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draft-laurie-pki-sunlight-04.txt
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Network Working Group B. Laurie
Internet-Draft A. Langley
Expires: June 22, 2013 E. Kasper
December 19, 2012
Certificate Transparency
draft-laurie-pki-sunlight-04
Abstract
The aim of Certificate Transparency is to have every public end-
entity (for example, web servers) and intermediate TLS certificate
issued by a known Certificate Authority recorded in one or more
certificate logs. In order to detect misissuance of certificates,
all logs are publicly auditable. In particular, domain owners or
their agents will be able to monitor logs for certificates issued on
their own domain.
To protect clients from unlogged misissued certificates, each log
signs all certificates it records, and clients can choose not to
trust certificates that are not accompanied by an appropriate log
signature. For privacy and performance reasons log signatures are
embedded in the TLS handshake via the TLS authorization extension, in
a stapled OCSP extension, or in the certificate itself via an X.509v3
certificate extension.
To ensure a globally consistent view of any particular log, each log
also provides a global signature over the entire log. Any
inconsistency of logs can be detected through cross-checks on the
global signature. Consistency between any pair of global signatures,
corresponding to snapshots of a particular log at different times,
can be efficiently shown.
Logs are only expected to certify that they have seen a certificate,
and thus we do not specify any revocation mechanism for log
signatures in this document. Logs are append-only, and log
signatures do not expire.
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 1]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
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 [RFC2119].
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 22, 2013.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2012 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.
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 2]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
Table of Contents
1. Informal introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Cryptographic components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1. Merkle Hash Trees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1.1. Merkle audit paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1.2. Merkle consistency proofs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.1.3. Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.1.4. Signatures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3. Log Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.1. Log Entries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.2. Including the Signed Certificate Timestamp in the TLS
Handshake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
3.3. Merkle Tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.4. Tree Head Signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4. Client Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4.1. Add Chain to Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4.2. Add PreCertChain to Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.3. Retrieve Latest Signed Tree Head . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.4. Retrieve Merkle Consistency Proof between two Signed
Tree Heads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.5. Retrieve Merkle Audit Proof from Log by Leaf Hash . . . . 19
4.6. Retrieve Entries from Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.7. Retrieve Entry+Merkle Audit Proof from Log . . . . . . . . 20
5. Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.1. Monitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.2. Auditor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
6. Allocation of RFC 5878 AuthorizationData Type . . . . . . . . 23
7. Security and Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.1. Misissued Certificates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.2. Detection of Misissue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
7.3. Misbehaving logs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
8. Efficiency Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
9. Future Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 3]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
1. Informal introduction
Certificate Transparency aims to mitigate the problem of misissued
certificates by providing publicly auditable, append-only, untrusted
logs of all issued certificates. The logs are publicly auditable so
that it is possible for anyone to verify the correct operation of
each log, and to monitor when new certificates are added to it. The
logs do not themselves prevent misissue, but they ensure that
interested parties (particularly those named in certificates) can
detect such misissuance. Note that this is a general mechanism, but
in this document we only describe its use for public TLS server
certificates issued by public CAs.
Each log consists of certificate chains, which can be submitted by
anyone. It is expected that public CAs will contribute all their
newly-issued certificates to one or more logs; it is also expected
that certificate holders will contribute their own certificate
chains. In order to avoid logs being spammed into uselessness, it is
required that each chain is rooted in a known CA certificate. When a
chain is submitted to a log, a signed timestamp is returned, which
can later be used to provide evidence to clients that the chain has
been submitted. Clients can thus require that all certificates they
see have been logged.
Those who are concerned about misissue can monitor the logs, asking
them regularly for all new entries, and can thus check whether
domains they are responsible for have had certificates issued that
they did not expect. What they do with this information,
particularly when they find that a misissuance has happened, is
beyond the scope of this document, but broadly speaking they can
invoke existing business mechanisms for dealing with misissued
certificates. Of course, anyone who wants can monitor the logs, and
if they believe a certificate is incorrectly issued, take action as
they see fit.
Similarly, those who have seen signed timestamps from a particular
log can later demand a proof of inclusion from that log. If the log
is unable to provide this (or, indeed, if the corresponding
certificate is absent from monitors' copies of that log), that is
evidence of the incorrect operation of the log. The checking
operation is asynchronous to allow TLS connections to proceed without
delay, despite network connectivity issues and the vagaries of
firewalls.
