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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          D. PinkasRequest for Comments: 5126                                      Bull SASObsoletes:3126                                                  N. PopeCategory: Informational                                 Thales eSecurity                                                                 J. Ross                                                  Security and Standards                                                           February 2008CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures (CAdES)Status of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document defines the format of an electronic signature that can   remain valid over long periods.  This includes evidence as to its   validity even if the signer or verifying party later attempts to deny   (i.e., repudiates) the validity of the signature.   The format can be considered as an extension toRFC 3852 andRFC2634, where, when appropriate, additional signed and unsigned   attributes have been defined.   The contents of this Informational RFC amount to a transposition of   the ETSI Technical Specification (TS) 101 733 V.1.7.4 (CMS Advanced   Electronic Signatures -- CAdES) and is technically equivalent to it.   The technical contents of this specification are maintained by ETSI.   The ETSI TS and further updates are available free of charge at:http://www.etsi.org/WebSite/Standards/StandardsDownload.aspxPinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................62. Scope ...........................................................63. Definitions and Abbreviations ...................................83.1. Definitions ................................................83.2. Abbreviations .............................................114. Overview .......................................................124.1. Major Parties .............................................134.2. Signature Policies ........................................144.3. Electronic Signature Formats ..............................154.3.1. CAdES Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES) .......15           4.3.2. CAdES Explicit Policy-based Electronic                  Signatures (CAdES-EPES) ............................184.4. Electronic Signature Formats with Validation Data .........194.4.1. Electronic Signature with Time (CAdES-T) ...........20           4.4.2. ES with Complete Validation Data References                  (CAdES-C) ..........................................214.4.3. Extended Electronic Signature Formats ..............23                  4.4.3.1. EXtended Long Electronic Signature                           (CAdES-X Long) ............................24                  4.4.3.2. EXtended Electronic Signature with                           Time Type 1 ...............................25                  4.4.3.3. EXtended Electronic Signature with                           Time Type 2 ...............................26                  4.4.3.4. EXtended Long Electronic Signature                           with Time (CAdES-X Long ...................274.4.4. Archival Electronic Signature (CAdES-A) ............274.5. Arbitration ...............................................284.6. Validation Process ........................................295. Electronic Signature Attributes ................................305.1. General Syntax ............................................305.2. Data Content Type .........................................305.3. Signed-data Content Type ..................................305.4. SignedData Type ...........................................315.5. EncapsulatedContentInfo Type ..............................315.6. SignerInfo Type ...........................................315.6.1. Message Digest Calculation Process .................325.6.2. Message Signature Generation Process ...............325.6.3. Message Signature Verification Process .............325.7. Basic ES Mandatory Present Attributes .....................325.7.1. content-type .......................................325.7.2. Message Digest .....................................335.7.3. Signing Certificate Reference Attributes ...........33                  5.7.3.1. ESS signing-certificate Attribute                           Definition ................................34                  5.7.3.2. ESS signing-certificate-v2                           Attribute Definition ......................34Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008                  5.7.3.3. Other signing-certificate                           Attribute Definition ......................35      5.8. Additional Mandatory Attributes for Explicit           Policy-based Electronic Signatures ........................365.8.1. signature-policy-identifier ........................365.9. CMS Imported Optional Attributes ..........................385.9.1. signing-time .......................................385.9.2. countersignature ...................................395.10. ESS-Imported Optional Attributes .........................395.10.1. content-reference Attribute .......................395.10.2. content-identifier Attribute ......................395.10.3. content-hints Attribute ...........................40      5.11. Additional Optional Attributes Defined in the            Present Document .........................................405.11.1. commitment-type-indication Attribute ..............415.11.2. signer-location Attribute .........................435.11.3. signer-attributes Attribute .......................435.11.4. content-time-stamp Attribute ......................445.12. Support for Multiple Signatures ..........................445.12.1. Independent Signatures ............................445.12.2. Embedded Signatures ...............................456. Additional Electronic Signature Validation Attributes ..........456.1. signature time-stamp Attribute (CAdES-T) ..................476.1.1. signature-time-stamp Attribute Definition ..........476.2. Complete Validation Data References (CAdES-C) .............48           6.2.1. complete-certificate-references Attribute                  Definition .........................................48           6.2.2. complete-revocation-references Attribute                  Definition .........................................49           6.2.3. attribute-certificate-references Attribute                  Definition .........................................51           6.2.4. attribute-revocation-references Attribute                  Definition .........................................526.3. Extended Validation Data (CAdES-X) ........................52           6.3.1. Time-Stamped Validation Data (CAdES-X Type1 or Type 2) .......................................53           6.3.2. Long Validation Data (CAdES-X Long, CAdES-X                  Long Type 1 or 2) ..................................536.3.3. certificate-values Attribute Definition ............546.3.4. revocation-values Attribute Definition .............546.3.5. CAdES-C-time-stamp Attribute Definition ............56           6.3.6. time-stamped-certs-crls-references                  Attribute Definition ...............................576.4. Archive Validation Data ...................................586.4.1. archive-time-stamp Attribute Definition ............587. Other Standard Data Structures .................................607.1. Public Key Certificate Format .............................607.2. Certificate Revocation List Format ........................60Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20087.3. OCSP Response Format ......................................607.4. Time-Stamp Token Format ...................................607.5. Name and Attribute Formats ................................607.6. AttributeCertificate ......................................618. Conformance Requirements .......................................618.1. CAdES-Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES) ..............628.2. CAdES-Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature ..........638.3. Verification Using Time-Stamping ..........................638.4. Verification Using Secure Records .........................639. References .....................................................649.1. Normative References ......................................649.2. Informative References ....................................65   Annex A (normative): ASN.1 Definitions ............................69           A.1. Signature Format Definitions UsingX.208 ASN.1 Syntax ...................................69           A.2. Signature Format Definitions UsingX.680 ASN.1 Syntax ...................................77   Annex B (informative): Extended Forms of Electronic Signatures ....86B.1. Extended Forms of Validation Data ....................86B.1.1. CAdES-X Long ..................................87B.1.2. CAdES-X Type 1 ................................88B.1.3. CAdES-X Type 2 ................................90B.1.4. CAdES-X Long Type 1 and CAdES-X Long Type 2 ...91B.2. Time-Stamp Extensions ................................93B.3. Archive Validation Data (CAdES-A) ....................94B.4. Example Validation Sequence ..........................97B.5. Additional Optional Features ........................102   Annex C (informative): General Description .......................103C.1. The Signature Policy ................................103C.2. Signed Information ..................................104C.3. Components of an Electronic Signature ...............104C.3.1. Reference to the Signature Policy ............104C.3.2. Commitment Type Indication ...................105C.3.3. Certificate Identifier from the Signer .......106C.3.4. Role Attributes ..............................106C.3.4.1.  Claimed Role .......................107C.3.4.2.  Certified Role .....................107C.3.5. Signer Location ..............................108C.3.6. Signing Time .................................108C.3.7. Content Format ...............................108C.3.8. content-hints ................................109C.3.9. Content Cross-Referencing ....................109C.4. Components of Validation Data .......................109C.4.1. Revocation Status Information ................109C.4.1.1. CRL Information .....................110C.4.1.2. OCSP Information ....................110C.4.2. Certification Path ...........................111C.4.3. Time-stamping for Long Life of Signatures ....111Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008                C.4.4. Time-stamping for Long Life of Signature                       before CA key Compromises ....................113                        C.4.4.1. Time-stamping the ES with                                 Complete Validation Data ...........113                        C.4.4.2. Time-Stamping Certificates and                                 Revocation Information References ..114C.4.5. Time-stamping for Archive of Signature .......115C.4.6. Reference to Additional Data .................116C.4.7. Time-Stamping for Mutual Recognition .........116C.4.8. TSA Key Compromise ...........................117C.5. Multiple Signatures .................................118   Annex D (informative): Data Protocols to Interoperate with TSPs ..118D.1. Operational Protocols ...............................118D.1.1. Certificate Retrieval ........................118D.1.2. CRL Retrieval ................................118D.1.3. Online Certificate Status ....................119D.1.4. Time-Stamping ................................119D.2. Management Protocols ................................119D.2.1. Request for Certificate Revocation ...........119   Annex E (informative): Security Considerations ...................119E.1. Protection of Private Key ...........................119E.2. Choice of Algorithms ................................119   Annex F (informative): Example Structured Contents and MIME ......120F.1. General Description .................................120F.1.1. Header Information ...........................120F.1.2. Content Encoding .............................121F.1.3. Multi-Part Content ...........................121F.2. S/MIME ..............................................122F.2.1. Using application/pkcs7-mime .................123F.2.2. Using application/pkcs7-signature ............124   Annex G (informative): Relationship to the European Directive                          and EESSI .................................125G.1. Introduction ........................................125G.2. Electronic Signatures and the Directive .............126           G.3. ETSI Electronic Signature Formats and the Directive .127           G.4. EESSI Standards and Classes of Electronic Signature .127G.4.1. Structure of EESSI Standardization ...........127G.4.2. Classes of Electronic Signatures .............128                G.4.3. Electronic Signature Classes and the ETSI                       Electronic Signature Format ..................128   Annex H (informative): APIs for the Generation and Verification                          of Electronic Signatures Tokens ...........129H.1. Data Framing ........................................129H.2. IDUP-GSS-APIs Defined by the IETF ...................131H.3. CORBA Security Interfaces Defined by the OMG ........132   Annex I (informative): Cryptographic Algorithms ..................133I.1. Digest Algorithms ...................................133I.1.1. SHA-1 ........................................133Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008I.1.2. General ......................................133I.2. Digital Signature Algorithms ........................134I.2.1. DSA ..........................................134I.2.2. RSA ..........................................135I.2.3. General ......................................135   Annex J (informative): Guidance on Naming ........................137J.1. Allocation of Names .................................137J.2. Providing Access to Registration Information ........138J.3. Naming Schemes ......................................138J.3.1. Naming Schemes for Individual Citizens .......138                J.3.2. Naming Schemes for Employees of an                       Organization .................................1391.  Introduction   This document is intended to cover electronic signatures for various   types of transactions, including business transactions (e.g.,   purchase requisition, contract, and invoice applications) where   long-term validity of such signatures is important.  This includes   evidence as to its validity even if the signer or verifying party   later attempts to deny (i.e., repudiates; see ISO/IEC 10181-5   [ISO10181-5]) the validity of the signature.   Thus, the present document can be used for any transaction between an   individual and a company, between two companies, between an   individual and a governmental body, etc.  The present document is   independent of any environment; it can be applied to any environment,   e.g., smart cards, Global System for Mobile Communication Subscriber   Identity Module (GSM SIM) cards, special programs for electronic   signatures, etc.   The European Directive on a community framework for Electronic   Signatures defines an electronic signature as: "Data in electronic   form which is attached to or logically associated with other   electronic data and which serves as a method of authentication".   An electronic signature, as used in the present document, is a form   of advanced electronic signature, as defined in the Directive.2.  Scope   The scope of the present document covers electronic signature formats   only.  The aspects of Electronic Signature Policies are defined inRFC 3125 [RFC3125] and ETSI TR 102 272 [TR102272].   The present document defines a number of electronic signature   formats, including electronic signatures that can remain valid over   long periods.  This includes evidence as to its validity even if thePinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   signer or verifying party later attempts to deny (repudiates) the   validity of the electronic signature.   The present document specifies use of Trusted Service Providers   (e.g., Time-Stamping Authorities) and the data that needs to be   archived (e.g., cross-certificates and revocation lists) to meet the   requirements of long-term electronic signatures.   An electronic signature, as defined by the present document, can be   used for arbitration in case of a dispute between the signer and   verifier, which may occur at some later time, even years later.   The present document includes the concept of signature policies that   can be used to establish technical consistency when validating   electronic signatures, but it does not mandate their use.   The present document is based on the use of public key cryptography   to produce digital signatures, supported by public key certificates.   The present document also specifies the use of time-stamping and   time-marking services to prove the validity of a signature long after   the normal lifetime of critical elements of an electronic signature.   This document also, as an option, defines ways to provide very   long-term protection against key compromise or weakened algorithms.   The present document builds on existing standards that are widely   adopted.  These include:      -RFC 3852 [4]: "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)";      - ISO/IEC 9594-8/ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [1]: "Information        technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory:        Authentication framework";      -RFC 3280 [2]: "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure (PKIX)        Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile";      -RFC 3161 [7]: "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure        Time-Stamp Protocol (TSP)".      NOTE: SeeSection 11 for a full set of references.   The present document describes formats for advanced electronic   signatures using ASN.1 (Abstract Syntax Notation 1) [14].  ASN.1 is   encoded using X.690 [16].   These formats are based on CMS (Cryptographic Message Syntax) defined   inRFC 3852 [4].  These electronic signatures are thus called CAdES,   for "CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures".Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Another document, TS 101 903 [TS101903], describes formats for XML   advanced electronic signatures (XAdES) built on XMLDSIG as specified   in [XMLDSIG].   In addition, the present document identifies other documents that   define formats for Public Key Certificates, Attribute Certificates,   and Certificate Revocation Lists and supporting protocols, including   protocols for use by trusted third parties to support the operation   of electronic signature creation and validation.   Informative annexes include:      - illustrations of extended forms of Electronic Signature formats        that protect against various vulnerabilities and examples of        validation processes (Annex B);      - descriptions and explanations of some of the concepts used in        the present document, giving a rationale for normative parts of        the present document (Annex C);      - information on protocols to interoperate with Trusted Service        Providers (Annex D);      - guidance on naming (Annex E);      - an example structured content and MIME (Annex F);      - the relationship between the present document and the directive        on electronic signature and associated standardization        initiatives (Annex G);      - APIs to support the generation and verification of electronic        signatures (Annex H);      - cryptographic algorithms that may be used (Annex I); and      - naming schemes (see Annex J).3.  Definitions and Abbreviations3.1.  Definitions   For the purposes of the present document, the following terms and   definitions apply:   Arbitrator: an arbitrator entity may be used to arbitrate a dispute   between a signer and verifier when there is a disagreement on the   validity of a digital signature.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Attribute Authority (AA): an authority that assigns privileges by   issuing attribute certificates.   Authority Certificate: a certificate issued to an authority (e.g.,   either to a certification authority or an attribute authority).   Attribute Authority Revocation List (AARL): a revocation list   containing a list of references to certificates issued to AAs that   are no longer considered valid by the issuing authority.   Attribute Certificate Revocation List (ACRL): a revocation list   containing a list of references to attribute certificates that are no   longer considered valid by the issuing authority.   Certification Authority Revocation List (CARL): a revocation list   containing a list of public key certificates issued to certification   authorities that are no longer considered valid by the certificate   issuer.   Certification Authority (CA): an authority trusted by one or more   users to create and assign public key certificates; optionally, the   certification authority may create the users' keys.      NOTE: See ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [1].   Certificate Revocation List (CRL): a signed list indicating a set of   public key certificates that are no longer considered valid by the   certificate issuer.   Digital Signature: data appended to, or a cryptographic   transformation of, a data unit that allows a recipient of the data   unit to prove the source and integrity of the data unit and protect   against forgery, e.g., by the recipient.      NOTE: See ISO 7498-2 [ISO7498-2].   Electronic Signature: data in electronic form that is attached to or   logically associated with other electronic data and that serves as a   method of authentication.      NOTE: See Directive 1999/93/EC of the European Parliament and of      the Council of 13 December 1999 on a Community framework for      electronic signatures [EUDirective].   Extended Electronic Signatures: electronic signatures enhanced by   complementing the baseline requirements with additional data, such as   time-stamp tokens and certificate revocation data, to address   commonly recognized threats.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature (EPES): an electronic   signature where the signature policy that shall be used to validate   it is explicitly specified.   Grace Period: a time period that permits the certificate revocation   information to propagate through the revocation process to relying   parties.   Initial Verification: a process performed by a verifier done after an   electronic signature is generated in order to capture additional   information that could make it valid for long-term verification.   Public Key Certificate (PKC): public keys of a user, together with   some other information, rendered unforgeable by encipherment with the   private key of the certification authority that issued it.      NOTE: See ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [1].   Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA): an asymmetric cryptography algorithm   based on the difficulty to factor very large numbers using a key   pair: a private key and a public key.   Signature Policy: a set of rules for the creation and validation of   an electronic signature that defines the technical and procedural   requirements for electronic signature creation and validation, in   order to meet a particular business need, and under which the   signature can be determined to be valid.   Signature Policy Issuer: an entity that defines and issues a   signature policy.   Signature Validation Policy: part of the signature policy that   specifies the technical requirements on the signer in creating a   signature and verifier when validating a signature.   Signer: an entity that creates an electronic signature.   Subsequent Verification: a process performed by a verifier to assess   the signature validity.      NOTE: Subsequent verification may be done even years after the      electronic signature was produced by the signer and completed by      the initial verification, and it might not need to capture more      data than those captured at the time of initial verification.   Time-Stamp Token: a data object that binds a representation of a   datum to a particular time, thus establishing evidence that the datum   existed before that time.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Time-Mark: information in an audit trail from a Trusted Service   Provider that binds a representation of a datum to a particular time,   thus establishing evidence that the datum existed before that time.   Time-Marking Authority: a trusted third party that creates records in   an audit trail in order to indicate that a datum existed before a   particular point in time.   Time-Stamping Authority (TSA): a trusted third party that creates   time-stamp tokens in order to indicate that a datum existed at a   particular point in time.   Time-Stamping Unit (TSU): a set of hardware and software that is   managed as a unit and has a single time-stamp token signing key   active at a time.   Trusted Service Provider (TSP): an entity that helps to build trust   relationships by making available or providing some information upon   request.   Validation Data: additional data that may be used by a verifier of   electronic signatures to determine that the signature is valid.   Valid Electronic Signature: an electronic signature that passes   validation.   Verifier: an entity that verifies evidence.      NOTE 1: See ISO/IEC 13888-1 [ISO13888-1].      NOTE 2: Within the context of the present document, this is an      entity that validates an electronic signature.3.2.  Abbreviations   For the purposes of the present document, the following abbreviations   apply:   AA           Attribute Authority   AARL         Attribute Authority Revocation List   ACRL         Attribute Certificate Revocation List   API          Application Program Interface   ASCII        American Standard Code for Information Interchange   ASN.1        Abstract Syntax Notation 1   CA           Certification Authority   CAD          Card Accepting Device   CAdES        CMS Advanced Electronic Signature   CAdES-A      CAdES with Archive validation dataPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   CAdES-BES    CAdES Basic Electronic Signature   CAdES-C      CAdES with Complete validation data   CAdES-EPES   CAdES Explicit Policy Electronic Signature   CAdES-T      CAdES with Time   CAdES-X      CAdES with eXtended validation data   CAdES-X Long CAdES with EXtended Long validation data   CARL         Certification Authority Revocation List   CMS          Cryptographic Message Syntax   CRL          Certificate Revocation List   CWA          CEN (European Committee for Standardization) Workshop                Agreement   DER          Distinguished Encoding Rules (for ASN.1)   DSA          Digital Signature Algorithm   EDIFACT      Electronic Data Interchange For Administration,                Commerce and Transport   EESSI        European Electronic Signature Standardization                Initiative   EPES         Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature   ES           Electronic Signature   ESS          Enhanced Security Services (enhances CMS)   IDL          Interface Definition Language   MIME         Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions   OCSP         Online Certificate Status Provider   OID          Object IDentifier   PKC          Public Key Certificate   PKIX         Public Key Infrastructure using X.509                (IETF Working Group)   RSA          Rivest-Shamir-Adleman   SHA-1        Secure Hash Algorithm 1   TSA          Time-Stamping Authority   TSP          Trusted Service Provider   TST          Time-Stamp Token   TSU          Time-Stamping Unit   URI          Uniform Resource Identifier   URL          Uniform Resource Locator   XML          Extensible Markup Language   XMLDSIG      XML Digital Signature4.  Overview   The present document defines a number of Electronic Signature (ES)   formats that build on CMS (RFC 3852 [4]) by adding signed and   unsigned attributes.   This section:      - provides an introduction to the major parties involved        (Section 4.1),Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - introduces the concept of signature policies (Section 4.2),      - provides an overview of the various ES formats (Section 4.3),      - introduces the concept of validation data, and provides an        overview of formats that incorporate validation data        (Section 4.4), and      - presents relevant considerations on arbitration        (Section 4.5) and for the validation process (Section 4.6).   The formal specifications of the attributes are specified in Sections   5 and 6; Annexes C and D provide rationale for the definitions of the   different ES forms.4.1.  Major Parties   The major parties involved in a business transaction supported by   electronic signatures, as defined in the present document, are:      - the signer;      - the verifier;      - Trusted Service Providers (TSP); and      - the arbitrator.   The signer is the entity that creates the electronic signature.  When   the signer digitally signs over data using the prescribed format,   this represents a commitment on behalf of the signing entity to the   data being signed.   The verifier is the entity that validates the electronic signature;   it may be a single entity or multiple entities.   The Trusted Service Providers (TSPs) are one or more entities that   help to build trust relationships between the signer and verifier.   They support the signer and verifier by means of supporting services   including: user certificates, cross-certificates, time-stamp tokens,   CRLs, ARLs, and OCSP responses.  The following TSPs are used to   support the functions defined in the present document:      - Certification Authorities;      - Registration Authorities;      - CRL Issuers;      - OCSP Responders;      - Repository Authorities (e.g., a Directory);      - Time-Stamping Authorities;      - Time-Marking Authorities; and      - Signature Policy Issuers.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Certification Authorities provide users with public key certificates   and a revocation service.   Registration Authorities allow the identification and registration of   entities before a CA generates certificates.   Repository Authorities publish CRLs issued by CAs, signature policies   issued by Signature Policy Issuers, and optionally public key   certificates.   Time-Stamping Authorities attest that some data was formed before a   given trusted time.   Time-Marking Authorities record that some data was formed before a   given trusted time.   Signature Policy Issuers define the signature policies to be used by   signers and verifiers.   In some cases, the following additional TSPs are needed:      - Attribute Authorities.   Attributes Authorities provide users with attributes linked to public   key certificates.   An Arbitrator is an entity that arbitrates in disputes between a   signer and a verifier.4.2.  Signature Policies   The present document includes the concept of signature policies that   can be used to establish technical consistency when validating   electronic signatures.   When a comprehensive signature policy used by the verifier is either   explicitly indicated by the signer or implied by the data being   signed, then a consistent result can be obtained when validating an   electronic signature.   When the signature policy being used by the verifier is neither   indicated by the signer nor can be derived from other data, or the   signature policy is incomplete, then verifiers, including   arbitrators, may obtain different results when validating an   electronic signature.  Therefore, comprehensive signature policies   that ensure consistency of signature validation are recommended from   both the signer's and verifier's point of view.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Further information on signature policies is provided in:      - TR 102 038 [TR102038];      - Sections5.8.1, C.1, and C.3.1 of the present document;      -RFC 3125 [RFC3125]; and      - TR 102 272 [TR102272].4.3.  Electronic Signature Formats   The current section provides an overview for two forms of CMS   advanced electronic signature specified in the present document,   namely, the CAdES Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES) and the   CAdES Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature (CAdES-EPES).   Conformance to the present document mandates that the signer create   one of these formats.4.3.1.  CAdES Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES)   A CAdES Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES), in accordance with   the present document, contains:      - The signed user data (e.g., the signer's document), as defined        in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]);      - A collection of mandatory signed attributes, as defined in CMS        (RFC 3852 [4]) and in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]);      - Additional mandatory signed attributes, defined in the present        document; and      - The digital signature value computed on the user data and, when        present, on the signed attributes, as defined in CMS (RFC 3852        [4]).   A CAdES Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES), in accordance with   the present document, may contain:      - a collection of additional signed attributes; and      - a collection of optional unsigned attributes.   The mandatory signed attributes are:      - Content-type.  It is defined inRFC 3852 [4] and specifies the        type of the EncapsulatedContentInfo value being signed.  Details        are provided inSection 5.7.1 of the present document.        Rationale for its inclusion is provided in Annex C.3.7;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - Message-digest.  It is defined inRFC 3852 [4] and specifies the        message digest of the eContent OCTET STRING within        encapContentInfo being signed.  Details are provided inSection5.7.2;      - ESS signing-certificate OR ESS signing-certificate-v2.  The ESS        signing-certificate attribute is defined in Enhanced Security        Services (ESS),RFC 2634 [5], and only allows for the use of        SHA-1 as a digest algorithm.  The ESS signing-certificate-v2        attribute is defined in "ESS Update: Adding CertID Algorithm        Agility",RFC 5035 [15], and allows for the use of any digest        algorithm.  A CAdES-BES claiming compliance with the present        document must include one of them.Section 5.7.3 provides the        details of these attributes.  Rationale for its inclusion is        provided in Annex C.3.3.   Optional signed attributes may be added to the CAdES-BES, including   optional signed attributes defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]), ESS (RFC2634 [5]), and the present document.  Listed below are optional   attributes that are defined inSection 5 and have a rationale   provided in Annex C:      - Signing-time: as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]), indicates the        time of the signature, as claimed by the signer.  Details and        short rationale are provided inSection 5.9.1.  Annex C.3.6        provides the rationale.      - content-hints: as defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]), provides        information that describes the innermost signed content of a        multi-layer message where one content is encapsulated in        another.Section 5.10.1 provides the specification details.        Annex C.3.8 provides the rationale.      - content-reference: as defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]), can be        incorporated as a way to link request and reply messages in an        exchange between two parties.Section 5.10.1 provides the        specification details.  