Internet-Draft | JWT and CWT Status List | July 2023 |
Looker & Bastian | Expires 11 January 2024 | [Page] |
This specification defines status list data structures for representing the status of JSON Web Tokens (JWTs) [RFC7519] and CBOR Web Tokens (CWTs) [RFC8392]. The status list data structures themselves are also represented as JWTs or CWTs.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
The latest revision of this draft can be found at https://vcstuff.github.io/draft-looker-oauth-jwt-cwt-status-list/draft-looker-oauth-jwt-cwt-status-list.html. Status information for this document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-looker-oauth-jwt-cwt-status-list/.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/vcstuff/draft-looker-oauth-jwt-cwt-status-list.¶
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JSON Web Tokens (JWTs) [RFC7519] and CBOR Web Tokens (CWTs) [RFC8392] as secure token formats, have vast possible applications. Some of these applications can involve issuing a token whereby certain semantics about the token can change over time, which are important to be able to communicate to relying parties in an interoperable manner, such as whether the token is considered invalidated or suspended by its issuer.¶
This document defines Status List representations in JWT and CWT formats that describe the individual statuses of multiple Referenced Tokens, which themselves are also JWTs or CWTs. The statuses of all Referenced Tokens are conveyed via a bit array in the Status List. Each Referenced Token is allocated an index during issuance that represents its position within this bit array. The value of the bit(s) at this position correspond to the Referenced Token's status. The document also defines how an issuer of a Referenced Token references a Status List Token. Status Lists may be composed for expressing a range of Status Types. This document defines basic Status Types for the most common use cases as well as an extensibility mechanism for custom Status Types. The Status List Token may be used by an issuer in the Issuer-Holder-Verifier model to express the status of verifiable credentials (Referenced Tokens) issued by an issuer.¶
The following diagram depicts the basic conceptual relationship.¶
+------------------+ +-------------------+ | | References | | | |------------------->| | | Referenced Token | | Status List Token | | (JWT or CWT) | | (JWT or CWT) | | | Describes Status | | | |<-------------------| | +------------------+ +-------------------+¶
Revocation mechanisms are an essential part for most identity ecosystems. In the past, revocation of X.509 TLS certificates has been proven difficult. Traditional certificate revocation lists (CRLs) have limited scalability; Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) has additional privacy risks, since the client is leaking the requested website to a third party. OCSP stapling is addressing some of these problems at the cost of less up-to-date data. Modern approaches use accumulator-based revocation registries and Zero-Knowledge-Proofs to accommodate for this privacy gap, but face scalability issues again.¶
This specification seeks to find a balance between scalability, security, and privacy by minimizing the status information to mere bits (often a single bit) and compressing the resulting binary data. Thereby, a Status List may contain statuses of 100,000 or more Referenced Tokens, but still remain relatively small. Placing large amounts of Referenced Tokens into the same list also enables herd privacy relative to the Issuer.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
A bit array that lists the statuses of many Referenced Tokens.¶
A token in JWT or CWT representation that contains a Status List.¶
A token in JWT or CWT representation which contains a reference to a Status List Token. The information from the contained Status List may give a verifier additional information about up-to-date status of the Referenced Token.¶
The following rules apply to validating a Referenced Token in JWT representation, which references a Status List Token. Application of additional restrictions and policy are at the discretion of the verifying party.¶
The following example is the decoded header and payload of a JWT meeting the processing rules as defined above.¶
{ "alg": "ES256", "kid": "11" } . { "iss": "https://example.com", "status": { "idx": 0, "uri": "https://example.com/statuslists/1" } }¶
The following rules apply to validating the "status" (status) claim¶
The following rules apply to validating a JWT-based Status List Token. Application of additional restrictions and policy are at the discretion of the verifying party.¶
{ "typ": "statuslist+jwt", "alg": "ES256", "kid": "11" } . { "iss": "https://example.com", "sub": "https://example.com/statuslists/1", "iat": 1683560915, "exp": 1686232115, "status_list": { "bits": 1, "lst": "H4sIAMo_jGQC_9u5GABc9QE7AgAAAA" } }¶
The following rules apply to validating the "status_list" (status list) claim¶
Each status of a Referenced Token MUST be represented with a bit size of 1,2,4, or 8. Therefore up to 2,4,16, or 256 statuses for a Referenced Token are possible, depending on the bit size. This limitation is intended to limit bit manipulation necessary to a single byte for every operation and thus keeping implementations simpler and less error prone.¶
