Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         G. Huston
Request for Comments: 6489                                 G. Michaelson
BCP: 174                                                           APNIC
Category: Best Current Practice                                  S. Kent
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                      BBN
                                                          February 2012


             Certification Authority (CA) Key Rollover in
            the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI)

Abstract

  This document describes how a Certification Authority (CA) in the
  Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) performs a planned rollover
  of its key pair.  This document also notes the implications of this
  key rollover procedure for relying parties (RPs).  In general, RPs
  are expected to maintain a local cache of the objects that have been
  published in the RPKI repository, and thus the way in which a CA
  performs key rollover impacts RPs.

Status of This Memo

  This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.

  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
  BCPs is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6489.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2012 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
  (http://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 Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of




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  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
     1.1. Terminology and Concepts ...................................2
  2. CA Key Rollover Procedure .......................................3
  3. Relying Party Requirements ......................................6
  4. Reissuing Certificates and RPKI Signed Objects ..................7
     4.1. CA Certificates ............................................7
     4.2. RPKI Signed Objects ........................................7
  5. Security Considerations .........................................8
  6. Acknowledgements ................................................8
  7. References ......................................................9
     7.1. Normative References .......................................9
     7.2. Informative References .....................................9

1.  Introduction

  This document describes an algorithm to be employed by a
  Certification Authority (CA) in the Resource Public Key
  Infrastructure (RPKI) [RFC6480] to perform a rollover of its key
  pair.

  This document defines a conservative procedure for such entities to
  follow when performing a key rollover.  This procedure is
  "conservative" in that the CA's actions in key rollover are not
  intended to disrupt the normal operation of relying parties (RPs) in
  maintaining a local cached version of the RPKI distributed
  repository.  Using this procedure, RPs are in a position to be able
  to validate all authentic objects in the RPKI using the validation
  procedure described in [RFC6480] at all times.

1.1.  Terminology and Concepts

  It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the terms and concepts
  described in "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate
  and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile" [RFC5280], "X.509
  Extensions for IP Addresses and AS Identifiers" [RFC3779], the
  profile for RPKI Certificates [RFC6487], and the RPKI repository
  structure [RFC6481] .

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].





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2.  CA Key Rollover Procedure

  A CA in the RPKI is an entity that issues CA and end-entity (EE)
  certificates and Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs).  A CA instance
  is associated with a single key pair [RFC6487], implying that if key
  rollover is a regularly scheduled event, then, over time, there will
  be many CA instances.  The implication in the context of key rollover
  is that, strictly speaking, a CA does not perform a key rollover per
  se.  In order to perform the equivalent of a key rollover, the CA
  creates a "new" instance of itself, with a new key pair, and then
  effectively substitutes this "new" CA instance into the RPKI
  hierarchy in place of the "old" CA instance.

  Note that focus of this procedure is planned key rollover, not an
  emergency key rollover, e.g., promoted by a suspected or detected
  private key compromise.  However, the procedure described here is
  applicable in emergency key rollover situations, with the exception
  of the "Staging Period" duration.

  There are several considerations regarding this procedure that MUST
  be followed by a CA performing a key rollover operation.  The
  critical consideration is that the RPKI has potential application in
  the area of control of routing integrity [RFC6480], and key rollover
  should not cause any transient hiatus in which an RP is led to
  incorrect conclusions regarding the authenticity of attestations made
  in the context of the RPKI.  A CA cannot assume that all RPs will
  perform path validation and path discovery in the same fashion;
  therefore, the key rollover procedure MUST preserve the integrity of
  the CRL Distribution Points (CRLDP), Subject Information Access
  (SIA), and Authority Information Access (AIA) pointers in RPKI
  certificates.

  In the procedure described here, the CA creates a "new" CA instance,
  and has the associated new public key published in the form of a
  "new" CA certificate.  While the "current" and "new" CA instances
  share a single repository publication point, each CA has its own CRL
  and its own manifest.  Initially, the "new" CA publishes an empty CRL
  and a manifest that contains a single entry for the CRL.  The
  "current" CA also maintains its published CRL and manifest at this
  repository publication point.

