Network Working Group                                           S. Dusse
Request for Comments: 2312                             RSA Data Security
Category: Informational                                       P. Hoffman
                                               Internet Mail Consortium
                                                            B. Ramsdell
                                                              Worldtalk
                                                           J. Weinstein
                                                               Netscape
                                                             March 1998


                S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

1. Overview

  S/MIME (Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions), described in
  [SMIME-MSG], provides a method to send and receive secure MIME
  messages. In order to validate the keys of a message sent to it, an
  S/MIME agent needs to certify that the key is valid. This memo
  describes the mechanisms S/MIME uses to create and validate keys
  using certificates.

  This specification is compatible with PKCS #7 in that it uses the
  data types defined by PKCS #7. It also inherits all the varieties of
  architectures for certificate-based key management supported by PKCS
  #7.  Note that the method S/MIME messages make certificate requests
  is defined in [SMIME-MSG].

  In order to handle S/MIME certificates, an agent has to follow
  specifications in this memo, as well as some of the specifications
  listed in the following documents:

   - "PKCS #1: RSA Encryption", [PKCS-1].
   - "PKCS #7: Cryptographic Message Syntax", [PKCS-7]
   - "PKCS #10: Certification Request Syntax", [PKCS-10].






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  Please note: The information in this document is historical material
  being published for the public record. It is not an IETF standard.
  The use of the word "standard" in this document indicates a standard
  for adopters of S/MIME version 2, not an IETF standard.

1.1 Definitions

  For the purposes of this memo, the following definitions apply.

  ASN.1: Abstract Syntax Notation One, as defined in CCITT X.208.

  BER: Basic Encoding Rules for ASN.1, as defined in CCITT X.209.

  Certificate: A type that binds an entity's distinguished name to a
  public key with a digital signature. This type is defined in CCITT
  X.509 [X.509].  This type also contains the distinguished name of the
  certificate issuer (the signer), an issuer-specific serial number,
  the issuer's signature algorithm identifier, and a validity period.

  Certificate Revocation List (CRL): A type that contains information
  about certificates whose validity an issuer has prematurely revoked.
  The information consists of an issuer name, the time of issue, the
  next scheduled time of issue, and a list of certificate serial
  numbers and their associated revocation times. The CRL is signed by
  the issuer. The type intended by this specification is the one
  defined in [KEYM].

  DER: Distinguished Encoding Rules for ASN.1, as defined in CCITT
  X.509.

1.2 Compatibility with Prior Practice of S/MIME

  Appendix C contains important information about how S/MIME agents
  following this specification should act in order to have the greatest
  interoperability with earlier implementations of S/MIME.

1.3 Terminology

  Throughout this memo, the terms MUST, MUST NOT, SHOULD, and SHOULD
  NOT are used in capital letters. This conforms to the definitions in
  [MUSTSHOULD].  [MUSTSHOULD] defines the use of these key words to
  help make the intent of standards track documents as clear as
  possible. The same key words are used in this document to help
  implementors achieve interoperability.







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2. PKCS #7 Options

  The PKCS #7 message format allows for a wide variety of options in
  content and algorithm support. This section puts forth a number of
  support requirements and recommendations in order to achieve a base
  level of interoperability among all S/MIME implementations. Most of
  the PKCS #7 format for S/MIME messages is defined in [SMIME-MSG].

2.1 CertificateRevocationLists

  Receiving agents MUST support for the Certificate Revocation List
  (CRL) format defined in [KEYM]. If sending agents include CRLs in
  outgoing messages, the CRL format defined in [KEYM] MUST be used.

  All agents MUST validate CRLs and check certificates against CRLs, if
  available, in accordance with [KEYM]. All agents SHOULD check the
  nextUpdate field in the CRL against the current time. If the current
  time is later than the nextUpdate time, the action that the agent
  takes is a local decision. For instance, it could warn a human user,
  it could retrieve a new CRL if able, and so on.

  Receiving agents MUST recognize CRLs in received S/MIME messages.

  Clients MUST use revocation information included as a CRL in an
  S/MIME message when verifying the signature and certificate path
  validity in that message.  Clients SHOULD store CRLs received in
  messages for use in processing later messages.