The append-only property of each log is technically achieved using
Merkle Trees, which can be used to show that any particular version
of the log is a superset of any particular previous version.
Likewise, Merkle Trees avoid the need to blindly trust logs: if a log
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 4]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
attempts to show different things to different people, this can be
efficiently detected by comparing tree roots and consistency proofs.
Similarly, other misbehaviours of any log (e.g. issuing signed
timestamps for certificates they then don't log) can be efficiently
detected and proved to the world at large.
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 5]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
2. Cryptographic components
2.1. Merkle Hash Trees
Logs use a binary Merkle hash tree for efficient auditing. The
hashing algorithm is SHA-256 (note that this is fixed for this
experiment but it is anticipated that each log would be able to
specify a hash algorithm). The input to the Merkle tree hash is a
list of data entries; these entries will be hashed to form the leaves
of the Merkle hash tree. The output is a single 32-byte root hash.
Given an ordered list of n inputs, D[n] = {d(0), d(1), ..., d(n-1)},
the Merkle Tree Hash (MTH) is thus defined as follows:
The hash of an empty list is the hash of an empty string:
MTH({}) = SHA-256().
The hash of a list with one entry is:
MTH({d(0)}) = SHA-256(0x00 || d(0)).
For n > 1, let k be the largest power of two smaller than n. The
Merkle Tree Hash of an n-element list D[n] is then defined
recursively as
MTH(D[n]) = SHA-256(0x01 || MTH(D[0:k]) || MTH(D[k:n])),
where || is concatenation and D[k1:k2] denotes the length (k2 - k1)
list {d(k1), d(k1+1),..., d(k2-1)}. (Note that the hash calculation
for leaves and nodes differ. This domain separation is required to
give second preimage resistance.)
Note that we do not require the length of the input list to be a
power of two. The resulting Merkle tree may thus not be balanced,
however, its shape is uniquely determined by the number of leaves.
[This Merkle tree is essentially the same as the history tree [1]
proposal, except our definition omits dummy leaves.]
2.1.1. Merkle audit paths
A Merkle audit path for a leaf in a Merkle hash tree is the shortest
list of additional nodes in the Merkle tree required to compute the
Merkle Tree Hash for that tree. Each node in the tree is either a
leaf node, or is computed from the two nodes immediately below it
(i.e. towards the leaves). At each step up the tree (towards the
root), a node from the audit path is combined with the node computed
so far. In other words, the audit path consists of the list of
missing nodes required to compute the nodes leading from a leaf to
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 6]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
the root of the tree. If the root computed from the audit path
matches the true root, then the audit path is proof that the leaf
exists in the tree.
Given an ordered list of n inputs to the tree, D[n] = {d(0), ...,
d(n-1)}, the Merkle audit path PATH(m, D[n]) for the (m+1)th input
d(m), 0 <= m < n, is defined as follows:
The path for the single leaf in a tree with a one-element input list
D[1] = {d(0)} is empty:
PATH(0, {d(0)}) = {}
For n > 1, let k be the largest power of two smaller than n. The
path for the (m+1)th element d(m) in a list of n > m elements is then
defined recursively as
PATH(m, D[n]) = PATH(m, D[0:k]) : MTH(D[k:n]) for m < k; and
PATH(m, D[n]) = PATH(m - k, D[k:n]) : MTH(D[0:k]) for m >= k,
where : is concatenation of lists and D[k1:k2] denotes the length (k2
- k1) list {d(k1), d(k1+1),..., d(k2-1)} as before.
2.1.2. Merkle consistency proofs
Merkle consistency proofs prove the append-only property of the tree.
A Merkle consistency proof for a Merkle Tree Hash MTH(D[n]) and a
previously advertised hash MTH(D[0:m]) of the first m leaves, m <= n,
is the list of nodes in the Merkle tree required to verify that the
first m inputs D[0:m] are equal in both trees. Thus, a consistency
proof must contain a set of intermediate nodes (i.e., commitments to
inputs) sufficient to verify MTH(D[n]), such that (a subset of) the
same nodes can be used to verify MTH(D[0:m]). We define an algorithm
that outputs the (unique) minimal consistency proof.
