14 KiB
Secrets
{{% added-in v="1.1" %}}
Clients may have secret information that they wish to be made available to other authorised clients, but that the server should not be able to see, so the information must be encrypted as it passes through the server. This can be done either asynchronously, by storing encrypted data on the server for later retrieval, or synchronously, by sending messages to each other.
Each secret has an identifier that is used by clients to refer to the secret when storing, fetching, requesting, or sharing the secret. Secrets are plain strings; structured data can be stored by encoding it as a string.
Storage
When secrets are stored on the server, they are stored in the user's account-data, using an event type equal to the secret's identifier. The keys that secrets are encrypted with are described by data that is also stored in the user's account-data. Users can have multiple keys, allowing them to control what sets of secrets clients can access, depending on what keys are given to them.
Key storage
Each key has an ID, and the description of the key is stored in the
user's account data using the event type
m.secret_storage.key.[key ID]
. The contents of the account data for
the key will include an algorithm
property, which indicates the
encryption algorithm used, as well as a name
property, which is a
human-readable name. Key descriptions may also have a passphrase
property for generating the key from a user-entered passphrase, as
described in deriving keys from
passphrases.
KeyDescription
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name | string | Optional. The name of the key. If not given, the client may use a generic name such as "Unnamed key", or "Default key" if the key is marked as the default key (see below). |
algorithm | string | Required. The encryption algorithm to be used for this key. Currently, only m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2 is supported. |
passphrase | string | See deriving keys from passphrases section for a description of this property. |
Other properties depend on the encryption algorithm, and are described below.
A key can be marked as the "default" key by setting the user's
account data with event type m.secret_storage.default_key
to an
object that has the ID of the key as its key
property. The default key
will be used to encrypt all secrets that the user would expect to be
available on all their clients. Unless the user specifies otherwise,
clients will try to use the default key to decrypt secrets.
Clients that want to present a simplified interface to users by not supporting multiple keys should use the default key if one is specified. If not default key is specified, the client may behave as if there is no key is present at all. When such a client creates a key, it should mark that key as being the default key.
DefaultKey
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
key | string | Required. The ID of the default key. |
m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2
For the purposes of allowing clients to check whether a user has correctly
entered the key, keys for use with the m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2
algorithm are stored with some additional data.
When storing a key, clients SHOULD:
-
Given the secret storage key, generate 64 bytes by performing an HKDF with SHA-256 as the hash, a salt of 32 bytes of 0, and the empty string as the info. The first 32 bytes are used as the AES key, and the next 32 bytes are used as the MAC key.
-
Generate 16 random bytes, set bit 63 to 0 (in order to work around differences in AES-CTR implementations), and use this as the AES initialization vector (IV).
-
Encrypt a message consisting of 32 byutes of 0, using AES-CTR-256 using the AES key and IV generated above.
-
Pass the raw encrypted data through HMAC-SHA-256 using the MAC key generated above.
-
Encode the IV from step 2, and the MAC from step 4, using unpadded base64, and store the results in the
iv
andmac
properties respectively in them.secret_storage.key.[key ID]
account-data. (The ciphertext from step 3 is discarded after passing through the MAC calculation.)
This process can be repeated by a client checking if the key is correct: the MAC should match if the key is correct. Note, however, that these properties are optional. If they are not present, clients must assume that the key is valid.
Note also, that although clients SHOULD use unpadded base64 as specified above, some existing implementations use standard RFC4648-compliant base64 with padding, so clients must accept either encoding.
The structure of a m.secret_storage.key.[key ID]
account data object for use
with this algorithm is therefore as follows:
AesHmacSha2KeyDescription
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name | string | Optional. The name of the key. |
algorithm | string | Required. The encryption algorithm to be used for this key: m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2 . |
passphrase | object | See deriving keys from passphrases section for a description of this property. |
iv | string | Optional. The 16-byte initialization vector for the validation check, encoded as base64. |
mac | string | Optional. The MAC of the result of encrypting 32 bytes of 0, encoded as base64. |
For example, it could look like:
{
"name": "m.default",
"algorithm": "m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2",
"iv": "random+data",
"mac": "mac+of+encrypted+zeros"
}
Secret storage
Encrypted data is stored in the user's account data using the event
type defined by the feature that uses the data. The account data will
have an encrypted
property that is a map from key ID to an object. The
algorithm from the m.secret_storage.key.[key ID]
data for the given
key defines how the other properties are interpreted, though it's
expected that most encryption schemes would have ciphertext
and mac
properties, where the ciphertext
property is the unpadded
base64-encoded ciphertext, and the mac
is used to ensure the integrity
of the data.
