GOST Cipher Suites for Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3
CryptoPro18, Suschevsky val Moscow127018Russian Federation+7 (495) 995-48-20svs@cryptopro.ruCryptoPro18, Suschevsky val Moscow127018Russian Federationalekseev@cryptopro.ruCryptoPro18, Suschevsky val Moscow127018Russian Federationess@cryptopro.ruCryptoPro18, Suschevsky val Moscow127018Russian Federationbabueva@cryptopro.ru
General
Network Working GroupGOST, cipher suite, TLS 1.3, signature scheme
The purpose of this document is to make the Russian cryptographic standards
available to the Internet community for their implementation in the Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Protocol Version 1.3.
This specification defines four new cipher suites and seven new signature schemes
based on GOST R 34.12-2015, GOST R 34.11-2012 and GOST R 34.10-2012 algorithms.
This document defines four new cipher suites (the TLS13_GOST cipher suites) and seven new signature schemes (the TLS13_GOST signature schemes)
for the Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3, that are based on Russian cryptographic standards
GOST R 34.12-2015 (the English version can be found in ),
GOST R 34.11-2012 (the English version can be found in ) and
GOST R 34.10-2012 (the English version can be found in ).
The TLS13_GOST cipher suites (see ) have the following values:
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_L = {TBD1};
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_L = {TBD2};
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_S = {TBD3};
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_S = {TBD4}.
Each TLS13_GOST cipher suite specifies a pair (record protection algorithm, hash algorithm) such that:
The record protection algorithm is the AEAD algorithm (see ) based on the GOST R 34.12-2015 block cipher
in the Multilinear Galois Mode (MGM) and the external re-keying approach
(see ) intended for increasing the lifetime of symmetric keys used to protect records.
The hash algorithm is the GOST R 34.11-2012 algorithm .
Note: The TLS13_GOST cipher suites are divided into two types (depending on the key lifetime limitations, see and
): the "_S" (strong) cipher suites and the "_L" (light) cipher suites.
The TLS13_GOST signature schemes that can be used with the TLS13_GOST cipher suites have the following values:
gostr34102012_256a = TBD5;
gostr34102012_256b = TBD6;
gostr34102012_256c = TBD7;
gostr34102012_256d = TBD8;
gostr34102012_512a = TBD9;
gostr34102012_512b = TBD10;
gostr34102012_512c = TBD11.
Each TLS13_GOST signature scheme specifies a pair (signature algorithm, elliptic curve) such that:
The signature algorithm is the GOST R 34.10-2012 algorithm .
The elliptic curve is one of the curves defined in .
Additionally, this document specifies the key exchange and authentication process in case of negotiating
TLS13_GOST cipher suites (see ).
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 when, and only when,
they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
This document uses the following terms and definitions for the sets and operations
on the elements of these sets:
the set of byte strings of length t, t >= 0, for t = 0 the
B_t set consists of a single empty string of zero length.
If A is an element of B_t, then A = (a_1, a_2,
... , a_t), where a_1, a_2, ... , a_t are in {0, ... , 255};
the set of all byte strings of a finite length
(hereinafter referred to as strings), including the empty
string;
the string A[i..j] = (a_i, a_{i+1}, ... , a_j) in B_{j-i+1}, where A = (a_1, ... , a_t) in B_t and 1<=i<=j<=t;
the byte length of the byte string A;
the concatenation of strings A and C both belonging to B*, i.e.,
a string in B_{|A|+|C|}, where the left substring in
B_|A| is equal to A, and the right substring in B_|C| is
equal to C;
bitwise AND of integers i and j;
the byte string STR_t(i) = (i_1, ... , i_t) in B_t corresponding to
an integer i = 256^{t-1} * i_1 + ... + 256 * i_{t-1} + i_t
(the interpretation of the integer as a byte string in big-endian format);
the byte string str_t(i) = (i_1, ... , i_t) in B_t corresponding to
an integer i = 256^{t-1} * i_t + ... + 256 * i_2 + i_1
(the interpretation of the integer as a byte string in little-endian format);
the byte-length of the block cipher key;
the byte-length of the block cipher block;
the byte-length of the initialization vector;
the elliptic curve indicated by client in "supported_groups" extension;
the order of group of points belonging to the elliptic curve E_i;
the cyclic subgroup order of group of points belonging to the elliptic curve E_i;
the cyclic subgroup cofactor which is equal to m_i / q_i;
the public key stored in endpoint's certificate;
the private key that corresponds to the Q_sign key;
the point of the elliptic curve E_i of the order q_i;
the client's ephemeral key pair which consists of the private key and the public key corresponding to the elliptic curve E_i;
the server's ephemeral key pair which consists of the private key and the public key corresponding to the elliptic curve E_i;
the zero point of the elliptic curve E_i.
