JOSE Working GroupInternet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. JonesInternet-DraftRequest for Comments: 7517 MicrosoftIntended status:Category: Standards TrackJanuary 16, 2015 Expires: July 20,May 2015 ISSN: 2070-1721 JSON Web Key (JWK)draft-ietf-jose-json-web-key-41Abstract A JSON Web Key (JWK) is a JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) data structure that represents a cryptographic key. This specification also defines aJSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)JSON data structure that represents a set of JWKs. Cryptographic algorithms and identifiers for use with this specification are described in the separate JSON Web Algorithms (JWA) specification and IANA registriesdefinedestablished by that specification. Status ofthisThis Memo ThisInternet-Draftissubmitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documentsan Internet Standards Track document. This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The listIt represents the consensus ofcurrent Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Internet-Drafts are draft documents validthe IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved fora maximumpublication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741. Information about the current status ofsix monthsthis document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may beupdated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documentsobtained atany time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on July 20, 2015.http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7517. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 43 1.1. Notational Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 43 2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 3. Example JWK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 4. JSON Web Key (JWK) Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 4.1. "kty" (Key Type) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..6 4.2. "use" (Public Key Use) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . ..6 4.3. "key_ops" (Key Operations) Parameter . . . . . . . . . ..7 4.4. "alg" (Algorithm) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.5. "kid" (Key ID) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..8 4.6. "x5u" (X.509 URL) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.7. "x5c" (X.509 Certificate Chain) Parameter . . . . . . . . 9 4.8. "x5t" (X.509 Certificate SHA-1 Thumbprint) Parameter . ..9 4.9. "x5t#S256" (X.509 Certificate SHA-256 Thumbprint) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.JSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.1. "keys" Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1110 6. String Comparison Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 7. Encrypted JWK and Encrypted JWK Set Formats . . . . . . . . . 11 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1211 8.1. JSON Web Key Parameters Registry . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1312 8.1.1. Registration Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1312 8.1.2. Initial Registry Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1413 8.2. JSON Web Key Use Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 8.2.1. Registration Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1615 8.2.2. Initial Registry Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1615 8.3. JSON Web Key Operations Registry . . . . . . . . . . . ..16 8.3.1. Registration Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1716 8.3.2. Initial Registry Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1716 8.4. JSON Web Key Set Parameters Registry . . . . . . . . . .. 1817 8.4.1. Registration Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1817 8.4.2. Initial Registry Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1918 8.5. Media Type Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1918 8.5.1. Registry Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1918 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2019 9.1. Key Provenance and Trust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..20 9.2. Preventing Disclosure ofNon-PublicNon-public Key Information . . .2120 9.3. RSA Private Key Representations and Blinding . . . . . ..21 9.4. Key Entropy and Random Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2221 10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2221 10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2221 10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2423 Appendix A. Example JSON Web Key Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . ..25 A.1. Example Public Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 A.2. Example Private Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..25 A.3. Example Symmetric Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..27 Appendix B. Example Use of "x5c" (X.509 Certificate Chain) Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2728 Appendix C. Example Encrypted RSA Private Key . . . . . . . . ..28 C.1. Plaintext RSA Private Key . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 C.2. JOSE Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 C.3. Content Encryption Key (CEK) . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..32 C.4. Key Derivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..33 C.5. Key Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..33 C.6. Initialization Vector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 C.7. Additional Authenticated Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 C.8. Content Encryption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..34 C.9. Complete Representation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 Appendix D.38 Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 Appendix E. Document History . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. 3940 Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4740 1. Introduction A JSON Web Key (JWK) is a JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) [RFC7159] data structure that represents a cryptographic key. This specification also defines aJSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)JSON data structure that represents a set of JWKs. Cryptographic algorithms and identifiers for use with this specification are described in the separate JSON Web Algorithms (JWA) [JWA] specification and IANA registriesdefinedestablished by that specification. Goals for this specification do not include representing new kinds of certificate chains, representing new kinds of certified keys, or replacing X.509 certificates. JWKs and JWK Sets are used in the JSON Web Signature(JWS)[JWS] and JSON Web Encryption(JWE)[JWE] specifications. Names defined by this specification are short because a core goal is for the resulting representations to be compact. 1.1. Notational Conventions 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 inKey"Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate RequirementLevelsLevels" [RFC2119].If these words are used without being spelled in uppercase then they are toThe interpretation should only beinterpreted with their normal natural language meanings.applied when the terms appear in all capital letters. BASE64URL(OCTETS) denotes the base64url encoding of OCTETS, per Section 2 of [JWS]. UTF8(STRING) denotes the octets of the UTF-8 [RFC3629] representation of STRING, where STRING is a sequence of zero or more Unicode [UNICODE] characters. ASCII(STRING) denotes the octets of the ASCII [RFC20] representation of STRING, where STRING is a sequence of zero or more ASCII characters. The concatenation of two values A and B is denoted as A || B. 2. TerminologyTheseThe termsdefined by the JSON Web Signature (JWS) [JWS] specification are incorporated into this specification: "JSON"JSON Web Signature (JWS)", "Base64url Encoding", "Collision-Resistant Name", "Header Parameter", and "JOSEHeader". These termsHeader" are defined by theJSON Web Encryption (JWE) [JWE]JWS specificationare incorporated into this specification:[JWS]. The terms "JSON Web Encryption (JWE)", "Additional Authenticated Data (AAD)", "JWE Authentication Tag", "JWE Ciphertext", "JWE Compact Serialization", "JWE Encrypted Key", "JWE Initialization Vector", and "JWE ProtectedHeader". These termsHeader" are defined by theInternet Security Glossary, Version 2 [RFC4949] are incorporated into this specification:JWE specification [JWE]. The terms "Ciphertext", "Digital Signature", "Message Authentication Code (MAC)", and"Plaintext"."Plaintext" are defined by the "Internet Security Glossary, Version 2" [RFC4949]. These terms are defined by this specification: JSON Web Key (JWK) A JSON object that represents a cryptographic key. The members of the object represent properties of the key, including its value.JSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)A JSON object that represents a set of JWKs. The JSON object MUST have a "keys" member, which is an array of JWKs. 3. Example JWK This section provides an example of a JWK. The following example JWK declares that the key is an Elliptic Curve [DSS] key, it is used with the P-256 Elliptic Curve, and its x and y coordinates are thebase64url encodedbase64url-encoded values shown. A key identifier is also provided for the key. {"kty":"EC", "crv":"P-256", "x":"f83OJ3D2xF1Bg8vub9tLe1gHMzV76e8Tus9uPHvRVEU", "y":"x_FEzRu9m36HLN_tue659LNpXW6pCyStikYjKIWI5a0", "kid":"Public key used in JWS spec Appendix A.3 example" } Additional example JWK values can be found in Appendix A. 4. JSON Web Key (JWK) Format AJSON Web Key (JWK)JWK is a JSON object that represents a cryptographic key. The members of the object represent properties of the key, including its value. This JSON object MAY containwhite spacewhitespace and/or line breaks before or after any JSON values or structural characters, in accordance with Section 2 of RFC 7159 [RFC7159]. This document defines the key parameters that are not algorithmspecific, and thusspecific and, thus, common to many keys. In addition to the common parameters, each JWK will have members that are keytype-specific.type specific. These members represent the parameters of the key. Section 6 of the JSON Web Algorithms (JWA) [JWA] specification defines multiple kinds of cryptographic keys and their associated members. The member names within a JWK MUST be unique; JWK parsers MUST either reject JWKs with duplicate member names or use a JSON parser that returns only the lexically last duplicate member name, as specified in Section 15.12 (The JSON Object) of ECMAScript 5.1 [ECMAScript]. Additional members can be present in the JWK; if not understood by implementations encountering them, they MUST be ignored. Member names used for representing key parameters for different keys types need not be distinct. Any new member name should either be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyParametersParameters" registrydefined inestablished by Section 8.1 or be a value that contains a Collision-Resistant Name. 4.1. "kty" (Key Type) Parameter The "kty" (key type)memberparameter identifies the cryptographic algorithm family used with the key, such as "RSA" or "EC". "kty" values should either be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyTypesTypes" registrydefined inestablished by [JWA] or be a value that contains aCollision-ResistantCollision- Resistant Name. The "kty" value is a case-sensitive string. This member MUST be present in a JWK. A list of defined "kty" values can be found in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyTypesTypes" registrydefined inestablished by [JWA]; the initial contents of this registry are the values defined in Section 6.1 ofthe JSON Web Algorithms (JWA) [JWA] specification.