naiveproxy/net/docs/certificate-transparency.md

386 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

2018-08-11 08:35:24 +03:00
# Certificate Transparency
[TOC]
## Overview
Certificate Transparency (CT) is a protocol designed to fix several structural
flaws in the SSL/TLS certificate ecosystem. Described in
[RFC 6962](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6962), it provides a public,
append-only data structure that can log certificates that are issued by
[certificate authorities](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_authority) (CAs).
By logging certificates, it becomes possible for the public to see what
certificates have been issued by a given CA. This allows site operators to
detect when a certificate has been issued for their domains, allowing them to
check for unauthorized issuance. It also allows browsers and root stores, and
the broader community, to examine the certificates a CA has issued and ensure
that the CA is complying with their expected or disclosed practices.
For more information about how Certificate Transparency works, see:
* https://www.certificate-transparency.org
* [Introducing Certificate Transparency and Nimbus](https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-certificate-transparency-and-nimbus/)
## Certificate Transparency for Site Operators
### Basics
We say that a certificate supports Certificate Transparency if it comes with
CT information that demonstrates it has been logged in several CT logs. This
CT information must comply with the
[Certificate Transparency in Chrome](https://github.com/chromium/ct-policy/blob/master/ct_policy.md)
policy. We sometimes refer to a site that "supports" CT as using a certificate
that is "CT qualified" or "disclosed via CT."
In general, a site operator does not need to take special action to
support Certificate Transparency. This is because RFC 6962 defines three ways
of providing the necessary information for CT: within the certificate, within
a stapled OCSP response, or directly by the TLS server. Nearly every CA
supports CT through the first method, meaning that when you get a certificate,
it will already support CT and require no further configuration. If you are
using a cloud provider to terminate your TLS connections, the cloud provider
may also support CT via TLS, requiring no further action on your part.
Supporting CT within the certificate itself is the preferred and recommended
way to enable CT support. If you obtain a certificate from your CA and it does
not support CT, then that generally indicates that your CA is not following
industry best practice, and you should probably look for another CA to provide
certificates for your sites.
Configuring support for CT via the TLS extension is not recommended for most
site operators. This is because supporting CT via this method requires
constant monitoring of the CT ecosystem, such as for changes in the list of
trusted logs or testing compatibility with various CT-supporting clients. This
method works well for organizations with the ability to dedicate resources to
that, such as hosting and cloud providers. If you are hosting your own website,
you should try to ensure that your certificates support CT, and avoid supporting
CT via the TLS extension. Supporting CT via the TLS extension may require rapid
changes to your configuration, and thus may be riskier for organizations
without staff dedicated to this.
If you are getting longer-lived certificates (for example, 1 year), it's
possible that changes in the CT ecosystem may mean that the CT information may
expire before the certificate expires. If your CA also supports delivering CT
via OCSP responses, then supporting OCSP stapling on your server may allow
fresh CT information to be provided without having to replace the certificate.
Alternatively, if your server does not support OCSP stapling, or your CA does
not support CT in their OCSP responses, you may need to replace your certificate.
These policies only apply to publicly-trusted CAs - that is, CAs that your
browser or device trust without any additional configuration. For organizations
using their own CAs, or for locally installed CAs, see
[Certificate Transparency for Enterprises](#Certificate-Transparency-For-Enterprises).
### Chrome Policies
Chrome has gradually required Certificate Transparency for more and more
publicly-trusted certificates over the past few years.
* [Since 1 January 2015](https://github.com/chromium/ct-policy/blob/master/ct_policy.md),
Chrome has required that all Extended Validation certificates be disclosed via
Certificate Transparency. Certificates that were not properly disclosed would
be [stripped of their EV status](https://news.netcraft.com/archives/2015/08/24/thousands-short-changed-by-ev-certificates-that-dont-display-correctly-in-chrome.html),
but no warnings would be shown to visitors to sites that did not comply.
* [Since 1 June 2016](https://security.googleblog.com/2015/10/sustaining-digital-certificate-security.html),
Chrome has required that all new certificates issued by the set of root
certificates owned by Symantec Corporation are disclosed via Certificate
Transparency. Certificates that were not disclosed, or which were not disclosed
in a way consistent with RFC 6962, would be rejected as untrusted.
* For all new certificates issued after 30 April 2018, [Chrome will require that
the certificate be disclosed via Certificate
Transparency](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/d/msg/ct-policy/wHILiYf31DE/iMFmpMEkAQAJ).
