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INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Independent Submission                                        S. BarbatoRequest for Comments: 6896                                  S. DorigottiCategory: Informational                                  T. Fossati, Ed.ISSN: 2070-1721                                                KoanLogic                                                              March 2013SCS: KoanLogic's Secure Cookie Sessions for HTTPAbstract   This memo defines a generic URI and HTTP-header-friendly envelope for   carrying symmetrically encrypted, authenticated, and origin-   timestamped tokens.  It also describes one possible usage of such   tokens via a simple protocol based on HTTP cookies.   Secure Cookie Session (SCS) use cases cover a wide spectrum of   applications, ranging from distribution of authorized content via   HTTP (e.g., with out-of-band signed URIs) to securing browser   sessions with diskless embedded devices (e.g., Small Office, Home   Office (SOHO) routers) or web servers with high availability or load-   balancing requirements that may want to delegate the handling of the   application state to clients instead of using shared storage or   forced peering.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other   RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at   its discretion and makes no statement about its value for   implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by   the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6896.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................42. Requirements Language ...........................................43. SCS Protocol ....................................................53.1. SCS Cookie Description .....................................53.1.1. ATIME ...............................................63.1.2. DATA ................................................63.1.3. TID .................................................73.1.4. IV ..................................................73.1.5. AUTHTAG .............................................73.2. Crypto Transform ...........................................83.2.1. Choice and Role of the Framing Symbol ...............83.2.2. Cipher Set ..........................................93.2.3. Compression .........................................93.2.4. Cookie Encoding .....................................93.2.5. Outbound Transform ..................................93.2.6. Inbound Transform ..................................103.3. PDU Exchange ..............................................123.3.1. Cookie Attributes ..................................123.3.1.1. Expires ...................................123.3.1.2. Max-Age ...................................123.3.1.3. Domain ....................................133.3.1.4. Secure ....................................133.3.1.5. HttpOnly ..................................134. Key Management and Session State ...............................135. Cookie Size Considerations .....................................156. Acknowledgements ...............................................157. Security Considerations ........................................157.1. Security of the Cryptographic Protocol ....................157.2. Impact of the SCS Cookie Model ............................167.2.1. Old Cookie Replay ..................................167.2.2. Cookie Deletion ....................................177.2.3. Cookie Sharing or Theft ............................187.2.4. Session Fixation ...................................187.3. Advantages of SCS over Server-Side Sessions ...............198. References .....................................................208.1. Normative References ......................................208.2. Informative References ....................................20Appendix A. Examples ..............................................22A.1. No Compression ............................................22A.2. Use Compression ...........................................22Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20131.  Introduction   This memo defines a generic URI and HTTP-header-friendly envelope for   carrying symmetrically encrypted, authenticated, and origin-   timestamped tokens.   It is generic in that it does not force any specific format upon the   authenticated information, which makes SCS tokens flexible, easy, and   secure to use in many different scenarios.   It is URI and HTTP header friendly, as it has been explicitly   designed to be compatible with both the ABNF "token" syntax [RFC2616]   (the one used for, e.g., Set-Cookie and Cookie headers) and the path   or query syntax of HTTP URIs.   This memo also describes one possible usage of such tokens via a   simple protocol based on HTTP cookies that allows the establishment   of "client mode" sessions.  This is not their sole possible use.   