[JWA]. The key type definitions include specification of the members to be used for those key types.Additional membersMembers used with specific "kty" values canalsobe found in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyParametersParameters" registrydefined inestablished by Section 8.1. 4.2. "use" (Public Key Use) Parameter The "use" (public key use)memberparameter identifies the intended use of the public key. The "use" parameter is employed to indicate whether a public key is used for encrypting data or verifying the signature on data. Values defined by this specification are: o "sig" (signature) o "enc" (encryption) Other values MAY be used. The "use" value is a case-sensitive string. Use of the "use" member is OPTIONAL, unless the application requires its presence. When a key is used to wrap another key and aPublic Key Usepublic key use designation for the first key is desired, the "enc" (encryption) key use value is used, since key wrapping is a kind of encryption. The "enc" value is also to be used for public keys used for key agreement operations. AdditionalPublic Key Use"use" (public key use) values can be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyUseUse" registrydefined inestablished by Section 8.2. Registering any extension values used is highly recommended when this specification is used in open environments, in which multiple organizations need to have a common understanding of any extensions used. However, unregistered extension values can be used in closed environments, in which the producing and consuming organization will always be the same. 4.3. "key_ops" (Key Operations) Parameter The "key_ops" (key operations)memberparameter identifies the operation(s)thatfor which the key is intended to beused for.used. The "key_ops" parameter is intended for use cases in which public, private, or symmetric keys may be present. Its value is an array of key operation values. Values defined by this specification are: o "sign" (compute digital signature or MAC) o "verify" (verify digital signature or MAC) o "encrypt" (encrypt content) o "decrypt" (decrypt content and validate decryption, if applicable) o "wrapKey" (encrypt key) o "unwrapKey" (decrypt key and validate decryption, if applicable) o "deriveKey" (derive key) o "deriveBits" (derive bits not to be used as a key) (Note that the "key_ops" values intentionally match the "KeyUsage" values defined in the Web Cryptography API [W3C.CR-WebCryptoAPI-20141211] specification.) Other values MAY be used. The key operation values are case- sensitive strings. Duplicate key operation values MUST NOT be present in the array. Use of the "key_ops" member is OPTIONAL, unless the application requires its presence. Multiple unrelated key operations SHOULD NOT be specified for a key because of the potential vulnerabilities associated with using the same key with multiple algorithms. Thus, the combinations "sign" with "verify", "encrypt" with "decrypt", and "wrapKey" with "unwrapKey" are permitted, but other combinations SHOULD NOT be used. AdditionalKey Operations"key_ops" (key operations) values can be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyOperationsOperations" registrydefined inestablished by Section 8.3. The same considerations about registering extension values apply to the "key_ops" member as do for the "use" member. The "use" and "key_ops" JWK members SHOULD NOT be used together; however, if both are used, the information they convey MUST be consistent. Applications should specify which of these members they use, if either is to be used by the application. 4.4. "alg" (Algorithm) Parameter The "alg" (algorithm)memberparameter identifies the algorithm intended for use with the key. The values used should either be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web Signature and EncryptionAlgorithmsAlgorithms" registrydefined inestablished by [JWA] or be a value that contains aCollision-ResistantCollision- Resistant Name. The "alg" value is a case-sensitive ASCII string. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. 4.5. "kid" (Key ID) Parameter The "kid" (key ID)memberparameter is used to match a specific key. This is used, for instance, to choose among a set of keys within a JWK Set during key rollover. The structure of the "kid" value is unspecified. When "kid" values are used within a JWK Set, different keys within the JWK Set SHOULD use distinct "kid" values. (One example in which different keys might use the same "kid" value is if they have different "kty" (key type) values but are considered to be equivalent alternatives by the application using them.) The "kid" value is a case-sensitive string. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. When used with JWS or JWE, the "kid" value is used to match a JWS or JWE "kid" Header Parameter value. 4.6. "x5u" (X.509 URL) Parameter The "x5u" (X.509 URL)memberparameter is a URI [RFC3986] that refers to a resource for an X.509 public key certificate or certificate chain [RFC5280]. The identified resource MUST provide a representation of the certificate or certificate chain that conforms to RFC 5280 [RFC5280] inPEM encodedPEM-encoded form, with each certificate delimited as specified in Section 6.1 of RFC 4945 [RFC4945]. The key in the first certificate MUST match the public key represented by other members of the JWK. The protocol used to acquire the resource MUST provide integrity protection; an HTTP GET request to retrieve the certificate MUST use TLS[RFC2818, RFC5246];[RFC2818] [RFC5246]; the identity of the server MUST be validated, as per Section 6 of RFC 6125 [RFC6125]. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. While there is no requirement that optional JWK members providing key usage, algorithm, or other information be present when the "x5u" member is used, doing so may improve interoperability for applications that do not handle PKIX certificates [RFC5280]. If other members are present, the contents of those members MUST be semantically consistent with the related fields in the first certificate. For instance, if the "use" member is present, then it MUST correspond to the usage that is specified in the certificate, when it includes this information. Similarly, if the "alg" member is present, it MUST correspond to the algorithm specified in the certificate. 4.7. "x5c" (X.509 Certificate Chain) Parameter The "x5c" (X.509Certificate Chain) membercertificate chain) parameter contains a chain of one or more PKIX certificates [RFC5280]. The certificate chain is represented as a JSON array of certificate value strings. Each string in the array is abase64 encoded ([RFC4648] Sectionbase64-encoded (Section 4 of [RFC4648] -- notbase64url encoded)base64url-encoded) DER [ITU.X690.1994] PKIX certificate value. The PKIX certificate containing the key value MUST be the first certificate. This MAY be followed by additional certificates, with each subsequent certificate being the one used to certify the previous one. The key in the first certificate MUST match the public key represented by other members of the JWK. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. As with the "x5u" member, optional JWK members providing key usage, algorithm, or other information MAY also be present when the "x5c" member is used. If other members are present, the contents of those members MUST be semantically consistent with the related fields in the first certificate. See the last paragraph of Section 4.6 for additional guidance on this. 4.8. "x5t" (X.509 Certificate SHA-1 Thumbprint) Parameter The "x5t" (X.509Certificatecertificate SHA-1Thumbprint) memberthumbprint) parameter is abase64url encodedbase64url-encoded SHA-1 thumbprint (a.k.a. digest) of the DER encoding of an X.509 certificate [RFC5280]. Note that certificate thumbprints are also sometimes known as certificate fingerprints. The key in the certificate MUST match the public key represented by other members of the JWK. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. As with the "x5u" member, optional JWK members providing key usage, algorithm, or other information MAY also be present when the "x5t" member is used. If other members are present, the contents of those members MUST be semantically consistent with the related fields in the referenced certificate. See the last paragraph of Section 4.6 for additional guidance on this. 4.9. "x5t#S256" (X.509 Certificate SHA-256 Thumbprint) Parameter The "x5t#S256" (X.509Certificatecertificate SHA-256Thumbprint) memberthumbprint) parameter is abase64url encodedbase64url-encoded SHA-256 thumbprint (a.k.a. digest) of the DER encoding of an X.509 certificate [RFC5280]. Note that certificate thumbprints are also sometimes known as certificate fingerprints. The key in the certificate MUST match the public key represented by other members of the JWK. Use of this member is OPTIONAL. As with the "x5u" member, optional JWK members providing key usage, algorithm, or other information MAY also be present when the "x5t#S256" member is used. If other members are present, the contents of those members MUST be semantically consistent with the related fields in the referenced certificate. See the last paragraph of Section 4.6 for additional guidance on this. 5.JSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)Format AJSON Web KeyJWK Set(JWK Set)is a JSON object that represents a set of JWKs. The JSON object MUST have a "keys" member, with its value being an array of JWKs. This JSON object MAY containwhite spacewhitespace and/or line breaks. The member names within a JWK Set MUST be unique; JWK Set parsers MUST either reject JWK Sets with duplicate member names or use a JSON parser that returns only the lexically last duplicate member name, as specified in Section 15.12(The("The JSONObject)Object") of ECMAScript 5.1 [ECMAScript]. Additional members can be present in the JWK Set; if not understood by implementations encountering them, they MUST be ignored. Parameters for representing additional properties of JWK Sets should either be registered in the IANAJSON"JSON Web Key SetParametersParameters" registrydefined inestablished by Section 8.4 or be a value that contains aCollision- ResistantCollision-Resistant Name. Implementations SHOULD ignore JWKs within a JWK Set that use "kty" (key type) values that are not understood by them, that are missing required members, or for which values are out of the supported ranges. 5.1. "keys" Parameter The value of the "keys"memberparameter is an array of JWK values. By default, the order of the JWK values within the array does not imply an order of preference among them, although applications of JWK Sets can choose to assign a meaning to the order for their purposes, if desired. 6. String Comparison Rules The string comparison rules for this specification are the same as those defined in Section 5.3 of [JWS]. 