<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.8 (Ruby 3.2.2) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-dance-architecture-04" category="info" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.20.1 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="DNS-Bound Identities Architecture">An Architecture for DNS-Bound Client and Sender Identities</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-dance-architecture-04"/>
    <author initials="A." surname="Wilson" fullname="Ash Wilson">
      <organization>Valimail</organization>
      <address>
        <email>ash.d.wilson@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Huque" fullname="Shumon Huque">
      <organization>Salesforce</organization>
      <address>
        <email>shuque@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="O." surname="Johansson" fullname="Olle Johansson">
      <organization>Edvina.net</organization>
      <address>
        <email>oej@edvina.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Richardson" fullname="Michael Richardson">
      <organization>Sandelman Software Works Inc</organization>
      <address>
        <email>mcr+ietf@sandelman.ca</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2024" month="March" day="25"/>
    <area>Internet</area>
    <workgroup>DANCE</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <?line 39?>

<t>This architecture document defines terminology, interaction, and authentication patterns,
related to the use of DANE DNS records for TLS client and messaging peer identity,
within the context of existing object security and TLS-based protocols.</t>
    </abstract>
    <note removeInRFC="true">
      <name>Discussion Venues</name>
      <t>Discussion of this document takes place on the
    DANE Authentication for Network Clients Everywhere Working Group mailing list (dance@ietf.org),
    which is archived at <eref target="https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/dance/"/>.</t>
      <t>Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
    <eref target="https://github.com/ashdwilson/draft-dance-architecture"/>.</t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 45?>

<section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>A digital identity, in an abstract sense, possesses at least two features: an identifier (or name),
and a means of proving ownership of the identifier.
One of the most resilient mechanisms for tying an identifier to a method for proving ownership of
the identifier is the digital certificate, issued by a well-run Certification Authority (CA).
The CA acts as a mutually trusted third party, a root of trust.</t>
      <t>Certificate-based identities are limited in scope by the issuing CA, or by the namespace of the
application responsible for issuing or validating the identity.</t>
      <t>An example of this limitation is well-illustrated by organizational Public Key Infrastructure (PKI).
Organizational PKI is very often coupled with email and LDAP systems, and can be used for associating
a human or machine identity identifier with a public key.
Within the organization, authentication systems already agree on the roots of trust for validating entity certificates issued by organizational PKI.</t>
      <t>Attempting to use organizational PKI outside the organization can be challenging.
In order to authenticate a certificate, the certificate’s CA must be trusted.
CAs have no way of controlling identifiers in certificates issued by other CAs.
Consequently, trusting multiple CAs at the same time can enable entity identifier collisions.
Asking an entity to trust your CA implies trust in anything that your CA signs.
This is why many organizations operate a private CA, and require users and devices connecting to the
organization’s networks or applications to possess certificates issued by the organization’s CA.</t>
      <t>These limitations make the implementation and ongoing maintenance of a PKI costly, and have a
chilling effect on the broader adoption of certificate-based IoT device identity and user identity.
If certificate-based device and user identity were easier to manage, more broadly trusted, and less
operationally expensive, more organizations and applications would be able to use it.</t>
      <t>The lack of trust between PKI domains has lead to a lack of simple and globally scalable solutions
for secure end-to-end inter-domain communication between entities, such as SIP phones, email and
chat accounts and IoT devices belonging to different organizations.</t>
      <t>DANCE seeks to make PKI-based user and IoT device identity universally discoverable, more broadly recognized,
and less expensive to maintain by using DNS as the constraining namespace and lookup mechanism.
DANCE builds on patterns established by the original DANE RFCs to enable client and sending entity
certificate, public key, and trust anchor discovery.
DANCE allows entities to possess a first-class identity, which, thanks to DNSSEC, may be trusted by any
application also trusting the DNS.
A first-class identity is an application-independent identity.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="conventions-and-definitions">
      <name>Conventions and Definitions</name>
      <t>The key words "<bcp14>MUST</bcp14>", "<bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>REQUIRED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL
NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14>",
"<bcp14>MAY</bcp14>", and "<bcp14>OPTIONAL</bcp14>" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>
      <?line -18?>

<t><strong>This section will be interesting to define. We have great examples of identity terminology in the https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-sarikaya-t2trg-sbootstrapping-06 document, but this document also admits that there is semantic drift on terms like “bootstrapping”, depending on who’s talking.</strong></t>
      <t><strong>How to Dance with ENTITY:</strong> This architecture document delegates many details of how DANCE can be used with some specific protocol to a document with the names "How to Dance with <em>entity</em>".</t>
      <t><strong>Identity provisioning:</strong> This refers to the set of tasks required to securely provision an asymmetric key pair for the device, sign the certificate (if the public credential is not simply a raw public key), and publish the public key or certificate in DNS.
Under some circumstances, these steps are not all performed by the same party or organization.
A device manufacturer may instantiate the key pair, and a systems integrator may be responsible for issuing (and publishing) the device certificate in DNS.
In some circumstances, a manufacturer may also publish device identity records in DNS.
In this case, the system integrator needs to perform network and application access configuration, since the identity already exists in DNS.