While no other operational patterns are outlined here, it is expected   that SCS tokens may be easily employed as a building block for other   types of HTTP-based applications that need to carry in-band secured   information.   When SCS tokens are used to implement client-mode cookie sessions,   the SCS implementer must fully understand the security implications   entailed by the act of delegating the whole application state to the   client (browser).  In this regard, some hopefully useful security   considerations have been collected inSection 7.2.  However, please   note that they may not cover all possible scenarios; therefore, they   must be weighed carefully against the specific application threat   model.   An SCS server may be implemented within a web application by means of   a user library that exposes the core SCS functionality and leaves   explicit control over SCS tokens to the programmer, or transparently,   by hiding a "diskless session" facility behind a generic session API   abstraction, for example.  SCS implementers are free to choose the   model that best suits their needs.2.  Requirements Language   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20133.  SCS Protocol   The SCS protocol defines:   o  the SCS cookie structure and encoding (Section 3.1);   o  the cryptographic transformations involved in SCS cookie creation      and verification (Section 3.2);   o  the HTTP-based PDU exchange that uses the Set-Cookie and Cookie      HTTP headers (Section 3.3);   o  the underlying key management model (Section 4).   Note that the PDU is transmitted to the client as an opaque data   block; hence, no interpretation nor validation is necessary.  The   single requirement for client-side support of SCS is cookie   activation on the user agent.  The origin server is the sole actor   involved in the PDU manipulation process, which greatly simplifies   the crypto operations -- especially key management, which is usually   a pesky task.   In the following sections, we assume S to be one or more   interchangeable HTTP server entities (e.g., a server pool in a load-   balanced or high-availability environment) and C to be the client   with a cookie-enabled browser or any user agent with equivalent   capabilities.3.1.  SCS Cookie Description   S and C exchange a cookie (Section 3.3) whose cookie value consists   of a sequence of adjacent non-empty values, each of which is the 'URL   and Filename safe' Base64 encoding [RFC4648] of a specific SCS field.   (Hereafter, the encoded and raw versions of each SCS field are   distinguished based on the presence, or lack thereof, of the 'e'   prefix in their name, e.g., eATIME and ATIME.)   Each SCS field is separated by its left and/or right sibling by means   of the %x7c ASCII character (i.e., '|'), as follows:Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   scs-cookie        = scs-cookie-name "=" scs-cookie-value   scs-cookie-name   = token   scs-cookie-value  = eDATA "|" eATIME "|" eTID "|" eIV "|" eAUTHTAG   eDATA             = 1*base64url-character   eATIME            = 1*base64url-character   eTID              = 1*base64url-character   eIV               = 1*base64url-character   eAUTHTAG          = 1*base64url-character                                 Figure 1   Confidentiality is limited to the application-state information   (i.e., the DATA field), while integrity and authentication apply to   the entire cookie value.   The following subsections describe the syntax and semantics of each   SCS cookie field.3.1.1.  ATIME   Absolute timestamp relating to the last read or write operation   performed on session DATA, encoded as a HEX string holding the number   of seconds since the UNIX epoch (i.e., since 00:00:00, Jan 1 1970).   This value is updated with each client contact and is used to   identify expired sessions.  If the delta between the received ATIME   value and the current time on S is larger than a predefined   "session_max_age" (which is chosen by S as an application-level   parameter), a session is considered to be no longer valid, and is   therefore rejected.   Such an expiration error may be used to force user logout from an   SCS-cookie-based session, or hooked in the web application logic to   display an HTML form requiring revalidation of user credentials.3.1.2.  DATA   Block of encrypted and optionally compressed data, possibly   containing the current session state.  Note that no restriction is   imposed on the cleartext structure: the protocol is completely   agnostic as to inner data layout.   Generally speaking, the plaintext is the "normal" cookie that would   have been exchanged by S and C if SCS had not been used.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20133.1.3.  TID   This identifier is equivalent to a Security Parameter Index (SPI) in   a Data Security SA [RFC3740]) and consists of an ASCII string that   uniquely identifies the transform set (keys and algorithms) used to   generate this SCS cookie.   