Annex C.3.9 provides the rationale.      - content-identifier: as defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]), contains        an identifier that may be used later on in the previous        content-reference attribute.Section 5.10.2 provides the        specification details.      - commitment-type-indication: this attribute is defined by the        present document as a way to indicate the commitment endorsed by        the signer when producing the signature.Section 5.11.1        provides the specification details.  Annex C.3.2 provides the        rationale.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - signer-location: this attribute is defined by the present        document.  It allows the signer to indicate the place where the        signer purportedly produced the signature.Section 5.11.2        provides the specification details.  Annex C.3.5 provides the        rationale.      - signer-attributes: this attribute is defined by the present        document.  It allows a claimed or certified role to be        incorporated into the signed information.Section 5.11.3        provides the specification details.  Annex C.3.4 provides the        rationale.      - content-time-stamp: this attribute is defined by the present        document.  It allows a time-stamp token of the data to be signed        to be incorporated into the signed information.  It provides        proof of the existence of the data before the signature was        created.Section 5.11.4 provides the specification details.        Annex C.3.6 provides the rationale.   A CAdES-BES form can also incorporate instances of unsigned   attributes, as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]) and ESS (RFC 2634 [5]).      - CounterSignature, as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]); it can be        incorporated wherever embedded signatures (i.e., a signature on        a previous signature) are needed.Section 5.9.2 provides the        specification details.  Annex C.5 in Annex C provides the        rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-BES is illustrated in Figure 1.                +------Elect.Signature (CAdES-BES)------+                |+----------------------------------- + |                ||+---------+ +----------+            | |                |||Signer's | |  Signed  |  Digital   | |                |||Document | |Attributes| Signature  | |                |||         | |          |            | |                ||+---------+ +----------+            | |                |+------------------------------------+ |                +---------------------------------------+                  Figure 1: Illustration of a CAdES-BES   The signer's conformance requirements of a CAdES-BES are defined inSection 8.1.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE: The CAdES-BES is the minimum format for an electronic      signature to be generated by the signer.  On its own, it does not      provide enough information for it to be verified in the longer      term.  For example, revocation information issued by the relevant      certificate status information issuer needs to be available for      long-term validation (seeSection 4.4.2).   The CAdES-BES satisfies the legal requirements for electronic   signatures, as defined in the European Directive on Electronic   Signatures, (see Annex C for further discussion on the relationship   of the present document to the Directive).  It provides basic   authentication and integrity protection.   The semantics of the signed data of a CAdES-BES or its context may   implicitly indicate a signature policy to the verifier.   Specification of the contents of signature policies is outside the   scope of the present document.  However, further information on   signature policies is provided in TR 102 038 [TR102038],RFC 3125   [RFC3125], and Sections5.8.1, C.1, and C.3.1 of the present   document.4.3.2.  CAdES Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signatures (CAdES-EPES)   A CAdES Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature (CAdES-EPES), in   accordance with the present document, extends the definition of an   electronic signature to conform to the identified signature policy.   A CAdES Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature (CAdES-EPES)   incorporates a signed attribute (sigPolicyID attribute) indicating   the signature policy that shall be used to validate the electronic   signature.  This signed attribute is protected by the signature.  The   signature may also have other signed attributes required to conform   to the mandated signature policy.Section 5.7.3 provides the details on the specification of   signature-policy-identifier attribute.  Annex C.1 provides a short   rationale.  Specification of the contents of signature policies is   outside the scope of the present document.   Further information on signature policies is provided in TR 102 038   [TR102038] and Sections5.8.1, C.1, and C.3.1 of the present   document.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The structure of the CAdES-EPES is illustrated in Figure 2.          +------------- Elect.Signature (CAdES-EPES) ---------------+          |                                                          |          |+-------------------------------------------------------+ |          || +-----------+                                         | |          || |           |   +---------------------------+         | |          || |           |   |   +----------+            |         | |          || | Signer's  |   |   |Signature | Signed     | Digital | |          || | Document  |   |   |Policy ID | Attributes |Signature| |          || |           |   |   +----------+            |         | |          || |           |   +---------------------------+         | |          || +-----------+                                         | |          |+-------------------------------------------------------+ |          |                                                          |          +----------------------------------------------------------+                   Figure 2: Illustration of a CAdES-EPES   The signer's conformance requirements of CAdES-EPES are defined inSection 8.2.4.4.  Electronic Signature Formats with Validation Data   Validation of an electronic signature, in accordance with the present   document, requires additional data needed to validate the electronic   signature.  This additional data is called validation data, and   includes:      - Public Key Certificates (PKCs);      - revocation status information for each PKC;      - trusted time-stamps applied to the digital signature, otherwise        a time-mark shall be available in an audit log.      - when appropriate, the details of a signature policy to be used        to verify the electronic signature.   The validation data may be collected by the signer and/or the   verifier.  When the signature-policy-identifier signed attribute is   present, it shall meet the requirements of the signature policy.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Validation data includes CA certificates as well as revocation status   information in the form of Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) or   certificate status information (OCSP) provided by an online service.   Validation data also includes evidence that the signature was created   before a particular point in time; this may be either a time-stamp   token or time-mark.   The present document defines unsigned attributes able to contain   validation data that can be added to CAdES-BES and CAdES-EPES,   leading to electronic signature formats that include validation data.   The sections below summarize these formats and their most relevant   characteristics.4.4.1.  Electronic Signature with Time (CAdES-T)   An electronic signature with time (CAdES-T), in accordance with the   present document, is when there exits trusted time associated with   the ES.   The trusted time may be provided by:      - a time-stamp attribute as an unsigned attribute added to the ES;        and      - a time-mark of the ES provided by a Trusted Service Provider.   The time-stamp attribute contains a time-stamp token of the   electronic signature value.Section 6.1.1 provides the specification   details.  Annex C.4.3 provides the rationale.   A time-mark provided by a Trusted Service would have a similar effect   to the signature-time-stamp attribute, but in this case, no attribute   is added to the ES, as it is the responsibility of the TSP to provide   evidence of a time-mark when required to do so.  The management of   time marks is outside the scope of the present document.   Trusted time provides the initial steps towards providing long-term   validity.  Electronic signatures with the time-stamp attribute or a   time-marked BES/EPES, forming the CAdES-T are illustrated in Figure   3.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   +-------------------------------------------------CAdES-T ---------+   |+------ CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES -------+                          |   ||+-----------------------------------+ | +----------------------+ |   |||+---------+ +----------+           | | |                      | |   ||||Signer's | |  Signed  |  Digital  | | | Signature-time-stamp | |   ||||Document | |Attributes| Signature | | | attribute required   | |   ||||         | |          |           | | | when using time      | |   |||+---------+ +----------+           | | | stamps.              | |   ||+-----------------------------------+ | |                      | |   |+--------------------------------------+ | or the BES/EPES      | |   |                                         | shall be time-marked | |   |                                         |                      | |   |                                         | Management and       | |   |                                         | provision of time    | |   |                                         | mark is the          | |   |                                         | responsibility of    | |   |                                         | the TSP.             | |   |                                         +----------------------+ |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+                Figure 3: Illustration of CAdES-T formats      NOTE 1: A time-stamp token is added to the CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES      as an unsigned attribute.      NOTE 2: Time-stamp tokens that may themselves include unsigned      attributes required to validate the time-stamp token, such as the      complete-certificate-references and complete-revocation-references      attributes, as defined by the present document.4.4.2.  ES with Complete Validation Data References (CAdES-C)   Electronic Signature with Complete validation data references   (CAdES-C), in accordance with the present document, adds to the   CAdES-T the complete-certificate-references and   complete-revocation-references attributes, as defined by the present   document.  The complete-certificate-references attribute contains   references to all the certificates present in the certification path   used for verifying the signature.  The complete-revocation-references   attribute contains references to the CRLs and/or OCSPs responses used   for verifying the signature.Section 6.2 provides the specification   details.  Storing the references allows the values of the   certification path and the CRLs or OCSPs responses to be stored   elsewhere, reducing the size of a stored electronic signature format.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Sections C.4.1 to C.4.2 provide rationale on the usage of validation   data and when it is suitable to generate the CAdES-C form.   Electronic signatures, with the additional validation data forming   the CAdES-C, are illustrated in Figure 4.   +------------------------- CAdES-C --------------------------------+   |+----------------------------- CAdES-T ---------+                 |   ||                                  +----------+ | +-------------+ |   ||                                  |Timestamp | | |             | |   ||                                  |attribute | | |             | |   ||+- CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES ------+|over      | | |             | |   |||                                ||digital   | | | Complete    | |   |||+---------++----------+         ||signature | | | certificate | |   ||||Signer's ||  Signed  | Digital ||is        | | |     and     | |   ||||Document ||Attributes|Signature||mandatory | | | revocation  | |   ||||         ||          |         ||if is not | | | references  | |   |||+---------++----------+         ||timemarked| | |             | |   ||+--------------------------------++----------+ | |             | |   |+-----------------------------------------------+ +-------------+ |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+             Figure 4: Illustration of CAdES-C format      NOTE 1: The complete certificate and revocation references are      added to the CAdES-T as an unsigned attribute.      NOTE 2: As a minimum, the signer will provide the CAdES-BES or,      when indicating that the signature conforms to an explicit signing      policy, the CAdES-EPES.      NOTE 3: To reduce the risk of repudiating signature creation, the      trusted time indication needs to be as close as possible to the      time the signature was created.  The signer or a TSP could provide      the CAdES-T; if not, the verifier should create the CAdES-T on      first receipt of an electronic signature because the CAdES-T      provides independent evidence of the existence of the signature      prior to the trusted time indication.      NOTE 4: A CAdES-T trusted time indication must be created before a      certificate has been revoked or expired.      NOTE 5: The signer and TSP could provide the CAdES-C to minimize      this risk, and when the signer does not provide the CAdES-C, the      verifier should create the CAdES-C when the required component of      revocation and validation data become available; this may require      a grace period.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE 6: A grace period permits certificate revocation information      to propagate through the revocation processes.  This period could      extend from the time an authorized entity requests certificate      revocation to when the information is available for the relying      party to use.  In order to make sure that the certificate was not      revoked at the time the signature was time-marked or time-stamped,      verifiers should wait until the end of the grace period.  A      signature policy may define specific values for grace periods.   An illustration of a grace period is provided in Figure 5.               +<--------------Grace Period --------->+   ----+-------+-------+--------+---------------------+----------+       ^       ^       ^        ^                     ^          ^       |       |       |        |                     |          |       |       |       |        |                     |          |   Signature   |     First      |                   Second       |    creation   |   revocation   |                  revocation    |     time      |     status     |                    status      |               |    checking    |                  checking      |               |                |                                |           Time-stamp      Certification                       Build              or              path                            CAdES-C           time-mark      construction             over          & verification           signature               Figure 5: Illustration of a grace period      NOTE 7: CWA 14171 [CWA14171] specifies a signature validation      process using CAdES-T, CAdES-C, and a grace period.  Annex B      provides example validation processes.  Annex C.4 provides      additional information about applying grace periods during the      validation process.   The verifier's conformance requirements are defined inSection 8.3   for time-stamped CAdES-C, andSection 8.4 for time-marked CAdES-C.   The present document only defines conformance requirements for the   verifier up to an ES with Complete validation data (CAdES-C).  This   means that none of the extended and archive forms of electronic   signatures, as defined in Sections4.4.3 to4.4.4, need to be   implemented to achieve conformance to the present document.4.4.3.  Extended Electronic Signature Formats   CAdES-C can be extended by adding unsigned attributes to the   electronic signature.  The present document defines various unsigned   attributes that are applicable for very long-term verification, andPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   for preventing some disaster situations that are discussed in Annex   C.  Annex B provides the details of the various extended formats, all   the required unsigned attributes for each type, and how they can be   used within the electronic signature validation process.  The   sections below give an overview of the various forms of extended   signature formats in the present document.4.4.3.1.  EXtended Long Electronic Signature (CAdES-X Long)   Extended Long format (CAdES-X Long), in accordance with the present   document, adds the certificate-values and revocation-values   attributes to the CAdES-C format.  The first one contains the whole   certificate path required for verifying the signature; the second one   contains the CRLs and/OCSP responses required for the validation of   the signature.  This provides a known repository of certificate and   revocation information required to validate a CAdES-C and prevents   such information from getting lost.  Sections6.3.3 and6.3.4 give   specification details.  Annex B.1.1 gives details on the production   of the format.  Annexes C4.1 to C.4.2 provide the rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-X Long format is illustrated in Figure 6.   +----------------------- CAdES-X-Long -----------------------------+   |+------------------------------------ CadES-C --+                 |   ||                                  +----------+ | +-------------+ |   ||+------ CAdES -------------------+|Timestamp | | |             | |   |||                                ||  over    | | | Complete    | |   |||+---------++----------+         ||digital   | | | certificate | |   ||||Signer's ||  Signed  | Digital ||signature | | |     and     | |   ||||Document ||Attributes|Signature||          | | | revocation  | |   ||||         ||          |         ||Optional  | | |    data     | |   |||+---------++----------+         ||when      | | |             | |   ||+--------------------------------+|timemarked| | |             | |   ||                                  +----------+ | |             | |   ||                               +-------------+ | +-------------+ |   ||                               | Complete    | |                 |   ||                               | certificate | |                 |   ||                               | and         | |                 |   ||                               | revocation  | |                 |   ||                               | references  | |                 |   ||                               +-------------+ |                 |   |+-----------------------------------------------+                 |   |                                                                  |   +------------------------------------------------------------------+                  Figure 6: Illustration of CAdES-X-LongPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20084.4.3.2.  EXtended Electronic Signature with Time Type 1          (CAdES-X Type 1)   Extended format with time type 1 (CAdES-X Type 1), in accordance with   the present document, adds the CAdES-C-time-stamp attribute, whose   content is a time-stamp token on the CAdES-C itself, to the CAdES-C   format.   This provides an integrity and trusted time protection over all the   elements and references.  It may protect the certificates, CRLs, and   OCSP responses in case of a later compromise of a CA key, CRL key, or   OCSP issuer key.Section 6.3.5 provides the specification details.   Annex B.1.2 gives details on the production of the time-stamping   process.  Annex C.4.4.1 provides the rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-X Type 1 format is illustrated in Figure   7.  +----------------------- CAdES-X-Type 1 ------------------------------+  |+-------------------------------------- CAdES-C -----+               |  ||                                    +-------------+ | +-----------+ |  ||+--------- CAdES ------------------+| Timestamp   | | |           | |  |||                                  || over        | | |           | |  |||+---------++----------+           || digital     | | |           | |  ||||Signer's ||  Signed  |  Digital  || signature   | | | Timestamp | |  ||||Document ||Attributes| Signature ||             | | |   over    | |  ||||         ||          |           || Optional    | | | CAdES-C   | |  |||+---------++----------+           || when        | | |           | |  ||+----------------------------------+| time-marked | | |           | |  ||                                    +-------------+ | |           | |  ||                                    +-------------+ | +-----------+ |  ||                                    | Complete    | |               |  ||                                    | certificate | |               |  ||                                    | and         | |               |  ||                                    | revocation  | |               |  ||                                    | references  | |               |  ||                                    +-------------+ |               |  |+----------------------------------------------------+               |  +---------------------------------------------------------------------+                  Figure 7: Illustration of CAdES-X Type  1Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20084.4.3.3.  EXtended Electronic Signature with Time Type 2          (CAdES-X Type 2)   Extended format with time type 2 (CAdES-X Type 2), in accordance with   the present document, adds to the CAdES-C format the   CAdES-C-time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute, whose content   is a time-stamp token on the certification path and revocation   information references.  This provides an integrity and trusted time   protection over all the references.   It may protect the certificates, CRLs and OCSP responses in case of a   later compromise of a CA key, CRL key or OCSP issuer key.   Both CAdES-X Type 1 and CAdES-X Type 2 counter the same threats, and   the usage of one or the other depends on the environment.Section6.3.5 provides the specification details.  Annex B.1.3 gives details   on the production of the time-stamping process.  Annex C.4.4.2   provides the rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-X Type 2 format is illustrated in Figure   8.+------------------------- CAdES-X-Type 2 ----------------------------+|+----------------------------------------CAdES-C ---+                |||                                     +------------+|                |||+----- CAdES -----------------------+| Timestamp  ||                ||||                                   || over       ||                ||||+---------+ +----------+           || digital    || +-------------+|||||Signer's | |  Signed  |  Digital  || signature  || | Time-stamp  ||||||Document | |Attributes| signature ||            || | only over   ||||||         | |          |           || optional   || | complete    |||||+---------+ +----------+           || when       || | certificate ||||+-----------------------------------+| timemarked || |    and      ||||                                     +------------+| | revocation  ||||                                   +-------------+ | | references  ||||                                   | Complete    | | +-------------+|||                                   | certificate | |                |||                                   | and         | |                |||                                   | revocation  | |                |||                                   | references  | |                |||                                   +-------------+ |                ||+---------------------------------------------------+                |+---------------------------------------------------------------------+                  Figure 8: Illustration of CAdES-X Type 2Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20084.4.3.4.  EXtended Long Electronic Signature with Time (CAdES-X Long          Type 1 or 2)   Extended Long with Time (CAdES-X Long Type 1 or 2), in accordance   with the present document, is a combination of CAdES-X Long and one   of the two former types (CAdES-X Type 1 and CAdES-X Type 2).  Annex   B.1.4 gives details on the production of the time-stamping process.   Annex C.4.8 in Annex C provides the rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-X Long Type 1 and CAdES-X Long Type 2   format is illustrated in Figure 9.   +------------------ CAdES-X Long Type 1 or 2 -----------------------+   |                                                   +--------------+|   |+-------------------------------------- CAdES-C --+|+------------+||   ||                                                 ||| Timestamp  |||   ||+------- CAdES --------------------++----------+ |||   over     |||   |||                                  ||Timestamp | |||  CAdES-C   |||   |||                                  ||over      | ||+------------+||   |||+---------++----------+           ||digital   | ||      OR      ||   ||||Signer's ||  Signed  | Digital   ||signature | ||+------------+||   ||||Document ||Attributes| signature ||          | ||| Timestamp  |||   ||||         ||          |           ||Optional  | ||| only over  |||   |||+---------++----------+           ||when      | ||| complete   |||   ||+----------------------------------+|timemarked| ||| certificate|||   ||                                    +----------+ |||    and     |||   ||                                                 ||| Revocation |||   ||                                 +-------------+ ||| References |||   ||                                 | Complete    | ||+------------+||   ||                                 | certificate | |+--------------+|   ||                                 | and         | | +------------+ |   ||                                 | revocation  | | | Complete   | |   ||                                 | references  | | |certificate | |   ||                                 +-------------+ | |   and      | |   |+-------------------------------------------------+ |revocation  | |   |                                                    |  value     | |   |                                                    +------------+ |   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+     Figure 9: Illustration of CAdES-X Long Type 1 and CAdES Long Type 24.4.4.  Archival Electronic Signature (CAdES-A)   Archival Form (CAdES-A), in accordance with the present document,   builds on a CAdES-X Long or a CAdES-X Long Type 1 or 2 by adding one   or more archive-time-stamp attributes.  This form is used for   archival of long-term signatures.  Successive time-stamps protect the   whole material against vulnerable hashing algorithms or the breakingPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   of the cryptographic material or algorithms.Section 6.4 contains   the specification details.  Sections C.4.5 and C.4.8 provide the   rationale.   The structure of the CAdES-A form is illustrated in Figure 10.  +---------------------------CAdES-A ---------------------------------+  |+----------------------------------------------------+              |  ||                                    +--------------+| +----------+ |  ||+----------------------CAdES-C ----+|+------------+|| |          | |  |||                     +----------+ ||| Timestamp  ||| |          | |  |||+---- CAdES-BES ----+|Timestamp | |||    over    ||| |          | |  ||||    or CAdeS-EPES  ||  over    | |||   CAdES-C  ||| |  Archive | |  ||||                   ||digital   | ||+------------+|| |          | |  ||||                   ||signature | ||      or      || |Timestamp | |  ||||                   ||          | ||+------------+|| |          | |  ||||                   ||Optional  | ||| Timestamp  ||| |          | |  ||||                   ||when      | ||| only over  ||| |          | |  ||||                   ||Timemarked| ||| complete   ||| |          | |  |||+-------------------+|          | ||| certificate||| +----------+ |  |||                     +----------+ |||    and     |||              |  |||                  +-------------+ ||| revocation |||              |  |||                  | Complete    | ||| references |||              |  |||                  | certificate | ||+------------+||              |  |||                  | and         | |+--------------+|              |  |||                  | revocation  | | +------------+ |              |  |||                  | references  | | |  Complete  | |              |  |||                  +-------------+ | |certificate | |              |  |||                                  | |    and     | |              |  ||+----------------------------------+ |revocation  | |              |  ||                                     |  values    | |              |  ||                                     +------------+ |              |  |+----------------------------------------------------+              |  +--------------------------------------------------------------------+                     Figure 10: Illustration of CAdES-A4.5.  Arbitration   The CAdES-C may be used for arbitration should there be a dispute   between the signer and verifier, provided that:      - the arbitrator knows where to retrieve the signer's certificate        (if not already present), all the cross-certificates and the        required CRLs, ACRLs, or OCSP responses referenced in the        CAdES-C;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - when time-stamping in the CAdES-T is being used, the certificate        from the TSU that has issued the time-stamp token in the CAdES-T        format is still within its validity period;      - when time-stamping in the CAdES-T is being used, the certificate        from the TSU that has issued the time-stamp token in the CAdES-T        format is not revoked at the time of arbitration;      - when time-marking in the CAdES-T is being used, a reliable audit        trail from the Time-Marking Authority is available for        examination regarding the time;      - none of the private keys corresponding to the certificates used        to verify the signature chain have ever been compromised;      - the cryptography used at the time the CAdES-C was built has not        been broken at the time the arbitration is performed; and      - if the signature policy can be explicitly or implicitly        identified, then an arbitrator is able to determine the rules        required to validate the electronic signature.4.6.  Validation Process   The validation process validates an electronic signature; the output   status of the validation process can be:      - invalid;      - incomplete validation; or      - valid.   An invalid response indicates that either the signature format is   incorrect or that the digital signature value fails verification   (e.g., the integrity check on the digital signature value fails, or   any of the certificates on which the digital signature verification   depends is known to be invalid or revoked).   An incomplete validation response indicates that the signature   validation status is currently unknown.  In the case of incomplete   validation, additional information may be made available to the   application or user, thus allowing them to decide what to do with the   electronic signature.  In the case of incomplete validation, the   electronic signature may be checked again at some later time when   additional information becomes available.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE: For example, an incomplete validation may be because all the      required certificates are not available or the grace period is not      completed.   A valid response indicates that the signature has passed   verification, and it complies with the signature validation policy.   Example validation sequences are illustrated in Annex B.5.  Electronic Signature Attributes   This section builds upon the existing Cryptographic Message Syntax   (CMS), as defined inRFC 3852 [4], and Enhanced Security Services   (ESS), as defined inRFC 2634 [5].  The overall structure of an   Electronic Signature is as defined in CMS.  The Electronic Signature   (ES) uses attributes defined in CMS, ESS, and the present document.   The present document defines ES attributes that it uses and that are   not defined elsewhere.   The mandated set of attributes and the digital signature value is   defined as the minimum Electronic Signature (ES) required by the   present document.  A signature policy may mandate that other signed   attributes be present.5.1.  General Syntax   The general syntax of the ES is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).      NOTE: CMS defines content types for id-data, id-signedData,      id-envelopedData, id-digestedData, id-encryptedData, and      id-authenticatedData.  Although CMS permits other documents to      define other content types, the ASN.1 type defined should not be a      CHOICE type.  The present document does not define other content      types.5.2.  Data Content Type   The data content type of the ES is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).      NOTE: If the content type is id-data, it is recommended that the      content be encoded using MIME, and that the MIME type is used to      identify the presentation format of the data.  See Annex F.1 for      an example of using MIME to identify the encoding type.5.3.  Signed-data Content Type   The Signed-data content type of the ES is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852   [4]).Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20085.4.  SignedData Type   The syntax of the SignedData of the ES is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852   [4]).   The fields of type SignedData are as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).   The identification of a signer's certificate used to create the   signature is always signed (seeSection 5.7.3).  The validation   policy may specify requirements for the presence of certain   certificates.  The degenerate case, where there are no signers, is   not valid in the present document.5.5.  EncapsulatedContentInfo Type   The syntax of the EncapsulatedContentInfo type ES is as defined in   CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).   For the purpose of long-term validation, as defined by the present   document, it is advisable that either the eContent is present, or the   data that is signed is archived in such as way as to preserve any   data encoding.  It is important that the OCTET STRING used to   generate the signature remains the same every time either the   verifier or an arbitrator validates the signature.      NOTE: The eContent is optional in CMS :          - When it is present, this allows the signed data to be            encapsulated in the SignedData structure, which then            contains both the signed data and the signature.  However,            the signed data may only be accessed by a verifier able to            decode the ASN.1 encoded SignedData structure.          - When it is missing, this allows the signed data to be sent            or stored separately from the signature, and the SignedData            structure only contains the signature.  It is, in the case            of the signature, only the data that is signed that needs to            be stored and distributed in such as way as to preserve any            data encoding.   