7. Encrypted JWK and Encrypted JWK Set Formats Access to JWKs containing non-public key material by parties without legitimate access to the non-public information MUST be prevented. This can be accomplished by encrypting the JWK when potentially observable by such parties to prevent the disclosure of private or symmetric key values. The use of an Encrypted JWK, which is a JWE with the UTF-8 encoding of a JWK as its plaintext value, is recommended for this purpose. The processing of Encrypted JWKs is identical to the processing of other JWEs. A "cty" (content type) Header Parameter value of "jwk+json" MUST be used to indicate that the content of the JWE is a JWK, unless the application knows that the encrypted content is a JWK by another means or convention, in which case the "cty" value would typically be omitted. JWK Sets containing non-public key material will also need to be encrypted under these circumstances. The use of an Encrypted JWK Set, which is a JWE with the UTF-8 encoding of a JWK Set as its plaintext value, is recommended for this purpose. The processing of Encrypted JWK Sets is identical to the processing of other JWEs. A "cty" (content type) Header Parameter value of "jwk-set+json" MUST be used to indicate that the content of the JWE is a JWK Set, unless the application knows that the encrypted content is a JWK Set by another means or convention, in which case the "cty" value would typically be omitted. See Appendix C for an example encrypted JWK. 8. IANA Considerations The following registration procedure is used for all the registries established by this specification.Values are registered on aThe registration procedure for values is Specification Required [RFC5226]basisafter a three-week review period on the jose-reg-review@ietf.org mailing list, on the advice of one or more Designated Experts. However, to allow for the allocation of values prior to publication, the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts may approve registration once they are satisfied that such a specification will be published. Registration requestsmust besent to thejose-reg-review@ietf.orgmailing list for reviewand comment, withshould use an appropriate subject (e.g., "Request to register JWK parameter: example"). Within the review period, the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts will either approve or deny the registration request, communicating this decision to the review list and IANA. Denials should include an explanation and, if applicable, suggestions as to how to make the request successful. Registration requests that are undetermined for a period longer than 21 days can be brought to the IESG's attention (using the iesg@ietf.org mailing list) for resolution. Criteria that should be applied by the DesignatedExpert(s) includesExperts include determining whether the proposed registration duplicates existing functionality,determiningwhether it is likely to be of general applicability orwhether it isuseful only for a single application, and whether the registration description is clear. IANA must only accept registry updates from the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts and should direct all requests for registration to the review mailing list. It is suggested that multiple Designated Experts be appointed who are able to represent the perspectives of different applications using this specification, in order to enablebroadly-informedbroadly informed review of registration decisions. In cases where a registration decision could be perceived as creating a conflict of interest for a particular Expert, that Expert should defer to the judgment of the otherExpert(s). [[ Note to the RFC Editor and IANA: Pearl Liang of ICANN had requested that the draft supply the following proposed registry description information. It is to be used for all registries established by this specification. o Protocol Category: JSON Object Signing and Encryption (JOSE) o Registry Location: http://www.iana.org/assignments/jose o Webpage Title: (same as the protocol category) o Registry Name: (same as the section title, but excluding the word "Registry", for example "JSON Web Key Parameters") ]] 8.1. JSON Web Key Parameters Registry This specification establishesExperts. 8.1. JSON Web Key Parameters Registry This section establishes the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyParametersParameters" registry for JWK parameter names. The registry records the parameter name, the key type(s) that the parameter is used with, and a reference to the specification that defines it. It also records whether the parameter conveys public or private information. Thisspecificationsection registers the parameter names defined in Section 4. The same JWK parameter name may be registered multiple times, provided that duplicate parameter registrations are only forkey type specifickey-type-specific JWK parameters; in this case, the meaning of the duplicate parameter name is disambiguated by the "kty" value of the JWK containing it. 8.1.1. Registration Template Parameter Name: The name requested (e.g., "kid"). Because a core goal of this specification is for the resulting representations to be compact, it is RECOMMENDED that the name be short -- not to exceed 8 characters without a compelling reason to do so. This name iscase-sensitive.case sensitive. Names may not match other registered names in a case-insensitive manner unless the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts state that there is a compelling reason to allow anexception in this particular case.exception. However, matching names may be registered, provided that the accompanying sets of "kty" values that theParameter Nameparameter name is used with are disjoint; for the purposes of matching "kty" values, "*" matches all values. Parameter Description: Brief description of the parameter (e.g., "Key ID"). Used with "kty" Value(s): The key type parameter value(s) that the parameter name is to be used with, or the value "*" if the parameter value is used with all key types. Values may not match other registered "kty" values in a case-insensitive manner when the registeredParameter Nameparameter name is the same (including when theParameter Nameparameter name matches in a case- insensitive manner) unless the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts state that there is a compelling reason to allow anexception in this particular case.exception. Parameter Information Class: Registers whether the parameter conveys public or private information. Its value must beone the wordseither Public or Private. Change Controller: For Standards Track RFCs,statelist the "IESG". For others, give the name of the responsible party. Other details (e.g., postal address, email address, home page URI) may also be included. Specification Document(s): Reference to thedocument(s)document or documents that specify the parameter, preferably includingURI(s)URIs that can be used to retrieve copies of thedocument(s).documents. An indication of the relevant sections may also be included but is not required. 8.1.2. Initial Registry Contents o Parameter Name: "kty" o Parameter Description: Key Type o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.1 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "use" o Parameter Description: Public Key Use o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.2 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "key_ops" o Parameter Description: Key Operations o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "alg" o Parameter Description: Algorithm o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.4 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "kid" o Parameter Description: Key ID o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.5 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "x5u" o Parameter Description: X.509 URL o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.6 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "x5c" o Parameter Description: X.509 Certificate Chain o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.7 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "x5t" o Parameter Description: X.509 Certificate SHA-1 Thumbprint o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.8 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Parameter Name: "x5t#S256" o Parameter Description: X.509 Certificate SHA-256 Thumbprint o Used with "kty" Value(s): * o Parameter Information Class: Public o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.9 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 8.2. JSON Web Key Use Registry Thisspecificationsection establishes the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyUseUse" registry for JWK "use" (public key use) member values. The registry records the public key use value and a reference to the specification that defines it. Thisspecificationsection registers the parameter names defined in Section 4.2. 8.2.1. Registration Template Use Member Value: The name requested (e.g., "sig"). Because a core goal of this specification is for the resulting representations to be compact, it is RECOMMENDED that the name be short -- not to exceed 8 characters without a compelling reason to do so. This name iscase-sensitive.case sensitive. Names may not match other registered names in a case-insensitive manner unless the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts state that there is a compelling reason to allow anexception in this particular case.exception. Use Description: Brief description of the use (e.g., "Digital Signature or MAC"). Change Controller: For Standards Track RFCs,statelist the "IESG". For others, give the name of the responsible party. Other details (e.g., postal address, email address, home page URI) may also be included. Specification Document(s): Reference to thedocument(s)document or documents that specify the parameter, preferably includingURI(s)URIs that can be used to retrieve copies of thedocument(s).documents. An indication of the relevant sections may also be included but is not required. 8.2.2. Initial Registry Contents o Use Member Value: "sig" o Use Description: Digital Signature or MAC o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.2 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Use Member Value: "enc" o Use Description: Encryption o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.2 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 8.3. JSON Web Key Operations Registry Thisspecificationsection establishes the IANAJSON"JSON Web KeyOperationsOperations" registry for values of JWK "key_ops" array elements. The registry records the key operation value and a reference to the specification that defines it. Thisspecificationsection registers the parameter names defined in Section 4.3. 8.3.1. Registration Template Key Operation Value: The name requested (e.g., "sign"). Because a core goal of this specification is for the resulting representations to be compact, it is RECOMMENDED that the name be short -- not to exceed 8 characters without a compelling reason to do so. This name iscase-sensitive.case sensitive. Names may not match other registered names in a case-insensitive manner unless the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts state that there is a compelling reason to allow anexception in this particular case.exception. Key Operation Description: Brief description of the key operation (e.g., "Compute digital signature or MAC"). Change Controller: For Standards Track RFCs,statelist the "IESG". For others, give the name of the responsible party. Other details (e.g., postal address, email address, home page URI) may also be included. Specification Document(s): Reference to thedocument(s)document or documents that specify the parameter, preferably includingURI(s)URIs that can be used to retrieve copies of thedocument(s).documents. An indication of the relevant sections may also be included but is not required. 