SCS assumes that a key-agreement/distribution mechanism exists for   environments in which S consists of multiple servers that provide a   unique external identifier for each transform set shared amongst pool   members.   Such a mechanism may safely downgrade to a periodic key refresh, if   there is only one server in the pool and the key is generated in   place -- i.e., it is not handled by an external source.   However, when many servers act concurrently upon the same pool, a   more sophisticated protocol, whose specification is out of the scope   of the present document, must be devised (ideally, one that is able   to handle key agreement for dynamic peer groups in a secure and   efficient way, e.g., [CLIQUES] or [Steiner]).3.1.4.  IV   Initialization Vector used for the encryption algorithm (seeSection 3.2).   In order to avoid providing correlation information to a possible   attacker with access to a sample of SCS cookies created using the   same TID, the IV MUST be created randomly for each SCS cookie.3.1.5.  AUTHTAG   Authentication tag that is based on the plain string concatenation of   the base64url-encoded DATA, ATIME, TID, and IV fields and is framed   by the "|" separator (see also the definition of the Box() function   inSection 3.2):   AUTHTAG = HMAC(base64url(DATA)  "|"                  base64url(ATIME) "|"                  base64url(TID)   "|"                  base64url(IV))   Note that, from a cryptographic point of view, the "|" character   provides explicit authentication of the length of each supplied   field, which results in a robust countermeasure against splicing   attacks.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20133.2.  Crypto Transform   SCS could potentially use any combination of primitives capable of   performing authenticated encryption.  In practice, an   encrypt-then-MAC approach [Kohno] with encryption utilizing the   Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode and Hashed Message Authentication   Code (HMAC) [RFC2104] authentication was chosen.   The two algorithms MUST be associated with two independent keys.   The following conventions will be used in the algorithm description   (Sections3.2.5 and3.2.6):   o  Enc/Dec(): block encryption/decryption functions (Section 3.2.2);   o  HMAC(): authentication function (Section 3.2.2);   o  Comp/Uncomp(): compression/decompression functions      (Section 3.2.3);   o  e/d(): cookie-value encoding/decoding functions (Section 3.2.4);   o  RAND(): random number generator [RFC4086];   o  Box(): string boxing function.  It takes an arbitrary number of      base64url-encoded strings and returns the string obtained by      concatenating each input in the exact order in which they are      listed, separated by the "|" char.  For example:         Box("akxI", "MTM", "Hadvo") = "akxI|MTM|Hadvo".3.2.1.  Choice and Role of the Framing Symbol   Note that the adoption of "|" as the framing symbol in the Box()   function is arbitrary: any char allowed by the cookie-value ABNF in   [RFC6265] is safe to be used as long it has empty intersection with   the base64url alphabet.   It is also worth noting that the role of the framing symbol, which   provides an implicit length indicator for each of the atoms, is key   to the accuracy and security of SCS.   This is especially relevant when the authentication tag is computed   (seeSection 3.1.5).  More specifically, the explicit inclusion of   the framing symbol within the HMAC input seals the integrity of the   blob as a whole together with each of its composing atoms in their   exact position.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   This feature makes the protocol robust against attacks aimed at   disrupting the security of SCS PDUs by freely moving boundaries   between adjacent atoms.3.2.2.  Cipher Set   Implementers MUST support at least the following algorithms:   o  AES-CBC-128 for encryption [NIST-AES];   o  HMAC-SHA1 with a 128-bit key for authenticity and integrity,   which appear to be sufficiently secure in a broad range of use cases   ([Bellare] [RFC6194]), are widely available, and can be implemented   in a few kilobytes of memory, providing an extremely valuable feature   for constrained devices.   One should consider using larger cryptographic key lengths (192- or   256-bit) according to the actual security and overall system   performance requirements.3.2.3.  Compression   Compression, which may be useful or even necessary when handling   large quantities of data, is not compulsory (in such a case, Comp/   Uncomp is replaced by an identity matrix).  If this function is   enabled, the DEFLATE [RFC1951] format MUST be supported.   Some advice to SCS users: compression should not be enabled when   handling relatively short and entropic state, such as pseudorandom   session identifiers.  Instead, large and quite regular state blobs   could get a significant boost when compressed.3.2.4.  