rfc9142-markv1.original | rfc9142-markv1.txt | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. Baushke | ||||
Request for Comments: 9142 January 2022 | ||||
Updates: 4250, 4253, 4432, 4462 | ||||
Category: Standards Track | ||||
ISSN: 2070-1721 | ||||
Key Exchange (KEX) Method Updates and Recommendations for Secure Shell | ||||
(SSH) | ||||
Abstract | ||||
This document updates the recommended set of key exchange methods for | ||||
use in the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol to meet evolving needs for | ||||
stronger security. It updates RFCs 4250, 4253, 4432, and 4462. | ||||
Status of This Memo | ||||
This is an Internet Standards Track document. | ||||
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force | ||||
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has | ||||
received public review and has been approved for publication by the | ||||
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on | ||||
Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841. | ||||
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, | ||||
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at | ||||
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9142. | ||||
Copyright Notice | ||||
Copyright (c) 2022 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 | ||||
(https://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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the | ||||
Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described | ||||
in the Revised BSD License. | ||||
Table of Contents | ||||
1. Overview and Rationale | ||||
1.1. Selecting an Appropriate Hashing Algorithm | ||||
1.2. Selecting an Appropriate Public Key Algorithm | ||||
1.2.1. Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) | ||||
1.2.2. Finite Field Cryptography (FFC) | ||||
1.2.3. Integer Factorization Cryptography (IFC) | ||||
2. Requirements Language | ||||
3. Key Exchange Methods | ||||
3.1. Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) | ||||
3.1.1. curve25519-sha256 and gss-curve25519-sha256-* | ||||
3.1.2. curve448-sha512 and gss-curve448-sha512-* | ||||
3.1.3. ecdh-*, ecmqv-sha2, and gss-nistp* | ||||
3.2. Finite Field Cryptography (FFC) | ||||
3.2.1. FFC Diffie-Hellman Using Generated MODP Groups | ||||
3.2.2. FFC Diffie-Hellman Using Named MODP Groups | ||||
3.3. Integer Factorization Cryptography (IFC) | ||||
3.4. KDFs and Integrity Hashing | ||||
3.5. Secure Shell Extension Negotiation | ||||
4. Summary Guidance for Implementation of Key Exchange Method | ||||
Names | ||||
5. Security Considerations | ||||
6. IANA Considerations | ||||
7. References | ||||
7.1. Normative References | ||||
7.2. Informative References | ||||
Acknowledgements | ||||
Author's Address | ||||
1. Overview and Rationale | ||||
Secure Shell (SSH) is a common protocol for secure communication on | ||||
the Internet. In [RFC4253], SSH originally defined two Key Exchange | ||||
(KEX) Method Names that MUST be implemented. Over time, what was | ||||
once considered secure is no longer considered secure. The purpose | ||||
of this RFC is to recommend that some published key exchanges be | ||||
deprecated or disallowed as well as to recommend some that SHOULD and | ||||
one that MUST be adopted. | ||||
This document updates [RFC4250], [RFC4253], [RFC4432], and [RFC4462] | ||||
by changing the requirement level ("MUST" moving to "SHOULD", "MAY", | ||||
or "SHOULD NOT", and "MAY" moving to "MUST", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", | ||||
or "MUST NOT") of various key exchange mechanisms. Some | ||||
recommendations will be unchanged but are included for completeness. | ||||
Section 7.2 of [RFC4253] says the following: | ||||
| The key exchange produces two values: a shared secret K, and an | ||||
| exchange hash H. Encryption and authentication keys are derived | ||||
| from these. The exchange hash H from the first key exchange is | ||||
| additionally used as the session identifier, which is a unique | ||||
| identifier for this connection. It is used by authentication | ||||
| methods as a part of the data that is signed as a proof of | ||||
| possession of a private key. Once computed, the session | ||||
| identifier is not changed, even if keys are later re-exchanged. | ||||
The security strength of the public key exchange algorithm and the | ||||
hash used in the Key Derivation Function (KDF) both impact the | ||||
security of the shared secret K being used. | ||||
The hashing algorithms used by key exchange methods described in this | ||||
document are: sha1, sha256, sha384, and sha512. In many cases, the | ||||
hash name is explicitly appended to the public key exchange algorithm | ||||
name. However, some of them are implicit and defined in the RFC that | ||||
defines the key exchange algorithm name. | ||||
Various RFCs use different spellings and capitalizations for the | ||||
hashing function and encryption function names. For the purpose of | ||||
this document, the following are equivalent names: sha1, SHA1, and | ||||
SHA-1; sha256, SHA256, and SHA2-256; sha384, SHA384, and SHA2-384; | ||||
and sha512, SHA512, and SHA2-512. | ||||
For the purpose of this document, the following are equivalent: | ||||
aes128, AES128, AES-128; aes192, AES192, and AES-192; and aes256, | ||||
AES256, and AES-256. | ||||
It is good to try to match the security strength of the public key | ||||
exchange algorithm with the security strength of the symmetric | ||||
cipher. | ||||
There are many possible symmetric ciphers available with multiple | ||||
modes. The list in Table 1 is intended as a representative sample of | ||||
those that appear to be present in most SSH implementations. The | ||||
security strength estimates are generally available in [RFC4086] for | ||||
triple-DES and AES, as well as [NIST.SP.800-57pt1r5], | ||||
Section 5.6.1.1. | ||||
+========================+=============================+ | ||||
| Cipher Name (modes) | Estimated Security Strength | | ||||
+========================+=============================+ | ||||
