6tisch Working Group M. Richardson
Internet-Draft Sandelman Software Works
Intended status: Informational B. Damm
Expires: November 1, 2018 Silver Spring Networks
April 30, 2018

6tisch Zero-Touch Secure Join protocol
draft-ietf-6tisch-dtsecurity-zerotouch-join-02

Abstract

This document describes a Zero-touch Secure Join (ZSJ) mechanism to enroll a new device (the "pledge") into a IEEE802.15.4 TSCH network using the 6tisch signaling mechanisms. The resulting device will obtain a domain specific credential that can be used with either 802.15.9 per-host pair keying protocols, or to obtain the network-wide key from a coordinator. The mechanism describe here is an augmentation to the one-touch mechanism described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security], and a constrained version of [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra].

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on November 1, 2018.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Enrollment of new nodes into LLNs present unique challenges. The constrained nodes has no user interfaces, and even if they did, configuring thousands of such nodes manually is undesireable from a human resources issue, as well as the difficulty in getting consistent results.

This document is about a standard way to introduce new nodes into a 6tisch network that does not involve any direct manipulation of the nodes themselves. This act has been called "zero-touch" provisioning, and it does not occur by chance, but requires coordination between the manufacturer of the node, the service operator running the LLN, and the installers actually taking the devices out of the shipping boxes.

This document is a constrained profile of [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra]. The above document/protocol is referred by by it's acronym: BRSKI. The pronounciation of which is "brew-ski", a common north american slang for beer with a pseudo-polish ending. This constrained protocol is called ZSJ.

This document follows the same structure as it's parent in order to emphasize the similarities, but specializes a number of things to constrained networks of constrained devices. Like [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra], the networks which are in scope for this protocol are deployed by a professional operator. The deterministic mechanisms which have been designed into 6tisch have been created to satisfy the operational needs of industrial settings where such an operator exists.

This document builds upon the "one-touch" provisioning described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security], reusing the OSCOAP Join Request mechanism when appropriate, but preceeding it with either the EDHOC key agreement protocol, or a DTLS channel. The [RFC7030] EST protocol extended in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security], has been mapped by [I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est] into CoAP.

Otherwise, this document follows BRSKI with the following high-level changes:

802.1AR Client certificates are retained, but optionally are specified by reference rather than value.

It is expected that the back-end network operator infrastructure would be able to bootstrap ANIMA BRSKI-type devices over ethernet, while also being able bootstrap 6tisch devices over 802.15.4 with few changes.

NOTE TO RFC-EDITOR: during production of this document, it was matched against [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra] section by section. This results in a few sections, such as IANA Considerations where there is no requested activity. Those sections are marked "NO ACTION, PLEASE REMOVE" and should be removed (along with this paragraph) from the final document.

1.1. Prior Bootstrapping Approaches

Constrained devices as used in industrial control systems are usually installed (or replaced) by technicians with expertise in the equipment being serviced, not in secure enrollment of devices.

Devices therefore are typically pre-configured in advance, marked for a particular factory, assembly line, or even down to the specific machine. It is not uncommon for manufacturers to have a product code (stock keeping unit -SKU) for each part, and for each customer as the part will be loaded with customer specifc security configuration. The resulting customer-specific parts are hard to inventory and spare, and should parts be delivered to the wrong customer, determining the reason for inability to configure is difficult and time consuming.

End-user actions to configure the part at the time of installation, aside from being error prone, also suffer from requiring a part that has an interface.

1.2. Terminology

In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119 [RFC2119] and indicate requirement levels for compliant STuPiD implementations.

The reader is expected to be familiar with the terms and concepts defined in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-terminology], [RFC7252], [I-D.ietf-core-object-security], and [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra]. The following terms are imported: drop ship, imprint, enrollment, pledge, join proxy, ownership voucher, join registrar/coordinator. The following terms are repeated here for readability, but this document is not authoritative for their definition:

pledge
the prospective device, which has the identity provided to at the factory. Neither the device nor the network knows if the device yet knows if this device belongs with this network.
Joined Node
the prospective device, after having completing the join process, often just called a Node.
Join Proxy (JP):
a stateless relay that provides connectivity between the pledge and the join registrar/coordinator.
Join Registrar/Coordinator (JRC):
central entity responsible for authentication and authorization of joining nodes.
Audit Token
A signed token from the manufacturer authorized signing authority indicating that the bootstrapping event has been successfully logged. This has been referred to as an "authorization token" indicating that it authorizes bootstrapping to proceed.
Ownership Voucher
A signed voucher from the vendor vouching that a specific domain "owns" the new entity as defined in [I-D.ietf-anima-voucher].
MIC
manufacturer installed certificate. An [ieee802-1AR] identity. Not to be confused with a (cryptographic) "Message Integrity Check"

1.3. Scope of solution

The solution described in this document is appropriate to enrolling between hundreds to hundreds of thousands of diverse devices into a network without any prior contact with the devices. The devices could be shipped by the manufacturer directly to the customer site without ever being seen by the operator of the network. As described in BRSKI, in the audit-mode of operation the device will be claimed by the first network that sees it. In the tracked owner mode of operation, sales channel integration provides a strong connection that the operator of the network is the legitimate owner of the device.

BRSKI describes a more general, more flexible approach for bootstrapping devices into an ISP or Enterprise network.

[I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] provides an extremely streamlined approach to enrolling from hundreds to thousands of devices into a network, provided that a unique secret key can be installed in each device.

1.3.1. Support environment

TBD

1.3.2. Constrained environments

TBD

1.3.3. Network Access Controls

TBD

1.4. Leveraging the new key infrastructure / next steps

In constrained networks, it is unlikely that an ACP be formed. This document does not preclude such a thing, but it is not mandated.

The resulting secure channel MAY be used just to distribute network-wide keys using a protocol such as [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security]. (XXX – do we need to signal this somehow?)