Cookie Encoding   SCS cookie values MUST be encoded using the alphabet that is URL and   filename safe (i.e., base64url) defined inSection 5 of Base64   [RFC4648].  This encoding is very widespread, falls smoothly into the   encoding rules defined inSection 4.1.1 of [RFC6265], and can be   safely used to supply SCS-based authorization tokens within a URI   (e.g., in a query string or straight into a path segment).3.2.5.  Outbound Transform   The output data transformation, as seen by the server (the only actor   that explicitly manipulates SCS cookies), is illustrated by the   pseudocode in Figure 2.Barbato, et al.               Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013         1.  IV := RAND()         2.  ATIME := NOW         3.  DATA := Enc(Comp(plain-text-cookie-value), IV)         4.  AUTHTAG := HMAC(Box(e(DATA), e(ATIME), e(TID), e(IV)))                                 Figure 2   A new Initialization Vector is randomly picked (step 1).  As   previously mentioned (Section 3.1.4), this step is necessary to avoid   providing correlation information to an attacker.   A new ATIME value is taken as the current timestamp according to the   server clock (step 2).   Since the only user of the ATIME field is the server, it is   unnecessary for it to be synchronized with the client -- though it   needs to use a fairly stable clock.  However, if multiple servers are   active in a load-balancing configuration, clocks SHOULD be   synchronized to avoid errors in the calculation of session expiry.   The plaintext cookie value is then compressed (if needed) and   encrypted by using the key-set identified by TID (step 3).   If the length of (compressed) state is not a multiple of the block   size, its value MUST be filled with as many padding bytes of equal   value as the pad length -- as defined by the scheme given inSection6.3 of [RFC5652].   Then, the authentication tag, which encompasses each SCS field (along   with lengths and relative positions), is computed by HMAC'ing the   "|"-separated concatenation of their base64url representations using   the key-set identified by TID (step 4).   Finally, the SCS-cookie-value is created as follows:      scs-cookie-value = Box(e(DATA), e(ATIME), e(TID), e(IV),                             e(AUTHTAG))3.2.6.  Inbound Transform   The inbound transformation is described in Figure 3.  Each of the   'e'-prefixed names shown has to be interpreted as the   base64url-encoded value of the corresponding SCS field.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013           0.  If (split_fields(scs-cookie-value) == ok)           1.      tid' := d(eTID)           2.      If (tid' is available)           3.          tag' := d(eAUTHTAG)           4.          tag := HMAC(Box(eDATA, eATIME, eTID, eIV))           5.          If (tag = tag')           6.              atime' := d(eATIME)           7.              If (NOW - atime' <= session_max_age)           8.                  iv' := d(eIV)                               data' := d(eDATA)           9.                  state := Uncomp(Dec(data', iv'))           10.             Else discard PDU           11.         Else discard PDU           12.     Else discard PDU           13. Else discard PDU                                 Figure 3   First, the inbound scs-cookie-value is broken into its component   fields, which MUST be exactly 5, and each at least the minimum length   specified in Figure 3 (step 0).  In case any of these preliminary   checks fails, the PDU is discarded (step 13); else, TID is decoded to   allow key-set lookup (step 1).   If the cryptographic credentials (encryption and authentication   algorithms and keys identified by TID) are unavailable (step 12), the   inbound SCS cookie is discarded since its value has no chance to be   interpreted correctly.  This may happen for several reasons: e.g., if   a device without storage has been reset and loses the credentials   stored in RAM, if a server pool node desynchronizes, or in case of a   key compromise that forces the invalidation of all current TIDs, etc.   When a valid key-set is found (step 2), the AUTHTAG field is decoded   (step 3) and the (still) encoded DATA, ATIME, TID, and IV fields are   supplied to the primitive that computes the authentication tag (step   4).   If the tag computed using the local key-set matches the one carried   by the supplied SCS cookie, we can be confident that the cookie   carries authentic material; otherwise, the SCS cookie is discarded   (step 11).   Then the age of the SCS cookie (as deduced by ATIME field value and   current time provided by the server clock) is decoded and compared to   the maximum time-to-live (TTL) defined by the session_max_age   parameter.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   If the "age" check passes, the DATA and IV fields are finally decoded   (step 8), so that the original plaintext data can be extracted from   the encrypted, and optionally compressed, blob (step 9).   