WGLC comments on draft-ietf-tls-tls13-18
Hi,
Very well written draft and an excellent protocol. The things I have found
is mostly
editorial. I think it’s ready. I will try to make sure that 3GPP already
next year
mandates support of both TLS 1.3 and DTLS 1.3 in all the places they use
(D)TLS.
Cheers,
John
- I cannot find any text describing the requirements TLS 1.3 put on the
lower layers. In
fact the only text I can find is "which might be hidden by TCP". I don't
know if the draft should mandate TCP or not, but otherwise it should be
stated that
reliable, in-order transport is required, and that the lower layers must
allow
identification TLS messages in the same session (e.g. the 5-tuple when
TCP is used).
- I cannot find any text describing that TLS 1.3 outputs a stream
identical to the input
stream. The current text only states that the input on the sender side
is application
messages. Should state that the TLS is reliable and in-order.
- The are no requirements on the TLS API. I think the following should be
added:
- SHALL support an exporter API
- SHALL support an API allowing an application to get information
regarding the negotiated
connection.
- SHOULD support an API allowing an application to influence the
connection to be
negotiated.
- TLS 1.3 also updates RFC5246, but I don't know if you can both update
and obsolete.
If you have to choose, obsolete is better.
- Section 1: This is the only place channel is used in the meaning
connection. I suggest
"channel" -> "connection"
as connection is used in the rest of the document.
- Section 1: "The TLS standard, however, does not specify ... how to
interpret the
authentication certificates"
I don't this is really true any more, the draft has significant text on
certificates.
I suggest removing "how to interpret the authentication certificates
exchanged"
- Figure 1, 4: "pre_shared_key_modes" -> "psk_key_exchange_modes"
- Figure 1. "Server Params" not horizontally aligned with "Key Exch" and
"Auth"
(not sure if this is a feature or a bug).
- Section 2:
- "CertificateVerify: a signature over the entire handshake "
"Finished : a MAC over the entire handshake "
Not really true. Maybe add something like "to this point"
- Section 2: The text below Figure 1 should mention
psk_key_exchange_modes. It talks
about all other messages and extensions.
- Section 2.2: OLD "PSKs can be used with (EC)DHE exchange"
NEW "PSKs SHOULD be used with (EC)DHE exchange"
- Section 2.3:
"When PSKs are provisioned out of band, the PSK identity and the KDF to
be used with
the PSK MUST also be provisioned."
OLD "and the KDF to be used"
NEW "and the Hash algorithm to be used"
I think this is a little problematic as current PSK provisioning
mechanisms do
not provision a hash algorithm. This means that they need to be updated
before
TLS 1.3 can be used. Otherwise the risk is that one endpoint uses
SHA-256 and
the other SHA-384. To enable PSK systems to directly and easily upgrade
to
TLS 1.3 I suggest the following
OLD
"When PSKs are provisioned out of band, the PSK identity and the KDF to
be used with
the PSK MUST also be provisioned."
NEW
"When PSKs are provisioned out of band, the PSK identity MUST also be
provisioned and
the Hash algorithm to be used SHOULD be provisioned. If no hash
algorithm has been
provisioned, then SHA-256 SHALL be used."
This would also affect 4.2.6.
- Section 2.3: "the following additional information MUST be provisioned
to both parties:
- The Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) protocol, if any
is to be used
- The Server Name Indication (SNI), if any is to be used"
I think these two bullets apply to ALL uses of TLS. Or? I suggest moving
to a general
section.
- Section 2.3: "1. This data is not forward secret, as it is encrypted
solely under keys
derived using the offered PSK."
This is true for all uses of PSK without (EC)DHE and not only Zero-RTT.
I suggest
moving this text to another more general section. Maybe in Section 2
when the three
basic key exchange modes are discussed.
- Section 2.3: Zero-RTT with PSK obtained out-of-band is a special case of
Zero-RTT, with its own requirements and warnings. I think it should be
moved to its
own subsubsection (2.3.1).
- Section 3.5: "enum { e1(v1), e2(v2), ... , en(vn) [[, (n)]] } Te;"
The variable 'n' is used for two different purposes. Use n, m or
something.
- Section 3.8: Same thing here. The variable 'n' is used for two different
purposes.
- Section 4.0 The cases in Handshake definition in some random order.
Should keep the same
order as the HandshakeType definition.
- Section 4.1.2 "Including a "cookie" extension if one was provided in the
HelloRetryRequest."
Could state that this is the HelloRetryRequest cookie echoed back.
