RFC 9668 | Using EDHOC with CoAP and OSCORE | October 2024 |
Palombini, et al. | Standards Track | [Page] |
The lightweight authenticated key exchange protocol Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC) can be run over the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) and used by two peers to establish a Security Context for the security protocol Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments (OSCORE). This document details this use of the EDHOC protocol by specifying a number of additional and optional mechanisms, including an optimization approach for combining the execution of EDHOC with the first OSCORE transaction. This combination reduces the number of round trips required to set up an OSCORE Security Context and to complete an OSCORE transaction using that Security Context.¶
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/rfc9668.¶
Copyright (c) 2024 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC) [RFC9528] is a lightweight authenticated key exchange protocol that is specifically intended for use in constrained scenarios. In particular, EDHOC messages can be transported over the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) [RFC7252] and used for establishing a Security Context for Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments (OSCORE) [RFC8613].¶
This document details the use of the EDHOC protocol with CoAP and OSCORE and specifies a number of additional and optional mechanisms. These include an optimization approach that combines the EDHOC execution with the first OSCORE transaction (see Section 3). This allows for a minimum number of two round trips necessary to set up the OSCORE Security Context and complete an OSCORE transaction, e.g., when an Internet of Things (IoT) device gets configured in a network for the first time.¶
This optimization is desirable since the number of message exchanges can have a substantial impact on the latency of conveying the first OSCORE request when using certain radio technologies.¶
Without this optimization, it is not possible to achieve the minimum number of two round trips. This optimization makes it possible since the message_3 of the EDHOC protocol can be made relatively small (see Section 1.2 of [RFC9528]), thus allowing additional OSCORE-protected CoAP data within target MTU sizes.¶
The minimum number of two round trips can be achieved only if the default forward message flow of EDHOC is used, i.e., when a CoAP client acts as EDHOC Initiator and a CoAP server acts as EDHOC Responder. The performance advantage of using this optimization can be lost when used in combination with Block-wise transfers [RFC7959] that rely on specific parameter values and block sizes.¶
Furthermore, this document defines a number of parameters corresponding to different information elements of an EDHOC application profile (see Section 6). These parameters can be specified as target attributes in the link to an EDHOC resource associated with that application profile, thus enabling an enhanced discovery of such a resource for CoAP clients.¶
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.¶
The reader is expected to be familiar with terms and concepts defined in CoAP [RFC7252], Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) [RFC8949], OSCORE [RFC8613], and EDHOC [RFC9528].¶
This section is not normative and summarizes what is specified in [RFC9528] (specifically Appendix A.2 of [RFC9528]). Thus, it provides a baseline for the enhancements in the subsequent sections.¶
The EDHOC protocol specified in [RFC9528] allows two peers to agree on a cryptographic secret in a mutually-authenticated way and achieves forward secrecy by using Diffie-Hellman ephemeral keys. The two peers are denoted as the "Initiator" and "Responder", as the one sending or receiving the initial EDHOC message_1, respectively.¶
After successful processing of EDHOC message_3, both peers agree on a cryptographic secret that can be used to derive further security material and establish an OSCORE Security Context [RFC8613]. The Responder can also send an optional EDHOC message_4 in order for the Initiator to achieve key confirmation, e.g., in deployments where no protected application message is sent from the Responder to the Initiator.¶
Appendix A.2 of [RFC9528] specifies how to transfer EDHOC over CoAP. That is, the EDHOC data (i.e., the EDHOC message possibly with a prepended connection identifier) is transported in the payload of CoAP requests and responses. The default forward message flow of EDHOC consists in the CoAP client acting as Initiator and the CoAP server acting as Responder (see Appendix A.2.1 of [RFC9528]). Alternatively, the two roles can be reversed as per the reverse message flow of EDHOC (see Appendix A.2.2 of [RFC9528]). In the rest of this document, EDHOC messages are considered to be transferred over CoAP.¶