This document defines potential statuses of Referenced Tokens as Status Type values. If the Status List contains more than one bit per token (as defined by "bits" in the Status List), then the whole value of bits MUST describe one value. A Status List can not represent multiple statuses per Referenced Token.¶
The registry in this document describes the basic Status Type values required for the most common use cases. Additional values may defined for particular use cases.¶
A status describes the state, mode, condition or stage of an entity that is described by the status list. Status Types MUST be numeric values between 0 and 255. Status types described by this specification comprise: - 0x00 - "VALID" - The status of the Token is valid, correct or legal. - 0x01 - "INVALID" - The status of the Token is revoked, annulled, taken back, recalled or cancelled. This state is irreversible. - 0x02 - "SUSPENDED" - The status of the Token is temporarily invalid, hanging, debarred from privilege. This state is reversible.¶
The issuer of the Status List Token MUST choose an adequate "bits" (bit size) to be able to describe the required Status Types for the application.¶
In this example, the Status List is used as a revocation list. It only requires the Status Types "VALID" and "INVALID"; therefore a "bits" of 1 is sufficient.¶
This example Status List represents the statuses of 16 Referenced Tokens, requiring 16 bits (2 bytes) of status.¶
status[0] = 1 status[1] = 0 status[2] = 0 status[3] = 1 status[4] = 1 status[5] = 1 status[6] = 0 status[7] = 1 status[8] = 1 status[9] = 1 status[10] = 0 status[11] = 0 status[12] = 0 status[13] = 1 status[14] = 0 status[15] = 1¶
These bits are concatenated:¶
byte 0 1 2 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+... values |1|0|1|1|1|0|0|1| |1|0|1|0|0|0|1|1| |0|... +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+... index 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 15 ... 10 9 8 23 \_______________/ \_______________/ 0xB9 0xA3¶
Resulting in the byte array:¶
byte_array = [0xB9, 0xA3]¶
After compression and base64url encoding, the generated Status List is:¶
"status_list": { "bits": 1, "lst": "H4sIAMo_jGQC_9u5GABc9QE7AgAAAA" }¶
In thisexample, the Status List additionally includes the Status Type "SUSPENDED. As the Status Type value for "SUSPENDED" is 0x02 and does not fit into 1 bit, the "bits" is required to be 2.¶
This example Status List represents the status of 12 Referenced Tokens, requiring 24 bits (3 bytes) of status.¶
status[0] = 1 status[1] = 2 status[2] = 0 status[3] = 3 status[4] = 0 status[5] = 1 status[6] = 0 status[7] = 1 status[8] = 1 status[9] = 2 status[10] = 3 status[11] = 3¶
These bits are concatenated:¶
byte 0 1 2 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ values |1|1|0|0|1|0|0|1| |0|1|0|0|0|1|0|0| |1|1|1|1|1|0|0|1| +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / \ / status 3 0 2 1 1 0 1 0 3 3 2 1 index 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 11 10 9 8 \___________/ \___________/ \___________/ 0xC9 0x44 0xF9¶
Resulting in the byte array:¶
byte_array = [0xC9, 0x44, 0xF9]¶
After compression and base64url encoding, the generated Status List is:¶
"status_list": { "bits": 2, "lst": "H4sIAMo_jGQC_zvp8hMAZLRLMQMAAAA" }¶
TBD Define parallel CWT representations for Status Lists and Referenced Tokens.¶
TBD Declare whether JWT and CWT representations can be used interchangeably by the same issuer. For instance, declare whether a status list can reference both JWT and CWT tokens.¶
TODO elaborate on risks of incorrect parsing/decoding leading to erroneous status data¶
TODO consumers/Verifiers of the status list should be aware if they fetch the up-to-date data¶
TODO elaborate on herd privacy, size of the status list¶
TODO elaborate on Verifiers regularly fetching the status list to create a profile, possible countermeasures with authorized access to the status list¶
TODO elaborate on Issuer-Verifier correlation and Verifier-Verifier correlation as the status list introduces unique,trackable data TODO elaborate on issuers avoiding sequential usage of indices and status lists TODO elaborate that a status list only gives information about the maximum number of possible statuses that a list conveys, issuers are recommended to pre-allocate lists, use dead entries that are never assigned or other obfuscation mechanisms¶
TODO elaborate on issuers generating unique status lists per Referenced Token that do not offer herd privacy¶
TODO elaborate on increased privacy if the status list is hosted by a third party instead of the issuer reducing tracking possiblities TODO evaluate deifnition of Status List Provider? An entity that hosts the Status List as a resource for potential verifiers. The Status List Provider may be the issuer of the Status List but may also be outsourced to a trusted third party.¶
This document specifies no IANA actions.¶
We would like to thank Christian Bormann, Michael B. Jones, Torsten Lodderstedt, and Kristina Yasuda for their valuable contributions to this specification.¶
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