<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.29 (Ruby 3.2.3) -->
<?rfc strict="yes"?>
<?rfc comments="yes"?>
<?rfc docmapping="yes"?>
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-pquip-pqc-engineers-10" category="info" consensus="true" submissionType="IETF" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.28.1 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="PQC for Engineers">Post-Quantum Cryptography for Engineers</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-pquip-pqc-engineers-10"/>
    <author fullname="Aritra Banerjee">
      <organization>Nokia</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <city>Munich</city>
          <country>Germany</country>
        </postal>
        <email>aritra.banerjee@nokia.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author fullname="Tirumaleswar Reddy">
      <organization>Nokia</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <city>Bangalore</city>
          <region>Karnataka</region>
          <country>India</country>
        </postal>
        <email>kondtir@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author fullname="Dimitrios Schoinianakis">
      <organization>Nokia</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <city>Athens</city>
          <country>Greece</country>
        </postal>
        <email>dimitrios.schoinianakis@nokia-bell-labs.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author fullname="Timothy Hollebeek">
      <organization>DigiCert</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <city>Pittsburgh</city>
          <country>USA</country>
        </postal>
        <email>tim.hollebeek@digicert.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Ounsworth" fullname="Mike Ounsworth">
      <organization abbrev="Entrust">Entrust Limited</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>2500 Solandt Road – Suite 100</street>
          <city>Ottawa, Ontario</city>
          <code>K2K 3G5</code>
          <country>Canada</country>
        </postal>
        <email>mike.ounsworth@entrust.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2025" month="May" day="01"/>
    <area>Security</area>
    <workgroup>PQUIP</workgroup>
    <keyword>PQC</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <?line 251?>

<t>The advent of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer (CRQC) would render state-of-the-art, traditional public-key algorithms deployed today obsolete, as the mathematical assumptions underpinning their security would no longer hold. To address this, protocols and infrastructure must transition to post-quantum algorithms, which are designed to resist both traditional and quantum attacks. This document explains why engineers need to be aware of and understand post-quantum cryptography (PQC), detailing the impact of CRQCs on existing systems and the challenges involved in transitioning to post-quantum algorithms. Unlike previous cryptographic updates, this shift may require significant protocol redesign due to the unique properties of post-quantum algorithms.</t>
    </abstract>
    <note removeInRFC="true">
      <name>About This Document</name>
      <t>
        Status information for this document may be found at <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-pquip-pqc-engineers/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>
        Discussion of this document takes place on the
        pquip Working Group mailing list (<eref target="mailto:pqc@ietf.org"/>),
        which is archived at <eref target="https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/pqc/"/>.
        Subscribe at <eref target="https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/pqc/"/>.
      </t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 255?>

<section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>Quantum computing is no longer just a theoretical concept in computational science and physics; it is now an active area of research with practical implications. Considerable research efforts and enormous corporate and government funding for the development of practical quantum computing systems are currently being invested. At the time this document is published, cryptographically relevant quantum computers (CRQCs) that can break widely used public-key cryptographic algorithms are not yet available. However, there is ongoing research and development in the field of quantum computing, with the goal of building more powerful and scalable quantum computers.</t>
      <t>One common myth is that quantum computers are faster than conventional CPUs and GPUs in all areas. This is not the case; much as GPUs outperform general-purpose CPUs only on specific types of problems, so too will quantum computers have a niche set of problems on which they excel. Unfortunately for cryptographers, integer factorization and discrete logarithms, the mathematical problems underpinning much of classical cryptography, happen to fall within the niche that quantum computers are expected to excel at. As quantum technology advances, there is the potential for future quantum computers to have a significant impact on current cryptographic systems. Predicting the date of emergence of a CRQC is a challenging task, and there is ongoing uncertainty regarding when they will become practically feasible <xref target="CRQCThreat"/>.</t>
      <t>Extensive research has produced several post-quantum cryptographic (PQC) algorithms that offer the potential to ensure cryptography's survival in the quantum computing era. However, transitioning to a post-quantum infrastructure is not a straightforward task, and there are numerous challenges to overcome. It requires a combination of engineering efforts, proactive assessment and evaluation of available technologies, and a careful approach to product development.</t>
      <t>PQC is sometimes referred to as "quantum-proof", "quantum-safe", or "quantum-resistant". It is the development of cryptographic algorithms designed to secure communication and data in a world where quantum computers are powerful enough to break traditional cryptographic systems, such as RSA and ECC. PQC algorithms are intended to be resistant to attacks by quantum computers, which use quantum-mechanical phenomena to solve mathematical problems that are infeasible for classical computers.</t>
      <t>As the threat of CRQCs draws nearer, engineers responsible for designing, maintaining, and securing cryptographic systems must prepare for the significant changes that the existence of CRQCs will bring. Engineers need to understand how to implement post-quantum algorithms in applications, how to evaluate the trade-offs between security and performance, and how to ensure backward compatibility with current systems where needed. This is not merely a one-for-one replacement of algorithms; in many cases, the shift to PQC will involve redesigning protocols and infrastructure to accommodate the significant differences in resource utilization and key sizes between traditional and PQC algorithms.</t>
      <t>This document aims to provide general guidance to engineers working on cryptographic libraries, network security, and infrastructure development, where long-term security planning is crucial. The document covers topics such as selecting appropriate PQC algorithms, understanding the differences between PQC key encapsulation mechanisms (KEMs) and traditional Diffie-Hellman and RSA style key exchanges, and provides insights into expected key, ciphertext and signature sizes and processing time differences between PQC and traditional algorithms. Additionally, it discusses the potential threat to symmetric cryptography and hash functions from CRQCs.</t>
      <t>It is important to remember that asymmetric algorithms (also known as public key algorithms) are largely used for secure communications between organizations or endpoints that may not have previously interacted, so a significant amount of coordination between organizations, and within and between ecosystems needs to be taken into account. Such transitions are some of the most complicated in the tech industry and will require staged migrations in which upgraded agents need to co-exist and communicate with non-upgraded agents at a scale never before undertaken.</t>
      <t>The National Security Agency (NSA) of the United States released an article on future PQC algorithm requirements for US national security systems <xref target="CNSA2-0"/> based on the need to protect against deployments of CRQCs in the future. The German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) has also released a PQC migration and recommendations document <xref target="BSI-PQC"/> which largely aligns with United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and NSA guidance, but differs on some of the guidance.</t>
      <t>CRQCs pose a threat to both symmetric and asymmetric cryptographic schemes. However, the threat to asymmetric cryptography is significantly greater due to Shor's algorithm, which can break widely-used public key schemes like RSA and ECC. Symmetric cryptography and hash functions also face some risk from Grover's algorithm, although the impact is less severe and can typically be mitigated by doubling key and digest lengths. It is crucial for the reader to understand that when the word "PQC" is mentioned in the document, it means asymmetric cryptography (or public key cryptography), and not any symmetric algorithms based on stream ciphers, block ciphers, hash functions, MACs, etc., which are less vulnerable to quantum computers. This document does not cover such topics as when traditional algorithms might become vulnerable (for that, see documents such as <xref target="QC-DNS"/> and others). It also does not cover unrelated technologies like quantum key distribution (QKD) or quantum key generation, which use quantum hardware to exploit quantum effects to protect communications and generate keys, respectively. PQC is based on conventional (that is, not quantum) math and software and can be run on any general purpose computer.</t>
      <t>This document does not go into the deep mathematics or technical specification of the PQC algorithms, but rather provides an overview to engineers on the current threat landscape and the relevant algorithms designed to help prevent those threats. Also, the cryptographic and algorithmic guidance given in this document should be taken as non-authoritative if it conflicts with emerging and evolving guidance from the IRTF's Crypto Forum Research Group (CFRG).</t>
      <t>There is ongoing discussion about whether to use the term "post-quantum", "quantum ready", or "quantum resistant", to describe algorithms that resist CRQCs, and a consensus has not yet been reached. It is important to clarify that "post-quantum" refers to algorithms designed to withstand attacks by CRQCs and classical computers alike. These algorithms are based on mathematically hard cryptographic problems that neither CRQCs nor classical computers are expected to break. This document uses any of these terms interchangeably to refer to such
algorithms.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="threat-of-crqcs-on-cryptography">
      <name>Threat of CRQCs on Cryptography</name>
      <t>When considering the security risks associated with the ability of a quantum computer to attack traditional cryptography, it is important to distinguish between the impact on symmetric algorithms and public-key ones. Dr. Peter Shor and Dr. Lov Grover developed two algorithms that changed the way the world thinks of security under the presence of a CRQC.</t>
      <t>Quantum computers are, by their nature, hybrids of classical and quantum computational units. For example, Shor's algorithm consists of a combination of quantum and classical computational steps. Thus, the term "quantum adversary" should be thought of as "quantum-enhanced adversary", meaning they have access to both classical and quantum computational techniques.</t>
      <t>Despite the fact that large-scale quantum computers do not yet exist to experiment on, the theoretical properties of quantum computation are very well understood. This allows us to reason today about the upper limits of quantum-enhanced computation, and indeed to design cryptographic algorithms that are resistant to any conceivable form of quantum cryptanalysis.</t>
      <section anchor="symmetric">
        <name>Symmetric Cryptography</name>
        <t>For unstructured data such as symmetric encrypted data or cryptographic hashes, although CRQCs can search for specific solutions across all possible input combinations (e.g., Grover's algorithm), no quantum algorithm is known to break the underlying security properties of these classes of algorithms.</t>
        <t>Grover's algorithm is a quantum search algorithm that provides a theoretical quadratic speedup for searching an unstructured database, compared to traditional search algorithms.