8.3.2. Initial Registry Contents o Key Operation Value: "sign" o Key Operation Description: Compute digital signature or MAC o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "verify" o Key Operation Description: Verify digital signature or MAC o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "encrypt" o Key Operation Description: Encrypt content o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "decrypt" o Key Operation Description: Decrypt content and validate decryption, if applicable o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "wrapKey" o Key Operation Description: Encrypt key o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "unwrapKey" o Key Operation Description: Decrypt key and validate decryption, if applicable o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "deriveKey" o Key Operation Description: Derive key o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Key Operation Value: "deriveBits" o Key Operation Description: Derive bits not to be used as a key o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 4.3 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 8.4. JSON Web Key Set Parameters Registry Thisspecificationsection establishes the IANAJSON"JSON Web Key SetParametersParameters" registry for JWK Set parameter names. The registry records the parameter name and a reference to the specification that defines it. Thisspecificationsection registers the parameter names defined in Section 5. 8.4.1. Registration Template Parameter Name: The name requested (e.g., "keys"). Because a core goal of this specification is for the resulting representations to be compact, it is RECOMMENDED that the name be short -- not to exceed 8 characters without a compelling reason to do so. This name iscase-sensitive.case sensitive. Names may not match other registered names in a case-insensitive manner unless the DesignatedExpert(s)Experts state that there is a compelling reason to allow anexception in this particular case.exception. Parameter Description: Brief description of the parameter (e.g., "Array of JWK values"). Change Controller: For Standards Track RFCs,statelist the "IESG". For others, give the name of the responsible party. Other details (e.g., postal address, email address, home page URI) may also be included. Specification Document(s): Reference to thedocument(s)document or documents that specify the parameter, preferably includingURI(s)URIs that can be used to retrieve copies of thedocument(s).documents. An indication of the relevant sections may also be included but is not required. 8.4.2. Initial Registry Contents o Parameter Name: "keys" o Parameter Description: Array of JWKvaluesValues o Change Controller: IESG o Specification Document(s): Section 5.1 of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 8.5. Media Type Registration 8.5.1. Registry Contents Thisspecificationsection registers the "application/jwk+json" and"application/jwk-set+json" Media Types"application/ jwk-set+json" media types [RFC2046] in theMIME Media Types"Media Types" registry [IANA.MediaTypes] in the manner described in RFC 6838 [RFC6838], which can be used toindicate, respectively,indicate that the content is a JWK or a JWKSet.Set, respectively. o Type Name: application o Subtype Name: jwk+json o Required Parameters: n/a o Optional Parameters: n/a o Encoding considerations: 8bit; application/jwk+json values are represented as a JSON object; UTF-8 encoding SHOULD be employed for the JSON object. o Security Considerations: See the Security Considerations section of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517. o Interoperability Considerations: n/a o Published Specification:[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Applications that use this media type: OpenID Connect, Salesforce, Google, Android, Windows Azure, W3C WebCrypto API, numerous others o Fragment identifier considerations: n/a o Additional Information: Magic number(s):n/a,n/a File extension(s):n/a,n/a Macintosh file type code(s): n/a o Person & email address to contact for further information: Michael B. Jones, mbj@microsoft.com o Intended Usage: COMMON o Restrictions on Usage: none o Author: Michael B. Jones, mbj@microsoft.com o Change Controller: IESG o Provisional registration? No o Type Name: application o Subtype Name: jwk-set+json o Required Parameters: n/a o Optional Parameters: n/a o Encoding considerations: 8bit; application/jwk-set+json values are represented as a JSON Object; UTF-8 encoding SHOULD be employed for the JSON object. o Security Considerations: See the Security Considerations section of[[ this document ]]RFC 7517. o Interoperability Considerations: n/a o Published Specification:[[ this document ]]RFC 7517 o Applications that use this media type: OpenID Connect, Salesforce, Google, Android, Windows Azure, W3C WebCrypto API, numerous others o Fragment identifier considerations: n/a o Additional Information: Magic number(s):n/a,n/a File extension(s):n/a,n/a Macintosh file type code(s): n/a o Person & email address to contact for further information: Michael B. Jones, mbj@microsoft.com o Intended Usage: COMMON o Restrictions on Usage: none o Author: Michael B. Jones, mbj@microsoft.com o Change Controller: IESG o Provisional registration? No 9. Security Considerations All of the security issues that are pertinent to any cryptographic application must be addressed by JWS/JWE/JWK agents. Among these issues are protecting the user's asymmetric private and symmetric secret keys and employing countermeasures to various attacks. 9.1. Key Provenance and Trust One should place no more trust in the data cryptographically secured by a key than in the method by which it was obtained and in the trustworthiness of the entity asserting an association with the key. Any data associated with a key that is obtained in an untrusted manner should be treated with skepticism. See Section 10.3 of [JWS] for security considerations on key origin authentication. In almost all cases, applications make decisions about whether to trust a key based on attributes bound to the key, such as names, roles, and the key origin, rather than based on the key itself. When an application is deciding whether to trust a key, there are several ways that it can bind attributes to a JWK. Two example mechanisms are PKIX [RFC5280] and JSON Web Token (JWT) [JWT]. For instance, the creator of a JWK can include a PKIX certificate in the JWK's "x5c" member. If the application validates the certificate and verifies that the JWK corresponds to the subject public key in the certificate, then the JWK can be associated with the attributes in the certificate, such as the subject name, subject alternative names, extended key usages, and its signature chain.Also for instance,As another example, a JWT can be used to associate attributes with a JWK by referencing the JWK as a claim in the JWT. The JWK can be included directly as a claim value or the JWT can include a TLS- secured URI from which to retrieve the JWK value. Either way, an application that gets a JWK via a JWT claim can associate it with the JWT's cryptographic properties and use these and possibly additional claims in deciding whether to trust the key. The security considerations in Section 12.3 of XML DSIG 2.0 [W3C.NOTE-xmldsig-core2-20130411] about the strength of a digital signature depending upon all the links in the security chain also apply to this specification. The TLS Requirements in Section 8 of [JWS] also apply to this specification, except that the "x5u" JWK member is the only feature defined by this specification using TLS. 9.2. Preventing Disclosure ofNon-PublicNon-public Key Information Private and symmetric keys MUST be protected from disclosure to unintended parties. One recommended means of doing so is to encrypt JWKs or JWK Sets containing them by using the JWK or JWK Set value as the plaintext of a JWE. Of course, this requires that there be a secure way to obtain the key used to encrypt the non-public key information to the intended party and a secure way for that party to obtain the corresponding decryption key. The security considerations in RFC 3447 [RFC3447] and RFC 6030 [RFC6030] about protecting private and symmetric keys, key usage, and information leakage also apply to this specification. 9.3. RSA Private Key Representations and Blinding The RSA Key blinding operation [Kocher], which is a defense against some timing attacks, requires all of the RSA key values "n", "e", and "d". However, some RSA private key representations do not include the public exponent "e", but only include the modulus "n" and the private exponent "d". This is true, for instance, of the Java RSAPrivateKeySpec API, which does not include the public exponent "e" as a parameter. So as to enable RSA key blinding, such representations should be avoided. For Java, the RSAPrivateCrtKeySpec API can be used instead. Section 8.2.2(i) of the Handbook of Applied Cryptography [HAC] discusses how to compute the remaining RSA private key parameters, if needed, using only "n", "e", and "d". 9.4. Key Entropy and Random Values See Section 10.1 of [JWS] for security considerations on key entropy and random values. 10. References 10.1. Normative References [ECMAScript] Ecma International, "ECMAScript Language Specification, 5.1 Edition", ECMA Standard 262, June2011.2011, <http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/5.1/ ECMA-262.pdf>. [IANA.MediaTypes] Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA),"MIME Media"Media Types",2005.<http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types>. [ITU.X690.1994] International Telecommunications Union, "Information Technology - ASN.1 encoding rules: Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical Encoding Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER)", ITU-T Recommendation X.690, 1994. [JWA] Jones, M., "JSON Web Algorithms (JWA)",draft-ietf-jose-json-web-algorithms (work in progress), January 2015.RFC 7518, DOI 10.17487/RFC7518, May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7518>. [JWE] Jones, M. and J. Hildebrand, "JSON Web Encryption (JWE)",draft-ietf-jose-json-web-encryption (work in progress), January 2015.RFC 7516, DOI 10.17487/RFC7516, May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7516>. [JWS] Jones, M., Bradley, J., and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web Signature (JWS)",draft-ietf-jose-json-web-signature (work in progress), January 2015.RFC 7515, DOI 10.17487/RFC7515, May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7515>. [RFC20] Cerf, V., "ASCII format for Network Interchange", STD 80, RFC 20, DOI 10.17487/RFC0020, October1969.1969, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc20>. [RFC2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046, DOI 10.17487/RFC2046, November1996.1996, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2046>. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March1997.1997, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>. [RFC2818] Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, DOI 10.17487/RFC2818, May2000.2000, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2818>. [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, DOI 10.17487/RFC3629, November2003.2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3629>. [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January2005.2005, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>. [RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October2006.2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>. [RFC4945] Korver, B., "The Internet IP Security PKI Profile of IKEv1/ISAKMP, IKEv2, and PKIX", RFC 4945, DOI 10.17487/RFC4945, August2007.2007, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4945>. [RFC4949] Shirey, R., "Internet Security Glossary, Version 2", FYI 36, RFC 4949, DOI 10.17487/RFC4949, August2007.2007, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4949>. [RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August2008.2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5246>. [RFC5280] Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S., Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May2008.2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>. [RFC6125] Saint-Andre, P. and J. Hodges, "Representation and Verification of Domain-Based Application Service Identity within Internet Public Key Infrastructure Using X.509 (PKIX) Certificates in the Context of Transport Layer Security (TLS)", RFC 6125, DOI 10.17487/RFC6125, March2011.2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6125>. [RFC7159] Bray, T., Ed., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format", RFC 7159, DOI 10.17487/RFC7159, March2014.2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7159>. [UNICODE] The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard",1991-,<http://www.unicode.org/versions/latest/>. 10.2. Informative References [DSS] National Institute of Standards andTechnology,Technology (NIST), "Digital Signature Standard (DSS)", FIPS PUB 186-4, July2013.2013, <http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/ NIST.FIPS.186-4.pdf>. [HAC] Menezes, A., van Oorschot, P., and S. Vanstone, "Handbook of Applied Cryptography", CRC Press,1996, <http://cacr.uwaterloo.ca/hac/about/chap8.pdf>.October 1996. [JWT] Jones, M., Bradley, J., and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web Token (JWT)",draft-ietf-oauth-json-web-token (work in progress), January 2015.RFC 7519, DOI 10.17487/RFC7519, May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7519>. [Kocher] Kocher, P., "Timing Attacks on Implementations ofDiffe- Hellman,Diffe-Hellman, RSA, DSS, and Other Systems", In Proceedings of the 16th Annual International Cryptology Conference Advances in Cryptology, Springer-Verlag, pp. 104-113, 1996. [MagicSignatures]Panzer (editor),Panzer, J., Ed., Laurie, B., and D. Balfanz, "Magic Signatures", January2011.2011, <http://salmon-protocol.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ draft-panzer-magicsig-01.html>. [RFC3447] Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.1", RFC 3447, DOI 10.17487/RFC3447, February2003.2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3447>. [RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, DOI 10.17487/RFC5226, May2008.2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5226>. [RFC6030] Hoyer, P., Pei, M., and S. Machani, "Portable Symmetric Key Container (PSKC)", RFC 6030, DOI 10.17487/RFC6030, October2010.2010, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6030>. [RFC6838] Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13, RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January2013.2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>. [W3C.CR-WebCryptoAPI-20141211] Sleevi, R. and M. Watson, "Web Cryptography API", World Wide Web Consortium Candidate RecommendationCR- WebCryptoAPI-20141211,CR-WebCryptoAPI-20141211, December 2014, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/CR-WebCryptoAPI-20141211/>. [W3C.NOTE-xmldsig-core2-20130411] Eastlake, D., Reagle, J., Solo, D., Hirsch, F., Roessler, T., Yiu, K., Datta, P., and S. Cantor, "XML Signature Syntax and Processing Version 2.0", World Wide Web Consortium Note NOTE-xmldsig-core2-20130411, April 2013, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/NOTE-xmldsig-core2-20130411/>. Appendix A. Example JSON Web Key Sets A.1. Example Public Keys The following example JWK Set contains two public keys represented as JWKs: one using an Elliptic Curve algorithm and a second one using an RSA algorithm. The first specifies that the key is to be used for encryption. The second specifies that the key is to be used with the "RS256" algorithm. Both provide aKeykey ID for key matching purposes. In both cases, integers are represented using the base64url encoding of theirbig endianbig-endian representations. (Line breaks within values are for display purposes only.) {"keys": [ {"kty":"EC", "crv":"P-256", "x":"MKBCTNIcKUSDii11ySs3526iDZ8AiTo7Tu6KPAqv7D4", "y":"4Etl6SRW2YiLUrN5vfvVHuhp7x8PxltmWWlbbM4IFyM", "use":"enc", "kid":"1"}, {"kty":"RSA", "n": "0vx7agoebGcQSuuPiLJXZptN9nndrQmbXEps2aiAFbWhM78LhWx 4cbbfAAtVT86zwu1RK7aPFFxuhDR1L6tSoc_BJECPebWKRXjBZCiFV4n3oknjhMs tn64tZ_2W-5JsGY4Hc5n9yBXArwl93lqt7_RN5w6Cf0h4QyQ5v-65YGjQR0_FDW2 QvzqY368QQMicAtaSqzs8KJZgnYb9c7d0zgdAZHzu6qMQvRL5hajrn1n91CbOpbI SD08qNLyrdkt-bFTWhAI4vMQFh6WeZu0fM4lFd2NcRwr3XPksINHaQ-G_xBniIqb w0Ls1jF44-csFCur-kEgU8awapJzKnqDKgw", "e":"AQAB", "alg":"RS256", "kid":"2011-04-29"} ] } A.2. Example Private Keys The following example JWK Set contains two keys represented as JWKs containing both public and private key values: one using an Elliptic Curve algorithm and a second one using an RSA algorithm. This example extends the example in the previous section, adding private key values. (Line breaks within values are for display purposes only.) {"keys": [ {"kty":"EC", "crv":"P-256", "x":"MKBCTNIcKUSDii11ySs3526iDZ8AiTo7Tu6KPAqv7D4", "y":"4Etl6SRW2YiLUrN5vfvVHuhp7x8PxltmWWlbbM4IFyM", "d":"870MB6gfuTJ4HtUnUvYMyJpr5eUZNP4Bk43bVdj3eAE", "use":"enc", "kid":"1"}, {"kty":"RSA", "n":"0vx7agoebGcQSuuPiLJXZptN9nndrQmbXEps2aiAFbWhM78LhWx4 cbbfAAtVT86zwu1RK7aPFFxuhDR1L6tSoc_BJECPebWKRXjBZCiFV4n3oknjhMst n64tZ_2W-5JsGY4Hc5n9yBXArwl93lqt7_RN5w6Cf0h4QyQ5v-65YGjQR0_FDW2Q vzqY368QQMicAtaSqzs8KJZgnYb9c7d0zgdAZHzu6qMQvRL5hajrn1n91CbOpbIS D08qNLyrdkt-bFTWhAI4vMQFh6WeZu0fM4lFd2NcRwr3XPksINHaQ-G_xBniIqbw 0Ls1jF44-csFCur-kEgU8awapJzKnqDKgw", "e":"AQAB", "d":"X4cTteJY_gn4FYPsXB8rdXix5vwsg1FLN5E3EaG6RJoVH-HLLKD9 M7dx5oo7GURknchnrRweUkC7hT5fJLM0WbFAKNLWY2vv7B6NqXSzUvxT0_YSfqij wp3RTzlBaCxWp4doFk5N2o8Gy_nHNKroADIkJ46pRUohsXywbReAdYaMwFs9tv8d _cPVY3i07a3t8MN6TNwm0dSawm9v47UiCl3Sk5ZiG7xojPLu4sbg1U2jx4IBTNBz nbJSzFHK66jT8bgkuqsk0GjskDJk19Z4qwjwbsnn4j2WBii3RL-Us2lGVkY8fkFz me1z0HbIkfz0Y6mqnOYtqc0X4jfcKoAC8Q", "p":"83i-7IvMGXoMXCskv73TKr8637FiO7Z27zv8oj6pbWUQyLPQBQxtPV nwD20R-60eTDmD2ujnMt5PoqMrm8RfmNhVWDtjjMmCMjOpSXicFHj7XOuVIYQyqV WlWEh6dN36GVZYk93N8Bc9vY41xy8B9RzzOGVQzXvNEvn7O0nVbfs", "q":"3dfOR9cuYq-0S-mkFLzgItgMEfFzB2q3hWehMuG0oCuqnb3vobLyum qjVZQO1dIrdwgTnCdpYzBcOfW5r370AFXjiWft_NGEiovonizhKpo9VVS78TzFgx kIdrecRezsZ-1kYd_s1qDbxtkDEgfAITAG9LUnADun4vIcb6yelxk", "dp":"G4sPXkc6Ya9y8oJW9_ILj4xuppu0lzi_H7VTkS8xj5SdX3coE0oim YwxIi2emTAue0UOa5dpgFGyBJ4c8tQ2VF402XRugKDTP8akYhFo5tAA77Qe_Nmtu YZc3C3m3I24G2GvR5sSDxUyAN2zq8Lfn9EUms6rY3Ob8YeiKkTiBj0", "dq":"s9lAH9fggBsoFR8Oac2R_E2gw282rT2kGOAhvIllETE1efrA6huUU vMfBcMpn8lqeW6vzznYY5SSQF7pMdC_agI3nG8Ibp1BUb0JUiraRNqUfLhcQb_d9 GF4Dh7e74WbRsobRonujTYN1xCaP6TO61jvWrX-L18txXw494Q_cgk", "qi":"GyM_p6JrXySiz1toFgKbWV-JdI3jQ4ypu9rbMWx3rQJBfmt0FoYzg UIZEVFEcOqwemRN81zoDAaa-Bk0KWNGDjJHZDdDmFhW3AN7lI-puxk_mHZGJ11rx yR8O55XLSe3SPmRfKwZI6yU24ZxvQKFYItdldUKGzO6Ia6zTKhAVRU", "alg":"RS256", "kid":"2011-04-29"} ] } A.3. Example Symmetric Keys The following example JWK Set contains two symmetric keys represented as JWKs: one designated as being for use with the AES Key Wrap algorithm and a second one that is an HMAC key. (Line breaks within values are for display purposes only.) {"keys": [ {"kty":"oct", "alg":"A128KW", "k":"GawgguFyGrWKav7AX4VKUg"}, {"kty":"oct", "k":"AyM1SysPpbyDfgZld3umj1qzKObwVMkoqQ-EstJQLr_T-1qS0gZH75 aKtMN3Yj0iPS4hcgUuTwjAzZr1Z9CAow", "kid":"HMAC key used in JWS spec Appendix A.1 example"} ] } Appendix B. Example Use of "x5c" (X.509 Certificate Chain) Parameter The following is an example of a JWK with a RSA signing key represented both as an RSA public key and as an X.509 certificate using the "x5c" parameter (with line breaks within values for display purposes only): {"kty":"RSA", "use":"sig", "kid":"1b94c", "n":"vrjOfz9Ccdgx5nQudyhdoR17V-IubWMeOZCwX_jj0hgAsz2J_pqYW08 PLbK_PdiVGKPrqzmDIsLI7sA25VEnHU1uCLNwBuUiCO11_-7dYbsr4iJmG0Q u2j8DsVyT1azpJC_NG84Ty5KKthuCaPod7iI7w0LK9orSMhBEwwZDCxTWq4a YWAchc8t-emd9qOvWtVMDC2BXksRngh6X5bUYLy6AyHKvj-nUy1wgzjYQDwH MTplCoLtU-o-8SNnZ1tmRoGE9uJkBLdh5gFENabWnU5m1ZqZPdwS-qo-meMv VfJb6jJVWRpl2SUtCnYG2C32qvbWbjZ_jBPD5eunqsIo1vQ", "e":"AQAB", "x5c": ["MIIDQjCCAiqgAwIBAgIGATz/FuLiMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBQUAMGIxCzAJB gNVBAYTAlVTMQswCQYDVQQIEwJDTzEPMA0GA1UEBxMGRGVudmVyMRwwGgYD VQQKExNQaW5nIElkZW50aXR5IENvcnAuMRcwFQYDVQQDEw5CcmlhbiBDYW1 wYmVsbDAeFw0xMzAyMjEyMzI5MTVaFw0xODA4MTQyMjI5MTVaMGIxCzAJBg NVBAYTAlVTMQswCQYDVQQIEwJDTzEPMA0GA1UEBxMGRGVudmVyMRwwGgYDV QQKExNQaW5nIElkZW50aXR5IENvcnAuMRcwFQYDVQQDEw5CcmlhbiBDYW1w YmVsbDCCASIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCCAQoCggEBAL64zn8/QnH YMeZ0LncoXaEde1fiLm1jHjmQsF/449IYALM9if6amFtPDy2yvz3YlRij66 s5gyLCyO7ANuVRJx1NbgizcAblIgjtdf/u3WG7K+IiZhtELto/A7Fck9Ws6 SQvzRvOE8uSirYbgmj6He4iO8NCyvaK0jIQRMMGQwsU1quGmFgHIXPLfnpn fajr1rVTAwtgV5LEZ4Iel+W1GC8ugMhyr4/p1MtcIM42EA8BzE6ZQqC7VPq PvEjZ2dbZkaBhPbiZAS3YeYBRDWm1p1OZtWamT3cEvqqPpnjL1XyW+oyVVk aZdklLQp2Btgt9qr21m42f4wTw+Xrp6rCKNb0CAwEAATANBgkqhkiG9w0BA QUFAAOCAQEAh8zGlfSlcI0o3rYDPBB07aXNswb4ECNIKG0CETTUxmXl9KUL +9gGlqCz5iWLOgWsnrcKcY0vXPG9J1r9AqBNTqNgHq2G03X09266X5CpOe1 zFo+Owb1zxtp3PehFdfQJ610CDLEaS9V9Rqp17hCyybEpOGVwe8fnk+fbEL 2Bo3UPGrpsHzUoaGpDftmWssZkhpBJKVMJyf/RuP2SmmaIzmnw9JiSlYhzo 4tpzd5rFXhjRbg4zW9C+2qok+2+qDM1iJ684gPHMIY8aLWrdgQTxkumGmTq gawR+N5MDtdPTEQ0XfIBc2cJEUyMTY5MPvACWpkA6SdS4xSvdXK3IVfOWA=="] } Appendix C. Example Encrypted RSA Private Key This example encrypts an RSA private key to the recipient using "PBES2-HS256+A128KW" for key encryption and "A128CBC+HS256" for content encryption. NOTE: Unless otherwise indicated, all line breaks are included solely for readability. C.1. Plaintext RSA Private Key The following RSA key is the plaintext for the authenticated encryption operation, formatted as a JWK (with line breaks within values for display purposes only): { "kty":"RSA", "kid":"juliet@capulet.lit", "use":"enc", "n":"t6Q8PWSi1dkJj9hTP8hNYFlvadM7DflW9mWepOJhJ66w7nyoK1gPNqFMSQRy O125Gp-TEkodhWr0iujjHVx7BcV0llS4w5ACGgPrcAd6ZcSR0-Iqom-QFcNP 8Sjg086MwoqQU_LYywlAGZ21WSdS_PERyGFiNnj3QQlO8Yns5jCtLCRwLHL0 Pb1fEv45AuRIuUfVcPySBWYnDyGxvjYGDSM-AqWS9zIQ2ZilgT-GqUmipg0X OC0Cc20rgLe2ymLHjpHciCKVAbY5-L32-lSeZO-Os6U15_aXrk9Gw8cPUaX1 _I8sLGuSiVdt3C_Fn2PZ3Z8i744FPFGGcG1qs2Wz-Q", "e":"AQAB", "d":"GRtbIQmhOZtyszfgKdg4u_N-R_mZGU_9k7JQ_jn1DnfTuMdSNprTeaSTyWfS NkuaAwnOEbIQVy1IQbWVV25NY3ybc_IhUJtfri7bAXYEReWaCl3hdlPKXy9U vqPYGR0kIXTQRqns-dVJ7jahlI7LyckrpTmrM8dWBo4_PMaenNnPiQgO0xnu ToxutRZJfJvG4Ox4ka3GORQd9CsCZ2vsUDmsXOfUENOyMqADC6p1M3h33tsu rY15k9qMSpG9OX_IJAXmxzAh_tWiZOwk2K4yxH9tS3Lq1yX8C1EWmeRDkK2a hecG85-oLKQt5VEpWHKmjOi_gJSdSgqcN96X52esAQ", "p":"2rnSOV4hKSN8sS4CgcQHFbs08XboFDqKum3sc4h3GRxrTmQdl1ZK9uw-PIHf QP0FkxXVrx-WE-ZEbrqivH_2iCLUS7wAl6XvARt1KkIaUxPPSYB9yk31s0Q8 UK96E3_OrADAYtAJs-M3JxCLfNgqh56HDnETTQhH3rCT5T3yJws", "q":"1u_RiFDP7LBYh3N4GXLT9OpSKYP0uQZyiaZwBtOCBNJgQxaj10RWjsZu0c6I edis4S7B_coSKB0Kj9PaPaBzg-IySRvvcQuPamQu66riMhjVtG6TlV8CLCYK rYl52ziqK0E_ym2QnkwsUX7eYTB7LbAHRK9GqocDE5B0f808I4s", "dp":"KkMTWqBUefVwZ2_Dbj1pPQqyHSHjj90L5x_MOzqYAJMcLMZtbUtwKqvVDq3 tbEo3ZIcohbDtt6SbfmWzggabpQxNxuBpoOOf_a_HgMXK_lhqigI4y_kqS1w Y52IwjUn5rgRrJ-yYo1h41KR-vz2pYhEAeYrhttWtxVqLCRViD6c", "dq":"AvfS0-gRxvn0bwJoMSnFxYcK1WnuEjQFluMGfwGitQBWtfZ1Er7t1xDkbN9 GQTB9yqpDoYaN06H7CFtrkxhJIBQaj6nkF5KKS3TQtQ5qCzkOkmxIe3KRbBy mXxkb5qwUpX5ELD5xFc6FeiafWYY63TmmEAu_lRFCOJ3xDea-ots", "qi":"lSQi-w9CpyUReMErP1RsBLk7wNtOvs5EQpPqmuMvqW57NBUczScEoPwmUqq abu9V0-Py4dQ57_bapoKRu1R90bvuFnU63SHWEFglZQvJDMeAvmj4sm-Fp0o