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INFORMATIONAL
Updated by:5955Errata Exist
Independent Submission                                        A. SantoniRequest for Comments: 5544                                Actalis S.p.A.Category: Informational                                    February 2010ISSN: 2070-1721Syntax for Binding Documents with Time-StampsAbstract   This document describes an envelope that can be used to bind a file   (not necessarily protected by means of cryptographic techniques) with   one or more time-stamp tokens obtained for that file, where "time-   stamp token" has the meaning defined inRFC 3161 or its successors.   Additional types of temporal evidence are also allowed.   The proposed envelope is based on the Cryptographic Message Syntax as   defined inRFC 5652.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other   RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at   its discretion and makes no statement about its value for   implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by   the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5544.IESG Note   This RFC is not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard.  The   standards track specificationRFC 4998, Evidence Record Syntax (ERS),   specifies an alternative mechanism.  Readers are encouraged to also   reviewRFC 4998 when evaluating the suitability of this mechanism.Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 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.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................21.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................32. Syntax for TimeStampedData ......................................33. Compliance Requirements .........................................64. Recommended Processing ..........................................64.1. Generating a New TimeStampedData Structure .................74.2. Verifying an Existing TimeStampedData Structure ............8      4.3. Extending the Validity of an Existing           TimeStampedData Structure ..................................95. Security Considerations .........................................96. Normative References ...........................................107. Informative References .........................................10Appendix A. ASN.1 Module ..........................................11Appendix B. Acknowledgments .......................................121.  Introduction   Time-stamping has become the standard technique for proving the   existence of a document before a certain point in time.  Several   legislations around the world embrace the concept and provide for   time-stamping services, mainly for the purpose of extending the   validity of signed documents.  However, while time-stamping enhances   digital signatures, its value does not depend on them.  It can   clearly be useful to time-stamp a document even if it is not signed.   And it can also be useful, or even mandatory in some cases, to time-   stamp a signed document in its entirety, regardless of how many   signatures it contains.   When a time-stamp is related to a digital signature, there already   exists a way to keep the two pieces together:RFC 3161 [TSP]   describes how one or more TimeStampTokens can be included in a   SignerInfo structure as unsigned attributes.  On the other hand,   there is no standard way to keep together a time-stamped document,   whether signed or not, and the related time-stamps.Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010   In such cases, two approaches are typically being adopted:   o  time-stamps are kept as separate files (keeping track of what      time-stamps belong to what documents is up to the user);   o  an ad hoc solution is adopted for specific applications, e.g., a      ZIP archive or a proprietary "envelope" of some kind.   Both solutions impede interoperability, which is the objective of   this memo.   This document describes a simple syntax for binding one document   (actually, any kind of file) to the corresponding temporal evidence;   the latter is typically represented by one or moreRFC 3161   TimeStampTokens.  Additional types of temporal evidence, e.g., anRFC4998 EvidenceRecord [ERS], are also supported via an "open" syntax.   However, for the sake of interoperability, the emphasis in this   document is on TimeStampTokens.   The proposed syntax is broadly based on the Cryptographic Message   Syntax (CMS) defined inRFC 5652 [CMS].1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   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 inRFC 2119 [KWORDS].   The terms "document" and "file" are used interchangeably.  The terms   "TimeStampToken" and "time-stamp token" are used interchangeably,   both referring to the data structure defined inRFC 3161.2.  Syntax for TimeStampedData   The proposed data structure is called TimeStampedData, and it is   based on the ContentInfo envelope defined in [CMS]:      ContentInfo ::= SEQUENCE {         contentType ContentType,         content [0] EXPLICIT ANY DEFINED BY contentType }      ContentType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   While CMS defines six content types (data, signed-data, enveloped-   data, digested-data, encrypted-data, and authenticated-data), this   memo defines an additional content type, timestamped-data, identified   by the following Object Identifier (OID):Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010      id-ct-timestampedData OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {               iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)               pkcs9(9) id-smime(16) id-ct(1) 31 }   This particular OID signals that the content field of the ContentInfo   has the following syntax:      TimeStampedData ::= SEQUENCE {         version              INTEGER { v1(1) },         dataUri              IA5String OPTIONAL,         metaData             MetaData OPTIONAL,         content              OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,         temporalEvidence     Evidence      }      MetaData ::= SEQUENCE {         hashProtected        BOOLEAN,         fileName             UTF8String OPTIONAL,         mediaType            IA5String OPTIONAL,         otherMetaData        Attributes OPTIONAL      }      Attributes ::=         SET SIZE(1..MAX) OF Attribute -- according toRFC 5652      Evidence ::= CHOICE {         tstEvidence    [0] TimeStampTokenEvidence,   -- seeRFC 3161         ersEvidence    [1] EvidenceRecord,           -- seeRFC 4998         otherEvidence  [2] OtherEvidence      }      OtherEvidence ::= SEQUENCE {         oeType               OBJECT IDENTIFIER,         oeValue              ANY DEFINED BY oeType }      TimeStampTokenEvidence ::=         SEQUENCE SIZE(1..MAX) OF TimeStampAndCRL      TimeStampAndCRL ::= SEQUENCE {         timeStamp   TimeStampToken,          -- according toRFC 3161         crl         CertificateList OPTIONAL -- according toRFC 5280      }   The version field contains the version number of the TimeStampedData   syntax.  It SHALL be 1 for this version of the document.Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010   The dataUri field contains a URI reference conforming to [URI].  When   the content field is absent, dataUri MUST be present and contain a   URI allowing retrieval of the document that was time-stamped (unless   the document is later moved).  When the content field is present,   this field MAY also be present.   The metaData field contains metadata related to the document that was   time-stamped, if applicable.  In particular:      The hashProtected field indicates whether the metadata have been      included in the computation of the digest within the first      TimeStampToken (see further on).  This makes it possible to detect      a subsequent alteration of the metadata.      The fileName field contains the original filename of the document      that was time-stamped.      The mediaType field contains a media type/subtype and possible      parameters for the time-stamped document, according to [MIME].      This information may help decide how to "open" or deal with the      time-stamped document.      The otherMetaData field contains further attributes of the time-      stamped document (e.g., a description, claimed author, etc.),      where each attribute is specified by an object identifier and a      corresponding set of values, as described in [CMS].  When this      field is present, it MUST contain at least one Attribute.   Within the metaData field (if present), at least one of the fileName,   mediaType, and otherMetaData sub-fields MUST be present.   The Attribute values within the otherMetaData field MUST be DER   encoded, even if the rest of the structure is BER encoded.   The content field, when present, carries the entire contents, in its   original format and encoding, of the document that was time-stamped.   This can actually be any kind of data, e.g., a text document, an   executable, a movie, a message, etc.  The omission of the content   field makes it possible to bind the temporal evidence to external   data.  In such a case, the temporal evidence is computed as though   the content field were present.   The temporalEvidence field carries the evidence that the time-stamped   document did exist before a certain point in time.  Several types of   evidence are allowed, but compliant applications are only required to   support theRFC 3161 type -- namely, the tstEvidence choice.Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010   The TimeStampTokenEvidence sequence MUST contain at least one element   of type TimeStampAndCRL.   The elements of the TimeStampTokenEvidence sequence MUST conform to   the following rule:   o  if the metaData field is absent or the value of its hashProtected      field is FALSE, then the TimeStampToken within the first element      SHALL be computed over the value octets of the content field (if      this field is absent, use the octets retrieved via the dataUri      field);   o  otherwise (the metaData field is present and the value of its      hashProtected field is TRUE), the TimeStampToken within the first      element SHALL be computed over the concatenation of the following      fields:      - the DER encoding of the metaData field;      - the value octets of the content field (if this field is absent,        use the octets retrieved via the dataUri field);   o  the TimeStampToken within the second element SHALL be computed      over the first element;   o  the TimeStampToken within each subsequent element SHALL be      computed over its preceding element in the sequence.   Within the TimeStampAndCRL construct, the optional crl field carries   a suitable CRL (Certificate Revocation List) demonstrating that the   certificate of the TSA (Time-Stamping Authority) that issued the   TimeStampToken was not revoked at the time when the subsequent   element in the TimeStampTokenEvidence sequence was added.  See the   Security Considerations section for further discussion on this topic.3.  Compliance Requirements   Compliant applications MUST support at least theRFC 3161-based type   of evidence (i.e., the tstEvidence CHOICE).4.  Recommended Processing   This section is focused on theRFC 3161-based type of evidence.   Processing of the structure for other types of evidence would be done   in a similar manner.Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 5544                                                   February 20104.1.  