If a certificate is issued after this date and neither the certificate nor
the site supports CT, then these certificates will be rejected as untrusted, and
the connection will be blocked. In the case of a main page load, the user will
see a full page certificate warning page, with the error code
`net::ERR_CERTIFICATE_TRANSPARENCY_REQUIRED`. If you receive this error, this
indicates that your CA has not taken steps to make sure your certificate
supports CT, and you should contact your CA's sales or support team to ensure
you can get a replacement certificate that works.
### Domain Privacy
Supporting CT by disclosing the certificate to a CT Log means that the full
contents of the certificate will be publicly accessible and viewable. In
particular, this means that the domains a certificate are for will be included
in the Certificate Transparency log, as well as the organization they are
affiliated with, if they are validated to a level higher than Domain
Validation or issued from an organization-specific CA.
For most certificates, this is no different than what is already available.
Publicly-trusted certificates have been subject to aggregation for public
analysis for some time, such as through products and tools such as
[Censys](https://censys.io/) or [scans.io](https://scans.io/). While
Certificate Transparency provides an interoperable protocol for exchanging
these datasets, in many cases, the certificate details and domains were already
publicly detectable.
Requiring that the full certificate be disclosed if it was issued by a
publicly-trusted CA is an important part of the security goals of Certificate
Transparency. Permitting some of the information to be hidden from
certificates allows for both attackers and untrustworthy CAs to hide
certificates that could be used to compromise users. Certificate Transparency
has detected issues at a large
[number of CAs](https://wiki.mozilla.org/CA/Incident_Dashboard), many that the
CAs themselves were not even aware of, and so public disclosure is critical
to keeping all users safe.
While proposals for hiding domain names were presented during the development
of Certificate Transparency, none of them were able to balance the needs of
site operators that did not need to hide their domains, those that did, and the
security risks that users would face.
Because of this, Chrome does not support any method for hiding domain names or
other information within publicly-trusted certificates, nor are there any plans
to support such mechanisms. Domain operators that wish to hide their
certificates, enabling security risks and attacks, have two options:
1. **Wildcard Certificates** - Wildcard certificates allow a single certificate
to be used for multiple hostnames, by putting a `*` as the most specific
DNS label (for example, `*.internal.example.com` is valid for
`mail.internal.example.com` and `wiki.internal.example.com`, but not for
`www.example.com` or `two.levels.internal.example.com`). Wildcard
certificates require greater care by the site operator to protect their
private key, but also can have their issuance controlled via technologies
such as [CAA (RFC 6844)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6844). This still
requires the certificate be disclosed, but can limit how much of the domain
is disclosed.
2. **Enterprise-specific configuration** - If the domains being accessed are
not intended to be used on the public internet, or not on machines or by
users that are not part of a single enterprise, then that enterprise can
use the options in the
[Certificate Transparency for Enterprises](#Certificate-Transparency-For-Enterprises).
This allows the enterprise to not reveal any information about the
certificate, but these certificates will **only** be trusted by their
members.
### What to do if your certificate does not work
As noted in [Chrome Policies](#Chrome-Policies), all certificates issued after
30 April 2018 are expected to be disclosed via Certificate Transparency in a
way that is compliant with the Certificate Transparency in Chrome policy.
Virtually all publicly-trusted CAs have committed to supporting CT for their
customers by default by this date, meaning that site operators should not have
to do anything special and can continue getting certificates that just work on
1 May 2018.
However, there's still a chance that a CA may not have adopted Certificate
Transparency, may have an infrastructure issue, or may not have communicated
to their partners, such as resellers or subordinate CAs, to ensure that the
transition would be as smooth as possible for their customers.
If you're receiving a `net::ERR_CERTIFICATE_TRANSPARENCY_REQUIRED` error
message, the best thing to do is to contact your CA's support or sales team
to diagnose the error with them. They will most likely need to replace your
certificate with a new one that properly supports CT.
## Certificate Transparency for Enterprises
### Locally-trusted CAs
Certificate Transparency only applies to CAs that are publicly-trusted - that
is, CAs that are supported by your browser or device out of the box, without
any additional configuration steps.
For CAs that have been manually installed, provided those certificates are not
or have not been publicly-trusted, it's not necessary to enable support for
Certificate Transparency. Further, Certificate Transparency Logs will not
accept certificates from those CAs, thus it's not possible to support CT.