The resulting secure channel MAY be instead used to do an enrollment of an LDevID as in BRSKI, but the resulting certificate is used to do per-pair keying such as described by {{ieee802159}.

1.4.1. Key Distribution Process

In addition to being used for the initial enrollment process, the secure channel may be kept open (and reversed) to use for network rekeying. Such a process is out of scope of this document, please see future work such as [I-D.richardson-6tisch-minimal-rekey].

1.5. Requirements for Autonomic Network Infrastructure (ANI) devices

TBD

2. Architectural Overview

Section 2 of BRSKI has a diagram with all of the components shown together. There are no significant changes to the diagram.

The use of a circuit proxy is not mandated. Instead the IPIP mechanism described in appendix C ("IPIP Join Proxy mechanism") SHOULD be be used instead as it supports both DTLS, EDHOC and OSCOAP protocols.

The CoAP proxy mechanism MAY be implemented instead: the decision depends upon the capabilities of the Registrar and the proxy. A mechanism is included for the Registrar to announce it's capabilities (XXX)

2.1. Behavior of a Pledge

The pledge goes through a series of steps which are outlined here at a high level.

             +--------------+
             |   Factory    |
             |   default    |
             +------+-------+
                    |
             +------v-------+
             | (1) Discover |
+------------>              |
|            +------+-------+
|                   |
|            +------v-------+
|            | (2) Identity |
^------------+              |
| rejected   +------+-------+
|                   |
|            +------v-------+
|            | (3) Request  |
|            |     Join     |
|            +------+-------+
|                   |
|            +------v-------+
|            | (4) Imprint  |
^------------+              |
| Bad MASA   +------+-------+
| response          |  send Voucher Status Telemetry
|            +------v-------+
|            | (5) Enroll   |
^------------+              |
| Enroll     +------+-------+
| Failure           |
|            +------v-------+
|            | (6) Enrolled |
^------------+              |
 Factory     +--------------+
 reset

State descriptions for the pledge are as follows:

  1. Discover a communication channel to a Registrar. This is done by listening for beacons as described by [I-D.richardson-anima-6join-discovery]
  2. Identify itself. This is done by presenting an X.509 IDevID credential to the discovered Registrar (via the Proxy) in a DTLS or EDHOC handshake. (The Registrar credentials are only provisionally accepted at this time).

    The registrar identifies itself using a raw public key, while the the pledge identifies itself to the registrar using an IDevID credential.
  3. Requests to Join the discovered Registrar. A unique nonce can be included ensuring that any responses can be associated with this particular bootstrapping attempt.
  4. Imprint on the Registrar. This requires verification of the vendor service (MASA) provided voucher. A voucher contains sufficient information for the Pledge to complete authentication of a Registrar. The voucher is signed by the vendor (MASA) using a raw public key, previously installed into the pledge at manufacturing time.
  5. Optionally Enroll. By accepting the domain specific information from a Registrar, and by obtaining a domain certificate from a Registrar using a standard enrollment protocol, e.g. Enrollment over Secure Transport (EST) [RFC7030].
  6. The Pledge is now a member of, and can be managed by, the domain and will only repeat the discovery aspects of bootstrapping if it is returned to factory default settings.

2.2. Secure Imprinting using Vouchers

As in BRSKI, the format and cryptographic mechansim of vouchers is described in detail in [I-D.ietf-anima-voucher]. As described in section YYY, the physical format for vouchers in this document differs from that of BRSKI, in that it uses [I-D.ietf-ace-cbor-web-token] to encode the voucher and to sign it.

2.3. Initial Device Identifier

The essential component of the zero-touch operation is that the pledge is provisioned with an 802.1AR (PKIX) certificate installed during the manufacturing process.

It is expected that constrained devices will use a signature algorithm corresponding to the hardware acceleration that they have, if they have any. The anticipated algorithms are the ECDSA P-256 (secp256p1) as SHOULD-, while newer devices SHOLD+ begin to appear using EdDSA curves using the 25519 curves. (EDNOTE details here)

There are a number of simplications detailed later on in this document designed to eliminate the need for an ASN.1 parser in the pledge.

The pledge should consider it's 802.1AR certificate to be an opaque blob of bytes, to be inserted into protocols at appropriate places. The pledge SHOULD have access to it's public and private keys in the most useable native format for computation.

The pledge MUST have the public key of the MASA built in a manufacturer time. This is a seemingly identical requirement as for BRSKI, but rather than being an abstract trust anchor that can be augmented with a certificate chain, the pledge MUST be provided with the Raw Public Key that the MASA will use to sign vouchers for that pledge.

There are a number of security concerns with use of a single MASA signing key, and section Section 9.1 addresses some of them with some operational suggestions.

BRSKI places some clear requirements upon the contents of the IDevID, but leaves the exact origin of the voucher serial-number open. This document restricts the process to being the hwSerialNum OCTET STRING. As CWT can handle binary formats, no base64 encoding is necessary.

The use of the MASA-URL extension is encouraged if the certificate is sent at all.

