RFC 9336 | EKU for Document Signing | November 2022 |
Ito, et al. | Standards Track | [Page] |
RFC 5280 specifies several extended key purpose identifiers (KeyPurposeIds) for X.509 certificates. This document defines a general-purpose document signing KeyPurposeId for inclusion in the Extended Key Usage (EKU) extension of X.509 public key certificates. Document Signing applications may require that the EKU extension be present and that a document signing KeyPurposeId be indicated in order for the certificate to be acceptable to that Document Signing application.¶
This is an Internet Standards Track document.¶
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.¶
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9336.¶
Copyright (c) 2022 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
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[RFC5280] specifies several extended key purpose identifiers (KeyPurposeIds) for X.509 certificates. In addition, several KeyPurposeIds have been added under the IANA repository "SMI Security for PKIX Extended Key Purpose" [RFC7299]. While usage of the anyExtendedKeyUsage KeyPurposeId is bad practice for publicly trusted certificates, there is no public and general KeyPurposeId explicitly assigned for Document Signing. The current practice is to use id-kp-emailProtection, id-kp-codeSigning, or a vendor-defined KeyPurposeId for general document signing purposes.¶
In circumstances where code signing and S/MIME certificates are also used for document signing, technical or policy changes made to the code signing and S/MIME ecosystem may cause unexpected behaviors or have an adverse impact such as decreased cryptographic agility on the document signing ecosystem and vice versa.¶
Vendor-defined KeyPurposeIds that are used in a PKI governed by the vendor or a group of vendors pose no interoperability concern. Appropriating, or misappropriating as the case may be, KeyPurposeIDs for use outside of their originally intended vendor or group of vendors controlled environment can introduce problems, the impact of which is difficult to determine.¶
Therefore, it is not favorable to use a vendor-defined KeyPurposeId for signing a document that is not governed by the vendor.¶
This document defines an extended key purpose identifier for Document Signing.¶
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.¶
This specification defines the KeyPurposeId id-kp-documentSigning.¶
As described in [RFC5280], "[i]f the [Extended Key Usage] extension is present, then the certificate MUST only be used for one of the purposes indicated." [RFC5280] also notes that "[i]f multiple [key] purposes are indicated the application need not recognize all purposes indicated, as long as the intended purpose is present."¶
Document Signing applications MAY require that the Extended Key Usage extension be present and that the id-kp-documentSigning be indicated in order for the certificate to be acceptable to that Document Signing application.¶
The term "Document Signing" in this document refers to digitally signing contents that are consumed by people. To be more precise, contents are intended to be shown to a person in a printable or displayable form by means of services or software, rather than processed by machines.¶
[RFC5280] specifies the EKU X.509 certificate extension for use on the Internet. The extension indicates one or more purposes for which the certified public key is valid. The EKU extension can be used in conjunction with the key usage extension, which indicates the set of basic cryptographic operations for which the certified key may be used.¶
The EKU extension syntax is repeated here for convenience:¶
ExtKeyUsageSyntax ::= SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF KeyPurposeId KeyPurposeId ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER¶
As described in [RFC5280], the EKU extension may, at the option of the certificate issuer, be either critical or non-critical.¶
This specification defines the KeyPurposeId id-kp-documentSigning. Inclusion of this KeyPurposeId in a certificate indicates that the public key encoded in the certificate has been certified to be used for cryptographic operations on contents that are consumed by people.¶
id-kp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) 3 } id-kp-documentSigning OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-kp 36 }¶
Our intended use case is people consuming the contents of signed documents. To be more precise, contents are intended to be shown to a person in a printable or displayable form by means of services or software, rather than processed by machines. The digital signature on the contents is to indicate to the recipient of the contents that the content has not changed since it was signed by the identity indicated as the subject of the certificate. To validate the digital signature that is signed on contents intended to be consumed by people, implementations MAY perform the steps below during certificate validation.¶