  Clients MUST handle multiple valid Certificate Authority (CA)
  certificates containing the same subject name and the same public
  keys but with overlapping validity intervals.

2.2 ExtendedCertificateOrCertificate

  Receiving agents MUST support X.509 v1 and X.509 v3 certificates. See
  [KEYM] for details about the profile for certificate formats. End
  entity certificates MUST include an Internet mail address, as
  described in section 3.1.

2.2.1 Historical Note About PKCS #7 Certificates

  The PKCS #7 message format supports a choice of certificate two
  formats for public key content types: X.509 and PKCS #6 Extended
  Certificates. The PKCS #6 format is not in widespread use. In
  addition, proposed revisions of X.509 certificates address much of
  the same functionality and flexibility as was intended in the PKCS
  #6. Thus, sending and receiving agents MUST NOT use PKCS #6 extended
  certificates.



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2.3 ExtendedCertificateAndCertificates

  Receiving agents MUST be able to handle an arbitrary number of
  certificates of arbitrary relationship to the message sender and to
  each other in arbitrary order. In many cases, the certificates
  included in a signed message may represent a chain of certification
  from the sender to a particular root. There may be, however,
  situations where the certificates in a signed message may be
  unrelated and included for convenience.

  Sending agents SHOULD include any certificates for the user's public
  key(s) and associated issuer certificates. This increases the
  likelihood that the intended recipient can establish trust in the
  originator's public key(s).  This is especially important when
  sending a message to recipients that may not have access to the
  sender's public key through any other means or when sending a signed
  message to a new recipient. The inclusion of certificates in outgoing
  messages can be omitted if S/MIME objects are sent within a group of
  correspondents that has established access to each other's
  certificates by some other means such as a shared directory or manual
  certificate distribution. Receiving S/MIME agents SHOULD be able to
  handle messages without certificates using a database or directory
  lookup scheme.

  A sending agent SHOULD include at least one chain of certificates up
  to, but not including, a Certificate Authority (CA) that it believes
  that the recipient may trust as authoritative. A receiving agent
  SHOULD be able to handle an arbitrarily large number of certificates
  and chains.

  Clients MAY send CA certificates, that is, certificates that are
  self-signed and can be considered the "root" of other chains. Note
  that receiving agents SHOULD NOT simply trust any self-signed
  certificates as valid CAs, but SHOULD use some other mechanism to
  determine if this is a CA that should be trusted.

  Receiving agents MUST support chaining based on the distinguished
  name fields. Other methods of building certificate chains may be
  supported but are not currently recommended.












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3. Distinguished Names in Certificates

3.1 Using Distinguished Names for Internet Mail

  The format of an X.509 certificate includes fields for the subject
  name and issuer name. The subject name identifies the owner of a
  particular public key/private key pair while the issuer name is meant
  to identify the entity that "certified" the subject (that is, who
  signed the subject's certificate). The subject name and issuer name
  are defined by X.509 as Distinguished Names.

  Distinguished Names are defined by a CCITT standard X.501 [X.501]. A
  Distinguished Name is broken into one or more Relative Distinguished
  Names.  Each Relative Distinguished Name is comprised of one or more
  Attribute-Value Assertions. Each Attribute-Value Assertion consists
  of a Attribute Identifier and its corresponding value information,
  such as CountryName=US. Distinguished Names were intended to identify
  entities in the X.500 directory tree [X.500]. Each Relative
  Distinguished Name can be thought of as a node in the tree which is
  described by some collection of Attribute-Value Assertions. The
  entire Distinguished Name is some collection of nodes in the tree
  that traverse a path from the root of the tree to some end node which
  represents a particular entity.

  The goal of the directory was to provide an infrastructure to
  uniquely name every communications entity everywhere. However,
  adoption of a global X.500 directory infrastructure has been slower
  than expected. Consequently, there is no requirement for X.500
  directory service provision in the S/MIME environment, although such
  provision would almost undoubtedly be of great value in facilitating
  key management for S/MIME.

