64 valid after + uint64 valid before + string critical options + string extensions + string reserved + string signature key + string signature + +The nonce field is a CA-provided random bitstring of arbitrary length +(but typically 16 or 32 bytes) included to make attacks that depend on +inducing collisions in the signature hash infeasible. + +e and n are the RSA exponent and public modulus respectively. + +p, q, g, y are the DSA parameters as described in FIPS-186-2. + +curve and public key are respectively the ECDSA "[identifier]" and "Q" +defined in section 3.1 of RFC5656. + +pk is the encoded Ed25519 public key as defined by +draft-josefsson-eddsa-ed25519-03. + +serial is an optional certificate serial number set by the CA to +provide an abbreviated way to refer to certificates from that CA. +If a CA does not wish to number its certificates it must set this +field to zero. + +type specifies whether this certificate is for identification of a user +or a host using a SSH_CERT_TYPE_... value. + +key id is a free-form text field that is filled in by the CA at the time +of signing; the intention is that the contents of this field are used to +identify the identity principal in log messages. + +"valid principals" is a string containing zero or more principals as +strings packed inside it. These principals list the names for which this +certificate is valid; hostnames for SSH_CERT_TYPE_HOST certificates and +usernames for SSH_CERT_TYPE_USER certificates. As a special case, a +zero-length "valid principals" field means the certificate is valid for +any principal of the specified type. + +"valid after" and "valid before" specify a validity period for the +certificate. Each represents a time in seconds since 1970-01-01 +00:00:00. A certificate is considered valid if: + + valid after <= current time < valid before + +critical options is a set of zero or more key options encoded as +below. All such options are "critical" in the sense that an implementation +must refuse to authorise a key that has an unrecognised option. + +extensions is a set of zero or more optional extensions. These extensions +are not critical, and an implementation that encounters one that it does +not recognise may safely ignore it. + +Generally, critical options are used to control features that restrict +access where extensions are used to enable features that grant access. +This ensures that certificates containing unknown restrictions do not +inadvertently grant access while allowing new protocol features to be +enabled via extensions without breaking certificates' backwards +compatibility. + +The reserved field is currently unused and is ignored in this version of +the protocol. + +The signature key field contains the CA key used to sign the +certificate. The valid key types for CA keys are ssh-rsa, +ssh-dss, ssh-ed25519 and the ECDSA types ecdsa-sha2-nistp256, +ecdsa-sha2-nistp384, ecdsa-sha2-nistp521. "Chained" certificates, where +the signature key type is a certificate type itself are NOT supported. +Note that it is possible for a RSA certificate key to be signed by a +Ed25519 or ECDSA CA key and vice-versa. + +signature is computed over all preceding fields from the initial string +up to, and including the signature key. Signatures are computed and +encoded according to the rules defined for the CA's public key algorithm +(RFC4253 section 6.6 for ssh-rsa and ssh-dss, RFC5656 for the ECDSA +types), and draft-josefsson-eddsa-ed25519-03 for Ed25519. + +Critical options +---------------- + +The critical options section of the certificate specifies zero or more +options on the certificates validity. The format of this field +is a sequence of zero or more tuples: + + string name + string data + +Options must be lexically ordered by "name" if they appear in the +sequence. Each named option may only appear once in a certificate. + +The name field identifies the option and the data field encodes +option-specific information (see below). All options are +"critical", if an implementation does not recognise a option +then the validating party should refuse to accept the certificate. + +Custom options should append the originating author or organisation's +domain name to the option name, e.g. "my-option@example.com". + +No critical options are defined for host certificates at present. The +supported user certificate options and the contents and structure of +their data fields are: + +Name Format Description +----------------------------------------------------------------------------- +force-command string Specifies a command that is executed + (replacing any the user specified on the + ssh command-line) whenever this key is + used for authentication. + +source-address string Comma-separated list of source addresses + from which this certificate is accepted + for authentication. Addresses are + specified in CIDR format (nn.nn.nn.nn/nn + or hhhh::hhhh/nn). + If this option is not present then + certificates may be presented from any + source address. + +Extensions +---------- + +The extensions section of the certificate specifies zero or more +non-critical certificate extensions. The encoding and ordering of +extensions in this field is identical to that of the critical options, +as is the requirement that each name appear only once. + +If an implementation does not recognise an extension, then it should +ignore it. + +Custom options should append the originating author or organisation's +domain name to the option name, e.g. "my-option@example.com". + +No extensions are defined for host certificates at present. The +supported user certificate extensions and the contents and structure of +their data fields are: + +Name Format Description +----------------------------------------------------------------------------- +no-presence-required empty Flag indicating that signatures made + with this certificate need not assert + user presence. This option only make + sense for the U2F/FIDO security key + types that support this feature in + their signature formats. + +permit-X11-forwarding empty Flag indicating that X11 forwarding + should be permitted. X11 forwarding will + be refused if this option is absent. + +permit-agent-forwarding empty Flag indicating that agent forwarding + should be allowed. Agent forwarding + must not be permitted unless this + option is present. + +permit-port-forwarding empty Flag indicating that port-forwarding + should be allowed. If this option is + not present then no port forwarding will + be allowed. + +permit-pty empty Flag indicating that PTY allocation + should be permitted. In the absence of + this option PTY allocation will be + disabled. + +permit-user-rc empty Flag indicating that execution of + ~/.ssh/rc should be permitted. Execution + of this script will not be permitted if + this option is not present. + +$OpenBSD: PROTOCOL.certkeys,v 1.17 2019/11/25 00:57:51 djm Exp $ |