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RFC3156 - MIME Security with OpenPGP

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group M. Elkins

Request for Comments: 3156 Network Associates, Inc.

Updates: 2015 D. Del Torto

Category: Standards Track CryptoRights Foundation

R. Levien

University of California at Berkeley

T. Roessler

August 2001

MIME Security with OpenPGP

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This document describes how the OpenPGP Message Format can be used to

provide privacy and authentication using the Multipurpose Internet

Mail Extensions (MIME) security content types described in RFC1847.

1. IntrodUCtion

Work on integrating PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) with MIME [3]

(including the since withdrawn "application/pgp" content type) prior

to RFC2015 suffered from a number of problems, the most significant

of which is the inability to recover signed message bodies without

parsing data structures specific to PGP. RFC2015 makes use of the

elegant solution proposed in RFC1847, which defines security

multipart formats for MIME. The security multiparts clearly separate

the signed message body from the signature, and have a number of

other desirable properties. This document revises RFC2015 to adopt

the integration of PGP and MIME to the needs which emerged during the

work on the OpenPGP specification.

This document defines three content types for implementing security

and privacy with OpenPGP: "application/pgp-encrypted",

"application/pgp-signature" and "application/pgp-keys".

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.

2. OpenPGP data formats

OpenPGP implementations can generate either ASCII armor (described in

[1]) or 8-bit binary output when encrypting data, generating a

digital signature, or extracting public key data. The ASCII armor

output is the REQUIRED method for data transfer. This allows those

users who do not have the means to interpret the formats described in

this document to be able to extract and use the OpenPGP information

in the message.

When the amount of data to be transmitted requires that it be sent in

many parts, the MIME message/partial mechanism SHOULD be used rather

than the multi-part ASCII armor OpenPGP format.

3. Content-Transfer-Encoding restrictions

Multipart/signed and multipart/encrypted are to be treated by agents

as opaque, meaning that the data is not to be altered in any way [2],

[7]. However, many existing mail gateways will detect if the next

hop does not support MIME or 8-bit data and perform conversion to

either Quoted-Printable or Base64. This presents serious problems

for multipart/signed, in particular, where the signature is

invalidated when such an operation occurs. For this reason all data

signed according to this protocol MUST be constrained to 7 bits (8-

bit data MUST be encoded using either Quoted-Printable or Base64).

Note that this also includes the case where a signed object is also

encrypted (see section 6). This restriction will increase the

likelihood that the signature will be valid upon receipt.

Additionally, implementations MUST make sure that no trailing

whitespace is present after the MIME encoding has been applied.

Note: In most cases, trailing whitespace can either be removed, or

protected by applying an appropriate content-transfer-encoding.

However, special care must be taken when any header lines - either

in MIME entity headers, or in embedded RFC822 headers - are

present which only consist of whitespace: Such lines must be

removed entirely, since replacing them by empty lines would turn

them into header delimiters, and change the semantics of the

message. The restrictions on whitespace are necessary in order to

make the hash calculated invariant under the text and binary mode

signature mechanisms provided by OpenPGP [1]. Also, they help to

avoid compatibility problems with PGP implementations which

predate the OpenPGP specification.

Note: If any line begins with the string "From ", it is strongly

suggested that either the Quoted-Printable or Base64 MIME encoding

be applied. If Quoted-Printable is used, at least one of the

characters in the string should be encoded using the hexadecimal

coding rule. This is because many mail transfer and delivery

agents treat "From " (the word "from" followed immediately by a

space character) as the start of a new message and thus insert a

right angle-bracket (>) in front of any line beginning with

"From " to distinguish this case, invalidating the signature.

Data that is ONLY to be encrypted is allowed to contain 8-bit

characters and trailing whitespace and therefore need not undergo the

conversion to a 7bit format, and the stripping of whitespace.

Implementor's note: It cannot be stressed enough that applications

using this standard follow MIME's suggestion that you "be

conservative in what you generate, and liberal in what you

accept." In this particular case it means it would be wise for an

implementation to accept messages with any content-transfer-

encoding, but restrict generation to the 7-bit format required by

this memo. This will allow future compatibility in the event the

Internet SMTP framework becomes 8-bit friendly.

4. OpenPGP encrypted data

Before OpenPGP encryption, the data is written in MIME canonical

format (body and headers).

OpenPGP encrypted data is denoted by the "multipart/encrypted"

content type, described in [2], and MUST have a "protocol" parameter

value of "application/pgp-encrypted". Note that the value of the

parameter MUST be enclosed in quotes.

