| rfc9881v1.txt | rfc9881.txt | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| skipping to change at line 114 ¶ | skipping to change at line 114 ¶ | |||
| The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", | The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", | |||
| "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and | "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and | |||
| "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in | "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in | |||
| BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all | BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all | |||
| capitals, as shown here. | capitals, as shown here. | |||
| 2. Identifiers | 2. Identifiers | |||
| The AlgorithmIdentifier type is defined in [RFC5912] as follows: | The AlgorithmIdentifier type is defined in [RFC5912] as follows: | |||
| AlgorithmIdentifier{ALGORITHM-TYPE, ALGORITHM-TYPE:AlgorithmSet} ::= | AlgorithmIdentifier{ALGORITHM-TYPE, ALGORITHM-TYPE:AlgorithmSet} ::= | |||
| SEQUENCE { | SEQUENCE { | |||
| algorithm ALGORITHM-TYPE.id({AlgorithmSet}), | algorithm ALGORITHM-TYPE.id({AlgorithmSet}), | |||
| parameters ALGORITHM-TYPE. | parameters ALGORITHM-TYPE. | |||
| Params({AlgorithmSet}{@algorithm}) OPTIONAL | &Params({AlgorithmSet}{@algorithm}) OPTIONAL | |||
| } | } | |||
| | NOTE: The above syntax is from [RFC5912] and is compatible with | | NOTE: The above syntax is from [RFC5912] and is compatible with | |||
| | the 2021 ASN.1 syntax [X680]. See [RFC5280] for the 1988 ASN.1 | | the 2021 ASN.1 syntax [X680]. See [RFC5280] for the 1988 ASN.1 | |||
| | syntax. | | syntax. | |||
| The fields in AlgorithmIdentifier have the following meanings: | The fields in AlgorithmIdentifier have the following meanings: | |||
| * algorithm identifies the cryptographic algorithm with an object | * algorithm identifies the cryptographic algorithm with an object | |||
| identifier (OID). | identifier (OID). | |||
| skipping to change at line 159 ¶ | skipping to change at line 159 ¶ | |||
| 3. ML-DSA Signatures in PKIX | 3. ML-DSA Signatures in PKIX | |||
| ML-DSA is a digital signature scheme built upon the Fiat-Shamir-with- | ML-DSA is a digital signature scheme built upon the Fiat-Shamir-with- | |||
| aborts framework [Fiat-Shamir]. The security is based upon the | aborts framework [Fiat-Shamir]. The security is based upon the | |||
| hardness of lattice problems over module lattices [Dilithium]. ML- | hardness of lattice problems over module lattices [Dilithium]. ML- | |||
| DSA provides three parameter sets for the NIST PQC security | DSA provides three parameter sets for the NIST PQC security | |||
| categories 2, 3, and 5. | categories 2, 3, and 5. | |||
| Signatures are used in a number of different ASN.1 structures. As | Signatures are used in a number of different ASN.1 structures. As | |||
| shown in the ASN.1 representation from [RFC5280] below, in an X.509 | shown in the ASN.1 equivalent to that in [RFC5280] below, in an X.509 | |||
| certificate, a signature is encoded with an algorithm identifier in | certificate, a signature is encoded with an algorithm identifier in | |||
| the signatureAlgorithm attribute and a signatureValue attribute that | the signatureAlgorithm attribute and a signatureValue attribute that | |||
| contains the actual signature. | contains the actual signature. | |||
| Certificate ::= SIGNED{ TBSCertificate } | Certificate ::= SIGNED{ TBSCertificate } | |||
| SIGNED{ToBeSigned} ::= SEQUENCE { | SIGNED{ToBeSigned} ::= SEQUENCE { | |||
| toBeSigned ToBeSigned, | toBeSigned ToBeSigned, | |||
| algorithmIdentifier SEQUENCE { | algorithmIdentifier SEQUENCE { | |||
| algorithm SIGNATURE-ALGORITHM. | algorithm SIGNATURE-ALGORITHM. | |||
| skipping to change at line 595 ¶ | skipping to change at line 595 ¶ | |||
| efficiently recover the private key by trying a small set of | efficiently recover the private key by trying a small set of | |||