  The use of Distinguished Names in accordance with the X.500 directory
  is not very widespread. By contrast, Internet mail addresses, as
  described in RFC 822 [RFC-822], are used almost exclusively in the
  Internet environment to identify originators and recipients of
  messages. However, Internet mail addresses bear no resemblance to
  X.500 Distinguished Names (except, perhaps, that they are both
  hierarchical in nature). Some method is needed to map Internet mail
  addresses to entities that hold public keys. Some people have











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  suggested that the X.509 certificate format should be abandoned in
  favor of other binding mechanisms. Instead, S/MIME keeps the X.509
  certificate and Distinguished Name mechanisms while tailoring the
  content of the naming information to suit the Internet mail
  environment.

  End-entity certificates MUST contain an Internet mail address as
  described in [RFC-822]. The address must be an "addr-spec" as defined
  in Section 6.1 of that specification.

  Receiving agents MUST recognize email addresses in the subjectAltName
  field. Receiving agents MUST recognize email addresses in the
  Distinguished Name field.

  Sending agents SHOULD make the address in the From header in a mail
  message match an Internet mail address in the signer's certificate.
  Receiving agents MUST check that the address in the From header of a
  mail message matches an Internet mail address in the signer's
  certificate. A receiving agent MUST provide some explicit alternate
  processing of the message if this comparison fails, which may be to
  reject the message.

3.2 Required Name Attributes

  Receiving agents MUST support parsing of zero, one, or more instances
  of each of the following set of name attributes within the
  Distinguished Names in certificates.

  Sending agents MUST include the Internet mail address during
  Distinguished Name creation. Guidelines for the inclusion, omission,
  and ordering of the remaining name attributes during the creation of
  a distinguished name will most likely be dictated by the policies
  associated with the certification service which will certify the
  corresponding name and public key.

  CountryName
  StateOrProvinceName
  Locality
  CommonName
  Title
  Organization
  OrganizationalUnit
  StreetAddress
  PostalCode
  PhoneNumber
  EmailAddress





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  All attributes other than EmailAddress are described in X.520
  [X.520].  EmailAddress is an IA5String that can have multiple
  attribute values.

4. Certificate Processing

  A receiving agent needs to provide some certificate retrieval
  mechanism in order to gain access to certificates for recipients of
  digital envelopes.  There are many ways to implement certificate
  retrieval mechanisms. X.500 directory service is an excellent example
  of a certificate retrieval-only mechanism that is compatible with
  classic X.500 Distinguished Names. The PKIX Working Group is
  investigating other mechanisms. Another method under consideration by
  the IETF is to provide certificate retrieval services as part of the
  existing Domain Name System (DNS). Until such mechanisms are widely
  used, their utility may be limited by the small number of
  correspondent's certificates that can be retrieved. At a minimum, for
  initial S/MIME deployment, a user agent could automatically generate
  a message to an intended recipient requesting that recipient's
  certificate in a signed return message.

  Receiving and sending agents SHOULD also provide a mechanism to allow
  a user to "store and protect" certificates for correspondents in such
  a way so as to guarantee their later retrieval. In many environments,
  it may be desirable to link the certificate retrieval/storage
  mechanisms together in some sort of certificate database. In its
  simplest form, a certificate database would be local to a particular
  user and would function in a similar way as a "address book" that
  stores a user's frequent correspondents. In this way, the certificate
  retrieval mechanism would be limited to the certificates that a user
  has stored (presumably from incoming messages).  A comprehensive
  certificate retrieval/storage solution may combine two or more
  mechanisms to allow the greatest flexibility and utility to the user.
  For instance, a secure Internet mail agent may resort to checking a
  centralized certificate retrieval mechanism for a certificate if it
  can not be found in a user's local certificate storage/retrieval
  database.

  Receiving and sending agents SHOULD provide a mechanism for the
  import and export of certificates, using a PKCS #7 certs-only
  message. This allows for import and export of full certificate chains
  as opposed to just a single certificate. This is described in
  [SMIME-MSG].








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4.1 Certificate Revocation Lists

  A receiving agent SHOULD have access to some certificate-revocation
  list (CRL) retrieval mechanism in order to gain access to
  certificate-revocation information when validating certificate
  chains. A receiving or sending agent SHOULD also provide a mechanism
  to allow a user to store incoming certificate-revocation information
  for correspondents in such a way so as to guarantee its later
  retrieval. However, it is always better to get the latest information
  from the CA than to get information stored away from incoming
  messages.