A user may instantiate a key pair, based upon which an organization's CA may produce a certificate after internally assuring the user identity, and the systems integrator may publish the CA root certificate in DNS.</t>
      <t><strong>DANCEr:</strong> A DANCEr is the term which is used to describe a protocol that has been taught to use DANE,
usually through a <em>How to Dance with</em> document.</t>
      <t><strong>Security Domain:</strong> DNS-bound client identity allows the device to establish secure communications with
any server with a DNS-bound identity, as long as a network path exists, the entity is configured to trust
its communicating peer by its DNS owner name, and agreement on protocols can be achieved.
The act of joining a security domain, in the past, may have involved certificate provisioning.
Now, it can be as simple as using a manufacturer-provisioned identity to join the device to the network and application.
[Is the security domain defined by how broadly the identity is recognized, or by the breadth of the application or network access policy?]</t>
      <t><strong>Client:</strong> This architecture document adopts the definition of "Client" from RFC 8446: "The endpoint initiating the TLS connection"</t>
      <t><strong>User:</strong> A client whose name consists of a user identity and a DNS owner name prefixed with a _user label.</t>
      <t><strong>Server:</strong> This architecture document adopts the definition of "Server" from RFC 8446: "The endpoint that did not initiate the TLS connection"</t>
      <t><strong>Sending agent:</strong> Software which encodes and transmits messages.
A sending agent may perform tasks related to generating cryptographic signatures and/or encrypting messages before transmission.</t>
      <t><strong>Receiving agent:</strong> Software which interprets and processes messages.
A receiving agent may perform tasks related to the decryption of messages, and verification of message signatures.</t>
      <t><strong>Store-and-forward system:</strong> A message handling system in-path between the sending agent and the receiving agent.</t>
      <t><strong>Hardware supplier role:</strong> The entity which manufactures or assembles the physical device.
In many situations, multiple hardware suppliers are involved in producing a given device.
In some cases, the hardware supplier may provision an asymmetric key pair for the device and establish the device identity in DNS.
In some cases, the hardware supplier may ship a device with software pre-installed.</t>
      <t><strong>Systems integrator:</strong> The party responsible for configuration and deployment of application components.
In some cases, the systems integrator also installs the software onto the device, and may provision the device identity in DNS.</t>
      <t><strong>Consumer:</strong> The entity or organization which pays for the value provided by the application, and defines the success criteria for the output of the application.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="communication-patterns">
      <name>Communication Patterns</name>
      <section anchor="clientserver">
        <name>Client/Server</name>
        <t>Client/server communication patterns imply a direct connection between an entity which provides a service (the server), and an entity which initiates a connection to the server, called a client.
A secure implementation of this pattern includes a TLS-protected session directly between the client and the server.
A secure implementation may also include public key-based mutual authentication.</t>
        <t>Extending DANE to include client identity allows the server to authenticate clients independent of the private PKI used to issue the client certificate.
This reduces the complexity of managing the CA certificate collection, and mitigates the possibility of client identifier collision.
If the client is a user, the certificate holds an additional user identity supplied under the prerogative of a DNS owner name, which reduces the complexity of authenticating both internal and external users, through protocol mechanisms like SASL EXTERNAL <xref target="RFC4422"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="peer2peer">
        <name>Peer2peer</name>
        <t>The extension also allows an application to find an application identity and set up a secure communication channel directly.
This pattern can be used in mesh networking, IoT and in many communication protocols for multimedia sessions, chat and messaging, where each endpoint may represent a device or a user.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="decoupled">
        <name>Decoupled</name>
        <t>Decoupled architecture, frequently incorporating store-and-forward systems, provides no direct connection between the producer and consumer of information.
The producer (or sending agent) and consumer (or receiving agent) are typically separated by at least one host running messaging-oriented middleware.
The Messaging-oriented middleware components may act as a server for the purpose of establishing TLS sessions for the producer and consumer.
This allows the assertion of identity between the middleware and sending agent, and the middleware and receiving agent.
The trust relationship between the sending agent and receiving agent is based on the presumed trustworthiness of the middleware, unless an identity can be attached to the message itself, independent of transport and middleware components.</t>
        <t>Within many existing store-and-forward protocols, certificates may be transmitted within the signed message itself.
An example of this is S/MIME.
Within IoT applications, we find that networks may be more constrained.
Including certificates in message payloads can present an unnecessary overhead on constrained network links.
Decoupled applications benefit from an out-of-band public key discovery mechanism, which may enable the retrieval of certificates only when needed, and sometimes using a less expensive network connection.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="client-authentication">
      <name>Client authentication</name>
      <section anchor="overview">
        <name>Overview</name>
        <t>The client sets up a TLS connection to a server, attaches a client certificate with one subjectAltName element dNSName indicating the DNS onwer name of the client.
If the client is a user, their user identity is added in one subjectAltName element otherName holding their uid attribute <xref target="RFC4519"/>.</t>
        <t>In the TLS connection the DANE-client-id extension is used to tell the server to use the certificate dNSName to find a DANE record including the public key of the certificate to be able to validate.
If the server can validate the DNSSEC response, the server validates the certificate and completes the TLS connection setup.
(PKIX offers rfc822Name with userid@domain.name as alternative for a user's uid &amp; dNSName, but it is limited to ASCII and suggests email only).</t>
        <t>Using DANE to convey certificate information for authenticating TLS clients gives a not-yet-authenticated client the ability to trigger a DNS lookup on the server side of the TLS connection.
An opportunity for DDOS may exist when malicious clients can trigger arbitrary DNS lookups.
For instance, an authoritative DNS server which has been configured to respond slowly, may cause a high concurrency of in-flight TLS authentication processes as well as open connections to upstream resolvers.