Generating a New TimeStampedData Structure   In this case, applications are supposed to behave as follows:   o  populate the version field with the integer value v1(1);   o  if a self-contained envelope is to be generated, always populate      the content field with the content of the file in its original      format and encoding; depending on the application, the dataUri      field may also be added;   o  otherwise (a detached envelope is to be generated), always      populate the dataUri field with the URI of the time-stamped      document (e.g., http://foo.example.com/Contract12345.pdf); using      an absolute URI or a relative reference depends on the      application;   o  if the metaData field is being added, decide on the value of its      hashProtected field; set its value to TRUE if the application      needs the remaining fields of the metaData construct to be hash-      protected as described inSection 2; otherwise, set it to FALSE;   o  if the metaData field is being added, optionally populate the      fileName field (e.g., "Contract12345.pdf"), the mediaType field      with a suitable media type/subtype and possible parameters      according to [MIME], and the otherMetaData field, depending on the      application;   o  select a suitable one-way hash function and compute a hash value      using that function over the content, or the concatenation of the      metadata and the content, as described inSection 2; this hash      value will then be used for requesting the first TimeStampToken;   o  obtain the first temporal evidence from a TSA and add it to the      temporalEvidence field;   o  insert the TimeStampedData into a ContentInfo structure, with the      id-ct-timestampedData OID in the contentType field;   o  BER-encode the ContentInfo structure (except for the fields that      are required to be DER encoded) and save it with a reasonable file      name (e.g., derived from the name of the time-stamped file).Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 5544                                                   February 20104.2.  Verifying an Existing TimeStampedData Structure   In this case, applications are supposed to behave as follows:   o  check that the contentType field of the ContentInfo structure has      the expected value (id-ct-timestampedData) in its contentType      field; then, extract the inner TimeStampedData structure and      continue processing;   o  check the version field (it should be v1);   o  check that the temporalEvidence field is not empty;   o  check whether the content is present; if it is not, use the      dataUri field to retrieve the file;   o  open the first element of the TimeStampTokenEvidence sequence,      open the time-stamp token within it and use the hash function that      was used to obtain it to re-compute the hash of the fields      indicated inSection 2; if the re-computed hash value matches the      one within the time-stamp token, continue processing; otherwise,      the TimeStampedData structure has been modified;   o  validate the temporalEvidence by checking that:      - each TimeStampToken in the chain does contain the correct digest        value (according to the rule described inSection 2) and it was        signed by a trusted TSA,      - the corresponding TSA signing certificate was not revoked at the        time when the subsequent TimeStampToken was issued, based on the        associated CRL;   o  depending on the application, use the temporal evidence for      whatever purpose the application was designed for;   o  depending on the application, show the dataUri, the fileName, the      mediaType, the otherMetaData, and the temporal evidence to the      user;   o  depending on the application, save the content to a separate file;   o  depending on the application, store at a different place the      content that has been retrieved using the dataUri field, then      update the dataUri field accordingly;   o  depending on the application, show the time-stamped file to the      user, possibly by activating a suitable "viewer".Santoni                       Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 5544                                                   February 20104.3.  Extending the Validity of an Existing TimeStampedData Structure   In this case, applications are supposed to behave as follows:   o  validate the TimeStampedData structure as described above;   o  select the time-stamp token from the last TimeStampAndCRL element      in the chain and obtain the latest available CRL for the      corresponding TSA certificate (if this CRL is not fresh enough,      wait until the next one is available), then store it in the      TimeStampAndCRL element;   o  instantiate a new TimeStampAndCRL element and obtain a new time-      stamp token computed over the previous one, according to the rule      described inSection 2; insert the new time-stamp token into the      new TimeStampAndCRL element, then append the latter to the end of      the chain.   See the Security Considerations section for further discussion on   extending the validity of an existing TimeStampedData structure.5.  Security Considerations   When the metaData field is present and the hashProtected sub-field is   set to TRUE, the metadata are also included in the computation of the   digest within the first time-stamp token, so that any subsequent   alteration of the metadata will be easily detected.  However, the   integrity of hash-protected metadata does not imply that the metadata   were correct at the time when the TimeStampedData object was created.   That can only be inferred by other means (e.g., from context).  For   instance, when TimeStampedData objects are created by an archival   service provider, it may be reasonable to assume that the metadata   are correct at creation time.  Instead, when a TimeStampedData object   is received from an unknown party, the recipient cannot safely assume   that the metadata are correct, lacking further information.   In general, a time-stamp token should not be considered valid after   the certificate of the issuing TSA is expired (also, this   consideration depends on the legislation and the policy under which   the TSA operates).  However, a time-stamp token can itself be time-   stamped to extend the validity of the TSA's signature.  By repeatedly   applying this technique, a whole chain of time-stamp tokens can be   grown to extend the validity of the first one ad libitum.  Thus, this   approach can be adopted to extend the validity of a TimeStampedData   structure beyond the expiry date of the first TimeStampToken within   it, by adding further elements to the TimeStampTokenEvidence sequenceSantoni                       Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010   according to the rule described inSection 2.  