Network Working Group F. Hao, Ed.
Internet-Draft Newcastle University (UK)
Intended status: Informational December 15, 2013
Expires: June 18, 2014
J-PAKE: Password Authenticated Key Exchange by Juggling
draft-hao-jpake-01
Abstract
This document specifies a Password Authenticated Key Exchange by
Juggling (J-PAKE) protocol. This protocol allows the establishment
of a secure end-to-end communication channel between two remote
parties over an insecure network solely based on a shared password,
without requiring a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) or any trusted
third party.
Status of This Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.1. Requirements language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. Notations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. J-PAKE Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Protocol setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2. Two-round key exchange . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.3. Three-pass variant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.4. Key confirmation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.5. Computational cost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
1. Introduction
Password-Authenticated Key Exchange (PAKE) is a technique that aims
to establish secure communication between two remote parties solely
based on their shared password, without relying on a Public Key
Infrastructure or any trusted third party [BM92]. The first PAKE
protocol, called EKE, was proposed by Steven Bellovin and Michael
Merrit in 1992 [BM92]. Other well-known PAKE protocols include SPEKE
(by David Jablon in 1996) [Jab96] and SRP (by Tom Wu in 1998) [Wu98].
SRP has been revised several times to address reported security and
efficiency issues. In particular, the version 6 of SRP, commonly
known as SRP-6, is specified in [RFC5054].
This document specifies a PAKE protocol called Password Authenticated
Key Exchange by Juggling (J-PAKE), which was designed by Feng Hao and
Peter Ryan in 2008 [HR08].
There are a few factors that may be considered in favor of J-PAKE
over others. First, J-PAKE has security proofs, while equivalent
proofs are lacking in EKE, SPEKE and SRP-6. Second, J-PAKE is not
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patented. It follows a completely different design approach from all
other PAKE protocols, and is built upon a well-established Zero
Knowledge Proof (ZKP) primitive: Schnorr NIZK proof [I-D-Schnorr].
Third, J-PAKE is efficient. It adopts novel engineering techniques
to optimize the use of ZKP so that overall the protocol is
sufficiently efficient for practical use. Fourth, J-PAKE is designed
to work generically in both the finite field and elliptic curve
setting (i.e., DSA and ECDSA-like groups). Unlike SPEKE, it does not
require any extra primitive to hash passwords onto a designated
elliptic curve. Finally, J-PAKE has already been used in real-world
applications at a relatively large scale. Since 2008, it has been
included into widely distributed open source libraries such as
OpenSSL, OpenSSH, Network Security Services (NSS) and the Bouncy
Castle. In 2010, it was adopted by Mozilla and built into the
Firefox browser (version 4 and onwards) to implement the secure sync
service.
1.1. Requirements language
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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
1.2. Notations
The following notations are used in this document:
o Alice: the assumed identity of the first party in the protocol
o Bob: the assumed identity of the second party in the protocol
o s: a low-entropy secret shared between Alice and Bob
o p: a large prime
o q: a large prime divisor of p-1
o Zp*: a multiplicative group of integers modulo p
o Gq: a subgroup of Zp* with primer order q
o g: a generator of Gq
o g^x: g raised to the power of x
o a mod b: a modulo b
o a * b: a multiplied by b
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o a || b: concatenation of a and b
o H: a secure one-way hash function
o KDF(a): Key Derivation Function with input a
o HMAC(MacKey, MacData): HMAC function with MacKey as the key and
MacData as the input data
2. J-PAKE Protocol
2.1. Protocol setup
The J-PAKE protocol uses exactly the same group setting as DSA (or
ECDSA). For simplicity, this document will only describe the J-PAKE
protocol in the DSA-like group setting. The protocol works basically
the same in the ECDSA-like group setting, except that the underlying
multiplicative group over a finite field is replaced by an additive
group over an elliptic curve.
Let Gq denote a subgroup of Zp* with prime order q, in which the
Decisional Diffie-Hellman problem (DDH) is intractable. The p and q
are large primes and q divides p-1. Let g be a generator in Gq. Any
non-identity element in Gq can be a generator. The two communicating
parties, Alice and Bob, both agree on (p, q, g). Values of (p, q,
g), as defined by NIST, can be found in the appendix of
[I-D-Schnorr]. [[Q1:: The reference is an accompanying internet
draft submission to IETF and it needs to be updated once it is
accepted by IETF.]]