  Receiving and sending agents SHOULD retrieve and utilize CRL
  information every time a certificate is verified as part of a
  certificate chain validation even if the certificate was already
  verified in the past.  However, in many instances (such as off-line
  verification) access to the latest CRL information may be difficult
  or impossible. The use of CRL information, therefore, may be dictated
  by the value of the information that is protected. The value of the
  CRL information in a particular context is beyond the scope of this
  memo but may be governed by the policies associated with particular
  certificate hierarchies.

4.2 Certificate Chain Validation

  In creating a user agent for secure messaging, certificate, CRL, and
  certificate chain validation SHOULD be highly automated while still
  acting in the best interests of the user. Certificate, CRL, and chain
  validation MUST be performed when validating a correspondent's public
  key. This is necessary when a) verifying a signature from a
  correspondent and, b) creating a digital envelope with the
  correspondent as the intended recipient.

  Certificates and CRLs are made available to the chain validation
  procedure in two ways: a) incoming messages, and b) certificate and
  CRL retrieval mechanisms. Certificates and CRLs in incoming messages
  are not required to be in any particular order nor are they required
  to be in any way related to the sender or recipient of the message
  (although in most cases they will be related to the sender). Incoming
  certificates and CRLs SHOULD be cached for use in chain validation
  and optionally stored for later use. This temporary certificate and
  CRL cache SHOULD be used to augment any other certificate and CRL
  retrieval mechanisms for chain validation on incoming signed
  messages.







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4.3 Certificate and CRL Signing Algorithms

  Certificates and Certificate-Revocation Lists (CRLs) are signed by
  the certificate issuer. A receiving agent MUST be capable of
  verifying the signatures on certificates andCRLs made with
  md5WithRSAEncryption and sha-1WithRSAEncryption signature algorithms
  with key sizes from 512 bits to 2048 bits described in [SMIME-MSG]. A
  receiving agent SHOULD be capable of verifying the signatures on
  certificates and CRLs made with the md2WithRSAEncryption signature
  algorithm with key sizes from 512 bits to 2048 bits.

4.4 X.509 Version 3 Certificate Extensions

  The X.509 v3 standard describes an extensible framework in which the
  basic certificate information can be extended and how such extensions
  can be used to control the process of issuing and validating
  certificates. The PKIX Working Group has ongoing efforts to identify
  and create extensions which have value in particular certification
  environments. As such, there is still a fair amount of profiling work
  to be done before there is widespread agreement on which v3
  extensions will be used. Further, there are active efforts underway
  to issue X.509 v3 certificates for business purposes. This memo
  identifies the minumum required set of certificate extensions which
  have the greatest value in the S/MIME environment. The
  basicConstraints, and keyUsage extensions are defined in [X.509].

  Sending and receiving agents MUST correctly handle the v3 Basic
  Constraints Certificate Extension, the Key Usage Certificate
  Extension, authorityKeyID, subjectKeyID, and the subjectAltNames when
  they appear in end-user certificates. Some mechanism SHOULD exist to
  handle the defined v3 certificate extensions when they appear in
  intermediate or CA certificates.

  Certificates issued for the S/MIME environment SHOULD NOT contain any
  critical extensions other than those listed here. These extensions
  SHOULD be marked as non-critical unless the proper handling of the
  extension is deemed critical to the correct interpretation of the
  associated certificate. Other extensions may be included, but those
  extensions SHOULD NOT be marked as critical.

4.4.1 Basic Constraints Certificate Extension

  The basic constraints extension serves to delimit the role and
  position of an issuing authority or end-user certificate plays in a
  chain of certificates.






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  For example, certificates issued to CAs and subordinate CAs contain a
  basic constraint extension that identifies them as issuing authority
  certificates. End-user subscriber certificates contain an extension
  that constrains the certificate from being an issuing authority
  certificate.

  Certificates SHOULD contain a basicContstraints extension.

4.4.2 Key Usage Certificate Extension

  The key usage extension serves to limit the technical purposes for
  which a public key listed in a valid certificate may be used. Issuing
  authority certificates may contain a key usage extension that
  restricts the key to signing certificates, certificate revocation
  lists and other data.