The multipart/encrypted MIME body MUST consist of exactly two body

parts, the first with content type "application/pgp-encrypted". This

body contains the control information. A message complying with this

standard MUST contain a "Version: 1" field in this body. Since the

OpenPGP packet format contains all other information necessary for

decrypting, no other information is required here.

The second MIME body part MUST contain the actual encrypted data. It

MUST be labeled with a content type of "application/octet-stream".

Example message:

From: Michael Elkins <elkins@aero.org>

To: Michael Elkins <elkins@aero.org>

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: multipart/encrypted; boundary=foo;

protocol="application/pgp-encrypted"

--foo

Content-Type: application/pgp-encrypted

Version: 1

--foo

Content-Type: application/octet-stream

-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

Version: 2.6.2

hIwDY32hYGCE8MkBA/wOu7d45aUxF4Q0RKJprD3v5Z9K1YcRJ2fve87lMlDlx4Oj

eW4GDdBfLbJE7VUpp13N19GL8e/AqbyyjHH4aS0YoTk10QQ9nnRvjY8nZL3MPXSZ

g9VGQxFeGqzykzmykU6A26MSMexR4ApeeON6xzZWfo+0yOqAq6lb46wsvldZ96YA

AABH78hyX7YX4uT1tNCWEIIBoqqvCeIMpp7UQ2IzBrXg6GtukS8NxbukLeamqVW3

1yt21DYOjuLzcMNe/JNsD9vDVCvOOG3OCi8=

=zzaA

-----END PGP MESSAGE-----

--foo--

5. OpenPGP signed data

OpenPGP signed messages are denoted by the "multipart/signed" content

type, described in [2], with a "protocol" parameter which MUST have a

value of "application/pgp-signature" (MUST be quoted).

The "micalg" parameter for the "application/pgp-signature" protocol

MUST contain exactly one hash-symbol of the format "pgp-<hash-

identifier>", where <hash-identifier> identifies the Message

Integrity Check (MIC) algorithm used to generate the signature.

Hash-symbols are constructed from the text names registered in [1] or

according to the mechanism defined in that document by converting the

text name to lower case and prefixing it with the four characters

"pgp-".

Currently defined values are "pgp-md5", "pgp-sha1", "pgp-ripemd160",

"pgp-md2", "pgp-tiger192", and "pgp-haval-5-160".

The multipart/signed body MUST consist of exactly two parts. The

first part contains the signed data in MIME canonical format,

including a set of appropriate content headers describing the data.

The second body MUST contain the OpenPGP digital signature. It MUST

be labeled with a content type of "application/pgp-signature".

Note: Implementations can either generate "signatures of a

canonical text document" or "signatures of a binary document", as

defined in [1]. The restrictions on the signed material put forth

in section 3 and in this section will make sure that the various

MIC algorithm variants specified in [1] and [5] will all produce

the same result.

When the OpenPGP digital signature is generated:

(1) The data to be signed MUST first be converted to its content-

type specific canonical form. For text/plain, this means

conversion to an appropriate character set and conversion of

line endings to the canonical <CR><LF> sequence.

(2) An appropriate Content-Transfer-Encoding is then applied; see

section 3. In particular, line endings in the encoded data

MUST use the canonical <CR><LF> sequence where appropriate

(note that the canonical line ending may or may not be present

on the last line of encoded data and MUST NOT be included in

the signature if absent).

(3) MIME content headers are then added to the body, each ending

with the canonical <CR><LF> sequence.

(4) As described in section 3 of this document, any trailing

whitespace MUST then be removed from the signed material.

(5) As described in [2], the digital signature MUST be calculated

over both the data to be signed and its set of content headers.

(6) The signature MUST be generated detached from the signed data

so that the process does not alter the signed data in any way.

Note: The accepted OpenPGP convention is for signed data to end

with a <CR><LF> sequence. Note that the <CR><LF> sequence

immediately preceding a MIME boundary delimiter line is considered

to be part of the delimiter in [3], 5.1. Thus, it is not part of

the signed data preceding the delimiter line. An implementation

which elects to adhere to the OpenPGP convention has to make sure

it inserts a <CR><LF> pair on the last line of the data to be

signed and transmitted (signed message and transmitted message

MUST be identical).

Example message:

From: Michael Elkins <elkins@aero.org>

To: Michael Elkins <elkins@aero.org>

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: multipart/signed; boundary=bar; micalg=pgp-md5;

protocol="application/pgp-signature"

--bar

& Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

& Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

&

& =A1Hola!

&

& Did you know that talking to yourself is a sign of senility?

&

& It's generally a good idea to encode lines that begin with

& From=20because some mail transport agents will insert a greater-

& than (>) sign, thus invalidating the signature.