Let s be the shared secret between Alice and Bob. The secret may be a
password, a hash of the password or any other derivative from a
password. This does not make any difference to the protocol. The
only assumptions are that s has low-entropy and that the value of s
falls within [1, q-1]. (Note that s must not be 0 for any non-empty
secret.)
2.2. Two-round key exchange
Round 1: Alice selects x1 uniformly at random from [0, q-1] and x2
from [1, q-1]. Similarly, Bob selects x3 uniformly at random from
[0, q-1] and x4 from [1, q-1].
o Alice -> Bob: g^{x1} mod p, g^{x2} mod p and knowledge proofs for
x1 and x2
o Bob -> Alice: g^{x3} mod p, g^{x4} mod p and knowledge proofs for
x3 and x4
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In this round, the sender must demonstrate the knowledge of the
ephemeral private keys. A suitable technique is to use the Schnorr
NIZK proof [I-D-Schnorr]. As an example, suppose one wishes to prove
the knowledge of the exponent for X = g^x mod p. The generated
Schnorr NIZK proof will contain: {UserID, V = g^v mod p, r = v - x *
h mod q} where UserID is the unique identifier for the prover, v is a
number chosen uniformly at random from [0, q-1] and h = H(g || V ||
X || UserID). The "uniqueness" of UserID is defined from the user's
perspective -- for example, if Alice communicates with several
parties, she shall associate a unique identity with each party. Upon
receiving a Schnorr NIZK proof, Alice shall check the prover's UserID
is a valid identity and is different from her own identity. During
the key exchange process using J-PAKE, each party shall ensure that
the other party has been consistently using the same identity
throughout the protocol execution. Details about the Schnorr NIZK
proof, including the generation and the verification procedures, can
be found in [I-D-Schnorr].
When this round finishes, Alice verifies the received knowledge
proofs as specified in [I-D-Schnorr] and also checks that g^{x4} != 1
mod p. Similarly, Bob verifies the received knowledge proofs and
also checks that g^{x2} != 1 mod p.
Round 2:
o Alice -> Bob: A=g^{(x1+x3+x4)*x2*s} mod p and a knowledge proof
for (x2*s)
o Bob -> Alice: B=g^{(x1+x2+x3)*x4*s} mod p and a knowledge proof
for (x4*s)
In this round, the Schnorr NIZK proof is computed in the same way as
in the previous round except that the generator is different. For
Alice, the generator used is g^(x1+x3+x4) instead of g; for Bob, the
generator is g^(x1+x2+x3) instead of g. Since any non-identity
element in Gq can be used as a generator, Alice and Bob just need to
ensure g^(x1+x3+x4) != 1 mod p and g^(x1+x2+x3) != 1 mod p. With
overwhelming probability, these inequalities are statistically
guaranteed even when the user is communicating with an adversary
(i.e., in an active attack). Nonetheless, for absolute guarantee,
the receiving party may wish to explicitly check if these
inequalities hold, and the cost of doing that is negligible.
When the second round finishes, Alice and Bob verify the received
knowledge proofs and then compute the key material K as follows:
o Alice computes K = (B/g^{x2*x4*s})^{x2} mod p =
g^{(x1+x3)*x2*x4*s} mod p
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o Bob computes K = (A/g^{x2*x4*s})^{x4} mod p = g^{(x1+x3)*x2*x4*s}
mod p
With the same keying material K, both parties can derive a common
session key k using a Key Derivation Function (KDF). If the
subsequent secure communication uses a symmetric cipher in an
authenticated mode (say AES-GCM), then one key is sufficient, i.e., k
= KDF(K). Otherwise, the session key should comprise an encryption
key (for confidentiality) and a MAC key (for integrity), i.e., k =
k_enc || k_mac, where k_enc = KDF(K || "JPAKE_ENC") and k_mac =
KDF(K || "JPAKE_MAC"). The exact choice of the KDF is left to
specific applications to define. (In many cases, the KDF can simply
be a cryptographic hash function, e.g., SHA-256.)
