ACME Working Group Y. Sheffer
Internet-Draft Intuit
Intended status: Standards Track D. Lopez
Expires: January 2, 2020 O. Gonzalez de Dios
A. Pastor Perales
Telefonica I+D
T. Fossati
ARM
July 01, 2019

Support for Short-Term, Automatically-Renewed (STAR) Certificates in Automated Certificate Management Environment (ACME)
draft-ietf-acme-star-06

Abstract

Public-key certificates need to be revoked when they are compromised, that is, when the associated private key is exposed to an unauthorized entity. However the revocation process is often unreliable. An alternative to revocation is issuing a sequence of certificates, each with a short validity period, and terminating this sequence upon compromise. This memo proposes an ACME extension to enable the issuance of short-term and automatically renewed (STAR) X.509 certificates.

[RFC Editor: please remove before publication]

While the draft is being developed, the editor’s version can be found at https://github.com/yaronf/I-D/tree/master/STAR.

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/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on January 2, 2020.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

The ACME protocol [RFC8555] automates the process of issuing a certificate to a named entity (an Identifier Owner or IdO). Typically, but not always, the identifier is a domain name.

If the IdO wishes to obtain a string of short-term certificates originating from the same private key (see [Topalovic] about why using short-lived certificates might be preferable to explicit revocation), she must go through the whole ACME protocol each time a new short-term certificate is needed - e.g., every 2-3 days. If done this way, the process would involve frequent interactions between the registration function of the ACME Certification Authority (CA) and the identity provider infrastructure (e.g.: DNS, web servers), therefore making the issuance of short-term certificates exceedingly dependent on the reliability of both.

This document presents an extension of the ACME protocol that optimizes this process by making short-term certificates first class objects in the ACME ecosystem. Once the order for a string of short-term certificates is accepted, the CA is responsible for publishing the next certificate at an agreed upon URL before the previous one expires. The IdO can terminate the automatic renewal before the negotiated deadline, if needed - e.g., on key compromise.

For a more generic treatment of STAR certificates, readers are referred to [I-D.nir-saag-star].

1.1. Name Delegation Use Case

The proposed mechanism can be used as a building block of an efficient name-delegation protocol, for example one that exists between a CDN or a cloud provider and its customers [I-D.ietf-acme-star-delegation]. At any time, the service customer (i.e., the IdO) can terminate the delegation by simply instructing the CA to stop the automatic renewal and letting the currently active certificate expire shortly thereafter. Note that in this case the delegated entity needs to access the auto-renewed certificate without being in possession of the ACME account key that was used for initiating the STAR issuance.

1.2. Terminology

IdO
Identifier Owner, the owner of an identifier, e.g.: a domain name, a telephone number.
STAR
Short-Term and Automatically Renewed X.509 certificates.

1.3. Conventions used in this document

The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “NOT RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

2. Protocol Flow

The following subsections describe the three main phases of the protocol:

2.1. Bootstrap

The IdO, in its role as an ACME client, requests the CA to issue a STAR certificate, i.e., one that:

Other than that, the ACME protocol flows as usual between IdO and CA. In particular, IdO is responsible for satisfying the requested ACME challenges until the CA is willing to issue the requested certificate. Per normal ACME processing, the IdO is given back an Order resource associated with the STAR certificate to be used in subsequent interaction with the CA (e.g., if the certificate needs to be terminated.)

The bootstrap phase ends when the ACME CA updates the Order resource to include the URL for the issued STAR certificate.

2.2. Refresh

The CA issues the initial certificate after the authorization completes successfully. It then automatically re-issues the certificate using the same CSR (and therefore the same identifier and public key) before the previous one expires, and publishes it to the URL that was returned to the IdO at the end of the bootstrap phase. The certificate user, which could be either the IdO itself or a delegated third party, as described in [I-D.ietf-acme-star-delegation], obtains the certificate (Section 3.3) and uses it.