This sort of attack (of type slowloris) could have a performance or availability impact on the TLS server.</t>
        <section anchor="example-1-tls-authentication-for-https-api-interaction-dane-pattern-assurance">
          <name>Example 1: TLS authentication for HTTPS API interaction, DANE pattern assurance</name>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>The client initiates a TLS connection to the server.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>The TLS server compares the dane_clientid (conveyed via the DANE Client Identity extension) to a list of allowed client domains.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>If the dane_clientid is allowed, the TLS server then performs a DNS lookup for the client's TLSA record.
If the dane_clientid is not allowed, authentication fails.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>If the client's TLSA record matches the presented certificate or public key, the TLS handshake completes successfully and the authenticated dane_clientid is presented to the web application in the (TBD) header field.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>This pattern has the following advantages:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>This pattern translates well to TLS/TCP load balancers, by using a TCP TLV instead of an HTTP header.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>No traffic reaches the application behind the load balancer unless DANE client authentication is successful.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <section anchor="example-2-tls-authentication-for-https-api-interaction-dane-matching-in-web-application">
            <name>Example 2: TLS authentication for HTTPS API interaction, DANE matching in web application</name>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>The client initiates a TLS connection to the server.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The TLS server accepts any certificate for which the client can prove possession of the corresponding private key.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The TLS server passes the certificate to the web application in (TBD) header field.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The HTTP request body contains the dane_clientid, and is passed to the web application.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The web application compares the dane_clientid to a list of allowed clients or client domains.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>If the dane_clientid is allowed, the web application makes the DNS query for the TLSA records for dane_clientid</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>If the presented certificate (which was authenticated by the TLS server) matches at least one TLSA record for dane_clientid, authentication succeeds.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>This pattern has the following advantages:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>In a web application where a TLS-terminating load balancer sits in front of a web application, the authentication logic in the load balancer remains simple.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The web application ultimately decides whether to make the DNS query to support DANE authentication.
This allows the web application to reject clients with identifiers which are not allowed, before making a DNS query for TLSA retrieval and comparison.
No need to manage an allow-list in the load balancer.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>This can be implemented with no changes to the TLS handshake.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </section>
          <section anchor="example-3-tls-user-authentication-for-an-ldap-query">
            <name>Example 3: TLS user authentication for an LDAP query</name>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>The LDAP client initiates a TLS connection the the server, conveying the user's domain via the DANE Client Identity extension.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>If the dane_clientid is allowed and begins with a _user label, the TLS server then performs a DNS lookup for TLSA records holding the user's CA, and includes them when requesting a client certificate.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>If the client's certificate is signed by a CA found in the TLSA records and the certificate's dNSName prefixed with a _user label matches the dane_clientid then the client identity is authenticated to consist of the lowercase uid in the certificate, an "@" symbol and the lowercase UTF-8 representation of the certificate's dNSName (which lacks the "_user." prefix).</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>The LDAP server responds to SASL EXTERNAL authentication by obtaining the authenticated user identity in userid@domain.name form and, if so requested, attempts to change to an authorization identity.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>This pattern has the following advantages:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>SASL authentication under TLS encryption is common to many protocols, including new ones.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>This LDAP example demonstrates the potential of authentication with realm crossover support as a precursor to fine access control to possibly sensitive data.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>User identities cannot be iterated in DNS; TLS 1.3 conceals the client certificate; TLS in general conceals the user's choice of authorization identity during SASL EXTERNAL.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>This can be implemented with no changes to the TLS handshake.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </section>
        </section>
        <section anchor="iot-device-to-cloud">
          <name>IoT: Device to cloud</name>
          <t>Direct device-to-cloud communication is common in simple IoT applications.
Authentication in these applications is usually accomplished using shared credentials like API keys, or using client certificates.
Client certificate authentication frequently requires the consumer to maintain a CA.
Before client DANE, the CA trust anchor certificate would be installed into the cloud application, and used in the TLS authentication process.</t>
          <t>Using client DANE for device identity can allow parties other than the implementer to operate the CA.
A hardware manufacturer can provide a pre-established identity, with the certificate or public key already published in DNS.
This makes PKI-based identity more approachable for small organizations which currently lack the resources to operate an organizational CA.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="lorawan">
          <name>LoRaWAN</name>
          <t>For the end-device onboarding in LoRaWAN, the "network server" and the "join server" <xref target="RFC8376"/> needs to establish mutual TLS authentication in order to exchange configuration parameters.
Certificate Authority based mutual TLS authentication doesn't work in LoRaWAN due to the non availability of the CA trust store in the LoRaWAN network stack.
Self-signed certificate based mutual-TLS authentication method is the alternative solution.</t>
          <t>DANE based client identity allows the server to authenticate clients during the TLS handhsake.
Thus, independent of the private PKI used to issue the client's self-signed certificate, the "network server" and the "join server" could be mutually authenticated.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="edge-computing">
          <name>Edge Computing</name>
          <t><eref target="Edge Computing">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-hong-t2trg-iot-edge-computing-01</eref> may require devices to mutually authenticate in the field.
A practical example of this pattern is the edge computing in construction use case [https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-hong-t2trg-iot-edge-computing-01#section-6.2.1].
Using traditional certificate-based identity, the sensor and the gateway may have certificates issued by
the same organizational PKI.
By using DANE for client and sender identity, the sensor and the gateway may have identities represented
by the equipment supplier, and still be able to mutually authenticate.