Given an ordered list of n inputs to the tree, D[n] = {d(0), ...,
d(n-1)}, the Merkle consistency proof PROOF(m, D[n]) for a previous
root hash MTH(D[0:m]), 0 < m < n, is defined as PROOF(m, D[n]) =
SUBPROOF(m, D[n], true):
The subproof for m = n is empty if m is the value for which PROOF was
originally requested (meaning that the subtree root hash MTH(D[0:m])
is known):
SUBPROOF(m, D[m], true) = {}
The subproof for m = n is the root hash committing inputs D[0:m]
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 7]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
otherwise:
SUBPROOF(m, D[m], false) = {MTH(D[m])}
For m < n, let k be the largest power of two smaller than n. The
subproof is then defined recursively.
If m <= k, the right subtree entries D[k:n] only exist in the current
tree. We prove that the left subtree entries D[0:k] are consistent
and add a commitment to D[k:n]:
SUBPROOF(m, D[n], b) = SUBPROOF(m, D[0:k], b) : MTH(D[k:n]).
If m > k, the left subtree entries D[0:k] are identical in both
trees. We prove that the right subtree entries D[k:n] are consistent
and add a commitment to D[0:k].
SUBPROOF(m, D[n], b) = SUBPROOF(m - k, D[k:n], false) : MTH(D[0:k]).
Here : is concatenation of lists and D[k1:k2] denotes the length (k2
- k1) list {d(k1), d(k1+1),..., d(k2-1)} as before.
The number of nodes in the resulting proof is bounded above by
ceil(log2(n)) + 1.
2.1.3. Example
The binary Merkle tree with 7 leaves:
hash
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ \
k l
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
g h i j
/ \ / \ / \ |
a b c d e f d6
| | | | | |
d0 d1 d2 d3 d4 d5
The audit path for d0 is [b, h, l].
The audit path for d3 is [c, g, l].
Laurie, et al. Expires June 22, 2013 [Page 8]
Internet-Draft Certificate Transparency December 2012
The audit path for d4 is [f, j, k].
The audit path for d6 is [i, k].
The same tree, built incrementally in four steps:
hash0 hash1=k
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
g c g h
/ \ | / \ / \
a b d2 a b c d
| | | | | |
d0 d1 d0 d1 d2 d3
hash2 hash
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
k i k l
/ \ / \ / \ / \
/ \ e f / \ / \
/ \ | | / \ / \
g h d4 d5 g h i j
/ \ / \ / \ / \ / \ |
a b c d a b c d e f d6
| | | | | | | | | |
d0 d1 d2 d3 d0 d1 d2 d3 d4 d5
The consistency proof between hash0 and hash is PROOF(3, D[7]) = [c,
d, g, l]. c, g are used to verify hash0, and d, l are additionally
used to show hash is consistent with hash0.
The consistency proof between hash1 and hash is PROOF(4, D[7]) = [l].
hash can be verified, using hash1=k and l.
The consistency proof between hash2 and hash is PROOF(6, D[7]) = [i,
j, k]. k, i are used to verify hash2, and j is additionally used to
show hash is consistent with hash2.
2.1.4. Signatures
Various data structures are signed. A log can use either elliptic
curve signatures using the NIST P-256 curve (section D.1.2.3 of DSS
[DSS]) or RSA signatures using a key of at least 2048 bits.
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3. Log Format
Anyone can submit certificates to certificate logs for public
auditing, however, since certificates will not be accepted by clients
unless logged, it is expected that certificate owners or their CAs
will usually submit them. A log is a single, ever-growing, append-
only Merkle Tree of such certificates.
When a valid certificate is submitted to a log, the log MUST
immediately return a Signed Certificate Timestamp (SCT). The SCT is
the log's promise to incorporate the certificate in the Merkle Tree
within a fixed amount of time known as the Maximum Merge Delay (MMD).
If the log has previously seen the certificate, it MAY return the
same SCT as it returned before. TLS servers MUST present an SCT from
one or more logs to the client together with the certificate. TLS
clients MUST reject certificates that do not have a valid SCT for the
end-entity certificate.
Periodically, each log appends all its new entries to the Merkle
Tree, and signs the root of the tree. Clients and auditors can thus
verify that each certificate for which an SCT has been issued indeed
appears in the log. The log MUST incorporate a certificate in its
Merkle Tree within the Maximum Merge Delay period after the issuance
of the SCT.