| 3des (cbc) | 112 bits | | ||||
+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| aes128 (cbc, ctr, gcm) | 128 bits | | ||||
+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| aes192 (cbc, ctr, gcm) | 192 bits | | ||||
+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| aes256 (cbc, ctr, gcm) | 256 bits | | ||||
+------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
Table 1: Symmetric Cipher Security Strengths | ||||
The following subsections describe how to select each component of | ||||
the key exchange. | ||||
1.1. Selecting an Appropriate Hashing Algorithm | ||||
The SHA-1 hash is in the process of being deprecated for many | ||||
reasons. | ||||
There have been attacks against SHA-1, and it is no longer strong | ||||
enough for SSH security requirements. Therefore, it is desirable to | ||||
move away from using it before attacks become more serious. | ||||
The SHA-1 hash provides for approximately 80 bits of security | ||||
strength. This means that the shared key being used has at most 80 | ||||
bits of security strength, which may not be sufficient for most | ||||
users. | ||||
For purposes of key exchange methods, attacks against SHA-1 are | ||||
collision attacks that usually rely on human help rather than a pre- | ||||
image attack. SHA-1 resistance against a second pre-image is still | ||||
at 160 bits, but SSH does not depend on second pre-image resistance | ||||
but rather on chosen-prefix collision resistance. | ||||
Transcript Collision attacks are documented in [TRANSCRIPTION]. This | ||||
paper shows that an on-path attacker does not tamper with the Diffie- | ||||
Hellman values and does not know the connection keys. The attack | ||||
could be used to tamper with both I_C and I_S (as defined in | ||||
Section 7.3 of [RFC4253]) and might potentially be able to downgrade | ||||
the negotiated ciphersuite to a weak cryptographic algorithm that the | ||||
attacker knows how to break. | ||||
These attacks are still computationally very difficult to perform, | ||||
but it is desirable that any key exchange using SHA-1 be phased out | ||||
as soon as possible. | ||||
If there is a need for using SHA-1 in a key exchange for | ||||
compatibility, it would be desirable to list it last in the | ||||
preference list of key exchanges. | ||||
Use of the SHA-2 family of hashes found in [RFC6234] rather than the | ||||
SHA-1 hash is strongly advised. | ||||
When it comes to the SHA-2 family of secure hashing functions, | ||||
SHA2-256 has 128 bits of security strength; SHA2-384 has 192 bits of | ||||
security strength; and SHA2-512 has 256 bits of security strength. | ||||
It is suggested that the minimum secure hashing function used for key | ||||
exchange methods should be SHA2-256 with 128 bits of security | ||||
strength. Other hashing functions may also have the same number of | ||||
bits of security strength, but none are as yet defined in any RFC for | ||||
use in a KEX for SSH. | ||||
To avoid combinatorial explosion of key exchange names, newer key | ||||
exchanges are generally restricted to *-sha256 and *-sha512. The | ||||
exceptions are ecdh-sha2-nistp384 and gss-nistp384-sha384-*, which | ||||
are defined to use SHA2-384 for the hash algorithm. | ||||
Table 2 provides a summary of security strength for hashing functions | ||||
for collision resistance. You may consult [NIST.SP.800-107r1] for | ||||
more information on hash algorithm security strength. | ||||
+===========+=============================+ | ||||
| Hash Name | Estimated Security Strength | | ||||
+===========+=============================+ | ||||
| sha1 | 80 bits (before attacks) | | ||||
+-----------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| sha256 | 128 bits | | ||||
+-----------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| sha384 | 192 bits | | ||||
+-----------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| sha512 | 256 bits | | ||||
+-----------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
Table 2: Hashing Function Security | ||||
Strengths | ||||
1.2. Selecting an Appropriate Public Key Algorithm | ||||
SSH uses mathematically hard problems for doing key exchanges: | ||||
* Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) has families of curves for key | ||||
exchange methods for SSH. NIST prime curves with names and other | ||||
curves are available using an object identifier (OID) with | ||||
Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) via [RFC5656]. Curve25519 | ||||
and curve448 key exchanges are used with ECDH via [RFC8731]. | ||||
* Finite Field Cryptography (FFC) is used for Diffie-Hellman (DH) | ||||
key exchange with "safe primes" either from a specified list found | ||||
in [RFC3526] or generated dynamically via [RFC4419] as updated by | ||||
[RFC8270]. | ||||
* Integer Factorization Cryptography (IFC) using the RSA algorithm | ||||
is provided for in [RFC4432]. | ||||
It is desirable that the security strength of the key exchange be | ||||
chosen to be comparable with the security strength of the other | ||||
elements of the SSH handshake. Attackers can target the weakest | ||||
element of the SSH handshake. | ||||
It is desirable that a minimum of 112 bits of security strength be | ||||
selected to match the weakest of the symmetric cipher (3des-cbc) | ||||
available. Based on implementer security needs, a stronger minimum | ||||
may be desired. | ||||
The larger the Modular Exponentiation (MODP) group, the ECC curve | ||||
size, or the RSA key length, the more computation power will be | ||||
required to perform the key exchange. | ||||
1.2.1. Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) | ||||
For ECC, across all of the named curves, the minimum security | ||||
strength is approximately 128 bits. The [RFC5656] key exchanges for | ||||
the named curves use a hashing function with a matching security | ||||
strength. Likewise, the [RFC8731] key exchanges use a hashing | ||||
function that has more security strength than the curves. The | ||||
minimum strength will be the security strength of the curve. Table 3 | ||||