This has led to the common misconception that symmetric key lengths need to be doubled for quantum security. When you consider the mapping of hash values to their corresponding hash inputs (also known as pre-image), or of ciphertext blocks to the corresponding plaintext blocks, as an unstructured database, then Grover’s algorithm theoretically requires doubling the key sizes of the symmetric algorithms that are currently deployed today to counter the quadratic speedup and maintain current security level. This is because Grover’s algorithm reduces the amount of operations to break 128-bit symmetric cryptography to 2^{64} quantum operations, which might sound computationally feasible. However, quantum operations are fundamentally different from classical ones, whereas 2^{64} classical operations can be efficiently parallelized, 2^{64} quantum operations must be performed serially, making them infeasible on practical quantum computers.</t>
        <t>Grover's algorithm is highly non-parallelizable and even if one deploys 2^c computational units in parallel to brute-force a key using Grover's algorithm, it will complete in time proportional to 2^{(128−c)/2}, or, put simply, using 256 quantum computers will only reduce runtime by a factor of 16, 1024 quantum computers will only reduce runtime by a factor of 32 and so forth (see <xref target="NIST"/> and <xref target="Cloudflare"/>). Due to this inherent limitation, the general expert consensus is that AES-128 remains secure in practice, and key sizes do not necessarily need to be doubled.</t>
        <t>It would be natural to ask whether future research will develop a superior algorithm that could outperform Grover's algorithm in the general case. However, Christof Zalka has shown that Grover's algorithm achieves the best possible complexity for this type of search, meaning no significantly faster quantum approach is expected <xref target="Grover-search"/></t>
        <t>Finally, in their evaluation criteria for PQC, NIST is assessing the security levels of proposed post-quantum algorithms by comparing them against the equivalent traditional and quantum security of AES-128, 192, and 256. This indicates that NIST is confident in the stable security properties of AES, even in the presence of both traditional and quantum attacks. As a result, 128-bit algorithms can be considered quantum-safe for the foreseeable future. However, for compliance purposes, some organizations, such as the National Agency for the Security of Information Systems (ANSSI), recommend the use of AES-256 <xref target="ANSSI"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="asymmetric-cryptography">
        <name>Asymmetric Cryptography</name>
        <t>“Shor’s algorithm” efficiently solves the integer factorization problem (and the related discrete logarithm problem), which underpin the foundations of the vast majority of public-key cryptography that the world uses today. This implies that, if a CRQC is developed, today’s public-key cryptography algorithms (e.g., RSA, Diffie-Hellman and elliptic curve cryptography, as well as less commonly-used variants such as ElGamal and Schnorr signatures) and protocols would need to be replaced by algorithms and protocols that can offer cryptanalytic resistance against CRQCs. Note that Shor’s algorithm cannot run solely on a classical computer, it requires a CRQC.</t>
        <t>For example, to provide some context, one would need around 20 million noisy qubits to break RSA-2048 in 8 hours <xref target="RSAShor"/> and <xref target="RSA8HRS"/> or 4099 stable (or logical) qubits to break it in 10 seconds <xref target="RSA10SC"/>.</t>
        <t>For structured data such as public keys and signatures, CRQCs can fully solve the underlying hard problems used in traditional cryptography (see Shor's algorithm). Because an increase in the size of the key-pair would not provide a secure solution (short of RSA keys that are many gigabytes in size <xref target="PQRSA"/>), a complete replacement of the algorithm is needed. Therefore, post-quantum public-key cryptography must rely on problems that are different from the ones used in traditional public-key cryptography (i.e., the integer factorization problem, the finite-field discrete logarithm problem, and the elliptic-curve discrete logarithm problem).</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="quantum-side-channel-attacks">
        <name>Quantum Side-channel Attacks</name>
        <t>The field of cryptographic side-channel attacks potentially stands to gain a boost in attacker power once cryptanalytic techniques can be enhanced with quantum computation techniques <xref target="QuantSide"/>. While a full discussion of quantum side-channel techniques is beyond the scope of this document, implementers of cryptographic hardware should be aware that current best-practices for side-channel resistance may not be sufficient against quantum adversaries.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="traditional-cryptographic-primitives-that-could-be-replaced-by-pqc">
      <name>Traditional Cryptographic Primitives that Could Be Replaced by PQC</name>
      <t>Any asymmetric cryptographic algorithm based on integer factorization, finite field discrete logarithms or elliptic curve discrete logarithms will be vulnerable to attacks using Shor's algorithm on a CRQC. This document focuses on the principal functions of asymmetric cryptography:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>Key agreement and key transport: Key agreement schemes, typically referred to as Diffie-Hellman (DH) or Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH), as well as key transport, typically using RSA encryption, are used to establish a shared cryptographic key for secure communication. They are one of the mechanisms that can be replaced by PQC, as this is based on existing public key cryptography and is therefore vulnerable to Shor's algorithm. A CRQC can employ Shor's algorithm to efficiently find the prime factors of a large public key (in the case of RSA), which in turn can be exploited to derive the private key. In the case of Diffie-Hellman, a CRQC has the potential to calculate the discrete logarithm of the (short or long-term) Diffie-Hellman public key. This, in turn, would reveal the secret required to derive the symmetric encryption key.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Digital signatures: Digital signature schemes are used to authenticate the identity of a sender, detect unauthorized modifications to data, and underpin trust in a system. Similar to key agreement, signatures also depend on a public-private key pair based on the same mathematics as for key agreement and key transport, and hence a break in existing public key cryptography will also affect traditional digital signatures, hence the importance of developing post-quantum digital signatures.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>BBS signatures: BBS (Boneh-Boyen-Shacham) signatures are a privacy-preserving signature scheme that offers zero-knowledge proof-like properties by allowing selective disclosure of specific signed attributes without revealing the entire set of signed data. The security of BBS signatures relies on the hardness of the discrete logarithm problem, making them vulnerable to Shor's algorithm. A CRQC can break the data authenticity security property of BBS but not the data confidentiality (Section 6.9 of <xref target="I-D.irtf-cfrg-bbs-signatures"/>).</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Content encryption: Content encryption typically refers to the encryption of the data using symmetric key algorithms, such as AES, to ensure confidentiality. The threat to symmetric cryptography is discussed in <xref target="symmetric"/>.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </section>
    <section anchor="invariants-of-pqc-necessitating-compliance-adjustments">
      <name>Invariants of PQC: Necessitating Compliance Adjustments</name>
      <t>In the context of PQC, symmetric-key cryptographic algorithms are generally not directly impacted by quantum computing advancements. Symmetric-key cryptography, which includes keyed primitives such as block ciphers (e.g., AES) and message authentication mechanisms (e.g., HMAC-SHA256), relies on secret keys shared between the sender and receiver and remains secure even in a post-quantum world. Symmetric cryptography also includes hash functions (e.g., SHA-256) that are used for secure message digesting without any shared key material. HMAC is a specific construction that utilizes a cryptographic hash function and a secret key shared between the sender and receiver to produce a message authentication code.</t>
      <t>Grover's algorithm does not pose a practical threat to symmetric cryptography (see <xref target="symmetric"/> for more details). As a result, CRQCs offer no substantial advantages in breaking symmetric-key algorithms compared to classical computers. However, for compliance purposes, such as meeting the standards of CNSA 2.0 (Commercial National Security Algorithm Suite 2.0) <xref target="CNSA2-0"/>, AES-256 must be used to ensure the highest level of security against both traditional and quantum threats.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="nist-pqc-algorithms">
      <name>NIST PQC Algorithms</name>
      <t>At time of writing, NIST have standardized three PQC algorithms, with more expected to be standardised in the future (<xref target="NISTFINAL"/>). These algorithms are not necessarily drop-in replacements for traditional asymmetric cryptographic algorithms. For instance, RSA <xref target="RSA"/> and ECC <xref target="RFC6090"/> can be used as both a key encapsulation method (KEM) and as a signature scheme, whereas there is currently no post-quantum algorithm that can perform both functions. When upgrading protocols, it is important to replace the existing use of traditional algorithms with either a PQC KEM or a PQC signature method, depending on how the traditional algorithm was previously being used. Additionally, KEMs, as described in <xref target="KEMs"/>, present a different API than either key agreement or key transport primitives. As a result, they may require protocol-level or application-level changes in order to be incorporated.</t>
      <section anchor="nist-candidates-selected-for-standardization">
        <name>NIST Candidates Selected for Standardization</name>
        <section anchor="pqc-key-encapsulation-mechanisms-kems">
          <name>PQC Key Encapsulation Mechanisms (KEMs)</name>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t><xref target="ML-KEM"/>: Module-Lattice-based Key-Encapsulation Mechanism Standard (FIPS-203).</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t><xref target="HQC"/>: This algorithm is based on the hardness of the syndrome decoding problem for quasi-cyclic concatenated Reed-Muller and Reed-Solomon (RMRS) codes in the Hamming metric. Reed-Muller (RM) codes are a class of block error-correcting codes commonly used in wireless and deep-space communications, while Reed-Solomon (RS) codes are widely used to detect and correct multiple-bit errors. HQC has been selected as part of the NIST post-quantum cryptography project but has not yet been standardized.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
        </section>
        <section anchor="pqc-signatures">
          <name>PQC Signatures</name>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t><xref target="ML-DSA"/>: Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Standard (FIPS-204).</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t><xref target="SLH-DSA"/>: Stateless Hash-Based Digital Signature (FIPS-205).</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t><xref target="FN-DSA"/>: FN-DSA is a lattice signature scheme (FIPS-206) (<xref target="lattice-based"/> and <xref target="sig-scheme"/>).</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iso-candidates-selected-for-standardization">
      <name>ISO Candidates Selected for Standardization</name>
      <t>At the time of writing, ISO has standardized three PQC KEM algorithms, which are mentioned in the following subsection.</t>
      <section anchor="pqc-key-encapsulation-mechanisms-kems-1">
        <name>PQC Key Encapsulation Mechanisms (KEMs)</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t><xref target="FrodoKEM"/>: Key Encapsulation mechanism based on the hardness on learning with errors in algebraically unstructured lattices.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t><xref target="ClassicMcEliece"/>: Based on the hardness of syndrome decoding of Goppa codes. Goppa codes are a class of error-correcting codes that can correct a certain number of errors in a transmitted message. The decoding problem involves recovering the original message from the received noisy codeword.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t><xref target="NTRU"/>: Key encapsulation mechanism based on the "N-th degree Truncated polynomial Ring Units" (NTRU) lattices.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="timeline">
      <name>Timeline for Transition</name>
      <t>The timeline, and driving motivation for transition differs slightly between data confidentiality (e.g., encryption) and data authentication (e.g., signature) use-cases.</t>
      <t>For data confidentiality, one is concerned with the so-called "harvest now, decrypt later" attack where a malicious actor with adequate resources can launch an attack to store sensitive encrypted data today that they hope to decrypt once a CRQC is available. This implies that, every day, sensitive encrypted data is susceptible to the attack by not implementing quantum-safe strategies, as it corresponds to data possibly being deciphered in the future.</t>
      <t>For authentication, it is often the case that signatures have a very short lifetime between signing and verifying (such as during a TLS handshake) but some authentication use-cases do require long lifetimes, such as signing firmware or software that will be active for decades, signing legal documents, or signing certificates that will be embedded into hardware devices such as smartcards. Even for short-lived signatures use cases, the infrastructure often relies on long-lived root keys which can be difficult to update or replace on in-field devices.</t>
      <figure anchor="Mosca">
        <name>Mosca model</name>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
+------------------------+----------------------------+
|                        |                            |
|           y            |             x              |
+------------------------+----------+-----------------+
|                                   | <--------------->
|               z                   |   Security gap
+-----------------------------------+

]]></artwork>
      </figure>
      <t>These challenges are illustrated nicely by the so-called Mosca model discussed in <xref target="Threat-Report"/>. In <xref target="Mosca"/>, "x" denotes the time that systems and data need to remain secure, "y" the number of years to fully migrate to a PQC infrastructure, and "z" the time until a CRQC that can break current cryptography is available. The model assumes either that encrypted data can be intercepted and stored before the migration is completed in "y" years, or that signatures will still be relied upon for "x" years after their creation. This data remains vulnerable for the complete "x" years of their lifetime, thus the sum "x+y" gives us an estimate of the full timeframe that data remain insecure. The model essentially asks how one is preparing IT systems during those "y" years (in other words, how one can minimize those "y" years) to minimize the transition phase to a PQC infrastructure and hence minimize the risks of data being exposed in the future.</t>
