Internet-Draft | RPKI CMS Signing-Time | February 2024 |
Snijders & Harrison | Expires 13 August 2024 | [Page] |
In the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI), Signed Objects are defined as Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) protected content types by way of a standard template (RFC 6488). That template includes an optional CMS signing-time attribute, representing the purported time at which the object was signed by its issuer. At the time when the standard template was defined, rsync was the only distribution mechanism for RPKI repositories.¶
Since the publication of the standard template, a new, additional protocol for distribution of RPKI repositories has been developed: the RPKI Repository Delta Protocol (RRDP). While RPKI repository operators must provide rsync service, RRDP is typically deployed alongside it as well, and preferred by default by most Relying Party (RP) implementations. However, RP implementations also support fallback to rsync in the event of problems with the RRDP service. As deployment experience with RRDP has increased, the usefulness of optimizing switchovers by RPs from one mechanism to the other has become apparent.¶
This document describes how Publishers and RPs can use the CMS signing-time attribute to minimize the burden of switching over from RRDP to rsync. Additionally, this document updates RFC 6488 by mandating the presence of the CMS signing-time attribute and disallowing the use of the binary-signing-time attribute.¶
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.¶
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In the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) [RFC6480], Signed Objects are defined as Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) [RFC5652] [RFC6268] protected content types by way of a standard template [RFC6488]. That template includes an optional CMS signing-time attribute, representing the time at which the object was signed by its issuer. At the time when the standard template was defined, rsync was the only distribution mechanism for RPKI repositories.¶
Since the publication of the standard template, a new, additional protocol for distribution of RPKI repositories has been developed: the RPKI Repository Delta Protocol (RRDP) [RFC8182]. While RPKI repository operators must provide rsync service, RRDP is typically deployed alongside it as well, and preferred by default by most RP implementations. However, RP implementations also support fallback to rsync in the event of problems with the RRDP service. As deployment experience with RRDP has increased, the usefulness of optimizing switchovers by RPs from one mechanism to the other has become apparent.¶
This document describes how Publishers and RPs can use the CMS signing-time attribute to minimize the burden of switching over from RRDP to rsync. Additionally, this document updates [RFC6488] by mandating the presence of the CMS signing-time attribute and disallowing the use of the binary-signing-time attribute.¶
To avoid needless re-transfers of unchanged files in consecutive rsync synchronizations, [I-D.timbru-sidrops-publication-server-bcp] recommends the use of so-called 'deterministic' (normalized) timestamps for files. When the content of a file is unchanged, Publishers SHOULD ensure that the last modification timestamp of the file remains unchanged as well.¶
This document advances the aforementioned concept by describing a synchronization strategy through which needless transfers are also avoided upon first use of rsync, by leveraging data previously fetched via RRDP.¶
As described in [I-D.ietf-sidrops-prefer-rrdp], all modern RP implementations will first attempt synchronization via RRDP. If synchronization via RRDP fails for some reason (e.g. malformed XML, expired TLS certificate, HTTP connection timeout), the RP will attempt to synchronize via rsync instead.¶
In the rsync synchronization protocol, a file's last modification timestamp (from here on 'mod-time') and filesize are used to determine whether the general-purpose rsync synchronization algorithm needs to be executed for the file. This is the default mode for both the original rsync implementation [rsync] and the OpenBSD implementation [openrsync]. If the sender's copy of the file and the receiver's copy of the file both have the same mod-time and filesize, the files are assumed to contain the same content, and will be omitted from the list of files to be transferred. Ensuring consistency with respect to mod-time for both senders and receivers helps to reduce the burden of rsync synchronization in terms of network bandwidth, disk I/O operations, and CPU usage.¶
In order to reduce the burden of the rsync synchronization (following an RRDP failure), Publishers and RPs SHOULD adhere to the following guidelines.¶
When serializing RPKI Signed Objects to a filesystem hierarchy for publication via rsync, the mod-time of the file containing the Signed Object SHOULD be set to the value of the CMS signing-time attribute contained within the Signed Object.¶