contains a breakdown of just the ECC security strength by curve name; | ||||
it does include the hashing algorithm used. The curve25519 and | ||||
curve488 security-level numbers are in [RFC7748]. The nistp256, | ||||
nistp384, and nistp521 (NIST prime curves) are provided in [RFC5656]. | ||||
The hashing algorithm designated for use with the individual curves | ||||
have approximately the same number of bits of security as the named | ||||
curve. | ||||
+============+=============================+ | ||||
| Curve Name | Estimated Security Strength | | ||||
+============+=============================+ | ||||
| nistp256 | 128 bits | | ||||
+------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| nistp384 | 192 bits | | ||||
+------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| nistp521 | 512 bits | | ||||
+------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| curve25519 | 128 bits | | ||||
+------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| curve448 | 224 bits | | ||||
+------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
Table 3: ECC Security Strengths | ||||
1.2.2. Finite Field Cryptography (FFC) | ||||
For FFC, it is recommended to use a modulus with a minimum of 2048 | ||||
bits (approximately 112 bits of security strength) with a hash that | ||||
has at least as many bits of security as the FFC. The security | ||||
strength of the FFC and the hash together will be the minimum of | ||||
those two values. This is sufficient to provide a consistent | ||||
security strength for the 3des-cbc cipher. Section 1 of [RFC3526] | ||||
notes that the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) cipher, which has | ||||
more strength, needs stronger groups. For the 128-bit AES, we need | ||||
about a 3200-bit group. The 192- and 256-bit keys would need groups | ||||
that are about 8000 and 15400 bits, respectively. Table 4 provides | ||||
the security strength of the MODP group. When paired with a hashing | ||||
algorithm, the security strength will be the minimum of the two | ||||
algorithms. | ||||
+==================+=============================+============+ | ||||
| Prime Field Size | Estimated Security Strength | Example | | ||||
| | | MODP Group | | ||||
+==================+=============================+============+ | ||||
| 2048-bit | 112 bits | group14 | | ||||
+------------------+-----------------------------+------------+ | ||||
| 3072-bit | 128 bits | group15 | | ||||
+------------------+-----------------------------+------------+ | ||||
| 4096-bit | 152 bits | group16 | | ||||
+------------------+-----------------------------+------------+ | ||||
| 6144-bit | 176 bits | group17 | | ||||
+------------------+-----------------------------+------------+ | ||||
| 8192-bit | 200 bits | group18 | | ||||
+------------------+-----------------------------+------------+ | ||||
Table 4: FFC MODP Security Strengths | ||||
The minimum MODP group is the 2048-bit MODP group14. When used with | ||||
sha1, this group provides approximately 80 bits of security. When | ||||
used with sha256, this group provides approximately 112 bits of | ||||
security. The 3des-cbc cipher itself provides at most 112 bits of | ||||
security, so the group14-sha256 key exchanges is sufficient to keep | ||||
all of the 3des-cbc key, for 112 bits of security. | ||||
A 3072-bit MODP group with sha256 hash will provide approximately 128 | ||||
bits of security. This is desirable when using a cipher such as | ||||
aes128 or chacha20-poly1305 that provides approximately 128 bits of | ||||
security. | ||||
The 8192-bit group18 MODP group when used with sha512 provides | ||||
approximately 200 bits of security, which is sufficient to protect | ||||
aes192 with 192 bits of security. | ||||
1.2.3. Integer Factorization Cryptography (IFC) | ||||
The only IFC algorithm for key exchange is the RSA algorithm | ||||
specified in [RFC4432]. RSA 1024-bit keys have approximately 80 bits | ||||
of security strength. RSA 2048-bit keys have approximately 112 bits | ||||
of security strength. It is worth noting that the IFC types of key | ||||
exchange do not provide Forward Secrecy, which both FFC and ECC do | ||||
provide. | ||||
In order to match the 112 bits of security strength needed for 3des- | ||||
cbc, an RSA 2048-bit key matches the security strength. The use of a | ||||
SHA-2 family hash with RSA 2048-bit keys has sufficient security to | ||||
match the 3des-cbc symmetric cipher. The rsa1024-sha1 key exchange | ||||
has approximately 80 bits of security strength and is not desirable. | ||||
Table 5 summarizes the security strengths of these key exchanges | ||||
without including the hashing algorithm strength. Guidance for these | ||||
strengths can be found in [NIST.SP.800-57pt1r5], Section 5.6.1.1. | ||||
+=====================+=============================+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method | Estimated Security Strength | | ||||
+=====================+=============================+ | ||||
| rsa1024-sha1 | 80 bits | | ||||
+---------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
| rsa2048-sha256 | 112 bits | | ||||
+---------------------+-----------------------------+ | ||||
Table 5: IFC Security Strengths | ||||
2. Requirements Language | ||||
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", | ||||
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and | ||||
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in | ||||
BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all | ||||
capitals, as shown here. | ||||
3. Key Exchange Methods | ||||
This document adopts the style and conventions of [RFC4253] in | ||||
specifying how the use of data key exchange is indicated in SSH. | ||||
This RFC also collects key exchange method names in various existing | ||||
RFCs ([RFC4253], [RFC4419], [RFC4432], [RFC4462], [RFC5656], | ||||
[RFC8268], [RFC8308], [RFC8731], and [RFC8732]) and provides a | ||||
suggested suitability for implementation of MUST, SHOULD, MAY, SHOULD | ||||