The following procedure is used to examine the KeyPurposeId(s) included in the Extended Key Usage extension. Restrictions on Extended Key Usage is derived and implemented from (or configured with) the policy to which the implementation conforms.¶
If there are restrictions set for the relying party and relying party software, then process the KeyPurposeId(s) as described below.¶
This procedure is intended to permit or prohibit the presence of a certain KeyPurposeId or the complete absence of KeyPurposeIds. It is outside the scope of this document, but the relying party can permit or prohibit combinations of KeyPurposeIds, instead of a single KeyPurposeId. A consideration on prohibiting combinations of KeyPurposeIds is described in the Security Considerations section of this document. If both "Excluded KeyPurposeId" and "Permitted KeyPurposeId" exist, the relying party or the relying party software processes each restriction on "Excluded KeyPurposeId" first and then processes each restriction on "Permitted KeyPurposeId".¶
"Excluded KeyPurposeId" is a KeyPurposeId that the relying party or the relying party software prohibits. Examples of "Excluded KeyPurposeId" are the presence of the anyExtendedKeyUsage KeyPurposeId or the complete absence of the EKU extension in a certificate. If a KeyPurposeId of the certificate meets the conditions set by the "Excluded KeyPurposeId" restriction, the relying party or the relying party software rejects the certificate.¶
"Permitted KeyPurposeId" is a KeyPurposeId that the relying party or the relying party software accepts. Examples of "Permitted KeyPurposeId" are the presence of this general document signing KeyPurposeId and/or the protocol-specific document signing KeyPurposeIds. If a KeyPurposeId of the certificate meets the condition set by a "Permitted KeyPurposeId" restriction, the certificate is acceptable. Otherwise, the relying party or the relying party software rejects the certificate.¶
When a single application has the capability to process various data formats, the software may choose to make the excluded and permitted decisions separately in accordance with the format it is handling (e.g., TEXT and PDF).¶
The usage of the id-kp-documentSigning KeyPurposeId is to provide an alternative to id-kp-emailProtection being used for non-email purposes and id-kp-codeSigning being used to sign objects other than binary code. This extended key purpose does not introduce new security risks but instead reduces existing security risks by providing means to separate other extended key purposes used for communication protocols, namely TLS (id-kp-clientAuth) or S/MIME (id-kp-emailProtection) etc., in order to minimize the risk of cross-protocol attacks.¶
To reduce the risk of specific cross-protocol attacks, the relying party or the relying party software may additionally prohibit use of specific combinations of KeyPurposeIds.¶
While a specific protocol or signing scheme may choose to come up with their own KeyPurposeIds, some may not have significant motive or resources to set up and manage their own KeyPurposeIds. This general document signing KeyPurposeId may be used as a stop-gap for those that intend to define their own document signing KeyPurposeId or those who do not intend to set up a KeyPurposeId but still would like to distinguish document signing from other usages.¶
Introduction of this id-kp-documentSigning KeyPurposeId does not introduce any new security or privacy concerns.¶
IANA has registered the following OID in the "SMI Security for PKIX Extended Key Purpose" registry (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3). This OID is defined in Section 3.1.¶
Decimal | Description | References |
---|---|---|
36 | id-kp-documentSigning | RFC 9336 |
IANA has also registered the following ASN.1 [X.680] module OID in the "SMI Security for PKIX Module Identifier" registry (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.0). This OID is defined in Appendix A.¶
Decimal | Description | References |
---|---|---|
104 | id-mod-docsign-eku | RFC 9336 |
The following ASN.1 [X.680] module provides the complete definition of the Document Signing KeyPurposeId.¶
DocSignEKU { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-mod-docsign-eku(104) } DEFINITIONS EXPLICIT TAGS ::= BEGIN -- EXPORTS ALL -- -- IMPORTS NOTHING -- -- OID Arc -- id-kp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) kp(3) } -- Document Signing Extended Key Usage -- id-kp-documentSigning OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-kp 36 } END¶
We would like to thank Russ Housley for verifying the ASN.1 module. Additionally, we would like to thank Corey Bonnell, Wendy Brown, Russ Housley, Prachi Jain, and Stefan Santesson for their comments.¶