      <t>Finally, other factors that could accelerate the introduction of a CRQC should not be under-estimated, like for example faster-than-expected advances in quantum computing and more efficient versions of Shor’s algorithm requiring fewer qubits. Innovation often comes in waves, so it is to the industry’s benefit to remain vigilant and prepare as early as possible. Bear in mind also that while the industry tracks advances from public research institutions such as universities and companies that publish their results, there is also a great deal of large-budget quantum research being conducted privately by various national interests. Therefore, the true state of quantum computer advancement is likely several years ahead of the publicly available research.</t>
      <t>Organizations should also consider carefully and honestly what their migration timeline "y" actually is. If you think only of the time between receiving a patch from your technology vendor, and rolling that patch out, then "y" might seem as short as a few weeks. However, this represents the minority of migration cases; more often, a PQC migration will involve at least some amount of hardware replacement. For example, performance-sensitive applications will need CPUs with PQC hardware acceleration. Security-sensitive applications will need PQC TPMs, TEEs, Secure Enclaves, and other cryptographic co-processors. Smartcard applications will require replacement of the cards as well as of the readers which can come in many form-factors: tap-for-entry door and turnstile readers, PIN pad machines, laptops with built-in smartcard readers, and many others.</t>
      <t>Included in "y" is not only the deployment time, but also preparation time: integration, testing, auditing, and re-certification of cryptographic environments. Consider also upstream effects that contribute to "y", including lead-times for your vendors to produce PQC-ready products, which may itself include auditing and certification delays, time for regulating bodies to adopt PQC policies, time for auditors to become familiar with the new requirements, etc. If you measure the full migration time "y" from when your vendors begin implementing PQC functionality, to when you switch off your last non-PQC-capable device, then "y" can be quite long; likely measured in years or decades for even most moderately-sized organizations.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="pqc-categories">
      <name>PQC Categories</name>
      <t>The post-quantum cryptographic schemes standardized by NIST, along with the ongoing Round 4 candidates, can be categorized into three main groups: lattice-based, hash-based, and code-based. Other approaches, such as isogeny-based, multivariate-based, and MPC-in-the-Head-based cryptography, are also being explored in research and standardization efforts. NIST has been calling for additional digital signature proposals to be considered in the PQC standardization process which has completed two rounds in October, 2024 <xref target="AddSig"/>.</t>
      <section anchor="lattice-based">
        <name>Lattice-Based Public-Key Cryptography</name>
        <t>Lattice-based public-key cryptography leverages the simple construction of lattices (i.e., a regular collection of points in a Euclidean space that are evenly spaced) to create "trapdoor" problems. These problems are efficient to compute if you possess the secret information but challenging to compute otherwise. Examples of such problems include the shortest vector, closest vector, short integer solution, learning with errors, module learning with errors, and learning with rounding problems. All of these problems feature strong proofs for worst-to-average case reduction, effectively relating the hardness of the average case to the worst case.</t>
        <t>Lattice-based schemes usually have good performances and average size public keys and signatures (average within the PQC primitives at least; they are still several orders of magnitude larger than e.g., RSA or ECC signatures), making them the best available candidates for general-purpose use such as replacing the use of RSA in PKIX certificates.</t>
        <t>Examples of this class of algorithms include ML-KEM, FN-DSA, ML-DSA and FrodoKEM.</t>
        <t>It is noteworthy that lattice-based encryption schemes require a rounding step during decryption which has a non-zero probability of "rounding the wrong way" and leading to a decryption failure, meaning that valid encryptions are decrypted incorrectly; as such, an attacker could significantly reduce the security of lattice-based schemes that have a relatively high failure rate. However, for most of the NIST PQC proposals, the number of required oracle queries to force a decryption failure is above practical limits, as has been shown in <xref target="LattFail1"/>. More recent works have improved upon the results in <xref target="LattFail1"/>, showing that the cost of searching for additional failing ciphertexts after one or more have already been found, can be sped up dramatically <xref target="LattFail2"/>. Nevertheless, at the time this document is published, the PQC candidates by NIST are considered secure under these attacks and constant monitoring as cryptanalysis research is ongoing.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="hash-based">
        <name>Hash-Based Public-Key Cryptography</name>
        <t>Hash based PKC has been around since the 1970s, when it was developed by Lamport and Merkle. It is used to create digital signature algorithms and its security is based on the security of the underlying cryptographic hash function. Many variants of hash-based signatures (HBS) have been developed since the 70s including the recent XMSS <xref target="RFC8391"/>, HSS/LMS <xref target="RFC8554"/> or BPQS <xref target="BPQS"/> schemes. Unlike many other digital signature techniques, most hash-based signature schemes are stateful, which means that signing necessitates the update and careful tracking of the state of the secret key. Producing multiple signatures using the same secret key state results in loss of security and may ultimately enable signature forgery attacks against that key.</t>
        <t>Stateful hash-based signatures with long service lifetimes require additional operational complexity compared with other signature types. For example, consider a 20-year root key; there is an expectation that 20 years is longer than the expected lifetime of the hardware that key is stored on, and therefore the key will need to be migrated to new hardware at some point. Disaster-recovery scenarios where the primary node fails without warning can be similarly tricky. This requires careful operational and compliance consideration to ensure that no private key state can be reused across the migration or disaster recovery event. One approach for avoiding these issues is to only use stateful HBS for short-term use cases that do not require horizontal scaling, for example signing a batch of firmware images and then retiring the signing key.</t>
        <t>The SLH-DSA algorithm, which was standardized by NIST, leverages the HORST (hash to obtain random subset with trees) technique and remains the only standardized hash based signature scheme that is stateless, thus avoiding the complexities associated with state management. SLH-DSA is an advancement on SPHINCS which reduces the signature sizes in SPHINCS and makes it more compact.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="code-based">
        <name>Code-Based Public-Key Cryptography</name>
        <t>This area of cryptography started in the 1970s and 80s based on the seminal work of McEliece and Niederreiter which focuses on the study of cryptosystems based on error-correcting codes. Some popular error correcting codes include Goppa codes (used in McEliece cryptosystems), encoding and decoding syndrome codes used in Hamming quasi-cyclic (HQC), or quasi-cyclic moderate density parity check (QC-MDPC) codes.</t>
        <t>Examples include all the unbroken NIST Round 4 finalists: Classic McEliece, HQC (selected by NIST for standardization), and BIKE.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="KEMs">
      <name>KEMs</name>
      <t>A Key Encapsulation Mechanism (KEM) is a cryptographic technique used for securely exchanging symmetric key material between two parties over an insecure channel. It is commonly used in hybrid encryption schemes, where a combination of asymmetric (public key) and symmetric encryption is employed. The KEM encapsulation results in a fixed-length symmetric key that can be used with a symmetric algorithm, typically a block cipher, in one of two different ways:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>Derive a data encryption key (DEK) to encrypt the data</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Derive a key encryption key (KEK) used to wrap a DEK</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>These techniques are often referred to as "hybrid public key encryption (HPKE)" <xref target="RFC9180"/> mechanism.</t>
      <t>The term "encapsulation" is chosen intentionally to indicate that KEM algorithms behave differently at the API level from the key agreement or key encipherment / key transport mechanisms that are in use today. Key agreement schemes imply that both parties contribute a public / private key pair to the exchange, while key encipherment / key transport schemes imply that the symmetric key material is chosen by one party and "encrypted" or "wrapped" for the other party. KEMs, on the other hand, behave according to the following API:</t>
      <t>KEM relies on the following primitives <xref target="PQCAPI"/>:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>def kemKeyGen() -&gt; (pk, sk)</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>def kemEncaps(pk) -&gt; (ss, ct)</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>def kemDecaps(ct, sk) -&gt; ss</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>where <tt>pk</tt> is the public key, <tt>sk</tt> is the secret key, <tt>ct</tt> is the ciphertext representing an encapsulated key, and <tt>ss</tt> is the shared secret. The following figure illustrates a sample flow of a KEM-based key exchange:</t>
      <figure anchor="tab-kem-ke">
        <name>KEM based key exchange</name>
        <artset>
          <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="336" width="536" viewBox="0 0 536 336" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px" stroke-linecap="round">
              <path d="M 8,272 L 8,304" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 24,80 L 24,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 184,32 L 184,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 208,80 L 208,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 208,272 L 208,304" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 224,72 L 224,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 264,32 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,32 L 280,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 320,72 L 320,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,176 L 336,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 360,32 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 528,176 L 528,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 184,32 L 264,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,32 L 360,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 184,64 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,64 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 24,80 L 208,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 24,112 L 208,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 232,160 L 312,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,176 L 528,176" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,208 L 528,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 232,256 L 312,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,272 L 208,272" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,304 L 208,304" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="320,160 308,154.4 308,165.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,312,160)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="240,256 228,250.4 228,261.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(180,232,256)"/>
              <g class="text">
                <text x="220" y="52">Client</text>
                <text x="316" y="52">Server</text>
                <text x="48" y="100">pk,</text>
                <text x="76" y="100">sk</text>
                <text x="96" y="100">=</text>
                <text x="152" y="100">kemKeyGen()</text>
                <text x="216" y="100">-</text>
                <text x="244" y="148">pk</text>
                <text x="328" y="196">-</text>
                <text x="360" y="196">ss,</text>
                <text x="388" y="196">ct</text>
                <text x="408" y="196">=</text>
                <text x="472" y="196">kemEncaps(pk)</text>
                <text x="292" y="244">ct</text>
                <text x="28" y="292">ss</text>
                <text x="48" y="292">=</text>
                <text x="112" y="292">kemDecaps(ct,</text>
                <text x="184" y="292">sk)</text>
                <text x="216" y="292">-</text>
              </g>
            </svg>
          </artwork>
          <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
                      +---------+ +---------+
                      | Client  | | Server  |
                      +---------+ +---------+
  +----------------------+ |           |
  | pk, sk = kemKeyGen() |-|           |
  +----------------------+ |           |
                           |           |
                           | pk        |
                           |---------->|
                           |           | +-----------------------+
                           |           |-| ss, ct = kemEncaps(pk)|
                           |           | +-----------------------+
                           |           |
                           |       ct  |
                           |<----------|
+------------------------+ |           |
| ss = kemDecaps(ct, sk) |-|           |
+------------------------+ |           |
                           |           |
]]></artwork>
        </artset>
      </figure>
      <section anchor="authenticated-key-exchange">
        <name>Authenticated Key Exchange</name>
        <t>Authenticated Key Exchange (AKE) with KEMs where both parties contribute a KEM public key to the overall session key is interactive as described in <xref target="I-D.draft-ietf-lake-edhoc"/>. However, single-sided KEM, such as when one peer has a KEM key in a certificate and the other peer wants to encrypt for it (as in S/MIME or OpenPGP email), can be achieved using non-interactive HPKE <xref target="RFC9180"/>. The following figure illustrates the Diffie-Hellman (DH) Key exchange:</t>
        <figure anchor="tab-dh-ake">
          <name>Diffie-Hellman based AKE</name>
          <artset>
            <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="480" width="552" viewBox="0 0 552 480" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px" stroke-linecap="round">
                <path d="M 8,320 L 8,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 24,80 L 24,128" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 136,336 L 136,344" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,32 L 184,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 216,80 L 216,128" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 216,320 L 216,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 232,72 L 232,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 264,32 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,32 L 280,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 328,72 L 328,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,192 L 344,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,432 L 344,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 360,32 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 544,192 L 544,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 544,432 L 544,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,32 L 264,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,32 L 360,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,64 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,64 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 24,80 L 216,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 24,128 L 216,128" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 240,176 L 320,176" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,192 L 544,192" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,256 L 544,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 240,304 L 320,304" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,320 L 216,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,368 L 216,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 240,416 L 320,416" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,432 L 544,432" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,464 L 544,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="328,416 316,410.4 316,421.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,320,416)"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="328,176 316,170.4 316,181.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,320,176)"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="248,304 236,298.4 236,309.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(180,240,304)"/>