Figure 1 shows a successful execution of EDHOC, with a CoAP client and a CoAP server running EDHOC as Initiator and Responder, respectively. In particular, it extends Figure 10 from Appendix A.2.1 of [RFC9528] by highlighting when the two peers perform EDHOC verification and establish the OSCORE Security Context, and by adding an exchange of OSCORE-protected CoAP messages after completing the EDHOC execution.¶
That is, the client sends a POST request to a reserved EDHOC resource at the server, by default at the Uri-Path "/.well-known/edhoc". The request payload consists of the CBOR simple value true
(0xf5) concatenated with EDHOC message_1, which also includes the EDHOC connection identifier C_I of the client encoded as per Section 3.3 of [RFC9528]. The request has Content-Format application/cid-edhoc+cbor-seq.¶
This triggers the EDHOC execution at the server, which replies with a 2.04 (Changed) response. The response payload consists of EDHOC message_2, which also includes the EDHOC connection identifier C_R of the server encoded as per Section 3.3 of [RFC9528]. The response has Content-Format application/edhoc+cbor-seq.¶
Finally, the client sends a POST request to the same EDHOC resource used earlier when it sent EDHOC message_1. The request payload consists of the EDHOC connection identifier C_R encoded as per Section 3.3 of [RFC9528] concatenated with EDHOC message_3. The request has Content-Format application/cid-edhoc+cbor-seq.¶
After this exchange takes place, and after successful verifications as specified in the EDHOC protocol, the client and server can derive an OSCORE Security Context as defined in Appendix A.1 of [RFC9528]. After that, the client and server can use OSCORE to protect their communications as per [RFC8613]. Note that the EDHOC connection identifier C_R is used as the OSCORE Sender ID of the client (see Appendix A.1 of [RFC9528]). Therefore, C_R is transported in the 'kid' field of the OSCORE option of the OSCORE Request (see Section 6.1 of [RFC8613]).¶
The client and server are required to agree in advance on certain information and parameters describing how they should use EDHOC. These are specified in an application profile associated with the EDHOC resource addressed (see Section 3.9 of [RFC9528]).¶
The sequential flow of EDHOC and OSCORE (where EDHOC runs first and OSCORE is used after) takes three round trips to complete, as shown in Figure 1.¶
Section 3 defines an optimization for combining EDHOC with the first OSCORE transaction. This reduces the number of round trips required to set up an OSCORE Security Context and complete an OSCORE transaction using that Security Context.¶
This section defines an optimization for combining the EDHOC message exchange with the first OSCORE transaction, thus minimizing the number of round trips between the two peers to the absolute possible minimum of two round trips.¶
To this end, this approach can be used only if the default forward message flow of EDHOC is used, i.e., when the client acts as Initiator and the server acts as Responder. The same is not possible in the case with reversed roles as per the reverse message flow of EDHOC.¶
When running the sequential flow of Section 2, the client has all the information to derive the OSCORE Security Context already after receiving EDHOC message_2 and before sending EDHOC message_3.¶
Hence, the client can potentially send both EDHOC message_3 and the subsequent OSCORE Request at the same time. On a semantic level, this requires sending two REST requests at once as shown in Figure 2.¶
To this end, the specific approach defined in this section consists of sending a single EDHOC + OSCORE request, which conveys the pair (C_R, EDHOC message_3) within an OSCORE-protected CoAP message.¶
That is, the EDHOC + OSCORE request is composed of the following two parts combined together in a single CoAP message. The steps for processing the EDHOC + OSCORE request and the two parts combined in the request itself are defined in Sections 3.2.1 and 3.3.1.¶
EDHOC data consisting of the pair (C_R, EDHOC message_3) required for completing the EDHOC session transported as follows:¶
The rest of this section specifies how to transport the data in the EDHOC + OSCORE request and their processing order. In particular, the use of this approach is explicitly signalled by including an EDHOC option (Section 3.1) in the EDHOC + OSCORE request. The processing of the EDHOC + OSCORE request is specified in Section 3.2 for the client side and in Section 3.3 for the server side.¶
This section defines the EDHOC option. This option is used in a CoAP request to signal that the request payload conveys both an EDHOC message_3 and OSCORE-protected data combined together.¶