Important sensor measurements forwarded by the gateway to the cloud may bear the DNS owner name and signature of
the originating sensor, and the cloud application may authenticate the measurement independent of the gateway
which forwarded the information to the application.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="domain-users">
          <name>Domain Users</name>
          <t>The allocation of user identities is the prerogative of a domain, in line with the nesting suggested in URI notation.
Domains may even choose to assign domain user identities to services, possibly with easily recognised identities like +mail+archive@domain.name.
Domains who publish TLSA records for a CA under a _user name underneath their domain allow the validation of user identities as mentioned in a certificate as TLS client or peer identities.
This mechanism is not restricted to domain-internal users, but can be used to validate users under any domain.</t>
          <t>Since ENUM maps telephone numbers to DNS owner names, it is possible to employ these same mechanisms for telephone number users.
Any DANCEr may however define alternate derivation procedures to obtain the DNS owner name for a phone number from specialised PKIX or LDAP attributes such as telephoneNumber, telexNumber, homePhone, mobile and pager.</t>
          <t>There is no reason why other uses, such as store-and-forward with S/MIME, could not benefit from this DNS-based PKI, as long as they remain mindful that anything in the certificate is the prerogative of the domain publishing the TLSA record, and the only reliable identity statements are for resources underneath the domain -- notably, the assignment of uid names.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sip-and-webrtc-inter-domain-privacy">
          <name>SIP and WebRTC inter-domain privacy</name>
          <t>End to end security in SIP is currently based on a classical S/MIME model which has not received much implementation.
There are also SIP standards that build upon a trust chained anchored on the HTTP trust chain (SIP identity, STIR).
WebRTC has a trust model between the web browser and the servers using TLS, but no inter-domain trust infrastructure.
WebRTC lacks a definition of namespace to map to DNS, where SIP is based on an email-style addressing scheme.
For WebRTC the application developer needs to define the name space and mapping to DNS.</t>
          <t>By using DNS as a shared root of trust SIP and WebRTC end points can anchor the keys used for DTLS/SRTP media channel setup.
In addition, SIP devices can establish security in the SIP messaging by using DNS to find the callee’s and the callers digital identity.</t>
          <t><xref target="I-D.johansson-sipcore-dane-sip"/>(SIPDANE)</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="dns-over-tls-client-authentication">
          <name>DNS over TLS client authentication</name>
          <t>Issue #7</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="smtp-starttls">
          <name>SMTP, STARTTLS</name>
          <t>Issue #8</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="ssh-client">
          <name>SSH client</name>
          <t>SSH servers have for some time been able to put their host keys into DNS using <xref target="RFC4255"/>.</t>
          <t>In many SSH server implementations the list of users that is authorized to login to an account is given by listing their public keys in a per-user file ("authorized_keys").
The file provides both authorization (who may login), and authentication (how they prove their identity).
While this is an implementation detail, doing both in one place has been one of Secure Shell's major reason for success.</t>
          <t>However, there are downsides to this: a user can not easily replace their key without visiting every host they are authorized to access and update the key on that host.
Separation of authorization and authentication in this case would involve putting the key material in a third place, such as in a DANE record in DNS, and then listing only the DNS owner name in the authorization file:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>A user who wants to update their key need only update DNS in that case.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>A user who has lost access to their key, but can still update DNS (or can have a colleague update it) would more easily be able to recover.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>An administrator who controls the domain would be able to remove a departing user's key from DNS, preventing the user from authenticating in the future.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>The DNS record used could be TLSA, but it is possible with some protocol work that it could instead be SSHFP.
Since SSH can trust CA certificates from X.509, those may be published for user authentication.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="network-access">
          <name>Network Access</name>
          <t>Network access refers to an authentication process by which a node is admitted securely onto network infrastructure.
This is most common for wireless networks (wifi, 802.15.4), but has also routine been done for wired infrastructure using 802.1X mechanisms with EAPOL.</t>
          <t>While there are EAP protocols that do not involve certificates, such as EAPSIM (<xref target="RFC4186"/>, the use of symmetric key mechanisms as the "network key" is common in many homes.
The use of certificate based mechanisms are expected to increase, due to challenges, such as Randomized and Changing MAC addresses (RCM), as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-madinas-use-cases"/>.</t>
          <section anchor="eap-tls-with-radius">
            <name>EAP-TLS with RADIUS</name>
            <t>Enterprise EAP methods use a version of TLS to form a secure transport.
Client and server-side certificates are used as credentials.
EAP-TLS does not run over TCP, but rather over a reliable transport provided by EAP.
To keep it simple the EAP "window" is always one, and there are various amounts of overhead that needs to be accounted for, and the EAP segment size is often noticeably smaller than the normal ethernet 1500 bytes.
<xref target="RFC3748"/> does guarantee a minimum payload of 1020 bytes.</t>
            <t>The client side certificates are often larger than 1500 bytes and can take two or three round trip times to transport from the supplicant to the authenticator.
In worst case scenarios, which are common with eduroam <xref target="RFC7593"/>, the EAP packets are transported some distance, easily across the entire planet.
The authenticating system (the "authentication server" in EAP terms) is a system at the institute that issued the client side certificate, and so already has access to the entire client certificate.
Transferring the client certificate is redundant.