                <g class="text">
                  <text x="220" y="52">Client</text>
                  <text x="316" y="52">Server</text>
                  <text x="72" y="100">Long-term</text>
                  <text x="140" y="100">client</text>
                  <text x="188" y="100">key:</text>
                  <text x="116" y="116">sk1,</text>
                  <text x="152" y="116">pk1</text>
                  <text x="224" y="116">-</text>
                  <text x="256" y="164">pk1</text>
                  <text x="336" y="212">-</text>
                  <text x="392" y="212">Long-term</text>
                  <text x="460" y="212">server</text>
                  <text x="508" y="212">key:</text>
                  <text x="436" y="228">sk2,</text>
                  <text x="472" y="228">pk2</text>
                  <text x="364" y="244">ss</text>
                  <text x="384" y="244">=</text>
                  <text x="436" y="244">KeyEx(pk1,</text>
                  <text x="500" y="244">sk2)</text>
                  <text x="312" y="292">pk2</text>
                  <text x="28" y="340">ss</text>
                  <text x="48" y="340">=</text>
                  <text x="96" y="340">KeyEx(pk2</text>
                  <text x="164" y="340">sk1)</text>
                  <text x="92" y="356">encryptContent(ss)</text>
                  <text x="224" y="356">-</text>
                  <text x="280" y="388">encrypted</text>
                  <text x="288" y="404">content</text>
                  <text x="428" y="452">decryptContent(ss)</text>
                </g>
              </svg>
            </artwork>
            <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
                      +---------+ +---------+
                      | Client  | | Server  |
                      +---------+ +---------+
  +-----------------------+ |           |
  | Long-term client key: | |           |
  |         sk1, pk1      |-|           |
  +-----------------------+ |           |
                            |           |
                            | pk1       |
                            |---------->|
                            |           | +------------------------+
                            |           |-| Long-term server key:  |
                            |           | |         sk2, pk2       |
                            |           | | ss = KeyEx(pk1, sk2)   |
                            |           | +------------------------+
                            |           |
                            |        pk2|
                            |<----------|
+-------------------------+ |           |
| ss = KeyEx(pk2, sk1)    | |           |
| encryptContent(ss)      |-|           |
+-------------------------+ |           |
                            | encrypted |
                            |   content |
                            |---------->|
                            |           | +------------------------+
                            |           | | decryptContent(ss)     |
                            |           | +------------------------+
]]></artwork>
          </artset>
        </figure>
        <t>What's important to note about the sample flow above is that the shared secret <tt>ss</tt> is derived using key material from both the Client and the Server, which classifies it as an AKE. There is another property of a key exchange, called Non-Interactive Key Exchange (NIKE) which refers to whether the sender can compute the shared secret <tt>ss</tt> and encrypt content without requiring active interaction (an exchange of network messages) with the recipient. <xref target="tab-dh-ake"/> shows a Diffie-Hellman key exchange which is an AKE, since both parties are using long-term keys which can have established trust (for example, via certificates), but it is not a NIKE, since the client needs to wait for the network interaction to receive the receiver's public key <tt>pk2</tt> before it can compute the shared secret <tt>ss</tt> and begin content encryption. However, a DH key exchange can be an AKE and a NIKE at the same time if the receiver's public key is known to the sender in advance, and many Internet protocols rely on this property of DH-based key exchanges.</t>
        <figure anchor="tab-dh-ake-nike">
          <name>Diffie-Hellman based AKE and NIKE simultaneously</name>
          <artset>
            <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="400" width="536" viewBox="0 0 536 400" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px" stroke-linecap="round">
                <path d="M 8,80 L 8,192" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 136,160 L 136,168" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 168,32 L 168,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 200,80 L 200,192" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 216,72 L 216,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 248,32 L 248,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 264,32 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 312,72 L 312,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 328,288 L 328,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 344,32 L 344,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 456,336 L 456,344" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 528,288 L 528,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 168,32 L 248,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 264,32 L 344,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 168,64 L 248,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 264,64 L 344,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,80 L 200,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,192 L 200,192" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 224,272 L 304,272" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 328,288 L 528,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 328,368 L 528,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="312,272 300,266.4 300,277.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,304,272)"/>
                <g class="text">
                  <text x="204" y="52">Client</text>
                  <text x="300" y="52">Server</text>
                  <text x="56" y="100">Long-term</text>
                  <text x="124" y="100">client</text>
                  <text x="172" y="100">key:</text>
                  <text x="100" y="116">sk1,</text>
                  <text x="136" y="116">pk1</text>
                  <text x="208" y="116">-</text>
                  <text x="56" y="132">Long-term</text>
                  <text x="124" y="132">server</text>
                  <text x="172" y="132">key:</text>
                  <text x="96" y="148">pk2</text>
                  <text x="28" y="164">ss</text>
                  <text x="48" y="164">=</text>
                  <text x="96" y="164">KeyEx(pk2</text>
                  <text x="164" y="164">sk1)</text>
                  <text x="92" y="180">encryptContent(ss)</text>
                  <text x="208" y="180">-</text>
                  <text x="244" y="228">pk1,</text>
                  <text x="264" y="244">encrypted</text>
                  <text x="272" y="260">content</text>
                  <text x="320" y="308">-</text>
                  <text x="376" y="308">Long-term</text>
                  <text x="444" y="308">server</text>
                  <text x="492" y="308">key:</text>
                  <text x="420" y="324">sk2,</text>
                  <text x="456" y="324">pk2</text>
                  <text x="348" y="340">ss</text>
                  <text x="368" y="340">=</text>
                  <text x="416" y="340">KeyEx(pk1</text>
                  <text x="484" y="340">sk2)</text>
                  <text x="412" y="356">decryptContent(ss)</text>
                </g>
              </svg>
            </artwork>
            <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
                      +---------+ +---------+
                      | Client  | | Server  |
                      +---------+ +---------+
  +-----------------------+ |           |
  | Long-term client key: | |           |
  |         sk1, pk1      |-|           |
  | Long-term server key: | |           |
  |         pk2           | |           |
  | ss = KeyEx(pk2, sk1)  | |           |
  | encryptContent(ss)    |-|           |
  +-----------------------+ |           |
                            |           |
                            | pk1,      |
                            | encrypted |
                            |   content |
                            |---------->|
                            |           | +------------------------+
                            |           |-| Long-term server key:  |
                            |           | |         sk2, pk2       |
                            |           | | ss = KeyEx(pk1, sk2)   |
                            |           | | decryptContent(ss)     |
                            |           | +------------------------+
]]></artwork>
          </artset>
        </figure>
        <t>The complication with KEMs is that a KEM <tt>Encaps()</tt> is non-deterministic; it involves randomness chosen by the sender of that message. Therefore, in order to perform an AKE, the client must wait for the server to generate the needed randomness and perform <tt>Encaps()</tt> against the client key, which necessarily requires a network round-trip. Therefore, a KEM-based protocol can either be an AKE or a NIKE, but cannot be both at the same time. Consequently, certain Internet protocols will necessitate a redesign to accommodate this distinction, either by introducing extra network round-trips or by making trade-offs in security properties.</t>
        <figure anchor="tab-kem-ake">
          <name>KEM based AKE</name>
          <artset>
            <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="480" width="560" viewBox="0 0 560 480" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px" stroke-linecap="round">
                <path d="M 8,80 L 8,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,288 L 8,352" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,32 L 184,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 208,80 L 208,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 208,336 L 208,352" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 224,72 L 224,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 264,32 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,32 L 280,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 320,72 L 320,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,176 L 336,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,416 L 336,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 360,32 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 552,176 L 552,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 552,416 L 552,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,32 L 264,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,32 L 360,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 184,64 L 264,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 280,64 L 360,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,80 L 208,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,112 L 208,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 232,160 L 312,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,176 L 552,176" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,224 L 552,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 232,272 L 312,272" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,288 L 200,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 8,352 L 208,352" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 232,400 L 312,400" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,416 L 552,416" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <path d="M 336,464 L 552,464" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="320,400 308,394.4 308,405.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,312,400)"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="320,160 308,154.4 308,165.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,312,160)"/>
                <polygon class="arrowhead" points="240,272 228,266.4 228,277.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(180,232,272)"/>
                <g class="text">
                  <text x="220" y="52">Client</text>
                  <text x="316" y="52">Server</text>
                  <text x="36" y="100">pk1,</text>
                  <text x="72" y="100">sk1</text>
                  <text x="96" y="100">=</text>
                  <text x="152" y="100">kemKeyGen()</text>
                  <text x="216" y="100">-</text>
                  <text x="240" y="148">pk1</text>
                  <text x="328" y="196">-</text>
                  <text x="364" y="196">ss1,</text>
                  <text x="400" y="196">ct1</text>
                  <text x="424" y="196">=</text>
                  <text x="492" y="196">kemEncaps(pk1)</text>
                  <text x="364" y="212">pk2,</text>
                  <text x="400" y="212">sk2</text>
                  <text x="424" y="212">=</text>
                  <text x="480" y="212">kemKeyGen()</text>
                  <text x="288" y="260">ct1,pk2</text>
                  <text x="32" y="308">ss1</text>
                  <text x="56" y="308">=</text>
                  <text x="124" y="308">kemDecaps(ct1,</text>
                  <text x="204" y="308">sk1)</text>
                  <text x="236" y="308">-|</text>
                  <text x="36" y="324">ss2,</text>
                  <text x="72" y="324">ct2</text>
                  <text x="96" y="324">=</text>
                  <text x="164" y="324">kemEncaps(pk2)</text>
                  <text x="28" y="340">ss</text>
                  <text x="48" y="340">=</text>
                  <text x="112" y="340">Combiner(ss1,</text>
                  <text x="188" y="340">ss2)</text>
                  <text x="240" y="388">ct2</text>
                  <text x="328" y="436">-</text>
                  <text x="360" y="436">ss2</text>
                  <text x="384" y="436">=</text>
                  <text x="452" y="436">kemDecaps(ct2,</text>
                  <text x="532" y="436">sk2)</text>
                  <text x="356" y="452">ss</text>
                  <text x="376" y="452">=</text>
                  <text x="440" y="452">Combiner(ss1,</text>
                  <text x="516" y="452">ss2)</text>
                </g>
              </svg>
            </artwork>
            <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
                      +---------+ +---------+
                      | Client  | | Server  |
                      +---------+ +---------+
+------------------------+ |           |
| pk1, sk1 = kemKeyGen() |-|           |
+------------------------+ |           |
                           |           |
                           |pk1        |
                           |---------->|
                           |           | +--------------------------+
                           |           |-| ss1, ct1 = kemEncaps(pk1)|
                           |           | | pk2, sk2 = kemKeyGen()   |
