Network Working Group S. Raza Internet-Draft J. Hoeglund Intended status: Standards Track RISE AB Expires: January 14, 2021 G. Selander J. Mattsson Ericsson AB M. Furuhed Nexus Group July 13, 2020 CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates draft-mattsson-cose-cbor-cert-compress-01 Abstract This document specifies a CBOR encoding/compression of RFC 7925 profiled certificates. By using the fact that the certificates are profiled, the CBOR certificate compression algorithms can in many cases compress RFC 7925 profiled certificates with over 50%. This document also specifies COSE headers for CBOR encoded certificates as well as the use of the CBOR certificate compression algorithm with TLS Certificate Compression in TLS 1.3 and DTLS 1.3. 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 14, 2021. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 1] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2. Notational Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 3. CBOR Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 4. Deployment settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 5. Expected Certificate Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 6. Native CBOR Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 8.1. CBOR Certificate Types Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 8.2. CBOR Certificate Signature Algorithms Registry . . . . . 9 8.3. CBOR Certificate Public Key Algorithms Registry . . . . . 10 8.4. COSE Header Parameters Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 8.5. TLS Certificate Compression Algorithm IDs Registry . . . 11 9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Appendix A. Example CBOR Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 A.1. Example X.509 Certificate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 A.2. Example CBOR Certificate Compression . . . . . . . . . . 15 A.3. Example Native CBOR Certificate . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Appendix B. X.509 Certificate Profile, ASN.1 . . . . . . . . . . 16 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 1. Introduction One of the challenges with deploying a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) for the Internet of Things (IoT) is the size and encoding of X.509 public key certificates [RFC5280], since those are not optimized for constrained environments [RFC7228]. More compact certificate representations are desirable. Due to the current PKI usage of X.509 certificates, keeping X.509 compatibility is necessary at least for a transition period. However, the use of a more compact encoding with the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) [RFC7049] reduces the certificate size significantly which has known performance benefits in terms of decreased communication overhead, power consumption, latency, storage, etc. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 2] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 CBOR is a data format designed for small code size and small message size. CBOR builds on the JSON data model but extends it by e.g. encoding binary data directly without base64 conversion. In addition to the binary CBOR encoding, CBOR also has a diagnostic notation that is readable and editable by humans. The Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) [RFC8610] provides a way to express structures for protocol messages and APIs that use CBOR. [RFC8610] also extends the diagnostic notation. CBOR data items are encoded to or decoded from byte strings using a type-length-value encoding scheme, where the three highest order bits of the initial byte contain information about the major type. CBOR supports several different types of data items, in addition to integers (int, uint), simple values (e.g. null), byte strings (bstr), and text strings (tstr), CBOR also supports arrays [] of data items, maps {} of pairs of data items, and sequences of data items. For a complete specification and examples, see [RFC7049], [RFC8610], and [RFC8742]. RFC 7925 [RFC7925] specifies a certificate profile for Internet of Things deployments which can be applied for lightweight certificate based authentication with e.g. TLS [RFC8446], DTLS [I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13], COSE [RFC8152], or EDHOC [I-D.ietf-lake-edhoc]. This document specifies the CBOR encoding/ compression of RFC 7925 profiled X.509 certificates based on [X.509-IoT]. Two variants are defined using exactly the same CBOR encoding and differing only in what is being signed: o The CBOR compressed X.509 certificate, which can be