In some cases, an Enterprise may have a locally-trusted CA that has been
manually installed, but it was previously publicly-trusted. For example, this
CA may have been removed by a browser or an OS for not complying with the
root store policies, but the Enterprise may still have a dependency on
trusting this CA. In these cases, the Enterprise can use
[Enterprise Policies](#Enterprise-Policies) to configure how Certificate
Transparency will be enforced for those CAs.
### Private Domain Names
For Enterprises that have domain names that are internal to their organization,
and do not need to be publicly-trusted by default, several options exist to
enable these domains to be kept private, while allowing the certificates to
still be used, without error, for users in their organization.
The recommended option is to no longer rely on publicly-trusted certificates
to serve these domains, as they are organization specific. For example, such
organizations can use a private CA, which [several](https://aws.amazon.com/certificate-manager/private-certificate-authority/)
[CAs](https://www.digicert.com/private-pki/) [offer](https://www.comodo.com/business-security/pki-management/certificate-manager.php).
Using a hosted, managed PKI may help organizations more rapidly respond to
change in the TLS ecosystem, such as changes to certificate algorithms or
support for new protocols.
Another option is to request that the publicly-trusted CA not log the
certificate. This will prevent this certificate from being trusted by default,
but organizations that manage their devices or users can override this through
[Enterprise Policies](#Enterprise-Policies) to enable these certificates to be
trusted for users in their Enterprise.
Finally, organizations may manage their own PKI in-house, using CA
software such as [CFSSL](https://github.com/cloudflare/cfssl), [Boulder](https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder),
[EJBCA](https://www.ejbca.org/) or
[Active Directory Certificate Services](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff630887.aspx).
Managing certificates in-house may be more complex and security risky, but
offers an alternative solution to partnering with a certificate provider.
### Legacy CAs
Some Enterprises rely on Certificate Authorities that have not been audited to
the same standard as other CAs or been operated to the same security
requirements. These CAs would not be trusted in new products, nor other root
programs, but may be trusted on one or more platforms that Chrome runs on.
Because they are trusted by default, they are subject to the Chrome's policies
on requiring CT, but due to their legacy status, may not be prepared. While the
requirement to disclose new certificates via Certificate Transparency has been
communicated, some may not do so, causing their new certificates to not be
trusted. This is most common with CAs run by governments, as they rarely meet the
required security standards of a widely-trusted CA.
Organizations that need to use certificates from these CAs should be aware
that their certificates will not be trusted if they do not support CT, and so
should look for CAs that do support CT. Alternatively, supporting CT via TLS
may be the only way to ensure these certificates continue to work, but that
requires the Enterprise constantly keep track of changes regarding Certificate
Transparency.
Organizations that need to trust certificates from these CAs, such as when
talking to other organizations that need to use these CAs, can configure
[Enterprise Policies](#Enterprise-Policy) for users in their organization,
which will allow trust in these certificates. As these only apply to Enterprise
users, these policies are not suitable for making these certificates trusted
more widely.
### Enterprise Policies
Several Chrome-specific policies exist that allow Enterprises to configure
their machines or users to disable Certificate Transparency for certain cases.
These policies are documented in the
[master policy list](https://www.chromium.org/administrators/policy-list-3),
but detailed further below.
#### CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForUrls
This [policy](https://www.chromium.org/administrators/policy-list-3#CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForUrls)
has been available since Chrome 53, and allows for disabling Certificate
Transparency enforcement for a certain set of domains or subdomains, without
disabling Certificate Transparency altogether.
If you wish to disable CT for a given hostname, and all of its subdomains, then
the domain is simply entered into the list. For example, `example.com` will
disable CT for `example.com` and all subdomains.
If you wish to disable CT only for a given hostname, but wish to ensure that
subdomains will still have CT enabled, then prefix the domain with a leading
dot. For example, `.example.com` will disable CT for `example.com` exactly,
while leaving it enabled for subdomains.
#### CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForCas
This [policy](https://www.chromium.org/administrators/policy-list-3#CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForCas),
available since Chrome 57, allows for disabling Certificate Transparency
enforcement if certain conditions are met in the trusted certificate chain.
This allows disabling CT without having to list all of the domain names, but
only for certificates issued to a specific organization.
Certificates are specified in this policy by applying Base64 to a hash of their
subjectPublicKeyInformation, as well as specifying the hash algorithm used.
