[cabfpub] Questions regarding timestamping certificates
Dimitris Zacharopoulos
jimmy at it.auth.gr
Thu Sep 8 21:28:16 UTC 2016
Thanks everyone for your input. To be honest, I didn't expect this to be
a controversial issue since timestamping has been around for many years.
I think Microsoft's reference c(5) is probably aligned with the BRs
(6.1.7). However, technically speaking, an OCSP responder certificate is
also an end-entity certificate but it is specifically allowed in the BRs
(same section).
Currently, as written, section 6.1.7 of the BRs numbered item 3, allows
the Root Key to be used to sign "Certificates for infrastructure
purposes (e.g. administrative role certificates, internal CA operational
device certificates, and OCSP Response verification Certificates)".
I think that we can all agree that this exception is kind of vague and
should probably be narrowed down to a smaller, more specific set. Of
course, a TimeStamping Certificate is not your everyday "Subscriber"
Certificate and could be defined by some CAs as a "Certificate for
infrastructure purposes", since it is usually operated by the CA/TSP and
not some other non-TSP entity as it works with SSL, S/MIME, Code Signing
Certificates. The ETSI EN 319 421 and the minimum requirements for Code
Signing document, have very strict controls on how to issue and maintain
a Timestamping Certificate that minimize the risk (from a risk
management perspective) compared to other end-entity (SSL, S/MIME and
CodeSigning) Certificates. Also, the CRL issuance frequency for the
status of Timestamping Certificates is aligned with the frequency of the
status of Subordinate CA Certificates so they are treated differently.
We could ballot this and change 6.1.7(3) to either specifically allow or
disallow timestamping end-entity certificates to be issued directly from
a Root and -obviously- if the majority votes that timestamping
certificates must not be allowed to be issued directly from Root
Certificates, introduce a proper effective date for enforcing this policy.
Dimitris.
On 8/9/2016 9:02 μμ, Jody Cloutier wrote:
>
> Thanks, Ryan.
>
> Dimitris, See http://aka.ms/ c(5). “The CA must not use the root
> certificate to issue end-entity certificates.”.
>
> J
>
> *From:*public-bounces at cabforum.org
> [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org] *On Behalf Of *Ryan Sleevi
> *Sent:* Thursday, September 8, 2016 10:56 AM
> *To:* Dimitris Zacharopoulos <jimmy at it.auth.gr>
> *Cc:* Bruce.Morton at entrust.com; public at cabforum.org
> *Subject:* Re: [cabfpub] Questions regarding timestamping certificates
>
> Dimitris,
>
> Thanks for raising this. I'd be especially curious to get Jody's take,
> and I'd suggest you see if https://aka.ms/rootcert has anything to say
> on this matter.
>
> As it stands, I'm loathe to suggest that it would be acceptable,
> simply because of EKU, to suggest that direct root issuance is safe or
> acceptable. As you know, the sub-CA approach ensures a proper
> risk-limiting scope; that is, we want to ensure the sub-CA is created
> "safely", and thus not have to worry about anything that the sub-CA
> itself signs.
>
> Ultimately, it's about risk management. Let's assume we said that the
> mere presence of the id-kp-timeStamping EKU was sufficient to make the
> "EE issued by Root" safe, and thus out of scope of the BRs. Would it
> be acceptable for that Root to sign the EE with SHA-1, since it's Out
> of Scope? Obviously, no - as the risk with SHA-1 would be an attacker
> could collide with an attacker-controlled cert that wasn't
> id-kp-timeStamping limited. However, if it was an id-kp-timeStamping
> sub-CA, then that sub-CA could issue however many certificates were
> desired, and the risk of any SHA-1 collisions under that sub-CA would
> be limited to affecting the timestamping services, thus minimizing the
> risk to most (but not all) browser vendors.
>
> Similarly, if we accept that it was sufficient, we'd run the risk that
> the Root's CRL could potentially grow. That is, imagine the impact to
> clients if there was 1 TLS sub-CA, and 100,000 id-kp-whatever EE
> certs, and the 100,000 certs needed to be revoked. TLS clients wanting
> to check if the sub-CA was revoked would also need to download the CRL
> with the 100,000 other revocations, potentially impacting performance.
>
> We unquestionably know that the root itself needs to comply with the
> BRs, and so I believe the MUST NOT absolutely applies, regardless of
> what you're signing. If you issue a sub-CA with id-kp-timestamping
> from this root, then the goal is that the sub-CA's profile fits the
> acceptable set (of what the Root is allowed to sign; in particular,
> the choice of algorithm), the Root's CRL matches the CRL policies, but
> that the sub-CA itself is not bound by the BRs in what it issues or
> how it operates.
>
> I agree, this is not entirely obvious from the BRs, and is the
> long-standing scope issue (both of the BRs and the Forum), and
> hopefully, as we work towards resolving the Forum structure some, we
> can revise the BRs as necessary to make it clearer the scope of common
> matters, and what elements are out of scope.
>
> In this regard, I appreciate the structured approach that ETSI has
> taken, in that it makes a clearer distinction between policies and
> profiles. We want the Root to have a known set of policies, and issue
> certificates with a bounded set of profiles. However, some subordinate
> certificates may follow one set of policies (and issue with one set of
> profiles), while another subordinate certificate may follow a
> different set of policies and profiles. That is, we could assume the
> Root has a uniform set of Policies (that are the minimum safety net
> for the *union* of all subrodinates; aka the most restrictive policy
> wins), while Subordinates may only have to comply with one set of
> policies (such as TLS or code signing), if the risk is constrained to
> a specific set of profiles (such as id-kp-serverAuth vs id-kp-codeSigning)
>
> Does that help offer a 'vendor' perspective?