2.3. Three-pass variant
The two-round J-PAKE protocol is completely symmetric, which
significantly simplifies the security analysis. In practice, one
party normally initiates the communication and the other party
responds. In that case, the protocol will be completed in three
passes instead of two rounds. The two-round J-PAKE protocol can be
trivially changed to three passes without losing security. Assume
Alice initiates the key exchange. The three-pass variant works as
follows:
1. Alice -> Bob: g^{x1} mod p, g^{x2} mod p, knowledge proofs for x1
and x2.
2. Bob -> Alice: g^{x3} mod p, g^{x4} mod p, B=g^{(x1+x2+x3)*x4*s
mod p, knowledge proofs for x3, x4, and x4*s.
3. Alice -> Bob: A=g^{(x1+x3+x4)*x2*s} mod p and a knowledge proof
for x2*s.
Both parties compute the session keys in exactly the same way as
before.
2.4. Key confirmation
The two-round J-PAKE protocol (or three-pass variant) provides
cryptographic guarantee that only the authenticated party who used
the same password at the other end is able to compute the same
session key. So far the authentication is only implicit.
For achieving explicit authentication, an additional key confirmation
procedure should be performed. This is to ensure that both parties
have actually obtained the same session key.
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There are several explicit key confirmation methods available. They
are generically applicable to all key exchange protocols, not just
J-PAKE. In general, it is recommended to use a different key from
the session key for key confirmation, say using k' = KDF(K ||
"JPAKE_KC"). The advantage of using a different key for key
confirmation is that the session key remains indistinguishable from
random after the key confirmation process (although this perceived
advantage is actually subtle and only theoretical). Two key-
confirmation methods are presented here.
The first method is based on the one used in the SPEKE protocol
[Jab96]. Suppose Alice initiates the key confirmation. Alice sends
to Bob H(H(k')), which Bob will verify. If the verification is
successful, Bob sends back to Alice H(k'), which Alice will verify.
This key confirmation procedure needs to be completed in two rounds,
as shown below.
1. Alice -> Bob: H(H(k'))
2. Bob -> Alice: H(k')
The second method is based on the unilateral key confirmation scheme
specified in NIST SP 800-56A Revision 1 [BJS07]. Alice and Bob send
to each other a MAC tag, which they will verify accordingly. This
key confirmation procedure can be completed in one round, as shown
below.
o Alice -> Bob: MacTagAlice = HMAC(k', "KC_1_U || Alice || Bob ||
g^x1 || g^x2 || g^x3 || g^x4")
o Bob -> Alice: MacTagBob = HMAC(k', "KC_1_U || Bob || Alice ||
g^x3 || g^x4 || g^x1 || g^x2")
The second method assumes an additional secure MAC function (HMAC)
and is slightly more complex than the first method; however, it can
be completed within one round and it preserves the overall symmetry
of the protocol implementation. This may prove desirable in some
applications.
2.5. Computational cost
In J-PAKE, the modular exponentiations are the predominant factors in
the computation. Hence, the computational cost is estimated based on
counting the number of such modular exponentiations. Note that it
takes one exponentiation to generate a Schnorr NIZK proof and two to
verify it [I-D-Schnorr]. For Alice, she has to perform 8
exponentiations in the first round, 4 in the second round, and 2 in
the final computation of the session key. Hence, that is 14 modular
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exponentiations in total. Based on the symmetry, the computational
cost for Bob is exactly the same.
3. Security Considerations
A PAKE protocol is designed to provide two functions in one protocol
execution. The first one is to provide zero-knowledge authentication
of a password. It is called "zero knowledge" because at the end of
the protocol, the two communicating parties will learn nothing more
than one bit information: whether the passwords supplied at two ends
are equal. Therefore, a PAKE protocol is naturally resistant against
phishing attacks. The second function is to provide session key
establishment if the two passwords are equal. The session key will
be used to protect the confidentiality and integrity of the
subsequent communication.
More concretely, a secure PAKE protocol shall satisfy the following
security requirements [HR10].
1. Off-line dictionary attack resistance: It does not leak any
information that allows a passive/active attacker to perform off-
line exhaustive search of the password.
2. Forward secrecy: It produces session keys that remain secure even
when the password is later disclosed.
3. Known-key security: It prevents a disclosed session key from
affecting the security of other sessions.
4. On-line dictionary attack resistance: It limits an active
attacker to test only one password per protocol execution.
First, a PAKE protocol must resist off-line dictionary attacks. A
password is inherently weak. Typically, it has only about 20-30 bits
entropy. This level of security is subject to exhaustive search.