Note that steps 5 and 7 allow any altered packets or expired sessions   to be discarded, hence avoiding unnecessary state decryption and   decompression.3.3.  PDU Exchange   SCS can be modeled in the same manner as a typical store-and-forward   protocol in which the endpoints are S, consisting of one or more HTTP   servers and the client C, an intermediate node used to "temporarily"   store the data to be successively forwarded to S.   In brief, S and C exchange an immutable cookie data block   (Section 3.1): the state is stored on the client at the first hop and   then restored on the server at the second, as in Figure 4.     1.  dump-state:         S --> C             Set-Cookie: ANY_COOKIE_NAME=KrdPagFes_5ma-ZUluMsww|MTM0...                Expires=...; Path=...; Domain=...;     2.  restore-state:         C --> S             Cookie: ANY_COOKIE_NAME=KrdPagFes_5ma-ZUluMsww|MTM0...                                 Figure 43.3.1.  Cookie Attributes   In the following subsections, a series of recommendations is provided   in order to maximize SCS PDU fitness in the generic cookie ecosystem.3.3.1.1.  Expires   If an SCS cookie includes an Expires attribute, then the attribute   MUST be set to a value consistent with session_max_age.   For maximum compatibility with existing user agents, the timestamp   value MUST be encoded inrfc1123-date format, which requires a   4-digit year.3.3.1.2.  Max-Age   Since not all User Agents (UAs) support this attribute, it MUST NOT   be present in any SCS cookie.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20133.3.1.3.  Domain   SCS cookies MUST include a Domain attribute compatible with   application usage.   A trailing '.'  MUST NOT be present in order to minimize the   possibility of a user agent ignoring the attribute value.3.3.1.4.  Secure   This attribute MUST always be asserted when SCS sessions are carried   over a Transport Layer Security (TLS) channel.3.3.1.5.  HttpOnly   This attribute SHOULD always be asserted.4.  Key Management and Session State   This specification provides some common recommendations and practices   relevant to cryptographic key management.   In the following, the term 'key' references both encryption and HMAC   keys.   o  The key SHOULD be generated securely following the randomness      recommendations in [RFC4086];   o  the key SHOULD only be used to generate and verify SCS PDUs;   o  the key SHOULD be replaced regularly as well as any time the      format of SCS PDUs or cryptographic algorithms changes.   Furthermore, to preserve the validity of active HTTP sessions upon   renewal of cryptographic credentials (whenever the value of TID   changes), an SCS server MUST be capable of managing at least two   transforms contemporarily: the currently instantiated one and its   predecessor.   Each transform set SHOULD be associated with an attribute pair,   "refresh" and "expiry", which is used to identify the exposure limits   (in terms of time or quantity of encrypted and/or authenticated   bytes, etc.) of related cryptographic material.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   In particular, the "refresh" attribute specifies the time limit for   substitution of transform set T with new material T'.  From that   moment onwards, and for an amount of time determined by "expiry", all   new sessions will be created using T', while the active T-protected   ones go through a translation phase in which:   o  the inbound transformation authenticates and decrypts/decompresses      using T (identified by TID);   o  the outbound transformation encrypts/compresses and authenticates      using T'.        T' {not valid yet} |---------------------|----------------                           |  translation stage  |        T  ----------------|---------------------| {no longer valid}                         refresh         refresh + expiry                                 Figure 5   As shown in Figure 5, the duration of the HTTP session MUST fit   within the lifetime of a given transform set (i.e., from creation   time until "refresh" + "expiry").   In practice, this should not be an obstacle because the longevity of   the two entities (HTTP session and SCS transform set) should differ   by one or two orders of magnitude.   An SCS server may take this into account by determining the duration   of a session adaptively according to the expected deletion time of   the active T, or by setting the "expiry" value to at least the   maximum lifetime allowed by an HTTP session.   Since there is also only one refresh attribute in situations with   more than one key (e.g., one for encryption and one for   authentication) within the same T, the smallest value is chosen.   It is critical for the correctness of the protocol that in case   multiple equivalent SCS servers are used in a pool, all of them share   the same view of time (see alsoSection 3.2.5) and keying material.   