NOT, and MUST NOT. Any method not explicitly listed MAY be | ||||
implemented. | ||||
Section 7.2 of [RFC4253] defines the generation of a shared secret K | ||||
(really the output of the KDF) and an exchange key hash H. Each key | ||||
exchange method uses a specified HASH function, which must be the | ||||
same for both key exchange and Key Derivation. H is used for key | ||||
exchange integrity across the SSH session as it is computed only | ||||
once. It is noted at the end of Section 7.2 of [RFC4253] that "This | ||||
process will lose entropy if the amount of entropy in K is larger | ||||
than the internal state size of HASH", so care must be taken that the | ||||
hashing algorithm used is well chosen ("reasonable") for the key | ||||
exchange algorithms being used. | ||||
This document provides guidance as to what key exchange algorithms | ||||
are to be considered for new or updated SSH implementations. | ||||
In general, key exchange methods that are considered "weak" are being | ||||
moved to either deprecated ("SHOULD NOT") or disallowed ("MUST NOT"). | ||||
Methods that are newer or considered to be stronger usually require | ||||
more device resources than many administrators and/or developers need | ||||
are to be allowed ("MAY"). (Eventually, some of these methods could | ||||
be moved by consensus to "SHOULD" to increase interoperability and | ||||
security.) Methods that are not "weak" and have implementation | ||||
consensus are encouraged ("SHOULD"). There needs to be at least one | ||||
consensus method promoted to a status of mandatory to implement | ||||
(MTI). This should help to provide continued interoperability even | ||||
with the loss of one of the now disallowed MTI methods. | ||||
For this document, 112 bits of security strength is the minimum. Use | ||||
of either or both of SHA-1 and RSA 1024 bits at an approximate 80 | ||||
bits of security fall below this minimum and should be deprecated and | ||||
moved to disallowed as quickly as possible in configured deployments | ||||
of SSH. It seems plausible that this minimum may be increased over | ||||
time, so authors and administrators may wish to prepare for a switch | ||||
to algorithms that provide more security strength. | ||||
3.1. Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) | ||||
The Elliptic Curve (EC) key exchange algorithms used with SSH include | ||||
the ECDH and EC Menezes-Qu-Vanstone (ECMQV). | ||||
The ECC curves defined for the key exchange algorithms above include | ||||
the following: curve25519, curve448, the NIST prime curves (nistp256, | ||||
nistp384, and nistp521), as well as other curves allowed for by | ||||
Section 6 of [RFC5656]. There are key exchange mechanisms based on | ||||
the Generic Security Service Application Program Interface (GSS-API) | ||||
that use these curves as well that have a "gss-" prefix. | ||||
3.1.1. curve25519-sha256 and gss-curve25519-sha256-* | ||||
Curve25519 is efficient on a wide range of architectures with | ||||
properties that allow higher-performance implementations compared to | ||||
the patented elliptic curve parameters purchased by NIST for the | ||||
general public to use as described in [RFC5656]. The corresponding | ||||
key exchange methods use SHA2-256 (also known as SHA-256) defined in | ||||
[RFC6234]. SHA2-256 is a reasonable hash for use in both the KDF and | ||||
session integrity. It is reasonable for both gss and non-gss uses of | ||||
curve25519 key exchange methods. These key exchange methods are | ||||
described in [RFC8731] and [RFC8732] and are similar to the IKEv2 key | ||||
agreement described in [RFC8031]. The curve25519-sha256 key exchange | ||||
method has multiple implementations and SHOULD be implemented. The | ||||
gss-curve25519-sha256-* key exchange method SHOULD also be | ||||
implemented because it shares the same performance and security | ||||
characteristics as curve25519-sha256. | ||||
Table 6 contains a summary of the recommendations for | ||||
curve25519-based key exchanges. | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| curve25519-sha256 | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-curve25519-sha256-* | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
Table 6: Curve25519 Implementation | ||||
Guidance | ||||
3.1.2. curve448-sha512 and gss-curve448-sha512-* | ||||
Curve448 provides more security strength than curve25519 at a higher | ||||
computational and bandwidth cost. The corresponding key exchange | ||||
methods use SHA2-512 (also known as SHA-512) defined in [RFC6234]. | ||||
SHA2-512 is a reasonable hash for use in both the KDF and session | ||||
integrity. It is reasonable for both gss and non-gss uses of | ||||
curve448 key exchange methods. These key exchange methods are | ||||
described in [RFC8731] and [RFC8732] and are similar to the IKEv2 key | ||||
agreement described in [RFC8031]. The curve448-sha512 key exchange | ||||
method MAY be implemented. The gss-curve448-sha512-* key exchange | ||||
method MAY also be implemented because it shares the same performance | ||||
and security characteristics as curve448-sha512. | ||||
Table 7 contains a summary of the recommendations for curve448-based | ||||
key exchanges. | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| curve448-sha512 | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-curve448-sha512-* | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
Table 7: Curve448 Implementation | ||||
Guidance | ||||
3.1.3. ecdh-*, ecmqv-sha2, and gss-nistp* | ||||
The ecdh-sha2-* namespace allows for both the named NIST prime curves | ||||
(nistp256, nistp384, and nistp521) as well as other curves to be | ||||
defined for the ECDH key exchange. At the time of this writing, | ||||
there are three named curves in this namespace that SHOULD be | ||||
supported. They appear in Section 10.1 of [RFC5656]. If | ||||
implemented, the named curves SHOULD always be enabled unless | ||||
specifically disabled by local security policy. In Section 6.1 of | ||||
[RFC5656], the method to name other ECDH curves using OIDs is | ||||
