Network Working Group                                           J. Zsako
Request for Comments: 2726                                       BankNet
Category: Standards Track                                  December 1999


             PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document presents the proposal for a stronger authentication
  method of the updates of the RIPE database based on digital
  signatures. The proposal tries to be as general as possible as far as
  digital signing methods are concerned, however, it concentrates
  mainly on PGP, as the first method to be implemented.  The proposal
  is the result of the discussions within the RIPE DBSEC Task Force.

1. Rationale

  An increasing need has been identified for a stronger authentication
  of the database maintainer upon database updates (addition,
  modification and deletion of objects). The existing authentication
  methods have serious security problems: the MAIL-FROM has the
  drawback that a mail header is very easy to forge whereas CRYPT-PW is
  exposed to message interception, since the password is sent
  unencrypted in the update mail message.

  The goal was to implement a digital signature mechanism based on a
  widely available and deployed technology. The first choice was PGP,
  other methods may follow at a later date. PGP is presently quite
  widely used within the Internet community and is available both in
  and outside the US.

  The current aim is for an improved authentication method and nothing
  more (in particular, this paper does not try to cover authorization
  issues other than those related to authentication).




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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


2. Changes to the RIPE database

  In order to make the database as much self consistent as possible,
  the key certificates are stored in the RIPE database. For efficiency
  reasons a local keyring of public keys will also be maintained,
  however, the local keyring will only contain a copy of the key
  certificates present in the database. The synchronization of the
  database with the local keyring will be made as often as possible.
  The database objects will be created only via the current e-mail
  mechanism ([email protected]), in particular no public key
  certificate will be retrieved from a key server by the database
  software.

  The presence of the key certificates in the database will allow the
  users of the database to check the "identity" of the maintainer, in
  the sense that they can query the database for the certificate of the
  key the database software uses for authenticating the maintainer.
  This key certificate can then be checked for existing signatures and
  can possibly be compared with the key certificate obtained by other
  means for the same user (e.g. from the owner himself of from a public
  key server). Although the key certificates can be stored in the RIPE
  database with any number of signatures, since the RIPE database is
  not communicating directly with the public key servers, it is a good
  practice to add the key certificate with the minimum number of
  signatures possible (preferably with just one signature: the one of
  itself).  See also section 4. for more details.

2.1. The key-cert object

  A new object type is defined below for the purpose of storing the key
  certificates of the maintainers:

  key-cert:  [mandatory]  [single]     [primary/look-up key]
  method:    [generated]  [single]     [ ]
  owner:     [generated]  [multiple]   [ ]
  fingerpr:  [generated]  [single]     [ ]
  certif:    [mandatory]  [single]     [ ]
  remarks:   [optional]   [multiple]   [ ]
  notify:    [optional]   [multiple]   [inverse key]
  mnt-by:    [mandatory]  [multiple]   [inverse key]
  changed:   [mandatory]  [multiple]   [ ]
  source:    [mandatory]  [single]     [ ]

  The syntax and the semantics of the different attributes are
  described below.






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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


  key-cert: Is of the form PGPKEY-hhhhhhhh, where hhhhhhhh stands for
     for the hex representation of the four bytes ID of the PGP key.
     The key certificate detailed in the certif attribute belongs to
     the PGP key with the id hhhhhhhh. The reason for having PGPKEY- as
     a prefix is to allow for other types of key certificates at a
     later date, and at the same time to be able to clearly
     differentiate at query time between a person query and a key
     certificate query.  At the time of the creation/modification of
     the key-cert object, the database software checks whether the key
     certificate in the certif attribute indeed belongs to the PGP id
     specified here. The creation/modification is authorized only upon
     the match of these two ids.