The cipher suite value is used to indicate a record protection algorithm and a hash algorithm which an endpoint supports (see Section 4.1.2 of ).
This section defines the following four TLS13_GOST cipher suites that can be used to support Russian cryptographic algorithms:
Each cipher suite specifies a pair of the record protection algorithm (see ) and the hash algorithm ().
In accordance with Section 5.2 of the record protection algorithm translates a TLSPlaintext structure into a TLSCiphertext structure.
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, the encrypted_record field of the TLSCiphertext structure MUST be set to the AEADEncrypted value computed as follows:
AEADEncrypted = AEAD-Encrypt'(sender_write_key, nonce, additional_data, plaintext, seqnum),
where
the AEAD-Encrypt' function is defined in ;
the sender_write_key (either the client_write_key or the server_write_key) is generated in accordance with Section 7.3 of ;
the nonce value is derived from the record sequence number seqnum and the sender_write_iv value (either the client_write_iv
or the server_write_iv) in accordance with Section 5.3 of ;
the additional_data value is the record header that is generated in accordance with Section 5.2 of :
the plaintext value is the TLSInnerPlaintext structure encoded in accordance with Section 5.2 of ;
the seqnum value is the record sequence number in the range 0-SNMAX, where the SNMAX value is defined in .
Note1: The AEAD-Encrypt' function is exactly the same as the AEAD-Encrypt function defined in except one additional argument
(seqnum) intended to support external re-keying approach.
Note2: The SNMAX parameter is specified by the particular TLS13_GOST cipher suite to limit the amount of data that can be encrypted under the same traffic key
material (sender_write_key, sender_write_iv).
The record deprotection algorithm reverse the process of the record protection. In order to decrypt and verify the protected record with sequence number
seqnum the algorithm takes as input the peer_write_key (either the client_write_key or the server_write_key), nonce, additional data, the AEADEncrypted value
and the seqnum value and outputs the res value which is either the plaintext or an error indicating that the decryption failed. If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is
negotiated, the res value MUST be computed as follows:
res = AEAD-Decrypt'(peer_write_key, nonce, additional_data, AEADEncrypted, seqnum),
where the AEAD-Decrypt' function is defined in .
Note: The AEAD-Decrypt' function is exactly the same as the AEAD-Decrypt function defined in except one additional argument
(seqnum) intended to support external re-keying approach.
The AEAD-Encrypt' and AEAD-Decrypt' functions are defined as follows.
where
MGM-Encrypt and MGM-Decrypt functions are defined in and are used with block ciphers defined in .
The size of the authentication tag T is equal to n bytes (S = n). The size of the nonce parameter is equal to n bytes (IVlen = n).
TLSTREE function is defined in .
The cipher suites TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_L and TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_S MUST use Kuznyechik
as a base block cipher for the AEAD algorithm (see ). The block length n is 16 bytes (n = 16) and the key length k is 32 bytes (k = 32).
The cipher suites TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_L and TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_S MUST use Magma
as a base block cipher for the AEAD algorithm (see ). The block length n is 8 bytes (n = 8) and the key length k is 32 bytes (k = 32).
