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Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Operational Protocols - LDAPv2
draft-ietf-pkix-ipki2opp-08

The information below is for an old version of the document that is already published as an RFC.
Document Type
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 2559.
Authors Sharon Boeyen , Tim Howes , Patrick Richard
Last updated 2013-03-02 (Latest revision 1998-09-24)
RFC stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
Intended RFC status Historic
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IESG IESG state Became RFC 2559 (Historic)
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Responsible AD Patrik Fältström
Send notices to <dwalln@orion.ncsc.mil>, <ejh@tycho.ncsc.mil>
draft-ietf-pkix-ipki2opp-08
PKIX Working Group                           Sharon Boeyen (Entrust)
draft-ietf-pkix-opp-LDAPv2-08.txt            Tim Howes (Netscape)
Expires in 6 months                          Patrick Richard (Xcert)
Updates RFC 1778                             September 1998

                Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure
                     Operational Protocols - LDAPv2
                  <draft-ietf-pkix-opp-LDAPv2-08.txt>

1.  Status of this Memo

     This document is an  Internet-Draft.  Internet-Drafts  are  working
     documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas,
     and its working groups. Note that other groups may also  distribute
     working documents as Internet-Drafts.

     Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid  for  a  maximum  of  six
     months  and  may  be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other docu-
     ments at any time. It is inappropriate to  use  Internet-Drafts  as
     reference  material  or  to  cite  them other than as "work in pro-
     gress."

     To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the
     "1id-abstracts.txt" listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow
     Directories  on  ftp.is.co.za  (Africa),  ftp.nordu.net   (Europe),
     munnari.oz.au  (Pacific  Rim),  ftp.ietf.org (US East Coast), or
     ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast).

2.  Abstract

     The protocol described in this document is designed to satisfy some
     of  the  operational  requirements within the Internet X.509 Public
     Key Infrastructure (IPKI).  Specifically, this  document  addresses
     requirements  to  provide access to Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)
     repositories for the purposes of  retrieving  PKI  information  and
     managing  that  same  information.  The mechanism described in this
     document is based on  the  Lightweight  Directory  Access  Protocol
     (LDAP) v2, defined in RFC 1777, defining a profile of that protocol
     for use within the IPKI and updates encodings for certificates  and
     revocation  lists  from  RFC 1778. Additional mechanisms addressing
     PKIX operational requirements are specified in separate documents.

     The key words  'MUST',  'REQUIRED',  'SHOULD',  'RECOMMENDED',  and
     'MAY'  in  this  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC
     2119.

     Please send comments on this document to the ietf-pkix@imc.org mail
     list.

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3.  Introduction

     This specification is part of a multi-part standard for development
     of a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) for the Internet. This specif-
     ication addresses requirements to provide retrieval  of  X.509  PKI
     information,  including  certificates  and  CRLs from a repository.
     This specification also addresses requirements to add,  delete  and
     modify PKI information in a repository. A profile based on the LDAP
     version 2 protocol is provided to satisfy these requirements.

4.  Model

     The PKI components, as defined in PKIX Part 1, which  are  involved
     in PKIX operational protocol interactions include:

        -  End Entities
        -  Certification Authorities (CA)
        -  Repository

     End entities and CAs using LDAPv2, retrieve  PKI  information  from
     the repository using a subset of the LDAPv2 protocol.

     CAs populate the repository with PKI information using a subset  of
     the LDAPv2 protocol.

5.  Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)

     The following sections examine the  retrieval  of  PKI  information
     from  a  repository  and management of PKI information in a reposi-
     tory. A profile of the LDAPv2 protocol  is  defined  for  providing
     these services.

     Section 6 satisfies the requirement to retrieve PKI information  (a
     certificate,  CRL, or other information of interest)  from an entry
     in the repository, where  the  retrieving  entity  (either  an  end
     entity  or  a  CA)  has knowledge of the name of the entry. This is
     termed "repository read".

     Section 7 satisfies the same requirement as  6  for  the  situation
     where  the  name  of the entry is not known, but some other related
     information which may optionally be used as a filter against candi-
     date  entries in the repository, is known.  This is termed "reposi-
     tory search".

     Section 8 satisfies the requirement  of  CAs  to  add,  delete  and
     modify  PKI  information  information (a certificate, CRL, or other
     information of interest)in the repository. This is termed  "reposi-
     tory modify".