The refresh process (Figure 1) goes on until either:

   Certificate             ACME/STAR
   User                    Server
   |     Retrieve cert     |                     [...]
   |---------------------->|                      |
   |                       +------.              /
   |                       |      |             /
   |                       | Automatic renewal :
   |                       |      |             \
   |                       |<-----'              \
   |     Retrieve cert     |                      |
   |---------------------->|            short validity period
   |                       |                      |
   |                       +------.              /
   |                       |      |             /
   |                       | Automatic renewal :
   |                       |      |             \
   |                       |<-----'              \
   |     Retrieve cert     |                      |
   |---------------------->|            short validity period
   |                       |                      |
   |                       +------.              /
   |                       |      |             /
   |                       | Automatic renewal :
   |                       |      |             \
   |                       |<-----'              \
   |                       |                      |
   |         [...]         |                    [...]

Figure 1: Auto renewal

2.3. Termination

The IdO may request early termination of the STAR certificate by sending a cancellation request to the Order resource, as described in Section 3.1.2. After the CA receives and verifies the request, it shall:

Note that it is not necessary to explicitly revoke the short-term certificate.

   Certificate                                     ACME/STAR
   User                    IdO                     Server
   |                       |                       |
   |                       |      Cancel Order     |
   |                       +---------------------->|
   |                       |                       +-------.
   |                       |                       |       |
   |                       |                       |  End auto renewal  
   |                       |                       |  Remove cert link
   |                       |                       |  etc.
   |                       |                       |       |
   |                       |         Done          |<------'
   |                       |<----------------------+
   |                       |                       |
   |                                               |
   |              Retrieve cert                    |
   +---------------------------------------------->|
   |              Error: recurrentOrderCanceled    |
   |<----------------------------------------------+
   |                                               |

Figure 2: Termination

3. Protocol Details

This section describes the protocol details, namely the extensions to the ACME protocol required to issue STAR certificates.

3.1. ACME Extensions

This protocol extends the ACME protocol, to allow for recurrent Orders.

3.1.1. Extending the Order Resource

The Order resource is extended with the following attributes:

These attributes are included in a POST message when creating the Order, as part of the “payload” encoded object. They are returned when the Order has been created, and the ACME server MAY adjust them at will, according to its local policy (see also Section 3.2).

The optional notBefore and notAfter fields defined in Section 7.1.3 of [RFC8555] MUST NOT be present in a STAR Order. If they are included, the server MUST return an error with status code 400 “Bad Request” and type “malformedRequest”.

Section 7.1.6 of [RFC8555] defines the following values for the Order resource’s status: “pending”, “ready”, “processing”, “valid”, and “invalid”. In the case of recurrent Orders, the status MUST be “valid” as long as STAR certificates are being issued. We add a new status value: “canceled”, see Section 3.1.2.

A STAR certificate is by definition a mutable resource. Instead of overloading the semantics of the “certificate” attribute, this document defines a new attribute “star-certificate” to be used instead of “certificate”.

3.1.2. Canceling a Recurrent Order

An important property of the recurrent Order is that it can be canceled by the IdO, with no need for certificate revocation. To cancel the Order, the ACME client sends a POST to the Order URL as shown in Figure 3.

  POST /acme/order/TOlocE8rfgo HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.org
  Content-Type: application/jose+json

  {
    "protected": base64url({
      "alg": "ES256",
      "kid": "https://example.com/acme/acct/evOfKhNU60wg",
      "nonce": "5XJ1L3lEkMG7tR6pA00clA",
      "url": "https://example.com/acme/order/TOlocE8rfgo"
    }),
    "payload": base64url({
      "status": "canceled"
    }),
    "signature": "H6ZXtGjTZyUnPeKn...wEA4TklBdh3e454g"
  }

Figure 3: Canceling a Recurrent Order

After a successful cancellation, the server MUST NOT issue any additional certificates for this order.

Immediately after the order is canceled, the server:

Issuing a cancellation for an order that is not in “valid” state is not allowed. A client MUST NOT send such a request, and a server MUST return an error response with status code 400 (Bad Request) and type “urn:ietf:params:acme:error:recurrentCancellationInvalid”.

Explicit certificate revocation using the revokeCert interface (Section 7.6 of [RFC8555]) is not supported for STAR certificates. A server receiving a revocation request for a STAR certificate MUST return an error response with status code 403 (Forbidden) and type “urn:ietf:params:acme:error:recurrentRevocationNotSupported”.