The TLS13_GOST cipher suites use the TLSTREE function for the external re-keying approach (see ). The TLSTREE function is defined as follows:
TLSTREE(K_root, i) = KDF_3(KDF_2(KDF_1(K_root, STR_8(i & C_1)), STR_8(i & C_2)), STR_8(i & C_3)),
where
K_root in B_32;
i in {0, 1, ... , 2^64 - 1};
KDF_j(K, D), j = 1, 2, 3, is the key derivation function defined as follows:
KDF_1(K, D) = KDF_GOSTR3411_2012_256(K, "level1", D),
KDF_2(K, D) = KDF_GOSTR3411_2012_256(K, "level2", D),
KDF_3(K, D) = KDF_GOSTR3411_2012_256(K, "level3", D),
where the KDF_GOSTR3411_2012_256 function is defined in , K in B_32, D in B_8.
C_1, C_2, C_3 are constants defined by the particular cipher suite as follows:
The SNMAX parameter is the maximum number of records encrypted under the same traffic key material (sender_write_key and sender_write_iv)
and is defined by the particular cipher suite as follows:
The Hash algorithm is used for key derivation process (see Section 7.1 of ),
Finished message calculation (see Section 4.4.4 of ), Transcript-Hash function computation
(see Section 4.4.1 of ), PSK binder value calculation (see Section 4.2.11.2 of ),
external re-keying approach (see ) and other purposes.
In case of negotiating a TLS13_GOST cipher suite the Hash algorithm MUST be the GOST R 34.11-2012
hash algorithm with 32-byte (256-bit) hash value.
The signature scheme value is used to indicate a single signature algorithm and a curve that can be used in digital signature (see Section 4.2.3 of ).
This section defines the following seven TLS13_GOST signature schemes that can be used to support Russian cryptographic algorithms:
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated and authentication via certificates is required one of the TLS13_GOST signature schemes listed above SHOULD be used.
Each signature scheme specifies a pair of the signature algorithm (see ) and the elliptic curve (see ).
Signature algorithms corresponding to the TLS13_GOST signature schemes are defined as follows:
Elliptic curves corresponding to the TLS13_GOST signature schemes are defined as follows:
If TLS13_GOST signature scheme is used, the signature value in CertificateVerify message (see )
MUST be calculated using the SIGN function defined as follows:
where
q is the subgroup order of group of points of the elliptic curve;
l is defined as follows:
l = 32 for gostr34102012_256a, gostr34102012_256b, gostr34102012_256c
and gostr34102012_256d signature schemes;
l = 64 for gostr34102012_512a, gostr34102012_512b and gostr34102012_512c
signature schemes;
SIGNGOST is an algorithm which takes as an input message M and private key d_sign and returns a pair of integers (r, s)
calculated during signature generation process in accordance with the GOST R 34.10-2012 signature algorithm
(see Section 6.1 of ).
Note: The signature value sgn is the concatenation of two strings that are byte representations of r and s values in the little-endian format.
Key exchange and authentication process in case of using TLS13_GOST cipher suites is defined in
, and .
TLS13_GOST cipher suites support three basic key exchange modes which are defined in : ECDHE, PSK-only and PSK-with-ECDHE.
Note: In accordance with TLS 1.3 also supports key exchange modes based on Diffie-Hellman protocol
over finite fields. However, TLS13_GOST cipher suites SHOULD use only modes based on Diffie-Hellman protocol over elliptic curves.
In accordance with PSKs can be divided into two types:
internal PSKs which can be established during the previous connection;
external PSKs which can be established out of band.
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, PSK-only key exchange mode SHOULD be established only via the internal PSKs, and external PSKs
SHOULD be used only in PSK-with-ECDHE mode (see more in ).
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated and ECDHE or PSK-with-ECDHE key exchange mode is used the ECDHE shared secret value SHOULD be calculated
in accordance with on the basis of one of the elliptic curves defined in .
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, ECDHE shared secret value SHOULD be calculated in accordance with
and . The public ephemeral keys used to obtain ECDHE shared secret value SHOULD be represented in format
described in .
The client calculates ECDHE shared secret value in accordance with the following steps:
1. Chooses from all supported curves E_1, ..., E_R the set of curves E_{i_1}, ..., E_{i_r}, 1 ≤ i_1 ≤ i_r ≤ R, where
r ≥ 1 in the case of first ClientHello message;
r = 1 in the case of responding to HelloRetryRequest message, E_{i_1} corresponds to the curve
indicated in the "key_share" extension in the HelloRetryRequest message.