  The CA performing key rollover waits for a period of time to afford
  every RP an opportunity to discover and retrieve this "new" CA
  certificate, and store it in its local RPKI repository cache
  instance.  This period of time is termed the Staging Period.  During
  this period, the CA will have a "new" CA instance, with no
  subordinate products, and a "current" CA instance that has issued all
  subordinate products.  At the expiration of the Staging Period, the



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  "new" CA instance MUST replace all (valid) subordinate products of
  the "current" CA instance, overwriting the "current" subordinate
  products in the CA's repository publication point.  When this process
  is complete, the "current" CA instance is retired, and the "new" CA
  instance becomes the "current" CA.

  During the transition of the "current" and "new" CA instances, the
  "new" CA instance MUST reissue all subordinate products of the
  "current" CA.  The procedure described here requires that, with the
  exception of manifests and CRLs, the reissued subordinate products be
  published using the same repository publication point object names,
  effectively overwriting the old objects with these reissued objects.
  The intent of this overwriting operation is to ensure that the AIA
  pointers of subordinate products at lower tiers in the RPKI hierarchy
  remain correct, and that CA key rollover does not require any
  associated actions by any subordinate CA.

  There are three CA states described here:

  CURRENT:
     The CURRENT CA is the active CA instance used to accept and
     process certificate issuance and revocation requests.  The
     starting point for this algorithm is that the key of the CURRENT
     CA is to be rolled over.

  NEW:
     The NEW CA is the CA instance that is being created.  The NEW CA
     is not active, and thus does not accept nor process certificate
     issuance and revocation requests.  The NEW CA SHOULD issue a CRL
     and an EE certificate in association with its manifest to provide
     a trivial, complete, and consistent instance of a CA.

  OLD:
     The CA instance is in the process of being removed.  An OLD CA
     instance is unable to process any certificate issuance and
     revocation requests.  An OLD CA instance will continue to issue
     regularly scheduled CRLs and issue an EE certificate as part of
     the process of updating its manifest to reflect the updated CRL.

     To perform a key rollover operation, the CA MUST perform the
     following steps in the order given here.  Unless specified
     otherwise each step SHOULD be performed without any intervening
     delay.  The process MUST be run through to completion.

     1. Generate a new key pair for use by the NEW CA.  Because the
        goal of this algorithm is key rollover, the key pair generated
        in this step MUST be different from the pair in use by the
        CURRENT CA.



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     2. Generate a certificate request with this key pair and pass the
        request to the CA that issued the CURRENT CA certificate.  This
        request MUST include the same SIA extension that is present in
        the CURRENT CA certificate.  This request, when satisfied, will
        result in the publication of the NEW CA certificate.  This
        (NEW) CA certificate will contain a subject name selected by
        the issuer, which MUST be distinct from the subject name used
        in the CURRENT CA certificate.  The Certificate Practice
        Statement (CPS) for the issuer of the NEW CA certificate will
        indicate the time frame within which a certificate request is
        expected to be processed.

     3. Publish the NEW CA's CRL and manifest.

        The steps involved here are:

        -  Wait for the issuer of the NEW CA to publish the NEW CA
           certificate.

        -  As quickly as possible following the publication of the NEW
           CA certificate, use the key pair associated with the NEW CA
           to generate an initially empty CRL, and publish this CRL in
           the NEW CA's repository publication point.  It is
           RECOMMENDED that the CRL for the NEW CA have a nextUpdate
           value that will cause the CRL to be replaced at the end of
           the Staging Period (see in Step 4 below).

        -  Generate a new key pair, and generate an associated EE
           certificate request with an AIA value of the NEW CA's
           repository publication point.  Pass this EE certificate
           request to the NEW CA, and use the returned (single-use) EE
           certificate as the NEW CA's manifest EE certificate.

        -  Generate a manifest containing the new CA's CRL as the only
           entry, and sign it with the private key associated with the
           manifest EE certificate.  Publish the manifest at the NEW
           CA's repository publication point.