  method:  Line containing the name of the signing method.  This is the
     name of the digital signature method. The present certificate
     belongs to a key for digitally signing messages using the
     specified method.  The method attribute is generated automatically
     by the database software upon creation of the key-cert object.
     Any method attribute present in the object at the time of the
     submission for creation is ignored.  The method has to be
     consistent with both the prefix of the id in the key-cert
     attribute and with the certificate contained in the certif
     attributes. If these latter two (i.e. prefix and certificate) are
     not consistent, the key-cert object creation is refused. For the
     PGP method this will be the string "PGP" (without the quotes).

  owner:  Line containing a description of the owner of the key.  For a
     PGP key, the owners are the user ids associated with the key.  For
     each user id present in the key certificate, an owner attribute is
     generated automatically by the database software upon creation of
     the key-cert object.  Any owner attribute present in the object at
     the time of the submission for creation is ignored.

  fingerpr:  A given number of hex encoded bytes, separated for better
     readability by spaces.  It represents the fingerprint of the key
     associated with the present certificate.  This is also a field
     generated upon creation of the object instance.  Any fingerpr
     attribute submitted to the robot is ignored.  The reason for
     having this attribute (and the owner attribute) is to allow for an
     easy check of the key certificate upon a query of the database.
     The querier gets the owner and fingerprint information without
     having to add the certificate to his/her own public keyring.
     Also, since these two attributes are _generated_ by the database
     software from the certificate, one can trust them (as much as one
     can trust the database itself).






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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


  certif:  Line containing a line of the ASCII armoured key
     certificate.  The certif attribute lines contain the key
     certificate.  In the case of PGP, they also contain the delimiting
     lines (BEGIN/END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK).  Obviously the order of
     the lines is essential, therefore the certif attribute lines are
     presented at query time in the same order as they have been
     submitted at creation.  A database client application could
     contain a script that strips the certif attribute lines (returned
     as a result of a query) from the leading "certif:" string and the
     following white spaces and import the remainder in the local
     keyring.

  mnt-by:  The usual syntax the usual semantics this attribute is
     _mandatory_ for this object. Therefore, the existence of a mntner
     object is a prerequisite for the creation of a key-cert object.
     The mntner referenced in the mnt-by attribute may not have the
     auth attribute set to NONE.

  remarks:,
  notify:,
  changed:,
  source:  the usual syntax and semantics.

  In the case of PGP, when a key-cert object is created, the associated
  key is also added to a local keyring of public keys. When a key-cert
  object is deleted, the corresponding public key is deleted from the
  local keyring as well. Whenever a key-cert object is modified, the
  key is deleted from the local keyring and the key associated with the
  new certificate is added to the keyring (obviously this is performed
  only when the database update is authorized, in particular if the new
  key certificate does belong to the id specified in the attribute
  key-cert, see above).

2.2. Changes to the mntner object

  The only change is that there is a new possible value for the auth
  attribute.  This value is of the form PGPKEY-<id>, where <id> is the
  hex representation of the four bytes id of the PGP public key used
  for authentication.

  The semantics of this new value is that the PGP key associated with
  the key certificate stored in the key-cert object identified by
  PGPKEY-id is used to check the signature of any
  creation/modification/deletion message sent to [email protected]
  affecting an object maintained by this mntner.






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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


  Just as with other values, the auth attribute can be multiple. It
  does not make much sense to have two auth attributes with different
  methods (e.g.  PGPKEY-<id> and NONE :)) ), just as it didn't earlier
  either.

  If there are several auth methods with a PGPKEY-<id> value, the
  semantics is the already known one, namely that _either_ signature is
  accepted.

3. The PGP signed creation/modification/deletion

  The whole message has to be signed. This means, that the database
  software first checks whether the message is a PGP signed message. If
  it is, it checks for a valid signature and associates this signature
  with the objects submitted in the message. A message may contain only
  one PGP signature.

  If an object present in a message has a mnt-by attribute, and the
  respective mntner has auth attribute(s) with PGPKEY-<id> value, the
  database software checks whether the object has a signature
  associated with it (i.e. whether the message being processed had been
  signed) and whether the type of the signature (PGP in this
  implementation phase) and the id of the key used for signing the
  message is the same as the one in (one of) the auth attribute(s). The
  creation/modification/deletion of the object is performed only if
  this authentication succeeds.