This format is very similar to that used by
[HTTP Public Key Pinning](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7469) (HPKP), so that
sites can use the same [examples](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7469#appendix-A)
or [tools](https://report-uri.com/home/pubkey_hash) used to generate HPKP
hashes to determine how to configure the policy. Note that while both use
Base64, an HPKP hash will be in the form `pin-sha256="hash"`, while the policy
will be in the form `sha256/hash`.
To disable Certificate Transparency for these certificates, the certificate
must match one of the following conditions:
1. The hash specified is of the server certificate's subjectPublicKeyInfo.
2. The hash specified is of an intermediate CA, and that intermediate CA has
a nameConstraints extension with one or more directoryNames in the
permittedSubtrees of that extension.
3. The hash specified is of an intermediate CA, that intermediate CA contains
one or more organizationName (O) attribute in the subject, and the server
certificate's has the same number of organizationName attributes, with
byte-for-byte identical values, in the same exact order.
#### CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForLegacyCas
This [policy](https://www.chromium.org/administrators/policy-list-3#CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForLegacyCas),
available since Chrome 67, allows for disabling Certificate Transparency
enforcement for certain legacy CAs that have not adopted modern security and
audit requirements required of publicly-trusted CAs. This is particularly
tailored towards CAs that are trusted on some platforms that Chrome runs on,
but are not trusted on ChromeOS or Android, due to not meeting the necessary
security requirements.
CAs are specified in this policy by applying Base64 to a hash of their
subjectPublicKeyInformation, the same as in
[CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForCAs](#CertificateTransparencyEnforcementDisabledForCas).
However, these CAs must also be recognized as Legacy CAs in the
[`/net/data/ssl/root_stores/root_stores.json`](/net/data/ssl/root_stores/root_stores.json)
file, which means that they are not trusted on ChromeOS or Android, but are
trusted on another platform that Chrome runs on.
This policy is the riskiest of the three Enterprise policies, in that such
legacy CAs can represent the greatest security threat to an organization, as
they lack either the audits or compliance with industry best practice and root
store requirements. Enterprises should only enable this policy if no other
option meets their needs.
## Certificate Transparency for Chrome/Chromium developers
### //net Interfaces
Support for Certificate Transparency in //net is made up of two core
interfaces:
* [`CTVerifier`](/net/cert/ct_verifier.h): Responsible for extracting the
CT information (SCTs) from the certificate, the OCSP response, and the
TLS handshake, validating the signatures against a set of known/configured
CT logs, and validating that the SCTs match the certificate provided.
* [`CTPolicyEnforcer`](/net/cert/ct_policy_enforcer.h): Responsible for
taking the extracted, verified SCTs and applying
application/embedder-specific policies to determine whether the SCTs are
"good enough" (meet application requirements).
In addition to these two core classes, configuration and support for CT-related
behaviours is expressed via the
[`TransportSecurityState`](/net/http/transport_security_state.h). The
`TransportSecurityState` has methods for exposing support and policies for
[`Expect-CT`](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-expect-ct) and
for embedder-specific overrides via the
`TransportSecurityState::RequireCTDelegate`.
### Supporting Certificate Transparency for Embedders
While Chromium has implemented support for Certificate Transparency for a
number of years, it would not block connections unless there was a known
security issue. For example, certificates that were intended to be EV, but
were not disclosed properly, simply would have their EV status removed, while
the connection should still continue.
However, as Google Chrome looks to roll out a more rigorous enforcement of
Certificate Transparency, by enforcing that newly-issued certificates are
disclosed as a condition of being trusted, the risks to the CA and CT
ecosystem significantly increase if embedders implement CT without the ability
for reliable, rapid updates, keeping track with ongoing development in the
main tree and reliably delivering security updates on the same cadence as
Chromium branches and Google Chrome releases.
For this reason, the CT implementation is undergoing a refactoring to reduce
those risks through code and implementation. As a result, Chromium embedders
will **NOT** have CT enforcement enabled by default, and are **NOT** encouraged
to manually enable it at this time.
Distributors of products that embed Chromium sources are encouraged to
participate in the
[ct-policy@chromium.org](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!forum/ct-policy)
discussion group, which involves a variety of stakeholders in the CT ecosystem
for discussing matters of policy and implementation, in order to understand
the risks and participate in solutions. Face-to-face summits are periodically
held to gather key stakeholders together to work through these issues, helping
root programs, CAs, log operators, and the overall PKI community develop
consistent, interoperable, secure, and reliable policies and implementations.