Internet-Draft | NoRevAvail for Short-lived X.509 Certifi | May 2023 |
Housley, et al. | Expires 19 November 2023 | [Page] |
Short-lived X.509v3 public key certificates as profiled in RFC 5280 are seeing greater use in the Internet. The Certification Authority (CA) that issues these short-lived certificates do not publish revocation information because the certificate lifespan that is shorter than the time needed to detect, report, and distribute revocation information. This specification defines the noRevAvail certificate extension so that a relying party can readily determine that the CA does not publish revocation information for the certificate.¶
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X.509v3 public key certificates [RFC5280] with short validity periods are seeing greater use in the Internet. For example, Automatic Certificate Management Environment (ACME) [RFC8555] provides a straightforward way to obtain short-lived certificates. In many cases, no revocation information is made available for short-lived certificates by the Certification Authority (CA). This is because short-lived certificates have a validity period that is shorter than the time needed to detect, report, and distribute revocation information. As a result, revoking short-lived certificates is unnecessary and pointless. This specification defines the noRevAvail certificate extension so that a relying party can readily determine that the CA does not publish revocation information for the certificate.¶
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.¶
X.509 certificates are generated using ASN.1 [X.680], using the Basic Encoding Rules (BER) and the Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER) [X.690].¶
In 1988, CCITT defined the X.509v1 certificate [X.509-1988].¶
In 1997, ITU-T defined the X.509v3 certificate and the attribute certificate [X.509-1997].¶
In 1999, the IETF first profiled the X.509v3 certificate for use in the Internet [RFC2459].¶
In 2000, ITU-T defined the noRevAvail certificate extension for use with attribute certificates [X.509-2000].¶
In 2002, the IETF first profiled the attribute certificate for use in the Internet [RFC3281], and this profile included support for the noRevAvail certificate extension.¶
With greater use of short-lived certificates in the Internet, the next revision of ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [X.509-TBD] is expected to allow the noRevAvail certificate extension to be used with public key certificates as well as attribute certificates.¶
The noRevAvail extension, defined in [X.509-TBD], allows an CA to indicate that no revocation information will be made available for this certificate.¶
Conforming CAs MUST include this extension in certificates for which no revocation information will be published. When present, conforming CAs MUST mark this extension as non-critical.¶
name id-ce-noRevAvail OID { id-ce 56 } syntax NULL (i.e. '0500'H is the DER encoding) criticality MUST be FALSE¶
A relying party that does not understand this extension might be able to find a certificate revocation list (CRL) from the CA, but the CRL will never include an entry for the certificate containing this extension.¶
Certificates that include the noRevAvail extension MUST NOT include certificate extensions that point to Certificate Revocation List (CRL) repositories or provide locations of Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) Responders. If the noRevAvail extension is present in a certificate, then:¶
This section provides an ASN.1 module [X.680] for the noRevAvail certificate extension, and it follows the conventions established in [RFC5912] and [RFC6268].¶
<CODE BEGINS> NoRevAvailExtn { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-mod-noRevAvail(TBD) } DEFINITIONS IMPLICIT TAGS ::= BEGIN IMPORTS EXTENSION FROM PKIX-CommonTypes-2009 -- RFC 5912 { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-mod-pkixCommon-02(57) } ; -- noRevAvail Certificate Extension ext-noRevAvail EXTENSION ::= { SYNTAX NULL IDENTIFIED BY id-ce-noRevAvail CRITICALITY { FALSE } } -- noRevAvail Certificate Extension OID id-ce OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) 29 } id-ce-noRevAvail OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-ce 56 } END <CODE ENDS>¶
The Security Considerations in [RFC5280] are relevant.¶
The precondition for applying this mechanism securely is that the certificate's validity period is sufficiently short to enable the timely detection, reporting, and distribution of revocation information. If the certificate validity period is not adequately short, it creates a window of opportunity for attackers to exploit a compromised private key. Therefore, it is crucial to carefully assess and set an appropriate certificate validity period before implementing the noRevAvail certificate extension.¶
When the noRevAvail certificate extension is included in a certificate, all revocation checking is bypassed, even if the CRL Distribution Points, Freshest CRL, or Authority Information Access (pointing to an OCSP Responder) certificate extensions are present. CA policies and practices MUST ensure that the noRevAvail is included only when appropriate, as any misuse or misconfiguration could result in a relying party continuing to trust a revoked certificate.¶
Some applications may have dependencies on revocation information or assume its availability. The absence of revocation information may require modifications or alternative configuration settings to ensure proper application security and functionality.¶
Since the absence of revocation information may limit the ability to detect compromised or malicious certificates, relying parties need confidence that the CA is following security practices, implementing certificate issuance policies, and properly using operational controls. Relying parties may evaluate CA reliability, monitoring CA performance, and observe CA incident response capabilities.¶
For the ASN.1 Module in Section 4, IANA is requested to assign an object identifier (OID) for the module identifier. The OID for the module should be allocated in the "SMI Security for PKIX Module Identifier" registry (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.0).¶
Many thanks to Erik Anderson for his efforts to make the noRevAvail certificate extension available for use with public key certificates as well as attribute certificates.¶