Logs MUST NOT impose any conditions on copying data retrieved from
the log.
3.1. Log Entries
Anyone can submit a certificate to any log. In order to enable
attribution of each logged certificate to its issuer, the log SHALL
publish a list of acceptable root certificates (this list might
usefully be the union of root certificates trusted by major browser
vendors). Each submitted certificate MUST be accompanied by all
additional certificates required to verify the certificate chain up
to an accepted root certificate. The root certificate itself MAY be
omitted from this list.
Alternatively, (root as well as intermediate) Certificate Authorities
may submit a certificate to logs prior to issuance. To do so, a
Certificate Authority constructs a Precertificate by adding a special
critical poison extension (OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.4.3, ASN.1 NULL
data) to the leaf TBSCertificate (this extension is to ensure that
the Precertificate cannot be validated by a standard X.509v3 client),
and signing the resulting TBSCertificate [RFC5280] with either
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o a special-purpose (Extended Key Usage: Certificate Transparency,
OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.4.4, basicConstraints=critical,CA:FALSE)
Precertificate Signing Certificate. The Precertificate Signing
Certificate MUST be certified by the CA certificate that will
ultimately sign the leaf TBSCertificate (note that the log may
relax standard validation rules to allow this, so long as the
final signed certificate will be valid),
o or, the CA certificate that will sign the final certificate.
As above, the Precertificate submission MUST be accompanied by the
Precertificate Signing Certificate, if used, and all additional
certificates required to verify the chain up to an accepted root
certificate. The signature on the TBSCertificate indicates the
Certificate Authority's intent to issue a certificate. This intent
is considered binding (i.e., misissuance of the Precertificate is
considered equal to misissuance of the final certificate). Each log
verifies the Precertificate signature chain, and issues a Signed
Certificate Timestamp on the corresponding TBSCertificate.
Logs MUST verify that the submitted leaf certificate or
Precertificate has a valid signature chain leading back to a trusted
root CA certificate, using the chain of intermediate CA certificates
provided by the submitter. In case of Precertificates, each log MUST
also verify that the Precertificate Signing Certificate has the
correct Extended Key Usage extension. Logs MAY accept certificates
that have expired, are not yet valid, have been revoked or are
otherwise not fully valid according to X.509 verification rules in
order to accomodate quirks of CA certificate issuing software.
However, logs MUST refuse to publish certificates without a valid
chain to a known root CA. If a certificate is accepted and an SCT
issued, the accepting log MUST store the chain used for verification
including the certificate or Precertificate itself, and MUST present
this chain for auditing upon request. This chain is required to
prevent a CA avoiding blame by logging a partial or empty chain
[Note: this effectively excludes self-signed and DANE-based
certificates until some mechanism to control spam for those
certificates is found - the authors welcome suggestions].
Each certificate entry in a log MUST include the following
components:
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enum { x509_entry(0), precert_entry(1), (65535) } LogEntryType;
struct {
LogEntryType entry_type;
select (entry_type) {
case x509_entry: X509ChainEntry;
case precert_entry: PrecertChainEntry;
} entry;
} LogEntry;
opaque ASN.1Cert<1..2^24-1>;
struct {
ASN.1Cert leaf_certificate;
ASN.1Cert certificate_chain<0..2^24-1>;
} X509ChainEntry;
struct {
ASN.1Cert tbs_certificate;
ASN.1Cert precertificate_chain<1..2^24-1>;
} PrecertChainEntry;
Logs MAY limit the length of chain they will accept.
"entry_type" is the type of this entry. Future revisions of this
protocol version may add new LogEntryType values. Section 4 explains
how clients should handle unknown entry types.
"leaf_certificate" is the end-entity certificate submitted for
auditing.
"certificate_chain" is a chain of additional certificates required to
verify the leaf certificate. The first certificate MUST certify the
leaf certificate. Each following certificate MUST directly certify
the one preceding it. The self-signed root certificate MAY be
omitted from the chain.
"tbs_certificate" is the TBSCertificate component of the
Precertificate (i.e., the original TBSCertificate, without the
Precertificate signature and the SCT extension).