        -  Destroy the private key associated with the manifest EE
           certificate.

     4. The NEW CA enters a Staging Period.  The duration of the
        Staging Period is determined by the CA, but it SHOULD be no
        less than 24 hours.  The Staging Period is intended to afford
        an opportunity for all RPs to download the NEW CA certificate
        prior to publication of certificates, CRLs, and RPKI signed
        objects under the NEW CA.  During the Staging Period, the NEW
        CA SHOULD reissue, but not publish, all of the products that



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        were issued under the CURRENT CA.  This includes all CA
        certificates, EE certificates, and RPKI signed objects.
        Section 4 describes how each reissued product relates to the
        product that it replaces.  During the Staging Period, the
        CURRENT CA SHOULD continue to accept and process certificate
        issuance requests and MUST continue to accept and process
        certificate revocation requests.  If any certificates are
        issued by the CURRENT CA during the Staging Period, they MUST
        be reissued under the NEW CA during this period.  Any
        certificates that are revoked under the CURRENT CA MUST NOT be
        reissued under the NEW CA.  As noted above, in the case of an
        emergency key rollover, a CA will decide whether the 24 hour
        minimal Staging Period interval is appropriate, or if a shorter
        Staging Period is needed.  As the Staging Period imposes no
        additional burden on Relying Parties, there is no stipulated or
        recommended maximum Staging Period.

     5. Upon expiration of the Staging Period, the NEW CA MUST publish
        the signed products that have been reissued under the NEW CA,
        replacing the corresponding products issued under the CURRENT
        CA at the NEW CA's repository publication point.  This
        replacement is implied by the file naming requirements imposed
        by [RFC6481] for these signed products.  The trivial manifest
        for the NEW CA (which contained only one entry, for the NEW
        CA's CRL) is replaced by a manifest listing all of these
        reissued, signed products.  At this point, the CURRENT CA
        becomes the OLD CA, and the NEW CA becomes the CURRENT CA.  Use
        the OLD CA to issue a manifest that lists only the OLD CA's
        CRL.  It is anticipated that this step is very brief, perhaps a
        few minutes in duration, because the CA has reissued all of the
        signed products during the Staging Period.  Nonetheless, it is
        desirable that the activities performed in this step be viewed
        as atomic by RPs.

     6. Generate a certificate revocation request for the OLD CA
        certificate and submit it to the issuer of that certificate.
        When the OLD CA certificate is revoked, the CRL for the OLD CA
        is removed from the repository, along with the manifest for the
        OLD CA.  The private key for the OLD CA is destroyed.

3.  Relying Party Requirements

  This procedure defines a Staging Period for CAs performing a key
  rollover operation.  This period is defined as a period no shorter
  than 24 hours.






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  RPs who maintain a local cache of the distributed RPKI repository
  MUST perform a local cache synchronization operation against the
  distributed RPKI repository at regular intervals of no longer than 24
  hours.

4.  Reissuing Certificates and RPKI Signed Objects

  This section provides rules a CA MUST use when it reissues
  subordinate certificates and RPKI signed objects [RFC6488] as part of
  the key rollover process.  Note that CRLs and manifests are not
  reissued, per se.  They are generated for each CA instance.  A
  manifest catalogues the contents of a publication point relative to a
  CA instance.  A CRL lists revoked certificates relative to a CA
  instance.  Key rollover processing for CRLs and manifests is
  described above, in Section 3.

4.1.  CA Certificates

  When a CA, as part of the key rollover process, reissues a CA
  certificate, it copies all of the field and extension values from the
  old certificate into the new certificate.  The only exceptions to
  this rule are that the notBefore value MAY be set to the current date
  and time, and the certificate serial number MAY change.  Because the
  reissued CA certificate is issued by a different CA instance, it is
  not a requirement that the certificate serial number change in the
  reissued certificate.  Nonetheless, the CA MUST ensure that each
  certificate issued under a specific CA instance (a distinct name and
  key) contains a unique serial number.