The EDHOC option has the properties summarized in Table 1, which extends Table 4 of [RFC7252]. The option is Critical, Safe-to-Forward, and part of the Cache-Key. The option MUST occur at most once and MUST be empty. If any value is sent, the recipient MUST ignore it. (Future documents may update the definition of the option by expanding its semantics and specifying admitted values.) The option is intended only for CoAP requests and is of Class U for OSCORE [RFC8613].¶
No. | C | U | N | R | Name | Format | Length | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | x | EDHOC | Empty | 0 | (none) |
The presence of this option means that the message payload also contains EDHOC data that must be extracted and processed as defined in Section 3.3 before the rest of the message can be processed.¶
Figure 3 shows an example of a CoAP message that is transported over UDP and that contains both the EDHOC data and the OSCORE ciphertext using the newly defined EDHOC option for signalling.¶
This section describes the processing on the client side.¶
The client prepares an EDHOC + OSCORE request as follows.¶
Establish the new OSCORE Security Context and use it to encrypt the original CoAP request as per Section 8.1 of [RFC8613].¶
Note that the OSCORE ciphertext is not computed over EDHOC message_3, which is not protected by OSCORE. That is, the result of this step is the OSCORE Request as in Figure 1.¶
Build COMB_PAYLOAD as the concatenation of EDHOC_MSG_3 and OSCORE_PAYLOAD in the order of COMB_PAYLOAD = EDHOC_MSG_3 | OSCORE_PAYLOAD, where | denotes byte string concatenation and:¶
Compose the EDHOC + OSCORE request, as the OSCORE-protected CoAP request resulting from Step 2, where the payload is replaced with COMB_PAYLOAD built at Step 3.¶
Note that the new payload includes EDHOC message_3, but it does not include the EDHOC connection identifier C_R. As the client is the EDHOC Initiator, C_R is the OSCORE Sender ID of the client, which is already specified as the value of the 'kid' field in the OSCORE option of the request from Step 2; hence, C_R is specified as the value of the 'kid' field of the EDHOC + OSCORE request.¶
Include the new EDHOC option defined in Section 3.1 into the EDHOC + OSCORE request.¶
The application/cid-edhoc+cbor-seq media type does not apply to this message, whose media type is unnamed.¶
With the same server, the client SHOULD NOT have multiple simultaneous outstanding interactions (see Section 4.7 of [RFC7252]), such that they consist of an EDHOC + OSCORE request and their EDHOC data pertains to the EDHOC session with the same connection identifier C_R.¶
An exception might apply for clients that operate under particular time constraints over particularly unreliable networks, thus raising the chances to promptly complete the EDHOC execution with the server through multiple simultaneous EDHOC + OSCORE requests. As discussed in Section 7, this does not have any impact in terms of security.¶
If Block-wise transfers [RFC7959] are supported, the client may fragment the first CoAP application request before protecting it as an original message with OSCORE as defined in Section 4.1.3.4.1 of [RFC8613].¶
In such a case, the OSCORE processing in Step 2 of Section 3.2.1 is performed on each inner block of the first CoAP application request. The following also applies.¶
The client takes the following additional step between Steps 2 and 3 of Section 3.2.1.¶
The client takes the following additional step between Steps 3 and 4 of Section 3.2.1.¶
The performance advantage of using the EDHOC + OSCORE request can be lost when used in combination with Block-wise transfers that rely on specific parameter values and block sizes. Application policies at the CoAP client can define when and how to detect whether the performance advantage is lost. If that is the case, they can also define whether to appropriately adjust the parameter values and block sizes or to fall back on the sequential workflow of EDHOC.¶
This section describes the processing on the server side.¶
In order to process a request containing the EDHOC option, i.e., an EDHOC + OSCORE request, the server MUST perform the following steps.¶
Retrieve the correct EDHOC session by using the connection identifier C_R from Step 3.¶
If the application profile used in the EDHOC session specifies that EDHOC message_4 shall be sent, the server MUST stop the EDHOC processing and consider it failed due to a client error.¶
Otherwise, perform the EDHOC processing on the EDHOC message_3 extracted at Step 2 as per Section 5.4.3 of [RFC9528] based on the protocol state of the retrieved EDHOC session.¶
The application profile used in the EDHOC session is the same one associated with the EDHOC resource where the server received the request conveying EDHOC message_1 that started the session. This is relevant in case the server provides multiple EDHOC resources that may generally refer to different application profiles.¶