Of course, each   additional TimeStampToken must be added in a timely manner (before   the previous one is expired or has been revoked).   The validity extension technique described above requires that the   TSA signing certificates can still be verified long after they have   expired, typically by checking a CRL.  The CRL must be captured at   the suitable time, because expired certificates are typically removed   from the CRL regardless of their being revoked.  The TimeStampAndCRL   construct allows adding a CRL next to the related TimeStampToken, so   that the TSA certificate will still be verifiable at any later time.   The CRL must be captured at the time when another element is about to   be added to the TimeStampTokenEvidence sequence, or even later -- to   allow for a last-minute revocation request to be processed by the CA   (see the discussion about "grace periods" in [CADES]).6.  Normative References   [CMS]     Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)",RFC5652, September 2009.   [ERS]     Gondrom, T., Brandner, R., and U. Pordesch, "Evidence             Record Syntax (ERS)",RFC 4998, August 2007.   [KWORDS]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate             Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [MIME]    Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail             Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message             Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.   [PKIX1]   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, May 2008.   [TSP]     Adams, C., Cain, P., Pinkas, D., and R. Zuccherato,             "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Time-Stamp             Protocol (TSP)",RFC 3161, August 2001.   [URI]     Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform             Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC3986, January 2005.7.  Informative References   [CADES]   Pinkas, D., Pope, N., and J. Ross, "CMS Advanced Electronic             Signatures (CAdES)",RFC 5126, March 2008.Santoni                       Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010Appendix A.  ASN.1 Module   The ASN.1 module contained in this appendix defines the structures   that are needed to implement this specification.  It is expected to   be used in conjunction with the ASN.1 modules in [CMS], [TSP],   [PKIX1], and [ERS].   TimeStampedDataModule      { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1)        pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0) 35 }      DEFINITIONS IMPLICIT TAGS ::=      BEGIN      IMPORTS         -- Imports fromRFC 5652 [CMS]         Attribute            FROM CryptographicMessageSyntax2004               { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549)                 pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0) cms-2004(24) }         -- Imports fromRFC 3161 [TSP]         TimeStampToken            FROM PKIXTSP               { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)                 security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)                 id-mod-tsp(13)}         -- Imports fromRFC 5280 [PKIX1]         CertificateList            FROM PKIX1Explicit88               { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)                 security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)                 id-pkix1-explicit-88(18)}         -- Imports fromRFC 4998 [ERS]         EvidenceRecord            FROM ERS               { iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)                 security(5) mechanisms(5) ltans(11) id-mod(0)                 id-mod-ers88(2) id-mod-ers88-v1(1) };      -- TimeStampedData Content Type and Object Identifier      id-ct-timestampedData OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {         iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)         id-smime(16) id-ct(1) 31 }Santoni                       Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010      TimeStampedData ::= SEQUENCE {         version              INTEGER { v1(1) },         dataUri              IA5String OPTIONAL,         metaData             MetaData OPTIONAL,         content              OCTET STRING OPTIONAL,         temporalEvidence     Evidence      }      MetaData ::= SEQUENCE {         hashProtected        BOOLEAN,         fileName             UTF8String OPTIONAL,         mediaType            IA5String OPTIONAL,         otherMetaData        Attributes OPTIONAL      }      Attributes ::=         SET SIZE(1..MAX) OF Attribute -- according toRFC 5652      Evidence ::= CHOICE {         tstEvidence    [0] TimeStampTokenEvidence,   -- seeRFC 3161         ersEvidence    [1] EvidenceRecord,           -- seeRFC 4998         otherEvidence  [2] OtherEvidence      }      OtherEvidence ::= SEQUENCE {         oeType            OBJECT IDENTIFIER,         oeValue           ANY DEFINED BY oeType }      TimeStampTokenEvidence ::=         SEQUENCE SIZE(1..MAX) OF TimeStampAndCRL      TimeStampAndCRL ::= SEQUENCE {         timeStamp   TimeStampToken,          -- according toRFC 3161         crl         CertificateList OPTIONAL -- according toRFC 5280      }      ENDAppendix B.  Acknowledgments   Thanks to Stephen Kent for encouraging the author in the early stages   of this work.   Thanks to Russ Housley for reviewing this memo, suggesting useful   amendments and assigning a value to the OIDs herein defined.   Thanks are also due to other people who reviewed this memo and helped   improving it, but prefer not to be mentioned.Santoni                       Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 5544                                                   February 2010Author's Address   Adriano Santoni   Actalis S.p.A.   Via Taramelli 26   I-20124 Milano   Italy   EMail: adriano.santoni@actalis.itSantoni                       Informational                    [Page 13]

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