The degenerate case where there are no signers is not valid in the   present document.5.6.  SignerInfo Type   The syntax of the SignerInfo type ES is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852   [4]).Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Per-signer information is represented in the type SignerInfo.  In the   case of multiple independent signatures (see Annex B.5), there is an   instance of this field for each signer.   The fields of type SignerInfo have the meanings defined in CMS (RFC3852 [4]), but the signedAttrs field shall contain the following   attributes:      - content-type, as defined inSection 5.7.1; and      - message-digest, as defined inSection 5.7.2;      - signing-certificate, as defined inSection 5.7.3.5.6.1.  Message Digest Calculation Process   The message digest calculation process is as defined in CMS (RFC 3852   [4]).5.6.2.  Message Signature Generation Process   The input to the message signature generation process is as defined   in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).5.6.3.  Message Signature Verification Process   The procedures for message signature verification are defined in CMS   (RFC 3852 [4]) and enhanced in the present document: the input to the   signature verification process must be the signer's public key, which   shall be verified as correct using the signing certificate reference   attribute containing a reference to the signing certificate, i.e.,   when SigningCertificateV2 fromRFC 5035 [16] or SigningCertificate   from ESS [5] is used, the public key from the first certificate   identified in the sequence of certificate identifiers from   SigningCertificate must be the key used to verify the digital   signature.5.7.  Basic ES Mandatory Present Attributes   The following attributes shall be present with the signed-data   defined by the present document.  The attributes are defined in CMS   (RFC 3852 [4]).5.7.1.  content-type   The content-type attribute indicates the type of the signed content.   The syntax of the content-type attribute type is as defined in CMS   (RFC 3852 [4])Section 11.1.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE 1: As stated inRFC 3852 [4] , the content-type attribute      must have its value (i.e., ContentType) equal to the eContentType      of the EncapsulatedContentInfo value being signed.      NOTE 2: For implementations supporting signature generation, if      the content-type attribute is id-data, then it is recommended that      the eContent be encoded using MIME.  For implementations      supporting signature verification, if the signed data (i.e.,      eContent) is MIME-encoded, then the OID of the content-type      attribute must be id-data.  In both cases, the MIME      content-type(s) must be used to identify the presentation format      of the data.  See Annex F for further details about the use of      MIME.5.7.2.  Message Digest   The syntax of the message-digest attribute type of the ES is as   defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).5.7.3.  Signing Certificate Reference Attributes   The Signing certificate reference attributes are supported by using   either the ESS signing-certificate attribute or the   ESS-signing-certificate-v2 attribute.   These attributes shall contain a reference to the signer's   certificate; they are designed to prevent simple substitution and   reissue attacks and to allow for a restricted set of certificates to   be used in verifying a signature.  They have a compact form (much   shorter than the full certificate) that allows for a certificate to   be unambiguously identified.   One, and only one, of the following alternative attributes shall be   present with the signedData, defined by the present document:      - The ESS signing-certificate attribute, defined in ESS [5], must        be used if the SHA-1 hashing algorithm is used.      - The ESS signing-certificate-v2 attribute, defined in "ESS        Update: Adding CertID Algorithm Agility",RFC 5035 [15], which        shall be used when other hashing algorithms are to be used.   The certificate to be used to verify the signature shall be   identified in the sequence (i.e., the certificate from the signer),   and the sequence shall not be empty.  The signature validation policy   may mandate other certificates be present that may include all the   certificates up to the trust anchor.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20085.7.3.1.  ESS signing-certificate Attribute Definition   The syntax of the signing-certificate attribute type of the ES is as   defined in Enhanced Security Services (ESS),RFC 2634 [5], and   further qualified in the present document.   The sequence of the policy information field is not used in the   present document.   The ESS signing-certificate attribute shall be a signed attribute.   The encoding of the ESSCertID for this certificate shall include the   issuerSerial field.   If present, the issuerAndSerialNumber in SignerIdentifier field of   the SignerInfo shall match the issuerSerial field present in   ESSCertID.  In addition, the certHash from ESSCertID shall match the   SHA-1 hash of the certificate.  The certificate identified shall be   used during the signature verification process.  If the hash of the   certificate does not match the certificate used to verify the   signature, the signature shall be considered invalid.      NOTE: Where an attribute certificate is used by the signer to      associate a role, or other attributes of the signer, with the      electronic signature; this is placed in the signer-attributes      attribute as defined inSection 5.8.3.5.7.3.2.  ESS signing-certificate-v2 Attribute Definition   The ESS signing-certificate-v2 attribute is similar to the ESS   signing-certificate defined above, except that this attribute can be   used with hashing algorithms other than SHA-1.   The syntax of the signing-certificate-v2 attribute type of the ES is   as defined in "ESS Update: Adding CertID Algorithm Agility",RFC 5035   [15], and further qualified in the present document.   The sequence of the policy information field is not used in the   present document.   This attribute shall be used in the same manner as defined above for   the ESS signing-certificate attribute.   The object identifier for this attribute is:         id-aa-signingCertificateV2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=         { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)           smime(16) id-aa(2) 47 }Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   If present, the issuerAndSerialNumber in SignerIdentifier field of   the SignerInfo shall match the issuerSerial field present in   ESSCertIDv2.  In addition, the certHash from ESSCertIDv2 shall match   the hash of the certificate computed using the hash function   specified in the hashAlgorithm field.  The certificate identified   shall be used during the signature verification process.  If the hash   of the certificate does not match the certificate used to verify the   signature, the signature shall be considered invalid.      NOTE 1: Where an attribute certificate is used by the signer to      associate a role, or other attributes of the signer, with the      electronic signature; this is placed in the signer-attributes      attribute as defined inSection 5.8.3.      NOTE 2:RFC 3126 was using the other signing-certificate attribute      (seeSection 5.7.3.3) for the same purpose.  Its use is now      deprecated, since this structure is simpler.5.7.3.3.  Other signing-certificate Attribute DefinitionRFC 3126 was using the other signing-certificate attribute as an   alternative to the ESS signing-certificate when hashing algorithms   other than SHA-1 were being used.  Its use is now deprecated, since   the structure of the signing-certificate-v2 attribute is simpler.   Its description is however still present in this version for   backwards compatibility.   id-aa-ets-otherSigCert OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)       member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)       smime(16) id-aa(2) 19 }   The other-signing-certificate attribute value has the ASN.1 syntax   OtherSigningCertificate:   OtherSigningCertificate ::=  SEQUENCE {       certs        SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID,       policies     SEQUENCE OF PolicyInformation OPTIONAL                    -- NOT USED IN THE PRESENT DOCUMENT }   OtherCertID ::= SEQUENCE {       otherCertHash            OtherHash,       issuerSerial             IssuerSerial OPTIONAL }   OtherHash ::= CHOICE {       sha1Hash OtherHashValue,  -- This contains a SHA-1 hash       otherHash OtherHashAlgAndValue}   OtherHashValue ::= OCTET STRINGPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   OtherHashAlgAndValue ::= SEQUENCE {       hashAlgorithm     AlgorithmIdentifier,       hashValue         OtherHashValue }5.8.  Additional Mandatory Attributes for Explicit Policy-based      Electronic Signatures5.8.1.  signature-policy-identifier   The present document mandates that for CAdES-EPES, a reference to the   signature policy is included in the signedData.  This reference is   explicitly identified.  A signature policy defines the rules for   creation and validation of an electronic signature, and is included   as a signed attribute with every Explicit Policy-based Electronic   Signature.  The signature-policy-identifier shall be a signed   attribute.   The following object identifier identifies the   signature-policy-identifier attribute:      id-aa-ets-sigPolicyId OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)      member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)      smime(16) id-aa(2) 15 }   signature-policy-identifier attribute values have ASN.1 type   SignaturePolicyIdentifier:      SignaturePolicyIdentifier ::= CHOICE {           signaturePolicyId          SignaturePolicyId,           signaturePolicyImplied     SignaturePolicyImplied                                      -- not used in this version   }      SignaturePolicyId ::= SEQUENCE {           sigPolicyId           SigPolicyId,           sigPolicyHash         SigPolicyHash,           sigPolicyQualifiers   SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF                                   SigPolicyQualifierInfo OPTIONAL}      SignaturePolicyImplied ::= NULLPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 36]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The sigPolicyId field contains an object-identifier that uniquely   identifies a specific version of the signature policy.  The syntax of   this field is as follows:      SigPolicyId ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   The sigPolicyHash field optionally contains the identifier of the   hash algorithm and the hash of the value of the signature policy.   The hashValue within the sigPolicyHash may be set to zero to indicate   that the policy hash value is not known.      NOTE: The use of a zero sigPolicyHash value is to ensure backwards      compatibility with earlier versions of the current document.  If      sigPolicyHash is zero, then the hash value should not be checked      against the calculated hash value of the signature policy.   If the signature policy is defined using ASN.1, then the hash is   calculated on the value without the outer type and length fields, and   the hashing algorithm shall be as specified in the field   sigPolicyHash.   If the signature policy is defined using another structure, the type   of structure and the hashing algorithm shall be either specified as   part of the signature policy, or indicated using a signature policy   qualifier.      SigPolicyHash ::= OtherHashAlgAndValue      OtherHashAlgAndValue ::= SEQUENCE {         hashAlgorithm   AlgorithmIdentifier,         hashValue       OtherHashValue }      OtherHashValue ::= OCTET STRING   A Signature Policy Identifier may be qualified with other information   about the qualifier.  The semantics and syntax of the qualifier is as   associated with the object-identifier in the sigPolicyQualifierId   field.  The general syntax of this qualifier is as follows:      SigPolicyQualifierInfo ::= SEQUENCE {           sigPolicyQualifierId  SigPolicyQualifierId,           sigQualifier          ANY DEFINED BY sigPolicyQualifierId }Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 37]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The present document specifies the following qualifiers:      - spuri: this contains the web URI or URL reference to the        signature policy, and      - sp-user-notice: this contains a user notice that should be        displayed whenever the signature is validated.           sigpolicyQualifierIds defined in the present document:           SigPolicyQualifierId ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER            id-spq-ets-uri OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)            member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)            smime(16) id-spq(5) 1 }        SPuri ::= IA5String            id-spq-ets-unotice OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)            member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)            smime(16) id-spq(5) 2 }        SPUserNotice ::= SEQUENCE {                noticeRef        NoticeReference OPTIONAL,                explicitText     DisplayText OPTIONAL}        NoticeReference ::= SEQUENCE {                organization     DisplayText,                noticeNumbers    SEQUENCE OF INTEGER }        DisplayText ::= CHOICE {                visibleString    VisibleString  (SIZE (1..200)),                bmpString        BMPString      (SIZE (1..200)),                utf8String       UTF8String     (SIZE (1..200)) }5.9.  CMS Imported Optional Attributes   The following attributes may be present with the signed-data; the   attributes are defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]) and are imported into   the present document.  Where appropriate, the attributes are   qualified and profiled by the present document.5.9.1.  signing-time   The signing-time attribute specifies the time at which the signer   claims to have performed the signing process.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 38]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Signing-time attribute values for ES have the ASN.1 type SigningTime   as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).      NOTE:RFC 3852 [4] states that dates between January 1, 1950 and      December 31, 2049 (inclusive) must be encoded as UTCTime.  Any      dates with year values before 1950 or after 2049 must be encoded      as GeneralizedTime.5.9.2.  countersignature   The countersignature attribute values for ES have ASN.1 type   CounterSignature, as defined in CMS (RFC 3852 [4]).  A   countersignature attribute shall be an unsigned attribute.5.10.  ESS-Imported Optional Attributes   The following attributes may be present with the signed-data defined   by the present document.  The attributes are defined in ESS and are   imported into the present document and are appropriately qualified   and profiled by the present document.5.10.1.  content-reference Attribute   The content-reference attribute is a link from one SignedData to   another.  It may be used to link a reply to the original message to   which it refers, or to incorporate by reference one SignedData into   another.  The content-reference attribute shall be a signed   attribute.   content-reference attribute values for ES have ASN.1 type   ContentReference, as defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]).   The content-reference attribute shall be used as defined in ESS (RFC2634 [5]).5.10.2.  content-identifier Attribute   The content-identifier attribute provides an identifier for the   signed content, for use when a reference may be later required to   that content; for example, in the content-reference attribute in   other signed data sent later.  The content-identifier shall be a   signed attribute.   content-identifier attribute type values for the ES have an ASN.1   type ContentIdentifier, as defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]).   The minimal content-identifier attribute should contain a   concatenation of user-specific identification information (such as aPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 39]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   user name or public keying material identification information), a   GeneralizedTime string, and a random number.5.10.3.  content-hints Attribute   The content-hints attribute provides information on the innermost   signed content of a multi-layer message where one content is   encapsulated in another.   The syntax of the content-hints attribute type of the ES is as   defined in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]).   When used to indicate the precise format of the data to be presented   to the user, the following rules apply:      - the contentType indicates the type of the associated content.        It is an object identifier (i.e., a unique string of integers)        assigned by an authority that defines the content type; and      - when the contentType is id-data, the contentDescription shall        define the presentation format; the format may be defined by        MIME types.   When the format of the content is defined by MIME types, the   following rules apply:      - the contentType shall be id-data, as defined in CMS (RFC 3852        [4]);      - the contentDescription shall be used to indicate the encoding of        the data, in accordance with the rules definedRFC 2045 [6]; see        Annex F for an example of structured contents and MIME.   NOTE 1: id-data OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840)   rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs7(7) 1 }   NOTE 2: contentDescription is optional in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]).  It may   be used to complement contentTypes defined elsewhere; such   definitions are outside the scope of the present document.5.11.  Additional Optional Attributes Defined in the Present Document   This section defines a number of attributes that may be used to   indicate additional information to a verifier:      a) the type of commitment from the signer, and/or      b) the claimed location where the signature is performed, and/orPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 40]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      c) claimed attributes or certified attributes of the signer,         and/or      d) a content time-stamp applied before the content was signed.5.11.1.  commitment-type-indication Attribute   There may be situations where a signer wants to explicitly indicate   to a verifier that by signing the data, it illustrates a type of   commitment on behalf of the signer.  The commitment-type-indication   attribute conveys such information.   The commitment-type-indication attribute shall be a signed attribute.   The commitment type may be:      - defined as part of the signature policy, in which case, the        commitment type has precise semantics that are defined as part        of the signature policy; and      - be a registered type, in which case, the commitment type has        precise semantics defined by registration, under the rules of        the registration authority.  Such a registration authority may        be a trading association or a legislative authority.   The signature policy specifies a set of attributes that it   "recognizes".  This "recognized" set includes all those commitment   types defined as part of the signature policy, as well as any   externally defined commitment types that the policy may choose to   recognize.  Only recognized commitment types are allowed in this   field.   The following object identifier identifies the   commitment-type-indication attribute:id-aa-ets-commitmentType OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)    us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 16}commitment-type-indication attribute values have ASN.1 typeCommitmentTypeIndication.CommitmentTypeIndication ::= SEQUENCE {  commitmentTypeId CommitmentTypeIdentifier,  commitmentTypeQualifier SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF                 CommitmentTypeQualifier OPTIONAL}CommitmentTypeIdentifier ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIERPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 41]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008CommitmentTypeQualifier ::= SEQUENCE {   commitmentTypeIdentifier   CommitmentTypeIdentifier,   qualifier                  ANY DEFINED BY commitmentTypeIdentifier }   The use of any qualifiers to the commitment type is outside the scope   of the present document.   The following generic commitment types are defined in the present   document:id-cti-ets-proofOfOrigin OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 1}id-cti-ets-proofOfReceipt OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 2}id-cti-ets-proofOfDelivery OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16)cti(6) 3}id-cti-ets-proofOfSender OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 4}id-cti-ets-proofOfApproval OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16)cti(6) 5}id-cti-ets-proofOfCreation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16)cti(6) 6}   These generic commitment types have the following meanings:   Proof of origin indicates that the signer recognizes to have created,   approved, and sent the message.   Proof of receipt indicates that signer recognizes to have received   the content of the message.   Proof of delivery indicates that the TSP providing that indication   has delivered a message in a local store accessible to the recipient   of the message.   Proof of sender indicates that the entity providing that indication   has sent the message (but not necessarily created it).   Proof of approval indicates that the signer has approved the content   of the message.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 42]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Proof of creation indicates that the signer has created the message   (but not necessarily approved, nor sent it).5.11.2.  signer-location Attribute   The signer-location attribute specifies a mnemonic for an address   associated with the signer at a particular geographical (e.g., city)   location.  The mnemonic is registered in the country in which the   signer is located and is used in the provision of the Public Telegram   Service (according to ITU-T Recommendation F.1 [11]).   The signer-location attribute shall be a signed attribute.  The   following object identifier identifies the signer-location attribute:id-aa-ets-signerLocation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)    us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 17}   Signer-location attribute values have ASN.1 type SignerLocation:SignerLocation ::= SEQUENCE {   -- at least one of the following shall be present:      countryName    [0]    DirectoryString OPTIONAL,                            -- As used to name a Country in X.500      localityName   [1]    DirectoryString OPTIONAL,                            -- As used to name a locality in X.500      postalAdddress [2]    PostalAddress OPTIONAL }PostalAddress ::= SEQUENCE SIZE(1..6) OF DirectoryString5.11.3.  signer-attributes Attribute   The signer-attributes attribute specifies additional attributes of   the signer (e.g., role).  It may be either:      - claimed attributes of the signer; or      - certified attributes of the signer.   The signer-attributes attribute shall be a signed attribute.  The   following object identifier identifies the signer-attribute   attribute:   id-aa-ets-signerAttr OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)       us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 18}Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 43]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   signer-attributes values have ASN.1 type SignerAttribute:   SignerAttribute ::= SEQUENCE OF CHOICE {       claimedAttributes     [0]   ClaimedAttributes,       certifiedAttributes   [1]   CertifiedAttributes }   ClaimedAttributes ::= SEQUENCE OF Attribute   CertifiedAttributes ::= AttributeCertificate   -- as defined inRFC 3281: seeSection 4.1.      NOTE 1: Only a single signer-attributes can be used.      NOTE 2: Attribute and AttributeCertificate are as defined      respectively in ITU-T Recommendations X.501 [9] and X.509 [1].5.11.4.  content-time-stamp Attribute   The content-time-stamp attribute is an attribute that is the   time-stamp token of the signed data content before it is signed.  The   content-time-stamp attribute shall be a signed attribute.   The following object identifier identifies the content-time-stamp   attribute:   id-aa-ets-contentTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member- body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 20}   content-time-stamp attribute values have ASN.1 type ContentTimestamp:   ContentTimestamp ::= TimeStampToken   The value of messageImprint of TimeStampToken (as described inRFC3161 [7]) shall be a hash of the value of the eContent field within   encapContentInfo in the signedData.   For further information and definition of TimeStampToken, seeSection7.4.      NOTE: content-time-stamp indicates that the signed information was      formed before the date included in the content-time-stamp.5.12.  Support for Multiple Signatures5.12.1.  Independent Signatures   Multiple independent signatures (see Annex B.5) are supported by   independent SignerInfo from each signer.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 44]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Each SignerInfo shall include all the attributes required under the   present document and shall be processed independently by the   verifier.      NOTE: Independent signatures may be used to provide independent      signatures from different parties with different signed      attributes, or to provide multiple signatures from the same party      using alternative signature algorithms, in which case the other      attributes, excluding time values and signature policy      information, will generally be the same.5.12.2.  Embedded Signatures   Multiple embedded signatures (see Annex C.5) are supported using the   countersignature unsigned attribute (seeSection 5.9.2).  Each   counter signature is carried in countersignature held as an unsigned   attribute to the SignerInfo to which the counter-signature is   applied.      NOTE: Counter signatures may be used to provide signatures from      different parties with different signed attributes, or to provide      multiple signatures from the same party using alternative      signature algorithms, in which case the other attributes,      excluding time values and signature policy information, will      generally be the same.6.  Additional Electronic Signature Validation Attributes   This section specifies attributes that contain different types of   validation data.  These attributes build on the electronic signature   specified inSection 5.  This includes:      - Signature-time-stamp applied to the electronic signature value        or a Time-Mark in an audit trail.  This is defined as the        Electronic Signature with Time (CAdES-T); and      - Complete validation data references that comprise the time-stamp        of the signature value, plus references to all the certificates        (complete-certificate-references) and revocation (complete-        revocation-references) information used for full validation of        the electronic signature.  This is defined as the Electronic        Signature with Complete data references (CAdES-C).      NOTE 1: Formats for CAdES-T are illustrated inSection 4.4, and      the attributes are defined inSection 6.1.1.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 45]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE 2: Formats for CAdES-C are illustrated inSection 4.4.  The      required attributes for the CAdES-C signature format are defined      in Sections6.2.1 to6.2.2; optional attributes are defined in      Sections6.2.3 and6.2.4.   In addition, the following optional extended forms of validation data   are also defined; see Annex B for an overview of the extended forms   of validation data:      - CAdES-X with time-stamp: there are two types of time-stamps used        in extended validation data defined by the present document;         - Type 1(CAdES-X Type 1): comprises a time-stamp over the ES           with Complete validation data (CAdES-C); and         - Type 2 (CAdES-X Type2): comprises a time-stamp over the           certification path references and the revocation information           references used to support the CAdES-C.      NOTE 3: Formats for CAdES-X Type 1 and CAdES-X Type 2 are      illustrated in Sections B.1.2 and B.1.3, respectively.         - CAdES-X Long: comprises the Complete validation data           references (CAdES-C), plus the actual values of all the           certificates and revocation information used in the CAdES-C.      NOTE 4: Formats for CAdES-X Long are illustrated in Annex B.1.1.         - CAdES-X Long Type 1 or CAdES-X Long Type 2: comprises an           X-Time-Stamp (Type 1 or Type 2), plus the actual values of           all the certificates and revocation information used in the           CAdES-C as per CAdES-X Long.   This section also specifies the data structures used in Archive   validation data format (CAdES-A)of extended forms:      - Archive form of electronic signature (CAdES-A) comprises:        - the Complete validation data references (CAdES-C),        - the certificate and revocation values (as in a CAdES-X Long ),        - any existing extended electronic signature time-stamps          (CAdES-X Type 1 or CAdES-X Type 2), if present, and        - the signed user data and an additional archive time-stamp          applied over all that data.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 46]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008        An archive time-stamp may be repeatedly applied after long        periods to maintain validity when electronic signature and        time-stamping algorithms weaken.   The additional data required to create the forms of electronic   signature identified above is carried as unsigned attributes   associated with an individual signature by being placed in the   unsignedAttrs field of SignerInfo.  Thus, all the attributes defined   inSection 6 are unsigned attributes.      NOTE 5: Where multiple signatures are to be supported, as      described inSection 5.12, each signature has a separate      SignerInfo.  Thus, each signature requires its own unsigned      attribute values to create CAdES-T, CAdES-C, etc.      NOTE 6: The optional attributes of the extended validation data      are defined in Sections6.3 and6.4.6.1.  signature time-stamp Attribute (CAdES-T)   An electronic signature with time-stamp is an electronic signature   for which part, but not all, of the additional data required for   validation is available (i.e., some certificates and revocation   information are available, but not all).   The minimum structure time-stamp validation data is:      - the signature time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1,        over the ES signature value.6.1.1.  signature-time-stamp Attribute Definition   The signature-time-stamp attribute is a TimeStampToken computed on   the signature value for a specific signer; it is an unsigned   attribute.  Several instances of this attribute may occur with an   electronic signature, from different TSAs.   The following object identifier identifies the signature-time-stamp   attribute:   id-aa-signatureTimeStampToken OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 14}   The signature-time-stamp attribute value has ASN.1 type   SignatureTimeStampToken:   SignatureTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampTokenPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 47]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The value of the messageImprint field within TimeStampToken shall be   a hash of the value of the signature field within SignerInfo for the   signedData being time-stamped.   For further information and definition of TimeStampToken, seeSection7.4.      NOTE 1: In the case of multiple signatures, it is possible to have      a:      - TimeStampToken computed for each and all signers; or      - TimeStampToken computed on one signer's signature; and no      - TimeStampToken on another signer's signature.      NOTE 2: In the case of multiple signatures, several TSTs, issued      by different TSAs, may be present within the same signerInfo (seeRFC 3852 [4]).6.2.  Complete Validation Data References (CAdES-C)   An electronic signature with Complete validation data references   (CAdES-C) is an electronic signature for which all the additional   data required for validation (i.e., all certificates and revocation   information) is available.  This form is built on the CAdES-T form   defined above.   As a minimum, the Complete validation data shall include the   following:      - a time, which shall either be a signature-timestamp attribute,        as defined inSection 6.1.1, or a time-mark operated by a        Time-Marking Authority;      - complete-certificate-references, as defined inSection 6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references, as defined inSection 6.2.2.6.2.1.  complete-certificate-references Attribute Definition   The complete-certificate-references attribute is an unsigned   attribute.  It references the full set of CA certificates that have   been used to validate an ES with Complete validation data up to (but   not including) the signer's certificate.  Only a single instance of   this attribute shall occur with an electronic signature.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 48]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE 1: The signer's certificate is referenced in the signing      certificate attribute (seeSection 5.7.3).id-aa-ets-certificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 21}   The complete-certificate-references attribute value has the ASN.1   syntax CompleteCertificateRefs.   CompleteCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID   OtherCertID is defined inSection 5.7.3.3.   The IssuerSerial that shall be present in OtherCertID.  The certHash   shall match the hash of the certificate referenced.      NOTE 2: Copies of the certificate values may be held using the      certificate-values attribute, defined inSection 6.3.3.      This attribute may include references to the certification chain      for any TSUs that provides time-stamp tokens.  In this case, the      unsigned attribute shall be added to the signedData of the      relevant time-stamp token as an unsignedAttrs in the signerInfos      field.6.2.2.  complete-revocation-references Attribute Definition   The complete-revocation-references attribute is an unsigned   attribute.  Only a single instance of this attribute shall occur with   an electronic signature.  It references the full set of the CRL,   ACRL, or OCSP responses that have been used in the validation of the   signer, and CA certificates used in ES with Complete validation data.   This attribute indicates that the verifier has taken due diligence to   gather the available revocation information.  The references stored   in this attribute can be used to retrieve the referenced information,   if not stored in the CMS structure, but somewhere else.   The following object identifier identifies the   complete-revocation-references attribute:id-aa-ets-revocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 22}Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 49]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The complete-revocation-references attribute value has the ASN.1   syntax CompleteRevocationRefs:   CompleteRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRef   CrlOcspRef ::= SEQUENCE {      crlids      [0]   CRLListID    OPTIONAL,      ocspids     [1]   OcspListID   OPTIONAL,      otherRev    [2]   OtherRevRefs OPTIONAL   }   CompleteRevocationRefs shall contain one CrlOcspRef for the   signing-certificate, followed by one for each OtherCertID in the   CompleteCertificateRefs attribute.  