&

& Also, in some cases it might be desirable to encode any =20

& trailing whitespace that occurs on lines in order to ensure =20

& that the message signature is not invalidated when passing =20

& a gateway that modifies such whitespace (like BITNET). =20

&

& me

--bar

Content-Type: application/pgp-signature

-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

Version: 2.6.2

iQCVAwUBMJrRF2N9oWBghPDJAQE9UQQAtl7LuRVndBjrk4EqYBIb3h5QXIX/LC//

jJV5bNvkZIGPIcEmI5iFd9boEgvpirHtIREEqLQRkYNoBActFBZmh9GC3C041WGq

uMbrbxc+nIs1TIKlA08rVi9ig/2Yh7LFrK5Ein57U/W72vgSxLhe/zhdfolT9Brn

HOxEa44b+EI=

=ndaj

-----END PGP MESSAGE-----

--bar--

The "&"s in the previous example indicate the portion of the data

over which the signature was calculated.

Upon receipt of a signed message, an application MUST:

(1) Convert line endings to the canonical <CR><LF> sequence before

the signature can be verified. This is necessary since the

local MTA may have converted to a local end of line convention.

(2) Pass both the signed data and its associated content headers

along with the OpenPGP signature to the signature verification

service.

6. Encrypted and Signed Data

Sometimes it is desirable to both digitally sign and then encrypt a

message to be sent. This protocol allows for two methods of

accomplishing this task.

6.1. RFC1847 Encapsulation

In [2], it is stated that the data is first signed as a

multipart/signature body, and then encrypted to form the final

multipart/encrypted body. This is most useful for standard MIME-

compliant message forwarding.

Example:

Content-Type: multipart/encrypted;

protocol="application/pgp-encrypted"; boundary=foo

--foo

Content-Type: application/pgp-encrypted

Version: 1

--foo

Content-Type: application/octet-stream

-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

& Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-md5

& protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary=bar

&

& --bar

& Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

&

& This message was first signed, and then encrypted.

&

& --bar

& Content-Type: application/pgp-signature

&

& -----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

& Version: 2.6.2

&

& iQCVAwUBMJrRF2N9oWBghPDJAQE9UQQAtl7LuRVndBjrk4EqYBIb3h5QXIX/LC//

& jJV5bNvkZIGPIcEmI5iFd9boEgvpirHtIREEqLQRkYNoBActFBZmh9GC3C041WGq

& uMbrbxc+nIs1TIKlA08rVi9ig/2Yh7LFrK5Ein57U/W72vgSxLhe/zhdfolT9Brn

& HOxEa44b+EI=

& =ndaj

& -----END PGP MESSAGE-----

&

& --bar--

-----END PGP MESSAGE-----

--foo--

(The text preceded by '&' indicates that it is really encrypted, but

presented as text for clarity.)

6.2. Combined method

The OpenPGP packet format [1] describes a method for signing and

encrypting data in a single OpenPGP message. This method is allowed

in order to reduce processing overhead and increase compatibility

with non-MIME implementations of OpenPGP. The resulting data is

formatted as a "multipart/encrypted" object as described in Section

4.

Messages which are encrypted and signed in this combined fashion are

REQUIRED to follow the same canonicalization rules as

multipart/signed objects.

It is eXPlicitly allowed for an agent to decrypt a combined message

and rewrite it as a multipart/signed object using the signature data

embedded in the encrypted version.

7. Distribution of OpenPGP public keys

Content-Type: application/pgp-keys

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

A MIME body part of the content type "application/pgp-keys" contains

ASCII-armored transferable Public Key Packets as defined in [1],

section 10.1.

8. Security Considerations

Signatures of a canonical text document as defined in [1] ignore

trailing white space in signed material. Implementations which

choose to use signatures of canonical text documents will not be able

to detect the addition of whitespace in transit.

See [3], [4] for more information on the security considerations

concerning the underlying protocols.

9. IANA Considerations

This document defines three media types: "application/pgp-encrypted",

"application/pgp-signature" and "application/pgp-keys". The

following sections specify the IANA registrations for these types.

9.1. Registration of the application/pgp-encrypted media type

MIME media type name: application

MIME suBType name: pgp-encrypted

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations:

Currently this media type always consists of a single 7bit text

string.

Security considerations:

See Section 8 and RFC2440 Section 13.

Interoperability considerations: none

Published specification:

This document.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): none

Macintosh File Type Code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

Intended usage: common

Author/Change controller:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

9.2. Registration of the application/pgp-signature media type

MIME media type name: application

MIME subtype name: pgp-signature

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations:

The content of this media type always consists of 7bit text.

