CORE Working Group Working Group P. Urien Internet Draft Telecom Paris Intended status: Experimental December 16 2021 Expires: June 2022 Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes draft-urien-core-bmac-09.txt Abstract In this draft context, things are powered by micro controllers units (MCU) comprising a set of memories such as static RAM (SRAM), FLASH and EEPROM. The total memory size, ranges from 10KB to a few megabytes. In this context code and data integrity are major security issues, for the deployment of Internet of Things infrastructure. The goal of the bijective MAC (bMAC) is to compute an integrity value, which cannot be guessed by malicious software. In classical keyed MACs, MAC is computing according to a fixed order. In the bijective MAC, the content of N addresses is hashed according to a permutation P (i.e. bijective application). The bijective MAC key is the permutation P. The number of permutations for N addresses is N!. So the computation of the bMAC requires the knowledge of the whole space memory; this is trivial for genuine software, but could very difficult for corrupted software, especially for time stamped bMAC. Requirements Language The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119. 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 http://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 June 2022. Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 1] Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2021 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 (http://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. Urien Expires June 2022 [page 2] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 Table of Contents Abstract........................................................... 1 Requirements Language.............................................. 1 Status of this Memo................................................ 1 Copyright Notice................................................... 2 1 Overview......................................................... 4 2 Bijective MAC.................................................... 4 2.1 Memory space................................................ 4 2.2 Permutation................................................. 4 2.3 bMAC computation............................................ 5 2.4 Unused memory............................................... 5 2.5 Permutation entropy......................................... 5 2.6 Time-stamped bMAC........................................... 6 2.6.1 Rational ............................................. 6 2.6.2 Canonical time ....................................... 6 3. The Pq permutation family....................................... 7 3.1 How to find a generator..................................... 7 3.1.1 Method 1 ............................................. 7 3.1.2 Method 2 ............................................. 7 3.1.3 Method 3 ............................................. 8 3.2 How to compute generators................................... 8 3.2.1 Example 1 ............................................ 8 3.2.2 Example 2. ........................................... 8 3.2.3 Example 3. ........................................... 9 3.2.4 Example 4 ............................................ 9 3.2.5 Example 5 ............................................ 9 3.2.6 Example 6 ............................................ 9 3.3 Shifted permutation......................................... 9 3.4 Composition in Fq.......................................... 10 3.5 Code example............................................... 10 3.5.1 Example 1 ........................................... 10 3.5.2 Example 2 ........................................... 11 4 bMAC protocol................................................... 12 5 IANA Considerations............................................. 12 6 Security Considerations......................................... 12 7 References...................................................... 12 7.1 Normative References....................................... 12 7.2 Informative References..................................... 12 8 Authors' Addresses.............................................. 12 Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 3] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 1 Overview In this draft context, things are powered by micro controllers units (MCU) comprising a set of memories such as static RAM (SRAM), FLASH and EEPROM. The total memory size ranges from 10KB to a few megabytes. In this context code and data integrity is a major security issue for the deployment of Internet of Things infrastructure. The goal of the bijective MAC (bMAC) is to compute an integrity value, which cannot be guessed by malicious software. In classical keyed MACs, MAC is computing according to a fixed order. In the bijective MAC, the content of N addresses (A[0]...A[N-1]) is hashed according to a hash function H and a permutation P (i.e. bijective application in [0,N-1])so that : bMAC(A, P) = H( A[P(0)] || A[P(1)] ... || A[P(N-1)] ) The bijective MAC key is the permutation P. The number of permutations for N addresses is N!, as an illustration 35! is greater than 2**128. So the bMAC computation requires the knowledge of the whole space memory. This is trivial for genuine software, but could very difficult for corrupted software, especially for time stamped bMAC. 2 Bijective MAC 2.1 Memory space The memory space is represented by an application A, working with N addresses, whose content is a byte value. | [0,N-1] -> [0,255] A | | x -> A[x] Non volatile memories (FLASH, EEPROM) MUST be included in the memory space. A subset of SRAM is included in the memory, whose structure relies on operational constraints (heap size, stack size,...). 