Yu_neotgQ0hzbI5gry7ajdYy9-2lNx_76aBZoOUu9HCJ-UsfSOI8" } The octets representing thePlaintextplaintext used in this example (using JSON array notation) are: [123, 34, 107, 116, 121, 34, 58, 34, 82, 83, 65, 34, 44, 34, 107, 105, 100, 34, 58, 34, 106, 117, 108, 105, 101, 116, 64, 99, 97, 112, 117, 108, 101, 116, 46, 108, 105, 116, 34, 44, 34, 117, 115, 101, 34, 58, 34, 101, 110, 99, 34, 44, 34, 110, 34, 58, 34, 116, 54, 81, 56, 80, 87, 83, 105, 49, 100, 107, 74, 106, 57, 104, 84, 80, 56, 104, 78, 89, 70, 108, 118, 97, 100, 77, 55, 68, 102, 108, 87, 57, 109, 87, 101, 112, 79, 74, 104, 74, 54, 54, 119, 55, 110, 121, 111, 75, 49, 103, 80, 78, 113, 70, 77, 83, 81, 82, 121, 79, 49, 50, 53, 71, 112, 45, 84, 69, 107, 111, 100, 104, 87, 114, 48, 105, 117, 106, 106, 72, 86, 120, 55, 66, 99, 86, 48, 108, 108, 83, 52, 119, 53, 65, 67, 71, 103, 80, 114, 99, 65, 100, 54, 90, 99, 83, 82, 48, 45, 73, 113, 111, 109, 45, 81, 70, 99, 78, 80, 56, 83, 106, 103, 48, 56, 54, 77, 119, 111, 113, 81, 85, 95, 76, 89, 121, 119, 108, 65, 71, 90, 50, 49, 87, 83, 100, 83, 95, 80, 69, 82, 121, 71, 70, 105, 78, 110, 106, 51, 81, 81, 108, 79, 56, 89, 110, 115, 53, 106, 67, 116, 76, 67, 82, 119, 76, 72, 76, 48, 80, 98, 49, 102, 69, 118, 52, 53, 65, 117, 82, 73, 117, 85, 102, 86, 99, 80, 121, 83, 66, 87, 89, 110, 68, 121, 71, 120, 118, 106, 89, 71, 68, 83, 77, 45, 65, 113, 87, 83, 57, 122, 73, 81, 50, 90, 105, 108, 103, 84, 45, 71, 113, 85, 109, 105, 112, 103, 48, 88, 79, 67, 48, 67, 99, 50, 48, 114, 103, 76, 101, 50, 121, 109, 76, 72, 106, 112, 72, 99, 105, 67, 75, 86, 65, 98, 89, 53, 45, 76, 51, 50, 45, 108, 83, 101, 90, 79, 45, 79, 115, 54, 85, 49, 53, 95, 97, 88, 114, 107, 57, 71, 119, 56, 99, 80, 85, 97, 88, 49, 95, 73, 56, 115, 76, 71, 117, 83, 105, 86, 100, 116, 51, 67, 95, 70, 110, 50, 80, 90, 51, 90, 56, 105, 55, 52, 52, 70, 80, 70, 71, 71, 99, 71, 49, 113, 115, 50, 87, 122, 45, 81, 34, 44, 34, 101, 34, 58, 34, 65, 81, 65, 66, 34, 44, 34, 100, 34, 58, 34, 71, 82, 116, 98, 73, 81, 109, 104, 79, 90, 116, 121, 115, 122, 102, 103, 75, 100, 103, 52, 117, 95, 78, 45, 82, 95, 109, 90, 71, 85, 95, 57, 107, 55, 74, 81, 95, 106, 110, 49, 68, 110, 102, 84, 117, 77, 100, 83, 78, 112, 114, 84, 101, 97, 83, 84, 121, 87, 102, 83, 78, 107, 117, 97, 65, 119, 110, 79, 69, 98, 73, 81, 86, 121, 49, 73, 81, 98, 87, 86, 86, 50, 53, 78, 89, 51, 121, 98, 99, 95, 73, 104, 85, 74, 116, 102, 114, 105, 55, 98, 65, 88, 89, 69, 82, 101, 87, 97, 67, 108, 51, 104, 100, 108, 80, 75, 88, 121, 57, 85, 118, 113, 80, 89, 71, 82, 48, 107, 73, 88, 84, 81, 82, 113, 110, 115, 45, 100, 86, 74, 55, 106, 97, 104, 108, 73, 55, 76, 121, 99, 107, 114, 112, 84, 109, 114, 77, 56, 100, 87, 66, 111, 52, 95, 80, 77, 97, 101, 110, 78, 110, 80, 105, 81, 103, 79, 48, 120, 110, 117, 84, 111, 120, 117, 116, 82, 90, 74, 102, 74, 118, 71, 52, 79, 120, 52, 107, 97, 51, 71, 79, 82, 81, 100, 57, 67, 115, 67, 90, 50, 118, 115, 85, 68, 109, 115, 88, 79, 102, 85, 69, 78, 79, 121, 77, 113, 65, 68, 67, 54, 112, 49, 77, 51, 104, 51, 51, 116, 115, 117, 114, 89, 49, 53, 107, 57, 113, 77, 83, 112, 71, 57, 79, 88, 95, 73, 74, 65, 88, 109, 120, 122, 65, 104, 95, 116, 87, 105, 90, 79, 119, 107, 50, 75, 52, 121, 120, 72, 57, 116, 83, 51, 76, 113, 49, 121, 88, 56, 67, 49, 69, 87, 109, 101, 82, 68, 107, 75, 50, 97, 104, 101, 99, 71, 56, 53, 45, 111, 76, 75, 81, 116, 53, 86, 69, 112, 87, 72, 75, 109, 106, 79, 105, 95, 103, 74, 83, 100, 83, 103, 113, 99, 78, 57, 54, 88, 53, 50, 101, 115, 65, 81, 34, 44, 34, 112, 34, 58, 34, 50, 114, 110, 83, 79, 86, 52, 104, 75, 83, 78, 56, 115, 83, 52, 67, 103, 99, 81, 72, 70, 98, 115, 48, 56, 88, 98, 111, 70, 68, 113, 75, 117, 109, 51, 115, 99, 52, 104, 51, 71, 82, 120, 114, 84, 109, 81, 100, 108, 49, 90, 75, 57, 117, 119, 45, 80, 73, 72, 102, 81, 80, 48, 70, 107, 120, 88, 86, 114, 120, 45, 87, 69, 45, 90, 69, 98, 114, 113, 105, 118, 72, 95, 50, 105, 67, 76, 85, 83, 55, 119, 65, 108, 54, 88, 118, 65, 82, 116, 49, 75, 107, 73, 97, 85, 120, 80, 80, 83, 89, 66, 57, 121, 107, 51, 49, 115, 48, 81, 56, 85, 75, 57, 54, 69, 51, 95, 79, 114, 65, 68, 65, 89, 116, 65, 74, 115, 45, 77, 51, 74, 120, 67, 76, 102, 78, 103, 113, 104, 53, 54, 72, 68, 110, 69, 84, 84, 81, 104, 72, 51, 114, 67, 84, 53, 84, 51, 121, 74, 119, 115, 34, 44, 34, 113, 34, 58, 34, 49, 117, 95, 82, 105, 70, 68, 80, 55, 76, 66, 89, 104, 51, 78, 52, 71, 88, 76, 84, 57, 79, 112, 83, 75, 89, 80, 48, 117, 81, 90, 121, 105, 97, 90, 119, 66, 116, 79, 67, 66, 78, 74, 103, 81, 120, 97, 106, 49, 48, 82, 87, 106, 115, 90, 117, 48, 99, 54, 73, 101, 100, 105, 115, 52, 83, 55, 66, 95, 99, 111, 83, 75, 66, 48, 75, 106, 57, 80, 97, 80, 97, 66, 122, 103, 45, 73, 121, 83, 82, 118, 118, 99, 81, 117, 80, 97, 109, 81, 117, 54, 54, 114, 105, 77, 104, 106, 86, 116, 71, 54, 84, 108, 86, 56, 67, 76, 67, 89, 75, 114, 89, 108, 53, 50, 122, 105, 113, 75, 48, 69, 95, 121, 109, 50, 81, 110, 107, 119, 115, 85, 88, 55, 101, 89, 84, 66, 55, 76, 98, 65, 72, 82, 75, 57, 71, 113, 111, 99, 68, 69, 53, 66, 48, 102, 56, 48, 56, 73, 52, 115, 34, 44, 34, 100, 112, 34, 58, 34, 75, 107, 77, 84, 87, 113, 66, 85, 101, 102, 86, 119, 90, 50, 95, 68, 98, 106, 49, 112, 80, 81, 113, 121, 72, 83, 72, 106, 106, 57, 48, 76, 53, 120, 95, 77, 79, 122, 113, 89, 65, 74, 77, 99, 76, 77, 90, 116, 98, 85, 116, 119, 75, 113, 118, 86, 68, 113, 51, 116, 98, 69, 111, 51, 90, 73, 99, 111, 104, 98, 68, 116, 116, 54, 83, 98, 102, 109, 87, 122, 103, 103, 97, 98, 112, 81, 120, 78, 120, 117, 66, 112, 111, 79, 79, 102, 95, 97, 95, 72, 103, 77, 88, 75, 95, 108, 104, 113, 105, 103, 73, 52, 121, 95, 107, 113, 83, 49, 119, 89, 53, 50, 73, 119, 106, 85, 110, 53, 114, 103, 82, 114, 74, 45, 121, 89, 111, 49, 104, 52, 49, 75, 82, 45, 118, 122, 50, 112, 89, 104, 69, 65, 101, 89, 114, 104, 116, 116, 87, 116, 120, 86, 113, 76, 67, 82, 86, 105, 68, 54, 99, 34, 44, 34, 100, 113, 34, 58, 34, 65, 118, 102, 83, 48, 45, 103, 82, 120, 118, 110, 48, 98, 119, 74, 111, 77, 83, 110, 70, 120, 89, 99, 75, 49, 87, 110, 117, 69, 106, 81, 70, 108, 117, 77, 71, 102, 119, 71, 105, 116, 81, 66, 87, 116, 102, 90, 49, 69, 114, 55, 116, 49, 120, 68, 107, 98, 78, 57, 71, 81, 84, 66, 57, 121, 113, 112, 68, 111, 89, 97, 78, 48, 54, 72, 55, 67, 70, 116, 114, 107, 120, 104, 74, 73, 66, 81, 97, 106, 54, 110, 107, 70, 53, 75, 75, 83, 51, 84, 81, 116, 81, 53, 113, 67, 122, 107, 79, 107, 109, 120, 73, 101, 51, 75, 82, 98, 66, 121, 109, 88, 120, 107, 98, 53, 113, 119, 85, 112, 88, 53, 69, 76, 68, 53, 120, 70, 99, 54, 70, 101, 105, 97, 102, 87, 89, 89, 54, 51, 84, 109, 109, 69, 65, 117, 95, 108, 82, 70, 67, 79, 74, 51, 120, 68, 101, 97, 45, 111, 116, 115, 34, 44, 34, 113, 105, 34, 58, 34, 108, 83, 81, 105, 45, 119, 57, 67, 112, 121, 85, 82, 101, 77, 69, 114, 80, 49, 82, 115, 66, 76, 107, 55, 119, 78, 116, 79, 118, 115, 53, 69, 81, 112, 80, 113, 109, 117, 77, 118, 113, 87, 53, 55, 78, 66, 85, 99, 122, 83, 99, 69, 111, 80, 119, 109, 85, 113, 113, 97, 98, 117, 57, 86, 48, 45, 80, 121, 52, 100, 81, 53, 55, 95, 98, 97, 112, 111, 75, 82, 117, 49, 82, 57, 48, 98, 118, 117, 70, 110, 85, 54, 51, 83, 72, 87, 69, 70, 103, 108, 90, 81, 118, 74, 68, 77, 101, 65, 118, 109, 106, 52, 115, 109, 45, 70, 112, 48, 111, 89, 117, 95, 110, 101, 111, 116, 103, 81, 48, 104, 122, 98, 73, 53, 103, 114, 121, 55, 97, 106, 100, 89, 121, 57, 45, 50, 108, 78, 120, 95, 55, 54, 97, 66, 90, 111, 79, 85, 117, 57, 72, 67, 74, 45, 85, 115, 102, 83, 79, 73, 56, 34, 125] C.2. JOSE Header The following example JWE Protected Header declares that: o the Content Encryption Key is encrypted to the recipient using the PSE2-HS256+A128KW algorithm to produce the JWE Encrypted Key, o the Salt Input ("p2s") value is [217, 96, 147, 112, 150, 117, 70, 247, 127, 8, 155, 137, 174, 42, 80, 215], o the Iteration Count ("p2c") value is 4096, o authenticated encryption is performed on thePlaintextplaintext using the AES_128_CBC_HMAC_SHA_256 algorithm to produce theCiphertextciphertext and the Authentication Tag, and o the content type is application/jwk+json. { "alg":"PBES2-HS256+A128KW", "p2s":"2WCTcJZ1Rvd_CJuJripQ1w", "p2c":4096, "enc":"A128CBC-HS256", "cty":"jwk+json" } Encoding this JWE Protected Header as BASE64URL(UTF8(JWE Protected Header)) gives this value (with line breaks for display purposes only): eyJhbGciOiJQQkVTMi1IUzI1NitBMTI4S1ciLCJwMnMiOiIyV0NUY0paMVJ2ZF9DSn VKcmlwUTF3IiwicDJjIjo0MDk2LCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4Q0JDLUhTMjU2IiwiY3R5Ijoi andrK2pzb24ifQ C.3. Content Encryption Key (CEK) Generate a256 bit256-bit random Content Encryption Key (CEK). In this example, the value (using JSON array notation) is: [111, 27, 25, 52, 66, 29, 20, 78, 92, 176, 56, 240, 65, 208, 82, 112, 161, 131, 36, 55, 202, 236, 185, 172, 129, 23, 153, 194, 195, 48, 253, 182] C.4. Key Derivation Derive a key from a shared passphrase using the PBKDF2 algorithm with HMAC SHA-256 and the specified Salt and Iteration Count values and a128 bit128-bit requested output key size to produce the PBKDF2 Derived Key. This example uses the following passphrase: Thus from my lips, by yours, my sin is purged. The octets representing the passphrase are: [84, 104, 117, 115, 32, 102, 114, 111, 109, 32, 109, 121, 32, 108, 105, 112, 115, 44, 32, 98, 121, 32, 121, 111, 117, 114, 115, 44, 32, 109, 121, 32, 115, 105, 110, 32, 105, 115, 32, 112, 117, 114, 103, 101, 100, 46] The Salt value (UTF8(Alg) || 0x00 || Salt Input) is: [80, 66, 69, 83, 50, 45, 72, 83, 50, 53, 54, 43, 65, 49, 50, 56, 75, 87, 0, 217, 96, 147, 112, 150, 117, 70, 247, 127, 8, 155, 137, 174, 42, 80, 215]. The resulting PBKDF2 Derived Key value is: [110, 171, 169, 92, 129, 92, 109, 117, 233, 242, 116, 233, 170, 14, 24, 75] C.5. Key Encryption Encrypt the CEK with the "A128KW" algorithm using the PBKDF2 Derived Key. The resulting JWE Encrypted Key value is: [78, 186, 151, 59, 11, 141, 81, 240, 213, 245, 83, 211, 53, 188, 134, 188, 66, 125, 36, 200, 222, 124, 5, 103, 249, 52, 117, 184, 140, 81, 246, 158, 161, 177, 20, 33, 245, 57, 59, 4] Encoding this JWE Encrypted Key as BASE64URL(JWE Encrypted Key) gives this value: TrqXOwuNUfDV9VPTNbyGvEJ9JMjefAVn-TR1uIxR9p6hsRQh9Tk7BA C.6. Initialization Vector Generate a random128 bit128-bit JWE Initialization Vector. In this example, the value is: [97, 239, 99, 214, 171, 54, 216, 57, 145, 72, 7, 93, 34, 31, 149, 156] Encoding this JWE Initialization Vector as BASE64URL(JWE Initialization Vector) gives this value: Ye9j1qs22DmRSAddIh-VnA C.7. Additional Authenticated Data Let the Additional Authenticated Data encryption parameter be ASCII(BASE64URL(UTF8(JWE Protected Header))). This value is: [123, 34, 97, 108, 103, 34, 58, 34, 80, 66, 69, 83, 50, 45, 72, 83, 50, 53, 54, 43, 65, 49, 50, 56, 75, 87, 34, 44, 34, 112, 50, 115, 34, 58, 34, 50, 87, 67, 84, 99, 74, 90, 49, 82, 118, 100, 95, 67, 74, 117, 74, 114, 105, 112, 81, 49, 119, 34, 44, 34, 112, 50, 99, 34, 58, 52, 48, 57, 54, 44, 34, 101, 110, 99, 34, 58, 34, 65, 49, 50, 56, 67, 66, 67, 45, 72, 83, 50, 53, 54, 34, 44, 34, 99, 116, 121, 34, 58, 34, 106, 119, 107, 43, 106, 115, 111, 110, 34, 125] C.8. Content Encryption Perform authenticated encryption on thePlaintextplaintext with the AES_128_CBC_HMAC_SHA_256 algorithm using the CEK as the encryption key, the JWE Initialization Vector, and the Additional Authenticated Data value above. The resultingCiphertextciphertext is: [3, 8, 65, 242, 92, 107, 148, 168, 197, 159, 77, 139, 25, 97, 42, 131, 110, 199, 225, 56, 61, 127, 38, 64, 108, 91, 247, 167, 150, 98, 112, 122, 99, 235, 132, 50, 28, 46, 56, 170, 169, 89, 220, 145, 38, 157, 148, 224, 66, 140, 8, 169, 146, 117, 222, 54, 242, 28, 31, 11, 129, 227, 226, 169, 66, 117, 133, 254, 140, 216, 115, 203, 131, 60, 60, 47, 233, 132, 121, 13, 35, 188, 53, 19, 172, 