Therefore, in the PAKE protocol, the communication must not reveal
any data that allows an attacker to learn the password through off-
line exhaustive search.
Second, a PAKE protocol must provide forward secrecy. The key
exchange is authenticated based on a shared password. However, there
is no guarantee on the long-term secrecy of the password. A secure
PAKE scheme shall protect past session keys even when the password is
later disclosed. This property also implies that if an attacker
knows the password but only passively observes the key exchange, he
cannot learn the session key.
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Third, a PAKE protocol must provide known key security. A session
key lasts throughout the session. An exposed session key must not
cause any global impact on the system, affecting the security of
other sessions.
Finally, a PAKE protocol must resist on-line dictionary attacks. If
the attacker is directly engaging in the key exchange, there is no
way to prevent such an attacker trying a random guess of the
password. However, a secure PAKE scheme should mitigate the effect
of the on-line attack to the minimum. In the best case, the attacker
can only guess exactly one password per impersonation attempt.
Consecutively failed attempts can be easily detected and the
subsequent attempts can be thwarted accordingly.
It has been proven in [HR10] that J-PAKE satisfies all of the four
requirements based on the assumptions that there exists a secure
cryptographic hash function and that the Decisional Diffie-Hellman
problem is intractable. By comparison, it has been known that EKE
has the problem of leaking partial information about the password to
a passive attacker, hence not satisfying the first requirement
[Jas96]. For SPEKE and SRP-6, an attacker may be able to test more
than one password in one on-line dictionary attack (see [Zha04] and
[Hao10]), hence they do not satisfy the fourth requirement in the
strict theoretical sense.
4. IANA Considerations
This document has no actions for IANA.
5. Acknowledgements
The editor of this document would like to thank Dylan Clarke and
Siamak F. Shahandashti for useful comments. This work was supported
by the EPSRC First Grant EP/J011541/1.
6. References
6.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC5054] Taylor, D., Wu, T., Mavrogiannopoulos, N., and T. Perrin,
"Using the Secure Remote Password (SRP) Protocol for TLS
Authentication", RFC 5054, November 2007.
[BM92] Bellovin, S. and M. Merrit, "Encrypted Key Exchange:
Password-based Protocols Secure against Dictionary
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Attacks", IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, May
1992.
[HR08] Hao, F. and P. Ryan, "Password Authenticated Key Exchange
by Juggling", 16th Workshop on Security Protocols
(SPW'08), May 2008.
[HR10] Hao, F. and P. Ryan, "J-PAKE: Authenticated Key Exchange
Without PKI", Springer Transactions on Computational
Science XI, 2010.
[Jab96] Jablon, D., "Strong Password-Only Authenticated Key
Exchange", ACM Computer Communications Review, October
1996.
[Wu98] Wu, T., "The Secure Remote Password protocol", Symposimum
on Network and Distributed System Security, March 1998.
[I-D-Schnorr]
Hao, F., "Schnorr NIZK proof: Non-interactive Zero
Knowledge Proof for Discrete Logarithm", Internet Draft
submitted to IETF, 2013.
6.2. Informative References
[BJS07] Barker, E., Johnson, D., and M. Smid, "Recommendation for
Pair-Wise Key Establishment Schemes Using Discrete
Logarithm Cryptography (Revised)", NIST Special
Publication 800-56A, March 2007, <http://csrc.nist.gov/
publications/nistpubs/800-56A/
SP800-56A_Revision1_Mar08-2007.pdf>.
[Jas96] Jaspan, B., "Dual-Workfactor Encrypted Key Exchange:
Efficiently Preventing Password Chaining and Dictionary
Attacks", USENIX Symphosium on Security, July 1996.
[Zha04] Zhang, M., "Analysis of The SPEKE Password-Authenticated
Key Exchange Protocol", IEEE Communications Letters,
January 2004.
[Hao10] Hao, F., "On Small Subgroup Non-Confinement Attacks", IEEE
conference on Computer and Information Technology, 2010.
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Author's Address
Feng Hao (editor)
Newcastle University (UK)
Claremont Tower, School of Computing Science, Newcastle University
Newcastle Upon Tyne
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0)192-208-6384
EMail: feng.hao@ncl.ac.uk
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