3.2. Capability Discovery

In order to support the discovery of STAR capabilities, the directory object defined in Section 9.7.6 of [RFC8555] is extended with the following attributes inside the “meta” field:

An example directory object advertising STAR support with one day star-min-cert-validity and one year star-max-renewal, and supporting certificate fetching with an HTTP GET is shown in Figure 4.

  {
     "new-nonce": "https://example.com/acme/new-nonce",
     "new-account": "https://example.com/acme/new-account",
     "new-order": "https://example.com/acme/new-order",
     "new-authz": "https://example.com/acme/new-authz",
     "revoke-cert": "https://example.com/acme/revoke-cert",
     "key-change": "https://example.com/acme/key-change",
     "meta": {
       "terms-of-service": "https://example.com/acme/terms/2017-5-30",
       "website": "https://www.example.com/",
       "caa-identities": ["example.com"],
       "star-enabled": true,
       "star-min-cert-validity": 86400,
       "star-max-renewal":  31536000,
       "star-allow-certificate-get": true
     }
  }

Figure 4: Directory object with STAR support

3.3. Fetching the Certificates

The certificate is fetched from the star-certificate endpoint with POST-as-GET as per [RFC8555] Section 7.4.2, unless client and server have successfully negotiated the “unauthenticated GET” option described in Section 3.4. In such case, the client can simply issue a GET to the star-certificate resource without authenticating itself to the server as illustrated in Figure 5.

  GET /acme/cert/mAt3xBGaobw HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.org
  Accept: application/pem-certificate-chain

  HTTP/1.1 200 OK
  Content-Type: application/pem-certificate-chain
  Link: <https://example.com/acme/some-directory>;rel="index"
  Not-Before: Mon, 1 Feb 2016 00:00:00 GMT
  Not-After: Mon, 8 Feb 2016 00:00:00 GMT

  -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  [End-entity certificate contents]
  -----END CERTIFICATE-----
  -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  [Issuer certificate contents]
  -----END CERTIFICATE-----
  -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  [Other certificate contents]
  -----END CERTIFICATE-----

Figure 5: Fetching a STAR certificate with unauthenticated GET

The Server SHOULD include the “Not-Before” and “Not-After” HTTP headers in the response. When they exist, they MUST be equal to the respective fields inside the end-entity certificate. Their format is “HTTP-date” as defined in Section 7.1.1.2 of [RFC7231]. Their purpose is to enable client implementations that do not parse the certificate.

To improve robustness, the next certificate MUST be made available by the ACME CA at the URL pointed by “star-certificate” at the latest halfway through the lifetime of the currently active certificate. It is worth noting that this has an implication in case of cancellation: in fact, from the time the next certificate is made available, the cancellation is not completely effective until the latter also expires. To avoid the client accidentally entering a broken state, the “next” certificate MUST be pre-dated so that it is already valid when it is published at the “star-certificate” URL. Note that the server might need to increase the recurrent-certificate-predate value to satisfy the latter requirement. For further discussion on pre-dating, see Section 4.1.

The server MUST NOT issue any additional certificates for this order beyond its recurrent-end-date.

Immediately after the order expires, the server MUST respond with 403 (Forbidden) to any requests to the star-certificate endpoint. The response SHOULD provide additional information using a problem document [RFC7807] with type “urn:ietf:params:acme:error:recurrentOrderExpired”. Note that the Order resource’s state remains “valid”, as per the base protocol.

3.4. Negotiating an unauthenticated GET

In order to enable the name delegation workflow defined in [I-D.ietf-acme-star-delegation] as well as to increase the reliability of the STAR ecosystem (see Section 4.3 for details), this document defines a mechanism that allows a server to advertise support for accessing star-certificate resources via unauthenticated GET (instead of, or in addition to, POST-as-GET), and a client to enable this service with per-Order granularity.

Specifically, a server states its availability to grant unauthenticated access to a client’s Order star-certificate by setting the star-allow-certificate-get attribute to true in the meta field of the Directory object:

A client states its will to access the issued star-certificate via unauthenticated GET by adding a recurrent-certificate-get attribute to its Order and setting it to true.

If the server accepts the request, it MUST reflect the attribute setting in the resulting Order object.