EDNOTE: here belongs text about sending only a reference to the IDevID rather than the entire certificate

2.3.1. Identification of the Pledge

TBD

2.3.2. MASA URI extension

TBD

2.4. Protocol Flow

The diagram from BRSKI is reproduced with some edits:

   +--------+         +---------+    +------------+     +------------+
   | Pledge |         | IPIP    |    | Domain     |     | Vendor     |
   |        |         | Proxy   |    | Registrar  |     | Service    |
   |        |         |         |    | (JRC)      |     | (MASA)     |
   +--------+         +---------+    +------------+     +------------+
     |                     |                   |                    |
     |<-RFC4862 IPv6 adr   |                   |                    |
     |                     |                   |                    |
     |<--------------------|                   |                    |
     | Enhanced Beacon     |                   |                    |
     |   periodic broadcast|                   |                    |
     |                     |                   |                    |
     |<------------------->C<----------------->|                    |
     |             DTLS via the IPIP    Proxy  |                    |
     |<--Registrar DTLS server authentication--|                    |
   [PROVISIONAL accept of server cert]         |                    |
     P---X.509 client authentication---------->|                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P---Voucher Request (include nonce)------>|                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |              [accept device?]          |
     P                     |              [contact Vendor]          |
     P                     |                   |--Pledge ID-------->|
     P                     |                   |--Domain ID-------->|
     P                     |                   |--nonce------------>|
     P                     |                   |     [extract DomainID]
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |     [update audit log]
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |<-device audit log--|
     P                     |                   |<- voucher ---------|
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P                     |       [verify audit log and voucher]   |
     P                     |                   |                    |
     P<------voucher---------------------------|                    |
   [verify voucher ]       |                   |                    |
   [verify provisional cert|                   |                    |
     |                     |                   |                    |
     |<--------------------------------------->|                    |
     | Continue with RFC7030 enrollment        |                    |
     | using now bidirectionally authenticated |                    |
     | DTLS session.       |                   |                    |
     |                     |                   |                    |
     |<--------------------------------------->|                    |
     |  Use 6tisch-minimal-security join request                    |

Noteable changes are:

  1. no IPv4 support/options.
  2. no mDNS steps, 6tisch only uses Enhanced Beacon
  3. nonce-full option is always mandatory

2.5. Architectural Components

The bootstrap process includes the following architectural components:

2.5.1. Pledge

The Pledge is the device which is attempting to join. Until the pledge completes the enrollment process, it has network connectivity only to the Proxy.

2.5.2. Stateless IPIP Join Proxy

The stateless CoAP or DTLS Proxy provides CoAP or DTLS connectivity (respectively) between the pledge and the registrar. The stateless CoAP proxy mechanism is described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] section 5.1.

The stateless DTLS mechanism is not yet described (TBD).

2.5.3. Domain Registrar

The Domain Registrar (having the formal name Join Registrar/ Coordinator (JRC)), operates as a CMC Registrar, terminating the EST and BRSKI connections. The Registrar is manually configured or distributed with a list of trust anchors necessary to authenticate any Pledge device expected on the network. The Registrar communicates with the Vendor supplied MASA to establish ownership.

The JRC is typically located on the 6LBR/DODAG root, but it may be located elsewhere, provided IP level connectivity can be established. The 6LBR may also provide a proxy or relay function to connect to the actual registrar in addition to the IPIP proxy described above. The existence of such an additional proxy is a private matter, and this documents assumes without loss of generality that the registrar is co-located with the 6LBR.

2.5.4. Manufacturer Service

The Manufacturer Service provides two logically seperate functions: the Manufacturer Authorized Signing Authority (MASA), and an ownership tracking/auditing function. This function is identical to that used by BRSKI, except that a different format voucher is used.

2.5.5. Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)

TBD

2.6. Certificate Time Validation

2.6.1. Lack of realtime clock

For the constrained situation it is assumed that devices have no real time clock. These nodes do have access to a monotonically increasing clock that will not go backwards in the form of the Absolute Sequence Number. Synchronization to the ASN is required in order to transmit/receive data and most nodes will maintain it in hardware.

The heuristic described in BRSKI under this section SHOULD be applied if there are dates in the CWT format voucher.

Voucher requests SHOULD include a nonce. For devices intended for off-line deployment, the vouchers will have been generated in advance and no nonce-ful operation will not be possible.

2.6.2. Infinite Lifetime of IDevID

TBD

2.7. Cloud Registrar

In 6tisch, the pledge never has network connectivity until it is enrolled, so no alternate registrar is ever possible.

2.8. Determining the MASA to contact

There are no changes from BRSKI: the IDevID provided by the pledge will contain a MASA URL extension.

3. Voucher-Request artifact

The voucher-request artifact is defined in [I-D.richardson-anima-ace-constrained-voucher] section 6.1.

For the 6tisch ZSJ protocol defined in this document, only COSE signed vouchers as described in [I-D.richardson-anima-ace-constrained-voucher] section 6.3.2 are supported.

4. Proxying details (Pledge - Proxy - Registrar)

The role of the Proxy is to facilitate communication. In the constrained situation the proxy needs to be stateless as there is very little ram to begin with, and none can be allocated to keep state for an unlimited number of potential pledges.

4.1. Pledge discovery of Proxy

In BRSKI, the pledge discovers the proxy via use of a GRASP M_FLOOD messages sent by the proxy. In 6tisch ZSJ, the existence of the proxy is announced by the Enhanced Beacon defined in [I-D.richardson-6tisch-join-enhanced-beacon].

4.2. CoAP connection to Registrar

In BRSKI CoAP is future work. This document represents this work.

4.3. HTTPS proxy connection to Registrar

HTTPS connections are not used between the Pledge, Proxy and Registrar. The Proxy relays CoAP or DTLS packets and does not interpret or terminate either CoAP or DTLS connections. (HTTPS is still used between the Registrar and MASA)

4.4. Proxy discovery of Registrar

In BRSKI, the proxy autonomically discovers the Registrar by listening for GRASP messages.

In the constrained network, the proxies are optionally configured with the address of the JRC by the Join Response in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] section 8. As specified in that section, if the address of the registrar otherwise defaults to be that of the DODAG root.

Whether or not a 6LR will announce itself as a possible Join Proxy is outside the scope of this document.

5. Protocol Details (Pledge - Registrar - MASA)

BRSKI is specified to run over HTTPS. This document respecifies it to run over CoAP with either DTLS or EDHOC-provided OSCOAP security.

There is an emerging (hybrid) possibility of DTLS-providing the OSCOAP security, but such a specification does not yet exist, and this document does at this point specify it.

[I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est] specifies that CoAP specifies the use of CoAP Block-Wise Transfer ("Block") [RFC7959] to fragment EST messages at the application layer.