| possibilities, rather than brute-force searching the whole keyspace. | possibilities, rather than brute-force searching the whole keyspace. | |||
| The generation of random numbers of a sufficient level of quality for | The generation of random numbers of a sufficient level of quality for | |||
| use in cryptography is difficult; see Section 3.6.1 of [FIPS204] for | use in cryptography is difficult; see Section 3.6.1 of [FIPS204] for | |||
| some additional information. | some additional information. | |||
| In the design of ML-DSA, care has been taken to make side-channel | In the design of ML-DSA, care has been taken to make side-channel | |||
| resilience easier to achieve. For instance, ML-DSA does not depend | resilience easier to achieve. For instance, ML-DSA does not depend | |||
| on Gaussian sampling. Implementations must still take great care not | on Gaussian sampling. Implementations must still take great care not | |||
| to leak information via various side channels. While deliberate | to leak information via various side channels. While deliberate | |||
| design decisions such as these can help to deliver a greater ease of | design decisions such as these can help to deliver a secure | |||
| secure implementation -- particularly against side-channel attacks -- | implementation with greater ease -- particularly against side-channel | |||
| it does not necessarily provide resistance to more powerful attacks | attacks -- it does not necessarily provide resistance to more | |||
| such as differential power analysis. Some amount of side-channel | powerful attacks such as differential power analysis. Some amount of | |||
| leakage has been demonstrated in parts of the signing algorithm | side-channel leakage has been demonstrated in parts of the signing | |||
| (specifically the bit-unpacking function), from which a demonstration | algorithm (specifically the bit-unpacking function), from which a | |||
| of key recovery has been made over a large sample of signatures. | demonstration of key recovery has been made over a large sample of | |||
| Masking countermeasures exist for ML-DSA, but comes with performance | signatures. Masking countermeasures exist for ML-DSA, but comes with | |||
| overhead. | performance overhead. | |||
| ML-DSA offers both deterministic and randomized signing. Signatures | ML-DSA offers both deterministic and randomized signing. Signatures | |||
| generated with either mode are compatible and a verifier can't tell | generated with either mode are compatible and a verifier can't tell | |||
| them apart. In the deterministic case, a signature only depends on | them apart. In the deterministic case, a signature only depends on | |||
| the private key and the message to be signed. This makes the | the private key and the message to be signed. This makes the | |||
| implementation easier to test and does not require a randomness | implementation easier to test and does not require a randomness | |||
| source during signing. In the randomized case, signing mixes in a | source during signing. In the randomized case, signing mixes in a | |||
| 256-bit random string from an approved random bit generator (RBG). | 256-bit random string from an approved random bit generator (RBG). | |||
| When randomized, ML-DSA is easier to harden against fault and | When randomized, ML-DSA is easier to harden against fault and | |||
| hardware side-channel attacks. | hardware side-channel attacks. | |||
| A security property that is also associated with digital signatures | A security property that is also associated with digital signatures | |||
| is non-repudiation. Non-repudiation refers to the assurance that the | is non-repudiation. Non-repudiation refers to the assurance that the | |||
| owner of a signature key pair that was capable of generating an | owner of a signature keypair that was capable of generating an | |||
| existing signature corresponding to certain data cannot convincingly | existing signature corresponding to certain data cannot convincingly | |||