As far as the latter is concerned, SCS does not mandate the use of   any specific key-sharing mechanism, and will keep working correctly   as long as the said mechanism is able to provide a single, coherent   view of the keys shared by pool members -- while conforming to the   recommendations given in this section.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20135.  Cookie Size Considerations   In general, SCS cookies are bigger than their plaintext counterparts.   This is due to the following reasons:   o  inflation of the Base64 encoding of state data (approximately 1.4      times the original size, including the encryption padding);   o  the fixed size increment (approximately 80/90 bytes) caused by SCS      fields and framing overhead.   While the former is a price the user must always pay proportionally   to the original data size, the latter is a fixed quantum, which can   be huge on small amounts of data but is quickly absorbed as soon as   data becomes big enough.   The following table compares byte lengths of SCS cookies (with a   four-byte TID) and corresponding plaintext cookies in a worst-case   scenario, i.e., when no compression is in use (or applicable).                               plain |  SCS                               -------+-------                                 11  |  128                                102  |  256                                285  |  512                                651  | 1024                               1382  | 2048                               2842  | 4096   The largest uncompressed cookie value that can be safely supplied to   SCS is about 2.8 KB.6.  Acknowledgements   We would like to thank Jim Schaad, David Wagner, Lorenzo Cavallaro,   Willy Tarreau, Tobias Gondrom, John Michener, Sean Turner, Barry   Leiba, Robert Sparks, Stephen Farrell, Stewart Bryant, and Nevil   Brownlee for their valuable feedback on this document.7.  Security Considerations7.1.  Security of the Cryptographic Protocol   From a cryptographic architecture perspective, the described   mechanism can be easily traced to an "encode then encrypt-then-MAC"   scheme (Encode-then-EtM) as described in [Kohno].Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   Given a "provably-secure" encryption scheme and MAC (as for the   algorithms mandated inSection 3.2.2), the authors of [Kohno]   demonstrate that their composition results in a secure authenticated   encryption scheme.7.2.  Impact of the SCS Cookie Model   The fact that the server does not own the cookie it produces, gives   rise to a series of consequences that must be clearly understood when   one envisages the use of SCS as a cookie provider and validator for   his/her application.   In the following subsections, a set of different attack scenarios   (together with corresponding countermeasures where applicable) are   identified and analyzed.7.2.1.  Old Cookie Replay   SCS doesn't address replay of old cookie values.   In fact, there is nothing that assures an SCS application about the   client having returned the most recent version of the cookie.   As with "server-side" sessions, if an attacker gains possession of a   given user's cookies -- via simple passive interception or another   technique -- he/she will always be able to restore the state of an   intercepted session by representing the captured data to the server.   The ATIME value, along with the session_max_age configuration   parameter, allows SCS to mitigate the chances of an attack (by   forcing a time window outside of which a given cookie is no longer   valid) but cannot exclude it completely.   A countermeasure against the "passive interception and replay"   scenario can be applied at transport/network level using the anti-   replay services provided by e.g., Secure Socket Layer/Transport Layer   Security (SSL/TLS) [RFC5246] or IPsec [RFC4301].   A native solution is not in scope with the security properties   inherent to an SCS cookie.  Hence, an application wishing to be   replay-resistant must put in place some ad hoc mechanism to prevent   clients (both rogue and legitimate) from (a) being able to replay old   cookies as valid credentials and/or (b) getting any advantage by   replaying them.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   The following illustrate some typical use cases:   o  Session inactivity timeout scenario (implicit invalidation): use      the session_max_age parameter if a global setting is viable, else      place an explicit TTL in the cookie (e.g.,      validity_period="start_time, duration") that can be verified by      the application each time the client presents the SCS cookie.   o  Session voidance scenario (explicit invalidation): put a randomly      chosen string into each SCS cookie (cid="$(random())") and keep a      list of valid session cids against which the SCS cookie presented      by the client can be checked.  When a cookie needs to be      invalidated, delete the corresponding cid from the list.  