When serializing RPKI Signed Objects retrieved via RRDP to a filesystem hierarchy, the mod-time of the file containing the Signed Object SHOULD be set to the value of the CMS signing-time attribute contained within the Signed Object.¶
If an RP uses RRDP to synthesize a filesystem hierarchy for the repository, then synchronizing from the publisher to the corresponding directory directly is an option. Alternatively, the RP can synchronize to a new (empty) directory using the --compare-dest=DIR rsync feature, in order to avoid retrieving files that are already available by way of the synthesized filesystem hierarchy stemming from previous RRDP fetches. The DIR component is to be substituted with the name of the directory containing previously fetched and validated RPKI data (in its original DER-encoded form, to ensure the filesize parameter matches).¶
From the [rsync] man page for --compare-dest=DIR:¶
This option instructs rsync to use DIR on the destination machine as an additional hierarchy to compare destination files against doing transfers (if the files are missing in the destination directory). If a file is found in DIR that is identical to the sender's file, the file will NOT be transferred to the destination directory. This is useful for creating a sparse backup of just files that have changed from an earlier backup.¶
From the [openrsync] man page for --compare-dest=directory:¶
Use directory as an alternate base directory to compare files against on the destination machine. If file in directory is found and identical to the sender's file, the file will not be transferred.¶
Analysing the [rpkiviews] archives containing millions of RPKI Signed Objects discovered via the five Regional Internet Registry (RIR) Trust Anchors (TAs) from June 6th, 2022 until January 29th, 2024, each Signed Object contained a CMS signing-time attribute.¶
The above means that all of the commonly-used TAs and their subordinate Certification Authorities (CAs) produce Signed Objects that contain a CMS signing-time attribute. This means that making the CMS signing-time attribute mandatory would not cause any existing commonly-used TA or CA to become non-compliant.¶
As of January 29th, 2024, for 83.8% of Signed Objects the CMS signing-time timestamp matches the file's mod-time observed via rsync. This means that it is already the case that RPs would see a significant reduction in the amount of processing required in rsync if they adopted the strategy outlined in Section 2.2.¶
In the above-mentioned period of time, no Signed Objects were discovered with a CMS binary-signing-time [RFC6019] attribute in the specified repositories. Therefore, disallowing the use of the CMS binary-signing-time attribute would not cause any existing commonly-used TA or CA to become non-compliant.¶
This section updates [RFC6488] to make the CMS signing-time attribute mandatory and to disallow the presence of the CMS binary-signing-time attribute.¶
In section 2.1.6.4, the paragraph starting with "The signedAttrs element MUST be present and ..." and ending in "Other signed attributes MUST NOT be included." is replaced with the following text:¶
The signedAttrs element MUST be present and MUST include the content-type, message-digest, and signing-time attributes [RFC5652]. Other signed attributes MUST NOT be included.¶
In section 2.1.6.4.3, the first sentence "The signing-time attribute MAY be present." is replaced with the following text:¶
The signing-time attribute MUST be present.¶
In section 2.1.6.4.3, the sentence "Note that the presence or absence of the signing-time attribute MUST NOT affect the validity of the signed object (as specified in Section 3)." is removed.¶
Section 2.1.6.4.4 is removed in its entirety.¶
In section 3, the paragraph starting with "The signedAttrs field in the SignerInfo object is present ..." (1.f) is replaced with the following text:¶
The signedAttrs field in the SignerInfo object is present and contains the content-type attribute (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.3), the message-digest attribute (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.4), and the signing-time attribute (1.2.840.113549.1.9.5).¶
In section 3, the paragraph starting with "The signedAttrs field in the SignerInfo object does not ..." (1.g) is replaced with the following text:¶
The signedAttrs field in the SignerInfo object does not contain any attributes other than the following three: the content-type attribute (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.3), the message-digest attribute (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.4), and the signing-time attribute (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.9.5).¶
In section 9 ("Informative References"), [RFC6019] is removed from the list.¶
No requirement is imposed concerning the correctness of the signing time attribute. It does not provide reliable information on the time the signature was produced and it bears no relevance for seamless switchover between RRDP and rsync.¶
While the Security Considerations in [RFC6019] mandate that the signing-time and binary-signing-time attributes, if both present, MUST provide the same date and time; a potential for ambiguity is removed by restricting the RPKI Signed Object profile to have only one field to store the purported signing time.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