| deny having signed the data, unless its private key was compromised. | deny having signed the data, unless its private key was compromised. | |||
| The digital signature scheme ML-DSA possesses three security | The digital signature scheme ML-DSA possesses three security | |||
| properties beyond unforgeability, that are associated with non- | properties beyond unforgeability, that are associated with non- | |||
| repudiation. These are exclusive ownership, message-bound | repudiation. These are exclusive ownership, message-bound | |||
| signatures, and non-resignability. These properties are based | signatures, and non-resignability. These properties are based | |||
| tightly on the assumed collision resistance of the hash function used | tightly on the assumed collision resistance of the hash function used | |||
| (in this case SHAKE-256). A full discussion of these properties in | (in this case SHAKE-256). A full discussion of these properties in | |||
| ML-DSA can be found at [CDFFJ21]. | ML-DSA can be found at [CDFFJ21]. | |||
| skipping to change at line 680 ¶ | skipping to change at line 680 ¶ | |||
| [X690] ITU-T, "Information Technology -- ASN.1 encoding rules: | [X690] ITU-T, "Information Technology -- ASN.1 encoding rules: | |||
| Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical | Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical | |||
| Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules | Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules | |||
| (DER)", ITU-T Recommendation X.690, ISO/IEC 8825-1:2021, | (DER)", ITU-T Recommendation X.690, ISO/IEC 8825-1:2021, | |||
| February 2021, <https://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-X.690>. | February 2021, <https://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-X.690>. | |||
| 10.2. Informative References | 10.2. Informative References | |||
| [CDFFJ21] Cremers, C., Düzlü, S., Fiedler, R., Fischlin, M., and C. | [CDFFJ21] Cremers, C., Düzlü, S., Fiedler, R., Fischlin, M., and C. | |||
| Janson, "BUFFing signature schemes beyond unforgeability | Janson, "BUFFing signature schemes beyond unforgeability | |||
| and the case of post-quantum signatures", 2021 IEEE | and the case of post-quantum signatures", Cryptology | |||
| Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP), pp. 1696-1714, | ePrint Archive, Paper 2020/1525, October 2023, | |||
| DOI 10.1109/SP40001.2021.00093, 2021, | <https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/1525.pdf>. | |||
| <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9519420>. | ||||
| [Dilithium] | [Dilithium] | |||
| Bai, S., Ducas, L., Kiltz, E., Lepoint, T., Lyubashevsky, | Bai, S., Ducas, L., Kiltz, E., Lepoint, T., Lyubashevsky, | |||
| V., Schwabe, P., Seiler, G., and D. Stehlé, "CRYSTALS- | V., Schwabe, P., Seiler, G., and D. Stehlé, "CRYSTALS- | |||
| Dilithium Algorithm Specifications and Supporting | Dilithium Algorithm Specifications and Supporting | |||
| Documentation (Version 3.1)", 8 February 2021, | Documentation (Version 3.1)", 8 February 2021, | |||
| <https://pq-crystals.org/dilithium/data/dilithium- | <https://pq-crystals.org/dilithium/data/dilithium- | |||
| specification-round3-20210208.pdf>. | specification-round3-20210208.pdf>. | |||
| [Fiat-Shamir] | [Fiat-Shamir] | |||
| skipping to change at line 876 ¶ | skipping to change at line 875 ¶ | |||
| PARAMS ARE absent | PARAMS ARE absent | |||
| PUBLIC-KEYS { pk-ml-dsa-87 } | PUBLIC-KEYS { pk-ml-dsa-87 } | |||
| SMIME-CAPS { IDENTIFIED BY id-ml-dsa-87 } | SMIME-CAPS { IDENTIFIED BY id-ml-dsa-87 } | |||
| } | } | |||
| END | END | |||
| <CODE ENDS> | <CODE ENDS> | |||
| Appendix B. Security Strengths | Appendix B. Security Strengths | |||
| Instead of defining the strength of a quantum algorithm in a | Instead of defining the strength of a quantum algorithm using the | |||