>
> On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 9:15 AM, Dimitris Zacharopoulos
> <jimmy at it.auth.gr <mailto:jimmy at it.auth.gr>> wrote:
>
>
> Yes, I was wondering if this is in fact allowed by the BRs. In a
> case where you have a Root that doesn't have the SSL trust-bits, I
> am sure you can do that. But what happens if your Root is included
> in the browsers with the SSL trust-bits set?
>
> Dimitris.
>
>
>
> On 8/9/2016 6:14 μμ, Inigo Barreira wrote:
>
> Well, it depends. There are some software vendors that
> “request” to have the TSA signed by a known certificate, and
> as they only trust on root certificate, usually to get your
> timestamps “recognized” you have to sign the TSA with the CA
> root cert just in case.
>
> *De:*public-bounces at cabforum.org
> <mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org>
> [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org] *En nombre de *Dimitris
> Zacharopoulos
> *Enviado el:* jueves, 8 de septiembre de 2016 16:39
> *Para:* Bruce Morton
> *CC:* public at cabforum.org <mailto:public at cabforum.org>
> *Asunto:* Re: [cabfpub] Questions regarding timestamping
> certificates
>
> On 8/9/2016 4:59 μμ, Bruce Morton wrote:
>
> Hi Dimitris,
>
> I don’t think that the spirit of BR 6.1.7 would be for a
> root CA to issue a certificate for a TSA. Also, the
> members of the Code Signing Working Group have recommended
> that there be a separate CA for issuing time-stamping
> certificates which is defined in Appendix B (4) of the
> Minimum Requirements for Code Signing certificates.
>
>
> That was my initial reading too and thank you for confirming.
> If others think that's not the case, please let us know.
>
> You may want to get feedback directly from the vendor of the
> client software which will validate the time-stamp signatures.
>
>
> I don't think that will be necessary because if the standards
> require a 2 level certificate chain verification, the client
> software must support it :)
>
>
> Best regards,
> Dimitris.
>
> Bruce.
>
> *From:*Dimitris Zacharopoulos [mailto:jimmy at it.auth.gr]
> *Sent:* Thursday, September 8, 2016 9:03 AM
> *To:* Bruce Morton <Bruce.Morton at entrust.com>
> <mailto:Bruce.Morton at entrust.com>; public at cabforum.org
> <mailto:public at cabforum.org>
> *Subject:* Re: [cabfpub] Questions regarding timestamping
> certificates
>
> On 8/9/2016 3:07 μμ, Bruce Morton wrote:
>
> Hi Dimitris,
>
> I think the best document to use for Time-stamping
> Authority is the Minimum Requirements for Code Signing
> certificates, see
> https://casecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Minimum-requirements-for-the-Issuance-and-Management-of-code-signing.pdf.
>
> Thanks, Bruce.
>
>
> Thank you Bruce, you helped me find answers related to my
> second question. I am not 100% sure if it answers my first
> question. The minimum requirements for code signing document,
> describes a scenario where there are explicit Subordinate CA
> Certificates for TimeStamping but there is no requirement that
> forbids end-entity certificates to be issued directly from the
> Root (at least not one I could spot straight away).
>
> I guess my 1st question is more focused on what is allowed
> under the currently approved CA/B Forum Baseline Requirements.
>
>
> Best regards,
> Dimitris.
>
>
>
> *From:*public-bounces at cabforum.org
> <mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org>
> [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org] *On Behalf Of
> *Dimitris Zacharopoulos
> *Sent:* Thursday, September 8, 2016 4:34 AM
> *To:* public at cabforum.org <mailto:public at cabforum.org>
> *Subject:* [cabfpub] Questions regarding timestamping
> certificates
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> We are setting up a new Timestamping Authority and we are
> looking for specific rules that apply to certificates and
> subCA Certificates related to timestamping. While reading
> various standards and the CA/B Forum documents, and after
> looking at various existing implementations of
> publicly-trusted CAs, I have some questions and would
> appreciate any feedback from the forum. Although the BRs
> apply to SSL certificates, some Root Certificates might be
> used for both SSL and timestamping services. So the
> questions that follow, apply to CAs that use the same Root
> Certificate for both SSL and timestamping purposes. Of
> course, the EV CodeSigning requirements also define some
> rules for "EV Timestamp Authorities".
>
> 1. Section 6.1.7 of the Baseline Requirements states that
> the Root CA Private Keys MUST NOT be used to sign
> end-entity certificates with some exceptions. This
> exception list does not specifically mention
> end-entity certificates with EKU id-kp-timeStamping.
> Are Root CAs allowed to directly issue end-entity
> certificates for timestamping authorities (end-entity
> certificates with EKU only id-kp-timeStamping)?
> 2. Section 4.9.7 describes the CRL issuance frequency for
> Subscriber and Subordinate CA Certificates. If there
> is a Subordinate CA Certificate constrained with EKU
> id-kp-timeStamping, is an end-entity certificate (with
> only id-kp-timeStamping) issued from that subCA
> considered a "Subscriber" Certificate? Should this
> subCA issue CRLs every 7 days or every 12 months? My
> understanding (according to section 1.1 of the BRs) is
> that the end-entity certificates from that subCA are
> not required to comply with the CA/B Forum BRs. This
> should allow the CA to choose the CRL issuance (from
> that restricted subCA), to exceed the 7-day requirement.
>
>
> Thank you in advance.
>
>
> Dimitris Zacharopoulos.
>
>
>
>
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