"precertificate_chain" is a chain of certificates required to verify
the Precertificate submission. The first certificate MUST be the
original Precertificate, with its unsigned part matching the
"tbs_certificate". The second certificate MUST be a valid
Precertificate Signing Certificate, and MUST certify the first
certificate. Each following certificate MUST directly certify the
one preceding it. The self-signed root certificate MAY be omitted
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from the chain.
Structure of the Signed Certificate Timestamp:
enum { certificate_timestamp(0), tree_hash(1), 255 }
SignatureType;
enum { v1(0), 255 }
Version;
struct {
opaque key_id[32];
} LogID;
opaque CtExtensions<0..2^16-1>;
"key_id" is the SHA-256 hash of the log's public key, calculated over
the DER encoding of the key represented as SubjectPublicKeyInfo.
struct {
Version sct_version;
LogID id;
uint64 timestamp;
CtExtensions extensions;
digitally-signed struct {
Version sct_version;
SignatureType signature_type = certificate_timestamp;
uint64 timestamp;
LogEntryType entry_type;
select(entry_type) {
case x509_entry: ASN.1Cert;
case precert_entry: ASN.1Cert;
} signed_entry;
CtExtensions extensions;
};
} SignedCertificateTimestamp;
The encoding of the digitally-signed element is defined in [RFC5246].
"sct_version" is the version of the protocol the SCT conforms to.
This version is v1.
"timestamp" is the current UTC time since epoch (January 1, 1970,
00:00), in milliseconds.
"entry_type" may be implicit from the context in which the SCT is
presented.
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"signed_entry" is the "leaf_certificate" (in case of an
X509ChainEntry), or "tbs_certificate" (in case of a
PrecertChainEntry).
"extensions" are future extensions to this protocol version (v1).
Currently, no extensions are specified.
3.2. Including the Signed Certificate Timestamp in the TLS Handshake
The SCT data from at least one log must be included in the TLS
handshake, either by using an Authorization Extension [RFC5878] with
type 182, or by using OCSP Stapling (section 8 of [RFC6066]), where
the response includes an OCSP extension with OID
1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.4.5 (see [RFC2560]) and body:
SignedCertificateTimestampList ::= OCTET STRING
At least one SCT MUST be included. Server operators MAY include more
than one SCT.
Similarly, a Certificate Authority MAY submit the precertificate to
more than one log, and all obtained SCTs can be directly embedded in
the final certificate, by encoding the SignedCertificateTimestampList
structure as an ASN.1 OCTET STRING and inserting the resulting data
in the TBSCertificate as an X.509v3 certificate extension (OID
1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.4.2). Upon receiving the certificate, clients
can reconstruct the original TBSCertificate to verify the SCT
signature.
The contents of the ASN.1 OCTET STRING embedded in an OCSP extension
or X509v3 certificate extension are as follows:
opaque SerializedSCT<1..2^16-1>;
struct {
SerializedSCT sct_list <1..2^16-1>;
} SignedCertificateTimestampList;
Here "SerializedSCT" is an opaque bytestring that contains the
serialized TLS structure. This encoding ensures that clients can
decode each SCT individually (i.e., if there is a version upgrade,
out of date clients can still parse old SCTs while skipping over new
SCTs whose version they don't understand).
SCTs embedded in the TLS Authorization Extension are each encoded as
an individual AuthorizationDataEntry [RFC5878].
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3.3. Merkle Tree
Each certificate log MUST periodically append all its new log entries
to the log Merkle Tree. The log MUST sign these entries by
constructing a binary Merkle Tree with log entries as consecutive
inputs to the tree, signing the corresponding Merkle Tree Hash, and
publishing each update to the tree in a Signed Merkle Tree Update.
The hashing algorithm for the Merkle Tree Hash is SHA-256.
Structure of the Merkle Tree input:
enum { timestamped_entry(0), 255 }
MerkleLeafType;
struct {
uint64 timestamp;
LogEntryType entry_type;
select(entry_type) {
case x509_entry: ASN.1Cert;
case precert_entry: ASN.1Cert;
} signed_entry;
CtExtensions extensions;
} TimestampedEntry;
struct {
Version version;
MerkleLeafType leaf_type;
select (leaf_type) {
case timestamped_entry: TimestampedEntry;
}
} MerkleTreeLeaf;
Here "version" is the version of the protocol the MerkleTreeLeaf
corresponds to. This version is v1.