77, 59, 54, 211, 158, 172, 25, 60, 111, 0, 80, 201, 158, 160, 210, 68, 55, 12, 67, 136, 130, 87, 216, 197, 95, 62, 20, 155, 205, 5, 140, 27, 168, 221, 65, 114, 78, 157, 254, 46, 206, 182, 52, 135, 87, 239, 3, 34, 186, 126, 220, 151, 17, 33, 237, 57, 96, 172, 183, 58, 45, 248, 103, 241, 142, 136, 7, 53, 16, 173, 181, 7, 93, 92, 252, 1, 53, 212, 242, 8, 255, 11, 239, 181, 24, 148, 136, 111, 24, 161, 244, 23, 106, 69, 157, 215, 243, 189, 240, 166, 169, 249, 72, 38, 201, 99, 223, 173, 229, 9, 222, 82, 79, 157, 176, 248, 85, 239, 121, 163, 1, 31, 48, 98, 206, 61, 249, 104, 216, 201, 227, 105, 48, 194, 193, 10, 36, 160, 159, 241, 166, 84, 54, 188, 211, 243, 242, 40, 46, 45, 193, 193, 160, 169, 101, 201, 1, 73, 47, 105, 142, 88, 28, 42, 132, 26, 61, 58, 63, 142, 243, 77, 26, 179, 153, 166, 46, 203, 208, 49, 55, 229, 34, 178, 4, 109, 180, 204, 204, 115, 1, 103, 193, 5, 91, 215, 214, 195, 1, 110, 208, 53, 144, 36, 105, 12, 54, 25, 129, 101, 15, 183, 150, 250, 147, 115, 227, 58, 250, 5, 128, 232, 63, 15, 14, 19, 141, 124, 253, 142, 137, 189, 135, 26, 44, 240, 27, 88, 132, 105, 127, 6, 71, 37, 41, 124, 187, 165, 140, 34, 200, 123, 80, 228, 24, 231, 176, 132, 171, 138, 145, 152, 116, 224, 50, 141, 51, 147, 91, 186, 7, 246, 106, 217, 148, 244, 227, 244, 45, 220, 121, 165, 224, 148, 181, 17, 181, 128, 197, 101, 237, 11, 169, 229, 149, 199, 78, 56, 15, 14, 190, 91, 216, 222, 247, 213, 74, 40, 8, 96, 20, 168, 119, 96, 26, 24, 52, 37, 82, 127, 57, 176, 147, 118, 59, 7, 224, 33, 117, 72, 155, 29, 82, 26, 215, 189, 140, 119, 28, 152, 118, 93, 222, 194, 192, 148, 115, 83, 253, 216, 212, 108, 88, 83, 175, 172, 220, 97, 79, 110, 42, 223, 170, 161, 34, 164, 144, 193, 76, 122, 92, 160, 41, 178, 175, 6, 35, 96, 113, 96, 158, 90, 129, 101, 26, 45, 70, 180, 189, 230, 15, 5, 247, 150, 209, 94, 171, 26, 13, 142, 212, 129, 1, 176, 5, 0, 112, 203, 174, 185, 119, 76, 233, 189, 54, 172, 189, 245, 223, 253, 205, 12, 88, 9, 126, 157, 225, 90, 40, 229, 191, 63, 30, 160, 224, 69, 3, 140, 109, 70, 89, 37, 213, 245, 194, 210, 180, 188, 63, 210, 139, 221, 2, 144, 200, 20, 177, 216, 29, 227, 242, 106, 12, 135, 142, 139, 144, 82, 225, 162, 171, 176, 108, 99, 6, 43, 193, 161, 116, 234, 216, 1, 242, 21, 124, 162, 98, 205, 124, 193, 38, 12, 242, 90, 101, 76, 204, 184, 124, 58, 180, 16, 240, 26, 76, 195, 250, 212, 191, 185, 191, 97, 198, 186, 73, 225, 75, 14, 90, 123, 121, 172, 101, 50, 160, 221, 141, 253, 205, 126, 77, 9, 87, 198, 110, 104, 182, 141, 120, 51, 25, 232, 3, 32, 80, 6, 156, 8, 18, 4, 135, 221, 142, 25, 135, 2, 129, 132, 115, 227, 74, 141, 28, 119, 11, 141, 117, 134, 198, 62, 150, 254, 97, 75, 197, 251, 99, 89, 204, 224, 226, 67, 83, 175, 89, 0, 81, 29, 38, 207, 89, 140, 255, 197, 177, 164, 128, 62, 116, 224, 180, 109, 169, 28, 2, 59, 176, 130, 252, 44, 178, 81, 24, 181, 176, 75, 44, 61, 91, 12, 37, 21, 255, 83, 130, 197, 16, 231, 60, 217, 56, 131, 118, 168, 202, 58, 52, 84, 124, 162, 185, 174, 162, 226, 242, 112, 68, 246, 202, 16, 208, 52, 154, 58, 129, 80, 102, 33, 171, 6, 186, 177, 14, 195, 88, 136, 6, 0, 155, 28, 100, 162, 207, 162, 222, 117, 248, 170, 208, 114, 87, 31, 57, 176, 33, 57, 83, 253, 12, 168, 110, 194, 59, 22, 86, 48, 227, 196, 22, 176, 218, 122, 149, 21, 249, 195, 178, 174, 250, 20, 34, 120, 60, 139, 201, 99, 40, 18, 177, 17, 54, 54, 6, 3, 222, 128, 160, 88, 11, 27, 0, 81, 192, 36, 41, 169, 146, 8, 47, 64, 136, 28, 64, 209, 67, 135, 202, 20, 234, 182, 91, 204, 146, 195, 187, 0, 72, 77, 11, 111, 152, 204, 252, 177, 212, 89, 33, 50, 132, 184, 44, 183, 186, 19, 250, 69, 176, 201, 102, 140, 14, 143, 212, 212, 160, 123, 208, 185, 27, 155, 68, 77, 133, 198, 2, 126, 155, 215, 22, 91, 30, 217, 176, 172, 244, 156, 174, 143, 75, 90, 21, 102, 1, 160, 59, 253, 188, 88, 57, 185, 197, 83, 24, 22, 180, 174, 47, 207, 52, 1, 141, 146, 119, 233, 68, 228, 224, 228, 193, 248, 155, 202, 90, 7, 213, 88, 33, 108, 107, 14, 86, 8, 120, 250, 58, 142, 35, 164, 238, 221, 219, 35, 123, 88, 199, 192, 143, 104, 83, 17, 166, 243, 247, 11, 166, 67, 68, 204, 132, 23, 110, 103, 228, 14, 55, 122, 88, 57, 180, 178, 237, 52, 130, 214, 245, 102, 123, 67, 73, 175, 1, 127, 112, 148, 94, 132, 164, 197, 153, 217, 87, 25, 89, 93, 63, 22, 66, 166, 90, 251, 101, 10, 145, 66, 17, 124, 36, 255, 165, 226, 97, 16, 86, 112, 154, 88, 105, 253, 56, 209, 229, 122, 103, 51, 24, 228, 190, 3, 236, 48, 182, 121, 176, 140, 128, 117, 87, 251, 224, 37, 23, 248, 21, 218, 85, 251, 136, 84, 147, 143, 144, 46, 155, 183, 251, 89, 86, 23, 26, 237, 100, 167, 32, 130, 173, 237, 89, 55, 110, 70, 142, 127, 65, 230, 208, 109, 69, 19, 253, 84, 130, 130, 193, 92, 58, 108, 150, 42, 136, 249, 234, 86, 241, 182, 19, 117, 246, 26, 181, 92, 101, 155, 44, 103, 235, 173, 30, 140, 90, 29, 183, 190, 77, 53, 206, 127, 5, 87, 8, 187, 184, 92, 4, 157, 22, 18, 105, 251, 39, 88, 182, 181, 103, 148, 233, 6, 63, 70, 188, 7, 101, 216, 127, 77, 31, 12, 233, 7, 147, 106, 30, 150, 77, 145, 13, 205, 48, 56, 245, 220, 89, 252, 127, 51, 180, 36, 31, 55, 18, 214, 230, 254, 217, 197, 65, 247, 27, 215, 117, 247, 108, 157, 121, 11, 63, 150, 195, 83, 6, 134, 242, 41, 24, 105, 204, 5, 63, 192, 14, 159, 113, 72, 140, 128, 51, 215, 80, 215, 39, 149, 94, 79, 128, 34, 5, 129, 82, 83, 121, 187, 37, 146, 27, 32, 177, 167, 71, 9, 195, 30, 199, 196, 205, 252, 207, 69, 8, 120, 27, 190, 51, 43, 75, 249, 234, 167, 116, 206, 203, 199, 43, 108, 87, 48, 155, 140, 228, 210, 85, 25, 161, 96, 67, 8, 205, 64, 39, 75, 88, 44, 238, 227, 16, 0, 100, 93, 129, 18, 4, 149, 50, 68, 72, 99, 35, 111, 254, 27, 102, 175, 108, 233, 87, 181, 44, 169, 18, 139, 79, 208, 14, 202, 192, 5, 162, 222, 231, 149, 24, 211, 49, 120, 101, 39, 206, 87, 147, 204, 200, 251, 104, 115, 5, 127, 117, 195, 79, 151, 18, 224, 52, 0, 245, 4, 85, 255, 103, 217, 0, 116, 198, 80, 91, 167, 192, 154, 199, 197, 149, 237, 51, 2, 131, 30, 226, 95, 105, 48, 68, 135, 208, 144, 120, 176, 145, 157, 8, 171, 80, 94, 61, 92, 92, 220, 157, 13, 138, 51, 23, 185, 124, 31, 77, 1, 87, 241, 43, 239, 55, 122, 86, 210, 48, 208, 204, 112, 144, 80, 147, 106, 219, 47, 253, 31, 134, 176, 16, 135, 219, 95, 17, 129, 83, 236, 125, 136, 112, 86, 228, 252, 71, 129, 218, 174, 156, 236, 12, 27, 159, 11, 138, 252, 253, 207, 31, 115, 214, 118, 239, 203, 16, 211, 205, 99, 22, 51, 163, 107, 162, 246, 199, 67, 127, 34, 108, 197, 53, 117, 58, 199, 3, 190, 74, 70, 190, 65, 235, 175, 97, 157, 215, 252, 189, 245, 100, 229, 248, 46, 90, 126, 237, 4, 159, 128, 58, 7, 156, 236, 69, 191, 85, 240, 179, 224, 249, 152, 49, 195, 223, 60, 78, 186, 157, 155, 217, 58, 105, 116, 164, 217, 111, 215, 150, 218, 252, 84, 86, 248, 140, 240, 226, 61, 106, 208, 95, 60, 163, 6, 0, 235, 253, 162, 96, 62, 234, 251, 249, 35, 21, 7, 211, 233, 86, 50, 33, 203, 67, 248, 60, 190, 123, 48, 167, 226, 90, 191, 71, 56, 183, 165, 17, 85, 76, 238, 140, 211, 168, 53, 223, 194, 4, 97, 149, 156, 120, 137, 76, 33, 229, 243, 194, 208, 198, 202, 139, 28, 114, 46, 224, 92, 254, 83, 100, 134, 158, 92, 70, 78, 61, 62, 138, 24, 173, 216, 66, 198, 70, 254, 47, 59, 193, 53, 6, 139, 19, 153, 253, 28, 199, 122, 160, 27, 67, 234, 209, 227, 139, 4, 50, 7, 178, 183, 89, 252, 32, 128, 137, 55, 52, 29, 89, 12, 111, 42, 181, 51, 170, 132, 132, 207, 170, 228, 254, 178, 213, 0, 136, 175, 8] The resulting Authentication Tag value is: [208, 113, 102, 132, 236, 236, 67, 223, 39, 53, 98, 99, 32, 121, 17, 236] Encoding this JWE Ciphertext as BASE64URL(JWE Ciphertext) gives this value (with line breaks for display purposes only): AwhB8lxrlKjFn02LGWEqg27H4Tg9fyZAbFv3p5ZicHpj64QyHC44qqlZ3JEmnZTgQo wIqZJ13jbyHB8LgePiqUJ1hf6M2HPLgzw8L-mEeQ0jvDUTrE07NtOerBk8bwBQyZ6g 0kQ3DEOIglfYxV8-FJvNBYwbqN1Bck6d_i7OtjSHV-8DIrp-3JcRIe05YKy3Oi34Z_ GOiAc1EK21B11c_AE11PII_wvvtRiUiG8YofQXakWd1_O98Kap-UgmyWPfreUJ3lJP nbD4Ve95owEfMGLOPflo2MnjaTDCwQokoJ_xplQ2vNPz8iguLcHBoKllyQFJL2mOWB wqhBo9Oj-O800as5mmLsvQMTflIrIEbbTMzHMBZ8EFW9fWwwFu0DWQJGkMNhmBZQ-3 lvqTc-M6-gWA6D8PDhONfP2Oib2HGizwG1iEaX8GRyUpfLuljCLIe1DkGOewhKuKkZ h04DKNM5Nbugf2atmU9OP0Ldx5peCUtRG1gMVl7Qup5ZXHTjgPDr5b2N731UooCGAU qHdgGhg0JVJ_ObCTdjsH4CF1SJsdUhrXvYx3HJh2Xd7CwJRzU_3Y1GxYU6-s3GFPbi rfqqEipJDBTHpcoCmyrwYjYHFgnlqBZRotRrS95g8F95bRXqsaDY7UgQGwBQBwy665 d0zpvTasvfXf_c0MWAl-neFaKOW_Px6g4EUDjG1GWSXV9cLStLw_0ovdApDIFLHYHe PyagyHjouQUuGiq7BsYwYrwaF06tgB8hV8omLNfMEmDPJaZUzMuHw6tBDwGkzD-tS_ ub9hxrpJ4UsOWnt5rGUyoN2N_c1-TQlXxm5oto14MxnoAyBQBpwIEgSH3Y4ZhwKBhH PjSo0cdwuNdYbGPpb-YUvF-2NZzODiQ1OvWQBRHSbPWYz_xbGkgD504LRtqRwCO7CC _CyyURi1sEssPVsMJRX_U4LFEOc82TiDdqjKOjRUfKK5rqLi8nBE9soQ0DSaOoFQZi GrBrqxDsNYiAYAmxxkos-i3nX4qtByVx85sCE5U_0MqG7COxZWMOPEFrDaepUV-cOy rvoUIng8i8ljKBKxETY2BgPegKBYCxsAUcAkKamSCC9AiBxA0UOHyhTqtlvMksO7AE hNC2-YzPyx1FkhMoS4LLe6E_pFsMlmjA6P1NSge9C5G5tETYXGAn6b1xZbHtmwrPSc ro9LWhVmAaA7_bxYObnFUxgWtK4vzzQBjZJ36UTk4OTB-JvKWgfVWCFsaw5WCHj6Oo 4jpO7d2yN7WMfAj2hTEabz9wumQ0TMhBduZ-QON3pYObSy7TSC1vVme0NJrwF_cJRe hKTFmdlXGVldPxZCplr7ZQqRQhF8JP-l4mEQVnCaWGn9ONHlemczGOS-A-wwtnmwjI B1V_vgJRf4FdpV-4hUk4-QLpu3-1lWFxrtZKcggq3tWTduRo5_QebQbUUT_VSCgsFc OmyWKoj56lbxthN19hq1XGWbLGfrrR6MWh23vk01zn8FVwi7uFwEnRYSafsnWLa1Z5 TpBj9GvAdl2H9NHwzpB5NqHpZNkQ3NMDj13Fn8fzO0JB83Etbm_tnFQfcb13X3bJ15 Cz-Ww1MGhvIpGGnMBT_ADp9xSIyAM9dQ1yeVXk-AIgWBUlN5uyWSGyCxp0cJwx7HxM 38z0UIeBu-MytL-eqndM7LxytsVzCbjOTSVRmhYEMIzUAnS1gs7uMQAGRdgRIElTJE SGMjb_4bZq9s6Ve1LKkSi0_QDsrABaLe55UY0zF4ZSfOV5PMyPtocwV_dcNPlxLgNA D1BFX_Z9kAdMZQW6fAmsfFle0zAoMe4l9pMESH0JB4sJGdCKtQXj1cXNydDYozF7l8 H00BV_Er7zd6VtIw0MxwkFCTatsv_R-GsBCH218RgVPsfYhwVuT8R4HarpzsDBufC4 r8_c8fc9Z278sQ081jFjOja6L2x0N_ImzFNXU6xwO-Ska-QeuvYZ3X_L31ZOX4Llp- 7QSfgDoHnOxFv1Xws-D5mDHD3zxOup2b2TppdKTZb9eW2vxUVviM8OI9atBfPKMGAO v9omA-6vv5IxUH0-lWMiHLQ_g8vnswp-Jav0c4t6URVUzujNOoNd_CBGGVnHiJTCHl 88LQxsqLHHIu4Fz-U2SGnlxGTj0-ihit2ELGRv4vO8E1BosTmf0cx3qgG0Pq0eOLBD IHsrdZ_CCAiTc0HVkMbyq1M6qEhM-q5P6y1QCIrwg Encoding this JWE Authentication Tag as BASE64URL(JWE Authentication Tag) gives this value: 0HFmhOzsQ98nNWJjIHkR7A C.9. Complete Representation Assemble the final representation: The JWE Compact Serialization of this result, as defined in Section 7.1 of [JWE], is the string BASE64URL(UTF8(JWE Protected Header)) || '.' || BASE64URL(JWE Encrypted Key) || '.' || BASE64URL(JWE Initialization Vector) || '.' || BASE64URL(JWE Ciphertext) || '.' || BASE64URL(JWE Authentication Tag). The final result in this example (with line breaks for display purposes only) is: eyJhbGciOiJQQkVTMi1IUzI1NitBMTI4S1ciLCJwMnMiOiIyV0NUY0paMVJ2ZF9DSn VKcmlwUTF3IiwicDJjIjo0MDk2LCJlbmMiOiJBMTI4Q0JDLUhTMjU2IiwiY3R5Ijoi andrK2pzb24ifQ. TrqXOwuNUfDV9VPTNbyGvEJ9JMjefAVn-TR1uIxR9p6hsRQh9Tk7BA. Ye9j1qs22DmRSAddIh-VnA. AwhB8lxrlKjFn02LGWEqg27H4Tg9fyZAbFv3p5ZicHpj64QyHC44qqlZ3JEmnZTgQo wIqZJ13jbyHB8LgePiqUJ1hf6M2HPLgzw8L-mEeQ0jvDUTrE07NtOerBk8bwBQyZ6g 0kQ3DEOIglfYxV8-FJvNBYwbqN1Bck6d_i7OtjSHV-8DIrp-3JcRIe05YKy3Oi34Z_ GOiAc1EK21B11c_AE11PII_wvvtRiUiG8YofQXakWd1_O98Kap-UgmyWPfreUJ3lJP nbD4Ve95owEfMGLOPflo2MnjaTDCwQokoJ_xplQ2vNPz8iguLcHBoKllyQFJL2mOWB wqhBo9Oj-O800as5mmLsvQMTflIrIEbbTMzHMBZ8EFW9fWwwFu0DWQJGkMNhmBZQ-3 lvqTc-M6-gWA6D8PDhONfP2Oib2HGizwG1iEaX8GRyUpfLuljCLIe1DkGOewhKuKkZ h04DKNM5Nbugf2atmU9OP0Ldx5peCUtRG1gMVl7Qup5ZXHTjgPDr5b2N731UooCGAU qHdgGhg0JVJ_ObCTdjsH4CF1SJsdUhrXvYx3HJh2Xd7CwJRzU_3Y1GxYU6-s3GFPbi rfqqEipJDBTHpcoCmyrwYjYHFgnlqBZRotRrS95g8F95bRXqsaDY7UgQGwBQBwy665 d0zpvTasvfXf_c0MWAl-neFaKOW_Px6g4EUDjG1GWSXV9cLStLw_0ovdApDIFLHYHe PyagyHjouQUuGiq7BsYwYrwaF06tgB8hV8omLNfMEmDPJaZUzMuHw6tBDwGkzD-tS_ ub9hxrpJ4UsOWnt5rGUyoN2N_c1-TQlXxm5oto14MxnoAyBQBpwIEgSH3Y4ZhwKBhH PjSo0cdwuNdYbGPpb-YUvF-2NZzODiQ1OvWQBRHSbPWYz_xbGkgD504LRtqRwCO7CC _CyyURi1sEssPVsMJRX_U4LFEOc82TiDdqjKOjRUfKK5rqLi8nBE9soQ0DSaOoFQZi GrBrqxDsNYiAYAmxxkos-i3nX4qtByVx85sCE5U_0MqG7COxZWMOPEFrDaepUV-cOy rvoUIng8i8ljKBKxETY2BgPegKBYCxsAUcAkKamSCC9AiBxA0UOHyhTqtlvMksO7AE hNC2-YzPyx1FkhMoS4LLe6E_pFsMlmjA6P1NSge9C5G5tETYXGAn6b1xZbHtmwrPSc ro9LWhVmAaA7_bxYObnFUxgWtK4vzzQBjZJ36UTk4OTB-JvKWgfVWCFsaw5WCHj6Oo 4jpO7d2yN7WMfAj2hTEabz9wumQ0TMhBduZ-QON3pYObSy7TSC1vVme0NJrwF_cJRe hKTFmdlXGVldPxZCplr7ZQqRQhF8JP-l4mEQVnCaWGn9ONHlemczGOS-A-wwtnmwjI B1V_vgJRf4FdpV-4hUk4-QLpu3-1lWFxrtZKcggq3tWTduRo5_QebQbUUT_VSCgsFc OmyWKoj56lbxthN19hq1XGWbLGfrrR6MWh23vk01zn8FVwi7uFwEnRYSafsnWLa1Z5 TpBj9GvAdl2H9NHwzpB5NqHpZNkQ3NMDj13Fn8fzO0JB83Etbm_tnFQfcb13X3bJ15 Cz-Ww1MGhvIpGGnMBT_ADp9xSIyAM9dQ1yeVXk-AIgWBUlN5uyWSGyCxp0cJwx7HxM 38z0UIeBu-MytL-eqndM7LxytsVzCbjOTSVRmhYEMIzUAnS1gs7uMQAGRdgRIElTJE SGMjb_4bZq9s6Ve1LKkSi0_QDsrABaLe55UY0zF4ZSfOV5PMyPtocwV_dcNPlxLgNA D1BFX_Z9kAdMZQW6fAmsfFle0zAoMe4l9pMESH0JB4sJGdCKtQXj1cXNydDYozF7l8 H00BV_Er7zd6VtIw0MxwkFCTatsv_R-GsBCH218RgVPsfYhwVuT8R4HarpzsDBufC4 r8_c8fc9Z278sQ081jFjOja6L2x0N_ImzFNXU6xwO-Ska-QeuvYZ3X_L31ZOX4Llp- 7QSfgDoHnOxFv1Xws-D5mDHD3zxOup2b2TppdKTZb9eW2vxUVviM8OI9atBfPKMGAO v9omA-6vv5IxUH0-lWMiHLQ_g8vnswp-Jav0c4t6URVUzujNOoNd_CBGGVnHiJTCHl 88LQxsqLHHIu4Fz-U2SGnlxGTj0-ihit2ELGRv4vO8E1BosTmf0cx3qgG0Pq0eOLBD IHsrdZ_CCAiTc0HVkMbyq1M6qEhM-q5P6y1QCIrwg. 