3.5. Computing notBefore and notAfter of STAR Certificates

We define “nominal renewal date” the point in time when a new short-term certificate for a given STAR Order is due. It is a multiple of the Order’s recurrent-certificate-validity that starts with the issuance of the first short-term certificate and is upper-bounded by the Order’s recurrent-end-date (Figure 6).

    rcv    - STAR Order's recurrent-certificate-validity
    red    - STAR Order's recurrent-end-date
    nrd[i] - nominal renewal date of the i-th STAR certificate


                 .-rcv-.   .-rcv-.   .-rcv-.   .__.
                /       \ /       \ /       \ /  red
    -----------o---------o---------o---------o----X-------> t
              nrd[0]    nrd[1]    nrd[2]    nrd[3]

Figure 6: Nominal Renewal Date

The rules to determine the notBefore and notAfter values of the i-th STAR certificate are as follows:

    notBefore = nrd[i] - predating
    notAfter  = min(nrd[i] + rcv, red)

where “predating” is the max between the (optional) recurrent-certificate-predate (rcp) and the amount of pre-dating that the server needs to add to make sure that all certificates being published are valid at the time of publication (Section 3.3). The server pre-dating is a fraction f of rcv (i.e., f * rcv with .5 <= f < 1).

    predating = max(rcp, f * rcv)

3.5.1. Example

Given a server that intends to publish the next STAR certificate halfway through the lifetime of the previous one, and a STAR Order with the following attributes:

     {
       "recurrent-start-date": "2016-01-10T00:00:00Z",
       "recurrent-end-date": "2016-01-20T00:00:00Z",
       "recurrent-certificate-validity": 345600,    // 4 days
       "recurrent-certificate-predate": 518400      // 6 days
     }

The amount of pre-dating that needs to be subtracted from each nominal renewal date is 6 days – i.e., max(518400, 345600 * .5).

The notBefore and notAfter of each short-term certificate are:

notBefore notAfter
2016-01-04T00:00:00Z 2016-01-14T00:00:00Z
2016-01-08T00:00:00Z 2016-01-18T00:00:00Z
2016-01-12T00:00:00Z 2016-01-20T00:00:00Z

A client should expect each certificate to be available from the star-certificate endpoint at the following times:

2016-01-10T00:00:00Z (or earlier)
2016-01-12T00:00:00Z
2016-01-16T00:00:00Z

4. Operational Considerations

4.1. The Meaning of “Short Term” and the Impact of Skewed Clocks

“Short Term” is a relative concept, therefore trying to define a cut-off point that works in all cases would be a useless exercise. In practice, the expected lifetime of a STAR certificate will be counted in minutes, hours or days, depending on different factors: the underlying requirements for revocation, how much clock synchronization is expected among relying parties and the issuing CA, etc.

Nevertheless, this section attempts to provide reasonable suggestions for the Web use case, informed by current operational and research experience.

Acer et al. [Acer] find that one of the main causes of “HTTPS error” warnings in browsers is misconfigured client clocks. In particular, they observe that roughly 95% of the “severe” clock skews - the 6.7% of clock-related breakage reports which account for clients that are more than 24 hours behind - happen to be within 6-7 days.

In order to avoid these spurious warnings about a not (yet) valid server certificate, it is RECOMMENDED that site owners pre-date their Web facing certificates by 5 to 7 days. The exact number depends on the percentage of the “clock-skewed” population that the site owner expects to protect - 5 days cover 97.3%, 7 days cover 99.6%. Note that exact choice is also likely to depend on the kind of clients that is prevalent for a given site or app - for example, Android and Mac OS clients are known to behave better than Windows clients. These considerations are clearly out of scope of the present document.

In terms of security, STAR certificates and certificates with OCSP must-staple [RFC7633] can be considered roughly equivalent if the STAR certificate’s and the OCSP response’s lifetimes are the same. Given OCSP responses can be cached on average for 4 days [Stark], it is RECOMMENDED that a STAR certificate that is used on the Web has an “effective” lifetime (excluding any pre-dating to account for clock skews) no longer than 4 days.