                           |           | +--------------------------+
                           |           |
                           |    ct1,pk2|
                           |<----------|
+------------------------+ |           |
| ss1 = kemDecaps(ct1, sk1)|-|         |
| ss2, ct2 = kemEncaps(pk2)|           |
| ss = Combiner(ss1, ss2)| |           |
+------------------------+ |           |
                           |           |
                           |ct2        |
                           |---------->|
                           |           | +--------------------------+
                           |           |-| ss2 = kemDecaps(ct2, sk2)|
                           |           | | ss = Combiner(ss1, ss2)  |
                           |           | +--------------------------+
]]></artwork>
          </artset>
        </figure>
        <t>Here, <tt>Combiner(ss1, ss2)</tt>, often referred to as a KEM Combiner, is a cryptographic construction that takes in two shared secrets and returns a single combined shared secret. The simplest combiner is concatenation <tt>ss1 || ss2</tt>, but combiners can vary in complexity depending on the cryptographic properties required. For example, if the combination should preserve IND-CCA2 of either input even if the other is chosen maliciously, then a more complex construct is required. Another consideration for combiner design is so-called "binding properties" introduced in <xref target="KEEPINGUP"/>, which may require the ciphertexts and recipient public keys to be included in the combiner. KEM combiner security analysis becomes more complicated in hybrid settings where the two KEMs represent different algorithms, for example, where one is ML-KEM and the other is ECDH. For a more thorough discussion of KEM combiners, see <xref target="KEEPINGUP"/>, <xref target="I-D.draft-ounsworth-cfrg-kem-combiners"/>, and <xref target="I-D.draft-connolly-cfrg-xwing-kem"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="security-properties-of-kems">
        <name>Security Properties of KEMs</name>
        <section anchor="ind-cca2">
          <name>IND-CCA2</name>
          <t>IND-CCA2 (INDistinguishability under adaptive Chosen-Ciphertext Attack) is an advanced security notion for encryption schemes. It ensures the confidentiality of the plaintext and resistance against chosen-ciphertext attacks. An appropriate definition of IND-CCA2 security for KEMs can be found in <xref target="CS01"/> and <xref target="BHK09"/>. ML-KEM <xref target="ML-KEM"/> and Classic McEliece provide IND-CCA2 security.</t>
          <t>Understanding IND-CCA2 security is essential for individuals involved in designing or implementing cryptographic systems and protocols in order to evaluate the strength of the algorithm, assess its suitability for specific use cases, and ensure that data confidentiality and security requirements are met. Understanding IND-CCA2 security is generally not necessary for developers migrating to using an IETF-vetted key establishment method (KEM) within a given protocol or flow. IND-CCA2 is a widely accepted security notion for public key encryption mechanisms, making it suitable for a broad range of applications. IETF specification authors should include all security concerns in the "Security Considerations" section of the relevant RFC and not rely on implementers being experts in cryptographic theory.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="binding">
          <name>Binding</name>
          <t>KEMs also have an orthogonal set of properties to consider when designing protocols around them: binding <xref target="KEEPINGUP"/>. This can be "ciphertext binding", "public key binding", "context binding", or any other property that is important to not be substituted between KEM invocations. In general, a KEM is considered to bind a certain value if substitution of that value by an attacker will necessarily result in a different shared secret being derived. As an example, if an attacker can construct two different ciphertexts which will decapsulate to the same shared secret; or can construct a ciphertext which will decapsulate to the same shared secret under two different public keys, or can substitute whole KEM exchanges from one session into another, then the construction is not ciphertext binding, public key binding, or context binding respectively. Similarly, protocol designers may wish to bind protocol state information such as a transaction ID or nonce so that attempts to replay ciphertexts from one session inside a different session will be blocked at the cryptographic level because the server derives a different shared secret and is thus is unable to decrypt the content.</t>
          <t>The solution to binding is generally achieved at the protocol design level: It is recommended to avoid using the KEM output shared secret directly without integrating it into an appropriate protocol. While KEM algorithms provide key secrecy, they do not inherently ensure source authenticity, protect against replay attacks, or guarantee freshness. These security properties should be addressed by incorporating the KEM into a protocol that has been analyzed for such protections. Even though modern KEMs such as ML-KEM produce full-entropy shared secrets, it is still advisable for binding reasons to pass it through a key derivation function (KDF) and also include all values that you wish to bind; then finally you will have a shared secret that is safe to use at the protocol level.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="hpke">
        <name>HPKE</name>
        <t>Modern cryptography has long used the notion of "hybrid encryption" where an asymmetric algorithm is used to establish a key, and then a symmetric algorithm is used for bulk content encryption.</t>
        <t>HPKE (hybrid public key encryption) <xref target="RFC9180"/> is a specific instantiation of this which works with a combination of KEMs, KDFs and AEAD (authenticated encryption with additional data) schemes. HPKE includes three authenticated variants, including one that authenticates possession of a pre-shared key and two optional ones that authenticate possession of a key encapsulation mechanism (KEM) private key. HPKE can be extended to support hybrid post-quantum KEM <xref target="I-D.draft-connolly-cfrg-xwing-kem"/>. ML-KEM does not support the static-ephemeral key exchange that allows HPKE based on DH based KEMs and its optional authenticated modes as discussed in section 1.5 of <xref target="I-D.draft-connolly-cfrg-xwing-kem"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="pqc-signatures-1">
      <name>PQC Signatures</name>
      <t>Any digital signature scheme that provides a construction defining security under a post-quantum setting falls under this category of PQC signatures.</t>
      <section anchor="security-properties-of-pqc-signatures">
        <name>Security Properties of PQC Signatures</name>
      </section>
      <section anchor="euf-cma-and-suf-cma">
        <name>EUF-CMA and SUF-CMA</name>
        <t>EUF-CMA (existential unforgeability under chosen message attack) <xref target="GMR88"/> is a security notion for digital signature schemes. It guarantees that an adversary, even with access to a signing oracle, cannot forge a valid signature for an arbitrary message. EUF-CMA provides strong protection against forgery attacks, ensuring the integrity and authenticity of digital signatures by preventing unauthorized modifications or fraudulent signatures. ML-DSA, FN-DSA, and SLH-DSA provide EUF-CMA security.</t>
        <t>SUF-CMA (strong unforgeability under chosen message attack) builds upon EUF-CMA by requiring that an adversary cannot produce a different valid signature for a message that has already been signed by the signing oracle. Like EUF-CMA, SUF-CMA provides robust assurances for digital signature schemes, further enhancing their security posture. ML-DSA, FN-DSA, and SLH-DSA also achieve SUF-CMA security.</t>
        <t>Understanding EUF-CMA and SUF-CMA security is essential for designing or implementing cryptographic systems in order to ensure the security, reliability, and robustness of digital signature schemes. These notions allow for informed decision-making, vulnerability analysis, compliance with standards, and designing systems that provide strong protection against forgery attacks. For developers migrating to using an IETF-vetted PQC signature scheme within a given protocol or flow, a deep understanding of EUF-CMA and SUF-CMA security may not be necessary, as the schemes vetted by IETF adhere to these stringent security standards.</t>
        <t>EUF-CMA and SUF-CMA are considered strong security benchmarks for public key signature algorithms, making them suitable for most applications. IETF specification authors should include all security concerns in the "Security Considerations" section of the relevant RFC and should not assume that implementers are experts in cryptographic theory.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sig-scheme">
        <name>Details of FN-DSA, ML-DSA, and SLH-DSA</name>
        <t>ML-DSA <xref target="ML-DSA"/> is a digital signature algorithm based on the hardness of lattice problems over module lattices (i.e., the Module Learning with Errors problem (MLWE)). The design of the algorithm is based on the "Fiat-Shamir with Aborts" <xref target="Lyu09"/> framework introduced by Lyubashevsky, that leverages rejection sampling to render lattice-based Fiat-Shamir (FS) schemes compact and secure. ML-DSA uses uniformly-distributed random number sampling over small integers to compute coefficients in error vectors, which makes the scheme easier to implement compared with FN-DSA <xref target="FN-DSA"/> which uses Gaussian-distributed numbers, necessitating the need to use floating point arithmetic during signature generation.</t>
        <t>ML-DSA offers both deterministic and randomized signing and is instantiated with 3 parameter sets providing different security levels. Security properties of ML-DSA are discussed in Section 9 of <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-dilithium-certificates"/>.</t>
        <t>FN-DSA <xref target="FN-DSA"/> is based on the GPV hash-and-sign lattice-based signature framework introduced by Gentry, Peikert, and Vaikuntanathan, which is a framework that requires a certain class of lattices and a trapdoor sampler technique.</t>
        <t>The main design principle of FN-DSA is compactness, i.e., it was designed in a way that achieves minimal total memory bandwidth requirement (the sum of the signature size plus the public key size). This is possible due to the compactness of NTRU lattices. FN-DSA also offers very efficient signing and verification procedures. The main potential downsides of FN-DSA refer to the non-triviality of its algorithms and the need for floating point arithmetic support in order to support Gaussian-distributed random number sampling where the other lattice schemes use the less efficient but easier to support uniformly-distributed random number sampling.</t>
        <t>Implementers of FN-DSA need to be aware that FN-DSA signing is highly susceptible to side-channel attacks, unless constant-time 64-bit floating-point operations are used. This requirement is extremely platform-dependent, as noted in NIST's report.</t>
        <t>The performance characteristics of ML-DSA and FN-DSA may differ based on the specific implementation and hardware platform. Generally, ML-DSA is known for its relatively fast signature generation, while FN-DSA can provide more efficient signature verification. The choice may depend on whether the application requires more frequent signature generation or signature verification (See <xref target="LIBOQS"/>). For further clarity on the sizes and security levels, please refer to the tables in sections <xref target="RecSecurity"/> and <xref target="Comparisons"/>.</t>
        <t>SLH-DSA <xref target="SLH-DSA"/> utilizes the concept of stateless hash-based signatures, where each signature is unique and unrelated to any previous signature (as discussed in <xref target="hash-based"/>). This property eliminates the need for maintaining state information during the signing process. SLH-DSA was designed to sign up to 2^64 messages under a given key pair, and it offers three security levels. The parameters for each of the security levels were chosen to provide 128 bits of security, 192 bits of security, and 256 bits of security. SLH-DSA offers smaller public key sizes, larger signature sizes, slower signature generation, and slower verification when compared to ML-DSA and FN-DSA. SLH-DSA does not introduce a new hardness assumption beyond those inherent to the underlying hash functions. It builds upon established foundations in cryptography, making it a reliable and robust digital signature scheme for a post-quantum world.</t>
        <t>All of these algorithms, ML-DSA, FN-DSA, and SLH-DSA include two signature modes: pure mode, where the entire content is signed directly, and pre-hash mode, where a digest of the content is signed.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="details-of-xmss-and-lms">
        <name>Details of XMSS and LMS</name>
        <t>The eXtended Merkle Signature Scheme (XMSS) <xref target="RFC8391"/> and Hierarchical Signature Scheme (HSS) / Leighton-Micali Signature (LMS) <xref target="RFC8554"/> are stateful hash-based signature schemes, where the secret key state changes over time. In both schemes, reusing a secret key state compromises cryptographic security guarantees.</t>
        <t>XMSS and LMS can be used for signing a potentially large but fixed number of messages and the number of signing operations depends upon the size of the tree. XMSS and LMS provide cryptographic digital signatures without relying on the conjectured hardness of mathematical problems, instead leveraging the properties of cryptographic hash functions. Multi-tree XMSS and LMS (i.e., XMSS-MT and HSS respectively) use a hyper-tree based hierarchical approach with a Merkle tree at each level of the hierarchy. <xref target="RFC8391"/> describes both single-tree and multi-tree variants of XMSS, while <xref target="RFC8554"/> describes the Leighton-Micali One-Time Signature (LM-OTS) system as well as the LMS and HSS N-time signature systems. Comparison of XMSS and LMS is discussed in Section 10 of <xref target="RFC8554"/>.</t>
        <t>The number of tree layers in multi-tree XMSS and HSS provides a trade-off between signature size on the one side and key generation and signing speed on the other side. Increasing the number of layers reduces key generation time exponentially and signing time linearly at the cost of increasing the signature size linearly. HSS allows for customization of each subtree whereas XMSS-MT does not, electing instead to use the same structure for each subtree.</t>
        <t>Due to the complexities described above, the XMSS and LMS are not a suitable replacement for traditional signature schemes like RSA or ECDSA. Applications that expect a long lifetime of a signature, like firmware update or secure boot, are typical use cases where those schemes can be successfully applied.</t>
        <section anchor="lms-key-and-signature-sizes">
          <name>LMS Key and Signature Sizes</name>
          <t>The LMS scheme is characterized by four distinct parameter sets: the underlying hash function (SHA2-256 or SHAKE-256), the length of the digest (24 or 32 bytes), the LMS tree height parameter that controls a maximal number of signatures that the private key can produce, and the width of the Winternitz coefficients (see <xref target="RFC8554"/>, section 4.1) that can be used to trade-off signing time for signature size. Parameters can be mixed, providing 80 possible parameterizations of the scheme.</t>
          <t>The public (PK) and private (SK) key size depends on the length of the digest (M). The signature size depends on the digest, the Winternitz parameter (W), the LMS tree height (H), and the length of the digest. The table below provides key and signature sizes for parameterization with the digest size M=32 of the scheme.</t>
          <table>
            <thead>
              <tr>
                <th align="left">PK</th>