  For example, a certification authority may create subordinate issuer
  certificates which contain a keyUsage extension which specifies that
  the corresponding public key can be used to sign end user certs and
  sign CRLs.

5. Generating Keys and Certification Requests

5.1 Binding Names and Keys

  An S/MIME agent or some related administrative utility or function
  MUST be capable of generating a certification request given a user's
  public key and associated name information. In most cases, the user's
  public key/private key pair will be generated simultaneously.
  However, there are cases where the keying information may be
  generated by an external process (such as when a key pair is
  generated on a cryptographic token or by a "key recovery" service).

  There SHOULD NOT be multiple valid (that is, non-expired and non-
  revoked) certificates for the same key pair bound to different
  Distinguished Names.  Otherwise, a security flaw exists where an
  attacker can substitute one valid certificate for another in such a
  way that can not be detected by a message recipient. If a users
  wishes to change their name (or create an alternate name), the user
  agent SHOULD generate a new key pair. If the user wishes to reuse an
  existing key pair with a new or alternate name, the user SHOULD first
  have any valid certificates for the existing public key revoked.

  In general, it is possible for a user to request certification for
  the same name and different public key from the same or different
  certification authorities.  This is acceptable both for end-entity
  and issuer certificates and can be useful in supporting a change of
  issuer keys in a smooth fashion.



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  CAs that re-use their own name with distinct keys MUST include the
  AuthorityKeyIdentifier extension in certificates that they issue, and
  MUST have the SubjectKeyIdentifier extension in their own
  certificate. CAs SHOULD use these extensions uniformly.

  Clients SHOULD handle multiple valid CA certificates that certify
  different public keys but contain the same subject name (in this
  case, that CA's name).

  When selecting an appropriate issuer's certificate to use to verify a
  given certificate, clients SHOULD process the AuthorityKeyIdentifier
  and SubjectKeyIdentifier extensions.

  5.2 Using PKCS #10 for Certification Requests

  PKCS #10 is a flexible and extensible message format for representing
  the results of cryptographic operations on some data. The choice of
  naming information is largely dictated by the policies and procedures
  associated with the intended certification service.

  In addition to key and naming information, the PKCS #10 format
  supports the inclusion of optional attributes, signed by the entity
  requesting certification. This allows for information to be conveyed
  in a certification request which may be useful to the request
  process, but not necessarily part of the Distinguished Name being
  certified.

  Receiving agents MUST support the identification of an RSA key with
  the rsa defined in X.509 and the rsaEncryption OID. Certification
  authorities MUST support sha-1WithRSAEncryption and
  md5WithRSAEncryption and SHOULD support MD2WithRSAEncryption for
  verification of signatures on certificate requests as described in
  [SMIME-MSG].

  For the creation and submission of certification-requests, RSA keys
  SHOULD be identified with the rsaEncryption OID and signed with the
  sha-1WithRSAEncryption signature algorithm.  Certification-requests
  MUST NOT be signed with the md2WithRSAEncryption signature algorithm.

  Certification requests MUST include a valid Internet mail address,
  either as part of the certificate (as described in 3.2) or as part of
  the PKCS #10 attribute list. Certification authorities MUST check
  that the address in the "From:" header matches either of these
  addresses. CAs SHOULD allow the CA operator to configure processing
  of messages whose addresses do not match.






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  Certification authorities SHOULD support parsing of zero or one
  instance of each of the following set of certification-request
  attributes on incoming messages. Attributes that a particular
  implementation does not support may generate a warning message to the
  requestor, or may be silently ignored.  Inclusion of the following
  attributes during the creation and submission of a certification-
  request will most likely be dictated by the policies associated with
  the certification service which will certify the corresponding name
  and public key.

  postalAddress
  challengePassword
  unstructuredAddress

  postalAddress is described in [X.520].

5.2.1 Challenge Password

  The challenge-password attribute type specifies a password by which
  an entity may request certificate revocation. The interpretation of
  the password is intended to be specified by the issuer of the
  certificate; no particular interpretation is required. The
  challenge-password attribute type is intended for PKCS #10
  certification requests.