2. Generates ephemeral key pairs (d_C^{i_1}, Q_C^{i_1}), ..., (d_C^{i_r}, Q_C^{i_r}) corresponding to
the curves E_{i_1}, ..., E_{i_r}, where for each i in {i_1, ..., i_r}:
d_C^i is chosen from {1, ..., q_i - 1} at random;
Q_C^i = d_C^i * P_i.
3. Sends ClientHello message specified in accordance with Section 4.1.2 of
and , which contains:
"key_share" extension with public ephemeral keys Q_C^{i_1}, ..., Q_C^{i_r} generated in accordance with
Section 4.2.8 of ;
"supported_groups" extension with supported curves E_1, ..., E_R generated in accordance with
Section 4.2.7 of .
4. In case of receiving HelloRetryRequest message client should return to step 1 and correct parameters in accordance
with Section 4.1.2 of .
In case of receiving ServerHello message client proceeds to the next step. In other cases client MUST terminate the
connection with "unexpected_message" alert.
5. Extracts curve E_res and ephemeral key Q_S^res, res in {1, ..., R}, from ServerHello message and checks whether
the Q_S^res belongs to E_res. If this check fails, the client MUST abort the handshake with "handshake_failure" alert.
6. Generates Q^ECDHE:
Q^ECDHE = (X^ECDHE, Y^ECDHE) = (h_res * d_C^res) * Q_S^res.
7. Client MUST check whether the computed shared secret Q^ECDHE is not equal to the zero point O_res. If this check fails,
the client MUST abort the handshake with "handshake_failure" alert.
8. Shared secret value ECDHE is the byte representation of the coordinate X^ECDHE of point Q^ECDHE in the little-endian format:
ECDHE = str_{coordinate_length}(X^ECDHE),
where the coordinate_length value is defined by the particular elliptic curve (see ).
Upon receiving the ClientHello message, the server calculates ECDHE shared secret value in accordance with the following steps:
1. Chooses the curve E_res, res in {1, ..., R} from the list of the curves E_1, ..., E_R indicated in "supported_groups"
extension in ClientHello message and the corresponding public ephemeral key value Q_C^res from the list Q_C^{i_1}, ..., Q_C^{i_r},
1 ≤ i_1 ≤ i_r ≤ R, indicated in "key_share" extension. If no corresponding public ephemeral key value is found
(res in {1, ..., R}\{i_1, ..., i_r}), server MAY send HelloRetryRequest message with "key_share" extension indicating the selected
elliptic curve E_res and wait for the new ClientHello message.
2. Checks whether Q_C^res belongs to E_res. If this check fails, the server MUST abort the handshake with "handshake_failure" alert.
3. Generates ephemeral key pair (d_S^res, Q_S^res) corresponding to E_res:
d_S^res is chosen from {1, ..., q_res - 1} at random;
Q_S^res = d_S^res * P_res.
4. Sends ServerHello message generated in accordance with Section 4.1.3 of
and with "key_share" extension which contains public ephemeral key
value Q_S^res corresponding to E_res.
5. Generates Q^ECDHE:
Q^ECDHE = (X^ECDHE, Y^ECDHE) = (h_res * d_S^res) * Q_C^res.
6. Server MUST check whether the computed shared secret Q^ECDHE is not equal to the zero point O_res. If this check fails, the server MUST
abort the handshake with "handshake_failure" alert.
7. Shared secret value ECDHE is the byte representation of the coordinate X^ECDHE of point Q^ECDHE in the little-endian format:
ECDHE = str_{coordinate_length}(X^ECDHE),
where the coordinate_length value is defined by the particular elliptic curve (see ).
This section defines the representation format of the public ephemeral keys generated during ECDHE shared secret calculation
(see and ).