The second and subsequent   CrlOcspRef fields shall be in the same order as the OtherCertID to   which they relate.  At least one of CRLListID or OcspListID or   OtherRevRefs should be present for all but the "trusted" CA of the   certificate path.CRLListID ::=  SEQUENCE {    crls        SEQUENCE OF CrlValidatedID }CrlValidatedID ::=  SEQUENCE {     crlHash                   OtherHash,     crlIdentifier             CrlIdentifier OPTIONAL }CrlIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {    crlissuer                 Name,    crlIssuedTime             UTCTime,    crlNumber                 INTEGER OPTIONAL }OcspListID ::=  SEQUENCE {    ocspResponses        SEQUENCE OF OcspResponsesID }OcspResponsesID ::=  SEQUENCE {    ocspIdentifier              OcspIdentifier,    ocspRepHash                 OtherHash    OPTIONAL}OcspIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {   ocspResponderID    ResponderID,      -- As in OCSP response data   producedAt         GeneralizedTime   -- As in OCSP response data}Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 50]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   When creating a crlValidatedID, the crlHash is computed over the   entire DER encoded CRL including the signature.  The crlIdentifier   would normally be present unless the CRL can be inferred from other   information.   The crlIdentifier is to identify the CRL using the issuer name and   the CRL issued time, which shall correspond to the time thisUpdate   contained in the issued CRL, and if present, the crlNumber.  The   crlListID attribute is an unsigned attribute.  In the case that the   identified CRL is a Delta CRL, then references to the set of CRLs to   provide a complete revocation list shall be included.   The OcspIdentifier is to identify the OCSP response using the issuer   name and the time of issue of the OCSP response, which shall   correspond to the time produced as contained in the issued OCSP   response.  Since it may be needed to make the difference between two   OCSP responses received within the same second, the hash of the   response contained in the OcspResponsesID may be needed to solve the   ambiguity.      NOTE 1: Copies of the CRL and OCSP responses values may be held      using the revocation-values attribute defined inSection 6.3.4.      NOTE 2: It is recommended that this attribute be used in      preference to the OtherRevocationInfoFormat specified inRFC 3852      to maintain backwards compatibility with the earlier version of      this specification.   The syntax and semantics of other revocation references are outside   the scope of the present document.  The definition of the syntax of   the other form of revocation information is as identified by   OtherRevRefType.   This attribute may include the references to the full set of the CRL,   ACRL, or OCSP responses that have been used to verify the   certification chain for any TSUs that provide time-stamp tokens.  In   this case, the unsigned attribute shall be added to the signedData of   the relevant time-stamp token as an unsignedAttrs in the signerInfos   field.6.2.3.  attribute-certificate-references Attribute Definition   This attribute is only used when a user attribute certificate is   present in the electronic signature.   The attribute-certificate-references attribute is an unsigned   attribute.  It references the full set of AA certificates that havePinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 51]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   been used to validate the attribute certificate.  Only a single   instance of this attribute shall occur with an electronic signature.   id-aa-ets-attrCertificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 44}   The attribute-certificate-references attribute value has the ASN.1   syntax AttributeCertificateRefs:   AttributeCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID   OtherCertID is defined inSection 5.7.3.3.      NOTE: Copies of the certificate values may be held using the      certificate-values attribute defined inSection 6.3.3.6.2.4.  attribute-revocation-references Attribute Definition   This attribute is only used when a user attribute certificate is   present in the electronic signature and when that attribute   certificate can be revoked.   The attribute-revocation-references attribute is an unsigned   attribute.  Only a single instance of this attribute shall occur with   an electronic signature.  It references the full set of the ACRL or   OCSP responses that have been used in the validation of the attribute   certificate.  This attribute can be used to illustrate that the   verifier has taken due diligence of the available revocation   information.   The following object identifier identifies the   attribute-revocation-references attribute:   id-aa-ets-attrRevocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)   member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16)   id-aa(2) 45}   The attribute-revocation-references attribute value has the ASN.1   syntax AttributeRevocationRefs:   AttributeRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRef6.3.  Extended Validation Data (CAdES-X)   This section specifies a number of optional attributes that are used   by extended forms of electronic signatures (see Annex B for an   overview of these forms of validation data).Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 52]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20086.3.1.  Time-Stamped Validation Data (CAdES-X Type 1 or Type 2)   The extended validation data may include one of the following   additional attributes, forming a CAdES-X Time-Stamp validation data   (CAdES-X Type 1 or CAdES-X Type 2), to provide additional protection   against later CA compromise and provide integrity of the validation   data used:      - CAdES-C Time-stamp, as defined inSection 6.3.5 (CAdES-X Type        1); or      - Time-Stamped Certificates and CRLs references, as defined inSection 6.3.6 (CAdES-X Type 2).6.3.2.  Long Validation Data (CAdES-X Long, CAdES-X Long Type 1 or 2)   The extended validation data may also include the following   additional information, forming a CAdES-X Long, for use if later   validation processes may not have access to this information:      - certificate-values, as defined inSection 6.3.3; and      - revocation-values, as defined inSection 6.3.4.   The extended validation data may, in addition to certificate-values   and revocation-values as defined in Sections6.3.3 and6.3.4, include   one of the following additional attributes, forming a CAdES-X Long   Type 1 or CAdES-X Long Type 2.      - CAdES-C Time-stamp, as defined inSection 6.3.3 (CAdES-X long        Type 1); or      - Time-Stamped Certificates and CRLs references, as defined inSection 6.3.4 (CAdES-X Long Type 2).   The CAdES-X Long Type 1 or CAdES-X Long Type 2 provides additional   protection against later CA compromise and provides integrity of the   validation data used.      NOTE 1: The CAdES-X-Long signature provides long-term proof of the      validity of the signature for as long as the CA keys, CRL Issuers      keys, and OCSP responder keys are not compromised and are      resistant to cryptographic attacks.      NOTE 2: As long as the time-stamp data remains valid, the CAdES-X      Long Type 1 and the CAdES-X Long Type 2 provide the following      important property for long-standing signatures; that having been      found once to be valid, it shall continue to be so months or yearsPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 53]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      later, long after the validity period of the certificates has      expired, or after the user key has been compromised.6.3.3.  certificate-values Attribute Definition   This attribute may be used to contain the certificate information   required for the following forms of extended electronic signature:   CAdES-X Long, ES X-Long Type 1, and CAdES-X Long Type 2; see Annex   B.1.1 for an illustration of this form of electronic signature.   The certificate-values attribute is an unsigned attribute.  Only a   single instance of this attribute shall occur with an electronic   signature.  It holds the values of certificates referenced in the   complete-certificate-references attribute.      NOTE: If an attribute certificate is used, it is not provided in      this structure but shall be provided by the signer as a      signer-attributes attribute (seeSection 5.11.3).   The following object identifier identifies the certificate-values   attribute:   id-aa-ets-certValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)   us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 23}   The certificate-values attribute value has the ASN.1 syntax   CertificateValues.   CertificateValues ::=  SEQUENCE OF Certificate   Certificate is defined inSection 7.1. (which is as defined in ITU-T   Recommendation X.509 [1]).   This attribute may include the certification information for any TSUs   that have provided the time-stamp tokens, if these certificates are   not already included in the TSTs as part of the TSUs signatures.  In   this case, the unsigned attribute shall be added to the signedData of   the relevant time-stamp token.6.3.4.  revocation-values Attribute Definition   This attribute is used to contain the revocation information required   for the following forms of extended electronic signature: CAdES-X   Long, ES X-Long Type 1, and CAdES-X Long Type 2; see Annex B.1.1 for   an illustration of this form of electronic signature.   The revocation-values attribute is an unsigned attribute.  Only a   single instance of this attribute shall occur with an electronicPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 54]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   signature.  It holds the values of CRLs and OCSP referenced in the   complete-revocation-references attribute.      NOTE: It is recommended that this attribute be used in preference      to the OtherRevocationInfoFormat specified inRFC 3852 to maintain      backwards compatibility with the earlier version of this      specification.   The following object identifier identifies the revocation-values   attribute:   id-aa-ets-revocationValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)   member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 24}   The revocation-values attribute value has the ASN.1 syntax   RevocationValues   RevocationValues ::=  SEQUENCE {      crlVals          [0] SEQUENCE OF CertificateList OPTIONAL,      ocspVals         [1] SEQUENCE OF BasicOCSPResponse OPTIONAL,      otherRevVals     [2] OtherRevVals OPTIONAL }   OtherRevVals ::= SEQUENCE {      OtherRevValType   OtherRevValType,      OtherRevVals      ANY DEFINED BY OtherRevValType }   OtherRevValType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   The syntax and semantics of the other revocation values   (OtherRevVals) are outside the scope of the present document.   The definition of the syntax of the other form of revocation   information is as identified by OtherRevRefType.   CertificateList is defined inSection 7.2. (which is as defined in   ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [1]).   BasicOCSPResponse is defined inSection 7.3. (which is as defined inRFC 2560 [3]).   This attribute may include the values of revocation data including   CRLs and OCSPs for any TSUs that have provided the time-stamp tokens,   if these certificates are not already included in the TSTs as part of   the TSUs signatures.  In this case, the unsigned attribute shall be   added to the signedData of the relevant time-stamp token.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 55]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20086.3.5.  CAdES-C-time-stamp Attribute Definition   This attribute is used to protect against CA key compromise.   This attribute is used for the time-stamping of the complete   electronic signature (CAdES-C).  It is used in the following forms of   extended electronic signature; CAdES-X Type 1 and CAdES-X Long Type   1; see Annex B.1.2 for an illustration of this form of electronic   signature.   The CAdES-C-time-stamp attribute is an unsigned attribute.  It is a   time-stamp token of the hash of the electronic signature and the   complete validation data (CAdES-C).  It is a special-purpose   TimeStampToken Attribute that time-stamps the CAdES-C.  Several   instances of this attribute may occur with an electronic signature   from different TSAs.      NOTE 1: It is recommended that the attributes being time-stamped      be encoded in DER.  If DER is not employed, then the binary      encoding of the ASN.1 structures being time-stamped should be      preserved to ensure that the recalculation of the data hash is      consistent.      NOTE 2: Each attribute is included in the hash with the attrType      and attrValues (including type and length) but without the type      and length of the outer SEQUENCE.   The following object identifier identifies the CAdES-C-Timestamp   attribute:   id-aa-ets-escTimeStamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)   us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 25}   The CAdES-C-timestamp attribute value has the ASN.1 syntax   ESCTimeStampToken :   ESCTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken   The value of the messageImprint field within TimeStampToken shall be   a hash of the concatenated values (without the type or length   encoding for that value) of the following data objects:      - OCTETSTRING of the SignatureValue field within SignerInfo;      - signature-time-stamp, or a time-mark operated by a Time-Marking        Authority;      - complete-certificate-references attribute; andPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 56]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - complete-revocation-references attribute.   For further information and definition of the TimeStampToken, seeSection 7.4.6.3.6.  time-stamped-certs-crls-references Attribute Definition   This attribute is used to protect against CA key compromise.  This   attribute is used for the time-stamping certificate and revocation   references.  It is used in the following forms of extended electronic   signature: CAdES-X Type 2 and CAdES-X Long Type 2; see Annex B.1.3   for an illustration of this form of electronic signature.   A time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute is an unsigned   attribute.  It is a time-stamp token issued for a list of referenced   certificates and OCSP responses and/or CRLs to protect against   certain CA compromises.  Its syntax is as follows:      NOTE 1: It is recommended that the attributes being time-stamped      be encoded in DER.  If DER is not employed, then the binary      encoding of the ASN.1 structures being time-stamped should be      preserved to ensure that the recalculation of the data hash is      consistent.      NOTE 2: Each attribute is included in the hash with the attrType      and attrValues (including type and length) but without the type      and length of the outer SEQUENCE.   The following object identifier identifies the   time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute:   id-aa-ets-certCRLTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 26}   The attribute value has the ASN.1 syntax TimestampedCertsCRLs:   TimestampedCertsCRLs ::= TimeStampToken   The value of the messageImprint field within the TimeStampToken shall   be a hash of the concatenated values (without the type or length   encoding for that value) of the following data objects, as present in   the ES with Complete validation data (CAdES-C):      - complete-certificate-references attribute; and      - complete-revocation-references attribute.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 57]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20086.4.  Archive Validation Data   Where an electronic signature is required to last for a very long   time, and the time-stamp token on an electronic signature is in   danger of being invalidated due to algorithm weakness or limits in   the validity period of the TSA certificate, it may be required to   time-stamp the electronic signature several times.  When this is   required, an archive time-stamp attribute may be required for the   archive form of the electronic signature (CAdES-A).  This archive   time-stamp attribute may be repeatedly applied over a period of time.6.4.1.  archive-time-stamp Attribute Definition   The archive-time-stamp attribute is a time-stamp token of many of the   elements of the signedData in the electronic signature.  If the   certificate-values and revocation-values attributes are not present   in the CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, then they shall be added to the   electronic signature prior to computing the archive time-stamp token.   The archive-time-stamp attribute is an unsigned attribute.  Several   instances of this attribute may occur with an electronic signature   both over time and from different TSUs.   The following object identifier identifies the nested   archive-time-stamp attribute:   id-aa-ets-archiveTimestampV2  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 48}   Archive-time-stamp attribute values have the ASN.1 syntax   ArchiveTimeStampToken   ArchiveTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken   The value of the messageImprint field within TimeStampToken shall be   a hash of the concatenation of:      - the encapContentInfo element of the SignedData sequence;      - any external content being protected by the signature, if the        eContent element of the encapContentInfo is omitted;      - the Certificates and crls elements of the SignedData sequence,        when present, and;      - all data elements in the SignerInfo sequence including all        signed and unsigned attributes.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 58]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE 1: An alternative archiveTimestamp attribute, identified by      an object identifier { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840)      rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 27, is defined      in prior versions of TS 101 733 [TS101733] and inRFC 3126.      The archiveTimestamp attribute, defined in versions of TS 101 733      prior to 1.5.1 and inRFC 3126, is not compatible with the      attribute defined in the current document.  The archiveTimestamp      attribute, defined in versions 1.5.1 to 1.6.3 of TS 101 733, is      compatible with the current document if the content is internal to      encapContentInfo.  Unless the version of TS 101 733 employed by      the signing party is known by all recipients, use of the      archiveTimestamp attribute defined in prior versions of TS 101 733      is deprecated.      NOTE 2: Counter signatures held as countersignature attributes do      not require independent archive time-stamps, as they are protected      by the archive time-stamp against the containing SignedData      structure.      NOTE 3: Unless DER is used throughout, it is recommended that the      binary encoding of the ASN.1 structures being time-stamped be      preserved when being archived to ensure that the recalculation of      the data hash is consistent.      NOTE 4: The hash is calculated over the concatenated data elements      as received/stored, including the Type and Length encoding.      NOTE 5: Whilst it is recommended that unsigned attributes be DER      encoded, it cannot generally be so guaranteed except by prior      arrangement.  For further information and definition of      TimeStampToken, seeSection 7.4.  The timestamp should be created      using stronger algorithms (or longer key lengths) than in the      original electronic signatures and weak algorithm (key length)      timestamps.      NOTE 6: This form of ES also provides protection against a TSP key      compromise.   The ArchiveTimeStamp will be added as an unsigned attribute in the   SignerInfo sequence.  For the validation of one ArchiveTimeStamp, the   data elements of the SignerInfo must be concatenated, excluding all   later ArchivTimeStampToken attributes.   Certificates and revocation information required to validate the   ArchiveTimeStamp shall be provided by one of the following methods:Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 59]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - The TSU provides the information in the SignedData of the        timestamp token;      - Adding the complete-certificate-references attribute and the        complete-revocation-references attribute of the TSP as an        unsigned attribute within TimeStampToken, when the required        information is stored elsewhere; or      - Adding the certificate-values attribute and the        revocation-values attribute of the TSP as an unsigned attribute        within TimeStampToken, when the required information is stored        elsewhere.7.  Other Standard Data Structures7.1.  Public Key Certificate Format   The X.509 v3 certificate basis syntax is defined in ITU-T   Recommendation X.509 [1].  A profile of the X.509 v3 certificate is   defined inRFC 3280 [2].7.2.  Certificate Revocation List Format   The X.509 v2 CRL syntax is defined in ITU-T Recommendation X.509 [1].   A profile of the X.509 v2 CRL is defined inRFC 3280 [2].7.3.  OCSP Response Format   The format of an OCSP token is defined inRFC 2560 [3].7.4.  Time-Stamp Token Format   The format of a TimeStampToken type is defined inRFC 3161 [7] and   profiled in ETSI TS 101 861 [TS101861].7.5.  Name and Attribute Formats   The syntax of the naming and other attributes is defined in ITU-T   Recommendation X.509 [1].      NOTE: The name used by the signer, held as the subject in the      signer's certificate, is allocated and verified on registration      with the Certification Authority, either directly or indirectly      through a Registration Authority, before being issued with a      Certificate.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 60]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The present document places no restrictions on the form of the name.   The subject's name may be a distinguished name, as defined in ITU-T   Recommendation X.500 [12], held in the subject field of the   certificate, or any other name form held in the subjectAltName   certificate extension field, as defined in ITU-T Recommendation X.509   [1].  In the case that the subject has no distinguished name, the   subject name can be an empty sequence and the subjectAltName   extension shall be critical.   All Certification Authorities, Attribute Authorities, and   Time-Stamping Authorities shall use distinguished names in the   subject field of their certificate.   The distinguished name shall include identifiers for the organization   providing the service and the legal jurisdiction (e.g., country)   under which it operates.   Where a signer signs as an individual, but wishes to also identify   him/herself as acting on behalf of an organization, it may be   necessary to provide two independent forms of identification.  The   first identity, which is directly associated with the signing key,   identifies him/her as an individual.  The second, which is managed   independently, identifies that person acting as part of the   organization, possibly with a given role.  In this case, one of the   two identities is carried in the subject/subjectAltName field of the   signer's certificate as described above.   The present document does not specify the format of the signer's   attribute that may be included in public key certificates.      NOTE: The signer's attribute may be supported by using a claimed      role in the CMS signed attributes field or by placing an attribute      certificate containing a certified role in the CMS signed      attributes field; seeSection 7.6.7.6.  AttributeCertificate   The syntax of the AttributeCertificate type is defined inRFC 3281   [13].8.  Conformance Requirements   For implementations supporting signature generation, the present   document defines conformance requirements for the generation of two   forms of basic electronic signature, one of the two forms must be   implemented.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 61]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   For implementations supporting signature verification, the present   document defines conformance requirements for the verification of two   forms of basic electronic signature, one of the two forms must be   implemented.   The present document only defines conformance requirements up to an   ES with Complete validation data (CAdES-C).  This means that none of   the extended and archive forms of the electronic signature (CAdES-X,   CAdES-A) need to be implemented to get conformance to the present   document.   On verification the inclusion of optional signed and unsigned   attributes must be supported only to the extent that the signature is   verifiable.  The semantics of optional attributes may be unsupported,   unless specified otherwise by a signature policy.8.1.  CAdES-Basic Electronic Signature (CAdES-BES)   A system supporting CAdES-BES signers, according to the present   document, shall, at a minimum, support generation of an electronic   signature consisting of the following components:      - The general CMS syntax and content type, as defined inRFC 3852        [4] (see Sections5.1 and5.2);      - CMS SignedData, as defined inRFC 3852 [4], with the version set        to 3 and at least one SignerInfo present (see Sections5.3 to        5.6);         - The following CMS attributes, as defined inRFC 3852 [4]:         - content-type; this shall always be present (seeSection5.7.1); and         - message-digest; this shall always be present (seeSection5.7.2).      - One of the following attributes, as defined in the present        document:         - signing-certificate: as defined inSection 5.7.3.1; or         - signing-certificate v2 : as defined inSection 5.7.3.2.      NOTE:RFC 3126 was using the other signing-certificate attribute      (seeSection 5.7.3.3).  Its use is now deprecated, since the      structure of the signing-certificate v2 attribute is simpler than      the other signing-certificate attribute.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 62]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 20088.2.  CAdES-Explicit Policy-based Electronic Signature   A system supporting Policy-based signers, according to the present   document, shall, at a minimum, support the generation of an   electronic signature consisting of the previous components defined   for the basic signer, plus:      - The following attributes, as defined inSection 5.9:         - signature-policy-identifier; this shall always be present           (seeSection 5.8.1).8.3.  Verification Using Time-Stamping   A system supporting verifiers, according to the present document,   with time-stamping facilities shall, at a minimum, support:      - verification of the mandated components of an electronic        signature, as defined inSection 8.1;      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2;      - Public Key Certificates, as defined in ITU-T Recommendation        X.509 [1] (seeSection 8.1); and      - either of:         - Certificate Revocation Lists, as defined in ITU-T           Recommendation X.509 [1] (seeSection 8.2); or         - Online Certificate Status Protocol, as defined inRFC 2560           [3] (seeSection 8.3).8.4.  Verification Using Secure Records   A system supporting verifiers, according to the present document,   shall, at a minimum, support:      - verification of the mandated components of an electronic        signature, as defined inSection 8.1;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 63]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2;      - a record of the electronic signature and the time when the        signature was first validated, using the referenced certificates        and revocation information, must be maintained, such that        records cannot be undetectably modified;      - Public Key Certificates, as defined in ITU-T Recommendation        X.509 [1] (seeSection 8.1); and         - either of:            - Certificate Revocation Lists, as defined in ITU-T              Recommendation X.509 [1] (seeSection 8.2); or            - online Certificate Status Protocol, as defined inRFC 2560              [3] (seeSection 8.3).9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [1]    ITU-T Recommendation X.509 (2000)/ISO/IEC 9594-8 (2001):          "Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The          Directory: Public key and Attribute Certificate framework".   [2]    Housley, R., Polk, W., Ford, W., and D. Solo, "Internet X.509          Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate          Revocation List (CRL) Profile",RFC 3280, April 2002.   [3]    Myers, M., Ankney, R., Malpani, A., Galperin, S., and C.          Adams, "X.509 Internet Public Key Infrastructure Online          Certificate Status Protocol - OCSP",RFC 2560, June 1999.   [4]    Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)",RFC 3852,          July 2004.   [5]    Hoffman, P., Ed., "Enhanced Security Services for S/MIME",RFC2634, June 1999.   [6]    Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail          Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message          Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 64]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   [7]    Adams, C., Cain, P., Pinkas, D., and R. Zuccherato, "Internet          X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Time-Stamp Protocol (TSP)",RFC 3161, August 2001.   [8]    ITU-T Recommendation X.680 (1997): "Information technology -          Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1): Specification of basic          notation".   [9]    ITU-T Recommendation X.501 (2000)/ISO/IEC 9594-1 (2001):          "Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection -          Directory models".   [10]   Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) Algorithms",RFC 3370, August 2002.   [11]   ITU-T Recommendation F.1: "Operational provisions for the          international public telegram service".   [12]   ITU-T Recommendation X.500: "Information technology - Open          Systems Interconnection - The Directory: Overview of concepts,          models and services".   [13]   Farrell, S. and R. Housley, "An Internet Attribute Certificate          Profile for Authorization",RFC 3281, April 2002.   [14]   ITU-T Recommendation X.208 (1988): "Specification of Abstract          Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)".   [15]   Schaad, J., "Enhanced Security Services (ESS) Update: Adding          CertID Algorithm Agility",RFC 5035, August 2007.   [16]   ITU-T Recommendation X.690 (2002): "Information technology          ASN.1 encoding rules: Specification of Basic Encoding Rules          (BER), Canonical Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished          Encoding Rules (DER)".9.2.  Informative References   [EUDirective]  Directive 1999/93/EC of the European Parliament and of                  the Council of 13 December 1999 on a community                  framework for Electronic Signatures.   [TS101733]     ETSI Standard TS 101 733 V.1.7.3 (2005-06) Electronic                  Signature Formats.   [TS101861]     ETSI TS 101 861: "Time stamping profile".Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 65]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   [TS101903]     ETSI TS 101 903: "XML Advanced Electronic Signatures                  (XAdES)".   [TR102038]     ETSI TR 102 038: "Electronic Signatures and                  Infrastructures (ESI); XML format for signature                  policies".   [TR102272]     ETSI TR 102 272 V1.1.1 (2003-12). "Electronic                  Signatures and Infrastructures (ESI); ASN.1 format for                  signature policies".   [RFC2479]      Adams, C., "Independent Data Unit Protection Generic                  Security Service Application Program Interface (IDUP-                  GSS-API)",RFC 2479, December 1998.   [RFC2743]      Linn, J., "Generic Security Service Application                  Program Interface Version 2, Update 1",RFC 2743,                  January 2000.   [RFC3125]      Ross, J., Pinkas, D., and N. Pope, "Electronic                  Signature Policies",RFC 3125, September 2001.   [RFC3447]      Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography                  Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications                  Version 2.1",RFC 3447, February 2003.   [RFC3494]      Zeilenga, K., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol                  version 2 (LDAPv2) to Historic Status",RFC 3494,                  March 2003.   [RFC3851]      Ramsdell, B., Ed., "Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail                  Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.1 Message                  Specification",RFC 3851, July 2004.   [RFC4210]      Adams, C., Farrell, S., Kause, T., and T. Mononen,                  "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate                  Management Protocol (CMP)",RFC 4210, September 2005.   [RFC4346]      Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer                  Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.1",RFC 4346, April                  2006.   [RFC4523]      Zeilenga, K., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol                  (LDAP) Schema Definitions for X.509 Certificates",RFC4523, June 2006.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 66]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   [ISO7498-2]    ISO 7498-2 (1989): "Information processing systems -                  Open Systems Interconnection - Basic Reference Model -                  Part 2: Security Architecture".   [ISO9796-2]    ISO/IEC 9796-2 (2002): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Digital signature schemes giving                  message recovery - Part 2: Integer factorization based                  mechanisms".   [ISO9796-4]    ISO/IEC 9796-4 (1998): "Digital signature schemes                  giving message recovery - Part 4: Discrete logarithm                  based mechanisms".   [ISO10118-1]   ISO/IEC 10118-1 (2000): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 1:                  General".   [ISO10118-2]   ISO/IEC 10118-2 (2000): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 2:                  Hash-functions using an n-bit block cipher algorithm".   [ISO10118-3]   ISO/IEC 10118-3 (2004): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 3:                  Dedicated hash-functions".   [ISO10118-4]   ISO/IEC 10118-4 (1998): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 4: Hash-                  functions using modular arithmetic".   [ISO10181-5]   ISO/IEC 10181-5:  Security Frameworks in Open Systems.                  Non-Repudiation Framework.  April 1997.   [ISO13888-1]   ISO/IEC 13888-1 (2004): "IT security techniques -                  Non-repudiation - Part 1: General".   [ISO14888-1]   ISO/IEC 14888-1 (1998): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Digital signatures with appendix                  - Part 1: General".   [ISO14888-2]   ISO/IEC 14888-2 (1999): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Digital signatures with appendix                  - Part 2: Identity-based mechanisms".   [ISO14888-3]   ISO/IEC 14888-3 (1998): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Digital signatures with appendix                  - Part 3: Certificate-based mechanisms".Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 67]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   [ISO15946-2]   ISO/IEC 15946-2 (2002): "Information technology -                  Security techniques - Cryptographic techniques based                  on elliptic curves - Part 2: Digital signatures".   [CWA14171]     CWA 14171 CEN Workshop Agreement: "General Guidelines                  for Electronic Signature Verification".   [XMLDSIG]      XMLDSIG: W3C/IETF Recommendation (February 2002):                  "XML-Signature Syntax and Processing".   [X9.30-1]      ANSI X9.30-1 (1997): "Public Key Cryptography for the                  Financial Services Industry - Part 1: The Digital                  Signature Algorithm (DSA)".   [X9.30-2]      ANSI X9.30-2 (1997): "Public Key Cryptography for the                  Financial Services Industry - Part 2: The Secure Hash                  Algorithm (SHA-1)".   [X9.31-1]      ANSI X9.31-1 (1997): "Public Key Cryptography Using                  Reversible Algorithms for the Financial Services                  Industry - Part 1: The RSA Signature Algorithm".   [X9.31-2]      ANSI X9.31-2 (1996): "Public Key Cryptography Using                  Reversible Algorithms for the Financial Services                  Industry - Part 2: Hash Algorithms".   [X9.62]        ANSI X9.62 (1998): "Public Key Cryptography for the                  Financial Services Industry - The Elliptic Curve                  Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA)".   [P1363]        IEEE P1363 (2000): "Standard Specifications for                  Public-Key Cryptography".   ETSI technical specifications can be downloaded free of charge via   the Services and Products Download Area at:http://www.etsi.org/WebSite/Standards/StandardsDownload.aspxPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 68]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Annex A (Normative): ASN.1 Definitions   This annex provides a summary of all the ASN.1 syntax definitions for   new syntax defined in the present document.A.1.  Signature Format Definitions Using X.208 ASN.1 Syntax      NOTE: The ASN.1 module defined in Annex A.1 using syntax defined      in ITU-T Recommendation X.208 [14] has precedence over that      defined in Annex A.2 in the case of any conflict.ETS-ElectronicSignatureFormats-ExplicitSyntax88 { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-mod(0)eSignature-explicit88(28)}DEFINITIONS EXPLICIT TAGS ::=BEGIN-- EXPORTS AllIMPORTS-- Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS):RFC 3852   ContentInfo, ContentType, id-data, id-signedData, SignedData,   EncapsulatedContentInfo, SignerInfo, id-contentType,   id-messageDigest, MessageDigest, id-signingTime, SigningTime,   id-countersignature, Countersignature      FROM CryptographicMessageSyntax2004      { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)      smime(16) modules(0) cms-2004(24) }-- ESS Defined attributes: ESS Update--RFC 5035 (Adding CertID Algorithm Agility)   id-aa-signingCertificate, SigningCertificate, IssuerSerial,   id-aa-contentReference, ContentReference, id-aa-contentIdentifier,   ContentIdentifier, id-aa-signingCertificateV2      FROM ExtendedSecurityServices-2006        { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549)          pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0) id-mod-ess-2006(30) }-- Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure - Certificate and CRL-- Profile:RFC 3280   Certificate, AlgorithmIdentifier, CertificateList, Name,   DirectoryString, Attribute, BMPString, UTF8StringPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 69]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      FROM PKIX1Explicit88      {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)      security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-pkix1-explicit(18)}   GeneralNames, GeneralName, PolicyInformation      FROM PKIX1Implicit88      {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1) security(5)       mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-pkix1-implicit (19)}-- Internet Attribute Certificate Profile for Authorization -RFC 3281   AttributeCertificate      FROM PKIXAttributeCertificate {iso(1) identified-organization(3)                dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7)                id-mod(0) id-mod-attribute-cert(12)}-- OCSP -RFC 2560   BasicOCSPResponse, ResponderID      FROM OCSP {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)      security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-mod-ocsp(14)}-- Time Stamp ProtocolRFC 3161   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)};-- Definitions of Object Identifier arcs used in the present document-- ==================================================================-- OID used referencing electronic signature mechanisms based on-- the present document for use with the Independent Data Unit-- Protection (IDUP) API (see Annex D)   id-etsi-es-IDUP-Mechanism-v1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { itu-t(0) identified-organization(4) etsi(0)     electronic-signature-standard (1733) part1 (1) idupMechanism (4)     etsiESv1(1) }-- Basic ES CMS Attributes Defined in the present document-- =======================================================Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 70]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008-- OtherSigningCertificate - deprecated    id-aa-ets-otherSigCert OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=    { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)    smime(16) id-aa(2) 19 }   OtherSigningCertificate ::=  SEQUENCE {      certs        SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID,      policies     SEQUENCE OF PolicyInformation OPTIONAL                   -- NOT USED IN THE PRESENT DOCUMENT   }   OtherCertID ::= SEQUENCE {      otherCertHash            OtherHash,      issuerSerial             IssuerSerial OPTIONAL }   OtherHash ::= CHOICE {       sha1Hash     OtherHashValue,       -- This contains a SHA-1 hash       otherHash    OtherHashAlgAndValue}-- Policy ES Attributes Defined in the present document-- ====================================================-- Mandatory Basic Electronic Signature Attributes as above,-- plus in addition.-- Signature-policy-identifier attribute   id-aa-ets-sigPolicyId OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)   smime(16) id-aa(2) 15 }   SignaturePolicy ::= CHOICE {      signaturePolicyId          SignaturePolicyId,      signaturePolicyImplied     SignaturePolicyImplied                                 --  not used in this version   }   SignaturePolicyId ::= SEQUENCE {      sigPolicyId        SigPolicyId,      sigPolicyHash      SigPolicyHash,      sigPolicyQualifiers   SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF                                   SigPolicyQualifierInfo OPTIONAL   }   SignaturePolicyImplied ::= NULLPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 71]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   SigPolicyId ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   SigPolicyHash ::= OtherHashAlgAndValue   OtherHashAlgAndValue ::= SEQUENCE {      hashAlgorithm   AlgorithmIdentifier,      hashValue       OtherHashValue }   OtherHashValue ::= OCTET STRING   SigPolicyQualifierInfo ::= SEQUENCE {      sigPolicyQualifierId  SigPolicyQualifierId,      sigQualifier          ANY DEFINED BY sigPolicyQualifierId }   SigPolicyQualifierId ::=   OBJECT IDENTIFIER   id-spq-ets-uri OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)   smime(16) id-spq(5) 1 }   SPuri ::= IA5String   id-spq-ets-unotice OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=   { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)   smime(16) id-spq(5) 2 }   SPUserNotice ::= SEQUENCE {       noticeRef        NoticeReference OPTIONAL,       explicitText     DisplayText OPTIONAL}   NoticeReference ::= SEQUENCE {      organization     DisplayText,      noticeNumbers    SEQUENCE OF INTEGER }   DisplayText ::= CHOICE {      visibleString    VisibleString  (SIZE (1..200)),      bmpString        BMPString      (SIZE (1..200)),      utf8String       UTF8String     (SIZE (1..200)) }-- Optional Electronic Signature Attributes-- Commitment-type attributeid-aa-ets-commitmentType OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 16}   CommitmentTypeIndication ::= SEQUENCE {Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 72]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008     commitmentTypeId CommitmentTypeIdentifier,     commitmentTypeQualifier SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF            CommitmentTypeQualifier OPTIONAL}   CommitmentTypeIdentifier ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   CommitmentTypeQualifier ::= SEQUENCE {      commitmentTypeIdentifier CommitmentTypeIdentifier,      qualifier   ANY DEFINED BY commitmentTypeIdentifier }id-cti-ets-proofOfOrigin OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 1}id-cti-ets-proofOfReceipt OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 2}id-cti-ets-proofOfDelivery OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) cti(6) 3}id-cti-ets-proofOfSender OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 4}id-cti-ets-proofOfApproval OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) cti(6) 5}id-cti-ets-proofOfCreation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) cti(6) 6}-- Signer-location attributeid-aa-ets-signerLocation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 17}   SignerLocation ::= SEQUENCE {       -- at least one of the following shall be present       countryName    [0]   DirectoryString OPTIONAL,          -- As used to name a Country in X.500       localityName   [1]   DirectoryString OPTIONAL,           -- As used to name a locality in X.500       postalAdddress [2]   PostalAddress OPTIONAL }   PostalAddress ::= SEQUENCE SIZE(1..6) OF DirectoryString-- Signer-attributes attributePinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 73]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008id-aa-ets-signerAttr OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 18}   SignerAttribute ::= SEQUENCE OF CHOICE {      claimedAttributes   [0] ClaimedAttributes,      certifiedAttributes [1] CertifiedAttributes }   ClaimedAttributes ::= SEQUENCE OF Attribute   CertifiedAttributes ::= AttributeCertificate   -- as defined inRFC 3281: seeSection 4.1-- Content-time-stamp attributeid-aa-ets-contentTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 20}   ContentTimestamp ::= TimeStampToken-- Signature-time-stamp attributeid-aa-signatureTimeStampToken OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 14}SignatureTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Complete-certificate-references attributeid-aa-ets-certificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 21}CompleteCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID-- Complete-revocation-references attributeid-aa-ets-revocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 22}   CompleteRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRef   CrlOcspRef ::= SEQUENCE {      crlids          [0] CRLListID   OPTIONAL,      ocspids         [1] OcspListID  OPTIONAL,      otherRev        [2] OtherRevRefs OPTIONAL   }Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 74]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   CRLListID ::=  SEQUENCE {      crls        SEQUENCE OF CrlValidatedID}   CrlValidatedID ::=  SEQUENCE {      crlHash                   OtherHash,      crlIdentifier             CrlIdentifier OPTIONAL}   CrlIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {      crlissuer                 Name,      crlIssuedTime             UTCTime,      crlNumber                 INTEGER OPTIONAL }   OcspListID ::=  SEQUENCE {       ocspResponses        SEQUENCE OF OcspResponsesID}   OcspResponsesID ::=  SEQUENCE {       ocspIdentifier              OcspIdentifier,       ocspRepHash                 OtherHash    OPTIONAL   }   OcspIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {      ocspResponderID      ResponderID,      -- As in OCSP response data      producedAt           GeneralizedTime      -- As in OCSP response data   }   OtherRevRefs ::= SEQUENCE {       otherRevRefType   OtherRevRefType,       otherRevRefs      ANY DEFINED BY otherRevRefType    }   OtherRevRefType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER-- Certificate-values attributeid-aa-ets-certValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 23}   CertificateValues ::=  SEQUENCE OF Certificate-- Certificate-revocation-values attributeid-aa-ets-revocationValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 24}   RevocationValues ::=  SEQUENCE {Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 75]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      crlVals           [0] SEQUENCE OF CertificateList OPTIONAL,      ocspVals          [1] SEQUENCE OF BasicOCSPResponse OPTIONAL,      otherRevVals      [2] OtherRevVals OPTIONAL}   OtherRevVals ::= SEQUENCE {       otherRevValType   OtherRevValType,       otherRevVals      ANY DEFINED BY otherRevValType   }   OtherRevValType ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER-- CAdES-C time-stamp attributeid-aa-ets-escTimeStamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 25}ESCTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Time-Stamped Certificates and CRLsid-aa-ets-certCRLTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 26}TimestampedCertsCRLs ::= TimeStampToken-- Archive time-stamp attributeid-aa-ets-archiveTimestampV2  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 48}ArchiveTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Attribute-certificate-references attributeid-aa-ets-attrCertificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 44}AttributeCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID-- Attribute-revocation-references attributeid-aa-ets-attrRevocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 45}AttributeRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRefPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 76]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008ENDA.2.  Signature Format Definitions Using X.680 ASN.1 Syntax      NOTE: The ASN.1 module defined in Annex A.1 has precedence over      that defined in Annex A.2 using syntax defined in ITU-T      Recommendation X.680 (1997) [8] in the case of any conflict.ETS-ElectronicSignatureFormats-ExplicitSyntax97 { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-mod(0)eSignature-explicit97(29)}DEFINITIONS EXPLICIT TAGS ::=BEGIN-- EXPORTS All -IMPORTS-- Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS):RFC 3852   ContentInfo, ContentType, id-data, id-signedData, SignedData,   EncapsulatedContentInfo, SignerInfo,   id-contentType, id-messageDigest, MessageDigest, id-signingTime,   SigningTime, id-countersignature, Countersignature      FROM CryptographicMessageSyntax2004      { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)       smime(16) modules(0) cms-2004(24) }-- ESS Defined attributes: ESS Update--RFC 5035 (Adding CertID Algorithm Agility)   id-aa-signingCertificate, SigningCertificate, IssuerSerial,   id-aa-contentReference, ContentReference, id-aa-contentIdentifier,   ContentIdentifier, id-aa-signingCertificateV2      FROM ExtendedSecurityServices-2006        { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549)          pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) modules(0) id-mod-ess-2006(30) }-- Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure-- Certificate and CRL Profile:RFC 3280   Certificate, AlgorithmIdentifier, CertificateList, Name,   Attribute      FROM PKIX1Explicit88      {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 77]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)      id-pkix1-explicit(18)}   GeneralNames, GeneralName, PolicyInformation      FROM PKIX1Implicit88 {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6)      internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)      id-pkix1-implicit(19)}-- Internet Attribute Certificate Profile for Authorization -RFC 3281   AttributeCertificate      FROM PKIXAttributeCertificate {iso(1) identified-organization(3)      dod(6) internet(1) security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0)      id-mod-attribute-cert(12)}-- OCSPRFC 2560   BasicOCSPResponse, ResponderID      FROM OCSP {iso(1) identified-organization(3) dod(6) internet(1)      security(5) mechanisms(5) pkix(7) id-mod(0) id-mod-ocsp(14)}--RFC 3161 Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure-- Time-Stamp Protocol   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)}-- X.520    DirectoryString {}        FROM SelectedAttributeTypes         {joint-iso-itu-t ds(5) module(1) selectedAttributeTypes(5) 4};-- Definitions of Object Identifier arcs used in the present document-- ==================================================================-- OID used referencing electronic signature mechanisms based-- on the present document for use with the IDUP API (see Annex D)id-etsi-es-IDUP-Mechanism-v1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ itu-t(0) identified-organization(4) etsi(0)electronic-signature-standard (1733) part1 (1) idupMechanism (4)etsiESv1(1) }Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 78]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008-- Basic ES Attributes Defined in the present document-- ===================================================-- CMS Attributes defined in the present document-- OtherSigningCertificate - deprecatedid-aa-ets-otherSigCert OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 19 }   OtherSigningCertificate ::=  SEQUENCE {      certs        SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID,      policies     SEQUENCE OF PolicyInformation OPTIONAL                   -- NOT USED IN THE PRESENT DOCUMENT   }   OtherCertID ::= SEQUENCE {      otherCertHash            OtherHash,      issuerSerial             IssuerSerial OPTIONAL }   OtherHash ::= CHOICE {      sha1Hash OtherHashValue,      -- This contains a SHA-1 hash      otherHash OtherHashAlgAndValue}-- Policy ES Attributes Defined in the present document-- ====================================================-- Mandatory Basic Electronic Signature Attributes, plus in addition.-- Signature Policy Identifierid-aa-ets-sigPolicyId OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 15 }   SignaturePolicy ::= CHOICE {      signaturePolicyId          SignaturePolicyId,      signaturePolicyImplied     SignaturePolicyImplied                              -- not used in this version   }   SignaturePolicyId ::= SEQUENCE {      sigPolicyId           SigPolicyId,      sigPolicyHash         SigPolicyHash,      sigPolicyQualifiers   SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF                                 SigPolicyQualifierInfo OPTIONALPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 79]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   }   SignaturePolicyImplied ::= NULL   SigPolicyId ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   SigPolicyHash ::= OtherHashAlgAndValue   OtherHashAlgAndValue ::= SEQUENCE {      hashAlgorithm   AlgorithmIdentifier,      hashValue       OtherHashValue   }   OtherHashValue ::= OCTET STRING   SigPolicyQualifierInfo ::= SEQUENCE {      sigPolicyQualifierId       SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER.&id      ({SupportedSigPolicyQualifiers}),      qualifier               SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER.&Qualifier                                ({SupportedSigPolicyQualifiers}                                    {@sigPolicyQualifierId})OPTIONAL }   SupportedSigPolicyQualifiers SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER ::=       { noticeToUser | pointerToSigPolSpec }   SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER ::= CLASS {      &id             OBJECT IDENTIFIER UNIQUE,      &Qualifier      OPTIONAL }   WITH SYNTAX {      SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER-ID     &id      [SIG-QUALIFIER-TYPE &Qualifier] }   noticeToUser SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER ::= {      SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER-ID id-spq-ets-unotice SIG-QUALIFIER-TYPE      SPUserNotice }   pointerToSigPolSpec SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER ::= {      SIG-POLICY-QUALIFIER-ID id-spq-ets-uri SIG-QUALIFIER-TYPE SPuri }   id-spq-ets-uri OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)    member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)    smime(16) id-spq(5) 1 }   SPuri ::= IA5String   id-spq-ets-unotice OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)   member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs9(9)   smime(16) id-spq(5) 2 }Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 80]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   SPUserNotice ::= SEQUENCE {        noticeRef        NoticeReference OPTIONAL,        explicitText     DisplayText OPTIONAL}   NoticeReference ::= SEQUENCE {        organization     DisplayText,        noticeNumbers    SEQUENCE OF INTEGER }   DisplayText ::= CHOICE {        visibleString    VisibleString  (SIZE (1..200)),        bmpString        BMPString      (SIZE (1..200)),        utf8String       UTF8String     (SIZE (1..200)) }-- Optional Electronic Signature Attributes-- Commitment Type  id-aa-ets-commitmentType OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)    us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 16}   CommitmentTypeIndication ::= SEQUENCE {      commitmentTypeId CommitmentTypeIdentifier,      commitmentTypeQualifier SEQUENCE SIZE (1..MAX) OF         CommitmentTypeQualifier OPTIONAL}   CommitmentTypeIdentifier ::= OBJECT IDENTIFIER   CommitmentTypeQualifier ::= SEQUENCE {      commitmentQualifierId   COMMITMENT-QUALIFIER.&id,      qualifier               COMMITMENT-QUALIFIER.&Qualifier OPTIONAL }   COMMITMENT-QUALIFIER ::= CLASS {      &id             OBJECT IDENTIFIER UNIQUE,      &Qualifier      OPTIONAL }   WITH SYNTAX {      COMMITMENT-QUALIFIER-ID     &id      [COMMITMENT-TYPE &Qualifier] }id-cti-ets-proofOfOrigin OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 1}id-cti-ets-proofOfReceipt OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 2}id-cti-ets-proofOfDelivery OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1)member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16)cti(6) 3}Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 81]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008id-cti-ets-proofOfSender OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) cti(6) 4}id-cti-ets-proofOfApproval OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) cti(6) 5}id-cti-ets-proofOfCreation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) cti(6) 6}-- Signer Locationid-aa-ets-signerLocation OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 17}   SignerLocation ::= SEQUENCE {   -- at least one of the following shall be present      countryName [0] DirectoryString{maxSize} OPTIONAL,         -- as used to name a Country in X.520      localityName [1] DirectoryString{maxSize} OPTIONAL,         -- as used to name a locality in X.520      postalAdddress [2] PostalAddress OPTIONAL }   PostalAddress ::= SEQUENCE SIZE(1..6) OF DirectoryString{maxSize}                    -- maxSize parametrization as specified in X.683-- Signer Attributesid-aa-ets-signerAttr OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 18}   SignerAttribute ::= SEQUENCE OF CHOICE {      claimedAttributes   [0] ClaimedAttributes,      certifiedAttributes [1] CertifiedAttributes }   ClaimedAttributes ::= SEQUENCE OF Attribute   CertifiedAttributes ::= AttributeCertificate   -- as defined inRFC 3281: seeSection 4.1-- Content Timestampid-aa-ets-contentTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 20}   ContentTimestamp ::= TimeStampTokenPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 82]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008-- Signature Timestampid-aa-signatureTimeStampToken OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 14}   SignatureTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Complete Certificate Refs.id-aa-ets-certificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 21}CompleteCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID-- Complete Revocation Refsid-aa-ets-revocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 22}   CompleteRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRef   CrlOcspRef ::= SEQUENCE {      crlids          [0] CRLListID   OPTIONAL,      ocspids         [1] OcspListID  OPTIONAL,      otherRev        [2] OtherRevRefs OPTIONAL   }   CRLListID ::=  SEQUENCE {      crls        SEQUENCE OF CrlValidatedID   }   CrlValidatedID ::=  SEQUENCE {      crlHash                   OtherHash,      crlIdentifier             CrlIdentifier OPTIONAL   }   CrlIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {       crlissuer                 Name,       crlIssuedTime             UTCTime,       crlNumber                 INTEGER OPTIONAL   }   OcspListID ::=  SEQUENCE {       ocspResponses        SEQUENCE OF OcspResponsesID   }   OcspResponsesID ::=  SEQUENCE {       ocspIdentifier              OcspIdentifier,Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 83]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008       ocspRepHash                 OtherHash    OPTIONAL   }   OcspIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {      ocspResponderID      ResponderID,      -- As in OCSP response data      producedAt           GeneralizedTime      -- As in OCSP response data   }   OtherRevRefs ::= SEQUENCE {      otherRevRefType   OTHER-REVOCATION-REF.&id,      otherRevRefs      SEQUENCE OF OTHER-REVOCATION-REF.&Type   }OTHER-REVOCATION-REF ::= CLASS {      &Type,      &id   OBJECT IDENTIFIER UNIQUE }   WITH SYNTAX {      WITH SYNTAX &Type ID &id }-- Certificate Valuesid-aa-ets-certValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 23}CertificateValues ::=  SEQUENCE OF Certificate-- Certificate Revocation Valuesid-aa-ets-revocationValues OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 24}   RevocationValues ::=  SEQUENCE {     crlVals           [0] SEQUENCE OF CertificateList OPTIONAL,     ocspVals          [1] SEQUENCE OF BasicOCSPResponse OPTIONAL,     otherRevVals      [2] OtherRevVals OPTIONAL   }   OtherRevVals ::= SEQUENCE {      otherRevValType   OTHER-REVOCATION-VAL.&id,      otherRevVals      SEQUENCE OF OTHER-REVOCATION-REF.&Type   }  OTHER-REVOCATION-VAL ::= CLASS {      &Type,Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 84]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      &id   OBJECT IDENTIFIER UNIQUE }   WITH SYNTAX {      WITH SYNTAX &Type ID &id }-- CAdES-C Timestampid-aa-ets-escTimeStamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) id-aa(2) 25}   ESCTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Time-Stamped Certificates and CRLsid-aa-ets-certCRLTimestamp OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 26}   TimestampedCertsCRLs ::= TimeStampToken-- Archive Timestampid-aa-ets-archiveTimestampV2  OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 48}   ArchiveTimeStampToken ::= TimeStampToken-- Attribute certificate referencesid-aa-ets-attrCertificateRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 44}   AttributeCertificateRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF OtherCertID-- Attribute revocation referencesid-aa-ets-attrRevocationRefs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::={ iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9)smime(16) id-aa(2) 45}   AttributeRevocationRefs ::=  SEQUENCE OF CrlOcspRefENDPinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 85]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Annex B (Informative): Extended Forms of Electronic SignaturesSection 4 provides an overview of the various formats of electronic   signatures included in the present document.  This annex lists the   attributes that need to be present in the various extended electronic   signature formats and provides example validation sequences using the   extended formats.B.1.  Extended Forms of Validation Data   The Complete validation data (CAdES-C) described inSection 4.3 and   illustrated in Figure 3 may be extended to create electronic   signatures with extended validation data.  Some electronic signature   forms that include extended validation are explained below.   An X-Long electronic signature (CAdES-X Long) is the CAdES-C with the   values of the certificates and revocation information.   This form of electronic signature can be useful when the verifier   does not have direct access to the following information:      - the signer's certificate;      - all the CA certificates that make up the full certification        path;      - all the associated revocation status information, as referenced        in the CAdES-C.   In some situations, additional time-stamps may be created and added   to the Electronic Signatures as additional attributes.  For example:      - time-stamping all the validation data as held with the ES        (CAdES-C), this eXtended validation data is called a CAdES-X        Type 1; or      - time-stamping individual reference data as used for complete        validation.  This form of eXtended validation data is called an        CAdES-X Type 2.      NOTE 1: The advantages/drawbacks for CAdES-X Type 1 and CAdES-X      Type 2 are discussed in Annex C.4.4.   The above time-stamp forms can be useful when it is required to   counter the risk that any CA keys used in the certificate chain may   be compromised.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 86]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   A combination of the two formats above may be used.  This form of   eXtended validation data is called an ES X-Long Type 1 or CAdES-X   Long Type 2.  This form of electronic signature can be useful when   the verifier needs both the values and proof of when the validation   data existed.      NOTE 2: The advantages/drawbacks for CAdES-X long Type 1 and      CAdES-X long Type 2 are discussed in Annex C.4.6.B.1.1.  CAdES-X Long   An electronic signature with the additional validation data forming   the CAdES-X Long form (CAdES-X-Long) is illustrated in Figure B.1 and   comprises the following:      - CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, as defined in Sections4.3 , 5.7, or        5.8;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2.   The following attributes are required if a TSP is not providing a   time-mark of the ES:      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1.   The following attributes are required if the full certificate values   and revocation values are not already included in the CAdES-BES or   CAdES-EPES:      - certificate-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.3;      - revocation-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.4.   If attributes certificates are used, then the following attributes   may be present:      - attribute-certificate-references attribute, defined inSection6.2.3;      - attribute-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.4.   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 87]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE: Attribute certificate and revocation references are only      present if a user attribute certificate is present in the      electronic signature; see Sections6.2.2 and6.2.3.+---------------------- CAdES-X-Long --------------------------------+|+-------------------------------------- CAdES-C ---+                |||                                     +----------+ | +-------------+|||+----- CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES ----+ |Timestamp | | |             |||||                                  | |over      | | | Complete    |||||+---------++----------++---------+| |digital   | | | certificate ||||||         ||          ||         || |signature | | |    and      ||||||Signer's ||  Signed  ||Digital  || |          | | | revocation  ||||||Document ||Attributes||signature|| |Optional  | | |    data     ||||||         ||          ||         || |when      | | |             |||||+---------++----------++---------+| |timemarked| | |             ||||+----------------------------------+ +----------+ | |             ||||                                     +-----------+| +-------------+|||                                     |Complete   ||                |||                                     |certificate||                |||                                     |and        ||                |||                                     |revocation ||                |||                                     |references ||                |||                                     +-----------+|                ||+--------------------------------------------------+                ||                                                                    |+--------------------------------------------------------------------+             Figure B.1: Illustration of CAdES-X-LongB.1.2.  CAdES-X Type 1   An electronic signature with the additional validation data forming   the eXtended validation data - Type 1 X is illustrated in Figure B.2   and comprises the following:      - the CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, as defined in Sections4.2,5.7, or        5.8;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2;      - CAdES-C-Timestamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.5.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 88]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The following attributes are required if a TSP is not providing a   time-mark of the ES:      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1.   If attributes certificates are used, then the following attributes   may be present:      - attribute-certificate-references attribute, defined inSection6.2.3;      - attribute-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.4.   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.+------------------------ CAdES-X-Type 1 ----------------------------+|+---------------------------------- CAdES-C ------+                 |||                                    +----------+ | +-------------+ |||+--- CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES ------+|Timestamp | | |             | ||||                                  ||over      | | |             | ||||+---------++----------++---------+||digital   | | |             | |||||Signer's ||  Signed  || Digital |||signature | | | Timestamp   | |||||Document ||Attributes||signature|||          | | |    over     | |||||         ||          ||         |||Optional  | | |   CAdES-C   | ||||+---------++----------++---------+||when      | | |             | |||+----------------------------------+|timemarked| | |             | |||                                    +----------+ | |             | |||                                    +-----------+| +-------------+ |||                                    |Complete   ||                 |||                                    |certificate||                 |||                                    |   and     ||                 |||                                    |revocation ||                 |||                                    |references ||                 |||                                    +-----------+|                 ||+-------------------------------------------------+                 ||                                                                    |+--------------------------------------------------------------------+               Figure B.2: Illustration of CAdES-X Type 1Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 89]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008B.1.3.  