BRSKI introduces the concept of a provisional state for EST. The same situation must also be added to DTLS: a situation where the connection is active but the identity of the Registar has not yet been confirmed.

The DTLS MUST validate that the exchange has been signed by the Raw Public Key that is presented by the Server, even though there is as yet no trust in that key. Such a key is often available through APIs that provide for channel binding, such as described in [RFC5056].

As in [I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est], support for Observe CoAP options [RFC7641] with BRSKI is not supported in the current BRSKI/EST message flows.

Observe options could be used by the server to notify clients about a change in the cacerts or csr attributes (resources) and might be an area of future work.

Redirection as described in [RFC7030] section 3.2.1 is NOT supported.

5.1. BRSKI-EST (D)TLS establishment details

6tisch ZSJ does not use TLS. The connection is either CoAP over DTLS, or CoAP with EDHOC security.

5.1.1. BRSKI-EST CoAP/DTLS estasblishment details

The details in the BRSKI document apply directly to use of DTLS.

The registrar SHOULD authenticate itself with a raw public key. A 256 bit ECDSA raw public key is RECOMMENDED. Pledges SHOULD support EDDSA keys if they contain hardware that supports doing so efficiently.

TBD: the Pledge needs to signal what kind of Raw Public Key it supports before the Registrar sends its ServerCertificate. Can SNI be used to do this?

The pledge SHOULD authenticate itself with the built-in IDevID certificate as a ClientCertificate.

5.1.2. BRSKI-EST CoAP/EDHOC estasblishment details

[I-D.selander-ace-cose-ecdhe] details how to use EDHOC. The EDHOC description identifiers a party U (the initiator), and a party V. The Pledge is the party U, and the JRC is the party V.

The communication from the Pledge is via CoAP via the Join Proxy. The Join proxy relays traffic to the JRC, and using the mechanism described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] section 5.1. This is designed so that the Join Proxy does not need to know if it is performing the one-touch enrollment described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] or the zero-touch enrollment protocol described in this document. A network could consist of a mix of nodes of each type.

As generating ephemeral keys is expensive for a low-resource Pledge, the use of a common E_U by the Pledge for multiple enrollment attempts (should the first turn out to be the wrong network) is encouraged.

The first communication detailed in [I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est] is to query the "/.well-known/core" resource to request the Link for EST. This is where the initial CoAP request is to sent.

The JRC MAY replace it's E_V ephermal key on a periodic basis, or even for every communication session.

The Pledge's ID_U is the Pledge's IDevID. It is transmitted in an x5bag [I-D.schaad-cose-x509]. An x5u (URL) MAY be used. An x5t (hash) MAY also be used and would be the smallest, but the Registrar may not know where to find the Pledge's IDevID unless the JRC has been preloaded will all the IDevIDs via out-of-band mechanism. It is impossible for the Pledge to know if the JRC has been loaded in such a way so x5t is discouraged for general use.

The JRC's ID_V is the JRC's Raw Public Key. It is transmitted as a key in COSE's YYY parameter.

The initial Mandatory to Implement (MTI) of an HKDF of SHA2-256, an AEAD based upon AES-CCM-16-64-128, a signature verification of BBBB, and signature generation of BBBB. The Pledge proposes a set of algorithms that it supports, and Pledge need not support more than one combination.

JRCs are expected to run on non-constrained servers, and are expected to support the above initial MTI, and any subsequent ones that become common. A JRC SHOULD support all available algorithms for a significant amount of time. Even when algorithms become weak or suspect, it is likely that it will still have to perform secure join for older devices. A JRC that responds to such an older device might not in the end accept the device into the network, but it is important that it be able to audit the event and communicate the event to an operator.

While EDHOC supports sending additional data in the message_3, in the constrained network situation, it is anticipated that the size of the this message will already be large, and no additional data is to be sent.

A COAP confirmable message SHOULD be used.

[I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] section 6 details how to setup OSCORE context given a shared key derived by EDHOC.

The registrar SHOULD authenticate itself with a raw public key.

The pledge SHOULD authenticate itself with the built-in IDevID certificate.

5.2. Pledge Requests Voucher from the Registrar

The voucher request and response as defined by BRSKI is modified slightly.

In order to simplify the pledge, the use of a certificate (and chain) for the Registrar is not supported. Instead the newly defined pinned-domain-subject-public-key-info must contain the (raw) public key info for the Registrar. It MUST be byte for byte identical to that which is transmitted by the Registrar during the TLS ServerCertificate handshake.

BRSKI permits the voucher request to be signed or unsigned. This document defines the voucher request to be unsigned.

5.3. BRSKI-MASA TLS establishment details

There are no changes. The connection from the Registrar to MASA is still HTTPS.

5.4. Registrar Requests Voucher from MASA

There are no change from BRSKI, as this step is between two non-constrained devices.

The format of the voucher is COSE, which implies changes to both the Registrar and the MASA, but semantically the content is the same.

The manufacturer will know what algorithms are supported by the pledge, and will issue a 406 (Conflict) error to the Registrar if the Registar's public key format is not supported by the pledge. It is however, too late for the Registar to use a different key, but at least it can log a reason for a failure. It is likely that the ZSJ-BRSKI-EST connection has already failed, and this step is never reached.

5.4.1. MASA renewal of expired vouchers

There are assumed to be no useful real-time clocks on constrained devices, so all vouchers are in effect infinite duration. Pledges will use nonces for freshness, and a request for a new voucher with a new voucher for the same Registrar is not unusual. A token-bucket system SHOULD be used such that no more than 24 vouchers are issued per-day, but more than one voucher can be issued in a one hour period. Tokens should not accumulate for more than one day!

5.4.2. MASA verification of voucher-request signature consistency

The voucher-request is signed by the Registrar using it's Raw Public Key. There is no additional certificate authority to sign this key. The MASA MAY have this key via sales-channel integration, but in most cases it will be seeing the key for the first time.