- Section 4.1.3 I don't think ServerHello.extensions can be 0 length, but
maybe there is
no well defined minimum length...
- Section 4.1.3
Should state that Server.random shall be (psuedo-)random, I don't think
this is stated
(except that the name kind of indicates it)
OLD: "random This structure is generated by the server and MUST be
generated independently of the ClientHello.random.
NEW: "random 32 bytes generated by the server. The first 24 bytes are
generated by a
secure random number and MUST be generated independently of the
ClientHello.random.
- Section 4.1.3
OLD "as long as ephemeral ciphers are used"
NEW "as long as ephemeral key exchange are used"
As the ephemeral part is not part of the cipher suites anymore.
- Section 4.1.3 "It does not provide downgrade protection when static RSA
is used."
I don't know the details of ServerKeyExchange, but it this not true for
non-DHE PSK
as well?
- Section 4.2.4
I do not really understand why the private_use divided and resticted?
I.e. ffdhe_private_use and ecdhe_private_use. I think it would be
preferable to just
have "private_use" without specifying the exact use. Where do I e.g. put
my private use
SIDH, and Lattice-based key exchange information. Feels like this is the
natural place,
or is the intention that a new extension is required for PQC?
- Section 4.2.8
OLD "the server MUST have accepted a PSK cipher suite"
OLD "the server MUST have accepted a PSK key exchange mode"
- Section 5.5 "up to 2^24.5 full-size records"
It is not well-defined on how to do with non-full-size records. I suggest
OLD "up to 2^24.5 full-size records"
NEW “up to 2^24.5 records"
- Section 5.5
Limits are needed also for AES-CCM. It should also be stated that new
specifications
defining new TLS ciphers SHALL provide lmits on the number of records
that can be
protected with a given key.
As far as I understand the confidentiality limits for AES-CCM (and CRT
and CBC) would
be the same as for AES-GCM. I suggest
OLD "For AES-GCM, up to 2^24.5 full-size records"
NEW "For AES-GCM and AES-CCM, up to 2^24.5 records"
These limits are quite hard, but I think that is fine as it should not
be a problem
to rekey frequantly.
- Section 5.5 "for Authenticated Encryption (AE) security."
I think it is better to state that this is confidentiality (in constrast
to integrity
or key recovery). Suggestion
OLD "for Authenticated Encryption (AE) security."
NEW "for an confidentiality attack"
- Section 8
The sentences "In the absence of an application profile standard
specifying otherwise"
only apply to some parts of Section 8. E.g. it applies to cipher suites
but not to the
diffie-hellman groups. Feels like this should apply to the whole
section. I suggest
removing the current occurences of ""In the absence of an application
profile standard
specifying otherwise" and add (at the start of Section 8.)
"In the absence of an application profile standard specifying otherwise,
the following
requirements apply".
- Section 8.1 and 8.2
The heading says "MTI" but the text also contains non-mandatory things
(SHOULD)
I suggest changing "MTI" to "Requirements"
- Section 8.1
The title is "cipher suites", but the scope is broader (signatures and
key
exchange). I sugegst changing the heading to
"Requirements for cipher suites, signatures, and groups"
- Section 8.2 This section seems to forget psk_key_exchange_modes. If
pre_shared_key is
mandatory then psk_key_exchange_modes should be to.
- Section 9: Should mention that an attacker at any point can terminate
the session by
sending a single malformed packet. This termination feature is both
positive and
negative.
- Section 11.2: [RFC4279] is an informative reference but never referred
to.
- Section A.4 "TLS 1.2 and lower cipher suites cannot be used with TLS
1.3."
I cannot find any text in the draft statinn that you can negotiate TLS
1.2 ciphersuites
in TLS 1.3, I think this should be stated.
OLD: "TLS 1.2 and lower cipher suites cannot be used with TLS 1.3."
NEW: "TLS 1.2 and lower cipher suites cannot be used with TLS 1.3, but
can be
negotiated in a TLS 1.3 Client Hello."
- Section D.2
OLD "weaker than 2048-bit RSA or 224-bit ECDSA are not appropriate"
OLD "weaker than 2048-bit RSA, 224-bit ECDSA, or 128-bit PSK are not
appropriate"
- Section D.2 "The reader should refer to the following references for
analysis of
the TLS record layer."
No references given.
------------------------------------------------------------------
JOHN MATTSSON
MSc Engineering Physics, MSc Business Administration and Economics
Ericsson IETF Security Coordinator
Senior Researcher, Security
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