That is, the authenticator already has access to the entire certificate, but the client does not know this to tbe case, so it sends the entire certificate anyway.</t>
            <t>The use of DANE Client IDs in TLS as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-dance-tls-clientid"/> reduces the redundant bytes of certificate sent.</t>
            <section anchor="terminology">
              <name>Terminology</name>
              <t><strong>Supplicant:</strong> The entity which acts as the TLS client in the EAP-TLS authentication protocol.
This term is defined in IEEE 802.1x.
The suppliant acts as a client in the EAPOL (EAP over LAN) protocol, which is terminated at the authenticator (defined below).</t>
              <t><strong>Authentication server:</strong> The entity which acts as the TLS server in the EAP-TLS protocol.
RADIUS (RFC 2865) is a frequently-used authentication server protocol.</t>
              <t><strong>Authenticator:</strong> The authenticator is the device which acts as a server the EAPOL (EAP over LAN) protocol, and is a client of the authentication server.
The authenticator is responsible for passing EAP messages between the supplicant and the authentication server, and for ensuring that only authenticated supplicants gain access to the network.</t>
              <t><eref target="EAP-TLS">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5216</eref> is a mature and widely-used protocol for network authentication, for IoT and IT equipment.
IEEE 802.1x defines the encapsulation of EAP over LAN access technologies, like IEEE 802.11 wireless and IEEE 802.3 ethernet.
RADIUS is a protocol and server technology frequently used for supporting the server side of EAP-TLS authentication.
Guidance for implementing RADIUS strongly encourages the use of a single common CA for all supplicants, to mitigate the possibility of identifier collisions across PKIs.
The use of DANE for client identity can allow the safe use of any number of CAs.
DNS acts as a constraining namespace, which prevents two unrelated CAs from issuing valid certificates bearing the same identifier.
Certificates represented in DNS are valid, and all others are un-trusted.</t>
            </section>
          </section>
          <section anchor="radsec">
            <name>RADSEC</name>
            <t>The RADIUS protocol has a few recognized security problems.
<eref target="RADSEC">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6614</eref> addresses the challenges related to the weakness of MD5-based authentication and confidentiality over untrusted networks by establishing a TLS session between the RADIUS protocol client and the RADIUS protocol server.
RADIUS datagrams are then transmitted between the authenticator and authentication server within the TLS session.
Updating the RADSEC standard to include the use of DANE for client and server identity would allow a RADIUS server and client to mutually authenticate, independent of the client’s and server’s issuing CAs.
The benefit for this use case is that a hosted RADIUS service may mutually authenticate any client device, like a WiFi access point or ethernet switch, via RADSEC, without requiring the distribution of CA certificates.</t>
          </section>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="object-security">
        <name>Object Security</name>
        <t>Issue #13</t>
        <section anchor="structured-data-messages-josecose">
          <name>Structured data messages: JOSE/COSE</name>
          <t>JOSE and COSE provide formats for exchanging authenticated and encrypted structured data. JOSE defines the x5u field in <xref section="4.1.5" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC7515"/>, and COSE defines a field of the same name in <xref section="2" sectionFormat="comma" target="I-D.ietf-cose-x509"/>.</t>
          <t>However, this URL field points to where the key can be found.
There is, as yet, no URI scheme which says that the key can be found via the DNS lookup itself.</t>
          <t>In order to make use of x5u, a DANCEr would have to define a new URI scheme that explained how to get the right key from DNS.
(Open Issue #22, about <xref target="RFC4501"/>)</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="operational-anomaly-reporting">
        <name>Operational anomaly reporting</name>
        <t>Issue #14</t>
        <section anchor="mud-reporting-for-improper-provisioning">
          <name>MUD reporting for improper provisioning</name>
        </section>
        <section anchor="xarf-for-abuse-reporting">
          <name>XARF for abuse reporting</name>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="adjacent-ecosystem-components">
        <name>Adjacent Ecosystem Components</name>
        <section anchor="certification-authority">
          <name>Certification Authority</name>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <section anchor="confidentiality">
        <name>Confidentiality</name>
        <t>DNS clients should use DNS over TLS with trusted DNS resolvers to protect the identity of authenticating peers.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="integrity">
        <name>Integrity</name>
        <t>The integrity of public keys represented in DNS is most important.
An altered public key can enable device impersonation, and the denial of existence for a valid identity can cause devices to become un-trusted by the network or the application.
DNS records should be validated by the DNS stub resolver, using the DNSSEC protocol.</t>
        <t>Compartmentalizing failure domains within an application is a well-known architectural best practice.
Within the context of protecting DNS-based identities, this compartmentalization may manifest by hosting an identity zone on a DNS server which only supports the resource record types essential for representing device identities.
This can prevent a compromised identity zone DNS server from presenting records essential for impersonating web sites under the organization’s domain name.</t>
        <t>The naming pattern suggested in <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-huque-dane-client-cert">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-huque-dane-client-cert</eref> includes
an underscore label (_device) which also prevents the issuance of Web PKI-validating certificates in the
event a DNS server hosting a client identity zone, which is capable of presenting A and AAAA records, is compromised.
An alternative underscore label _user separates the TLSA records with the domain CA from the TLSA records for devices.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="availability">
        <name>Availability</name>
        <t>One of the advantages of DNS is that it has more than fourty years of demonstrated scaling.
It is a distributed database with a caching mechanism, and properly configured, it has proven resilient
to many kinds of outages and attacks.</t>
        <t>A key part of this availability is the proper use of Time To Live (TTL) values for resource records.
