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+Filename: 105-less-tls-constraint.txt
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+Title: Checking fewer things during TLS handshakes
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+Version: $Revision: 12105 $
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+Last-Modified: $Date: 2007-01-30T07:50:01.643717Z $
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+Author: Nick Mathewson
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+Created:
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+Status: Open
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+
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+Overview:
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+
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+ This document proposes that we relax our requirements on the context of
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+ X.509 certificates during initial TLS handshakes.
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+
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+Motivation:
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+
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+ Later, we want to try harder to avoid protocol fingerprinting attacks.
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+ This means that we'll need to make our connection handshake look closer
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+ to a regular HTTPS connection. For now, about the best we can do is to
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+ stop requiring things during handshake that we don't actually use.
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+
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+What we check now, and where we check it:
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+
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+tor_tls_check_lifetime:
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+ peer has certificate
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+ notBefore <= now <= notAfter
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+
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+tor_tls_verify:
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+ peer has at least one certificate
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+ There is at lease one certificate in the chain
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+ At least one of the certificates in the chain is not the one used to
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+ negotiate the connection. (The "identity cert".)
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+ The certificate _not_ used to negotiate the connection has signed the
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+ link cert
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+
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+tor_tls_get_peer_cert_nickname:
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+ peer has a certificate.
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+ certificate has a subjectName.
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+ subjectName has a commonName.
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+ commonName consists only of characters in LEGAL_NICKNAME_CHARACTERS. [2]
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+
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+tor_tls_peer_has_cert:
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+ peer has a certificate.
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+
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+connection_or_check_valid_handshake:
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+ tor_tls_peer_has_cert [1]
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+ tor_tls_get_peer_cert_nickname [1]
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+ tor_tls_verify [1]
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+ If nickname in cert is a known, named router, then its identity digest
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+ must be as expected.
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+ If we initiated the connection, then we got the identity digest we
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+ expected.
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+
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+USEFUL THINGS WE COULD DO:
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+
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+[1] We could just not force clients to have any certificate at all, let alone
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+ an identity certificate. Internally to the code, we could assign the
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+ identity_digest field of these or_connections to a random number, or even
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+ not add them to the identity_digest->or_conn map.
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+
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+[2] Instead of using a restricted nickname character set that make our
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+ commonName structure look unlike typical SSL certificates, we could treat
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+ the nickname as extending from the start of the commonName up to but not
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+ including the first non-nickname character
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+
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+ Alternatively, we could stop checking commonNames entirely. We don't
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+ actually _do_ anything based on the nickname in the certificate, so
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+ there's really no harm in letting every router have any commonName it
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+ wants.
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+
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+REMAINING WAYS TO RECOGNIZE CLIENT->SERVER CONNECTIONS:
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+
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+Assuming that we removed the above requirements, we could then (in a later
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+release) have clients not send certificates, and sometimes and started making
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+our DNs a little less formulaic, client->server OR connections would still be
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+recognizable by:
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+ having a two-certificate chain sent by the server
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+ using a particular set of ciphersuites
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+ traffic patterns
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+ probing the server later
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+
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+OTHER IMPLICATIONS:
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+
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+If we stop verifying the above requirements:
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+
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+ It will be slightly (but only slightly) more common to connect to a non-Tor
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+ server running TLS, and believe that you're talking to a Tor server (until
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+ you send the first cell).
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+
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+ It will be far easier for non-Tor SSL clients to accidentally to Tor servers
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+ and speak HTTPS or whatever to them.
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+
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+If, in a later release, we have clients not send certificates, and we make
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+DNs less recognizable:
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+
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+ If clients don't send certs, servers don't need to verify them: win!
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+
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+ If we remove these restrictions, it will be easier for people to write
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+ clients to fuzz our protocol: sorta win!
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+
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+ If clients don't send certs, they look slightly less like servers.
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+
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+
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+
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