| traditional manner using the imprecise notion of bits of security, | common but imprecise notion of bits of security, NIST has instead | |||
| NIST has instead elected to define security levels by picking a | elected to define security levels by picking a reference scheme, | |||
| reference scheme, which NIST expects to offer notable levels of | which NIST expects to offer notable levels of resistance to both | |||
| resistance to both quantum and classical attacks. To wit, an | quantum and classical attacks. To wit, an algorithm that achieves | |||
| algorithm that achieves NIST PQC security level 1 must require | NIST PQC security level 1 must require computational resources to | |||
| computational resources to break the relevant security property, | break the relevant security property, which are greater than those | |||
| which are greater than those required for a brute-force key search on | required for a brute-force key search on AES-128. Levels 3 and 5 use | |||
| AES-128. Levels 3 and 5 use AES-192 and AES-256 as references, | AES-192 and AES-256 as references, respectively. Levels 2 and 4 use | |||
| respectively. Levels 2 and 4 use collision search for SHA-256 and | collision search for SHA-256 and SHA-384 as references. | |||
| SHA-384 as references. | ||||
| The parameter sets defined for NIST security levels 2, 3, and 5 are | The parameter sets defined for NIST security levels 2, 3, and 5 are | |||
| listed in Figure 1, along with the resulting signature size, public | listed in Figure 1, along with the resulting signature size, public | |||
| key, and private key sizes in bytes. Note that these are the sizes | key, and private key sizes in bytes. Note that these are the sizes | |||
| of the raw keys, not including ASN.1 encoding overhead from | of the raw keys, not including ASN.1 encoding overhead from | |||
| OneAsymmetricKey and SubjectPublicKeyInfo wrappers. Private key | OneAsymmetricKey and SubjectPublicKeyInfo wrappers. Private key | |||
| sizes are shown for both the seed format and expanded format. | sizes are shown for both the seed format and expanded format. | |||
| +=======+=======+=====+==========+========+=========+===========+ | +=======+=======+=====+==========+========+=========+===========+ | |||
| | Level | (k,l) | eta | Sig. (B) | Public | Private | Private | | | Level | (k,l) | eta | Sig. (B) | Public | Private | Private | | |||
| skipping to change at line 3840 ¶ | skipping to change at line 3838 ¶ | |||
| key. | key. | |||
| 3. The third ML-DSA-PrivateKey example also includes only | 3. The third ML-DSA-PrivateKey example also includes only | |||
| expandedKey. The private s_1 and s_2 vectors imply a t vector | expandedKey. The private s_1 and s_2 vectors imply a t vector | |||
| whose private low bits do not match the t_0 vector portion of the | whose private low bits do not match the t_0 vector portion of the | |||
| private key (its high bits t_1 are the primary content of the | private key (its high bits t_1 are the primary content of the | |||
| public key). | public key). | |||
| The second and third examples would not be detected by | The second and third examples would not be detected by | |||
| implementations that do not regenerate the public key from the | implementations that do not regenerate the public key from the | |||
| private key, or neglect to then check consistency of tr or t_0. | private key or, when they do, they neglect to check consistency of tr | |||
| and t_0. | ||||
| The following is the first example: | The following is the first example: | |||
| -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- | -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- | |||
| MIIKPgIBADALBglghkgBZQMEAxEEggoqMIIKJgQgAAECAwQFBgcICQoLDA0ODxAR | MIIKPgIBADALBglghkgBZQMEAxEEggoqMIIKJgQgAAECAwQFBgcICQoLDA0ODxAR | |||
| EhMUFRYXGBkaGxwdHh8EggoAUQyb/R3XN09Oiucd1YKBEGqTQS7Y+jV/dLu0Zh7L | EhMUFRYXGBkaGxwdHh8EggoAUQyb/R3XN09Oiucd1YKBEGqTQS7Y+jV/dLu0Zh7L | |||