specified. These other curves MAY be implemented. | ||||
The GSS-API namespace with gss-nistp*-sha* mirrors the algorithms | ||||
used by ecdh-sha2-* names. They are described in [RFC8732]. | ||||
ECDH reduces bandwidth of key exchanges compared to FFC DH at a | ||||
similar security strength. | ||||
Table 8 lists algorithms as "SHOULD" where implementations may be | ||||
more efficient or widely deployed. The items listed as "MAY" in | ||||
Table 8 are potentially less efficient. | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-* | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp256 | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp256-sha256-* | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp384 | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp384-sha384-* | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp521 | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp521-sha512-* | SHOULD | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| ecmqv-sha2 | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
Table 8: ECDH Implementation Guidance | ||||
It is advisable to match the Elliptic Curve Digital Signature | ||||
Algorithm (ECDSA) and ECDH algorithm to use the same curve for both | ||||
to maintain the same security strength in the connection. | ||||
3.2. Finite Field Cryptography (FFC) | ||||
3.2.1. FFC Diffie-Hellman Using Generated MODP Groups | ||||
[RFC4419] defines two key exchange methods that use a random | ||||
selection from a set of pre-generated moduli for key exchange: the | ||||
diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 method and the diffie-hellman- | ||||
group-exchange-sha256 method. Per [RFC8270], implementations SHOULD | ||||
use a MODP group whose modulus size is equal to or greater than 2048 | ||||
bits. MODP groups with a modulus size less than 2048 bits are weak | ||||
and MUST NOT be used. | ||||
The diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 key exchange method SHOULD NOT | ||||
be used. This method uses SHA-1, which is being deprecated. | ||||
The diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256 key exchange method MAY be | ||||
used. This method uses SHA-256, which is reasonable for MODP groups | ||||
less than 4096 bits. | ||||
Care should be taken in the pre-generation of the moduli P and | ||||
generator G such that the generator provides a Q-ordered subgroup of | ||||
P. Otherwise, the parameter set may leak one bit of the shared | ||||
secret. | ||||
Table 9 provides a summary of the guidance for these exchanges. | ||||
+======================================+============+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+======================================+============+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 | SHOULD NOT | | ||||
+--------------------------------------+------------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256 | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------------------+------------+ | ||||
Table 9: FFC Generated MODP Group Implementation | ||||
Guidance | ||||
3.2.2. FFC Diffie-Hellman Using Named MODP Groups | ||||
The diffie-hellman-group14-sha256 key exchange method is defined in | ||||
[RFC8268] and represents a key exchange that has approximately 112 | ||||
bits of security strength that matches 3des-cbc symmetric cipher | ||||
security strength. It is a reasonably simple transition from SHA-1 | ||||
to SHA-2, and given that diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 and diffie- | ||||
hellman-group14-sha256 share a MODP group and only differ in the hash | ||||
function used for the KDF and integrity, it is a correspondingly | ||||
simple transition from implementing diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 to | ||||
implementing diffie-hellman-group14-sha256. Given that diffie- | ||||
hellman-group14-sha1 is being removed from mandatory to implement | ||||
(MTI) status, the diffie-hellman-group14-sha256 method MUST be | ||||
implemented. The rest of the FFC MODP group from [RFC8268] have a | ||||
larger number of security bits and are suitable for symmetric ciphers | ||||
that also have a similar number of security bits. | ||||
Table 10 provides explicit guidance by name. | ||||
+===============================+==========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+===============================+==========+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group14-sha256 | MUST | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-group14-sha256-* | SHOULD | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group15-sha512 | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-group15-sha512-* | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group16-sha512 | SHOULD | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-group16-sha512-* | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group17-sha512 | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-group17-sha512-* | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group18-sha512 | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| gss-group18-sha512-* | MAY | | ||||
+-------------------------------+----------+ | ||||
Table 10: FFC Named Group Implementation | ||||
Guidance | ||||
3.3. Integer Factorization Cryptography (IFC) | ||||
The rsa1024-sha1 key exchange method is defined in [RFC4432] and uses | ||||
an RSA 1024-bit modulus with a SHA-1 hash. This key exchange does | ||||
NOT meet security requirements. This method MUST NOT be implemented. | ||||
The rsa2048-sha256 key exchange method is defined in [RFC4432] and | ||||
uses an RSA 2048-bit modulus with a SHA2-256 hash. This key exchange | ||||
meets 112-bit minimum security strength. This method MAY be | ||||
implemented. | ||||
Table 11 provides a summary of the guidance for IFC key exchanges. | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method Name | Guidance | | ||||
+==========================+==========+ | ||||
| rsa1024-sha1 | MUST NOT | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