CAdES-X Type 2   An electronic signature with the additional validation data forming   the eXtended Validation Data - Type 2 X is illustrated in Figure B.3   and comprises the following:      - CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, as defined in Sections4.2,5.7, or        5.8;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2;      - time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.6.   The following attributes are required if a TSP is not providing a   time-mark of the ES:      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1.   If attributes certificates are used, then the following attributes   may be present:      - attribute-certificate-references attribute, defined inSection6.2.3;      - attribute-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.4.   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 90]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+----------------------- CAdES-X-Type 2 -----------------------------+|+-------------------------------------- CAdES-C --+                 |||                                    +----------+ |                 |||+-- CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES -------+|Timestamp | |                 ||||                                  ||over      | |                 ||||+---------++----------++---------+||digital   | | +-------------+ |||||         ||          ||         |||Signature | | | Timestamp   | |||||Signer's ||  Signed  || Digital |||          | | | only over   | |||||Document ||Attributes||signature|||Optional  | | | Complete    | |||||         ||          ||         |||when      | | | certificate | ||||+---------++----------++---------+||Timemarked| | |    and      | |||+----------------------------------++----------+ | | revocation  | |||                                    +-----------+| | references  | |||                                    |Complete   || +-------------+ |||                                    |certificate||                 |||                                    |and        ||                 |||                                    |revocation ||                 |||                                    |references ||                 |||                                    +-----------+|                 ||+-------------------------------------------------+                 ||                                                                    |+--------------------------------------------------------------------+               Figure B.3: Illustration of CAdES-X Type 2B.1.4.  CAdES-X Long Type 1 and CAdES-X Long Type 2   An electronic signature with the additional validation data forming   the CAdES-X Long Type 1 and CAdES-X Long Type 2 is illustrated in   Figure B.4 and comprises the following:      - CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, as defined in Sections4.3,5.7, or        5.8;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2;   The following attributes are required if a TSP is not providing a   time-mark of the ES:      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 91]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   The following attributes are required if the full certificate values   and revocation values are not already included in the CAdES-BES or   CAdES-EPES:      - certificate-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.3;      - revocation-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.4.   If attributes certificates are used, then the following attributes   may be present:      - attribute-certificate-references attribute, defined inSection6.2.3;      - attribute-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.4.   Plus one of the following attributes is required:      - CAdES-C-Timestamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.5;      - time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.6.   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 92]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   +---------------------- CAdES-X-Type 1 or 2 ------------------------+   |                                                   +--------------+|   |+-------------------------------------- CAdES-C --+|+------------+||   ||                                    +----------+ ||| Timestamp  |||   ||+-- CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES -------+|Timestamp | |||    over    |||   |||                                  ||over      | |||  CAdES-C   |||   |||+---------++----------++---------+||digital   | | +------------+ |   ||||         ||          ||         |||signature | ||      or      ||   ||||Signer's ||  Signed  || Digital |||          | ||+------------+||   ||||Document ||Attributes||Signature|||Optional  | ||| Timestamp  |||   ||||         ||          ||         |||when      | ||| only over  |||   |||+---------++----------++---------+||timemarked| ||| complete   |||   ||+----------------------------------++----------+ ||| certificate|||   ||                                                 |||    and     |||   ||                                    +-----------+||| revocation |||   ||                                    |Complete   |||| references |||   ||                                    |certificate|||+------------+||   ||                                    |and        ||+--------------+|   ||                                    |revocation || +------------+ |   ||                                    |references || |Complete    | |   ||                                    +-----------+| |certificate | |   |+-------------------------------------------------+ |   and      | |   |                                                    |revocation  | |   |                                                    |  values    | |   |                                                    +------------+ |   +-------------------------------------------------------------------+             Figure B.4: Illustration of CAdES-X Long Type 1                         and CAdES-X Long Type 2B.2.  Time-Stamp Extensions   Each instance of the time-stamp attribute may include, as unsigned   attributes in the signedData of the time-stamp, the following   attributes related to the TSU:      - complete-certificate-references attribute of the TSU, as defined        inSection 6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute of the TSU, as defined        inSection 6.2.2;      - certificate-values attribute of the TSU, as defined inSection6.3.3;      - revocation-values attribute of the TSU, as defined inSection6.3.4.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 93]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.B.3.  Archive Validation Data (CAdES-A)   Before the algorithms, keys, and other cryptographic data used at the   time the CAdES-C was built become weak and the cryptographic   functions become vulnerable, or the certificates supporting previous   time-stamps expire, the signed data, the CAdES-C, and any additional   information (i.e., any CAdES-X) should be time-stamped.  If possible,   this should use stronger algorithms (or longer key lengths) than in   the original time-stamp.  This additional data and time-stamp is   called Archive validation data required for the ES Archive format   (CAdES-A).  The Time-stamping process may be repeated every time the   protection used to time-stamp a previous CAdES-A becomes weak.  A   CAdES-A may thus bear multiple embedded time-stamps.   An example of an electronic signature (ES), with the additional   validation data for the CAdES-C and CAdES-X forming the CAdES-A is   illustrated in Figure B.5.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 94]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+--------------------------- CAdES-A---------------------------------+|+----------------------------------------------------+              |||                                    +--------------+| +----------+ |||+--------------------- CAdES-C ----+|+------------+|| |          | ||||                     +----------+ ||| Timestamp  ||| |          | ||||+-- CAdES-BES ------+|Timestamp | |||   over     ||| |          | |||||   or CAdES-EPES   ||over      | |||  CAdES-C   ||| |  Archive | |||||                   ||digital   | ||+------------+|| |          | |||||                   ||signature | ||     or       || |Timestamp | |||||                   ||          | ||+------------+|| |          | |||||                   ||optional  | ||| Timestamp  ||| |          | |||||                   ||when      | ||| only over  ||| |          | |||||                   ||timemarked| ||| complete   ||| |          | ||||+-------------------++----------+ ||| certificate||| +----------+ ||||                                  |||    and     |||              ||||                   +-------------+||| revocation |||              ||||                   | Complete    |||| references |||              ||||                   | certificate |||+------------+||              ||||                   | and         ||+--------------+|              ||||                   | revocation  || +------------+ |              ||||                   | references  || |Complete    | |              ||||                   +-------------+| |certificate | |              |||+----------------------------------+ |   and      | |              |||                                     |revocation  | |              |||                                     |  values    | |              |||                                     +------------+ |              ||+----------------------------------------------------+              |+--------------------------------------------------------------------+                    Figure B.5: Illustration of CAdES-A   The CAdES-A comprises the following elements:      - the CAdES-BES or CAdES-EPES, including their signed and unsigned        attributes;      - complete-certificate-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.2.   The following attributes are required if a TSP is not providing a   time-mark of the ES:      - signature-time-stamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.1.1.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 95]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   If attributes certificates are used, then the following attributes   may be present:      - attribute-certificate-references attribute, defined inSection6.2.3;      - attribute-revocation-references attribute, as defined inSection6.2.4.   The following attributes are required if the full certificate values   and revocation values are not already included in the CAdES-BES or   CAdES-EPES:      - certificate-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.3;      - revocation-values attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.4.   At least one of the following two attributes is required:      - CAdES-C-Timestamp attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.5;      - time-stamped-certs-crls-references attribute, as defined inSection 6.3.6.   The following attribute is required:      - archive-time-stamp attributes, defined inSection 6.4.1.   Several instances of the archive-time-stamp attribute may occur with   an electronic signature, both over time and from different TSUs.  The   time-stamp should be created using stronger algorithms (or longer key   lengths) than in the original electronic signatures or time-stamps.   Other unsigned attributes of the ES may be present, but are not   required.   The archive-time-stamp will itself contain the certificate and   revocation information required to validate the archive-time-stamp;   this may include the following unsigned attributes:      - complete-certificate-references attribute of the TSU, as defined        inSection 6.2.1;      - complete-revocation-references attribute of the TSU, as defined        inSection 6.2.2;      - certificate-values attribute of the TSU, as defined inSection6.3.3;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 96]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - revocation-values attribute of the TSU, as defined inSection6.3.4.   Other unsigned attributes may be present, but are not required.B.4.  Example Validation Sequence   As described earlier, the signer or initial verifier may collect all   the additional data that forms the electronic signature.  Figure B.6   and the subsequent description describe how the validation process   may build up a complete electronic signature over time.+------------------------------------------ CAdES-C -------------+|+------------------------------- CAdES-T ------+                |||+-------------- CAdES ------------+           |                ||||+--------------------++---------+|+---------+|  +-----------+ ||||| ________           ||         |||Timestamp||  |Complete   | ||||||Sign.Pol|          ||Digital  |||over     ||  |certificate| ||||||  Id.   | Signed   ||signature|||digital  ||  |   and     | |||||| option.|attributes||         |||signature||  |revocation | ||||||________|          |+---------+|+---------+|  |references | ||||+--------------------+           |    ^      |  +-----------+ |||+---------------------------------+    |      |        ^       |||                     1 |              /       |        |       ||+---------------------- | ------------/--------+        |       |+----------------------- | ---------- / --------------- / -------+                         |           /2    ----3--------      +----------+       |          /     /      |          |       v         /     |      | Signer's |      +---------------------+     +-------------+      | document |----->| Validation Process  |---->|- Valid      |      |          |      +---------------------+ 4   |- Invalid    |      +----------+           |  ^       |  ^        |- Validation |                             v  |       v  |        |  Incomplete |                         +---------+ +--------+     +-------------+                         |Signature| |Trusted |                         | Policy  | |Service |                         | Issuer  | |Provider|                         +---------+ +--------+       Figure B.6: Illustration of a CAdES validation sequence   Soon after receiving the electronic signature (CAdES) from the signer   (1), the digital signature value may be checked; the validation   process shall at least add a time-stamp (2), unless the signer has   provided one which is trusted by the verifier.  The validation   process may also validate the electronic signature using additional   data (e.g., certificates, CRL, etc.) provided by Trusted ServicePinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 97]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Providers.  When applicable, the validation process will also need to   conform to the requirements specified in a signature policy.  If the   validation process is validation incomplete, then the output from   this stage is the CAdES-T.   To ascertain the validity status as Valid or Invalid and communicate   that to the user (4), all the additional data required to validate   the CAdES-C must be available (e.g., the complete certificate and   revocation information).   Once the data needed to complete validation data references (CAdES-C)   is available, then the validation process should:      - obtain all the necessary additional certificates and revocation        status information;      - complete all the validation checks on the ES using the complete        certificate and revocation information (if a time-stamp is not        already present, this may be added at the same stage, combining        the CAdES-T and CAdES-C processes);      - record the complete certificate and revocation references (3);      - indicate the validity status to the user (4).   At the same time as the validation process creates the CAdES-C, the   validation process may provide and/or record the values of   certificates and revocation status information used in CAdES-C (5).   The end result is called CAdES-X Long.   This is illustrated in Figure B.7.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 98]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+----------------------------------------------------- CAdES-X Long -+|+------------------------------- CAdES-C -------------+             |||+-------------- CAdES ------------+                  |             ||||+--------------------++---------+|+---------+       |+-----------+||||| ________           ||         |||Timestamp|       ||Complete   |||||||Sign.Pol|          ||Digital  |||over     |       ||certificate|||||||  Id.   | Signed   ||signature|||digital  |       ||   and     ||||||| option.|attributes||         |||signature|       ||revocation |||||||________|          ||         ||+---------+       ||  values   |||||+--------------------++---------+|  ^  +-----------+|+-----------+|||+---------------------------------+  |  |Complete   ||      ^      |||                         |           |  |certificate||      |      |||                         |         2 |  |   and     ||      |      |||                         |           |  |revocation ||      |      |||                         |           |  |references ||      |      |||                       1 |          /   +-----------+|      |      ||+------------------------ | ------- / --------- ^-----+     /       |+------------------------- | ------ / ---------- |--------- / -------+                           |       /      ----- /  ------- /      +----------+         |      /      /  3     /   5      |          |         v     |      |        |      | Signer's |      +--------------------+      +-----------+      | document |----->| Validation Process |----->| - Valid   |      |          |      +--------------------+  4   | - Invalid |      +----------+          |  ^       |  ^         +-----------+                            v  |       v  |                        +---------+ +--------+                        |Signature| |Trusted |                        | Policy  | |Service |                        | Issuer  | |Provider|                        +---------+ +--------+          Figure B.7: Illustration of a CAdES validation sequence                      with CAdES-X Long   When the validation process creates the CAdES-C, it may also create   extended forms of validation data.   A first alternative is to time-stamp all data forming the CAdES-X   Type 1.   This is illustrated in Figure B.8.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                     [Page 99]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+------------------------------------------------ CAdES-X Type 1 -----+|+------------------------------- CAdES-C ------------------+         |||+-------------- CAdES ------------+                       |         ||||+--------------------++---------+|+---------++----------+|+-------+||||| ________           ||         |||Timestamp|| Complete |||       |||||||Sign.Pol|          ||Digital  |||over     ||  cert.   |||Time-  |||||||  Id.   | Signed   ||signature|||digital  ||   and    |||stamp  ||||||| option.|attributes||         |||signature||  revoc.  ||| over  |||||||________|          |+---------+|+---------+|references|||CAdES-C|||||+--------------------+           |    ^      |          |||       ||||+---------------------------------+    |      +----------+|+-------+|||                         |             |            ^     |    ^    |||                       1 |            /             |     |    |    ||+------------------------ | --------- / ----------- / -----+    |    |+------------------------- | -------- / ----------- / --------- / ----+                           |       2 /     ---3----            /      +----------+         |        /    /   -----------5------      |          |         v       |    |  /      | Signer's |      +--------------------+       +-----------+      | document |----->| Validation Process |-----> | - Valid   |      |          |      +--------------------+  4    | - Invalid |      +----------+          |  ^       |  ^          +-----------+                            v  |       v  |                        +---------+ +--------+                        |Signature| |Trusted |                        | Policy  | |Service |                        | Issuer  | |Provider|                        +---------+ +--------+    Figure B.8: Illustration of CAdES with eXtended validation data                CAdES-X Type 1   Another alternative is to time-stamp the certificate and revocation   information references used to validate the electronic signature (but   not the signature) (6).  The end result is called CAdES-X Type 2.   This is illustrated in Figure B.9.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 100]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+-------------------------------------------- CAdES-X Type 2 --------+|+------------------------------- CAdES-C -------------+             |||+-------------- CAdES ------------+                  |             ||||+--------------------++---------+|+---------+       |+-----------+||||| ________           ||         |||Timestamp|       ||Timestamp  |||||||Sign.Pol|          ||         |||over     |       ||   over    |||||||  Id.   | Signed   ||Digital  |||digital  |       ||complete   ||||||| option.|attributes||signature|||signature|       ||certificate|||||||________|          ||         |||         |       ||           |||||+--------------------++---------+|+---------+       ||   and     ||||+---------------------------------+  ^  +-----------+||revocation ||||                         |           |  |Complete   |||references ||||                         |           |  |certificate||+-----------+|||                         |           |  |   and     ||     ^       |||                       1 |         2 |  |revocation ||     |       |||                         |           |  |references ||     |       |||                         |           |  +-----------+|     |       ||+------------------------ | --------- | --- ^ --------+     |       ||                          |           |   3 |              /        ||                          |           |    /    ----------          ||                          |          /    /    /   6                ||                          |         /    /    /                     ||                          |        /    /    /                      |+------------------------- | ----- | -- | -- / ----------------------+                           |       |    |   |                           v       |    |   |                        +--------------------+      +-----------+                        | Validation Process |----->| - Valid   |                        +--------------------+  4   | - Invalid |                            |  ^       |  ^         +-----------+                            v  |       v  |                        +---------+ +--------+                        |Signature| |Trusted |                        | Policy  | |Service |                        | Issuer  | |Provider|                        +---------+ +--------+   Figure B.9: Illustration of CAdES with eXtended validation data               CAdES-X Type 2   Before the algorithms used in any of the electronic signatures become   or are likely to be compromised or rendered vulnerable in the future,   it may be necessary to time-stamp the entire electronic signature,   including all the values of the validation and user data as an ES   with Archive validation data (CAdES-A) (7).   A CAdES-A is illustrated in Figure B.10.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 101]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008+----------------------------- CAdES-A ---------------------------+|                                                                 ||  +-- CAdES-X Long Type 1 or 2  ----------+                      ||  |                                       |   +------------+     ||  |                                       |   |            |     ||  |                                       |   |  Archive   |     ||  |                                       |   | Time-stamp |     ||  |                                       |   |            |     ||  |                                       |   +------------+     ||  +---------------------------------------+         ^            ||  +----------+          ^   ^   ^   ^               |            ||  |          |          |   |   |   |              /             ||  | Signers' |          |   |   |   |             /              ||  | Document |\         |   |   |   |            /               ||  |          | \ 1    2 | 3 | 5 | 6 |         7 /                ||  +----------+  \       |   |   |   |          /                 ||                 \      |   |   |   |         /                  |+----------------- \ --- | - | - | - | ------ / ------------------+                    \    |   |   |   |       |                     |   |   |   |   |       |                     |   |   |   |   |       |                     v   v   |   |   |       |                 +-----------------------------+      +-----------+                 |      Validation Process     |----->| - Valid   |                 +-----------------------------+  4   | - Invalid |                     |  ^       |  ^                  +-----------+                     v  |       v  |                 +---------+ +--------+                 |Signature| |Trusted |                 | Policy  | |Service |                 | Issuer  | |Provider|                 +---------+ +--------+                 Figure B.10: Illustration of CAdES-AB.5.  Additional Optional Features   The present document also defines additional optional features to:      - indicate a commitment type being made by the signer;      - indicate the claimed time when the signature was done;      - indicate the claimed location of the signer;      - indicate the claimed or certified role under which a signature        was created;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 102]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - support counter signatures;      - support multiple signatures.Annex C (Informative): General Description   This annex explains some of the concepts and provides the rationale   for normative parts of the present document.   The specification below includes a description of why and when each   component of an electronic signature is useful, with a brief   description of the vulnerabilities and threats and the manner by   which they are countered.C.1.  The Signature Policy   The signature policy is a set of rules for the creation and   validation of an electronic signature, under which the signature can   be determined to be valid.  A given legal/contractual context may   recognize a particular signature policy as meeting its requirements.   A signature policy may be issued, for example, by a party relying on   the electronic signatures and selected by the signer for use with   that relying party.  Alternatively, a signature policy may be   established through an electronic trading association for use amongst   its members.  Both the signer and verifier use the same signature   policy.   The signature policy may be explicitly identified or may be implied   by the semantics of the data being signed and other external data,   like a contract being referenced, which itself refers to a signature   policy.  An explicit signature policy has a globally unique   reference, which is bound to an electronic signature by the signer as   part of the signature calculation.   The signature policy needs to be available in human readable form so   that it can be assessed to meet the requirements of the legal and   contractual context in which it is being applied.  To facilitate the   automatic processing of an electronic signature, the parts of the   signature policy, which specify the electronic rules for the creation   and validation of the electronic signature, also need to be   comprehensively defined and in a computer-processable form.   The signature policy thus includes the following:      - rules that apply to technical validation of a particular        signature;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 103]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - rules that may be implied through adoption of Certificate        Policies that apply to the electronic signature (e.g., rules for        ensuring the secrecy of the private signing key);      - rules that relate to the environment used by the signer, e.g.,        the use of an agreed CAD (Card Accepting Device) used in        conjunction with a smart card.   For example, the major rules required for technical validation can   include:      - recognized root keys or "top-level certification authorities";      - acceptable certificate policies (if any);      - necessary certificate extensions and values (if any);      - the need for the revocation status for each component of the        certification tree;      - acceptable TSAs (if time-stamp tokens are being used);      - acceptable organizations for keeping the audit trails with        time-marks (if time-marking is being used);      - acceptable AAs (if any are being used),and;      - rules defining the components of the electronic signature that        shall be provided by the signer with data required by the        verifier when required to provide long-term proof.C.2.  Signed Information   The information being signed may be defined as a MIME-encapsulated   message that can be used to signal the format of the content in order   to select the right display or application.  It can be composed of   formatted data, free text, or fields from an electronic form   (e-form).  For example, the Adobe(tm) format "pdf" or the eXtensible   Mark up Language (XML) may be used.  Annex D defines how the content   may be structured to indicate the type of signed data using MIME.C.3.  Components of an Electronic SignatureC.3.1.  Reference to the Signature Policy   When two independent parties want to evaluate an electronic   signature, it is fundamental that they get the same result.  This   requirement can be met using comprehensive signature policies thatPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 104]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   ensure consistency of signature validation.  Signature policies can   be identified implicitly by the data being signed, or they can be   explicitly identified using the CAdES-EPES form of electronic   signature; the CAdES-EPES mandates a consistent signature policy must   be used by both the signer and verifier.   By signing over the Signature Policy Identifier in the CAdES-EPES,   the signer explicitly indicates that he or she has applied the   signature policy in creating the signature.   In order to unambiguously identify the details of an explicit   signature policy that is to be used to verify a CAdES-EPES, the   signature, an identifier, and hash of the "Signature policy" shall be   part of the signed data.  Additional information about the explicit   policy (e.g., web reference to the document) may be carried as   "qualifiers" to the Signature Policy Identifier.   In order to unambiguously identify the authority responsible for   defining an explicit signature policy, the "Signature policy" can be   signed.C.3.2.  Commitment Type Indication   The commitment type can be indicated in the electronic signature   either:      - explicitly using a "commitment type indication" in the        electronic signature;      - implicitly or explicitly from the semantics of the signed data.   If the indicated commitment type is explicit using a "commitment type   indication" in the electronic signature, acceptance of a verified   signature implies acceptance of the semantics of that commitment   type.  The semantics of explicit commitment type indications may be   subject to signer and verifier agreement, specified as part of the   signature policy or registered for generic use across multiple   policies.   If a CAdES-EPES electronic signature format is used and the   electronic signature includes a commitment type indication other than   one of those recognized under the signature policy, the signature   shall be treated as invalid.   How commitment is indicated using the semantics of the data being   signed is outside the scope of the present document.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 105]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE: Examples of commitment indicated through the semantics of      the data being signed are:      - an explicit commitment made by the signer indicated by the type        of data being signed over.  Thus, the data structure being        signed can have an explicit commitment within the context of the        application (e.g., EDIFACT purchase order);      - an implicit commitment that is a commitment made by the signer        because the data being signed over has specific semantics        (meaning), which is only interpretable by humans, (i.e., free        text).C.3.3.  Certificate Identifier from the Signer   In many real-life environments, users will be able to get from   different CAs or even from the same CA, different certificates   containing the same public key for different names.  The prime   advantage is that a user can use the same private key for different   purposes.  Multiple use of the private key is an advantage when a   smart card is used to protect the private key, since the storage of a   smart card is always limited.  When several CAs are involved, each   different certificate may contain a different identity, e.g., as a   citizen of a nation or as an employee from a company.  Thus, when a   private key is used for various purposes, the certificate is needed   to clarify the context in which the private key was used when   generating the signature.  Where there is the possibility that   multiple private keys are used, it is necessary for the signer to   indicate to the verifier the precise certificate to be used.   Many current schemes simply add the certificate after the signed data   and thus are vulnerable to substitution attacks.  If the certificate   from the signer was simply appended to the signature and thus not   protected by the signature, anyone could substitute one certificate   for another, and the message would appear to be signed by someone   else.  In order to counter this kind of attack, the identifier of the   signer has to be protected by the digital signature from the signer.   In order to unambiguously identify the certificate to be used for the   verification of the signature, an identifier of the certificate from   the signer shall be part of the signed data.C.3.4.  Role Attributes   While the name of the signer is important, the position of the signer   within a company or an organization is of paramount importance as   well.  Some information (i.e., a contract) may only be valid if   signed by a user in a particular role, e.g., a Sales Director.  InPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 106]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   many cases, who the sales Director really is, is not that important,   but being sure that the signer is empowered by his company to be the   Sales Director is fundamental.   The present document defines two different ways for providing this   feature:      - by placing a claimed role name in the CMS signed attributes        field;      - by placing an attribute certificate containing a certified role        name in the CMS signed attributes field.      NOTE: Another possible approach would have been to use additional      attributes containing the roles name(s) in the signer's identity      certificate.  However, it was decided not to follow this approach      as it significantly complicates the management of certificates.      For example, by using separate certificates for the signer's      identity and roles means new identity keys need not be issued if a      user's role changes.C.3.4.1.  Claimed Role   The signer may be trusted to state his own role without any   certificate to corroborate this claim; in which case, the claimed   role can be added to the signature as a signed attribute.C.3.4.2.  