"leaf_type" is the type of the leaf input. Currently, only
"timestamped_entry" (corresponding to an SCT) is defined. Future
revisions of this protocol version may add new MerkleLeafType types.
Section 4 explains how clients should handle unknown leaf types.
"timestamp" is the timestamp of the corresponding SCT issued for this
certificate.
"signed_entry" is the "signed_entry" of the corresponding SCT.
"extensions" are "extensions" of the corresponding SCT.
The leaves of the Merkle Tree are the hashes of the corresponding
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"MerkleTreeLeaf" structures.
3.4. Tree Head Signature
Every time a log appends new entries to the tree, the log MUST sign
the corresponding tree hash and tree information (see also the
corresponding Signed Tree Head client message in Section 4.3). The
signature input is structured as follows:
digitally-signed struct {
Version version;
SignatureType signature_type = tree_hash;
uint64 timestamp;
uint64 tree_size;
opaque sha256_root_hash[32];
} TreeHeadSignature;
"version" is the version of the protocol the TreeHeadSignature
conforms to. This version is v1.
"timestamp" is the current time. The timestamp MUST be at least as
recent as the most recent SCT timestamp in the tree. Each subsequent
timestamp MUST be more recent than the timestamp of the previous
update.
"tree_size" equals the number of entries in the new tree.
"sha256_root_hash" is the root of the Merkle Hash Tree.
Each log MUST produce a Tree Head Signature at least as often as the
Maximum Merge Delay. In the unlikely event that it receives no new
submissions during an MMD period, the log SHALL sign the same Merkle
Tree Hash with a fresh timestamp.
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4. Client Messages
Messages are sent as HTTPS GET or POST requests. Parameters for
POSTs and all responses are encoded as JSON objects. Parameters for
GETs are encoded as URL parameters. Binary data is base64 encoded as
specified in the individual messages.
The <log server> prefix can include a path as well as a server name
and a port. It must map one-to-one to a known public key (how this
mapping is distributed is out of scope for this document).
In general, where needed, the "version" is v1 and the "id" is the log
id for the log server queried.
4.1. Add Chain to Log
POST https://<log server>/ct/v1/add-chain
Inputs
chain An array of base64 encoded certificates. The first element is
the leaf certificate, the second chains to the first and so on to
the last, which is either the root certificate or a certificate
that chains to a known root certificate.
Outputs
sct_version The version of the SignedCertificateTimestamp structure,
in decimal. A compliant v1 implementation MUST NOT expect this to
be 0 (i.e. v1).
id The log ID, base64 encoded. Since clients who request an SCT for
inclusion in the TLS handshake are not required to verify it, we
do not assume they know the ID of the log.
timestamp The SCT timestamp, in decimal.
extensions [TBD]
signature The SCT signature, base64 encoded.
If the "sct_version" is not v1, then a v1 client may be unable to
verify the signature. It MUST NOT construe this as an error. [Note:
log clients don't need to be able to verify this structure, only TLS
clients do - if we were to serve the structure binary, then we could
completely change it without requiring an upgrade to v1 clients].
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4.2. Add PreCertChain to Log
POST https://<log server>/ct/v1/add-pre-chain
Inputs
chain An array of base64 encoded precertificates. The first element
is the leaf certificate, the second chains to the first and so on
to the last, which is either the root certificate or a certificate
that chains to a known root certificate.
Outputs are the same as Section 4.1.
4.3. Retrieve Latest Signed Tree Head
GET https://<log server>/ct/v1/get-sth
No inputs.
Outputs
tree_size The size of the tree, in entries, in decimal.
timestamp The timestamp, in decimal.
sha256_root_hash The root hash of the tree, in base64.
tree_head_signature A TreeHeadSignature for the above data.
4.4. Retrieve Merkle Consistency Proof between two Signed Tree Heads
GET https://<log server>/ct/v1/get-sth-consistency
Inputs
first The tree_size of the first tree, in decimal.
second The tree_size of the second tree, in decimal.
Both tree sizes must be from published v1 STHs (Signed Tree Heads).
Outputs
consistency An array of Merkle tree nodes, base64 encoded.