| rsa2048-sha256 | MAY | | ||||
+--------------------------+----------+ | ||||
Table 11: IFC Implementation Guidance | ||||
3.4. KDFs and Integrity Hashing | ||||
The SHA-1 and SHA-2 family of hashing algorithms are combined with | ||||
the FFC, ECC, and IFC algorithms to comprise a key exchange method | ||||
name. | ||||
The selected hash algorithm is used both in the KDF as well as for | ||||
the integrity of the response. | ||||
All of the key exchange methods using the SHA-1 hashing algorithm | ||||
should be deprecated and phased out due to security concerns for SHA- | ||||
1, as documented in [RFC6194]. | ||||
Unconditionally deprecating and/or disallowing SHA-1 everywhere will | ||||
hasten the day when it may be simply removed from implementations | ||||
completely. Leaving partially broken algorithms lying around is not | ||||
a good thing to do. | ||||
The SHA-2 family of hashes [RFC6234] is more secure than SHA-1. They | ||||
have been standardized for use in SSH with many of the currently | ||||
defined key exchanges. | ||||
Please note that at the present time, there is no key exchange method | ||||
for Secure Shell that uses the SHA-3 family of secure hashing | ||||
functions or the Extendable-Output Functions [NIST.FIPS.202]. | ||||
Prior to the changes made by this document, diffie-hellman- | ||||
group1-sha1 and diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 were MTI. diffie- | ||||
hellman-group14-sha1 is the stronger of the two. Group14 (a 2048-bit | ||||
MODP group) is defined in [RFC3526]. The group1 MODP group with | ||||
approximately 80 bits of security is too weak to be retained. | ||||
However, rather than jumping from the MTI status to making it | ||||
disallowed, many implementers suggested that it should transition to | ||||
deprecated first and be disallowed at a later time. The group14 MODP | ||||
group using a sha1 hash for the KDF is not as weak as the group1 MODP | ||||
group. There are some legacy situations where it will still provide | ||||
administrators with value, such as small hardware Internet of Things | ||||
(IOT) devices that have insufficient compute and memory resources to | ||||
use larger MODP groups before a timeout of the session occurs. There | ||||
was consensus to transition from MTI to a requirement status that | ||||
provides for continued use with the expectation that it would be | ||||
deprecated or disallowed in the future. Therefore, it is considered | ||||
reasonable to retain the diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 exchange for | ||||
interoperability with legacy implementations. The diffie-hellman- | ||||
group14-sha1 key exchange MAY be implemented, but should be put at | ||||
the end of the list of negotiated key exchanges. | ||||
The diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 and diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 | ||||
SHOULD NOT be implemented. The gss-group1-sha1-*, gss- | ||||
group14-sha1-*, and gss-gex-sha1-* key exchanges are already | ||||
specified as SHOULD NOT be implemented by [RFC8732]. | ||||
3.5. Secure Shell Extension Negotiation | ||||
There are two methods, ext-info-c and ext-info-s, defined in | ||||
[RFC8308]. They provide a mechanism to support other Secure Shell | ||||
negotiations. Being able to extend functionality is desirable. Both | ||||
ext-info-c and ext-info-s SHOULD be implemented. | ||||
4. Summary Guidance for Implementation of Key Exchange Method Names | ||||
Table 12 provides the existing key exchange method names listed | ||||
alphabetically. The Implement column contains the current | ||||
recommendations of this RFC. | ||||
+=======================+============+================+===========+ | ||||
| Key Exchange Method | Reference | Previous | RFC 9142 | | ||||
| Name | | Recommendation | Implement | | ||||
+=======================+============+================+===========+ | ||||
| curve25519-sha256 | [RFC8731] | none | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| curve448-sha512 | [RFC8731] | none | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group- | [RFC4419], | none | SHOULD | | ||||
| exchange-sha1 | [RFC8270] | | NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman-group- | [RFC4419], | none | MAY | | ||||
| exchange-sha256 | [RFC8720] | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC4253] | MUST | SHOULD | | ||||
| group1-sha1 | | | NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC4253] | MUST | MAY | | ||||
| group14-sha1 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC8268] | none | MUST | | ||||
| group14-sha256 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC8268] | none | MAY | | ||||
| group15-sha512 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC8268] | none | SHOULD | | ||||
| group16-sha512 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC8268] | none | MAY | | ||||
| group17-sha512 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| diffie-hellman- | [RFC8268] | none | MAY | | ||||
| group18-sha512 | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-* | [RFC5656] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp256 | [RFC5656] | MUST | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp384 | [RFC5656] | MUST | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ecdh-sha2-nistp521 | [RFC5656] | MUST | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ecmqv-sha2 | [RFC5656] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ext-info-c | [RFC8308] | SHOULD | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| ext-info-s | [RFC8308] | SHOULD | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss- | [RFC4462] | reserved | reserved | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss- | [RFC8732] | SHOULD | SHOULD | | ||||
| curve25519-sha256-* | | | | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-curve448-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-gex-sha1-* | [RFC4462], | SHOULD NOT | SHOULD | | ||||
| | [RFC8732] | | NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group1-sha1-* | [RFC4462], | SHOULD NOT | SHOULD | | ||||