                <th align="left">SK</th>
                <th align="left">W</th>
                <th align="left">H=5</th>
                <th align="left">H=10</th>
                <th align="left">H=15</th>
                <th align="left">H=20</th>
                <th align="left">H=25</th>
              </tr>
            </thead>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td align="left">56</td>
                <td align="left">52</td>
                <td align="left">1</td>
                <td align="left">8684</td>
                <td align="left">8844</td>
                <td align="left">9004</td>
                <td align="left">9164</td>
                <td align="left">9324</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td align="left">56</td>
                <td align="left">52</td>
                <td align="left">2</td>
                <td align="left">4460</td>
                <td align="left">4620</td>
                <td align="left">4780</td>
                <td align="left">4940</td>
                <td align="left">5100</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td align="left">56</td>
                <td align="left">52</td>
                <td align="left">4</td>
                <td align="left">2348</td>
                <td align="left">2508</td>
                <td align="left">2668</td>
                <td align="left">2828</td>
                <td align="left">2988</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td align="left">56</td>
                <td align="left">52</td>
                <td align="left">8</td>
                <td align="left">1292</td>
                <td align="left">1452</td>
                <td align="left">1612</td>
                <td align="left">1772</td>
                <td align="left">1932</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="hash-then-sign">
        <name>Hash-then-Sign</name>
        <t>Within the hash-then-sign paradigm, the message is hashed before signing it. By pre-hashing, the onus of resistance to existential forgeries becomes heavily reliant on the collision-resistance of the hash function in use. The hash-then-sign paradigm has the ability to improve application performance by reducing the size of signed messages that need to be transmitted between application and cryptographic module, and making the signature size predictable and manageable. As a corollary, hashing remains mandatory even for short messages and assigns a further computational requirement onto the verifier. This makes the performance of hash-then-sign schemes more consistent, but not necessarily more efficient.</t>
        <t>Using a hash function to produce a fixed-size digest of a message ensures that the signature is compatible with a wide range of systems and protocols, regardless of the specific message size or format. Crucially for hardware security modules, Hash-then-Sign also significantly reduces the amount of data that needs to be transmitted and processed by a Hardware Security Module (HSM). Consider scenarios such as a networked HSM located in a different data center from the calling application or a smart card connected over a USB interface. In these cases, streaming a message that is megabytes or gigabytes long can result in notable network latency, on-device signing delays, or even depletion of available on-device memory.</t>
        <t>Note that the vast majority of Internet protocols that sign large messages already perform some form of content hashing at the protocol level, so this tends to be more of a concern with proprietary cryptographic protocols, and protocols from non-IETF standards bodies. Protocols like TLS 1.3 and DNSSEC use the Hash-then-Sign paradigm. In TLS 1.3 <xref target="RFC8446"/> CertificateVerify messages, the content that is covered under the signature includes the transcript hash output (Section 4.4.1 of <xref target="RFC8446"/>), while DNSSEC <xref target="RFC4033"/> uses it to provide origin authentication and integrity assurance services for DNS data. Similarly, the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) <xref target="RFC5652"/> includes a mandatory message digest step before invoking the signature algorithm.</t>
        <t>In the case of ML-DSA, it internally incorporates the necessary hash operations as part of its signing algorithm. ML-DSA directly takes the original message, applies a hash function internally, and then uses the resulting hash value for the signature generation process. In the case of SLH-DSA, it internally performs randomized message compression using a keyed hash function that can process arbitrary length messages. In the case of FN-DSA, the SHAKE-256 hash function is used as part of the signature process to derive a digest of the message being signed.</t>
        <t>Therefore, ML-DSA, FN-DSA, and SLH-DSA offer enhanced security over the traditional Hash-then-Sign paradigm because by incorporating dynamic key material into the message digest, a pre-computed hash collision on the message to be signed no longer yields a signature forgery. Applications requiring the performance and bandwidth benefits of Hash-then-Sign may still pre-hash at the protocol level prior to invoking ML-DSA, FN-DSA, or SLH-DSA, but protocol designers should be aware that doing so re-introduces the weakness that hash collisions directly yield signature forgeries. Signing the full un-digested message is recommended where applications can tolerate it.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="RecSecurity">
      <name>Recommendations for Security / Performance Tradeoffs</name>
      <t>The table below denotes the five security levels provided by NIST for PQC algorithms. Neither NIST nor the IETF make any specific recommendations about which security level to use. In general, protocols will include algorithm choices at multiple levels so that users can choose the level appropriate to their policies and data classification, similar to how organizations today choose which size of RSA key to use. The security levels are defined as requiring computational resources comparable to or greater than an attack on AES (128, 192 and 256) and SHA2/SHA3 algorithms, i.e., exhaustive key recovery for AES and optimal collision search for SHA2/SHA3. This information is a re-print of information provided in the NIST PQC project <xref target="NIST"/> as of time this document is published.</t>
      <table>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">PQ Security Level</th>
            <th align="left">AES/SHA(2/3) hardness</th>
            <th align="left">PQC Algorithm</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">AES-128 (exhaustive key recovery)</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-512, FN-DSA-512, SLH-DSA-SHA2/SHAKE-128f/s</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">2</td>
            <td align="left">SHA-256/SHA3-256 (collision search)</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-44</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">AES-192 (exhaustive key recovery)</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-768, ML-DSA-65, SLH-DSA-SHA2/SHAKE-192f/s</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">4</td>
            <td align="left">SHA-384/SHA3-384 (collision search)</td>
            <td align="left">No algorithm tested at this level</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">AES-256 (exhaustive key recovery)</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-1024, FN-DSA-1024, ML-DSA-87, SLH-DSA-SHA2/SHAKE-256f/s</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>The SLH-DSA-x-yf/s "f/s" in the above table denotes whether SLH-DSA is using SHAKE or SHA-2 as an underlying hash function "x" and whether it is the fast (f) or small (s) version for "y" bit AES security level. Refer to <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-cms-sphincs-plus"/> for further details on SLH-DSA algorithms.</t>
      <t>The following table discusses the signature size differences for similar SLH-DSA algorithm security levels with the "simple" version but for different categories i.e., (f) for fast verification and (s) for compactness/smaller. Both SHA-256 and SHAKE-256 parameterization output the same signature sizes, so both have been included.</t>
      <table>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">PQ Security Level</th>
            <th align="left">Algorithm</th>
            <th align="left">Public key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Private key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Signature size (in bytes)</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-128f</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
            <td align="left">17088</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-128s</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
            <td align="left">7856</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-192f</td>
            <td align="left">48</td>
            <td align="left">96</td>
            <td align="left">35664</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-192s</td>
            <td align="left">48</td>
            <td align="left">96</td>
            <td align="left">16224</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-256f</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
            <td align="left">128</td>
            <td align="left">49856</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">SLH-DSA-{SHA2,SHAKE}-256s</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
            <td align="left">128</td>
            <td align="left">29792</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>The following table discusses the impact of performance on different security levels in terms of private key sizes, public key sizes, and ciphertext/signature sizes.</t>
      <table>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">PQ Security Level</th>
            <th align="left">Algorithm</th>
            <th align="left">Public key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Private key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Ciphertext/signature size (in bytes)</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-512</td>
            <td align="left">800</td>
            <td align="left">1632</td>
            <td align="left">768</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">FN-DSA-512</td>
            <td align="left">897</td>
            <td align="left">1281</td>
            <td align="left">666</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">2</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-44</td>
            <td align="left">1312</td>
            <td align="left">2560</td>
            <td align="left">2420</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-768</td>
            <td align="left">1184</td>
            <td align="left">2400</td>
            <td align="left">1088</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-65</td>
            <td align="left">1952</td>
            <td align="left">4032</td>
            <td align="left">3309</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">FN-DSA-1024</td>
            <td align="left">1793</td>
            <td align="left">2305</td>
            <td align="left">1280</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-1024</td>
            <td align="left">1568</td>
            <td align="left">3168</td>
            <td align="left">1588</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-87</td>
            <td align="left">2592</td>
            <td align="left">4896</td>
            <td align="left">4627</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
    </section>
    <section anchor="Comparisons">
      <name>Comparing PQC KEMs/Signatures vs Traditional KEMs (KEXs)/Signatures</name>
      <t>This section provides two tables for comparison of different KEMs and signatures respectively, in the traditional and post-quantum scenarios. These tables focus on the secret key sizes, public key sizes, and ciphertext/signature sizes for the PQC algorithms and their traditional counterparts of similar security levels.</t>
      <t>The first table compares traditional vs. PQC KEMs in terms of security, public and private key sizes, and ciphertext sizes.</t>
      <table>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">PQ Security Level</th>
            <th align="left">Algorithm</th>
            <th align="left">Public key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Private key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Ciphertext size (in bytes)</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">Traditional</td>
            <td align="left">P256_HKDF_SHA-256</td>
            <td align="left">65</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">65</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">Traditional</td>
            <td align="left">P521_HKDF_SHA-512</td>
            <td align="left">133</td>
            <td align="left">66</td>
            <td align="left">133</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">Traditional</td>
            <td align="left">X25519_HKDF_SHA-256</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-512</td>
            <td align="left">800</td>
            <td align="left">1632</td>
            <td align="left">768</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-768</td>
            <td align="left">1184</td>
            <td align="left">2400</td>
            <td align="left">1088</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">ML-KEM-1024</td>
            <td align="left">1568</td>
            <td align="left">3168</td>
            <td align="left">1568</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>The next table compares traditional vs. PQC signature schemes in terms of security, public, private key sizes, and signature sizes.</t>
      <table>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">PQ Security Level</th>
            <th align="left">Algorithm</th>
            <th align="left">Public key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Private key size (in bytes)</th>
            <th align="left">Signature size (in bytes)</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">Traditional</td>
            <td align="left">RSA2048</td>
            <td align="left">256</td>
            <td align="left">256</td>
            <td align="left">256</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">Traditional</td>
            <td align="left">ECDSA-P256</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">64</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">FN-DSA-512</td>
            <td align="left">897</td>
            <td align="left">1281</td>
            <td align="left">666</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">2</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-44</td>
            <td align="left">1312</td>
            <td align="left">2560</td>
            <td align="left">2420</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-65</td>
            <td align="left">1952</td>
            <td align="left">4032</td>
            <td align="left">3309</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">FN-DSA-1024</td>
            <td align="left">1793</td>
            <td align="left">2305</td>
            <td align="left">1280</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">ML-DSA-87</td>
            <td align="left">2592</td>
            <td align="left">4896</td>
            <td align="left">4627</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>As is clear from the above table, PQC KEMs and signature schemes typically have significantly larger keys and ciphertexts/signatures than their traditional counterparts. These increased key and signatures sizes could introduce problems in protocols. As an example, IKEv2 uses UDP as the transport for its messages. One challenge with integrating a PQC KEM into IKEv2 is that IKE fragmentation cannot be utilized in the initial IKE_SA_INIT exchange. To address this issue, <xref target="RFC9242"/> introduces a solution by defining a new exchange called the "Intermediate Exchange" which can be fragmented using the IKE fragmentation mechanism. <xref target="RFC9370"/> then uses this Intermediate Exchange to carry out the PQC key exchange after the initial IKEv2 exchange and before the IKE_AUTH exchange. Another example from <xref target="SP-1800-38C"/> section 6.3.3 shows that increased key and signature sizes cause protocol key exchange messages to span more network packets, therefore it results in a higher total loss probability per packet. In lossy network conditions, this may increase the latency of the key exchange.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="post-quantum-and-traditional-hybrid-schemes">