Decrypt and verify the OSCORE-protected CoAP request rebuilt at Step 7 as per Section 8.2 of [RFC8613] by using the OSCORE Security Context established at Step 5.¶
When the decrypted request is checked for any critical CoAP options (as it is during regular CoAP processing), the presence of an EDHOC option MUST be regarded as an unprocessed critical option unless it is processed by some further mechanism.¶
If Steps 4 (EDHOC processing) and 8 (OSCORE processing) are both successfully completed, the server MUST reply with an OSCORE-protected response (see Section 5.4.3 of [RFC9528]). The usage of EDHOC message_4 as defined in Section 5.5 of [RFC9528] is not applicable to the approach defined in this document.¶
If Step 4 (EDHOC processing) fails, the server aborts the session as per Section 5.4.3 of [RFC9528] and responds with an EDHOC error message with error code 1, which is formatted as defined in Section 6.2 of [RFC9528]. The server MUST NOT establish a new OSCORE Security Context from the present EDHOC session with the client. The CoAP response conveying the EDHOC error message is not protected with OSCORE. As per Section 9.5 of [RFC9528], the server has to make sure that the error message does not reveal sensitive information. The CoAP response conveying the EDHOC error message MUST have Content-Format set to application/edhoc+cbor-seq registered in Section 10.9 of [RFC9528].¶
If Step 4 (EDHOC processing) is successfully completed but Step 8 (OSCORE processing) fails, the same OSCORE error handling as defined in Section 8.2 of [RFC8613] applies.¶
If Block-wise transfers [RFC7959] are supported, the server takes the additional following step before any other in Section 3.3.1.¶
Figure 4 shows an example of an EDHOC + OSCORE request transported over UDP. In particular, the example assumes that:¶
The OSCORE Sender ID of the client is 0x01.¶
As per Section 3.3.3 of [RFC9528], this straightforwardly corresponds to the EDHOC connection identifier C_R 0x01.¶
As per Section 3.3.2 of [RFC9528], when using the sequential flow shown in Figure 1, the same C_R with a value of 0x01 would be encoded on the wire as the CBOR integer 1 (0x01 in CBOR encoding) and prepended to EDHOC message_3 in the payload of the second EDHOC request.¶
This results in the following components shown in Figure 4:¶
The OSCORE Sender/Recipient IDs are the EDHOC connection identifiers (see Section 3.3.3 of [RFC9528]). This applies also to the optimized workflow defined in Section 3 of this document.¶
Note that the value of the 'kid' field in the OSCORE option of the EDHOC + OSCORE request is both the server's Recipient ID (i.e., the client's Sender ID) and the EDHOC connection identifier C_R of the server at Step 3 of Section 3.3.1.¶
When using EDHOC to establish an OSCORE Security Context, the client and server MUST perform the following additional steps during an EDHOC execution, thus extending Section 5 of [RFC9528].¶
The Initiator selects an EDHOC connection identifier C_I as follows.¶
The Initiator MUST choose a C_I that is neither used in any current EDHOC session as this peer's EDHOC connection identifier nor the Recipient ID in a current OSCORE Security Context where the ID Context is not present.¶
The chosen C_I SHOULD NOT be the Recipient ID of any current OSCORE Security Context. Note that, unless the two peers concurrently use alternative methods to establish OSCORE Security Contexts, this allows the Responder to always omit the 'kid context' in the OSCORE option of its messages sent to the Initiator when protecting those with an OSCORE Security Context where C_I is the Responder's OSCORE Sender ID (see Section 6.1 of [RFC8613]).¶
The Responder selects an EDHOC connection identifier C_R as follows.¶
The Responder MUST choose a C_R that is none of the following:¶
The chosen C_R SHOULD NOT be the Recipient ID of any current OSCORE Security Context. Note that, for a reason analogous to the one given in Section 4.1.1 with C_I, this allows the Initiator to always omit the 'kid context' in the OSCORE option of its messages sent to the Responder when protecting those with an OSCORE Security Context where C_R is the Initiator's OSCORE Sender ID (see Section 6.1 of [RFC8613]).¶
If the EDHOC connection identifier C_I is equal to the EDHOC connection identifier C_R specified in EDHOC message_2, then the Initiator MUST abort the session and reply with an EDHOC error message with error code 1 formatted as defined in Section 6.2 of [RFC9528].¶
It is possible to include the information below in the application profile referred by the client and server according to the specified consistency rules.¶
If the server supports the EDHOC + OSCORE request within an EDHOC execution started at a certain EDHOC resource, then the application profile associated with that resource SHOULD explicitly specify support for the EDHOC + OSCORE request.¶