The      described method has the drawback that, in case a non-permanent      storage is used to archive valid cids, a reboot/restart would      invalidate all sessions (it can't be used when |S| > 1).   o  One-shot transaction scenario (ephemeral): this is a variation on      the previous theme when sessions are consumed within a single      request/response.  Put a nonce="$(random())" within the state      information and keep a list of not-yet-consumed nonces in RAM.      Once the client presents its cookie credential, the embodied nonce      is deleted from the list and will be therefore discarded whenever      replayed.   o  TLS binding scenario: the server application must run on TLS, be      able to extract information related to the current TLS session,      and store it in the DATA field of the SCS cookie itself [RFC5056].      The establishment of this secure channel binding prevents any      third party from reusing the SCS cookie, and drops its value      altogether after the TLS session is terminated -- regardless of      the lifetime of the cookie.  This approach suffers a scalability      problem in that it requires each SCS session to be handled by the      same client-server pair.  However, it provides a robust model and      an affordable compromise when security of the session is      exceptionally valuable (e.g., a user interacting with his/her      online banking site).   It is worth noting that in all but the latter scenario, if an   attacker is able to use the cookie before the legitimate client gets   a chance to, then the impersonation attack will always succeed.7.2.2.  Cookie Deletion   A direct and important consequence of the missing owner role in SCS   is that a client could intentionally delete its cookie and return   nothing.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   The application protocol has to be designed so there is no incentive   to do so, for instance:   o  it is safe for the cookie to represent some kind of positive      capability -- the possession of which increases the client's      powers;   o  it is not safe to use the cookie to represent negative      capabilities -- where possession reduces the client's powers -- or      for revocation.   Note that this behavior is not equivalent to cookie removal in the   "server-side" cookie model, because in case of missing cookie backup   by other parties (e.g., the application using SCS), the client could   simply make it disappear once and for all.7.2.3.  Cookie Sharing or Theft   Just like with plain cookies, SCS doesn't prevent sharing (both   voluntary and illegitimate) of cookies between multiple clients.   In the context of voluntary cookie sharing, using HTTPS only as a   separate secure transport provider is useless: in fact, client   certificates are just as shareable as cookies.  Instead, using some   form of secure channel binding (as illustrated inSection 7.2.1) may   cancel this risk.   The risk of theft could be mitigated by securing the wire (e.g., via   HTTPS, IPsec, VPN, etc.), thus reducing the opportunity of cookie   stealing to a successful attack on the protocol endpoints.   In order to reduce the attack window on stolen cookies, an   application may choose to generate cookies whose lifetime is upper   bounded by the browsing session lifetime (i.e., by not attaching an   Expires attribute to them.)7.2.4.  Session Fixation   Session fixation vulnerabilities [Kolsec] are not addressed by SCS.   A more sophisticated protocol involving active participation of the   UA in the SCS cookie manipulation process would be needed: e.g., some   form of challenge/response exchange initiated by the server in the   HTTP response and replied to by the UA in the next chained HTTP   request.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   Unfortunately, the present specification, which is based on   [RFC6265], sees the UA as a completely passive actor whose role is to   blindly paste the cookie value set by the server.   Nevertheless, the SCS cookies wrapping mechanism may be used in the   future as a building block for a more robust HTTP state management   protocol.7.3.  Advantages of SCS over Server-Side Sessions   Note that all the above-mentioned vulnerabilities also apply to plain   cookies, making SCS at least as secure, but there are a few good   reasons to consider its security level enhanced.   First of all, the confidentiality and authentication features   provided by SCS protect the cookie value, which is normally plaintext   and tamperable.   Furthermore, neither of the common vulnerabilities of server-side   sessions (session identifier (SID) prediction and SID brute-forcing)   can be exploited when using SCS, unless the attacker possesses   encryption and HMAC keys (both current ones and those relating to the   previous set of credentials).   More in general, no slicing nor altering operations can be done over   an SCS PDU without controlling the cryptographic key-set.