      <name>Post-Quantum and Traditional Hybrid Schemes</name>
      <t>The migration to PQC is unique in the history of modern digital cryptography in that neither the traditional algorithms nor the post-quantum algorithms are fully trusted to protect data for the required lifetimes. The traditional algorithms, such as RSA and ECDH, will fall to quantum cryptanalysis, while the post-quantum algorithms face uncertainty about the underlying mathematics, compliance issues, unknown vulnerabilities, and hardware and software implementations that have not had sufficient maturing time to rule out traditional cryptanalytic attacks and implementation bugs.</t>
      <t>During the transition from traditional to post-quantum algorithms, there may be a desire or a requirement for protocols that use both algorithm types. <xref target="I-D.ietf-pquip-pqt-hybrid-terminology"/> defines the terminology for the post-quantum and traditional (PQ/T) hybrid schemes.</t>
      <section anchor="pqt-hybrid-confidentiality">
        <name>PQ/T Hybrid Confidentiality</name>
        <t>The PQ/T Hybrid Confidentiality property can be used to protect from a "harvest now, decrypt later" attack described in <xref target="timeline"/>, which refers to an attacker collecting encrypted data now and waiting for quantum computers to become powerful enough to break the encryption later. Two types of hybrid key agreement schemes are discussed below.</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Concatenated hybrid key agreement scheme: The final shared secret that will be used as an input of the key derivation function is the result of the concatenation of the secrets established with each key agreement scheme. For example, in <xref target="I-D.ietf-tls-hybrid-design"/>, the client uses the TLS supported groups extension to advertise support for a PQ/T hybrid scheme, and the server can select this group if it supports the scheme. The hybrid-aware client and server establish a hybrid secret by concatenating the two shared secrets, which is used as the shared secret in the existing TLS 1.3 key schedule.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Cascaded hybrid key agreement scheme: The final shared secret is computed by applying as many iterations of the key derivation function as the number of key agreement schemes composing the hybrid key agreement scheme. For example, <xref target="RFC9370"/> extends the Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2) to allow one or more PQC algorithms in addition to the traditional algorithm to derive the final IKE SA keys using the cascade method as explained in Section 2.2.2 of <xref target="RFC9370"/>.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Various instantiations of these two types of hybrid key agreement schemes have been explored. One must be careful when selecting which hybrid scheme to use. The chosen scheme for protocols like TLS 1.3 <xref target="I-D.ietf-tls-hybrid-design"/> has IND-CCA2 robustness, that is IND-CCA2 security is guaranteed for the scheme as long as at least one of the component algorithms is IND-CCA2 secure.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="pqt-hybrid-authentication">
        <name>PQ/T Hybrid Authentication</name>
        <t>The PQ/T hybrid authentication property can be utilized in scenarios where an on-path attacker possesses network devices equipped with CRQCs, capable of breaking traditional authentication protocols, or where an attacker can attack long-lived authenticated data such as CA certificates or signed software images. This property ensures authentication through a PQ/T hybrid scheme or a PQ/T hybrid protocol, as long as at least one component algorithm remains secure to provide the intended security level. For example, a PQ/T hybrid certificate <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-pq-composite-sigs"/>can be employed to facilitate a PQ/T hybrid authentication protocol. However, a PQ/T hybrid authentication protocol does not need to use a PQ/T hybrid certificate; separate certificates could be used for individual component algorithms <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-cert-binding-for-multi-auth"/>. When separate certificates are used, it may be possible for attackers to take them apart or put them together in unexpected ways, including enabling cross-protocol attacks. The exact risks this presents are highly dependent on the protocol and use case, so a full security analysis is needed. Best practices for ensuring that pairs of certificates are only used as intended are discussed in more detail in Sections 12.3.2 and 12.3.3 of this document.</t>
        <t>The frequency and duration of system upgrades and the time when CRQCs will become widely available need to be weighed to determine whether and when to support the PQ/T Hybrid Authentication property.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="hybrid-cryptographic-algorithm-combinations-considerations-and-approaches">
        <name>Hybrid Cryptographic Algorithm Combinations: Considerations and Approaches</name>
        <section anchor="hybrid-cryptographic-combinations">
          <name>Hybrid Cryptographic Combinations</name>
          <t>It is also possible to use more than two algorithms together in a hybrid scheme, with various methods for combining them. For post-quantum transition purposes, the combination of a post-quantum algorithm with a traditional algorithm is the most straightforward and recommended. The use of multiple post-quantum algorithms with different mathematical bases has also been considered. Combining algorithms in a way that requires both to be used together ensures stronger security, while combinations that do not require both will sacrifice security but offer other benefits like backwards compatibility and crypto agility. Including a traditional key alongside a post-quantum key often has minimal bandwidth impact.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="composite-keys-in-hybrid-schemes">
          <name>Composite Keys in Hybrid Schemes</name>
          <t>When combining keys in an "and" mode, it may make more sense to consider them to be a single composite key, instead of two keys. This generally requires fewer changes to various components of PKI ecosystems, many of which are not prepared to deal with two keys or dual signatures. To those protocol- or application-layer parsers, a "composite" algorithm composed of two "component" algorithms is simply a new algorithm, and support for adding new algorithms generally already exists. Treating multiple "component" keys as a single "composite" key also has security advantages such as preventing cross-protocol reuse of the individual component keys and guarantees about revoking or retiring all component keys together at the same time, especially if the composite is treated as a single object all the way down into the cryptographic module.</t>
          <t>All that needs to be done is to standardize the formats of how the two keys from the two algorithms are combined into a single data structure, and how the two resulting signatures or KEMs are combined into a single signature or KEM. The answer can be as simple as concatenation, if the lengths are fixed or easily determined. At the time this document is published, security research is ongoing as to the security properties of concatenation-based composite signatures and KEMs vs more sophisticated signature and KEM combiners, and in which protocol contexts those simpler combiners are sufficient.</t>
          <t>One last consideration is the specific pairs of algorithms that can be combined. A recent trend in protocols is to only allow a small number of "known good" configurations that make sense, often referred to in cryptography as a "ciphersuite", instead of allowing arbitrary combinations of individual configuration choices that may interact in dangerous ways. The current consensus is that the same approach should be followed for combining cryptographic algorithms, and that "known good" pairs should be explicitly listed ("explicit composite"), instead of just allowing arbitrary combinations of any two cryptographic algorithms ("generic composite").</t>
          <t>The same considerations apply when using multiple certificates to transport a pair of related keys for the same subject. Exactly how two certificates should be managed in order to avoid some of the pitfalls mentioned above is still an active area of investigation. Using two certificates keeps the certificate tooling simple and straightforward, but in the end simply moves the problems with requiring that both certs are intended to be used as a pair, must produce two signatures which must be carried separately, and both must validate, to the certificate management layer, where addressing these concerns in a robust way can be difficult.</t>
          <t>At least one scheme has been proposed that allows the pair of certificates to exist as a single certificate when being issued and managed, but dynamically split into individual certificates when needed (<xref target="I-D.draft-bonnell-lamps-chameleon-certs"/>.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="key-reuse-in-hybrid-schemes">
          <name>Key Reuse in Hybrid Schemes</name>
          <t>An important security note, particularly when using hybrid signature keys, but also to a lesser extent hybrid KEM keys, is key reuse. In traditional cryptography, problems can occur with so-called "cross-protocol attacks" when the same key can be used for multiple protocols; for example signing TLS handshakes and signing S/MIME emails. While it is not best-practice to reuse keys within the same protocol, for example using the same key for multiple S/MIME certificates for the same user, it is not generally catastrophic for security. However, key reuse becomes a large security problem within hybrids.</t>
          <t>Consider an {RSA, ML-DSA} hybrid key where the RSA key also appears within a single-algorithm certificate. In this case, an attacker could perform a "stripping attack" where they take some piece of data signed with the {RSA, ML-DSA} key, remove the ML-DSA signature and present the data as if it was intended for the RSA only certificate. This leads to a set of security definitions called "non-separability properties", which refers to how well the signature scheme resists various complexities of downgrade / stripping attacks <xref target="I-D.draft-ietf-pquip-hybrid-signature-spectrums"/>. Therefore, it is recommended that implementers either reuse the entire hybrid key as a whole, or perform fresh key generation of all component keys per usage, and must not take an existing key and reuse it as a component of a hybrid.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="jurisdictional-fragmentation">
          <name>Jurisdictional Fragmentation</name>
          <t>Another potential application of hybrids bears mentioning, even though it is not directly PQC-related. That is using hybrids to navigate inter-jurisdictional cryptographic connections. Traditional cryptography is already fragmented by jurisdiction: consider that while most jurisdictions support Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman, those in the United States will prefer the NIST curves while those in Germany will prefer the Brainpool curves. China, Russia, and other jurisdictions have their own national cryptography standards. This situation of fragmented global cryptography standards is unlikely to improve with PQC. If "and" mode hybrids become standardized for the reasons mentioned above, then one could imagine leveraging them to create "ciphersuites" in which a single cryptographic operation simultaneously satisfies the cryptographic requirements of both endpoints.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="future-directions-and-ongoing-research">
          <name>Future Directions and Ongoing Research</name>
          <t>Many aspects of hybrid cryptography are still under investigation. LAMPS WG at IETF is actively exploring the security properties of these combinations, and future standards will reflect the evolving consensus on these issues.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <section anchor="cryptanalysis">
        <name>Cryptanalysis</name>
        <t>Traditional cryptanalysis exploits weaknesses in algorithm design, mathematical vulnerabilities, or implementation flaws, that are exploitable with classical (i.e. non-quantum) hardware, whereas quantum cryptanalysis harnesses the power of CRQCs to solve specific mathematical problems more efficiently. Another form of quantum cryptanalysis is "quantum side-channel" attacks. In such attacks, a device under threat is directly connected to a quantum computer, which then injects entangled or superimposed data streams to exploit hardware that lacks protection against quantum side-channels. Both pose threats to the security of cryptographic algorithms, including those used in PQC. Developing and adopting new cryptographic algorithms resilient against these threats is crucial for ensuring long-term security in the face of advancing cryptanalysis techniques.</t>
        <t>Recent attacks on the side-channel implementations using deep learning based power analysis have also shown that one needs to be cautious while implementing the required PQC algorithms in hardware. Two of the most recent works include one attack on ML-KEM <xref target="KyberSide"/> and one attack on Saber <xref target="SaberSide"/>. An evolving threat landscape points to the fact that lattice based cryptography is indeed more vulnerable to side-channel attacks as in <xref target="SideCh"/>, <xref target="LatticeSide"/>. Consequently, there were some mitigation techniques for side channel attacks that have been proposed as in <xref target="Mitigate1"/>, <xref target="Mitigate2"/>, and <xref target="Mitigate3"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="cryptographic-agility">
        <name>Cryptographic Agility</name>
        <t>Cryptographic agility is recommended for both traditional and quantum cryptanalysis as it enables organizations to adapt to emerging threats, adopt stronger algorithms, comply with standards, and plan for long-term security in the face of evolving cryptanalytic techniques and the advent of CRQCs.</t>
        <t>Several PQC schemes are available that need to be tested; cryptography experts around the world are pushing for the best possible solutions, and the first standards that will ease the introduction of PQC are being prepared. It is of paramount importance and a call for imminent action for organizations, bodies, and enterprises to start evaluating their cryptographic agility, assess the complexity of implementing PQC into their products, processes, and systems, and develop a migration plan that achieves their security goals to the best possible extent.</t>
        <t>An important and often overlooked step in achieving cryptographic agility is maintaining a cryptographic inventory. Modern software stacks incorporate cryptography in numerous places, making it challenging to identify all instances. Therefore, cryptographic agility and inventory management take two major forms: First, application developers responsible for software maintenance should actively search for instances of hard-coded cryptographic algorithms within applications. When possible, they should design the choice of algorithm to be dynamic, based on application configuration. Second, administrators, policy officers, and compliance teams should take note of any instances where an application exposes cryptographic configurations. These instances should be managed either through organization-wide written cryptographic policies or automated cryptographic policy systems.</t>
