additions and clarifications

- indicate how to use MSC 1946 to store/share private keys
- add signing by devices to enable migrating from device verifications
- add information about signature upload failures and M_INVALID_SIGNATURE code
- add security consideration
pull/1756/head
Hubert Chathi 5 years ago
parent 7bad359b0d
commit 4d31ddc8c9

@ -57,18 +57,37 @@ store it at all. Clients will need to balance the security of the keys with
the usability of signing users and devices when performing key verification.
The private halves of a user's cross-signing keys be stored encrypted on the
server so that they may be retrieved by new devices. FIXME: explain how to do
this via MSC 1946
server so that they may be retrieved by new devices, or shared between devices
using [MSC 1946](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/pull/1946). When
handled in this way, the keys must be base64-encoded, and use the names
`m.cross_signing.master`, `m.cross_signing.self_signing`, and
`m.cross_signing.user_signing` for the master, self-signing, and user-signing
keys, respectively.
### Signature distribution
Currently, users will only be allowed to see signatures made by her own master,
self-signing or user-signing keys, or signatures made by other users' master or
self-signing keys about their own devices. This is done in order to preserve
the privacy of social connections. Future proposals may define mechanisms for
Currently, users will only be allowed to see signatures made by their own
master, self-signing or user-signing keys, signatures of their own master key
made by their own devices, signatures made by other users' master or
self-signing keys about their own devices, or signatures made of other users'
master keys by their own devices. This is done in order to preserve the
privacy of social connections. Future proposals may define mechanisms for
distributing signatures to other users in order to allow for other web-of-trust
use cases.
### Migrating from device verifications
Users who have verified individual devices may wish to migrate these
verifications to use cross-signing instead. In order to aid with this,
signatures of a user's master key, made by their own devices, may be uploaded
to the server. If another client sees that the user's master key has a valid
signature from a device that was previously verified, then the client MAY
choose to trust and sign the master key. The client SHOULD take precautions to
ensure that a stolen device cannot be used to cause it to trust a malicious
master key. For example, a client could prompt the user before signing the
master key, or it could only do this migration on the first master key that it
sees from a user.
### API description
#### Uploading signing keys
@ -126,7 +145,8 @@ properties:
"`ed25519:`" followed by the unpadded base64 encoding of the public key, and
whose value is the unpadded base64 encoding of the public key.
* `signatures` ({string: {string: string}}): signatures of the key. A
self-signing or user-signing key must be signed by the master key.
self-signing or user-signing key MUST be signed by the master key. A master
key MAY be signed by a device.
In order to ensure that there will be no collisions in the `signatures`
property, the server must respond with an error (FIXME: what error?) if any of
@ -136,7 +156,8 @@ keys, the server must respond with an error (FIXME: what error?).
If a self-signing or user-signing key is uploaded, it must be signed by the
master key that is included in the request, or the current master key if no
master key is included.
master key is included. If the signature from the master key is incorrect, the
server should respond with an error code of `M_INVALID_SIGNATURE`.
After uploading cross-signing keys, they will be included under the
`/keys/query` endpoint under the `master_keys`, `self_signing_keys` and
@ -287,10 +308,11 @@ others users who share an encrypted room with that user.
#### Uploading signatures
Signatures of keys can be uploaded using `/keys/signatures/upload`.
Signatures of device keys can be uploaded using `/keys/signatures/upload`.
For example, Alice signs one of her devices (HIJKLMN) (using her self-signing
key), and signs Bob's master key (using her user-signing key).
key), her own master key (using her HIJKLMN device), Bob's master key (using
her user-signing key).
`POST /keys/signatures/upload`
@ -313,6 +335,18 @@ key), and signs Bob's master key (using her user-signing key).
"ed25519:base64+self+signing+public+key": "base64+signature+of+HIJKLMN"
}
}
},
"base64+master+public+key": {
"user_id": "@alice:example.com",
"usage": ["master"],
"keys": {
"ed25519:base64+master+public+key": "base64+master+public+key"
},
"signatures": {
"@alice:example.com": {
"ed25519:HIJKLMN": "base64+signature+of+master+key"
}
}
}
},
"@bob:example.com": {
@ -332,9 +366,23 @@ key), and signs Bob's master key (using her user-signing key).
}
```
After Alice uploads a signature for her own devices, her signature will be
included in the results of the `/keys/query` request when *anyone* requests her
keys:
response:
``` json
{
"failures": {}
}
```
The response contains a `failures` property, which is a map of user ID to
device ID to failure reason, if any of the uploaded keys failed. The
homeserver should verify that the signature is correct. If it is not, the
homeserver should set the corresponding entry in `failures` to a JSON object
with the `errcode` property set to `M_INVALID_SIGNATURE`.
After Alice uploads a signature for her own devices or master key, her
signature will be included in the results of the `/keys/query` request when
*anyone* requests her keys:
`POST /keys/query`
@ -382,6 +430,11 @@ response:
"usage": ["master"],
"keys": {
"ed25519:base64+master+public+key": "base64+master+public+key"
},
"signatures": {
"@alice:example.com": {
"ed25519:HIJKLMN": "base64+signature+of+master+key"
}
}
},
"self_signing_key": {
@ -484,6 +537,12 @@ deleted and replaced. An attacker who is able to both steal a user's device
and control their homeserver could prevent that device from being marked as
untrusted.
An attacker may be able to upload a large number of signatures in a DoS attack
against clients or servers, similar to the [attack against the SKS keyserver
network](https://gist.github.com/rjhansen/67ab921ffb4084c865b3618d6955275f).
Since clients are only sent a subset of signatures, and the attestation graph
is limited, a DoS attack is less likely to be successful in this case.
## Conclusion
This proposal presents an alternative cross-signing mechanism to MSC1680,

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