A cache is allowed to hang on to the data for a set time, the TTL, after which it must do a new query to find out if the data has changed, or perhaps been deleted.</t>
        <t>There is therefore a tension between resilience (higher TTL values), and agility (lower TTL values).
A lower TTL value allows for revocation or replacement of a key to become known much faster.
This allows for a more agile security posture.</t>
        <t>On the other hand, lower TTLs cause the queries to occur more often, which may reveal more information to an observer about which devices are active.
Encrypted transports like DoT/DoH/DoQ make these queries far less visible.
In addition to the on-path observer being able to see more, the resolver logs also may be a source of information.
It also allows for more opportunities for an attacker to affect the response time of the queries.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="privacy">
        <name>Privacy</name>
        <t>If the DNS owner name of the identity proven by a certificate is directly or indirectly relatable to a person, privacy needs to be considered when forming the name of the DNS resource record for the certificate.
This privacy is implied for domain users inasfar as the domain CA does not mention users.
When creating the DNS owner name, effects of DNS zone walking and possible harvesting of identities in the DNS zone will have to be considered.
The DNS owner name may not have to have a direct relation to the name of the subject or the subjectAltName of the certificate.
If there is such a relation, a DANCEr may specify support for CA certificates, stored under a wildcard in DNS.</t>
        <t>Further work has do be done in this area.</t>
        <t>AW: Consider if an approach like the email local-part hashing used in SMIMEA <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8162">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8162</eref> might work for this.
If the identifier/local-part is hashed and the certificate association is a SHA256 or SHA512 hash, the effort required to walk a zone would not produce much useful information.</t>
        <section anchor="dns-scalability">
          <name>DNS Scalability</name>
          <t>In the use case for IoT an implementation must be scalable to a large amount of devices.
In many cases, identities may also be very short lived as revocation is performed by simply removing a DNS record.
A zone will have to manage a large amount of changes as devices are constantly added and de-activated.</t>
          <t>In these cases it is important to consider the architecture of the DNS zone and when possible use a tree-like structure with many subdomain parts, much like reverse DNS records or how telephone numbers are represented in the ENUM standard (RFC 6116).</t>
          <t>If an authoritative resolver were configured to respond quite slowly (think slow loris [XXXrefereceXXX]), is it possible to cause a DoS on the TLS server via complete exhaustion of TCP connections?</t>
          <t>The availability of a client identity zone is essential to permitting clients to authenticate.
If the DNS infrastructure hosting client identities becomes unavailable, then the clients represented by that zone cannot be authenticated.</t>
          <t><strong>OEJ: We may want to have a discussion with the IETF DNS directorate. The scalability section above is from a discussion with one of the members...</strong></t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="change-of-ownership-for-iot-devices">
          <name>Change of ownership for IoT devices</name>
          <t>One of the significant use cases is where the devices are identified by their manufacturer assigned identities.
A significant savings was that enterprises would not have to run their own (private) PKI systems, sometimes even one system per device type.
But, with this usage style for DANCE there is no private PKI to run, and as a result there is no change of ownership required.
The device continues to use the manufacturer assigned identity.</t>
          <t>The device OwnerOperator is therefore at risk if the device's manufacturer goes out of business, or decides that they no longer wish to manufacturer that device.
Should that happen then the OwnerOperator of the device may be in trouble, and may find themselves having to replace the devices.</t>
          <t><xref section="10.4" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8995"/> (BRSKI) deals with concerns about manufacturers influence on devices.
In the case of BRSKI, the concern was limited to when the device ownership transfer was performed (the BRSKI transaction itself).
There was no concern once the OwnerOperator had taken control over the device through an <xref target="RFC8366"/> voucher.</t>
          <t>In the case of DANCE, the manufacturer is continuously involved with the day to day operation of the device.</t>
          <t>If this is of concern, then the OwnerOperator should perform some kind of transfer of ownership, such as using DPP, <xref target="RFC8995"/>(BRSKI), <xref target="RFC9140"/>(EAP-NOOB), and others yet to come.</t>
          <t>The DANCE method of using manufacturer assigned identities would therefore seem to be best used for devices which have a short lifetime: one much smaller than the uncertainty about the anticipated lifespan of the manufacturer.