The authors would like to thank Ties de Kock, Niels Bakker, Mikael Abrahamsson, and Russ Housley for their helpful review of this document.¶
This section is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
A slightly different approach that has been suggested is to normalize file mod-times based on the Signed Object's embedded End-Entity (EE) X.509 notBefore timestamp value. A downside of this approach is that objects from CAs not using one-time use EE certificates, per section 5.1.1 of [RFC9286] would result in multiple objects signed at different points in time with the same mod-times.¶
Additionally, CAs might backdate the notBefore timestamp to increase the validity window of the Signed Object, which in turn decreases insight for RPKI operators as to when exactly the Signed Object purportedly came into existence. Along similar lines, the notBefore timestamp may be set in the future for contractual reasons. Setting the mod-time of a file to a future date may be unintuitive for users, and some programs (e.g. GNU make) will warn on encountering files with such mod-times.¶
There is also an increased chance of two distinct objects published to the same path having the same mod-time and filesize under this approach, due to CAs setting the notBefore timestamp to some stable value for a given object and reissuance often not changing the file size (e.g. where a prefix or a max-length value is changed in a ROA). In such a situation, if the receiver has the first copy of a file, rsync retrieval will skip the second copy of the file, and the synchronization operation for the associated repository will result in a "failed fetch", per section 6.6 of [RFC9286], due to an inconsistency between the file's hash and the hash listed in the associated manifest. That in turn necessitates further retrieval operations on the part of the receiver. The chance of two distinct objects being issued with the same mod-time and filesize when CMS signing-time is used to set the mod-time is much smaller, since it requires that those distinct objects be issued in very close succession.¶
Another downside of using notBefore is that Publishers would need to deserialize both the CMS envelope and the X.509 EE certificate contained therein to extract a timestamp, instead of merely parsing the CMS envelope.¶
Ensuring the mod-time is set to the CMS signing-time gives RPKI operators a headstart when using tools like [ls], in the sense that the mod-time aligns with the purported time of object issuance.¶
The CMS signing-time attribute has proven useful in researching and tracking delays in various layers of the RPKI [PAM23]. Mandating the CMS signing-time to be present might aid future researchers studying the RPKI ecosystem.¶
The --checksum option to rsync disables the mod-time and filesize comparison check in favour of a check based on a whole-file checksum. This check is slower than the mod-time and filesize check, but (in instances where the file content has not changed) faster than the general-purpose rsync synchronization algorithm. Since ensuring consistency between the mod-time and filesize on both sides of the transaction is straightforward, there is no particular reason to pursue an approach based on rsync's --checksum feature.¶
This section is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
This section records the status of known implementations of the protocol defined by this specification at the time of posting of this Internet-Draft, and is based on a proposal described in RFC 7942. The description of implementations in this section is intended to assist the IETF in its decision processes in progressing drafts to RFCs. Please note that the listing of any individual implementation here does not imply endorsement by the IETF. Furthermore, no effort has been spent to verify the information presented here that was supplied by IETF contributors. This is not intended as, and must not be construed to be, a catalog of available implementations or their features. Readers are advised to note that other implementations may exist.¶
According to RFC 7942, "this will allow reviewers and working groups to assign due consideration to documents that have the benefit of running code, which may serve as evidence of valuable experimentation and feedback that have made the implemented protocols more mature. It is up to the individual working groups to use this information as they see fit".¶
[rpkitouch] - a timestamp setter utility for both rsync servers and RRDP clients by Job Snijders in C.¶
[rpki-client] - a Relying Party implementation by OpenBSD in C, a client side implementation.¶
[rsyncit] - a RRDP-to-rsync sync tool by RIPE NCC in Java, run on the server side.¶
[apnicrepository] - the public APNIC RPKI repository - the APNIC rsync server normalizes timestamps.¶
[rpki-rrdp-tools-py] - a number of client-side RRDP utilities by Ties de Kock in Python.¶
[krill-sync] - a RRDP-to-rsync sync tool by NLNet Labs in Rust, run on the server side.¶