XXX-should the TLS connection from Registrar to MASA have a ClientCertificate? If so, then should it use the same Public Key? Or a different one?

5.4.3. MASA authentication of registrar (certificate)

IDEA: The MASA SHOULD pin the Raw Public Key (RPK) to the IP address that was first used to make a request with it. Should the RPK <-> IP address relationship be 1:1, 1:N, N:1? Should we take IP address to mean, "IP subnet", essentially the IPv4/24, and IPv6/64? The value of doing is about DDoS mitigation?

Should above mapping be on a per-Pledge basis?

5.4.4. MASA revocation checking of registrar (certificate)

As the Registrar has a Raw Public Key as an identity, there is no meaningful standard revocation checking that can be done. The MASA SHOULD have a blacklist table, and a way to add entries, but this process is out of scope.

5.4.5. MASA verification of pledge prior-signed-voucher-request

The MASA will know whether or not the Pledge is capable of producing a signed voucher-request for inclusion by the Registrar. In the case where the Pledge can sign the voucher-request to the Registrar, then the Registrar will have put it in the 'prior-signed-voucher-request'. The MASA can verify the signature from the Pledge using the MASA's copy of the Pledge's IDevID public key.

In many cases, the Pledge will not be capable of doing signatures in real time, so no 'prior-signed-voucher-request' will be present. The MASA will have rely on the audit log as a history function to determine if the Pledge has previously been claimed, and to identify situations where the claim from the Registrar is fraudulent.

5.4.6. MASA pinning of registrar

When the MASA creates a voucher, it puts the Registrar's Raw Public Key into the 'pinned-domain-subject-public-key-info' leaf of the voucher.

The MASA does not include the 'pinned-domain-cert' field.

5.4.7. MASA nonce handling

Use of nonces is highly RECOMMENDED, but there are situations where not all components are connected at the same time in which the nonce will not be present.

There are no significant changes from BRSKI.

5.5. MASA Voucher Response

The MASA responses with a voucher as specified in [I-D.richardson-anima-ace-constrained-voucher] section 6.2.

This result is communicated back with a MIME Content-Type of 'application/voucher-cose+cbor'

5.5.1. Pledge voucher verification

The Pledge receives the voucher from the Registrar over it's CoAP connection. It verifies the signature using the MASA anchor built in, as in the BRSKI case.

5.5.2. Pledge authentication of provisional TLS connection

The BRSKI process uses the pinned-domain-cert field of the voucher to validate the registrar's ServerCertificate. In the ZeroTouch case, the voucher will contain a pinned-domain-subject-public-key-info field containing the raw public key of the certificate. It should match, byte-to-byte with the raw public key ServerCertificate.

5.6. Pledge Voucher Status Telemetry

The voucher status telemetry report is communicated from the pledge to the registrar over CoAP channel. The shortened URL is as described in table QQQ.

5.7. Registrar audit log request

There are no changes to the Registrar audit log request.

5.7.1. MASA audit log response

There are no changes to the MASA audit log response.

5.7.2. Registrar audit log verification

There are no changes to how the Registrar verifies the audit log.

5.8. EST Integration for PKI bootstrapping

TBD.

5.8.1. EST Distribution of CA Certificates

TBD.

5.8.2. EST CSR Attributes

In 6tisch, no Autonomic Control Plane will be created, so none of the criteria for SubjectAltname found in [I-D.ietf-anima-autonomic-control-plane] apply.

The CSR Attributes request SHOULD NOT be performed.

5.8.3. EST Client Certificate Request

6tisch will use a certificate to:

  1. to authenticate an 802.15.9 key agreement protocol.
  2. to terminate an incoming DTLS or EDHOC key agreement as part of application data protection.

It is recommended that the requested subjectAltName contain only the [RFC4514] hwSerialNum.

5.8.4. Enrollment Status Telemetry

There are no changes to the status telemetry between Registrar and MASA.

5.8.5. Multiple certificates

Multiple certificates are not supported.

5.8.6. EST over CoAP

This document and [I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est] detail how to run EST over CoAP.

5.9. Use of Secure Transport for Minimal Join

Rather than bootstrap to a public key infrastructure, the secure channel MAY instead be for the minimal security join process described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security].

The desire to do a minimal-security join process is signaled by the Registrar in it's voucher-request by including a 'join-process' value of 'minimal'. The MASA copies this value into the voucher that is creates, and also logs this to the audit log.

When the secure channel was created with EDHOC, then the keys setup by EDHOC are simply used by OSCORE exactly as if they had been Pre-Shared. The keys derived by EDHOC SHOULD be stored by both Registrar and Pledge as their long term key should the join process need to be repeated.

6. Reduced security operational modes

This document defines a specific reduced security operational mode, specifically:

  1. X
  2. Y
  3. Z

6.1. Trust Model

TBD

6.2. Pledge security reductions

TBD

6.3. Registrar security reductions

TBD

6.4. MASA security reductions

TBD

7. IANA Considerations

XXX

7.1. Well-known EST registration

XXX

7.2. PKIX Registry

TBD

7.3. Voucher Status Telemetry

TBD

7.4. DNS Service Names

TBD

7.5. MUD File Extension for the MASA server

TBD

8. Privacy Considerations

[I-D.ietf-6lo-privacy-considerations] details a number of privacy considerations important in Resource Constrained nodes. There are two networks and three sets of constrained nodes to consider. They are: 1. the production nodes on the production network. 2. the new pledges, which have yet to enroll, and which are on a join network. 3. the production nodes which are also acting as proxy nodes.

8.1. Privacy Considerations for Production network

The details of this are out of scope for this document.

8.2. Privacy Considerations for New Pledges

New Pledges do not yet receive Router Advertisements with PIO options, and so configure link-local addresses only based upon layer-2 addresses using the normal SLAAC mechanisms described in [RFC4191].