4.2. Impact on Certificate Transparency (CT) Logs

Provided that the recommendations in Section 4.1 are followed, the increase in Certificate Transparency (CT) [RFC6962] log ingestion should be one order of magnitude in the worst case compared to the current state.

The input received from most members of the CT community when the issue was raised was that this should not represent a problem for the CT architecture.

4.3. Dependability

When using authenticated POST-as-GET, the HTTPS endpoint from where the STAR certificate is fetched can’t be easily replicated by an on-path HTTP cache. Reducing the caching properties of the protocol makes STAR clients increasingly dependent on the ACME server availability. This might be problematic given the relatively high rate of client-server interactions in a STAR ecosystem. Clients and servers should consider using the mechanism described in Section 3.4 to mitigate the risk.

5. Implementation Status

Note to RFC Editor: please remove this section before publication, including the reference to [RFC7942].

This section records the status of known implementations of the protocol defined by this specification at the time of posting of this Internet-Draft, and is based on a proposal described in [RFC7942]. The description of implementations in this section is intended to assist the IETF in its decision processes in progressing drafts to RFCs. Please note that the listing of any individual implementation here does not imply endorsement by the IETF. Furthermore, no effort has been spent to verify the information presented here that was supplied by IETF contributors. This is not intended as, and must not be construed to be, a catalog of available implementations or their features. Readers are advised to note that other implementations may exist.

According to [RFC7942], “this will allow reviewers and working groups to assign due consideration to documents that have the benefit of running code, which may serve as evidence of valuable experimentation and feedback that have made the implemented protocols more mature. It is up to the individual working groups to use this information as they see fit”.

5.1. Overview

The implementation is constructed around 3 elements: STAR Client for the Name Delegation Client (NDC), STAR Proxy for IdO and ACME Server for CA. The communication between them is over an IP network and the HTTPS protocol.

The software of the implementation is available at: https://github.com/mami-project/lurk

The following subsections offer a basic description, detailed information is available in https://github.com/mami-project/lurk/blob/master/proxySTAR_v2/README.md

5.1.1. ACME Server with STAR extension

This is a fork of the Let’s Encrypt Boulder project that implements an ACME compliant CA. It includes modifications to extend the ACME protocol as it is specified in this draft, to support recurrent orders and cancelling orders.

The implementation understands the new “recurrent” attributes as part of the Certificate issuance in the POST request for a new resource. An additional process “renewalManager.go” has been included in parallel that reads the details of each recurrent request, automatically produces a “cron” Linux based task that issues the recurrent certificates, until the lifetime ends or the order is canceled. This process is also in charge of maintaining a fixed URI to enable the NDC to download certificates, unlike Boulder’s regular process of producing a unique URI per certificate.

5.1.2. STAR Proxy

The STAR Proxy has a double role as ACME client and STAR Server. The former is a fork of the EFF Certbot project that implements an ACME compliant client with the STAR extension. The latter is a basic HTTP REST API server.

The STAR Proxy understands the basic API request with a server. The current implementation of the API is defined in draft-ietf-acme-star-01. Registration or order cancellation triggers the modified Certbot client that requests, or cancels, the recurrent generation of certificates using the STAR extension over ACME protocol. The URI with the location of the recurrent certificate is delivered to the STAR client as a response.

5.2. Level of Maturity

This is a prototype.

5.3. Coverage

A STAR Client is not included in this implementation, but done by direct HTTP request with any open HTTP REST API tool. This is expected to be covered as part of the [I-D.sheffer-acme-star-request] implementation.

This implementation completely covers STAR Proxy and ACME Server with STAR extension.

5.4. Version Compatibility

The implementation is compatible with version draft-ietf-acme-star-01. The implementation is based on the Boulder and Certbot code release from 7-Aug-2017.

5.5. Licensing

This implementation inherits the Boulder license (Mozilla Public License 2.0) and Certbot license (Apache License Version 2.0 ).

5.6. Implementation experience

To prove the concept all the implementation has been done with a self-signed CA, to avoid impact on real domains. To be able to do it we use the FAKE_DNS property of Boulder and static /etc/hosts entries with domains names. Nonetheless this implementation should run with real domains.