| GSHTp1/JO4jvDmqbhRvs7BmZm+gQaMhZ1t8RXGCMFQEXDrbAVcIvYlWSSXbYlaX1 | GSHTp1/JO4jvDmqbhRvs7BmZm+gQaMhZ1t8RXGCMFQEXDrbAVcIvYlWSSXbYlaX1 | |||
| TSw4WWxAPM72+XPiKl+MfCuoNjNEcJCniyK7Qc/e2vvLLt7PkHDM5hLkKrCh8T65 | TSw4WWxAPM72+XPiKl+MfCuoNjNEcJCniyK7Qc/e2vvLLt7PkHDM5hLkKrCh8T65 | |||
| 3DwUkDGJwoHgsDHalISCEgijtDDSKEoEByDDRELgQC5EoHEBqSwDJmQSQSQYMiQA | 3DwUkDGJwoHgsDHalISCEgijtDDSKEoEByDDRELgQC5EoHEBqSwDJmQSQSQYMiQA | |||
| Ii5KlmALGZAiMyBShkUbCEyTGIQZAG1TgAwQpChQBgogBgwjETLSxEDSEgIENIYj | Ii5KlmALGZAiMyBShkUbCEyTGIQZAG1TgAwQpChQBgogBgwjETLSxEDSEgIENIYj | |||
| skipping to change at line 4058 ¶ | skipping to change at line 4057 ¶ | |||
| # M is the message, a bit-string | # M is the message, a bit-string | |||
| # μ and ctx are byte-strings. | # μ and ctx are byte-strings. | |||
| # ctx is the context string, which defaults to the empty string. | # ctx is the context string, which defaults to the empty string. | |||
| μ = H(BytesToBits(H(pk, 64) || IntegerToBytes(0, 1) || | μ = H(BytesToBits(H(pk, 64) || IntegerToBytes(0, 1) || | |||
| IntegerToBytes(|ctx|, 1) || ctx) || M, 64) | IntegerToBytes(|ctx|, 1) || ctx) || M, 64) | |||
| # The functions `BytesToBits` and `IntegerToBytes` are defined | # The functions `BytesToBits` and `IntegerToBytes` are defined | |||
| # in FIPS 204. | # in FIPS 204. | |||
| return μ | return μ | |||
| Figure 1: Computeμ Prehash Operation | Figure 1: Computeμ Pre-Hash Operation | |||
| Sign operations: | Sign operations: | |||
| Signμ(sk, μ): | Signμ(sk, μ): | |||
| # Referred to as 'Externalμ-ML-DSA.Sign(sk, μ)' | # Referred to as 'Externalμ-ML-DSA.Sign(sk, μ)' | |||
| # in the FIPS 204 FAQ. | # in the FIPS 204 FAQ. | |||
| if |μ| != 64 then | if |μ| != 64 then | |||
| return error # return an error indication if the input μ is not | return error # return an error indication if the input μ is not | |||
| skipping to change at line 4083 ¶ | skipping to change at line 4082 ¶ | |||
| # set rnd to all zeroes | # set rnd to all zeroes | |||
| if rnd = NULL then | if rnd = NULL then | |||
| return error # return an error indication if random bit | return error # return an error indication if random bit | |||
| # generation failed | # generation failed | |||
| end if | end if | |||
| sigma = Signμ_internal(sk, μ, rnd, isExternalμ=true) | sigma = Signμ_internal(sk, μ, rnd, isExternalμ=true) | |||
| return sigma | return sigma | |||
| ML-DSA.Signμ_internal(sk, M', rnd, isExternalμ=false): | ML-DSA.Signμ_internal(sk, M', rnd, isExternalμ=false): | |||
| # μ can be passed as an argument instead of M' | # μ is passed to the function via the argument M'. | |||
| # defaulting is Externalμ to false means that | # Defaulting Externalμ to false means that | |||
| # this modified version of Sign_internal can be used | # this modified version of Sign_internal can be used | |||
| # in place of the original without interfering with | # in place of the original without interfering with | |||
| # the functioning of pure ML-DSA mode. | # functioning of pure ML-DSA mode. | |||
| # ... identical to FIPS 204 Algorithm 7, but with Line 6 replaced | ||||
| # with | # ... identical to FIPS 204 Algorithm 7, but with Line 6 | |||
| # replaced with | ||||
| 6: if (isExternalμ): | 6: if (isExternalμ): | |||
| μ = M' | μ = M' | |||
| else: | else: | |||
| μ = H(BytesToBits(tr) || M', 64) | μ = H(BytesToBits(tr) || M', 64) | |||
| Figure 2: The Operations for Signing μ | Figure 2: The Operations for Signing μ | |||
| There is no need to specify an External μ Verify() routine because | There is no need to specify an External μ Verify() routine because | |||
| this is identical to the original ML-DSA.Verify(). This makes | this is identical to the original ML-DSA.Verify(). This makes | |||
| External μ mode simply an internal optimization of the signer, and | External μ mode simply an internal optimization of the signer, and | |||
| End of changes. 10 change blocks. | ||||
| 38 lines changed or deleted | 38 lines changed or added | |||
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