decompressed into a certificate that can be verified by code compatible with RFC 7925. o The "native" CBOR encoded certificate, which further optimizes the performance in constrained environments but is not backwards compatible with RFC 7925, see Section 6. Other work has looked at reducing the size of X.509 certificates. The purpose of this document is to stimulate a discussion on CBOR based certificates: what field values (in particular for 'issuer'/'subject') are relevant for constrained IoT applications, what is the maximum compression that can be expected with CBOR, and what is the right trade-off between compactness and generality. This document specifies COSE headers for use of the CBOR certificate encoding with COSE. The document also specifies the CBOR certificate compression algorithm for use as TLS Certificate Compression with TLS 1.3 and DTLS 1.3. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 3] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 2. Notational Conventions 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. This specification makes use of the terminology in [RFC7228]. 3. CBOR Encoding This section specifies the content and encoding for CBOR certificates, with the overall objective to produce a very compact representation of the certificate profile defined in [RFC7925]. The CBOR certificate can be either a CBOR compressed X.509 certificate, in which case the signature is calculated on the DER encoded ASN.1 data in the X.509 certificate, or a native CBOR certificate, in which case the signature is calculated directly on the CBOR encoded data (see Section 6). In both cases the certificate content is adhering to the restrictions given by [RFC7925]. The corresponding ASN.1 schema is given in Appendix A. The encoding and compression has several components including: ASN.1 DER and base64 encoding are replaced with CBOR encoding, static fields are elided, and elliptic curve points are compressed. The X.509 fields and their CBOR encodings are listed below. Combining these different components reduces the certificate size significantly, which is not possible with general purpose compressions algorithms, see Figure 1. CBOR certificates are defined in terms of RFC 7925 profiled X.509 certificates: o version. The 'version' field is known (fixed to v3), and is omitted in the CBOR encoding. o serialNumber. The 'serialNumber' field is encoded as a CBOR byte string. This allows encoding of all lengths with minimal overhead. o signature. The 'signature' field is always the same as the 'signatureAlgorithm' field and always omitted from the CBOR encoding. o issuer. In the general case, the Distinguished Name is encoded as CBOR map, but if only CN is present the value can be encoded as a single text value. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 4] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 o validity. The 'notBefore' and 'notAfter' UTCTime fields are ASCII string of the form "yymmddHHMMSSZ". They are encoded as the unsigned integers using the following invertible encoding (Horner's method with different bases). The resulting integer n always fit in a 32 bit usigned integer. n = SS + 60 * (MM + 60 * (HH + 24 * (dd + 32 * (mm + 13 * yy)))) Decoding can be done by a succession of modulo and substraction operations. I.e. SS = n mod 60, MM = ((n - SS) / 60) mod 60, etc. o subject. The 'subject' field is restricted to specifying the value of the common name. By RFC 7925 an IoT subject is identified by either an EUI-64 for clients, or by a FQDN for servers. An EUI-64 mapped from a 48-bit MAC address is encoded as a CBOR byte string of length 6. Other EUI-64 is encoded as a CBOR byte string of length 8. A FQDN is encoded as a CBOR text string. o subjectPublicKeyInfo. If the 'algorithm' field is the default (id-ecPublicKey and prime256v1), it is omitted in the CBOR encoding, otherwise it is included in the subjectPublicKeyInfo_algorithm field encoded as an int, (see Section 8). The 'subjectPublicKey' is encoded as a CBOR byte string. Public keys of type id-ecPublicKey are point compressed as defined in Section 2.3.3 of [SECG]. o extensions. The 'extensions' field is encoded as a CBOR array where each extension is represented with an int. This is the most compact representation of the allowed extensions. The extensions mandated to be supported by RFC 7925 is encodeded as specified below, where critical extensions are encoded with a negative sign. TODO: need to make things mod 3 instead. I.e. non-critical keyUsage keyAgreement is encoded as 5, critical basicConstraints cA is encodes as -3, and non-criticical