Most of the implementation has been made to avoid deep changes inside of Boulder or Certbot, for example, the recurrent certificates issuance by the CA is based on an external process that auto-configures the standard Linux “cron” daemon in the ACME CA server.

The reference setup recommended is one physical host with 3 virtual machines, one for each of the 3 components (client, proxy and server) and the connectivity based on host bridge.

Network security is not enabled (iptables default policies are “accept” and all rules removed) in this implementation to simplify and test the protocol.

5.7. Contact Information

See author details below.

6. IANA Considerations

[[RFC Editor: please replace XXXX below by the RFC number.]]

6.1. New Error Types

This document adds the following entries to the ACME Error Type registry:

Type Description Reference
recurrentOrderCanceled The short-term certificate is no longer available because the recurrent order has been explicitly canceled by the IdO RFC XXXX
recurrentOrderExpired The short-term certificate is no longer available because the recurrent order has expired RFC XXXX
recurrentCancellationInvalid A request to cancel a recurrent order that is not in state “valid” has been received RFC XXXX
recurrentRevocationNotSupported A request to revoke a recurrent order has been received RFC XXXX

6.2. New fields in Order Objects

This document adds the following entries to the ACME Order Object Fields registry:

Field Name Field Type Configurable Reference
recurrent string true RFC XXXX
recurrent-start-date string true RFC XXXX
recurrent-end-date string true RFC XXXX
recurrent-certificate-validity integer true RFC XXXX
recurrent-certificate-predate integer true RFC XXXX
recurrent-certificate-get boolean true RFC XXXX
star-certificate string false RFC XXXX

6.3. New fields in the “meta” Object within a Directory Object

This document adds the following entries to the ACME Directory Metadata Fields:

Field Name Field Type Reference
star-enabled boolean RCF XXXX
star-min-cert-validity integer RCF XXXX
star-max-renewal integer RCF XXXX
star-allow-certificate-get boolean RFC XXXX

6.4. Not-Before and Not-After HTTP Headers

The “Message Headers” registry should be updated with the following additional values:

Header Field Name Protocol Status Reference
Not-Before http standard RFC XXXX
Not-After http standard RFC XXXX

7. Security Considerations

7.1. No revocation

STAR certificates eliminate an important security feature of PKI which is the ability to revoke certificates. Revocation allows the administrator to limit the damage done by a rogue node or an adversary who has control of the private key. With STAR certificates, expiration replaces revocation so there is a timeliness issue. To that end, see also the discussion on clock skew in Section 4.1.

It should be noted that revocation also has timeliness issues, because both CRLs and OCSP responses have nextUpdate fields that tell relying parties (RPs) how long they should trust this revocation data. These fields are typically set to hours, days, or even weeks in the future. Any revocation that happens before the time in nextUpdate goes unnoticed by the RP.

More discussion of the security of STAR certificates is available in [Topalovic].

7.2. Denial of Service Considerations

STAR adds a new attack vector that increases the threat of denial of service attacks, caused by the change to the CA’s behavior. Each STAR request amplifies the resource demands upon the CA, where one order produces not one, but potentially dozens or hundreds of certificates, depending on the “recurrent-certificate-validity” parameter. An attacker can use this property to aggressively reduce the “recurrent-certificate-validity” (e.g. 1 sec.) jointly with other ACME attack vectors identified in Sec. 10 of [RFC8555]. Other collateral impact is related to the certificate endpoint resource where the client can retrieve the certificates periodically. If this resource is external to the CA (e.g. a hosted web server), the previous attack will be reflected to that resource.

Mitigation recommendations from ACME still apply, but some of them need to be adjusted. For example, applying rate limiting to the initial request, by the nature of the recurrent behavior cannot solve the above problem. The CA server needs complementary mitigation and specifically, it SHOULD enforce a minimum value on “recurrent-certificate-validity”. Alternatively, the CA can set an internal certificate generation processes rate limit.

7.3. Privacy Considerations

In order to avoid correlation of certificates by account, if unauthenticated GET is negotiated (Section 3.4) the recommendation in Section 10.5 of [RFC8555] regarding the choice of URL structure applies, i.e. servers SHOULD choose URLs of certificate resources in a non-guessable way, for example using capability URLs [W3C.WD-capability-urls-20140218].