In the case where the application profile indicates that the server supports the optional EDHOC message_4 (see Section 5.5 of [RFC9528]), it is still possible to use the optimized workflow based on the EDHOC + OSCORE request. However, this means that the server is not going to send EDHOC message_4 since it is not applicable to the optimized workflow (see Section 3.3.1).¶
Also, in the case where the application profile indicates that the server shall send EDHOC message_4, the application profile MUST NOT specify support for the EDHOC + OSCORE request. There is no point for the client to use the optimized workflow that is bound to fail (see Section 3.3.1).¶
Section 10.10 of [RFC9528] registers the resource type "core.edhoc", which can be used as target attribute in a web link [RFC8288] to an EDHOC resource, e.g., using a link-format document [RFC6690]. This enables clients to discover the presence of EDHOC resources at a server, possibly using the resource type as a filter criterion.¶
At the same time, the application profile associated with an EDHOC resource provides information describing how the EDHOC protocol can be used through that resource. A client may become aware of the application profile, e.g., by obtaining its information elements upon discovering the EDHOC resources at the server. This allows the client to discover the EDHOC resources whose associated application profile denotes a way of using EDHOC that is most suitable to the client, e.g., with EDHOC cipher suites or authentication methods that the client also supports or prefers.¶
That is, while discovering an EDHOC resource, a client can contextually obtain relevant pieces of information from the application profile associated with that resource. The resource discovery can occur by means of a direct interaction with the server or by means of the CoRE Resource Directory [RFC9176] where the server may have registered the links to its resources.¶
In order to enable the above, this section defines a number of parameters, each of which can be optionally specified as a target attribute with the same name in the link to the respective EDHOC resource or as filter criterion in a discovery request from the client. When specifying these parameters in a link to an EDHOC resource, the target attribute rt="core.edhoc" MUST be included and the same consistency rules defined in Section 5 for the corresponding information elements of an application profile MUST be followed.¶
The following parameters are defined.¶
Specifies a type of identifier supported by the server for identifying authentication credentials. This parameter MUST specify a single value, which is taken from the 'Label' column of the "COSE Header Parameters" registry [COSE.Header.Parameters]. This parameter MAY occur multiple times, with each occurrence specifying a type of identifier for authentication credentials.¶
Note that the values in the 'Label' column of the "COSE Header Parameters" registry are strongly typed. On the contrary, CoRE Link Format is weakly typed; thus, it does not distinguish between, for instance, the string value "-10" and the integer value -10. Therefore, if responses in CoRE Link Format are returned, string values that look like an integer are not supported. Thus, such values MUST NOT be used in the 'ed-idcred-t' parameter.¶
Future documents may update the definition of the parameters 'ed-i', 'ed-r', and 'ed-comb-req' by expanding their semantics and specifying what they can take as value.¶
The example in Figure 5 shows how a client discovers one EDHOC resource at a server and obtains information elements from the respective application profile. The CoRE Link Format notation from Section 5 of [RFC6690] is used.¶
The same security considerations from OSCORE [RFC8613] and EDHOC [RFC9528] hold for this document. In addition, the following considerations apply.¶
Section 3.2.1 specifies that a client SHOULD NOT have multiple outstanding EDHOC + OSCORE requests pertaining to the same EDHOC session. Even if a client did not fulfill this requirement, it would not have any impact in terms of security. That is, the server would still not process different instances of the same EDHOC message_3 more than once in the same EDHOC session (see Section 5.1 of [RFC9528]) and would still enforce replay protection of the OSCORE-protected request (see Sections 7.4 and 8.2 of [RFC8613]).¶
When using the optimized workflow in Figure 2, a minimum of 128-bit security against online brute-force attacks is achieved after the client receives and successfully verifies the first OSCORE-protected response (see Sections 9.1 and 9.4 of [RFC9528]). As an example, if EDHOC is used with method 3 (see Section 3.2 of [RFC9528]) and cipher suite 2 (see Section 3.6 of [RFC9528]), then the following holds:¶