Secret
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
encrypted | {string: object} | Required. Map from key ID the encrypted data. The exact format for the encrypted data is dependent on the key algorithm. See the definition of AesHmacSha2EncryptedData in the m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2 section. |
Example:
Some secret is encrypted using keys with ID key_id_1
and key_id_2
:
org.example.some.secret
:
{
"encrypted": {
"key_id_1": {
"ciphertext": "base64+encoded+encrypted+data",
"mac": "base64+encoded+mac",
// ... other properties according to algorithm property in
// m.secret_storage.key.key_id_1
},
"key_id_2": {
// ...
}
}
}
and the key descriptions for the keys would be:
m.secret_storage.key.key_id_1
:
{
"name": "Some key",
"algorithm": "m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2",
// ... other properties according to algorithm
}
m.secret_storage.key.key_id_2
:
{
"name": "Some other key",
"algorithm": "m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2",
// ... other properties according to algorithm
}
If key_id_1
is the default key, then we also have:
m.secret_storage.default_key
:
{
"key": "key_id_1"
}
m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2
Secrets encrypted using the m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2
algorithm are encrypted using AES-CTR-256, and authenticated using
HMAC-SHA-256. The secret is encrypted as follows:
-
Given the secret storage key, generate 64 bytes by performing an HKDF with SHA-256 as the hash, a salt of 32 bytes of 0, and with the secret name as the info. The first 32 bytes are used as the AES key, and the next 32 bytes are used as the MAC key.
-
Generate 16 random bytes, set bit 63 to 0 (in order to work around differences in AES-CTR implementations), and use this as the AES initialization vector (IV).
-
Encrypt the data using AES-CTR-256 using the AES key and IV generated above.
-
Pass the raw encrypted data through HMAC-SHA-256 using the MAC key generated above.
-
Encode the IV from step 2, the ciphertext from step 3, and MAC from step 4, using unpadded base64, and store them as the
iv
,ciphertext
, andmac
properties respectively in the account data object.Note: some existing implementations encode these properties using standard RFC4648-compliant base64 with padding, so clients must accept either encoding.
The structure of the encrypted
property of an account data object encrypted
with this algorithm is therefore as follows:
AesHmacSha2EncryptedData
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
iv | string | Required. The 16-byte initialization vector, encoded as base64. |
ciphertext | string | Required. The AES-CTR-encrypted data, encoded as base64. |
mac | string | Required. The MAC, encoded as base64. |
For example, data encrypted using this algorithm could look like this:
{
"encrypted": {
"key_id": {
"iv": "16+bytes+base64",
"ciphertext": "base64+encoded+encrypted+data",
"mac": "base64+encoded+mac"
}
}
}
Key representation
When a user is given a raw key for m.secret_storage.v1.aes-hmac-sha2
,
it will be presented as a string constructed as follows:
- The key is prepended by the two bytes
0x8b
and0x01
- All the bytes in the string above, including the two header bytes, are XORed together to form a parity byte. This parity byte is appended to the byte string.
- The byte string is encoded using base58, using the same mapping as
is used for Bitcoin
addresses,
that is, using the alphabet
123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz
. - The string is formatted into groups of four characters separated by spaces.
When decoding a raw key, the process should be reversed, with the exception that whitespace is insignificant in the user's input.
Deriving keys from passphrases
A user may wish to use a chosen passphrase rather than a randomly
generated key. In this case, information on how to generate the key from
a passphrase will be stored in the passphrase
property of the
m.secret_storage.key.[key ID]
account-data. The passphrase
property
has an algorithm
property that indicates how to generate the key from
the passphrase. Other properties of the passphrase
property are
defined by the algorithm
specified.
Currently, the only algorithm defined is m.pbkdf2
. For the m.pbkdf2
algorithm, the passphrase
property has the
following properties:
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
algorithm | string | Required. Must be m.pbkdf2 |
salt | string | Required. The salt used in PBKDF2. |
iterations | integer | Required. The number of iterations to use in PBKDF2. |
bits | integer | Optional. The number of bits to generate for the key. Defaults to 256. |
The key is generated using PBKDF2 with SHA-512 as the hash, using the
salt given in the salt
parameter, and the number of iterations given
in the iterations
parameter.
Example:
{
"passphrase": {
"algorithm": "m.pbkdf2",
"salt": "MmMsAlty",
"iterations": 100000,
"bits": 256
},
...
}
Sharing
To request a secret from other devices, a client sends an
m.secret.request
device event with action
set to request
and
name
set to the identifier of the secret. A device that wishes to
share the secret will reply with an m.secret.send
event, encrypted
using olm. When the original client obtains the secret, it sends an
m.secret.request
event with action
set to request_cancellation
to
all devices other than the one that it received the secret from. Clients
should ignore m.secret.send
events received from devices that it did
not send an m.secret.request
event to.
Clients must ensure that they only share secrets with other devices that are allowed to see them. For example, clients should only share secrets with the user’s own devices that are verified and may prompt the user to confirm sharing the secret.
Event definitions
{{% event event="m.secret.request" %}}
{{% event event="m.secret.send" %}}