Challenge-password attribute values have ASN.1 type ChallengePassword:

ChallengePassword ::= CHOICE {
 PrintableString, T61String }

A challenge-password attribute must have a single attribute value.

It is expected that if UCS becomes an ASN.1 type
(e.g., UNIVERSAL STRING),
ChallengePassword will become a CHOICE type:

ChallengePassword ::= CHOICE {
   PrintableString, T61String, UNIVERSAL STRING }

5.2.2 Unstructured Address

  The unstructured-address attribute type specifies the address or
  addresses of the subject of a certificate as an unstructured ASCII or
  T.61 string.  The interpretation of the addresses is intended to be
  specified by the issuer of the certificate; no particular
  interpretation is required. A likely interpretation is as an
  alternative to the X.520 postalAddress attribute type. The
  unstructured-address attribute type is intended for PKCS #10



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  certification requests.

  Unstructured-address attribute values have
  ASN.1 type UnstructuredAddress:

  UnstructuredAddress ::= CHOICE {
    PrintableString, T61String }

  An unstructured-address attribute can have multiple attribute values.

  Note: T.61's newline character (hexadecimal code 0d) is recommended
  as a line separator in multi-line addresses.

  It is expected that if UCS becomes an ASN.1 type (e.g., UNIVERSAL
  STRING), UnstructuredAddress will become a CHOICE type:

  UnstructuredAddress ::= CHOICE {
      PrintableString, T61String, UNIVERSAL STRING }

5.3 Fulfilling a Certification Request

  Certification authorities SHOULD use the sha-1WithRSAEncryption
  signature algorithms when signing certificates.

5.4 Using PKCS #7 for Fulfilled Certificate Response

  [PKCS-7] supports a degenerate case of the SignedData content type
  where there are no signers on the content (and hence, the content
  value is "irrelevant"). This degenerate case is used to convey
  certificate and CRL information. Certification authorities MUST use
  this format for returning certificate information resulting from the
  successful fulfillment of a certification request. At a minimum, the
  fulfilled certificate response MUST include the actual subject
  certificate (corresponding to the information in the certification
  request). The response SHOULD include other certificates which link
  the issuer to higher level certification authorities and
  corresponding certificate-revocation lists. Unrelated certificates
  and revocation information is also acceptable.

  Receiving agents MUST parse this degenerate PKCS #7 message type and
  handle the certificates and CRLs according to the requirements and
  recommendations in Section 4.









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6. Security Considerations

  All of the security issues faced by any cryptographic application
  must be faced by a S/MIME agent. Among these issues are protecting
  the user's private key, preventing various attacks, and helping the
  user avoid mistakes such as inadvertently encrypting a message for
  the wrong recipient. The entire list of security considerations is
  beyond the scope of this document, but some significant concerns are
  listed here.

  When processing certificates, there are many situations where the
  processing might fail. Because the processing may be done by a user
  agent, a security gateway, or other program, there is no single way
  to handle such failures. Just because the methods to handle the
  failures has not been listed, however, the reader should not assume
  that they are not important.  The opposite is true: if a certificate
  is not provably valid and associated with the message, the processing
  software should take immediate and noticable steps to inform the end
  user about it.

  Some of the many places where signature and certificate checking
  might fail include:

  - no Internet mail addresses in a certificate match the sender of a
    message
  - no certificate chain leads to a trusted CA
  - no ability to check the CRL for a certificate
  - an invalid CRL was received
  - the CRL being checked is expired
  - the certificate is expired
  - the certificate has been revoked

  There are certainly other instances where a certificate may be
  invalid, and it is the responsibility of the processing software to
  check them all thoroughly, and to decide what to do if the check
  fails.















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RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


A. Object Identifiers and Syntax

  Sections A.1 through A.4 are adopted from [SMIME-MSG].