Certified Role   Unlike public key certificates that bind an identifier to a public   key, Attribute Certificates bind the identifier of a certificate to   some attributes, like a role.  An Attribute Certificate is NOT issued   by a CA but by an Attribute Authority (AA).  The Attribute Authority,   in most cases, might be under the control of an organization or a   company that is best placed to know which attributes are relevant for   which individual.  The Attribute Authority may use or point to public   key certificates issued by any CA, provided that the appropriate   trust may be placed in that CA.  Attribute Certificates may have   various periods of validity.  That period may be quite short, e.g.,   one day.  While this requires that a new Attribute Certificate be   obtained every day, valid for that day, this can be advantageous   since revocation of such certificates may not be needed.  When   signing, the signer will have to specify which Attribute Certificate   it selects.  In order to do so, the Attribute Certificate will have   to be included in the signed data in order to be protected by the   digital signature from the signer.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 107]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   In order to unambiguously identify the attribute certificate(s) to be   used for the verification of the signature, an identifier of the   attribute certificate(s) from the signer shall be part of the signed   data.C.3.5.  Signer Location   In some transactions, the purported location of the signer at the   time he or she applies his signature may need to be indicated.  For   this reason, an optional location indicator shall be able to be   included.   In order to provide indication of the location of the signer at the   time he or she applied his signature, a location attribute may be   included in the signature.C.3.6.  Signing Time   The present document provides the capability to include a claimed   signing time as an attribute of an electronic signature.   Using this attribute, a signer may sign over a time that is the   claimed signing time.  When an ES with Time is created (CAdES-T),   then either a trusted time-stamp is obtained and added to the ES or a   trusted time-mark exists in an audit trail.  When a verifier accepts   a signature, the two times shall be within acceptable limits.   A further optional attribute is defined in the present document to   time-stamp the content and to provide proof of the existence of the   content, at the time indicated by the time-stamp token.   Using this optional attribute, a trusted secure time may be obtained   before the document is signed and included under the digital   signature.  This solution requires an online connection to a trusted   time-stamping service before generating the signature and may not   represent the precise signing time, since it can be obtained in   advance.  However, this optional attribute may be used by the signer   to prove that the signed object existed before the date included in   the time-stamp (seeSection 5.11.4).C.3.7.  Content Format   When presenting signed data to a human user, it may be important that   there is no ambiguity as to the presentation of the signed   information to the relying party.  In order for the appropriate   representation (text, sound, or video) to be selected by the relying   party when data (as opposed to data that has been further signed or   encrypted) is encapsulated in the SignedData (indicated by thePinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 108]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   eContentType within EncapsulatedContentInfo being set to id-data),   further typing information should be used to identify the type of   document being signed.  This is generally achieved using the MIME   content typing and encoding mechanism defined inRFC 2045 [6]).   Further information on the use of MIME is given in Annex F.C.3.8.  content-hints   The contents-hints attribute provides information on the innermost   signed content of a multi-layer message where one content is   encapsulated in another.  This may be useful if the signed data is   itself encrypted.C.3.9.  Content Cross-Referencing   When presenting a signed data is in relation to another signed data,   it may be important to identify the signed data to which it relates.   The content-reference and content-identifier attributes, as defined   in ESS (RFC 2634 [5]), provide the ability to link a request and   reply messages in an exchange between two parties.C.4.  Components of Validation DataC.4.1.  Revocation Status Information   A verifier will have to ascertain that the certificate of the signer   was valid at the time of the signature.  This can be done by either:      - using Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs);      - using responses from an online certificate status server (for        example, obtained through the OCSP protocol).      NOTE 1: The time of the signature may not be known, so      time-stamping or time-marking may be used to provide the time      indication of when it was known that the signature existed.      NOTE 2: When validating an electronic signature and checking      revocation status information, if a "grace period" is required, it      needs to be suitably long enough to allow the involved authority      to process a "last-minute" revocation request and for the request      to propagate through the revocation system.  This grace period is      to be added to the time included with the time-stamp token or the      time-mark, and thus the revocation status information should be      captured after the end of the grace period.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 109]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008C.4.1.1.  CRL Information   When using CRLs to get revocation information, a verifier will have   to make sure that he or she gets, at the time of the first   verification, the appropriate certificate revocation information from   the signer's CA.  This should be done as soon as possible to minimize   the time delay between the generation and verification of the   signature.  However, a "grace period" is required to allow CAs time   to process revocation requests.   For example, a revocation request may arrive at a CA just before   issuing the next CRL, and there may not enough time to include the   revised revocation status information.  This involves checking that   the signer certificate serial number is not included in the CRL.   Either the signer, the initial verifier, or a subsequent verifier may   obtain this CRL.  If obtained by the signer, then it shall be   conveyed to the verifier.  It may be convenient to archive the CRL   for ease of subsequent verification or arbitration.  Alternatively,   provided the CRL is archived elsewhere, which is accessible for the   purpose of arbitration, then the serial number of the CRL used may be   archived together with the verified electronic signature as a CAdES-C   form.   Even if the certificate serial number appears in the CRL with the   status "suspended" (i.e., on hold), the signature is not to be deemed   as valid since a suspended certificate is not supposed to be used   even by its rightful owner.C.4.1.2.  OCSP Information   When using OCSP to get revocation information, a verifier will have   to make sure that he or she gets, at the time of the first   verification, an OCSP response that contains the status "valid".   This should be done as soon as possible after the generation of the   signature, still providing a "grace period" suitable enough to allow   the involved authority to process a "last-minute" revocation request.   The signer, the verifier, or any other third party may fetch this   OCSP response.  Since OCSP responses are transient and thus are not   archived by any TSP, including CA, it is the responsibility of every   verifier to make sure that it is stored in a safe place.  The   simplest way is to store them associated with the electronic   signature.  An alternative would be to store them so that they can   then be easily retrieved and incorporate references to them in the   electronic signature itself as a CAdES-C form.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 110]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   In the same way as for the case of the CRL, it may happen that the   certificate is declared as invalid but with the secondary status   "suspended".  In such a case, the same comment as for the CRL   applies.C.4.2.  Certification Path   A verifier may have to ascertain that the certification path was   valid, at the time of the signature, up to a trust point, according   to the:      - naming constraints;      - certificate policy constraints;      - signature policy, when applicable.   Since the time of the signature cannot be known with certainty, an   upper limit of it should be used as indicated by either the   time-stamp or time-mark.   In this case, it will be necessary to capture all the certificates   from the certification path, starting with those from the signer and   ending up with those of the self-signed certificate from one trusted   root; when applicable, this may be specified as part of the Signature   Policy.  In addition, it will be necessary to capture the Certificate   Authority Revocation Lists (CARLs) to prove that none of the CAs from   the chain were revoked at the time of the signature.  Again, all this   material may be incorporated in the electronic signature (ES X   forms).  An alternative would be to store this information so that it   can be easily retrieved and incorporate references to it in the   electronic signature itself as a CAdES-C form.C.4.3.  Time-Stamping for Long Life of Signatures   An important property for long-standing signatures is that a   signature, having been found once to be valid, shall continue to be   so months or years later.   A signer, verifier, or both may be required to provide, on request,   proof that a digital signature was created or verified during the   validity period of all the certificates that make up the certificate   path.  In this case, the signer, verifier, or both will also be   required to provide proof that the signer's certificate and all the   CA certificates used to form a valid certification path were not   revoked when the signature was created or verified.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 111]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   It would be quite unacceptable to consider a signature as invalid   even if the keys or certificates were later compromised.  Thus, there   is a need to be able to demonstrate that the signature keys were   valid at the time that the signature was created to provide long-term   evidence of the validity of a signature.   It could be the case that a certificate was valid at the time of the   signature but revoked some time later.  In this event, evidence shall   be provided that the document was signed before the signing key was   revoked.  Time-stamping by a Time-Stamping Authority (TSA) can   provide such evidence.  A time-stamp is obtained by sending the hash   value of the given data to the TSA.  The returned "time-stamp" is a   signed document that contains the hash value, the identity of the   TSA, and the time of stamping.  This proves that the given data   existed before the time of stamping.  Time-stamping a digital   signature (by sending a hash of the signature to the TSA) before the   revocation of the signer's private key provides evidence that the   signature had been created before the certificate was revoked.   If a recipient wants to hold a valid electronic signature, he will   have to ensure that he has obtained a valid time-stamp for it before   that key (and any key involved in the validation) is revoked.  The   sooner the time-stamp is obtained after the signing time, the better.   Any time-stamp or time-mark that is taken after the expiration date   of any certificate in the certification path has no value in proving   the validity of a signature.   It is important to note that signatures may be generated "off-line"   and time-stamped at a later time by anyone, for example, by the   signer or any recipient interested in the value of the signature.   The time-stamp can thus be provided by the signer, together with the   signed document, or obtained by the recipient following receipt of   the signed document.   The time-stamp is NOT a component of the Basic Electronic Signature,   but it is the essential component of the ES with Time.   It is required, in the present document, that if a signer's digital   signature value is to be time-stamped, the time-stamp token is issued   by a trusted source, known as a Time-Stamping Authority.   The present document requires that the signer's digital signature   value be time-stamped by a trusted source before the electronic   signature can become an ES with Complete validation data.  Acceptable   TSAs may be specified in a Signature Validation Policy.   This technique is referred to as CAdES-C in the present document.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 112]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Should both the signer and verifier be required to time-stamp the   signature value to meet the requirements of the signature policy, the   signature policy may specify a permitted time delay between the two   time-stamps.C.4.4.  Time-Stamping for Long Life of Signature before CA Key        Compromises   Time-stamped, extended electronic signatures are needed when there is   a requirement to safeguard against the possibility of a CA key in the   certificate chain ever being compromised.  A verifier may be required   to provide, on request, proof that the certification path and the   revocation information used at the time of the signature were valid,   even in the case where one of the issuing keys or OCSP responder keys   is later compromised.   The present document defines two ways of using time-stamps to protect   against this compromise:      - time-stamp the ES with Complete validation data, when an OCSP        response is used to get the status of the certificate from the        signer (CAdES-X Type 1).  This format is suitable to be used        with an OCSP response, and it offers the additional advantage of        providing an integrity protection over the whole data;      - time-stamp only the certification path and revocation        information references when a CRL is used to get the status of        the certificate from the signer (CAdES-X Type2).  This format is        suitable to be used with CRLs, since the time-stamped        information may be used for more than one signature (when        signers have their certificates issued by the same CA and when        signatures can be checked using the same CRLs).      NOTE: The signer, verifier, or both may obtain the time-stamp.C.4.4.1.  Time-Stamping the ES with Complete Validation Data (CAdES-X          Type 1)   When an OCSP response is used, it is necessary to time-stamp in   particular that response in the case the key from the responder would   be compromised.  Since the information contained in the OCSP response   is user specific and time specific, an individual time-stamp is   needed for every signature received.  Instead of placing the   time-stamp only over the certification path references and revocation   information references, which include the OCSP response, the   time-stamp is placed on the CAdES-C.  Since the certification path   and revocation information references are included in the ES with   Complete validation data, they are also protected.  For the samePinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 113]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   cryptographic price, this provides an integrity mechanism over the ES   with Complete validation data.  Any modification can be immediately   detected.  It should be noticed that other means of   protecting/detecting the integrity of the ES with Complete validation   data exist and could be used.  Although the technique requires a   time-stamp for every signature, it is well suited for individual   users wishing to have an integrity-protected copy of all the   validated signatures they have received.   By time-stamping the complete electronic signature, including the   digital signature as well as the references to the certificates and   revocation status information used to support validation of that   signature, the time-stamp ensures that there is no ambiguity in the   means of validating that signature.   This technique is referred to as CAdES-X Type 1 in the present   document.      NOTE: Trust is achieved in the references by including a hash of      the data being referenced.   If it is desired for any reason to keep a copy of the additional data   being referenced, the additional data may be attached to the   electronic signature, in which case the electronic signature becomes   a CAdES-X Long Type 1, as defined by the present document.   A CAdES-X Long Type 1 is simply the concatenation of a CAdES-X Type   1, with a copy of the additional data being referenced.C.4.4.2.  Time-Stamping Certificates and Revocation Information          References (CAdES-X Type 2)   Time-stamping each ES with Complete validation data, as defined   above, may not be efficient, particularly when the same set of CA   certificates and CRL information is used to validate many signatures.   Time-stamping CA certificates will stop any attacker from issuing   bogus CA certificates that could be claimed to exist before the CA   key was compromised.  Any bogus time-stamped CA certificates will   show that the certificate was created after the legitimate CA key was   compromised.  In the same way, time-stamping CA CRLs will stop any   attacker from issuing bogus CA CRLs that could be claimed to exist   before the CA key was compromised.   Time-stamping of commonly used certificates and CRLs can be done   centrally, e.g., inside a company or by a service provider.  This   method reduces the amount of data the verifier has to time-stamp; for   example, it could be reduced to just one time-stamp per day (i.e., inPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 114]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   the case where all the signers use the same CA, and the CRL applies   for the whole day).  The information that needs to be time-stamped is   not the actual certificates and CRLs, but the unambiguous references   to those certificates and CRLs.   This technique is referred to as CAdES-X Type 2 in the present   document and requires the following:      - all the CA certificates references and revocation information        references (i.e., CRLs) used in validating the CAdES-C are        covered by one or more time-stamps.   Thus, a CAdES-C with a time-stamp signature value at time T1 can be   proved valid if all the CA and CRL references are time-stamped at   time T1+.C.4.5.  Time-Stamping for Archive of Signature   Advances in computing increase the probability of being able to break   algorithms and compromise keys.  There is therefore a requirement to   be able to protect electronic signatures against this possibility.   Over a period of time, weaknesses may occur in the cryptographic   algorithms used to create an electronic signature (e.g., due to the   time available for cryptoanalysis, or improvements in   cryptoanalytical techniques).  Before such weaknesses become likely,   a verifier should take extra measures to maintain the validity of the   electronic signature.  Several techniques could be used to achieve   this goal, depending on the nature of the weakened cryptography.  In   order to simplify matters, a single technique called Archive   validation data, covering all the cases, is being used in the present   document.   Archive validation data consists of the validation data and the   complete certificate and revocation data, time-stamped together with   the electronic signature.  The Archive validation data is necessary   if the hash function and the crypto algorithms that were used to   create the signature are no longer secure.  Also, if it cannot be   assumed that the hash function used by the Time-Stamping Authority is   secure, then nested time-stamps of the Archived Electronic Signature   are required.   The potential for a Trusted Service Provider (TSP) key compromise   should be significantly lower than user keys because TSP(s) are   expected to use stronger cryptography and better key protection.  It   can be expected that new algorithms (or old ones with greater key   lengths) will be used.  In such a case, a sequence of time-stamps   will protect against forgery.  Each time-stamp needs to be affixedPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 115]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   before either the compromise of the signing key or the cracking of   the algorithms used by the TSA.  TSAs (Time-Stamping Authorities)   should have long keys (e.g., which at the time of drafting the   present document was at least 2048 bits for the signing RSA   algorithm) and/or a "good" or different algorithm.   Nested time-stamps will also protect the verifier against key   compromise or cracking the algorithm on the old electronic   signatures.   The process will need to be performed and iterated before the   cryptographic algorithms used for generating the previous time-stamp   are no longer secure.  Archive validation data may thus bear multiple   embedded time-stamps.   This technique is referred to as CAdES-A in the present document.C.4.6.  Reference to Additional Data   Using CAdES-X Type 1 or CAdES-X Type 2 extended validation data,   verifiers still need to keep track of all the components that were   used to validate the signature, in order to be able to retrieve them   again later on.  These components may be archived by an external   source, like a Trusted Service Provider; in which case, referenced   information that is provided as part of the ES with Complete   validation data (CAdES-C) is adequate.  The actual certificates and   CRL information reference in the CAdES-C can be gathered when needed   for arbitration.   If references to additional data are not adequate, then the actual   values of all the certificates and revocation information required   may be part of the electronic signature.  This technique is referred   to as CAdES-X Long Type 1 or CAdES-X Long Type 2 in the present   document.C.4.7.  Time-Stamping for Mutual Recognition   In some business scenarios, both the signer and the verifier need to   time-stamp their own copy of the signature value.  Ideally, the two   time-stamps should be as close as possible to each other.      EXAMPLE:  A contract is signed by two parties, A and B,      representing their respective organizations; to time-stamp the      signer and verifier data, two approaches are possible:         - under the terms of the contract, a predefined common           "trusted" TSA may be used;Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 116]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008         - if both organizations run their own time-stamping services, A           and B can have the transaction time-stamped by these two           time-stamping services.   In the latter case, the electronic signature will only be considered   valid if both time-stamps were obtained in due time (i.e., there   should not be a long delay between obtaining the two time-stamps).   Thus, neither A nor B can repudiate the signing time indicated by   their own time-stamping service.  Therefore, A and B do not need to   agree on a common "trusted" TSA to get a valid transaction.   It is important to note that signatures may be generated "off-line"   and time-stamped at a later time by anyone, e.g., by the signer or   any recipient interested in validating the signature.  The time-stamp   over the signature from the signer can thus be provided by the   signer, together with the signed document, and/or be obtained by the   verifier following receipt of the signed document.   The business scenarios may thus dictate that one or more of the   long-term signature time-stamping methods described above be used.   This may be part of a mutually agreed Signature Validation Policy   that is part of an agreed signature policy under which digital   signatures may be used to support the business relationship between   the two parties.C.4.8.  TSA Key Compromise   TSA servers should be built in such a way that once the private   signature key is installed, there is minimal likelihood of compromise   over as long as a possible period.  Thus, the validity period for the   TSA's keys should be as long as possible.   Both the CAdES-T and the CAdES-C contain at least one time-stamp over   the signer's signature.  In order to protect against the compromise   of the private signature key used to produce that time-stamp, the   Archive validation data can be used when a different Time-Stamping   Authority key is involved to produce the additional time-stamp.  If   it is believed that the TSA key used in providing an earlier   time-stamp may ever be compromised (e.g., outside its validity   period), then the CAdES-A should be used.  For extremely long   periods, this may be applied repeatedly using new TSA keys.   This technique is referred to as a nested CAdES-A in the present   document.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 117]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008C.5.  Multiple Signatures   Some electronic signatures may only be valid if they bear more than   one signature.  This is generally the case when a contract is signed   between two parties.  The ordering of the signatures may or may not   be important, i.e., one may or may not need to be applied before the   other.   Several forms of multiple and counter signatures need to be   supported, which fall into two basic categories:      - independent signatures;      - embedded signatures.   Independent signatures are parallel signatures where the ordering of   the signatures is not important.  The capability to have more than   one independent signature over the same data shall be provided.   Embedded signatures are applied one after the other and are used   where the order in which the signatures are applied is important.   The capability to sign over signed data shall be provided.   These forms are described inSection 5.13.  All other multiple   signature schemes, e.g., a signed document with a countersignature,   double countersignatures, or multiple signatures can be reduced to   one or more occurrences of the above two cases.Annex D (Informative): Data Protocols to Interoperate with TSPsD.1.  Operational Protocols   The following protocols can be used by signers and verifiers to   interoperate with Trusted Service Providers during the electronic   signature creation and validation.D.1.1.  Certificate Retrieval   User certificates, CA certificates, and cross-certificates can be   retrieved from a repository using the Lightweight Directory Access   Protocol as defined inRFC 3494 [RFC3494], with the schema defined inRFC 4523 [RFC4523].D.1.2.  CRL Retrieval   Certificate revocation lists, including authority revocation lists   and partial CRL variants, can be retrieved from a repository using   the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, as defined inRFC 3494   [RFC3494], with the schema defined inRFC 4523 [RFC4523].Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 118]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008D.1.3.  Online Certificate Status   As an alternative to the use of certificate revocation lists, the   status of a certificate can be checked using the Online Certificate   Status Protocol (OCSP), as defined inRFC 2560 [3].D.1.4.  Time-Stamping   The time-stamping service can be accessed using the Time-Stamping   Protocol defined inRFC 3161 [7].D.2.  Management Protocols   Signers and verifiers can use the following management protocols to   manage the use of certificates.D.2.1.  Request for Certificate Revocation   Request for a certificate to be revoked can be made using the   revocation request and response messages defined inRFC 4210   [RFC4210].Annex E (Informative): Security ConsiderationsE.1.  Protection of Private Key   The security of the electronic signature mechanism defined in the   present document depends on the privacy of the signer's private key.   Implementations should take steps to ensure that private keys cannot   be compromised.E.2.  Choice of Algorithms   Implementers should be aware that cryptographic algorithms become   weaker with time.  As new cryptoanalysis techniques are developed and   computing performance improves, the work factor to break a particular   cryptographic algorithm will reduce.  Therefore, cryptographic   algorithm implementations should be modular, allowing new algorithms   to be readily inserted.  That is, implementers should be prepared for   the set of mandatory-to-implement algorithms to change over time.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 119]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Annex F (Informative): Example Structured Contents and MIMEF.1.  Use of MIME to Encode Data   The signed content may be structured using MIME (Multipurpose   Internet Mail Extensions --RFC 2045 [6]).  Whilst the MIME structure   was initially developed for Internet email, it has a number of   features that make it useful to provide a common structure for   encoding a range of electronic documents and other multi-media data   (e.g., photographs, video).  These features include:      - providing a means of signalling the type of "object" being        carried (e.g., text, image, ZIP file, application data);      - providing a means of associating a file name with an object;      - associating several independent objects (e.g., a document and        image) to form a multi-part object;      - handling  data encoded in text or binary and, if necessary,        re-encoding the binary as text.   When encoding a single object, MIME consists of:      - header information, followed by;      - encoded content.   This structure can be extended to support multi-part content.F.1.1.  Header Information   A MIME header includes:   MIME Version information: e.g., MIME-Version: 1.0   Content type information, which includes information describing the   content sufficient for it to be presented to a user or application   process, as required.  This includes information on the "media type"   (e.g., text, image, audio) or whether the data is for passing to a   particular type of application.  In the case of text, the content   type includes information on the character set used, e.g.,   Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii".   Content-encoding information, which defines how the content is   encoded (see below about encoding supported by MIME).Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 120]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Other information about the content, such as a description or an   associated file name.   An example MIME header for text object is:   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1   Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable   An example MIME header for a binary file containing a pdf document   is:   Content-Type: application/pdf   Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64   Content-Description: JCFV201.pdf   Content-Disposition: filename="JCFV201.pdf"F.1.2.  Content Encoding   MIME supports a range of mechanisms for encoding both text and binary   data.   Text data can be carried transparently as lines of text data encoded   in 7- or 8-bit ASCII characters.  MIME also includes a   "quoted-printable" encoding that converts characters other than the   basic ASCII into an ASCII sequence.   Binary can either be carried:      - transparently as 8-bit octets; or      - converted to a basic set of characters using a system called        Base64.      NOTE: As there are some mail relays that can only handle 7-bit      ASCII, Base64 encoding is usually used on the Internet.F.1.3.  Multi-Part Content   Several objects (e.g., text and a file attachment) can be associated   together using a special "multi-part" content type.  This is   indicated by the content type "multipart" with an indication of the   string to be used indicating a separation between each part.   In addition to a header for the overall multipart content, each part   includes its own header information indicating the inner content type   and encoding.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 121]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   An example of a multipart content is:Mime-Version: 1.0Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01BC4599.98004A80"Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit------=_NextPart_000_01BC4599.98004A80Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bitPer your request, I've attached our proposal for the Java Card Version2.0 API and the Java Card FAQ.------=_NextPart_000_01BC4599.98004A80Content-Type: application/pdf; name="JCFV201.pdf"Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64Content-Description: JCFV201.pdfContent-Disposition: attachment; filename="JCFV201.pdf"0M8R4KGxGuEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAPgADAP7/CQAGAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACAAAAAgAAAAAAAAAAEAAAtAAAAAEAAAD+////AAAAAAMAAAAGAAAA////////////////////////////////////////AANhAAQAYg==------=_NextPart_000_01BC4599.98004A80--   Multipart content can be nested.  So a set of associated objects   (e.g., HTML text and images) can be handled as a single attachment to   another object (e.g., text).   The Content-Type from each part of the S/MIME message indicates the   type of content.F.2.  S/MIME   The specific use of MIME to carry CMS (extended as defined in the   present document) secured data is called S/MIME (see [RFC3851]).   S/MIME carries electronic signatures as either:      - an "application/pkcs7-mime" object with the CMS carried as a        binary attachment (PKCS7 is the name of the early version of        CMS).        The signed data may be included in the SignedData, which itself        may be included in a single S/MIME object.  See[RFC3851],        Section 3.4.2: "Signing Using application/pkcs7-mime with        SignedData" and Figure F.1 hereafter.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 122]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   or      - a "multipart/signed" object with the signed data and the        signature encoded as separate MIME objects.        The signed data is not included in the SignedData, and the CMS        structure only includes the signature.  See [RFC3851],Section3.4.3: "Signing Using the multipart/signed Format" and Figure        F.2 hereafter.        +-------------++----------++-------------++------------+        |             ||          ||             ||            |        |   S/MIME    ||  CAdES   ||    MIME     ||  pdf file  |        |             ||          ||             ||            |        |Content-Type=||SignedData||Content-Type=||Dear MrSmith|        |application/ || eContent ||application/ ||Received    |        |pkcs7-mime   ||          ||pdf          ||  100 tins  |        |             ||          ||             ||            |        |smime-type=  ||     /|   ||       /|    ||  Mr.Jones  |        |signed-data  ||    / -----+      / ------+            |        |             ||    \ -----+      \ ------+            |        |             ||     \|   ||       \|    |+------------+        |             ||          |+-------------+        |             |+----------+        +-------------+            Figure F.1: Signing Using application/pkcs7-mimeF.2.1.  Using application/pkcs7-mime   This approach is similar to handling signed data as any other binary   file attachment.   