For instance, some kind of battery operated sensor which might be used in a large quantity at a construction site, and which can not be recharged.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document has no IANA actions.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references>
      <name>References</name>
      <references anchor="sec-normative-references">
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC2119">
          <front>
            <title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
            <date month="March" year="1997"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification. These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2119"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2119"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8174">
          <front>
            <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
            <author fullname="B. Leiba" initials="B." surname="Leiba"/>
            <date month="May" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8174"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8174"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC4422">
          <front>
            <title>Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)</title>
            <author fullname="A. Melnikov" initials="A." role="editor" surname="Melnikov"/>
            <author fullname="K. Zeilenga" initials="K." role="editor" surname="Zeilenga"/>
            <date month="June" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) is a framework for providing authentication and data security services in connection-oriented protocols via replaceable mechanisms. It provides a structured interface between protocols and mechanisms. The resulting framework allows new protocols to reuse existing mechanisms and allows old protocols to make use of new mechanisms. The framework also provides a protocol for securing subsequent protocol exchanges within a data security layer.</t>
              <t>This document describes how a SASL mechanism is structured, describes how protocols include support for SASL, and defines the protocol for carrying a data security layer over a connection. In addition, this document defines one SASL mechanism, the EXTERNAL mechanism.</t>
              <t>This document obsoletes RFC 2222. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4422"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4422"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4519">
          <front>
            <title>Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP): Schema for User Applications</title>
            <author fullname="A. Sciberras" initials="A." role="editor" surname="Sciberras"/>
            <date month="June" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document is an integral part of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) technical specification. It provides a technical specification of attribute types and object classes intended for use by LDAP directory clients for many directory services, such as White Pages. These objects are widely used as a basis for the schema in many LDAP directories. This document does not cover attributes used for the administration of directory servers, nor does it include directory objects defined for specific uses in other documents. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4519"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4519"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8376">
          <front>
            <title>Low-Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) Overview</title>
            <author fullname="S. Farrell" initials="S." role="editor" surname="Farrell"/>
            <date month="May" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Low-Power Wide Area Networks (LPWANs) are wireless technologies with characteristics such as large coverage areas, low bandwidth, possibly very small packet and application-layer data sizes, and long battery life operation. This memo is an informational overview of the set of LPWAN technologies being considered in the IETF and of the gaps that exist between the needs of those technologies and the goal of running IP in LPWANs.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8376"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8376"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.johansson-sipcore-dane-sip">
          <front>
            <title>TLS sessions in SIP using DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) TLSA records</title>
            <author fullname="Olle E. Johansson" initials="O. E." surname="Johansson">
              <organization>Edvina AB</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="6" month="October" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   Use of TLS in the SIP protocol is defined in multiple documents,
   starting with RFC 3261.  The actual verification that happens when
   setting up a SIP TLS connection to a SIP server based on a SIP URI is
   described in detail in RFC 5922 - SIP Domain Certificates.

   In this document, an alternative method is defined, using DNS-Based
   Authentication of Named Entities (DANE).  By looking up TLSA DNS
   records and using DNSsec protection of the required queries,
   including lookups for NAPTR and SRV records, a SIP Client can verify
   the identity of the TLS SIP server in a different way, matching on
   the SRV host name in the X.509 PKIX certificate instead of the SIP
   domain.  This provides more scalability in hosting solutions and make
   it easier to use standard CA certificates (if needed at all).

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-johansson-sipcore-dane-sip-00"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4255">
          <front>
            <title>Using DNS to Securely Publish Secure Shell (SSH) Key Fingerprints</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schlyter" initials="J." surname="Schlyter"/>
            <author fullname="W. Griffin" initials="W." surname="Griffin"/>
            <date month="January" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a method of verifying Secure Shell (SSH) host keys using Domain Name System Security (DNSSEC). The document defines a new DNS resource record that contains a standard SSH key fingerprint. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4255"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4255"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4186">
          <front>
            <title>Extensible Authentication Protocol Method for Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) Subscriber Identity Modules (EAP-SIM)</title>
            <author fullname="H. Haverinen" initials="H." role="editor" surname="Haverinen"/>
            <author fullname="J. Salowey" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Salowey"/>
            <date month="January" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies an Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) mechanism for authentication and session key distribution using the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) Subscriber Identity Module (SIM). GSM is a second generation mobile network standard. The EAP-SIM mechanism specifies enhancements to GSM authentication and key agreement whereby multiple authentication triplets can be combined to create authentication responses and session keys of greater strength than the individual GSM triplets. The mechanism also includes network authentication, user anonymity support, result indications, and a fast re-authentication procedure. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4186"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4186"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-madinas-use-cases">
          <front>
            <title>Randomized and Changing MAC Address Use Cases</title>
            <author fullname="Jerome Henry" initials="J." surname="Henry">
              <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Yiu Lee" initials="Y." surname="Lee">
              <organization>Comcast</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="29" month="February" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   To limit the privacy issues created by the association between a
   device, its traffic, its location and its user, client and client OS
   vendors have started implementing MAC address rotation.  When such a
   rotation happens, some in-network states may break, which may affect
   network connectivity and user experience.  At the same time, devices
   may continue using other stable identifiers, defeating the MAC
   rotation purposes.  This document lists various network environments
   and a set of network services that may be affected by such rotation.