  This approach allows for a simplification of the message parsing
  process.  A different approach would be necessary if one would sign
  the _objects_, rather then the update messages. In case the objects
  would be signed, the parser would have to identify which objects were
  signed, check the signature(s) on each object individually and
  permit/refuse the update at an object level, depending on (amongst
  others) whether the signature is valid and whether it belongs to (one
  of) the maintainer(s). This approach would allow for mixing in the
  same e-mail message objects signed by different maintainers (which
  would probably not be typical), and it would also allow for storing
  the signature in the database (in order to allow for the verification
  of the signature at query time). This latter (i.e. storing the
  signatures in the database) is beyond the scope of the first phase of
  the implementation. It may become a goal at a later date.

  It is recommended to check that the mailer program does not make any
  transformations on the text of the e-mail message (and possibly
  configure it not to do any). Such common transformations are line-
  wrapping after a given number of characters, transforming of tabs in
  spaces, etc. Also check that you only use ASCII characters in the
  message.



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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


4. Requirements the PGP key certificates must meet

  There is no limitation imposed with respect to the version of the PGP
  software that is/was used for the creation of the key. Key of both
  version 2.x and 5.0 are supported, although the keys generated with
  version 5.0 are recommended.

  The key certificates submitted for creating a key-cert object must
  contain a signature of the key itself. Although the certificate may
  contain other signatures as well, it is recommended to create the
  key-cert object with as few signatures as possible in the
  certificate. Anyone concerned about the trustfulness of the key
  should retrieve a copy of the key certificate from a public key
  server (or by any other appropriate means and check the signatures
  present in _that_ certificate. If such a check is performed one
  should take care to check both the key fingerprint and the key type
  and length in order to make sure the two certificates (the one
  retrieved from the RIPE database and the one retrieved from the
  public key server or collected by other means) belong to the same
  key.

  Although it is highly unlikely, it may happen that a key-cert with
  the id identical to the id of the key of a maintainer already exists
  in the RIPE database.  In case this latter key had been used for a
  while and it had been registered at public key servers for some time,
  the given person should contact the RIPE NCC and report this to
  [email protected]. Anyway, he/she may have to create a new key and
  register _its_ certificate into the RIPE database. Such a procedure,
  although highly unlikely to happen, should not create serious
  problems to the respective maintainer.

5. Short overview of the tasks to be performed in order to use PGP
  authentication

  You must have a mntner object in the RIPE database with auth: other
  than NONE.  The mntner object has to be created in the traditional
  way.

  You must get a certificate of your own key and prepare a key-cert
  object from it. The object has to reference in mnt-by the mntner
  mentioned above.

  Create the key-cert object in the RIPE database, by sending the
  object prepared above to [email protected]. Obviously you must pass
  the authentication checks required by the mntner object (i.e.  mail
  from a predefined address or send the correct password).





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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


  Change the mntner object to have the auth: attribute value of
  PGPKEY-<id>, where <id> is the hex id of your PGP key.

  Check all objects maintained by the given mntner (preferably with the
  command This is the only way to benefit from the stronger
  authentication method in order to assign more trustfulness to the
  database. Remember that you are the only person who can check for and
  correct possible inconsistencies.

  From now on always sign the (whole) update messages that refer to
  objects maintained by you, with the key you submitted to the RIPE
  database.







































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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