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     The subset of LDAPv2 needed to support each of these  functions  is
     described  below.  Note  that  the  repository search service  is a
     superset of the repository read service  in  terms  of  the  LDAPv2
     functionality needed.

     Note  that all tags are implicit by default in  the  ASN.1  defini-
     tions that follow.

6.  LDAP Repository Read

     To retrieve information from an entry corresponding to the  subject
     or issuer name of a certificate, requires a subset of the following
     three LDAP operations:

       BindRequest (and BindResponse)
       SearchRequest (and SearchResponse)
       UnbindRequest

     The subset of each REQUIRED operation is given below.

6.1.  Bind

6.1.1.  Bind Request

     The full LDAP v2 Bind Request is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MUST imple-
     ment the following subset of this operation:

        BindRequest ::=
          [APPLICATION 0] SEQUENCE {
             version      INTEGER (2),
             name         LDAPDN, -- MUST accept NULL LDAPDN
             simpleauth [0] OCTET STRING  -- MUST accept NULL simple
             }

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MAY  imple-
     ment other aspects of the BindRequest as well.

     Different services may have different security  requirements.  Some
     services may allow anonymous search, others may require authentica-
     tion. Those services allowing anonymous search may choose  only  to
     allow search based on certain criteria and not others.

     A LDAP repository read  service  SHOULD  implement  some  level  of
     anonymous  search access. A LDAP repository read service MAY imple-
     ment authenticated search access.

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6.1.2.  Bind Response

     The full LDAPv2 BindResponse is described in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MUST imple-
     ment  this entire protocol element, though only the following error
     codes may be returned from a Bind operation:

       success                      (0),
       operationsError              (1),
       protocolError                (2),
       authMethodNotSupported       (7),
       noSuchObject                 (32),
       invalidDNSyntax              (34),
       inappropriateAuthentication  (48),
       invalidCredentials           (49),
       busy                         (51),
       unavailable                  (52),
       unwillingToPerform           (53),
       other                        (80)

6.2.  Search

6.2.1.  Search Request

     The full LDAPv2 SearchRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MUST imple-
     ment the following subset of the SearchRequest.

        SearchRequest ::=
          [APPLICATION 3] SEQUENCE {
             baseObject     LDAPDN,
             scope             ENUMERATED {
                               baseObject   (0),
                                          },
             derefAliases   ENUMERATED {
                               neverDerefAliases   (0),
                                       },
             sizeLimit      INTEGER (0),
             timeLimit      INTEGER (0),
             attrsOnly      BOOLEAN, -- FALSE only
             filter         Filter,
             attributes     SEQUENCE OF AttributeType
                                 }

        Filter ::=
          CHOICE {

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            present        [7] AttributeType, -- "objectclass" only
                   }

     This subset of the LDAPv2 SearchRequest allows  the  LDAPv2  "read"
     operation:  a  base  object  search  with  a filter testing for the
     existence of the objectClass attribute.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MAY  imple-
     ment other aspects of the SearchRequest as well.

6.2.2.

     The full LDAPv2 SearchResponse is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service over LDAPv2
     MUST implement the full SearchResponse.

     Note that in the case of multivalued attributes such as  userCerti-
     ficate  a SearchResponse containing this attribute will include all
     values, assuming the requester has sufficient  access  permissions.
     The  application/relying  party  may  need to select an appropriate
     value to be used. Also note that retrieval of a certificate from  a
     named  entry  does  not guarantee that the certificate will include
     that same Distinguished Name (DN) and in some cases the subject  DN
     in the certificate may be NULL.

6.3.  Unbind

     The full LDAPv2 UnbindRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service MUST imple-
     ment the full UnbindRequest.

7.  LDAP Repository Search

     To search ,using arbitrary criteria, for an entry in  a  repository
     containing  a  certificate,  CRL, or other information of interest,
     requires a subset of the following three LDAP operations:

       BindRequest (and BindResponse)
       SearchRequest (and SearchResponse)
       UnbindRequest

     The subset of each operation REQUIRED is given below.

7.1.  Bind

     The BindRequest and BindResponse subsets needed  are  the  same  as

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     those described in Section 6.1.

     The full LDAP v2 Bind Request is defined in RFC 1777.

7.2.  Search

7.2.1.  Search Request

     The full LDAPv2 SearchRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  search  service  MUST
     implement the following subset of the SearchRequest protocol unit.