0HFmhOzsQ98nNWJjIHkR7AAppendix D.Acknowledgements A JSON representation for RSA public keys was previously introduced by John Panzer, Ben Laurie, and Dirk Balfanz in Magic Signatures [MagicSignatures]. Thanks to Matt Miller for creating the encrypted key example and to Edmund Jay and Brian Campbell for validating the example. This specification is the work of the JOSEWorking Group,working group, which includes dozens of active and dedicated participants. In particular, the following individuals contributed ideas, feedback, and wording that influenced this specification: Dirk Balfanz, Richard Barnes, John Bradley, Brian Campbell, Breno de Medeiros, Stephen Farrell, Joe Hildebrand, Edmund Jay, Stephen Kent, Ben Laurie, James Manger, Matt Miller, Kathleen Moriarty, Chuck Mortimore, Tony Nadalin, Axel Nennker, John Panzer, Eric Rescorla, Pete Resnick, Nat Sakimura, Jim Schaad, Ryan Sleevi, Paul Tarjan, Hannes Tschofenig, and Sean Turner. Jim Schaad and Karen O'Donoghue chaired the JOSE working group and Sean Turner, Stephen Farrell, and Kathleen Moriarty served as Securityarea directorsArea Directors during the creation of this specification.Appendix E. Document History [[ to be removed by the RFC Editor before publication as an RFC ]] -41 o Added Security Considerations text about binding attributes to keys. o Incorporated additional terms defined in the JWE spec by reference. -40 o Clarified the definitions of UTF8(STRING) and ASCII(STRING). o Stated that line breaks are for display purposes only in places where this disclaimer was needed and missing. o Updated the WebCrypto reference to refer to the W3C Candidate Recommendation. -39 o No changes were made, other than to the version number and date. -38 o Replaced uses of the phrase "JWK object" with "JWK". -37 o Updated the TLS requirements language to only require implementations to support TLS when they support features using TLS. o Restricted algorithm names to using only ASCII characters. o Updated the example IANA registration request subject line. -36 o Stated that if both "use" and "key_ops" are used, the information they convey MUST be consistent. o Clarified where white space and line breaks may occur in JSON objects by referencing Section 2 of RFC 7159. o Specified that registration reviews occur on the jose-reg-review@ietf.org mailing list. -35 o Used real values for examples in the IANA Registration Templates. -34 o Addressed IESG review comments by Pete Resnick, Stephen Farrell, and Richard Barnes. o Referenced RFC 4945 for PEM certificate delimiter syntax. -33 o Addressed secdir review comments by Stephen Kent for which resolutions had mistakenly been omitted in the previous draft. o Acknowledged additional contributors. -32 o Addressed Gen-ART review comments by Russ Housley. o Addressed secdir review comments by Stephen Kent. -31 o No changes were made, other than to the version number and date. -30 o Added references and cleaned up the reference syntax in a few places. o Applied minor wording changes to the Security Considerations section. -29 o Replaced the terms JWS Header, JWE Header, and JWT Header with a single JOSE Header term defined in the JWS specification. This also enabled a single Header Parameter definition to be used and reduced other areas of duplication between specifications. -28 o Revised the introduction to the Security Considerations section. o Refined the text about when applications using encrypted JWKs and JWK Sets would not need to use the "cty" header parameter. -27 o Added an example JWK early in the draft. o Described additional security considerations. o Added the "x5t#S256" (X.509 Certificate SHA-256 Thumbprint) JWK member. o Addressed a few editorial issues. -26 o Referenced Section 6 of RFC 6125 for TLS server certificate identity validation. o Deleted misleading non-normative phrase from the "use" description. o Noted that octet sequences are depicted using JSON array notation. o Updated references, including to W3C specifications. -25 o Updated WebCrypto reference to refer to W3C Last Call draft. -24 o Corrected the authentication tag value in the encrypted key example. o Updated the JSON reference to RFC 7159. -23 o No changes were made, other than to the version number and date. -22 o Corrected RFC 2119 terminology usage. o Replaced references to draft-ietf-json-rfc4627bis with RFC 7158. -21 o Replaced the "key_ops" values "wrap" and "unwrap" with "wrapKey" and "unwrapKey" to match the "KeyUsage" values defined in the current Web Cryptography API editor's draft. o Compute the PBES2 salt parameter as (UTF8(Alg) || 0x00 || Salt Input), where the "p2s" Header Parameter encodes the Salt Input value and Alg is the "alg" Header Parameter value. o Changed some references from being normative to informative, addressing issue #90. -20 o Renamed "use_details" to "key_ops" (key operations). o Clarified that "use" is meant for public key use cases, "key_ops" is meant for use cases in which public, private, or symmetric keys may be present, and that "use" and "key_ops" should not be used together. o Replaced references to RFC 4627 with draft-ietf-json-rfc4627bis, addressing issue #90. -19 o Added optional "use_details" (key use details) JWK member. o Reordered the key selection parameters. -18 o Changes to address editorial and minor issues #68, #69, #73, #74, #76, #77, #78, #79, #82, #85, #89, and #135. o Added and used Description registry fields. -17 o Refined the "typ" and "cty" definitions to always be MIME Media Types, with the omission of "application/" prefixes recommended for brevity, addressing issue #50. o Added an example encrypting an RSA private key with "PBES2-HS256+A128KW" and "A128CBC-HS256". Thanks to Matt Miller for producing this! o Processing rules occurring in both JWS and JWK are now referenced in JWS by JWK, rather than duplicated, addressing issue #57. o Terms used in multiple documents are now defined in one place and incorporated by reference. Some lightly used or obvious terms were also removed. This addresses issue #58. -16 o Changes to address editorial and minor issues #41, #42, #43, #47, #51, #67, #71, #76, #80, #83, #84, #85, #86, #87, and #88. -15 o Changes to address editorial issues #48, #64, #65, #66, and #91. -14 o Relaxed language introducing key parameters since some parameters are applicable to multiple, but not all, key types. -13 o Applied spelling and grammar corrections. -12 o Stated that recipients MUST either reject JWKs and JWK Sets with duplicate member names or use a JSON parser that returns only the lexically last duplicate member name. -11 o Stated that when "kid" values are used within a JWK Set, different keys within the JWK Set SHOULD use distinct "kid" values. o Added optional "x5u" (X.509 URL), "x5t" (X.509 Certificate Thumbprint), and "x5c" (X.509 Certificate Chain) JWK parameters. o Added section on Encrypted JWK and Encrypted JWK Set Formats. o Added a Parameter Information Class value to the JSON Web Key Parameters registry, which registers whether the parameter conveys public or private information. o Registered "application/jwk+json" and "application/jwk-set+json" MIME types and "JWK" and "JWK-SET" typ header parameter values, addressing issue #21. -10 o No changes were made, other than to the version number and date. -09 o Expanded the scope of the JWK specification to include private and symmetric key representations, as specified by draft-jones-jose-json-private-and-symmetric-key-00. o Defined that members that are not understood must be ignored. -08 o Changed the name of the JWK key type parameter from "alg" to "kty" to enable use of "alg" to indicate the particular algorithm that the key is intended to be used with. o Clarified statements of the form "This member is OPTIONAL" to "Use of this member is OPTIONAL". o Referenced String Comparison Rules in JWS. o Added seriesInfo information to Internet Draft references. -07 o Changed the name of the JWK RSA modulus parameter from "mod" to "n" and the name of the JWK RSA exponent parameter from "xpo" to "e", so that the identifiers are the same as those used in RFC 3447. -06 o Changed the name of the JWK RSA exponent parameter from "exp" to "xpo" so as to allow the potential use of the name "exp" for a future extension that might define an expiration parameter for keys. (The "exp" name is already used for this purpose in the JWT specification.) o Clarify that the "alg" (algorithm family) member is REQUIRED. o Correct an instance of "JWK" that should have been "JWK Set". o Applied changes made by the RFC Editor to RFC 6749's registry language to this specification. -05 o Indented artwork elements to better distinguish them from the body text. -04 o Refer to the registries as the primary sources of defined values and then secondarily reference the sections defining the initial contents of the registries. o Normatively reference XML DSIG 2.0 for its security considerations. o Added this language to Registration Templates: "This name is case sensitive. Names that match other registered names in a case insensitive manner SHOULD NOT be accepted." o Described additional open issues. o Applied editorial suggestions. -03 o Clarified that "kid" values need not be unique within a JWK Set. o Moved JSON Web Key Parameters registry to the JWK specification. o Added "Collision Resistant Namespace" to the terminology section. o Changed registration requirements from RFC Required to Specification Required with Expert Review. o Added Registration Template sections for defined registries. o Added Registry Contents sections to populate registry values. o Numerous editorial improvements. -02 o Simplified JWK terminology to get replace the "JWK Key Object" and "JWK Container Object" terms with simply "JSON Web Key (JWK)" and "JSON Web Key Set (JWK Set)" and to eliminate potential confusion between single keys and sets of keys. As part of this change, the top-level member name for a set of keys was changed from "jwk" to "keys". o Clarified that values with duplicate member names MUST be rejected. o Established JSON Web Key Set Parameters registry. o Explicitly listed non-goals in the introduction. o Moved algorithm-specific definitions from JWK to JWA. o Reformatted to give each member definition its own section heading. -01 o Corrected the Magic Signatures reference. -00 o Created the initial IETF draft based upon draft-jones-json-web-key-03 with no normative changes.Author's Address Michael B. Jones MicrosoftEmail:EMail: mbj@microsoft.com URI: http://self-issued.info/