6. Example of objects using the new feature

  mntner:      AS3244-MNT
  descr:       BankNet, Budapest HU
  descr:       Eastern European Internet Provider via own VSAT network
  admin-c:     JZ38
  tech-c:      JZ38
  tech-c:      IR2-RIPE
  upd-to:      [email protected]
  mnt-nfy:     [email protected]
  auth:        PGPKEY-23F5CE35
  remarks:     This is the maintainer of all BankNet related objects
  notify:      [email protected]
  mnt-by:      AS3244-MNT
  changed:     [email protected] 19980525
  source:      RIPE

  key-cert: PGPKEY-23F5CE35
  method:   PGP
  owner:    Janos Zsako <[email protected]>
  fingerpr: B5 D0 96 D0 D0 D3 2B B2  B8 C2 5D 22 D4 F5 78 92
  certif: -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
   Version: 2.6.2i
  +
   mQCNAzCqKdIAAAEEAPMSQtBNFFuTS0duoUiqnPHm05dxrI76rrOGwx+OU5tzGavx
   cm2iCInNtikeKjlIMD7FiCH1J8PWdZivpwhzuGeeMimT8ZmNn4z3bb6ELRyiZOvs
   4nfxVlh+kKKD9JjBfy8DnuMs5sT0jw4FEt/PYogJinFdndzywXHzGHEj9c41AAUR
   tB9KYW5vcyBac2FrbyA8enNha29AYmFua25ldC5uZXQ+iQCVAwUQMjkx2XHzGHEj
   9c41AQEuagP/dCIBJP+R16Y70yH75kraRzXY5rnsHmT0Jknrc/ihEEviRYdMV7X1
   osP4pmDU8tNGf0OfGrok7KDTCmygIh7/me+PKrDIj0YkAVUhBX3gBtpSkhEmkLqf
   xbhYwDn4DV3zF7f5AMsbD0UCBDyf+vpkMzgd1Pbr439iXdgwgwta50qJAHUDBRAy
   OSsrO413La462EEBAdIuAv4+Cao1wqBG7+gIm1czIb1M2cAM7Ussx6y+oL1d+HqN
   PRhx4upLVg8Eqm1w4BYpOxdZKkxumIrIvrSxUYv4NBnbwQaa0/NmBou44jqeN+y2
   xwxAEVd9BCUtT+YJ9iMzZlE=
   =w8xL
   -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
  remarks: This is an example of PGP key certificate
  mnt-by:  AS3244-MNT
  changed: [email protected] 19980525
  source:  RIPE











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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


7. Security Considerations

  This document addresses authentication of transactions for making
  additions, deletions, and updates to the routing policy information
  through strong cryptographic means.  The authorization of these
  transactions are addressed in [1].

8. Acknowledgements

  The present proposal is the result of the discussions within the RIPE
  DBSEC Task Force, which was set up at RIPE 27 in Dublin at the
  initiative of Joachim Schmitz and Wilfried Woeber. The list of
  participants who have contributed to the discussions at different
  ocasions (TF meetings and via e-mail) is (in alphabetical order):
  Cengiz Allaettinoglu, Joao Luis Silva Damas, Havard Eidnes, Chris
  Fletcher, Daniel Karrenberg, David Kessens, Jake Khuon, Craig
  Labovitz, Carl Malamud, Dave Meyer, Maldwyn Morris, Sandy Murphy,
  Mike Norris, Carol Orange, Joachim Schmitz, Tom Spindler, Don
  Stikvoort, Curtis Villamizar, Gerald Winters, Wilfried Woeber, Janos
  Zsako.

9. References

  [1]  Meyer, D., Villamizar, C., Alaettinoglu, C. and S.  Murphy,
       "Routing Policy System Security", RFC 2725, December 1999.

10. Author's Address

  Janos Zsako
  BankNet
  1121 Budapest
  Konkoly-Thege ut 29-33.
  Hungary

  Phone: +36 1 395 90 28
  Fax:   +36 1 395 90 32
  EMail: [email protected]














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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


11. Notices

  PGP is a commercial software.

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it
  has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the
  IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and
  standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11.  Copies of
  claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of
  licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to
  obtain a general license or permission for the use of such
  proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can
  be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
  rights which may cover technology that may be required to practice
  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF Executive
  Director.




























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RFC 2726      PGP Authentication for RIPE Database Updates December 1999


12.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  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.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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