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 20138.  References8.1.  Normative References   [NIST-AES]  National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Advanced               Encryption Standard (AES)", FIPS PUB 197, November 2001,               <http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips197/fips-197.pdf>.   [RFC1951]   Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format               Specification version 1.3",RFC 1951, May 1996.   [RFC2104]   Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-               Hashing for Message Authentication",RFC 2104,               February 1997.   [RFC2119]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2616]   Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,               Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext               Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1",RFC 2616, June 1999.   [RFC4086]   Eastlake, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, "Randomness               Requirements for Security",BCP 106,RFC 4086, June 2005.   [RFC4648]   Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data               Encodings",RFC 4648, October 2006.   [RFC5652]   Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)",               STD 70,RFC 5652, September 2009.   [RFC6194]   Polk, T., Chen, L., Turner, S., and P. Hoffman, "Security               Considerations for the SHA-0 and SHA-1 Message-Digest               Algorithms",RFC 6194, March 2011.   [RFC6265]   Barth, A., "HTTP State Management Mechanism",RFC 6265,               April 2011.8.2.  Informative References   [Bellare]   Bellare, M., "New Proofs for NMAC and HMAC: Security               Without Collision-Resistance", 2006.   [CLIQUES]   Steiner, M., Tsudik, G., and M. Waidner, "Cliques: A New               Approach to Group Key Agreement", 1996.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   [Kohno]     Kohno, T., Palacio, A., and J. Black, "Building Secure               Cryptographic Transforms, or How to Encrypt and MAC",               2003.   [Kolsec]    Kolsec, M., "Session Fixation Vulnerability in Web-based               Applications", 2002.   [RFC3740]   Hardjono, T. and B. Weis, "The Multicast Group Security               Architecture",RFC 3740, March 2004.   [RFC4301]   Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the               Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.   [RFC5056]   Williams, N., "On the Use of Channel Bindings to Secure               Channels",RFC 5056, November 2007.   [RFC5246]   Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security               (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246, August 2008.   [Steiner]   Steiner, M., Tsudik, G., and M. Waidner, "Diffie-Hellman               Key Distribution Extended to Group Communication", 1996.Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013Appendix A.  Examples   The examples in this section have been created using the 'scs' test   tool bundled with LibSCS, a free and opensource reference   implementation of the SCS protocol that can be found at   (http://github.com/koanlogic/libscs).A.1.  No Compression   The following parameters:   o  Plaintext cookie: "a state string"   o  AES-CBC-128 key: "123456789abcdef"   o  HMAC-SHA1 key: "12345678901234567890"   o  TID: "tid"   o  ATIME: 1347265955   o  IV:      \xb4\xbd\xe5\x24\xf7\xf6\x9d\x44\x85\x30\xde\x9d\xb5\x55\xc9\x4f   produce the following tokens:   o  DATA: DqfW4SFqcjBXqSTvF2qnRA   o  ATIME: MTM0NzI2NTk1NQ   o  TID: OHU7M1cqdDQt   o  IV: tL3lJPf2nUSFMN6dtVXJTw   o  AUTHTAG: AznYHKga9mLL8ioi3If_1iy2KSAA.2.  Use Compression   The same parameters as above, except ATIME and IV:   o  Plaintext cookie: "a state string"   o  AES-CBC-128 key: "123456789abcdef"   o  HMAC-SHA1 key: "12345678901234567890"   o  TID: "tid"Barbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 6896                           SCS                        March 2013   o  ATIME: 1347281709   o  IV:      \x1d\xa7\x6f\xa0\xff\x11\xd7\x95\xe3\x4b\xfb\xa9\xff\x65\xf9\xc7   produce the following tokens:   o  DATA: PbE-ypmQ43M8LzKZ6fMwFg-COrLP2l-Bvgs   o  ATIME: MTM0NzI4MTcwOQ   o  TID: akxIKmhbMTE8   o  IV: HadvoP8R15XjS_up_2X5xw   o  AUTHTAG: A6qevPr-ugHQChlr_EiKYWPvpB0   In both cases, the resulting SCS cookie is obtained via ordered   concatenation of the produced tokens, as described inSection 3.1.Authors' Addresses   Stefano Barbato   KoanLogic   Via Marmolada, 4   Vitorchiano (VT),   01030   Italy   EMail: tat@koanlogic.com   Steven Dorigotti   KoanLogic   Via Maso della Pieve 25/C   Bolzano,   39100   Italy   EMail: stewy@koanlogic.com   Thomas Fossati (editor)   KoanLogic   Via di Sabbiuno 11/5   Bologna,   40136   Italy   EMail: tho@koanlogic.comBarbato, et al.               Informational                    [Page 23]

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