4.2.  RPKI Signed Objects

  An RPKI signed object is a Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) signed-
  data object, containing an EE certificate and a payload (content)
  [RFC6488].  When a key rollover occurs, the EE certificate for the
  RPKI signed object MUST be reissued, under the key of the NEW CA.  A
  CA MAY choose to treat this EE certificate the same way that it deals
  with CA certificates, i.e., to copy over all fields and extensions,
  and MAY change only the notBefore date and the serial number.  If the
  CA adopts this approach, then the new EE certificate is inserted into
  the CMS wrapper, but the signed context remains the same.  (If the
  signing time or binary signing time values in the CMS wrapper are
  non-null, they MAY be updated to reflect the current time.)
  Alternatively, the CA MAY elect to generate a new key pair for this
  EE certificate.  If it does so, the object content MUST be resigned
  under the private key corresponding to the EE certificate.  In this
  case, the EE certificate MUST contain a new public key and a new
  notBefore value, and it MAY contain a new notAfter value, but all
  other field and extension values, other than those relating to the



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  digital signature and its associated certificate validation path,
  remain unchanged.  If the signing time or binary signing time values
  in the CMS wrapper are non-null, they MAY be updated to reflect the
  current time.

  As noted in Sections 2.1.6.4.3 and 2.1.6.4.4 of [RFC6488], the
  presence or absence of the signing-time and/or the binary-signing-
  time attribute MUST NOT affect the validity of the RPKI signed
  object.

5.  Security Considerations

  No key should be used forever.  The longer a key is in use, the
  greater the probability that it will have been compromised through
  carelessness, accident, espionage, or cryptanalysis.  Infrequent key
  rollover increases the risk that the rollover procedures will not be
  followed to the appropriate level of precision, increasing the risk
  of operational failure of some form in the key rollover process.
  Regular scheduling of key rollover is generally considered to be a
  part of a prudent key management practice.  However, key rollover
  does impose additional operational burdens on both the CA and the
  population of RPs.

  These considerations imply that in choosing lifetimes for the keys it
  manages, a CA should balance security and operational impact (on
  RPs).  A CA should perform key rollover at regularly scheduled
  intervals.  These intervals should be frequent enough to minimize the
  risks associated with key compromise (noted above) and to maintain
  local operational proficiency with respect to the key rollover
  process.  However, key lifetimes should be sufficiently long so that
  the (system-wide) load associated with key rollover events (across
  the entire RPKI) does not impose an excessive burden upon the
  population of RPs.  RPs are encouraged to maintain an accurate local
  cache of the current state of the RPKI, which implies frequent
  queries to the RPKI repository system to detect changes.  When a CA
  rekeys, it changes many signed objects, thus impacting all RPs.

6.  Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to acknowledge the review comments of Tim
  Bruijnzeels and Sean Turner in preparing this document.










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7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC3779]  Lynn, C., Kent, S., and K. Seo, "X.509 Extensions for IP
             Addresses and AS Identifiers", RFC 3779, June 2004.

  [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
             Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
             Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
             (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, May 2008.

  [RFC6480]  Lepinski, M. and S. Kent, "An Infrastructure to Support
             Secure Internet Routing", RFC 6480, February 2012.

  [RFC6481]  Huston, G., Loomans, R., and G. Michaelson, "A Profile for
             Resource Certificate Repository Structure", RFC 6481,
             February 2012.

  [RFC6487]  Huston, G., Michaelson, G., and R. Loomans, "A Profile for
             X.509 PKIX Resource Certificates", RFC 6487, February
             2012.

7.2.  Informative References

  [RFC6488]  Lepinski, M., Chi, A., and S. Kent, "Signed Object
             Template for the Resource Public Key Infrastructure
             (RPKI)", RFC 6488, February 2012.




















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Authors' Addresses

  Geoff Huston
  APNIC

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.apnic.net


  George Michaelson
  APNIC

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.apnic.net


  Stephen Kent
  BBN Technologies
  10 Moulton St.
  Cambridge, MA  02138
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]




























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