A.5 Name Attributes

emailAddress OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

    {iso(1) member-body(2) US(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) 1}

CountryName OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 6}

StateOrProvinceName OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 8}

locality OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 7}

CommonName OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 3}

Title OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 12}

Organization OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 10}

OrganizationalUnit OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 11}

StreetAddress OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 9}

Postal Code OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 17}

Phone Number OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 20}

A.6 Certification Request Attributes

postalAddress OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 16}

challengePassword OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {iso(1) member-body(2) US(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) 7}




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RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


unstructuredAddress OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {iso(1) member-body(2) US(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) 8}

A.7 X.509 V3 Certificate Extensions

basicConstraints OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) 29 19 }

The ASN.1 definition of basicConstraints certificate extension is:

basicConstraints basicConstraints EXTENSION ::= {
    SYNTAX  BasicConstraintsSyntax
    IDENTIFIED BY { id-ce 19 } }

BasicConstraintsSyntax ::= SEQUENCE {
    cA                 BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE,
    pathLenConstraint  INTEGER (0..MAX) OPTIONAL }

keyUsage OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
    {joint-iso-ccitt(2) ds(5) 29 15 }

The ASN.1 definition of keyUsage certificate extension is:

keyUsage EXTENSION ::= {
    SYNTAX  KeyUsage
    IDENTIFIED BY { id-ce 15 }}

KeyUsage ::= BIT STRING {
    digitalSignature      (0),
    nonRepudiation        (1),
    keyEncipherment       (2),
    dataEncipherment      (3),
    keyAgreement          (4),
    keyCertSign           (5),
    cRLSign               (6)}















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RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


B. References

  [KEYM] PKIX Part 1. At the time of this writing, PKIX is a Work in
  Progress, but it is expected that there will be standards-track RFCs
  at some point in the future.

  [MUSTSHOULD] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
  Requirement Levels", BCP 1l4, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [PKCS-1] Kaliski, B., "PKCS #1: RSA Encryption Version 1.5", RFC
  2313, March 1998.

  [PKCS-7] Kaliski, B., "PKCS #7: Cryptographic Message Syntax Version
  1.5", RFC 2315, March 1998.

  [PKCS-10] Kaliski, B., "PKCS #10: Certification Request Syntax
  Version 1.5", RFC 2314, March 1998.

  [RFC-822] Crocker, D., "Standard For The Format Of ARPA Internet Text
  Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.

  [SMIME-MSG] Dusse, S., Hoffman, P., Ramsdell, R., Lundblade, L., and
  L. Repka, "S/MIME Version 2 Message Specification", RFC 2311, March
  1998.

  [X.500] ITU-T Recommendation X.500 (1997) | ISO/IEC 9594-1:1997,
  Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The
  Directory: Overview of concepts, models and services

  [X.501] ITU-T Recommendation X.501 (1997) | ISO/IEC 9594-2:1997,
  Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The
  Directory: Models

  [X.509] ITU-T Recommendation X.509 (1997) | ISO/IEC 9594-8:1997,
  Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The
  Directory: Authentication framework

  [X.520] ITU-T Recommendation X.520 (1997) | ISO/IEC 9594-6:1997,
  Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The
  Directory: Selected attribute types.











Dusse, et. al.               Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


C. Compatibility with Prior Practice in S/MIME

  S/MIME was originally developed by RSA Data Security, Inc. Many
  developers implemented S/MIME agents before this document was
  published. All S/MIME receiving agents SHOULD make every attempt to
  interoperate with these earlier implementations of S/MIME.

D. Acknowledgements

  Significant contributions to the content of this memo were made by
  many people, including David Solo, Anil Gangolli, Jeff Thompson, and
  Lisa Repka.







































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RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


E. Authors' Addresses

  Steve Dusse
  RSA Data Security, Inc.
  100 Marine Parkway, #500
  Redwood City, CA  94065  USA

  Phone: (415) 595-8782
  EMail: [email protected]


  Paul Hoffman
  Internet Mail Consortium
  127 Segre Place
  Santa Cruz, CA  95060

  Phone: (408) 426-9827
  EMail: [email protected]


  Blake Ramsdell
  Worldtalk
  13122 NE 20th St., Suite C
  Bellevue, WA 98005

  Phone: (425) 882-8861
  EMail: [email protected]


  Jeff Weinstein
  Netscape Communications Corporation
  501 East Middlefield Road
  Mountain View, CA  94043

  Phone: (415) 254-1900
  EMail: [email protected]















Dusse, et. al.               Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 2312        S/MIME Version 2 Certificate Handling         March 1998


F.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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