        SearchRequest ::=
          [APPLICATION 3] SEQUENCE {
             baseObject     LDAPDN,
             scope          ENUMERATED {
                                 baseObject     (0),
                                 singleLevel    (1),
                                 wholeSubtree   (2)
                                       },
             derefAliases   ENUMERATED {
                                 neverDerefAliases     (0),
                                       },
             sizeLimit      INTEGER (0 .. maxInt),
             timeLimit      INTEGER (0 .. maxInt),
             attrsOnly      BOOLEAN,  -- FALSE only
             filter         Filter,
             attributes     SEQUENCE OF AttributeType
                                  }

     All aspects of the SearchRequest MUST be supported, except for  the
     following:

     - Only the neverDerefAliases value of derefAliases needs
       to be supported

     - Only the FALSE value for attrsOnly needs to be supported

     This subset provides a more general  search  capability.  It  is  a
     superset  of the SearchRequest subset defined in Section 6.2.1. The
     elements added to this service are:

     - singleLevel and wholeSubtree scope needs to be supported

     - sizeLimit is included

     - timeLimit is included

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     - Enhanced filter capability

     An application providing  a  LDAP  repository  search  service  MAY
     implement other aspects of the SearchRequest as well.

7.2.2.  Search Response

     The full LDAPv2 SearchResponse is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  search  service  over
     LDAPv2 MUST implement the full SearchResponse.

7.3.  Unbind

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  search  service  MUST
     implement the full UnbindRequest.

8.  LDAP Repository Modify

     To add, delete and modify PKI information in a repository  requires
     a subset of the following LDAP operations:

       BindRequest (and BindResponse)
       ModifyRequest (and ModifyResponse)
       AddRequest (and AddResponse)
       DelRequest (and DelResponse
       UnbindRequest

     The subset of each operation REQUIRED is given below.

8.1.  Bind

     The full LDAP v2 Bind Request is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the following subset of this operation:

        BindRequest ::=
          [APPLICATION 0] SEQUENCE {
             version      INTEGER (2),
             name         LDAPDN,
             simpleauth [0] OCTET STRING
             }

     A LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST  implement  authenticated
     access.

     The BindResponse subsets needed are the same as those described  in

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     Section 6.1.2.

8.2.  Modify

8.2.1.  Modify Request

     The full LDAPv2 ModifyRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the following subset of the ModifyRequest protocol unit.

        ModifyRequest ::=
          [APPLICATION 6] SEQUENCE {
         object         LDAPDN,
         modification   SEQUENCE OF SEQUENCE {
                          operation     ENUMERATED {
                                          add     (0),
                                          delete  (1)
                                        },
                          modification  SEQUENCE {
                                        type   AttributeType,
                                        values SET OF
                                               AttributeValue
                                        }
                        }
          }

     All aspects of the ModifyRequest MUST be supported, except for  the
     following:

     - Only the add and delete values of operation need to be supported

8.2.2.  Modify Response

     The full LDAPv2 ModifyResponse is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full ModifyResponse.

8.3.  Add

8.3.1.  Add Request

     The full LDAPv2 AddRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full AddRequest.

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8.3.2.  Add Response

     The full LDAPv2 AddResponse is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full AddResponse.

8.4.  Delete

8.4.1.  Delete Request

     The full LDAPv2 DelRequest is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full DelRequest.

8.4.2.  Delete Response

     The full LDAPv2 DelResponse is defined in RFC 1777.

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full DelResponse.

8.5.  Unbind

     An application providing a  LDAP  repository  modify  service  MUST
     implement the full UnbindRequest.

9.  Non-standard attribute value encodings

     When conveyed in LDAP requests and results, attributes  defined  in
     X.500 are to be encoded using string representations defined in RFC
     1778, The String Representation  of  Standard  Attribute  Syntaxes.
     These string encodings were based on the attribute definitions from
     X.500(1988).  Thus, the string representations of the PKI  informa-
     tion  elements are for version 1 certificates and version 1 revoca-
     tion lists.  Since this specification uses version  3  certificates
     and  version 2 revocation lists, as defined in X.509(1997), the RFC
     1778 string encoding of these attributes is inappropriate.

