Thanks, Dave, I'll forward this on. But are you saying that the descriptions in 
6962 are precise enough? Would you have any objections to defining structures 
in 6962 using the same syntax as 5280?

-Rick

From: David A. Cooper [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2014 10:55 AM
To: Rick Andrews
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Trans] RFC6962 BIS Log file encodings.

Rick,

I haven't read RFC 6962 in detail, but the ASN.1 experts you spoke with may not 
be familiar with the definition of Extension in certificates. X.509 defines it 
as:

   Extension ::= SEQUENCE {
            extnId EXTENSION.&id ({ExtensionSet}),
            critical BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE,
            extnValue OCTET STRING
   (CONTAINING EXTENSION.&ExtnType({ExtensionSet}{@extnId})
                                                    ENCODED BY der)}

   der OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {joint-iso-itu-t asn1(1) ber-derived(2) 
distinguished-encoding(1)}

In RFC 5280 it is:
   Extension  ::=  SEQUENCE  {
        extnID      OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
        critical    BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE,
        extnValue   OCTET STRING
                    -- contains the DER encoding of an ASN.1 value
                    -- corresponding to the extension type identified
                    -- by extnID
        }

It is my understanding that the two definitions are based on different versions 
of ASN.1, but are considered to be equivalent. The important point is that both 
indicate that the extension value must contain the DER encoding of some ASN.1 
value. So, the only way to interpret the RFC 6962 text in a manner that is 
consistent with X.509 is that the extnValue contains the tag for OCTET STRING 
followed by a length then a second OCTET STRING tag and a second length and 
then the (non-ASN.1) encoded SignedCertificateTimestampList structure. Given 
that the SignedCertificateTimestampList structure is not ASN.1, and so it 
cannot be DER encoded, this seems the only reasonable way to include it in a 
certificate.

This is similar to the subjectKeyIdentifier extension. The subjectKeyIdentifier 
just contains a string of bits, such as the SHA-1 hash of the subject public 
key. It is defined in RFC 5280 as follows:

     KeyIdentifier ::= OCTET STRING

     -- subject key identifier OID and syntax

     id-ce-subjectKeyIdentifier OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=  { id-ce 14 }

     SubjectKeyIdentifier ::= KeyIdentifier

and here is an example of an encoded subjectKeyIdentifier extension:
       SEQUENCE {
         SEQUENCE {
           OBJECT IDENTIFIER subjectKeyIdentifier (2 5 29 14)
           OCTET STRING, encapsulates {
             OCTET STRING
               08 68 AF 85 33 C8 39 4A 7A F8 82 93 8E 70 6A 4A
               20 84 2C 32
             }
           }

RFC 5912 shows the extensions in the newer ASN.1 syntax.

Dave

On 03/28/2014 01:31 PM, Rick Andrews wrote:
In addition, our ASN.1 experts have asked for the syntax to be described in 
"ASN.1-like" syntax, as is used in RFCs 3280 and 5280.

For example, 3280/5280 defines an Extension like this:

Extension  ::=  SEQUENCE  {
     extnID      OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
     critical    BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE,
     extnValue   OCTET STRING  }

so the extnValue is defined as an OCTET STRING, yet 6962 says "...encoding the 
SignedCertificateTimestampList structure as an ASN.1 OCTET STRING and inserting 
the resulting data in the TBSCertificate as an X.509v3 certificate 
extension...". The ASN.1 folks say it's not clear if that means that the 
Extension contains the OCTET STRING data type (for extnValue) and length 
followed by another OCTET STRING data type identifier and length of the SCT. Or 
is the second OCTET STRING identifier redundant?

Those updating existing cert generation code will probably be dealing with 
ASN.1 compilers, so a precise definition of structures in ASN.1-like syntax 
will go a long way. In addition, defining OIDs as arc plus extension (like 
this: id-kp-serverAuth  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-kp 1 }) would help.

-Rick

From: Trans [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eran Messeri
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2014 3:01 AM
To: Phillip Hallam-Baker
Cc: Rob Stradling; [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Trans] RFC6962 BIS Log file encodings.

I strongly support clarifying the description of the file format. When I 
started implementing aspects of RFC6962 (with no background in TLS encoding or 
ASN.1) it was very unclear.
>From other 
>posts<https://groups.google.com/forum/#%21topic/certificate-transparency/T9CDwnsercQ>
> on the list it seems this was unclear to others as well.

On Thu, Mar 13, 2014 at 10:50 PM, Phillip Hallam-Baker 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On Thu, Mar 13, 2014 at 4:20 PM, Rob Stradling 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
(Inspired by RFC5280 Appendix C)

Would it help to include one or more example SCTs in the text?

I think we definitely need that for Proposed. But right now I am trying to see 
how complete the description is.

--
Website: http://hallambaker.com/

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