An example of signed data encoded using this approach is:   Content-Type: application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type=signed-data;   Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=smime.p7m     567GhIGfHfYT6ghyHhHUujpfyF4f8HHGTrfvhJhjH776tbB9HG4VQbnj7     77n8HHGT9HG4VQpfyF467GhIGfHfYT6rfvbnj756tbBghyHhHUujhJhjH     HUujhJh4VQpfyF467GhIGfHfYGTrfvbnjT6jH7756tbB9H7n8HHGghyHh     6YT64V0GhIGfHfQbnj75Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 123]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008F.2.2.  Using application/pkcs7-signature   CMS also supports an alternative structure where the signature and   data being protected are separate MIME objects carried within a   single message.  In this case, the signed data is not included in the   SignedData, and the CMS structure only includes the signature.  See[RFC3851], Section 3.4.3: "Signing Using the multipart/signed Format"   and Figure F.2 hereafter.   An example of signed data encoded using this approach is:   Content-Type: multipart/signed;             protocol="application/pkcs7-signature";             micalg=sha1; boundary=boundary42          --boundary42          Content-Type: text/plain          This is a clear-signed message.          --boundary42   Content-Type: application/pkcs7-signature; name=smime.p7s          Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64          Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=smime.p7s          ghyHhHUujhJhjH77n8HHGTrfvbnj756tbB9HG4VQpfyF467GhIGfHfYT6          4VQpfyF467GhIGfHfYT6jH77n8HHGghyHhHUujhJh756tbB9HGTrfvbnj          n8HHGTrfvhJhjH776tbB9HG4VQbnj7567GhIGfHfYT6ghyHhHUujpfyF4          7GhIGfHfYT64VQbnj756          --boundary42--   With this second approach, the signed data passes through the CMS   process and is carried as part of a multiple-parts signed MIME   structure, as illustrated in Figure F.2.  The CMS structure just   holds the electronic signature.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 124]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   +---------------++----------++-------------++------------+   |               ||          ||             ||            |   |     MIME      ||  CAdES   ||    MIME     ||  pdf file  |   |               ||          ||             ||            |   |Content-Type=  ||SignedData||Content-Type=||Dear MrSmith|   |multipart/     ||          ||application/ ||Received    |   |signed         ||          ||pdf          ||  100 tins  |   |        /|     ||          ||             ||            |   |       / -------------------+        /|   ||  Mr.Jones  |   |       \ -------------------+       / -----+            |   |        \|     ||          ||       \ -----+            |   |Content-Type=  ||          ||        \|   |+------------+   |application/   ||          |+-------------+   |pdf            ||          |   |               ||          |   |Content-Type=  ||          |   |application/   ||          |   |pkcs7-signature||          |   |               ||          |   |        /|     ||          |   |       / -------+          |   |       \ -------+          |   |        \|     ||----------+   |               |   +---------------+       Figure F.2: Signing Using application/pkcs7-signature   This second approach (multipart/signed) has the advantage that the   signed data can be decoded by any MIME-compatible system even if it   does not recognize CMS-encoded electronic signatures.Annex G (Informative): Relationship to the European Directive and EESSIG.1.  Introduction   This annex provides an indication of the relationship between   electronic signatures created under the present document and   requirements under the European Parliament and Council Directive on a   Community framework for electronic signatures.      NOTE: Legal advice should be sought on the specific national      legislation regarding use of electronic signatures.   The present document is one of a set of standards that has been   defined under the "European Electronic Signature Standardization   Initiative" (EESSI) for electronic signature products and solutions   compliant with the European Directive for Electronic Signatures.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 125]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008G.2.  Electronic Signatures and the Directive   This directive defines electronic signatures as:      - "data in electronic form which are attached to or logically        associated with other electronic data and which serve as a        method of authentication".   The directive states that an electronic signature should not be   denied "legal effectiveness and admissibility as evidence in legal   proceedings" solely on the grounds that it is in electronic form.   The directive identifies an electronic signature as having   equivalence to a hand-written signature if it meets specific   criteria:      - it is an "advanced electronic signature" with the following        properties:         a) it is uniquely linked to the signatory;         b) it is capable of identifying the signatory;         c) it is created using means that the signatory can maintain            under his sole control; and         d) it is linked to the data to which it relates in such a            manner that any subsequent change of the data is detectable.      - it is based on a certificate that meets detailed criteria given        in Annex I of the directive and is issued by a        "certification-service-provider" that meets requirements given        in Annex II of the directive.  Such a certificate is referred to        as a "qualified certificate";      - it is created by a "device", for which detailed criteria are        given in Annex III of the directive.  Such a device is referred        to a "secure-signature-creation device".   This form of electronic signature is referred to as a "qualified   electronic signature" in EESSI (see below).Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 126]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008G.3.  ETSI Electronic Signature Formats and the Directive   An electronic signature created in accordance with the present   document is:      a) considered to be an "electronic signature" under the terms of         the Directive;      b) considered to be an "advanced electronic signature" under the         terms of the Directive;      c) considered to be a "Qualified Electronic Signature", provided         the additional requirements in Annex I, II, and III of the         Directive are met.  The requirements in Annex I, II, and III of         the Directive are outside the scope of the present document,         and are subject to standardization elsewhere.G.4.  EESSI Standards and Classes of Electronic SignatureG.4.1.  Structure of EESSI Standardization   EESSI looks at standards in several areas.  See the ETSI and CEN web   sites for the latest list of standards and their versions:      - use of X.509 public key certificates as qualified certificates;      - security Management and Certificate Policy for CSPs Issuing        Qualified Certificates;      - security requirements for trustworthy systems used by CSPs        Issuing Qualified Certificates;      - security requirements for Secure Signature Creation Devices;      - security requirements for Signature Creation Systems;      - procedures for Electronic Signature Verification;      - electronic signature syntax and encoding formats;      - protocol to interoperate with a Time-Stamping Authority;      - Policy requirements for Time-Stamping Authorities; and      - XML electronic signature formats.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 127]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Each of these standards addresses a range of requirements, including   the requirements of Qualified Electronic Signatures, as specified in   Article 5.1 of the Directive.  However, some of them also address   general requirements of electronic signatures for business and   electronic commerce, which all fall into the category of Article 5.2   of the Directive.  Such variation in the requirements may be   identified either as different levels or different options.G.4.2.  Classes of Electronic Signatures   Since some of these standards address a range of requirements, it may   be useful to identify a set of standards to address a specific   business need.  Such a set of standards and their uses define a class   of electronic signature.  The first class already identified is the   qualified electronic signature, fulfilling the requirements of   Article 5.1 of the Directive.   A limited number of "classes of electronic signatures" and   corresponding profiles could be defined in close cooperation with   actors on the market (business, users, suppliers). The need for such   standards is envisaged, in addition to those for qualified electronic   signatures, in areas such as:      - different classes of electronic signatures with long-term        validity;      - electronic signatures for business transactions with limited        value.G.4.3.  Electronic Signature Classes and the ETSI Electronic Signature        Format   The electronic signature format defined in the present document is   applicable to the EESSI area "electronic signature and encoding   formats".   An electronic signature produced by a signer (seeSection 5 and   conformanceSection 10.1) is applicable to the proposed class of   electronic signature: "qualified electronic signatures fulfilling   article 5.1".   With the addition of attributes by the verifier (seeSection 6 and   conformanceSection 10.2) the qualified electronic signature supports   long-term validity.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 128]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Annex H (Informative): APIs for the Generation and Verification of                       Electronic Signatures Tokens   While the present document describes the data format of an electronic   signature, the question is whether there exist APIs (Application   Programming Interfaces) able to manipulate these structures.  At   least two such APIs have been defined; one set by the IETF and   another set by the OMG (Object Management Group).H.1.  Data Framing   In order to be able to use either of these APIs, it will be necessary   to frame the previously defined electronic signature data structures   using a mechanism-independent token format.Section 3.1 of RFC 2743   [RFC2743] specifies a mechanism-independent level of encapsulating   representation for the initial token of a GSS-API context   establishment sequence, incorporating an identifier of the mechanism   type to be used on that context and enabling tokens to be interpreted   unabmiguously.   In order to be processable by these APIs, all electronic signature   data formats that are defined in the present document shall be framed   following that description.   The encoding format for the token tag is derived from ASN.1 and DER,   but its concrete representation is defined directly in terms of   octets rather than at the ASN.1 level, in order to facilitate   interoperable implementation without use of general ASN.1 processing   code.  The token tag consists of the following elements, in order:      1) 0x60 -- Tag forRFC 2743 SEQUENCE; indicates that constructed         form, definite length encoding follows.      2) Token-length octets, specifying length of subsequent data         (i.e., the summed lengths of elements 3 to 5 in this list, and         of the mechanism-defined token object following the tag).  This         element comprises a variable number of octets:         a) If the indicated value is less than 128, it shall be            represented in a single octet with bit 8 (high order) set to            "0" and the remaining bits representing the value.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 129]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008         b) If the indicated value is 128 or more, it shall be            represented in two or more octets, with bit 8 of the first            octet set to "1" and the remaining bits of the first octet            specifying the number of additional octets.  The subsequent            octets carry the value, 8 bits per octet, with the most            significant digit first.  The minimum number of octets shall            be used to encode the length (i.e., no octets representing            leading zeros shall be included within the length encoding).      3) 0x06 -- Tag for OBJECT IDENTIFIER.      4) Object identifier length -- length (number of octets) of the         encoded object identifier contained in element 5, encoded per         rules as described in 2a) and 2b) above.      5) object identifier octets -- variable number of octets, encoded         per ASN.1 BER rules:         - The first octet contains the sum of two values:            (1) the top-level object identifier component, multiplied by                40 (decimal); and            (2) the second-level object identifier component.                This special case is the only point within an object                identifier encoding where a single octet represents                contents of more than one component.            - Subsequent octets, if required, encode successively lower              components in the represented object identifier.  A              component's encoding may span multiple octets, encoding 7              bits per octet (most significant bits first) and with bit              8 set to "1" on all but the final octet in the component's              encoding.  The minimum number of octets shall be used to              encode each component (i.e., no octets representing              leading zeros shall be included within a component's              encoding).      NOTE: In many implementations, elements 3 to 5 may be stored and      referenced as a contiguous string constant.   The token tag is immediately followed by a mechanism-defined token   object.  Note that no independent size specifier intervenes following   the object identifier value to indicate the size of the   mechanism-defined token object.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 130]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Tokens conforming to the present document shall have the following   OID in order to be processable by IDUP-APIs:   id-etsi-es-IDUP-Mechanism-v1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=    { itu-t(0) identified-organization(4) etsi(0)     electronic-signature-standard (1733) part1 (1) IDUPMechanism (4)     etsiESv1(1) }H.2.  IDUP-GSS-APIs Defined by the IETF   The IETF CAT WG produced, in December 1998, an RFC (RFC 2479   [RFC2479]) under the name of IDUP-GSS-API (Independent Data Unit   Protection) able to handle the electronic signature data format   defined in the present document.   The IDUP-GSS-API includes support for non-repudiation services.   It supports evidence generation, where "evidence" is information that   either by itself, or when used in conjunction with other information,   is used to establish proof about an event or action, as well as   evidence verification.   IDUP supports various types of evidences.  All the types defined in   IDUP are supported in the present document through the   commitment-type parameter.Section 2.3.3 of IDUP describes the specific calls needed to handle   evidence ("EV" calls).  The "EV" group of calls provides a simple,   high-level interface to underlying IDUP mechanisms when application   developers need to deal with only evidence: not with encryption or   integrity services.   All generations and verification are performed according to the   content of a NR policy that is referenced in the context.   Get_token_details is used to return the attributes that correspond to   a given input token to an application.  Since IDUP-GSS-API tokens are   meant to be opaque to the calling application, this function allows   the application to determine information about the token without   having to violate the opaqueness intention of IDUP.  Of primary   importance is the mechanism type, which the application can then use   as input to the IDUP_Establish_Env() call in order to establish the   correct environment in which to have the token processed.   Generate_token generates a non-repudiation token using the current   environment.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 131]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   Verify_evidence verifies the evidence token using the current   environment.  This operation returns a major_status code that can be   used to determine whether the evidence contained in a token is   complete (i.e., can be successfully verified (perhaps years) later).   If a token's evidence is not complete, the token can be passed to   another API, form_complete_pidu, to complete it.  This happens when a   status "conditionally valid" is returned.  That status corresponds to   the status "validation incomplete" of the present document.   Form_complete_PIDU is used primarily when the evidence token itself   does not contain all the data required for its verification, and it   is anticipated that some of the data not stored in the token may   become unavailable during the interval between generation of the   evidence token and verification unless it is stored in the token.   The Form_Complete_PIDU operation gathers the missing information and   includes it in the token so that verification can be guaranteed to be   possible at any future time.H.3.  CORBA Security Interfaces Defined by the OMG   Non-repudiation interfaces have been defined in "CORBA Security", a   document produced by the OMG (Object Management Group).  These   interfaces are described in IDL (Interface Definition Language) and   are optional.   The handling of "tokens" supporting non-repudiation is done through   the following interfaces:      - set_NR_features specifies the features to apply to future        evidence generation and verification operations;      - get_NR_features returns the features that will be applied to        future evidence generation and verification operations;      - generate_token generates a non-repudiation token using the        current non-repudiation features;      - verify_evidence verifies the evidence token using the current        non-repudiation features;      - get_tokens_details returns information about an input        non-repudiation token.  The information returned depends upon        the type of token;      - form_complete_evidence is used when the evidence token itself        does not contain all the data required for its verification, and        it is anticipated that some of the data not stored in the token        may become unavailable during the interval between generation ofPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 132]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008        the evidence token and verification unless it is stored in the        token.  The form_complete_evidence operation gathers the missing        information and includes it in the token so that verification        can be guaranteed to be possible at any future time.      NOTE: The similarity between the two sets of APIs is noticeable.Annex I (Informative): Cryptographic AlgorithmsRFC 3370 [10] describes the conventions for using several   cryptographic algorithms with the Crytographic Message Syntax (CMS).   Only the hashing and signing algorithms are appropriate for use with   the present document.   Since the publication ofRFC 3370 [10], MD5 has been broken.  This   algorithm is no longer considered appropriate and has been deleted   from the list of algorithms.I.1.  Digest AlgorithmsI.1.1.  SHA-1   The SHA-1 digest algorithm is defined in FIPS Pub 180-1.  The   algorithm identifier for SHA-1 is:sha-1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) identified-organization(3) oiw(14)secsig(3) algorithm(2) 26 }   The AlgorithmIdentifier parameters field is optional.  If present,   the parameters field shall contain an ASN.1 NULL.  Implementations   should accept SHA-1 AlgorithmIdentifiers with absent parameters as   well as NULL parameters.  Implementations should generate SHA-1   AlgorithmIdentifiers with NULL parameters.I.1.2.  General   The following is a selection of work that has been done in the area   of digest algorithms or, as they are often called, hash functions:      - ISO/IEC 10118-1 (1994) [ISO10118-1]: "Information technology -        Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 1: General". ISO/IEC        10118-1 contains definitions and describes basic concepts.      - ISO/IEC 10118-2 (1994) [ISO10118-2]: "Information technology -        Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 2: Hash-functions        using an n-bit block cipher algorithm".  ISO/IEC 10118-2        specifies two ways to construct a hash-function from a block        cipher.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 133]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - ISO/IEC 10118-3 (1997) [ISO10118-3]: "Information technology -        Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 3: Dedicated        hash-functions".  ISO/IEC 10118-3 specifies the following        dedicated hash-functions:         - SHA-1 (FIPS 180-1);         - RIPEMD-128;         - RIPEMD-160.      - ISO/IEC 10118-4 (1998) [ISO10118-4]: "Information technology -        Security techniques - Hash-functions - Part 4: Hash-functions        using modular arithmetic".      -RFC 1320 (PS 1992): "The MD4 Message-Digest Algorithm".RFC1320 specifies the hash-function MD4.  Today, MD4 is considered        outdated.      -RFC 1321 (I 1992): "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm".RFC 1321        (informational) specifies the hash-function MD5.  Today, MD5 is        not recommended for new implementations.      - FIPS Publication 180-1 (1995): "Secure Hash Standard".  FIPS        180-1 specifies the Secure Hash Algorithm (SHA), dedicated hash-        function developed for use with the DSA.  The original SHA,        published in 1993, was slightly revised in 1995 and renamed        SHA-1.      - ANSI X9.30-2 (1997) [X9.30-2]: "Public Key Cryptography for the        Financial Services Industry - Part 2: The Secure Hash Algorithm        (SHA-1)".  X9.30-2 specifies the ANSI-Version of SHA-1.      - ANSI X9.31-2 (1996) [X9.31-2]: "Public Key Cryptography Using        Reversible Algorithms for the Financial Services Industry - Part        2: Hash Algorithms".  X9.31-2 specifies hash algorithms.I.2.  Digital Signature AlgorithmsI.2.1.  DSA   The DSA signature algorithm is defined in FIPS Pub 186.  DSA is   always used with the SHA-1 message digest algorithm.  The algorithm   identifier for DSA is:id-dsa-with-sha1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=  { iso(1) member-body(2) us(840)x9-57 (10040) x9cm(4) 3 }   The AlgorithmIdentifier parameters field shall not be present.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 134]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008I.2.2.  RSA   The RSA signature algorithm is defined inRFC 3447 [RFC3447].RFC3370 [10] specifies the use of the RSA signature algorithm with the   SHA-1 algorithm.  The algorithm identifier for RSA with SHA-1 is:   Sha1WithRSAEncryption OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)   us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-1(1) 5 }      NOTE:RFC 3370 [10] recommends that MD5 not be used for new      implementations.I.2.3.  General      The following is a selection of work that has been done in the      area of digital signature mechanisms:      - FIPS Publication 186 (1994): "Digital Signature Standard".        NIST's Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA) is a variant of        ElGamal's Discrete Logarithm-based digital signature mechanism.        The DSA requires a 160-bit hash-function and mandates SHA-1.      - IEEE P1363 (2000) [P1363]: "Standard Specifications for Public-        Key Cryptography".  IEEE P1363 contains mechanisms for digital        signatures, key establishment, and encipherment based on three        families of public key schemes:      - "Conventional" Discrete Logarithm (DL)-based techniques, i.e.,        Diffie-Hellman (DH) key agreement, Menezes-Qu-Vanstone (MQV) key        agreement, the Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA), and        Nyberg-Rueppel (NR) digital signatures;      - Elliptic Curve (EC)-based variants of the DL-mechanisms        specified above, i.e., EC-DH, EC-MQV, EC-DSA, and EC-NR.  For        elliptic curves, implementation options include mod p and        characteristic 2 with polynomial or normal basis representation;      - Integer Factoring (IF)-based techniques, including RSA        encryption, RSA digital signatures, and RSA-based key transport.      - ISO/IEC 9796-2 (1997) [ISO9796-2]: "Information technology -        Security techniques - Digital signature schemes giving message        recovery - Part 2: Mechanisms using a hash-function".  ISO/IEC        9796-2 specifies digital signature mechanisms with partial        message recovery that are also based on the RSA technique but        make use of a hash-function.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 135]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - ISO/IEC 9796-4 (1998) [ISO9796-4]: "Digital signature schemes        giving message recovery - Part 4: Discrete logarithm based        mechanisms".  ISO/IEC 9796-4 specifies digital signature        mechanisms with partial message recovery that are based on        Discrete Logarithm techniques.  The document includes the        Nyberg-Rueppel scheme.      - ISO/IEC 14888-1 [ISO14888-1]: "Digital signatures with appendix        - Part 1: General".  ISO/IEC 14888-1 contains definitions and        describes the basic concepts of digital signatures with        appendix.      - ISO/IEC 14888-2 [ISO14888-2]: "Digital signatures with appendix        - Part 2: Identity-based mechanisms".  ISO/IEC 14888-2 specifies        digital signature schemes with appendix that make use of        identity-based keying material.  The document includes the        zero-knowledge techniques of Fiat-Shamir and Guillou-Quisquater.      - ISO/IEC 14888-3 [ISO14888-3]: "Digital signatures with appendix        - Part 3: Certificate-based mechanisms".  ISO/IEC 14888-3        specifies digital signature schemes with appendix that make use        of certificate-based keying material.  The document includes        five schemes:         - DSA;         - EC-DSA, an elliptic curve-based analog of NIST's Digital           Signature Algorithm;         - Pointcheval-Vaudeney signatures;         - RSA signatures;         - ESIGN.      - ISO/IEC 15946-2 (2002) [ISO15946-2]: "Cryptographic techniques        based on elliptic curves - Part 2: Digital signatures",        specifies digital signature schemes with appendix using elliptic        curves.      - The document includes two schemes:        - EC-DSA, an elliptic curve-based analog of NIST's Digital          Signature Algorithm;        - EC-AMV, an elliptic curve-based analog of the Agnew-Muller-          Vanstone signature algorithm.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 136]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      - ANSI X9.31-1 (1997) [X9.31-1]: "Public Key Cryptography Using        Reversible Algorithms for the Financial Services Industry - Part        1: The RSA Signature Algorithm".  ANSI X9.31-1 specifies a        digital signature mechanism with appendix using the RSA public        key technique.      - ANSI X9.30-1 (1997) [X9.30-1]: "Public Key Cryptography Using        Irreversible Algorithms for the Financial Services Industry -        Part 1: The Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA)".  ANSI X9.30-1        specifies the DSA, NIST's Digital Signature Algorithm.      - ANSI X9.62 (1998) [X9.62]: "Public Key Cryptography for the        Financial Services Industry - The Elliptic Curve Digital        Signature Algorithm (ECDSA)".  ANSI X9.62 specifies the Elliptic        Curve Digital Signature Algorithm, an analog of NIST's Digital        Signature Algorithm (DSA) using elliptic curves.  The appendices        provide tutorial information on the underlying mathematics for        elliptic curve cryptography and give many examples.Annex J (Informative): Guidance on NamingJ.1.  Allocation of Names   The subject name shall be allocated through a registration scheme   administered through a Registration Authority (RA) to ensure   uniqueness.  This RA may be an independent body or a function carried   out by the Certification Authority.   In addition to ensuring uniqueness, the RA shall verify that the name   allocated properly identifies the applicant and that authentication   checks are carried out to protect against masquerade.   The name allocated by an RA is based on registration information   provided by, or relating to, the applicant (e.g., his personal name,   date of birth, residence address) and information allocated by the   RA. Three variations commonly exist:      - the name is based entirely on registration information, which        uniquely identifies the applicant (e.g., "Pierre Durand (born        on) July 6, 1956");      - the name is based on registration information, with the addition        of qualifiers added by the registration authority to ensure        uniqueness (e.g., "Pierre Durand 12");      - the registration information is kept private by the registration        authority and the registration authority allocates a        "pseudonym".Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 137]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008J.2.  Providing Access to Registration Information   Under certain circumstances, it may be necessary for information used   during registration, but not published in the certificate, to be made   available to third parties (e.g., to an arbitrator to resolve a   dispute or for law enforcement).  This registration information is   likely to include personal and sensitive information.   Thus, the RA needs to establish a policy for:         - whether the registration information should be disclosed;         - to whom such information should be disclosed;         - under what circumstances such information should be           disclosed.   This policy may be different whether the RA is being used only within   a company or for public use.  The policy will have to take into   account national legislation and in particular any data protection   and privacy legislation.   Currently, the provision of access to registration is a local matter   for the RA.  However, if open access is required, standard protocols,   such as HTTP --RFC 2068 (Internet Web Access Protocol), may be   employed with the addition of security mechanisms necessary to meet   the data protection requirements (e.g., Transport Layer Security --RFC 4346 [RFC4346]) with client authentication.J.3.  Naming SchemesJ.3.1.  Naming Schemes for Individual Citizens   In some cases, the subject name that is contained in a public key   certificate may not be meaningful enough.  This may happen because of   the existence of homonyms or because of the use of pseudonyms.  A   distinction could be made if more attributes were present.  However,   adding more attributes to a public key certificate placed in a public   repository would be going against the privacy protection   requirements.   In any case, the Registration Authority will get information at the   time of registration, but not all that information will be placed in   the certificate.  In order to achieve a balance between these two   opposite requirements, the hash values of some additional attributes   can be placed in a public key certificate.  When the certificate   owner provides these additional attributes, then they can be   verified.  Using biometrics attributes may unambiguously identify a   person.  Examples of biometrics attributes that can be used include:   a picture or a manual signature from the certificate owner.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 138]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008      NOTE: Using hash values protects privacy only if the possible      inputs are large enough.  For example, using the hash of a      person's social security number is generally not sufficient since      it can easily be reversed.   A picture can be used if the verifier once met the person and later   on wants to verify that the certificate that he or she got relates to   the person whom was met.  In such a case, at the first exchange, the   picture is sent, and the hash contained in the certificate may be   used by the verifier to verify that it is the right person.  At the   next exchange, the picture does not need to be sent again.   A manual signature may be used if a signed document has been received   beforehand.  In such a case, at the first exchange, the drawing of   the manual signature is sent, and the hash contained in the   certificate may be used by the verifier to verify that it is the   right manual signature.  At the next exchange, the manual signature   does not need to be sent again.J.3.2.  Naming Schemes for Employees of an Organization   The name of an employee within an organization is likely to be some   combination of the name of the organization and the identifier of the   employee within that organization.   An organization name is usually a registered name, i.e., business or   trading name used in day-to-day business.  This name is registered by   a Naming Authority, which guarantees that the organization's   registered name is unambiguous and cannot be confused with another   organization.   In order to get more information about a given registered   organization name, it is necessary to go back to a publicly available   directory maintained by the Naming Authority.   The identifier may be a name or a pseudonym (e.g., a nickname or an   employee number).  When it is a name, it is supposed to be   descriptive enough to unambiguously identify the person.  When it is   a pseudonym, the certificate does not disclose the identity of the   person.  However, it ensures that the person has been correctly   authenticated at the time of registration and therefore may be   eligible to some advantages implicitly or explicitly obtained through   the possession of the certificate.  In either case, however, this can   be insufficient because of the existence of homonyms.   Placing more attributes in the certificate may be one solution, for   example, by giving the organization unit of the person or the name of   a city where the office is located.  However, the more information isPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 139]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008   placed in the certificate, the more problems arise if there is a   change in the organization structure or the place of work.  So this   may not be the best solution.  An alternative is to provide more   attributes (like the organization unit and the place of work) through   access to a directory maintained by the company.  It is likely that,   at the time of registration, the Registration Authority got more   information than what was placed in the certificate, if such   additional information is placed in a repository accessible only to   the organization.Acknowledgments   Special thanks to Russ Housley for reviewing the document.Authors' Addresses   Denis Pinkas   Bull SAS   Rue Jean-Jaures   78340 Les Clayes sous Bois CEDEX   FRANCE   EMail: Denis.Pinkas@bull.net   Nick Pope   Thales eSecurity   Meadow View House   Long Crendon   Aylesbury   Buck   HP18 9EQ   United Kingdom   EMail: nick.pope@thales-esecurity.com   John Ross   Security & Standards Consultancy Ltd   The Waterhouse Business Centre   2 Cromer Way   Chelmsford   Essex   CM1 2QE   United Kingdom   EMail: ross@secstan.comPinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 140]

RFC 5126           CMS Advanced Electronic Signatures      February 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Pinkas, et al.               Informational                    [Page 141]

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