| | [RFC8732] | | NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group14-sha1-* | [RFC4462], | SHOULD NOT | SHOULD | | ||||
| | [RFC8732] | | NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group14-sha256-* | [RFC8732] | SHOULD | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group15-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group16-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | SHOULD | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group17-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-group18-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp256-sha256-* | [RFC8732] | SHOULD | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp384-sha384-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| gss-nistp521-sha512-* | [RFC8732] | MAY | SHOULD | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| rsa1024-sha1 | [RFC4432] | MAY | MUST NOT | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
| rsa2048-sha256 | [RFC4432] | MAY | MAY | | ||||
+-----------------------+------------+----------------+-----------+ | ||||
Table 12: IANA Guidance for Implementation of Key Exchange | ||||
Method Names | ||||
The full set of official [IANA-KEX] key algorithm method names not | ||||
otherwise mentioned in this document MAY be implemented. | ||||
5. Security Considerations | ||||
This SSH protocol provides a secure encrypted channel over an | ||||
insecure network. It performs server host authentication, key | ||||
exchange, encryption, and integrity checks. It also derives a unique | ||||
session ID that may be used by higher-level protocols. The key | ||||
exchange itself generates a shared secret and uses the hash function | ||||
for both the KDF and integrity. | ||||
Full security considerations for this protocol are provided in | ||||
[RFC4251] and continue to apply. In addition, the security | ||||
considerations provided in [RFC4432] apply. Note that Forward | ||||
Secrecy is NOT available with the rsa1024-sha1 or rsa2048-sha256 key | ||||
exchanges. | ||||
It is desirable to deprecate or disallow key exchange methods that | ||||
are considered weak so they are not still actively in operation when | ||||
they are broken. | ||||
A key exchange method is considered weak when the security strength | ||||
is insufficient to match the symmetric cipher or the algorithm has | ||||
been broken. | ||||
The 1024-bit MODP group used by diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 is too | ||||
small for the symmetric ciphers used in SSH. | ||||
MODP groups with a modulus size less than 2048 bits are too small for | ||||
the symmetric ciphers used in SSH. If the diffie-hellman-group- | ||||
exchange-sha256 or diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1 key exchange | ||||
method is used, the modulus size of the MODP group used needs to be | ||||
at least 2048 bits. | ||||
At this time, the rsa1024-sha1 key exchange is too small for the | ||||
symmetric ciphers used in SSH. | ||||
The use of SHA-1 for use with any key exchange may not yet be | ||||
completely broken, but it is time to retire all uses of this | ||||
algorithm as soon as possible. | ||||
The diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 algorithm is not yet completely | ||||
deprecated. This is to provide a practical transition from the MTI | ||||
algorithms to a new one. However, it would be best to only be used | ||||
as a last resort in key exchange negotiations. All key exchange | ||||
methods using the SHA-1 hash are to be considered as deprecated. | ||||
6. IANA Considerations | ||||
IANA has added a new column to the "Key Exchange Method Names" | ||||
registry [IANA-KEX] with the heading "OK to Implement" and annotated | ||||
entries therein with the implementation guidance provided in | ||||
Section 4, "Summary Guidance for Implementation of Key Exchange | ||||
Method Names", in this document. IANA also added entries for ecdh- | ||||
sha2-nistp256, ecdh-sha2-nistp384, and ecdh-sha2-nistp521, and added | ||||
references to [RFC4462] and [RFC8732] for gss-gex-sha1-*, gss- | ||||
group1-sha1-*, gss-group14-sha1-*, diffie-hellman-group-exchange- | ||||
sha1, and diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256. A summary may be | ||||
found in Table 12 in Section 4. IANA has also included this document | ||||
as an additional registry reference for the suggested implementation | ||||
guidance provided in Section 4 of this document and added a note | ||||
indicating the following: | ||||
| OK to Implement guidance entries for registrations that pre-date | ||||
| [RFC9142] are found in Table 12 in Section 4 of [RFC9142]. | ||||
Registry entries annotated with "MUST NOT" are considered disallowed. | ||||
Registry entries annotated with "SHOULD NOT" are deprecated and may | ||||
be disallowed in the future. | ||||
7. References | ||||
7.1. Normative References | ||||
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate | ||||
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, | ||||
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>. | ||||
[RFC4250] Lehtinen, S. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell (SSH) | ||||
Protocol Assigned Numbers", RFC 4250, | ||||
DOI 10.17487/RFC4250, January 2006, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4250>. | ||||
[RFC4253] Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell (SSH) | ||||
Transport Layer Protocol", RFC 4253, DOI 10.17487/RFC4253, | ||||
January 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4253>. | ||||
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC | ||||
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, | ||||
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>. | ||||
[RFC8268] Baushke, M., "More Modular Exponentiation (MODP) Diffie- | ||||
Hellman (DH) Key Exchange (KEX) Groups for Secure Shell | ||||
(SSH)", RFC 8268, DOI 10.17487/RFC8268, December 2017, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8268>. | ||||