These link-local addresses are visible to any on-link eavesdropper (who is synchronized to the same Join Assistant), so regardless of what is chosen they can be seen. This link-layer traffic is encapsulated by the Join Proxy into IPIP packets and carried to the JRC. The traffic SHOULD never leave the operator's network, will be kept confidential by the layer-2 keys inside the LLN. As no outside traffic can enter the join network, to do any ICMP scanning as described in [I-D.ietf-6lo-privacy-considerations].

The join process described herein requires that some identifier meaningful to the network operator be communicated to the JRC. The join request with this object occurs within a secured CoAP channel, although the link-local address configured by the pledge will be visible in either the CoAP stateless proxy option (section 5.1 of [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security]), or in the equivalent DTLS stateless proxy option (reference TBD).

This need not be a manufacturer created EUI-64 as assigned by IEEE; it could be another value with higher entropy and less interesting vendor/device information. Regardless of what is chosen, it can be used to track where the device attaches.

For most constrained device, network attachment occurs very infrequently, often only once in their lifetime, so tracking opportunities may be rare. Once connected, the long 8-byte EUI64 layer-2 address is usually replaced with a short JRC assigned 2-byte address.

Additionally, during the enrollment process, a DTLS connection or EDHOC connection will be created. TLS1.3 will keep contents of the certificates transmitted private while TLS 1.2 will not. If the client certificate can be observed, then the device identity will be visible to passive observers in the 802.11AR IDevID certificate that is sent.

Even when TLS 1.3 is used, an active attacker could collect the information by creating a rogue proxy.

The use of a manufacturer assigned EUI64 (whether derived from IEEE assignment or created through another process during manufacturing time) is encouraged.

8.2.1. EUI-64 derived address for join time IID

The IID used in the link-local address used during the join process be a vendor assigned EUI-64. After the join process has concluded, the device SHOULD be assigned a unique randomly generated long address, and a unique short address (not based upon the vendor EUI-64) for use at link-layer address. At that point, all layer-3 content is encrypted by the layer-2 key.

8.3. Privacy Considerations for Join Proxy

TBD.

9. Security Considerations

TBD

9.1. Security of MASA voucher signing key(s)

TBD

10. Acknowledgements

Kristofer Pister helped with many non-IETF references.

11. References

11.1. Normative References

[cullenCiscoPhoneDeploy] Jennings, C., "Transitive Trust Enrollment for Constrained Devices", 2012.
[I-D.ietf-6lo-privacy-considerations] Thaler, D., "Privacy Considerations for IPv6 Adaptation Layer Mechanisms", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-6lo-privacy-considerations-04, October 2016.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal] Vilajosana, X., Pister, K. and T. Watteyne, "Minimal 6TiSCH Configuration", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-6tisch-minimal-21, February 2017.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] Vucinic, M., Simon, J., Pister, K. and M. Richardson, "Minimal Security Framework for 6TiSCH", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-6tisch-minimal-security-05, March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-terminology] Palattella, M., Thubert, P., Watteyne, T. and Q. Wang, "Terms Used in IPv6 over the TSCH mode of IEEE 802.15.4e", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-6tisch-terminology-10, March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-ace-cbor-web-token] Jones, M., Wahlstroem, E., Erdtman, S. and H. Tschofenig, "CBOR Web Token (CWT)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-ace-cbor-web-token-15, March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-ace-coap-est] Stok, P., Kampanakis, P., Kumar, S., Richardson, M., Furuhed, M. and S. Raza, "EST over secure CoAP (EST-coaps)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-ace-coap-est-00, February 2018.
[I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra] Pritikin, M., Richardson, M., Behringer, M., Bjarnason, S. and K. Watsen, "Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructures (BRSKI)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra-15, April 2018.
[I-D.ietf-anima-grasp] Bormann, C., Carpenter, B. and B. Liu, "A Generic Autonomic Signaling Protocol (GRASP)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-anima-grasp-15, July 2017.
[I-D.ietf-anima-voucher] Watsen, K., Richardson, M., Pritikin, M. and T. Eckert, "Voucher Profile for Bootstrapping Protocols", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-anima-voucher-07, January 2018.
[I-D.ietf-core-comi] Veillette, M., Stok, P., Pelov, A. and A. Bierman, "CoAP Management Interface", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-comi-02, December 2017.
[I-D.ietf-core-object-security] Selander, G., Mattsson, J., Palombini, F. and L. Seitz, "Object Security for Constrained RESTful Environments (OSCORE)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-object-security-12, March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-core-yang-cbor] Veillette, M., Pelov, A., Somaraju, A., Turner, R. and A. Minaburo, "CBOR Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-yang-cbor-06, February 2018.
[I-D.ietf-netconf-keystore] Watsen, K., "YANG Data Model for a "Keystore" Mechanism", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-netconf-keystore-04, October 2017.
[I-D.richardson-6tisch-join-enhanced-beacon] Dujovne, D. and M. Richardson, "IEEE802.15.4 Informational Element encapsulation of 6tisch Join Information", Internet-Draft draft-richardson-6tisch-join-enhanced-beacon-03, January 2018.
[I-D.richardson-6tisch-minimal-rekey] Richardson, M., "Minimal Security rekeying mechanism for 6TiSCH", Internet-Draft draft-richardson-6tisch-minimal-rekey-02, August 2017.
[I-D.richardson-anima-6join-discovery] Richardson, M., "GRASP discovery of Registrar by Join Assistant", Internet-Draft draft-richardson-anima-6join-discovery-00, October 2016.
[I-D.richardson-anima-ace-constrained-voucher] Richardson, M., Stok, P. and P. Kampanakis, "Constrained Voucher Profile for Bootstrapping Protocols", Internet-Draft draft-richardson-anima-ace-constrained-voucher-03, February 2018.
[I-D.schaad-cose-x509] Schaad, J., "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Headers for carrying and referencing X.509 certificates", Internet-Draft draft-schaad-cose-x509-01, May 2017.
[I-D.selander-ace-cose-ecdhe] Selander, G., Mattsson, J. and F. Palombini, "Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)", Internet-Draft draft-selander-ace-cose-ecdhe-08, March 2018.
[iec62591] IEC, ., "62591:2016 Industrial networks - Wireless communication network and communication profiles - WirelessHART", 2016.
[ieee802-1AR] IEEE Standard, ., "IEEE 802.1AR Secure Device Identifier", 2009.
[ieee802154] IEEE Standard, ., "802.15.4-2015 - IEEE Standard for Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)", 2015.
[ieee802159] IEEE Standard, ., "802.15.9-2016 - IEEE Approved Draft Recommended Practice for Transport of Key Management Protocol (KMP) Datagrams", 2016.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC4514] Zeilenga, K., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP): String Representation of Distinguished Names", RFC 4514, DOI 10.17487/RFC4514, June 2006.
[RFC6775] Shelby, Z., Chakrabarti, S., Nordmark, E. and C. Bormann, "Neighbor Discovery Optimization for IPv6 over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks (6LoWPANs)", RFC 6775, DOI 10.17487/RFC6775, November 2012.
[RFC7030] Pritikin, M., Yee, P. and D. Harkins, "Enrollment over Secure Transport", RFC 7030, DOI 10.17487/RFC7030, October 2013.
[RFC7217] Gont, F., "A Method for Generating Semantically Opaque Interface Identifiers with IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC)", RFC 7217, DOI 10.17487/RFC7217, April 2014.
[RFC7228] Bormann, C., Ersue, M. and A. Keranen, "Terminology for Constrained-Node Networks", RFC 7228, DOI 10.17487/RFC7228, May 2014.
[RFC7250] Wouters, P., Tschofenig, H., Gilmore, J., Weiler, S. and T. Kivinen, "Using Raw Public Keys in Transport Layer Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS)", RFC 7250, DOI 10.17487/RFC7250, June 2014.
[RFC7252] Shelby, Z., Hartke, K. and C. Bormann, "The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7252, DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014.
[RFC7959] Bormann, C. and Z. Shelby, "Block-Wise Transfers in the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7959, DOI 10.17487/RFC7959, August 2016.