     For this reason, these attributes MUST be encoded  using  a  syntax
     similar  to  the  syntax  "Undefined" from section 2.1 of RFC 1778:
     values of these attributes are encoded as if they  were  values  of
     type  "OCTET  STRING",  with the string value of the encoding being
     the DER-encoding of the value itself.  For example, when writing  a
     userCertificate  to the repository, the CA generates a DER-encoding
     of the certificate and uses that encoding as the value of the user-
     Certificate  attribute  in  the  LDAP  Modify request.This encoding

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     style is consistent with the encoding scheme proposed  for  LDAPv3,
     which is now being defined within the IETF.

     Note that certificates and revocation  lists  will  be  transferred
     using  this  mechanism rather than the string encodings in RFC 1778
     and client systems  which  do  not  understand  this  encoding  may
     experience problems with these attributes.

10.  Transport

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service, LDAP repo-
     sitory  search service, or LDAP repository modify service MUST sup-
     port LDAPv2 transport over TCP, as defined in Section  3.1  of  RFC
     1777.

     An application providing a LDAP repository read service, LDAP repo-
     sitory  search  service, or LDAP repository modify service MAY sup-
     port LDAPv2 transport over other reliable transports as well.

11.  Security Considerations

     Since the elements of information which are key to the PKI  service
     (certificates  and CRLs) are both digitally signed pieces of infor-
     mation, additional integrity service is NOT REQUIRED.   As  neither
     information  element  need  be  kept secret and anonymous access to
     such information, for retrieval purposes is  generally  acceptable,
     privacy service is NOT REQUIRED for information retrieval requests.

     CAs have additional requirements,  including  modification  of  PKI
     information.  Simple  authentication  alone  is  not sufficient for
     these purposes. It is  RECOMMENDED  that  some  stronger  means  of
     authentication and/or (if simple authentication is used) some means
     of protecting the privacy of the password  is  used,  (e.g.  accept
     modifications  only  via physically secure networks, use IPsec, use
     SSH or TLS or SSL tunnel). Without such authentication, it is  pos-
     sible  that  a  denial-of-service  attack  could  occur  where  the
     attacker replaces valid certificates with bogus ones.

     For the LDAP repository modify  service,  profiled  in  section  8,
     there  are  some  specific  security considerations with respect to
     access control. These controls apply to a repository which is under
     the  same  management  control  as  the CA. Organizations operating
     directories are NOT REQUIRED to provide external CAs access permis-
     sion to their directories.

     The CA MUST have access control permissions allowing it to:

       For CA entries:

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         - add, modify and delete all PKI attributes for its
           own directory entry;
         - add, modify and delete all values of these attributes.

       For CRL distribution point entries (if used):
         - create, modify and delete entries of object class
           cRLDistributionPoint immediately subordinate to its own
           entry;
         - add, modify and delete all attributes, and all values of
           these attributes for these entries.

       For subscriber (end-entity) entries:
         - add, modify and delete the attribute userCertificate and
           all values of that attribute, issued by this CA
           to/from these entries.

      The CA is the ONLY entity with these permissions.

     An application providing  LDAP  repository  read,  LDAP  repository
     search,  or  LDAP  repository  modify  service  as  defined in this
     specification is NOT REQUIRED to implement any additional  security
     features  other than those described herein, however an implementa-
     tion SHOULD do so.

12.  References

[1]  Lightweight Directory Access  Protocol.  Y.  Yeong,  T.  Howes,  S.
     Kille, RFC 1777, March 1995.

[2]   The String  Representation  of  Standard  Attribute  Syntaxes.  T.
     Howes, S. Kille, W. Yeong, C. Robbins, RFC 1778, March 1995.

[3]  Key Words for use  in  RFCs  to  Indicate  Requirement  Levels,  S.
     Bradner, RFC 2119, March 1997.

13.  Author's Address

   Sharon Boeyen
   Entrust Technologies Limited
   750 Heron Road
   Ottawa, Ontario
   Canada K1V 1A7
   boeyen@entrust.com

   Tim Howes
   Netscape Communications Corp.
   501 E. Middlefield Rd.
   Mountain View, CA 94043

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   USA
   howes@netscape.com

   Patrick Richard
   Xcert Software Inc.
   Suite 1001, 701 W. Georgia Street
   P.O. Box 10145
   Pacific Centre
   Vancouver, B.C.
   Canada V7Y 1C6
   patr@xcert.com

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