[RFC8270] Velvindron, L. and M. Baushke, "Increase the Secure Shell | ||||
Minimum Recommended Diffie-Hellman Modulus Size to 2048 | ||||
Bits", RFC 8270, DOI 10.17487/RFC8270, December 2017, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8270>. | ||||
[RFC8308] Bider, D., "Extension Negotiation in the Secure Shell | ||||
(SSH) Protocol", RFC 8308, DOI 10.17487/RFC8308, March | ||||
2018, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8308>. | ||||
[RFC8731] Adamantiadis, A., Josefsson, S., and M. Baushke, "Secure | ||||
Shell (SSH) Key Exchange Method Using Curve25519 and | ||||
Curve448", RFC 8731, DOI 10.17487/RFC8731, February 2020, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8731>. | ||||
7.2. Informative References | ||||
[IANA-KEX] IANA, "Secure Shell (SSH) Protocol Parameters", | ||||
<https://www.iana.org/assignments/ssh-parameters/>. | ||||
[NIST.FIPS.202] | ||||
National Institute of Standards and Technology, "SHA-3 | ||||
Standard: Permutation-Based Hash and Extendable-Output | ||||
Functions", FIPS PUB 202, DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.202, | ||||
August 2015, <https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.FIPS.202>. | ||||
[NIST.SP.800-107r1] | ||||
Dang, Q., "Recommendation for applications using approved | ||||
hash algorithms", DOI 10.6028/NIST.SP.800-107r1, August | ||||
2012, <https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-107r1>. | ||||
[NIST.SP.800-57pt1r5] | ||||
Barker, E., "Recommendation for Key Management: Part 1 - | ||||
General", DOI 10.6028/NIST.SP.800-57pt1r5, May 2020, | ||||
<https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-57pt1r5>. | ||||
[RFC3526] Kivinen, T. and M. Kojo, "More Modular Exponential (MODP) | ||||
Diffie-Hellman groups for Internet Key Exchange (IKE)", | ||||
RFC 3526, DOI 10.17487/RFC3526, May 2003, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3526>. | ||||
[RFC4086] Eastlake 3rd, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, | ||||
"Randomness Requirements for Security", BCP 106, RFC 4086, | ||||
DOI 10.17487/RFC4086, June 2005, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4086>. | ||||
[RFC4251] Ylonen, T. and C. Lonvick, Ed., "The Secure Shell (SSH) | ||||
Protocol Architecture", RFC 4251, DOI 10.17487/RFC4251, | ||||
January 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4251>. | ||||
[RFC4419] Friedl, M., Provos, N., and W. Simpson, "Diffie-Hellman | ||||
Group Exchange for the Secure Shell (SSH) Transport Layer | ||||
Protocol", RFC 4419, DOI 10.17487/RFC4419, March 2006, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4419>. | ||||
[RFC4432] Harris, B., "RSA Key Exchange for the Secure Shell (SSH) | ||||
Transport Layer Protocol", RFC 4432, DOI 10.17487/RFC4432, | ||||
March 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4432>. | ||||
[RFC4462] Hutzelman, J., Salowey, J., Galbraith, J., and V. Welch, | ||||
"Generic Security Service Application Program Interface | ||||
(GSS-API) Authentication and Key Exchange for the Secure | ||||
Shell (SSH) Protocol", RFC 4462, DOI 10.17487/RFC4462, May | ||||
2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4462>. | ||||
[RFC5656] Stebila, D. and J. Green, "Elliptic Curve Algorithm | ||||
Integration in the Secure Shell Transport Layer", | ||||
RFC 5656, DOI 10.17487/RFC5656, December 2009, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5656>. | ||||
[RFC6194] Polk, T., Chen, L., Turner, S., and P. Hoffman, "Security | ||||
Considerations for the SHA-0 and SHA-1 Message-Digest | ||||
Algorithms", RFC 6194, DOI 10.17487/RFC6194, March 2011, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6194>. | ||||
[RFC6234] Eastlake 3rd, D. and T. Hansen, "US Secure Hash Algorithms | ||||
(SHA and SHA-based HMAC and HKDF)", RFC 6234, | ||||
DOI 10.17487/RFC6234, May 2011, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6234>. | ||||
[RFC7748] Langley, A., Hamburg, M., and S. Turner, "Elliptic Curves | ||||
for Security", RFC 7748, DOI 10.17487/RFC7748, January | ||||
2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7748>. | ||||
[RFC8031] Nir, Y. and S. Josefsson, "Curve25519 and Curve448 for the | ||||
Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2) Key | ||||
Agreement", RFC 8031, DOI 10.17487/RFC8031, December 2016, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8031>. | ||||
[RFC8720] Housley, R., Ed. and O. Kolkman, Ed., "Principles for | ||||
Operation of Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) | ||||
Registries", RFC 8720, DOI 10.17487/RFC8720, February | ||||
2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8720>. | ||||
[RFC8732] Sorce, S. and H. Kario, "Generic Security Service | ||||
Application Program Interface (GSS-API) Key Exchange with | ||||
SHA-2", RFC 8732, DOI 10.17487/RFC8732, February 2020, | ||||
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8732>. | ||||
[TRANSCRIPTION] | ||||
Bhargavan, K. and G. Leurent, "Transcript Collision | ||||
Attacks: Breaking Authentication in TLS, IKE, and SSH", | ||||
Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS), | ||||
DOI 10.14722/ndss.2016.23418, February 2016, | ||||
<https://doi.org/10.14722/ndss.2016.23418>. | ||||
Acknowledgements | ||||
Thanks to the following people for review and comments: Denis Bider, | ||||
Peter Gutmann, Damien Miller, Niels Moeller, Matt Johnston, Iwamoto | ||||
Kouichi, Simon Josefsson, Dave Dugal, Daniel Migault, Anna Johnston, | ||||
Tero Kivinen, and Travis Finkenauer. | ||||
Thanks to the following people for code to implement interoperable | ||||
exchanges using some of these groups as found in this document: | ||||
Darren Tucker for OpenSSH and Matt Johnston for Dropbear. And thanks | ||||
to Iwamoto Kouichi for information about RLogin, Tera Term (ttssh), | ||||
and Poderosa implementations also adopting new Diffie-Hellman groups | ||||
based on this document. | ||||
Author's Address | ||||
Mark D. Baushke | ||||
Email: mbaushke.ietf@gmail.com | ||||
End of changes. 1 change blocks. | ||||
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