extKeyUsage id-kp-codeSigning + id-kp-OCSPSigning is encoded as 22. If subjectAltName is present, the value is placed at the end of the array encoded as a byte or text string following the encoding rules for the subject field. If the array contains a single int, extensions is encoded as the int instead of an array. subjectAltName = 1 basicConstraints = 2 + cA Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 5] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 keyUsage = 3 + digitalSignature + 2 * keyAgreement + 4 * keyCertSign extKeyUsage = 10 + id-kp-serverAuth + 2 * id-kp-clientAuth + 4 * id-kp-codeSigning + 8 * id-kp-OCSPSigning o signatureAlgorithm. If the 'signatureAlgorithm' field is the default (ecdsa-with-SHA256) it is omitted in the CBOR encoding, otherwise it is included in the signatureAlgorithm field encoded as an CBOR int (see Section 8). o signatureValue. Since the signature algorithm and resulting signature length are known, padding and extra length fields which are present in the ASN.1 encoding are omitted and the 'signatureValue' field is encoded as a CBOR byte string. For native CBOR certificates the signatureValue is calculated over the certificate CBOR sequence excluding the signatureValue. In addition to the above fields present in X.509, the CBOR ecoding introduces an additional field o type. A CBOR int used to indicate the type of CBOR certificate. Currently type can be a native CBOR certificate (type = 0) or a CBOR compressed X.509 certificates (type = 1), see Section 8. The following Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) defines a group, the elements of which are to be used in an unadorned CBOR Sequence [RFC8742]. The member names therefore only have documentary value. certificate = ( type : int, serialNumber : bytes, issuer : { + int => bytes } / text, validity_notBefore: uint, validity_notAfter: uint, subject : text / bytes subjectPublicKey : bytes extensions : [ *4 int, ? text / bytes ] / int, signatureValue : bytes, ? ( signatureAlgorithm : int, subjectPublicKeyInfo_algorithm : int ) ) The signatureValue for native CBOR certificates is calculated over the CBOR sequence: Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 6] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 ( type : int, serialNumber : bytes, issuer : { + int => bytes } / text, validity_notBefore: uint, validity_notAfter: uint, subject : text / bytes subjectPublicKey : bytes extensions : [ *4 int, ? text / bytes ] / int, ? ( signatureAlgorithm : int, subjectPublicKeyInfo_algorithm : int ) ) TODO - Specify exactly how issuer is encoded into a map / text and back again. This is a compromise between compactness and complete generality. 4. Deployment settings CBOR certificates can be deployed with legacy X.509 certificates and CA infrastructure. In order to verify the signature, the CBOR certificate is used to recreate the original X.509 data structure to be able to verify the signature. For protocols like TLS/DTLS 1.2, where the handshake is sent unencrypted, the actual encoding and compression can be done at different locations depending on the deployment setting. For example, the mapping between CBOR certificate and standard X.509 certificate can take place in a 6LoWPAN border gateway which allows the server side to stay unmodified. This case gives the advantage of the low overhead of a CBOR certificate over a constrained wireless links. The conversion to X.509 within an IoT device will incur a computational overhead, however, measured in energy this is negligible compared to the reduced communication overhead. For the setting with constrained server and server-only authentication, the server only needs to be provisioned with the CBOR certificate and does not perform the conversion to X.509. This option is viable when client authentication can be asserted by other means. For protocols like IKEv2, TLS/DTLS 1.3, and EDHOC, where certificates are encrypted, the proposed encoding needs to be done fully end-to- end, through adding the encoding/decoding functionality to the server. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 7] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 5. Expected Certificate Sizes The CBOR encoding of the sample certificate given in Appendix A results in the numbers shown in Figure 1. After RFC 7925 profiling, most duplicated information has been removed, and the remaining text strings are minimal in size. Therefore the further size reduction reached with general compression mechanisms will be small, mainly corresponding to making the ASN.1 endcoding more compact. The zlib number was calculated with zlib-flate. zlib-flate -compress < cert.der > cert.compressed +------------------+--------------+------------+--------------------+ | | RFC 7925 | zlib | CBOR Certificate | +------------------+---------------------------+--------------------+ | Certificate Size | 314 | 295 | 136 | +------------------+--------------+------------+--------------------+ Figure 1: Comparing Sizes of Certificates (bytes) 6. Native CBOR Certificates The difference between CBOR compressed X.509 certificate and native CBOR certificate is that the signature is calculated over the CBOR encoding rather than the DER encoded ASN.1 data. This removes entirely the need for ASN.1 DER and base64 encoding which reduces the processing in the authenticating devices, and avoids known complexities with these encodings. Native CBOR certificates can be applied in devices that are only required to authenticate to native CBOR certificate compatible servers. This is not a major restriction for many IoT deployments, where the parties issuing and verifying certificates can be a restricted ecosystem which not necessarily involves public CAs. CBOR compressed X.509 certificates provides an intermediate step between RFC 7925 profiled X.509 certificates and native CBOR certificates: An implementation of CBOR compressed X.509 certificates contains both the CBOR encoding of the X.509 certificate and the signature operations sufficient for native CBOR certificates. 7. Security Considerations The CBOR profiling of X.509 certificates does not change the security assumptions needed when deploying standard X.509 certificates but decreases the number of fields transmitted, which reduces the risk for implementation errors. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 8] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 Conversion between the certificate formats can be made in constant time to reduce risk of information leakage through side channels. The mechanism in this draft does not reveal any additional information compared to X.509. Because of difference in size, it will be possible to detect that this profile is used. The gateway solution described in Section 4 requires unencrypted certificates and is not recommended. 8. IANA Considerations For all items, the 'Reference' field points to this document. 8.1. CBOR Certificate Types Registry IANA has created a new registry titled "CBOR Certificate Types" under the new heading "CBOR Certificate". The registration procedure is "Expert Review". The columns of the registry are Value, Description, and Reference, where Value is an integer and the other columns are text strings. The initial contents of the registry are: +-------+---------------------------------------+ | Value | Description | +=======+=======================================+ | 0 | Native CBOR Certificate. | | 1 | CBOR Compressed X.509 Certificate | +-------+---------------------------------------+ Figure 2: CBOR Certificate Types 8.2. CBOR Certificate Signature Algorithms Registry IANA has created a new registry titled "CBOR Certificate Signature Algorithms" under the new heading "CBOR Certificate". The registration procedure is "Expert Review". The columns of the registry are Value, X.509 Algorithm, and Reference, where Value is an integer and the other columns are text strings. The initial contents of the registry are: Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 9] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 +-------+---------------------------------------+ | Value | X.509 Signature Algorithm | +=======+=======================================+ | 0 | ecdsa-with-SHA384 | | 1 | ecdsa-with-SHA512 | | 2 | id-ecdsa-with-shake128 | | 3 | id-ecdsa-with-shake256 | | 4 | id-Ed25519 | | 5 | id-Ed448 | +-------+---------------------------------------+ Figure 3: CBOR Certificate Signature Algorithms 8.3. CBOR Certificate Public Key Algorithms Registry IANA has created a new registry titled "CBOR Certificate Public Key Algorithms" under the new heading "CBOR Certificate". The registration procedure is "Expert Review". The columns of the registry are Value, X.509 Algorithm, and Reference, where Value is an integer and the other columns are text strings. The initial contents of the registry are: +-------+---------------------------------------+ | Value | X.509 Public Key Algorithm | +=======+=======================================+ | 0 | id-ecPublicKey + prime384v1 | | 1 | id-ecPublicKey + prime512v1 | | 2 | id-X25519 | | 3 | id-X448 | | 4 | id-Ed25519 | | 5 | id-Ed448 | +-------+---------------------------------------+ Figure 4: CBOR Certificate Public Key Algorithms 8.4. COSE Header Parameters Registry This document registers the following entries in the "COSE Header Parameters" registry under the "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE)" heading. The formatting and processing are the same as the corresponding x5chain and x5u defined in [I-D.ietf-cose-x509] except that the certificates are CBOR encoded instead of DER encoded. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 10] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 +-----------+-------+----------------+---------------------+ | Name | Label | Value Type | Description | +===========+=======+================+=====================+ | CBORchain | TBD1 | COSE_CBOR_Cert | An ordered chain of | | | | | CBOR certificates | +-----------+-------+----------------+---------------------+ | CBORu | TBD2 | uri | URI pointing to a | | | | | CBOR certificate | +-----------+-------+----------------+---------------------+ 8.5. TLS Certificate Compression Algorithm IDs Registry This document registers the following entry in the "Certificate Compression Algorithm IDs" registry under the "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Extensions" heading. +------------------+------------------------------+ | Algorithm Number | Description | +==================+==============================+ | TBD3 | CBOR Certificate | +------------------+------------------------------+ 9. References 9.1. Normative References [I-D.ietf-tls-certificate-compression] Ghedini, A. and V. Vasiliev, "TLS Certificate Compression", draft-ietf-tls-certificate-compression-10 (work in progress), January 2020. [I-D.ietf-tls-dtls13] Rescorla, E., Tschofenig, H., and N. Modadugu, "The Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Protocol Version 1.3", draft-ietf-tls-dtls13-38 (work in progress), May 2020. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997, . [RFC5280] Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S., Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008, . Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 11] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 [RFC7049] Bormann, C. and P. Hoffman, "Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)", RFC 7049, DOI 10.17487/RFC7049, October 2013, . [RFC7925] Tschofenig, H., Ed. and T. Fossati, "Transport Layer Security (TLS) / Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Profiles for the Internet of Things", RFC 7925, DOI 10.17487/RFC7925, July 2016, . [RFC8152] Schaad, J., "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE)", RFC 8152, DOI 10.17487/RFC8152, July 2017, . [RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017, . [RFC8446] Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018, . [RFC8610] Birkholz, H., Vigano, C., and C. Bormann, "Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL): A Notational Convention to Express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) and JSON Data Structures", RFC 8610, DOI 10.17487/RFC8610, June 2019, . [RFC8742] Bormann, C., "Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Sequences", RFC 8742, DOI 10.17487/RFC8742, February 2020, . 9.2. Informative References [I-D.ietf-cose-x509] Schaad, J., "CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Header parameters for carrying and referencing X.509 certificates", draft-ietf-cose-x509-06 (work in progress), March 2020. [I-D.ietf-lake-edhoc] Selander, G., Mattsson, J., and F. Palombini, "Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)", draft-ietf-lake- edhoc-00 (work in progress), July 2020. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 12] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 [RFC7228] Bormann, C., Ersue, M., and A. Keranen, "Terminology for Constrained-Node Networks", RFC 7228, DOI 10.17487/RFC7228, May 2014, . [SECG] "Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Standards for Efficient Cryptography Group, ver. 2", 2009, . [X.509-IoT] Forsby, F., Furuhed, M., Papadimitratos, P., and S. Raza, "Lightweight X.509 Digital Certificates for the Internet of Things.", Springer, Cham. Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering, vol 242., July 2018, . Appendix A. Example CBOR Certificates A.1. Example X.509 Certificate Example of RFC 7925 profiled X.509 certificate parsed with OpenSSL. Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 13] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 Certificate: Data: Version: 3 (0x2) Serial Number: 128269 (0x1f50d) Signature Algorithm: ecdsa-with-SHA256 Issuer: CN=RFC test CA Validity Not Before: Jan 1 00:00:00 2020 GMT Not After : Feb 2 00:00:00 2021 GMT Subject: CN=01-23-45-FF-FE-67-89-AB Subject Public Key Info: Public Key Algorithm: id-ecPublicKey Public-Key: (256 bit) pub: 04:ae:4c:db:01:f6:14:de:fc:71:21:28:5f:dc:7f: 5c:6d:1d:42:c9:56:47:f0:61:ba:00:80:df:67:88: 67:84:5e:e9:a6:9f:d4:89:31:49:da:e3:d3:b1:54: 16:d7:53:2c:38:71:52:b8:0b:0d:f3:e1:af:40:8a: 95:d3:07:1e:58 ASN1 OID: prime256v1 NIST CURVE: P-256 X509v3 extensions: X509v3 Key Usage: Digital Signature Signature Algorithm: ecdsa-with-SHA256 30:44:02:20:37:38:73:ef:87:81:b8:82:97:ef:23:5c:1f:ac: cf:62:da:4e:44:74:0d:c2:a2:e6:a3:c6:c8:82:a3:23:8d:9c: 02:20:3a:d9:35:3b:a7:88:68:3b:06:bb:48:fe:ca:16:ea:71: 17:17:34:c6:75:c5:33:2b:2a:f1:cb:73:38:10:a1:fc The DER encoding of the above certificate is 314 bytes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aza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 14] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 A.2. Example CBOR Certificate Compression The CBOR certificate compression of the X.509 in CBOR diagnostic format is: ( 1, h'01f50d', "RFC test CA", 721699200, 760492800, h'0123456789AB', h'02ae4cdb01f614defc7121285fdc7f5c6d1d42c95647f061ba 0080df678867845e', 5, h'373873EF8781B88297EF235C1FACCF62DA4E44740DC2A2E6A3 C6C882A3238D9C3AD9353BA788683B06BB48FECA16EA711717 34C675C5332B2AF1CB733810A1FC' ) The CBOR encoding (CBOR sequence) of the CBOR certificate is 136 bytes. 014301F50D6B52464320746573742043411A2B0441801A2D5433004601234567 89AB582102AE4CDB01F614DEFC7121285FDC7F5C6D1D42C95647F061BA0080DF 678867845E055840373873EF8781B88297EF235C1FACCF62DA4E44740DC2A2E6 A3C6C882A3238D9C3AD9353BA788683B06BB48FECA16EA71171734C675C5332B 2AF1CB733810A1FC A.3. Example Native CBOR Certificate The corresponding native CBOR certificate in CBOR diagnostic format is identical except for type and signatureValue. ( 0, h'01f50d', "RFC test CA", 721699200, 760492800, h'0123456789AB', h'02ae4cdb01f614defc7121285fdc7f5c6d1d42c95647f061 ba0080df678867845e', 5, h'7F10A063DA8DB2FD49414440CDF85070AC22A266C7F1DFB1 577D9A35A295A8742E794258B76968C097F85542322A0796 0199C13CC0220A9BC729EF2ECA638CFE' ) Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 15] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 The CBOR encoding (CBOR sequence) of the CBOR certificate is 136 bytes. 004301F50D6B52464320746573742043411A2B0441801A2D5433004601234567 89AB582102AE4CDB01F614DEFC7121285FDC7F5C6D1D42C95647F061BA0080DF 678867845E0558407F10A063DA8DB2FD49414440CDF85070AC22A266C7F1DFB1 577D9A35A295A8742E794258B76968C097F85542322A07960199C13CC0220A9B C729EF2ECA638CFE Appendix B. X.509 Certificate Profile, ASN.1 TODO - This ASN.1 profile should probably be in a document that updates RFC 7925. IOTCertificate DEFINITIONS EXPLICIT TAGS ::= BEGIN Certificate ::= SEQUENCE { tbsCertificate TBSCertificate, signatureAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, signatureValue BIT STRING } TBSCertificate ::= SEQUENCE { version [0] INTEGER {v3(2)}, serialNumber INTEGER (1..MAX), signature AlgorithmIdentifier, issuer Name, validity Validity, subject Name, subjectPublicKeyInfo SubjectPublicKeyInfo, extensions [3] Extensions OPTIONAL } Name ::= SEQUENCE SIZE (1) OF DistinguishedName DistinguishedName ::= SET SIZE (1) OF CommonName CommonName ::= SEQUENCE { type OBJECT IDENTIFIER (id-at-commonName), value UTF8String } Validity ::= SEQUENCE { notBefore UTCTime, notAfter UTCTime } SubjectPublicKeyInfo ::= SEQUENCE { Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 16] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 algorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, subjectPublicKey BIT STRING } AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE { algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER, parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL } } Extensions ::= SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF Extension Extension ::= SEQUENCE { extnId OBJECT IDENTIFIER, critical BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE, extnValue OCTET STRING } id-at-commonName OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {joint-iso-itu-t(2) ds(5) attributeType(4) 3} END Authors' Addresses Shahid Raza RISE AB Email: shahid.raza@ri.se Joel Hoeglund RISE AB Email: joel.hoglund@ri.se Goeran Selander Ericsson AB Email: goran.selander@ericsson.com John Preuss Mattsson Ericsson AB Email: john.mattsson@ericsson.com Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 17] Internet-Draft CBOR Profile of X.509 Certificates July 2020 Martin Furuhed Nexus Group Email: martin.furuhed@nexusgroup.com Raza, et al. Expires January 14, 2021 [Page 18]