Security considerations:

See Section 8 and RFC2440 Section 13.

Interoperability considerations: none

Published specification:

RFC2440 and this document.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): asc, sig

Macintosh File Type Code(s): pgDS

Person & email address to contact for further information:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

Intended usage: common

Author/Change controller:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

9.3. Registration of the application/pgp-keys media type

MIME media type name: application

MIME subtype name: pgp-keys

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations:

The content of this media type always consists of 7bit text.

Security considerations:

See Section 8 and RFC2440 Section 13.

Interoperability considerations: none

Published specification:

RFC2440 and this document.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): asc

Macintosh File Type Code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

Intended usage: common

Author/Change controller:

Michael Elkins

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu

10. Notes

"PGP" and "Pretty Good Privacy" are registered trademarks of Network

Associates, Inc.

11. Acknowledgements

This document relies on the work of the IETF's OpenPGP Working

Group's definitions of the OpenPGP Message Format. The OpenPGP

message format is currently described in RFC2440 [1].

Special thanks are due: to Philip Zimmermann for his original and

ongoing work on PGP; to Charles Breed, Jon Callas and Dave Del Torto

for originally proposing the formation of the OpenPGP Working Group;

and to Steve Schoenfeld for helpful feedback during the draft

process. The authors would also like to thank the engineers at

Pretty Good Privacy, Inc (now Network Associates, Inc), including

Colin Plumb, Hal Finney, Jon Callas, Mark Elrod, Mark Weaver and

Lloyd Chambers, for their technical commentary.

Additional thanks are due to Jeff Schiller and Derek Atkins for their

continuing support of strong cryptography and PGP freeware at MIT; to

Rodney Thayer of Sable Technology; to John Noerenberg, Steve Dorner

and Laurence Lundblade of the Eudora team at QUALCOMM, Inc; to Bodo

Moeller for proposing the approach followed with respect to trailing

whitespace; to John Gilmore, Hugh Daniel and Fred Ringel (at

Rivertown) and Ian Bell (at Turnpike) for their timely critical

commentary; and to the international members of the IETF's OpenPGP

mailing list, including William Geiger, Lutz Donnerhacke and Kazu

Yamamoto. The idea to use multipart/mixed with multipart/signed has

been attributed to James Galvin. Finally, our gratitude is due to

the many members of the "Cypherpunks," "Coderpunks" and "pgp-users"

<http://cryptorights.org/pgp-users> mailing lists and the many users

of PGP worldwide for helping keep the path to privacy open.

12. Addresses of the Authors and OpenPGP Working Group Chair

The OpenPGP working group can be contacted via the current chair:

John W. Noerenberg II

Qualcomm, Inc.

5775 Morehouse Dr.

San Diego, CA 92121 USA

Phone: +1 619 658 3510

EMail: jwn2@qualcomm.com

The principal authors of this document are:

Dave Del Torto

CryptoRights Foundation

80 Alviso Street, Mailstop: CRF

San Francisco, CA 94127 USA

Phone: +1.415.334.5533, vm: #2

EMail: ddt@cryptorights.org, ddt@openpgp.net

Michael Elkins

Network Associates, Inc.

3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd Suite 700

Los Angeles, CA 90034 USA

Phone: +1.310.737.1663

Fax: +1.310.737.1755

Email: me@cs.hmc.edu, Michael_Elkins@NAI.com

Raph Levien

University of California at Berkeley

579 Soda Hall

Berkeley, CA 94720 USA

Phone: +1.510.642.6509

EMail: raph@acm.org

Thomas Roessler

Nordstrasse 99

D-53111 Bonn, Germany

Phone: +49-228-638007

EMail: roessler@does-not-exist.org

References

[1] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H. and R. Thayer, "OpenPGP

Message Format", RFC2440, November 1998.

[2] Galvin, J., Murphy, G., Crocker, S. and N. Freed, "Security

Multiparts for MIME: Multipart/Signed and Multipart/Encrypted",

RFC1847, October 1995.

[3] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail

Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC2046, November

1996.

[4] Galvin, J., Murphy, G., Crocker, S. and N. Freed, "MIME Object

Security Services", RFC1848, October 1995.

[5] Atkins, D., Stallings, W. and P. Zimmermann, "PGP Message

Exchange Formats", RFC1991, August 1996.

[6] Elkins, M., "MIME Security with Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)", RFC

2015, October 1996.

[7] Freed, N., "Gateways and MIME Security Multiparts", RFC2480,

January 1999.

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to

others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it

or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published

and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any

kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are

included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this

document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing

the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other

Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of

developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for

copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be

followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than

English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be

revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING

TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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