11.2. Informative References

[duckling] Stajano, F. and R. Anderson, "The resurrecting duckling: security issues for ad-hoc wireless networks", 1999.
[I-D.ietf-ace-actors] Gerdes, S., Seitz, L., Selander, G. and C. Bormann, "An architecture for authorization in constrained environments", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-ace-actors-06, November 2017.
[I-D.ietf-anima-autonomic-control-plane] Eckert, T., Behringer, M. and S. Bjarnason, "An Autonomic Control Plane (ACP)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-anima-autonomic-control-plane-13, December 2017.
[I-D.ietf-core-sid] Veillette, M. and A. Pelov, "YANG Schema Item iDentifier (SID)", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-sid-03, December 2017.
[I-D.ietf-roll-useofrplinfo] Robles, I., Richardson, M. and P. Thubert, "When to use RFC 6553, 6554 and IPv6-in-IPv6", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-roll-useofrplinfo-22, March 2018.
[ISA100] "The Technology Behind the ISA100.11a Standard", June 2010.
[PFS] Wikipedia, ., "Forward Secrecy", August 2016.
[pledge-word] Dictionary.com, ., "Dictionary.com Unabridged", 2015.
[RFC4191] Draves, R. and D. Thaler, "Default Router Preferences and More-Specific Routes", RFC 4191, DOI 10.17487/RFC4191, November 2005.
[RFC4655] Farrel, A., Vasseur, J. and J. Ash, "A Path Computation Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655, DOI 10.17487/RFC4655, August 2006.
[RFC5056] Williams, N., "On the Use of Channel Bindings to Secure Channels", RFC 5056, DOI 10.17487/RFC5056, November 2007.
[RFC7554] Watteyne, T., Palattella, M. and L. Grieco, "Using IEEE 802.15.4e Time-Slotted Channel Hopping (TSCH) in the Internet of Things (IoT): Problem Statement", RFC 7554, DOI 10.17487/RFC7554, May 2015.
[RFC7641] Hartke, K., "Observing Resources in the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7641, DOI 10.17487/RFC7641, September 2015.
[RFC7731] Hui, J. and R. Kelsey, "Multicast Protocol for Low-Power and Lossy Networks (MPL)", RFC 7731, DOI 10.17487/RFC7731, February 2016.

Appendix A. Extra text

The following text is from previous versions of this document. The document has been re-organized to match the flow of [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra].

A.1. Assumptions

A.1.1. One-Touch Assumptions

This document interacts with the one-touch solution described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security].

A.1.2. Factory provided credentials (if any)

When a manufacturer installed certificate is provided as the IDevID, it SHOULD contain a number of fields. [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra] provides a detailed set of requirements.

A manufacturer unique serial number MUST be provided in the serialNumber SubjectAltName extension, and MAY be repeated in the Common Name. There are no sequential or numeric requirements on the serialNumber, it may be any unique value that the manufacturer wants to use. The serialNumber SHOULD be printed on the packaging and/or on the device in a discrete way so that failures can be physically traced to the relevant device.

A.1.3. Credentials to be introduced

The goal of the bootstrap process is to introduce one or more new locally relevant credentials:

  1. a certificate signed by a local certificate authority/registrar. This is the LDevID of [ieee802-1AR].
  2. alternatively, a network-wide key to be used to secure L2 traffic.
  3. alternatively, a network-wide key to be used to authenticate per-peer keying of L2 traffic using a mechanism such as provided by [ieee802159].