   This document then examines settings where the user experience may be
   affected by in-network state disruption.  Last, this document
   examines solutions to maintain user privacy while preserving user
   quality of experience and network operation efficiency.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-madinas-use-cases-09"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3748">
          <front>
            <title>Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)</title>
            <author fullname="B. Aboba" initials="B." surname="Aboba"/>
            <author fullname="L. Blunk" initials="L." surname="Blunk"/>
            <author fullname="J. Vollbrecht" initials="J." surname="Vollbrecht"/>
            <author fullname="J. Carlson" initials="J." surname="Carlson"/>
            <author fullname="H. Levkowetz" initials="H." role="editor" surname="Levkowetz"/>
            <date month="June" year="2004"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), an authentication framework which supports multiple authentication methods. EAP typically runs directly over data link layers such as Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) or IEEE 802, without requiring IP. EAP provides its own support for duplicate elimination and retransmission, but is reliant on lower layer ordering guarantees. Fragmentation is not supported within EAP itself; however, individual EAP methods may support this. This document obsoletes RFC 2284. A summary of the changes between this document and RFC 2284 is available in Appendix A. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3748"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3748"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7593">
          <front>
            <title>The eduroam Architecture for Network Roaming</title>
            <author fullname="K. Wierenga" initials="K." surname="Wierenga"/>
            <author fullname="S. Winter" initials="S." surname="Winter"/>
            <author fullname="T. Wolniewicz" initials="T." surname="Wolniewicz"/>
            <date month="September" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the architecture of the eduroam service for federated (wireless) network access in academia. The combination of IEEE 802.1X, the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), and RADIUS that is used in eduroam provides a secure, scalable, and deployable service for roaming network access. The successful deployment of eduroam over the last decade in the educational sector may serve as an example for other sectors, hence this document. In particular, the initial architectural choices and selection of standards are described, along with the changes that were prompted by operational experience.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7593"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7593"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-dance-tls-clientid">
          <front>
            <title>TLS Extension for DANE Client Identity</title>
            <author fullname="Shumon Huque" initials="S." surname="Huque">
              <organization>Salesforce</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Viktor Dukhovni" initials="V." surname="Dukhovni">
              <organization>Two Sigma</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="8" month="January" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document specifies a TLS and DTLS extension to convey a DNS-
   Based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) Client Identity to a
   TLS or DTLS server.  This is useful for applications that perform TLS
   client authentication via DANE TLSA records.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-dance-tls-clientid-03"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7515">
          <front>
            <title>JSON Web Signature (JWS)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Jones" initials="M." surname="Jones"/>
            <author fullname="J. Bradley" initials="J." surname="Bradley"/>
            <author fullname="N. Sakimura" initials="N." surname="Sakimura"/>
            <date month="May" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>JSON Web Signature (JWS) represents content secured with digital signatures or Message Authentication Codes (MACs) using JSON-based data structures. Cryptographic algorithms and identifiers for use with this specification are described in the separate JSON Web Algorithms (JWA) specification and an IANA registry defined by that specification. Related encryption capabilities are described in the separate JSON Web Encryption (JWE) specification.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7515"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7515"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-cose-x509">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Header Parameters for Carrying and Referencing X.509 Certificates</title>
            <author fullname="Jim Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad">
              <organization>August Cellars</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="13" month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) message structure uses references to keys in general.  For some algorithms, additional properties are defined that carry parameters relating to keys as needed.  The COSE Key structure is used for transporting keys outside of COSE messages.  This document extends the way that keys can be identified and transported by providing attributes that refer to or contain X.509 certificates.
              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-cose-x509-09"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4501">
          <front>
            <title>Domain Name System Uniform Resource Identifiers</title>
            <author fullname="S. Josefsson" initials="S." surname="Josefsson"/>
            <date month="May" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines Uniform Resource Identifiers for Domain Name System resources. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4501"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4501"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8995">
          <front>
            <title>Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure (BRSKI)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Pritikin" initials="M." surname="Pritikin"/>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson"/>
            <author fullname="T. Eckert" initials="T." surname="Eckert"/>
            <author fullname="M. Behringer" initials="M." surname="Behringer"/>
            <author fullname="K. Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen"/>
            <date month="May" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies automated bootstrapping of an Autonomic Control Plane. To do this, a Secure Key Infrastructure is bootstrapped. This is done using manufacturer-installed X.509 certificates, in combination with a manufacturer's authorizing service, both online and offline. We call this process the Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure (BRSKI) protocol. Bootstrapping a new device can occur when using a routable address and a cloud service, only link-local connectivity, or limited/disconnected networks. Support for deployment models with less stringent security requirements is included. Bootstrapping is complete when the cryptographic identity of the new key infrastructure is successfully deployed to the device. The established secure connection can be used to deploy a locally issued certificate to the device as well.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8995"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8995"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8366">
          <front>
            <title>A Voucher Artifact for Bootstrapping Protocols</title>
            <author fullname="K. Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen"/>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson"/>
            <author fullname="M. Pritikin" initials="M." surname="Pritikin"/>
            <author fullname="T. Eckert" initials="T." surname="Eckert"/>
            <date month="May" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a strategy to securely assign a pledge to an owner using an artifact signed, directly or indirectly, by the pledge's manufacturer. This artifact is known as a "voucher".</t>
              <t>This document defines an artifact format as a YANG-defined JSON document that has been signed using a Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) structure. Other YANG-derived formats are possible. The voucher artifact is normally generated by the pledge's manufacturer (i.e., the Manufacturer Authorized Signing Authority (MASA)).</t>
              <t>This document only defines the voucher artifact, leaving it to other documents to describe specialized protocols for accessing it.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8366"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8366"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9140">
          <front>
            <title>Nimble Out-of-Band Authentication for EAP (EAP-NOOB)</title>
            <author fullname="T. Aura" initials="T." surname="Aura"/>
            <author fullname="M. Sethi" initials="M." surname="Sethi"/>
            <author fullname="A. Peltonen" initials="A." surname="Peltonen"/>
            <date month="December" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) provides support for multiple authentication methods. This document defines the EAP-NOOB authentication method for nimble out-of-band (OOB) authentication and key derivation. The EAP method is intended for bootstrapping all kinds of Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices that have no preconfigured authentication credentials. The method makes use of a user-assisted, one-directional, out-of-band (OOB) message between the peer device and authentication server to authenticate the in-band key exchange. The device must have a nonnetwork input or output interface, such as a display, microphone, speaker, or blinking light, that can send or receive dynamically generated messages of tens of bytes in length.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9140"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9140"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
    <?line 505?>

<section numbered="false" anchor="acknowledgments">
      <name>Acknowledgments</name>
      <t>TODO acknowledge.</t>
    </section>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