2.2 Permutation For practical reasons, permutation MAY use a range of M values, greater than the size N of the memory space (M>=N). | [0,M-1] -> [0,M-1] P | | x -> P(x) Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 4] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 For example, given a N memory space, and q a prime number so that q>N, and g a generator for the group Z/qZ, the P permutation (with M= q-1) can computed as: | [0,q-2] -> [0,q-2] P | | x -> (g**(1+x) mod q)-1 2.3 bMAC computation We consider a one way hash function H (such as SHA2 or SHA3) with three procedures, H.reset, H.update, and H.final. Given a space memory N, a permutation P with M values, the bMAC, according to C like notation, is computed as: H.reset() ; for (i=0; i< M; i++) { if (P(i) < N) H.update(A[P[i]); } bMAC= H.final(); 2.4 Unused memory Unused memory MAY be filled by pseudo random values, before performing the bMAC computation. 2.5 Permutation entropy A family of Pk permutations is a subset of M! permutations of M elements, which is computed according to dedicated algorithms. We note #Pk the number of elements of a Pk family. The entropy is the integer e, such as 2**e is closed to #Pk: 2**e <= #Pk < 2**(e+1) The entropy of a family may be increased by the composition of Pk functions so that : P(k1,k2,...,kn) = Pkn o ... o Pk2 o Pk1 Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 5] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 2.6 Time-stamped bMAC 2.6.1 Rational The main idea is to detect corrupted software that uses a code compression algorithm. +-------------------------+ +-------------------------------+ | | | +-+ Genuine Code Compressed | | | +-|-|---------------------------+ | | | | | Code Compression Algo. | | Genuine Code | +-|-|---------------------------+ | | | V + Malicious bMAC + ^ | | | +------------------------|-|----+ | | | Genuine Code +-+ | +-------------------------+ +-------------------------------+ | bMAC | | MALWARE | +-------------------------+ +-------------------------------+ The basic principle of the time stamped bMAC is that the code compression algorithm modifies the time needed for the bMAC computing. Furthermore we assume that the time required by the bMAC computing is dependent on the permutation. Below is an illustration of C code that returns the content of a corrupted address: if ((Adr >= Adr-Min) && (Adr <= Adr-Max)) v =decompress(Adr); else v= read(Adr); Many computing cycles are added to the genuine code (read(Adr)) due to Program Counter jumps and execution of the decompression procedure. 2.6.2 Canonical time We assume that the bMAC computing time (T) ranges between the values Tmin and Tmax Tmin <= T <= Tmax If the computing time is fixed (Tmin=Tmax) then the Canonical Time (cT) is the computing time T. If Tmin#Tmax we define the following values: Range = Tmax-Tmin+1 Delta = Tmin modulo Range Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 6] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 For a given computing time T, we define the canonical computing time cT as: cT = (T-Delta)/Range For every T value, cT has a fix value equal to the quotient of Tmin/Range. The main interest of the canonical time is that it works as a secret value, deduced from the bMAC computing but not stored in the software memory image. The time-stamped bMAC is computed from an exor operation between the bMAC and the canonical time: Time-Stamped bMAC = bMAC exor cT 3. The Pq permutation family We consider a N memory space, and q a prime number so that q>N. Z/qZ is a monogenous group with n=phi(q-1) generators (g), phi being the Euler number. Generators (g) in Z/qZ can be used to build a permutation family Pq= = {Pg1, Pg2,.., Pgn}, so that: | [1,q-1] -> [1,q-1] Pg(x) | | x -> g**x mod q Given a P permutation working in the [1,q-1] range (such as Pg), we use the P*(P) permutation in order to enforce compatibility with the memory space A(x) starting at the zero address : | [0,q-2] -> [0,q-2] P* | | x -> P*(x) = P(1+x)-1 3.1 How to find a generator 3.1.1 Method 1 Given x in [2, q-1], If x**k mod q # 1 for all k in [1, q-2], then g is a generator. 3.1.2 Method 2 Factorize q-1 into primes: q-1 = q1**k1...qi**ki...qn**kn Find n integers ai (a1...an) of order qi**ki, in Z/qZ (phi(qi**ki) elements) The product of the n elements a1 x...x an, is a generator. Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 7] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 3.1.3 Method 3 q being a safe prime, q = 2*p+1 with p prime (p is the Sophie Germain prime),and q = 7 mod 8. phi(q-1) = phi(2p) = p-1 1 generator of order 2, i.e. q-1 p-1 generators of order p, i.e. 2**k mod q with k in [1,p-1] p-1 generators gk of order q-1. The generators gk are the product of (q-1).2**k mod q, for k in [1,p-1]. In other words the generators gk are equal to q-(2**k mod q), for k in [1,p-1] 3.2 How to compute generators Find a generator g. There are phi(q-1) generators g**k, with k prime with q-1. GCD(k,q-1)=1, GCD being the Greatest Common Divisor of two integers. 3.2.1 Example 1 q=11, phi(10)= 4 10= 2x5, phi(2)=1, phi(5)=4 prime numbers with 10= {1,3,7,9} k 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 x**k 1 2 4 8 5 10 9 7 3 6 1 3 9 5 4 1 4 5 9 3 1 5 3 4 9 1 6 3 7 9 10 5 8 4 2 1 7 5 2 3 10 4 6 9 8 1 8 9 6 4 10 3 2 5 7 1 9 4 3 5 1 10 1 10 has an order 2 3, 4, 5, 9 have order 5 10*3= 8, 4*10= 7, 5*10=6, 9*10=2 are generators 2 is a generator 2**3 = 8 is a generator 2**7 = 7 is a generator 2**9 = 6 is a generator 3.2.2 Example 2. q= 23 = 2x11 + 1, p=11, q is a safe prime with q mod 8 =7 Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 8] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 power of 2 mod 23 = {2**k, k in [1,10]}= {2,4,8,16,9,18,13,3,6,12} 10 generators gk of order 22 = {21,19,15,7,14,5,10,20,17,11} 3.2.3 Example 3. Memory space N = 512B EEPROM + 8192B FLASH + 1024B SRAM = 9728B Nearest prime number q = 9733 q-1 = 9732= 811 x 4 x 3 phi(9732) = 3240 2 is a generator generators are numbers 2**k mod q, with k less than q-1, and k prime with 811, 4 and 3. 3.2.4 Example 4 Memory space N = 512B EEPROM + 8192B FLASH + 1024B SRAM = 9728B Safe prime = 9887 4943 generators 3.2.5 Example 5 Memory space N = 4096B EEPROM + 262144B FLASH + 1024B SRAM= 274432 prime number q = 278543 q-1= 278542 = 2 x 11**2 x 1151 phi(278542) = 126500 5 is a generator generators are numbers, 5**k mod q, with k less than q-1, prime with 2, 11, and 1151 3.2.6 Example 6 Memory space N = 4096B EEPROM + 262144B FLASH + 1024B SRAM= 274432 Safe prime = 275447 137723 generators 3.3 Shifted permutation Given an integer s in the range [0, q-1], the shifted permutation P(g,s) is defined as | [1,q-1] -> [1,q-1] P(g,s)(x) | | x -> s.g**x mod q In other words P(g,s)(x) = s x Pg(x). Because s can be written in the form s = g**d, s.g = g**(x+d), which leads to a right shift. The number of shifted permutations is (q-1)*phi(q-1). The benefit of shifted permutation is to increase, with a low cost computation, the bMAC entropy. Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 9] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 3.4 Composition in Fq Given a set of k ptuples {(g1,s1), (g2,s2),..., (gk,sk)} and associated shifted permutations P(gi,si), a permutation P(q,k) is computed according to the relation : P(q,k) = P(gk,sk) o ... o P(g2,s2) o P(g1,s1) 3.5 Code example The bMAC is computed with a permutation P= P(g2) o P(g1,s1) The pseudo code is written in a C like way. H is a SHA3-256 KECCAK hash function. 3.5.1 Example 1 In this example 32 bits integers are used. The prime number q is 9733. The address space is N= 9664. For a 8 bits processor, 12MHz clock, the bMAC is computed in about 10s, i.e. 1ms per byte. uint32-t x,y,bitn,v,gi[14]; uint32-t PRIME, g1=a-generator, s1=a-value, g2=a-generator; bool tohash; PRIME =9733; H.reset(); gi[0]= g2; for (int n=1;n<=13;n++) gi[n] = (gi[n-1] * gi[n-1]) % PRIME; x= s1; for(int i=1;i>1; } v = (y-1); // if address v exists, read the v address content A(v) // tohash=true ; if (tohash) H.update(A(v)); } H.dofinal(); Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 10] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 3.5.2 Example 2 In this example 64 bits and 32 bits integers are used. The prime number q is 278543. The address space is N= 271360. For a 8 bits processor, 16MHz clock, the bMAC is computed in about 320s, i.e. 1.1 ms per byte. uint32-t bitn,v; uint64-t x,y,gi[19]; uint32-t PRIME, g1=a-generator, s1=a-value, g2=a-generator; bool tohash; PRIME = 278543; H.reset(); gi[0]=(uint64-t)g2; for (n=1;n<=18;n++) { gi[n] = gi[n-1] * gi[n-1]; gi[n] = gi[n] % PRIME; } x= s1; for(i=1;i>1; } v = (uint32-t)(y-1); // if address v exists, read the v address content A(v) // tohash=true ; if (tohash) H.update(A(v)); } H.final(); Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 11] Bijective MAC for Constraint Nodes December 2021 4 bMAC protocol A bMAC protocol involves a bMAC requester and a bMAC provider. The requester sends to the bMAC provider the parameters needed for the P permutation. The bMAC provider computes the bMAC according to the P permutation and returns the result. If the bMAC provider has access to internet, the requester (typically a gateway) SHOULD control its internet access in order to avoid side channel attack. 5 IANA Considerations TODO 6 Security Considerations TODO 7 References 7.1 Normative References 7.2 Informative References 8 Authors' Addresses Pascal Urien Telecom Paris 19 Place Marguerite Perey 91120 Palaiseau France Phone: NA Email: Pascal.Urien@telecom-paris.fr Urien Expires June 2022 [Page 12]