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated and ECDHE or PSK-with-ECDHE key exchange mode is used, the public ephemeral key Q
indicated in the KeyShareEntry.key_exchange field SHOULD contain the data defined by the following structure:
where X and Y, respectively, contain the byte representations of the x and the y values of point Q (Q = (x, y)) in the little-endian format
and are specified as follows:
X = str_{coordinate_length}(x);
Y = str_{coordinate_length}(y).
The coordinate_length value is defined by the particular elliptic curve (see ).
The "supported_groups" extension is used to indicate the set of the elliptic curves supported by an endpoint and is defined
in Section 4.2.7 .
This section defines the following seven elliptic curves that can be used to support Russian cryptographic algorithms:
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated and ECDHE or PSK-with-ECDHE key exchange mode is established, one of the elliptic curves listed above SHOULD be used.
Each curve corresponds to the particular identifier and specifies the value of coordinate_length parameter (see "cl" column) as follows:
Note: The identifier values and the corresponding elliptic curves are the same as in .
In accordance with authentication can happen via signature with certificate or via symmetric pre-shared key (PSK).
The server side of the channel is always authenticated; the client side is optionally authenticated.
PSK-based authentication happens as a side effect of key exchange. If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, external PSKs SHOULD be combined
only with the mutual authentication (see more in ).
Certificate-based authentication happens via Authentication messages and optional CertificateRequest message (sent if client authentication is required).
In case of negotiating TLS13_GOST cipher suites the signature schemes used for certificate-based authentication are defined in
and the Authentication messages are specified in and . The CertificateRequest message is specified in .
The TLS13_GOST cipher suites specify the ClientHello, ServerHello, CertificateRequest, Certificate
and CertificateVerify handshake messages that are described in further detail below.
The ClientHello message is sent when a client first connects to a server or responds
to a HelloRetryRequest message and is specified in accordance with as follows.
In order to negotiate a TLS13_GOST cipher suite, the ClientHello message MUST meet the following requirements.
The ClientHello.cipher_suites field MUST contain the values defined in .
If server authentication via a certificate is required, the extension_data field
of the "signature_algorithms" extension MUST contain the values defined in ,
which correspond to the GOST R 34.10-2012 signature algorithm.
If server authentication via a certificate is required and the client uses optional
"signature_algorithms_cert" extension, the extension_data field of this extension MUST contain the
values defined in , which correspond to the GOST R 34.10-2012 signature algorithm.
If client wants to establish TLS 1.3 connection using ECDHE shared secret value, the extension_data field
of the "supported_groups" extension MUST contain the elliptic curve identifiers defined
in .
The ServerHello message is sent by the server in response to a ClientHello message to negotiate
an acceptable set of handshake parameters based on the ClientHello and is specified in accordance
with as follows.
In case of negotiating a TLS13_GOST cipher suite, the ServerHello message MUST meet the following requirements.
The ServerHello.cipher_suite field MUST contain one of the values defined
in .
If server decides to establish TLS 1.3 connection using ECDHE shared secret value,
the extension_data field of the "key_share" extension MUST contain the elliptic curve
identifier and the public ephemeral key that satisfy the following conditions.
The elliptic curve identifier corresponds to a value that was provided in the
"supported_groups" and the "key_share" extensions in the ClientHello message.
The elliptic curve identifier is one of the values defined in .
The public ephemeral key corresponds to the elliptic curve specified by the
KeyShareEntry.group identifier.
This message is sent when server requests client authentication via a certificate and is specified in
accordance with as follows.
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, the CertificateRequest message MUST meet the following
requirements.
The extension_data field of the "signature_algorithms" extension MUST contain only the values
defined in .
If server uses optional "signature_algorithms_cert" extension, the extension_data field
of this extension MUST contain only the values defined in .
This message is sent to convey the endpoint's certificate chain to the peer and is specified in
accordance with as follows.
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, the Certificate message MUST meet the following requirements.
Each endpoint's certificate provided to the peer MUST be signed using the algorithm
which corresponds to a signature scheme indicated by the peer in its "signature_algoritms_cert"
extension, if present (or in the "signature_algorithms" extension, otherwise).
The signature algorithm used for signing certificates MUST correspond to the one of the
signature schemes defined in .