With reference to the sequential workflow in Figure 1, the OSCORE request might have to undergo access-control checks at the server before being actually executed for accessing the target protected resource. The same MUST hold when the optimized workflow in Figure 2 is used, i.e., when using the EDHOC + OSCORE request.¶
That is, the rebuilt OSCORE-protected application request from Step 7 in Section 3.3.1 MUST undergo the same access-control checks that would be performed on a traditional OSCORE-protected application request sent individually as shown in Figure 1.¶
To this end, validated information to perform access-control checks (e.g., an access token issued by a trusted party) has to be available at the server before starting to process the rebuilt OSCORE-protected application request. Such information may have been provided to the server separately before starting the EDHOC execution altogether, or instead as External Authorization Data during the EDHOC execution (see Section 3.8 of [RFC9528]).¶
Thus, a successful completion of the EDHOC protocol and the following derivation of the OSCORE Security Context at the server do not play a role in determining whether the rebuilt OSCORE-protected request is authorized to access the target protected resource at the server.¶
This document has the following actions for IANA.¶
IANA has registered the following option number in the "CoAP Option Numbers" registry within the "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) Parameters" registry group.¶
Number | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
21 | EDHOC | RFC 9668 |
IANA has registered the following entries in the "Target Attributes" registry [CORE.Target.Attributes] within the "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) Parameters" registry group as per [RFC9423]. For all entries, the Change Controller is "IETF" and the reference is "[RFC 9668]".¶
Attribute Name | Brief Description |
---|---|
ed-i | Hint: support for the EDHOC Initiator role |
ed-r | Hint: support for the EDHOC Responder role |
ed-method | A supported authentication method for EDHOC |
ed-csuite | A supported cipher suite for EDHOC |
ed-cred-t | A supported type of authentication credential for EDHOC |
ed-idcred-t | A supported type of authentication credential identifier for EDHOC |
ed-ead | A supported External Authorization Data (EAD) item for EDHOC |
ed-comb-req | Hint: support for the EDHOC + OSCORE request |
IANA has created the "EDHOC Authentication Credential Types" registry within the "Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)" registry group defined in [RFC9528].¶
The registration policy is either "Private Use", "Standards Action with Expert Review", or "Specification Required" per [RFC8126]. "Expert Review" guidelines are provided in Section 8.4.¶
All assignments according to "Standards Action with Expert Review" are made on a "Standards Action" basis per Section 4.9 of [RFC8126] with "Expert Review" additionally required per Section 4.5 of [RFC8126]. The procedure for early IANA allocation of "standards track code points" defined in [RFC7120] also applies. When such a procedure is used, IANA will ask the designated expert(s) to approve the early allocation before registration. In addition, working group chairs are encouraged to consult the expert(s) early during the process outlined in Section 3.1 of [RFC7120].¶
The columns of this registry are:¶
This field contains the value used to identify the type of authentication credential. These values MUST be unique. The value can be an unsigned integer or a negative integer. Different ranges of values use different registration policies:¶
Value | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
0 | CBOR Web Token (CWT) containing a COSE_Key in a 'cnf' claim and possibly other claims. CWT is defined in RFC 8392. | [RFC8392] |
1 | CWT Claims Set (CCS) containing a COSE_Key in a 'cnf' claim and possibly other claims. CCS is defined in RFC 8392. | [RFC8392] |
2 | X.509 certificate | [RFC5280] |
"Standards Action with Expert Review" and "Specification Required" are two of the registration policies defined for the IANA registry established in Section 8.3. This section gives some general guidelines for what the experts should be looking for; however, they are being designated as experts for a reason, so they should be given substantial latitude.¶
Expert reviewers should take into consideration the following points:¶
The authors sincerely thank Christian Amsüss, Emmanuel Baccelli, Carsten Bormann, Roman Danyliw, Esko Dijk, Joel Halpern, Wes Hardaker, Klaus Hartke, John Preuß Mattsson, David Navarro, Shuping Peng, Jim Schaad, Jürgen Schönwälder, John Scudder, Orie Steele, Gunter Van de Velde, Mališa Vučinić, and Paul Wouters for their feedback and comments.¶
The work on this document has been partly supported by the Sweden's Innovation Agency VINNOVA and the Celtic-Next project CRITISEC, and by the H2020 project SIFIS-Home (Grant agreement 952652).¶