8. Acknowledgments

This work is partially supported by the European Commission under Horizon 2020 grant agreement no. 688421 Measurement and Architecture for a Middleboxed Internet (MAMI). This support does not imply endorsement.

Thanks to Roman Danyliw, Jon Peterson, Eric Rescorla, Sean Turner and Martin Thomson for helpful comments and discussions that have shaped this document.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC3339] Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps", RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002.
[RFC7231] Fielding, R. and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content", RFC 7231, DOI 10.17487/RFC7231, June 2014.
[RFC7807] Nottingham, M. and E. Wilde, "Problem Details for HTTP APIs", RFC 7807, DOI 10.17487/RFC7807, March 2016.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017.
[RFC8555] Barnes, R., Hoffman-Andrews, J., McCarney, D. and J. Kasten, "Automatic Certificate Management Environment (ACME)", RFC 8555, DOI 10.17487/RFC8555, March 2019.

9.2. Informative References

[Acer] Acer, M., Stark, E., Felt, A., Fahl, S., Bhargava, R., Dev, B., Braithwaite, M., Sleevi, R. and P. Tabriz, "Where the Wild Warnings Are: Root Causes of Chrome HTTPS Certificate Errors", DOI 10.1145/3133956.3134007, 2017.
[I-D.ietf-acme-star-delegation] Sheffer, Y., Lopez, D., Pastor, A. and T. Fossati, "An ACME Profile for Generating Delegated STAR Certificates", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-acme-star-delegation-00, December 2018.
[I-D.nir-saag-star] Nir, Y., Fossati, T., Sheffer, Y. and T. Eckert, "Considerations For Using Short Term Certificates", Internet-Draft draft-nir-saag-star-01, March 2018.
[I-D.sheffer-acme-star-request] Sheffer, Y., Lopez, D., Dios, O., Pastor, A. and T. Fossati, "Generating Certificate Requests for Short-Term, Automatically-Renewed (STAR) Certificates", Internet-Draft draft-sheffer-acme-star-request-02, June 2018.
[RFC6962] Laurie, B., Langley, A. and E. Kasper, "Certificate Transparency", RFC 6962, DOI 10.17487/RFC6962, June 2013.
[RFC7633] Hallam-Baker, P., "X.509v3 Transport Layer Security (TLS) Feature Extension", RFC 7633, DOI 10.17487/RFC7633, October 2015.
[RFC7942] Sheffer, Y. and A. Farrel, "Improving Awareness of Running Code: The Implementation Status Section", BCP 205, RFC 7942, DOI 10.17487/RFC7942, July 2016.
[Stark] Stark, E., Huang, L., Israni, D., Jackson, C. and D. Boneh, "The case for prefetching and prevalidating TLS server certificates", 2012.
[Topalovic] Topalovic, E., Saeta, B., Huang, L., Jackson, C. and D. Boneh, "Towards Short-Lived Certificates", 2012.
[W3C.WD-capability-urls-20140218] Tennison, J., "Good Practices for Capability URLs", World Wide Web Consortium WD WD-capability-urls-20140218, February 2014.

Appendix A. Document History

[[Note to RFC Editor: please remove before publication.]]

A.1. draft-ietf-acme-star-06

A.2. draft-ietf-acme-star-05

A.3. draft-ietf-acme-star-04

A.4. draft-ietf-acme-star-03

A.5. draft-ietf-acme-star-02

A.6. draft-ietf-acme-star-01

A.7. draft-ietf-acme-star-00

A.8. draft-sheffer-acme-star-02

A.9. draft-sheffer-acme-star-01

A.10. draft-sheffer-acme-star-00

A.11. draft-sheffer-acme-star-lurk-00

Authors' Addresses

Yaron Sheffer Intuit EMail: yaronf.ietf@gmail.com
Diego Lopez Telefonica I+D EMail: diego.r.lopez@telefonica.com
Oscar Gonzalez de Dios Telefonica I+D EMail: oscar.gonzalezdedios@telefonica.com
Antonio Agustin Pastor Perales Telefonica I+D EMail: antonio.pastorperales@telefonica.com
Thomas Fossati ARM EMail: thomas.fossati@arm.com