This message is sent to provide explicit proof that an endpoint possesses the private key
corresponding to the public key indicated in its certificate and is specified in accordance
with as follows.
If TLS13_GOST cipher suite is negotiated, the CertificateVerify message MUST meet the following requirements.
The CertificateVerify.algorithm field MUST contain the signature scheme identifier which
corresponds to the value indicated in the peer's "signature_algorithms" extension and
which is one of the values defined in .
The CertificateVerify.signature field contains the sgn value, which is computed as follows:
sgn = SIGN(M, d_sign),
where
the SIGN function is defined in ,
the message M is defined in accordance with Section 4.4.3 of ,
d_sign is the sender long-term private key that corresponds to
the sender long-term public key Q_sign from the sender's certificate.
IANA is asked to assign numbers TBD1, TBD2, TBD3 and TBD4 with the names
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_L,
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_L,
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_KUZNYECHIK_MGM_S,
TLS_GOSTR341112_256_WITH_MAGMA_MGM_S to
the "TLS Cipher Suites" registry with this document as reference, as shown below.
IANA is asked to assign numbers TBD5, TBD6, TBD7, TBD8, TBD9, TBD10 and TBD11 with the names
gostr34102012_256a,
gostr34102012_256b,
gostr34102012_256c,
gostr34102012_256d,
gostr34102012_512a,
gostr34102012_512b,
gostr34102012_512c
to the "TLS SignatureScheme" registry, as shown below.
Due to historical reasons in addition to the curve identifier values listed in Table 5
there exist some additional identifier values that correspond to
the signature schemes as follows.
Client should be prepared to handle any of them correctly if corresponding signature scheme is included in the "signature_algorithms"
or "signature_algorithms_cert" extensions.
In order to create an effective implementation client and server SHOULD follow the rules below.
1. While using TLSTREE algorithm function KDF_j, j = 1, 2, 3, SHOULD be invoked only if the record sequence number seqnum reaches such a value that
seqnum & C_j != (seqnum - 1) & C_j.
Otherwise the previous value should be used.
2. For each pre-shared key value PSK the binder_key value should be computed only once within all connections where ClientHello message contains a
"pre_shared_key" extension indicating this PSK value.
In order to ensure the secure TLS 1.3 connection client and server SHOULD fulfil the following requirements.
1. An internal PSK value is NOT RECOMMENDED to be used to establish more than one TLS 1.3 connection.
2. 0-RTT data SHOULD NOT be sent during TLS 1.3 connection. The reasons for this restriction are that the 0-RTT data is not forward secret and
is not resistant to replay attacks (see more in Section 2.3 of ).
3. If client authentication is required, server SHOULD NOT send Application Data, NewSessionTicket and KeyUpdate messages
prior to receiving the client's Authentication messages since any data sent at that point is
being sent to an unauthenticated peer.
4. External PSKs SHOULD be used only in PSK-with-ECDHE mode. In case of using external PSK in PSK-only mode the attack described in
is possible which leads to the situation when client establishes connection to itself. One of the mitigations proposed in is to use
certificates, however, in that case, an impersonation attack as in occurs.
If the connections are established with additional usage
of key_share extension (in PSK-with-ECDHE mode), then the adversary which just echoes messages cannot reveal the traffic
key material (as long as the used group is secure).
5. In case of using external PSK, the mutual authentication MUST be provided by the external PSK distribution mechanism between the endpoints
which guarantees that the derived external PSK is unknown to anyone but the endpoints. In addition, the endpoint roles (i.e. client and server)
MUST be fixed during this mechanism and each role can match only to one endpoint during the whole external PSK lifetime.
Multilinear Galois Mode (MGM) CryptoPro TC 26TC 26CryptoPro
GOST Cipher Suites for Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2
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Information technology. Cryptographic data security. Block ciphers
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processes of [electronic] digital signature
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Selfie: reflections on TLS 1.3 with PSK
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Continuing to reflect on TLS 1.3 with external PSK
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Lilia Akhmetzyanova
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Alexandr Sokolov
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Vasily Nikolaev
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nikolaev@cryptopro.ru