A.2. Network Assumptions

This document is about enrollment of constrained devices [RFC7228] to a constrained network. Constrained networks is such as [ieee802154], and in particular the time-slotted, channel hopping (tsch) mode, feature low bandwidths, and limited opportunities to transmit. A key feature of these networks is that receivers are only listening at certain times.

A.2.1. Security above and below IP

802.15.4 networks have three kinds of layer-2 security:

Setting up the credentials to bootstrap one of these kinds of security, (or directly configuring the key itself for the first case) is required. This is the security below the IP layer.

Security is required above the IP layer: there are three aspects which the credentials in the previous section are to be used.

A.2.1.1. Perfect Forward Secrecy

Perfert Forward Secrecy (PFS) is the property of a protocol such that complete knowledge of the crypto state (for instance, via a memory dump) at time X does not imply that data from a disjoint time Y can also be recovered. ([PFS]).

PFS is important for two reasons: one is that it offers protection against the compromise of a node. It does this by changing the keys in a non-deterministic way. This second property also makes it much easier to remove a node from the network, as any node which has not participated in the key changing process will find itself no longer connected.

A.2.2. Join network assumptions

The network which the new pledge will connect to will have to have the following properties:

A.2.3. Number and cost of round trips

TBD.

A.2.4. Size of packets, number of fragments

TBD

A.3. Target end-state for join process

At the end of the zero-touch join process there will be a symmetric key protected channel between the Join Registrar/Coordinator and the pledge, now known as a Joined Node. This channel may be rekeyed via new exchange of asymmetric exponents (ECDH for instance), authenticated using the domain specific credentials created during the join process.

This channel is in the form of an OSCOAP protected connection with [I-D.ietf-core-comi] encoded objects. This document includes definition of a [I-D.ietf-netconf-keystore] compatible objects for encoding of the relevant [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra] objects.

Appendix B. Join Protocol

The pledge join protocol state machine is described in [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security], in section XYZ. The pledge recognizes that it is in zero-touch configuration by the following situation:

All of these conditions MUST be true. If any of these are not true, then the pledge has either been connected to the wrong network, or it has already been bootstrapped into a different network, and it should wait until it finds that network.

The zero-touch process consists of three stages:

  1. the key agreement process
  2. the provisional enrollment process
  3. the key distribution process

B.1. Key Agreement process

The key agreement process is identical to [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security]. The process uses EDHOC with certificates.

The pledge will have to trust the JRC provisionally, as described in [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra], section 3.1.2, and in section 4.1.1 of [RFC7030].

The JRC will be able to validate the IDevID of the pledge using the manufacturer's CA.

The pledge may not know if it is in a zero-touch or one-touch situation: the pledge may be able to verify the JRC based upon trust anchors that were installed at manufacturing time. In that case, the pledge runs the simplified one-touch process.

The pledge signals in the EDHOC message_2 if it has accepted the JRC certificate. The JRC will in general, not trust the pledge with the network keys until it has provided the pledge with a voucher. The pledge will notice the absence of the provisioning keys.

XXX - there could be some disconnect here. May need additional signals here.

B.2. Provisional Enrollment process

When the pledge determines that it can not verify the certificate of the JRC using built-in trust anchors, then it enters a provisional state. In this state, it keeps the channel created by EDHOC open.

A new EDHOC key derivation is done by the JRC and pledge using a new label, "6tisch-provisional".

The pledge runs as a passive CoMI server, leaving the JRC to drive the enrollment process. The JRC can interrogate the pledge in a variety of fashions as shown below: the process terminates when the JRC provides the pledge with an ownership voucher and the pledge leaves the provisional state.

A typical interaction involves the following requests:

    +-----------+ +----------+ +-----------+ +----------+
    |           | |          | | Circuit   | | New      |
    |  Vendor   | | Registrar| |  Proxy    | | Entity   |
    |  (MASA)   | |          | |           | |          |
    ++----------+ +--+-------+ +-----------+ +----------+
     |               |     GET  request voucher       |
     |               |-------------------------------->
     |               <----------voucher-token---------|
     |/requestvoucher|                                |
     <---------------+                                |
     +--------------->                                |
     |/requestlog    |                                |
     <---------------+                                |
     +--------------->                                |
     |               |        POST voucher            |
     |               |-------------------------------->
     |               <------------2.05 OK ------------+
     |               |                                |
     |               |        POST csr attributes     |
     |               |-------------------------------->
     |               <------------2.05 OK ------------+
     |               |                                |
     |               |        GET  cert request       |
     |               |-------------------------------->
     |     ????      <------------2.05 OK ------------+
     |<--------------|              CSR               |
     |-------------->|                                |
     |               |        POST certificate        |
     |               |-------------------------------->
     |               <------------2.05 OK ------------+
     |               |                                |

Appendix C. IANA Considerations

This document allocates one value from the subregistry "Address Registration Option Status Values": ND_NS_JOIN_DECLINED Join Assistant, JOIN DECLINED (TBD-AA)

Appendix D. Protocol Definition

D.1. Discovery

Only IPv6 operations using Link-Local addresses are supported. Use of a temporary address is NOT encouraged as the critial resource on the Proxy device is the number of Neighbour Cache Entries that can be used for untrusted pledge entries.

D.1.1. Proxy Discovery Protocol Details

The Proxy is discovered using the enhanced beacon defined in [I-D.richardson-6tisch-join-enhanced-beacon].

D.1.2. Registrar Discovery Protocol Details

The Registrar is not discovered by the Proxy. Any device that is expected to be able to operate as a Registrar MAY be told the address of the Registrar when that device joins the network. The address MAY be included in the [I-D.ietf-6tisch-minimal-security] Join Response. If the address is NOT included, then Proxy may assume that the Registrar can be found at the DODAG root, which is well known in the 6tisch's use of the RPL protocol.

Authors' Addresses

Michael Richardson Sandelman Software Works EMail: mcr+ietf@sandelman.ca
Benjamin Damm Silver Spring Networks EMail: bdamm@ssni.com