        <t>Numerous commercial solutions are available for both detecting hard-coded cryptographic algorithms in source code and compiled binaries, as well as providing cryptographic policy management control planes for enterprise and production environments.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="hybrid-key-exchange-and-signatures-bridging-the-gap-between-post-quantum-and-traditional-cryptography">
        <name>Hybrid Key Exchange and Signatures: Bridging the Gap Between Post-Quantum and Traditional Cryptography</name>
        <t>Post-quantum algorithms selected for standardization are relatively new and they have not been subject to the same depth of study as traditional algorithms. PQC implementations will also be new and therefore more likely to contain implementation bugs than the battle-tested crypto implementations that are relied on today. In addition, certain deployments may need to retain traditional algorithms due to regulatory constraints, for example FIPS <xref target="SP-800-56C"/> or PCI compliance. Hybrid key exchange is recommended to enhance security against the "harvest now, decrypt later" attack. Additionally, hybrid signatures provide for time to react in the case of the announcement of a devastating attack against any one algorithm, while not fully abandoning traditional cryptosystems.</t>
        <t>Hybrid key exchange performs both a classical and a post-quantum key exchange in parallel. It provides security redundancy against potential weaknesses in PQ algorithms, allows for a gradual transition of trust in PQC algorithms, and, in backward-compatible designs, enables gradual adoption without breaking compatibility with existing systems. For instance, in TLS 1.3, a hybrid key exchange can combine a widely supported classical algorithm, such as X25519, with a post-quantum algorithm like ML-KEM. This allows legacy clients to continue using the classical algorithm while enabling upgraded clients to proceed with hybrid key exchange. In contrast, overhead-spreading hybrid designs focus on reducing the PQ overhead. For example, approaches like those described in <xref target="I-D.hale-mls-combiner"/> amortize PQ costs by selectively applying PQ updates in key exchange processes, allowing systems to balance security and efficiency. This strategy ensures a post-quantum secure channel while keeping the overhead manageable, making it particularly suitable for constrained environments.</t>
        <t>While some hybrid key exchange options introduce additional computational and bandwidth overhead, the impact of traditional key exchange algorithms (e.g., key size) is typically small, helping to keep the overall increase in resource usage manageable for most systems. In highly constrained environments, however, those hybrid key exchange protocols may be impractical due to their higher resource requirements compared to pure post-quantum or traditional key exchange approaches. However, some hybrid key exchange designs distribute the PQC overhead, making them more suitable for constrained environments. The choice of hybrid key exchange design depends on the specific system requirements and use case, so the appropriate approach may vary.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="caution-ciphertext-commitment-in-kem-vs-dh">
        <name>Caution: Ciphertext commitment in KEM vs DH</name>
        <t>The ciphertext generated by a KEM is not necessarily directly linked to the shared secret it produces. KEMs allow for multiple ciphertexts to encapsulate the same shared secret, which enables flexibility in key management without enforcing a strict one-to-one correspondence between ciphertexts and shared secrets. This allows for secret reuse across different recipients, sessions, or operational contexts without the need for new secrets for each use, simplifying key distribution and reducing computational overhead. In contrast, cryptographic schemes like Diffie-Hellman inherently link the public key to the derived shared secret, meaning any change in the public key results in a different shared secret.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document has no IANA considerations.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="further-reading-resources">
      <name>Further Reading &amp; Resources</name>
      <t>A good book on modern cryptography is Serious Cryptography, 2nd Edition, by Jean-Philippe Aumasson, ISBN 9781718503847.</t>
      <t>The Open Quantum Safe (OQS) Project <xref target="OQS"/> is an open-source project that aims to support the transition to quantum-resistant cryptography.</t>
      <t>The IETF's PQUIP Working Group <xref target="PQUIP-WG"/> maintains a list of PQC-related protocol work within the IETF.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
      <name>Informative References</name>
      <reference anchor="Grover-search">
        <front>
          <title>C. Zalka, “Grover’s quantum searching algorithm is optimal,” Physical Review A, vol. 60, pp. 2746-2751, 1999.</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Threat-Report" target="https://globalriskinstitute.org/publications/quantum-threat-timeline-report-2020/">
        <front>
          <title>Quantum Threat Timeline Report 2020</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="QC-DNS" target="https://www.icann.org/octo-031-en.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Quantum Computing and the DNS</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="NIST" target="https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-quantum-cryptography/post-quantum-cryptography-standardization">
        <front>
          <title>Post-Quantum Cryptography Standardization</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Cloudflare" target="https://blog.cloudflare.com/nist-post-quantum-surprise/">
        <front>
          <title>NIST’s pleasant post-quantum surprise</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="ML-KEM" target="https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/NIST.FIPS.203.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>FIPS-203: Module-Lattice-based Key-Encapsulation Mechanism Standard</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="ML-DSA" target="https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/NIST.FIPS.204.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>FIPS-204: Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Standard</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SLH-DSA" target="https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/NIST.FIPS.205.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>FIPS-205: Stateless Hash-Based Digital Signature Standard</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="FN-DSA" target="https://falcon-sign.info/">
        <front>
          <title>Fast Fourier lattice-based compact signatures over NTRU</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RSA" target="https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/359340.359342">
        <front>
          <title>A Method for Obtaining Digital Signatures and Public-Key Cryptosystems+</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="CS01" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2001/108">
        <front>
          <title>Design and Analysis of Practical Public-Key Encryption Schemes Secure against Adaptive Chosen Ciphertext Attack</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="BHK09" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2009/418">
        <front>
          <title>Subtleties in the Definition of IND-CCA: When and How Should Challenge-Decryption be Disallowed?</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="GMR88" target="https://people.csail.mit.edu/silvio/Selected%20Scientific%20Papers/Digital%20Signatures/A_Digital_Signature_Scheme_Secure_Against_Adaptive_Chosen-Message_Attack.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>A digital signature scheme secure against adaptive chosen-message attacks.</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="PQCAPI" target="https://csrc.nist.gov/CSRC/media/Projects/Post-Quantum-Cryptography/documents/example-files/api-notes.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>PQC - API notes</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RSA8HRS" target="https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.09749">
        <front>
          <title>How to factor 2048 bit RSA integers in 8 hours using 20 million noisy qubits</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RSA10SC" target="https://www.quintessencelabs.com/blog/breaking-rsa-encryption-update-state-art">
        <front>
          <title>Breaking RSA Encryption - an Update on the State-of-the-Art</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RSAShor" target="https://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0205095.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Circuit for Shor’s algorithm using 2n+3 qubits</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="LIBOQS" target="https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/liboqs">
        <front>
          <title>LibOQS - Open Quantum Safe</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="KyberSide" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2022/1452">
        <front>
          <title>A Side-Channel Attack on a Hardware Implementation of CRYSTALS-Kyber</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SaberSide" target="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13389-023-00315-3">
        <front>
          <title>A side-channel attack on a masked and shuffled software implementation of Saber</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SideCh" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2022/919">
        <front>
          <title>Side-Channel Attacks on Lattice-Based KEMs Are Not Prevented by Higher-Order Masking</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="LatticeSide" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/948">
        <front>
          <title>Generic Side-channel attacks on CCA-secure lattice-based PKE and KEM schemes</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Mitigate1" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2022/873">
        <front>
          <title>POLKA: Towards Leakage-Resistant Post-Quantum CCA-Secure Public Key Encryption</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Mitigate2" target="https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9855226">
        <front>
          <title>Leakage-Resilient Certificate-Based Authenticated Key Exchange Protocol</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Mitigate3" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2022/916">
        <front>
          <title>Post-Quantum Authenticated Encryption against Chosen-Ciphertext Side-Channel Attacks</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="CNSA2-0" target="https://media.defense.gov/2022/Sep/07/2003071834/-1/-1/0/CSA_CNSA_2.0_ALGORITHMS_.PDF">
        <front>
          <title>Announcing the Commercial National Security Algorithm Suite 2.0</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="LattFail1" target="https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_19#chapter-info">
        <front>
          <title>Decryption Failure Attacks on IND-CCA Secure Lattice-Based Schemes</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="LattFail2" target="https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-45727-3_1">
        <front>
          <title>(One) Failure Is Not an Option: Bootstrapping the Search for Failures in Lattice-Based Encryption Schemes.</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="BSI-PQC" target="https://www.bsi.bund.de/SharedDocs/Downloads/EN/BSI/Publications/Brochure/quantum-safe-cryptography.html?nn=916626">
        <front>
          <title>Quantum-safe cryptography – fundamentals, current developments and recommendations</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date year="2022" month="May"/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="PQRSA" target="https://cr.yp.to/papers/pqrsa-20170419.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Post-quantum RSA</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date year="2017" month="April"/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SP-800-56C" target="https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/SpecialPublications/NIST.SP.800-56Cr2.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Recommendation for Key-Derivation Methods in Key-Establishment Schemes</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="Lyu09" target="https://www.iacr.org/archive/asiacrypt2009/59120596/59120596.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>V. Lyubashevsky, “Fiat-Shamir With Aborts: Applications to Lattice and Factoring-Based Signatures“, ASIACRYPT 2009</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SP-1800-38C" target="https://www.nccoe.nist.gov/sites/default/files/2023-12/pqc-migration-nist-sp-1800-38c-preliminary-draft.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>Migration to Post-Quantum Cryptography Quantum Readiness: Quantum-Resistant Cryptography Technology Interoperability and Performance Report</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date/>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="KEEPINGUP" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/1933">
        <front>
          <title>Keeping Up with the KEMs: Stronger Security Notions for KEMs and automated analysis of KEM-based protocols</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="NISTFINAL" target="https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2024/08/nist-releases-first-3-finalized-post-quantum-encryption-standards">
        <front>
          <title>NIST Releases First 3 Finalized Post-Quantum Encryption Standards</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="ANSSI" target="https://cyber.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/document/follow_up_position_paper_on_post_quantum_cryptography.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>ANSSI views on the Post-Quantum Cryptography transition</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="HQC" target="http://pqc-hqc.org/">
        <front>
          <title>HQC</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="BIKE" target="http://pqc-hqc.org/">
        <front>
          <title>BIKE</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="ClassicMcEliece" target="https://classic.mceliece.org/">
        <front>
          <title>Classic McEliece</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SIKE" target="https://sike.org/">
        <front>
          <title>SIKE – Supersingular Isogeny Key Encapsulation</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="SIDH-Attack" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2022/975.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>An efficient key recovery attack on SIDH</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="PQUIP-WG" target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/pquip/documents/">
        <front>
          <title>Post-Quantum Use In Protocols (pquip) Working Group</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="OQS" target="https://openquantumsafe.org/">
        <front>
          <title>Open Quantum Safe Project</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="NTRU" target="https://ntru.org/index.shtml">
        <front>
          <title>NTRU</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="FrodoKEM" target="https://frodokem.org/">
        <front>
          <title>FrodoKEM</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="CRQCThreat" target="https://globalriskinstitute.org/publication/2024-quantum-threat-timeline-report/">
        <front>
          <title>CRQCThreat</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="QuantSide" target="https://arxiv.org/pdf/2304.03315">
        <front>
          <title>QuantSide</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="AddSig" target="https://csrc.nist.gov/Projects/pqc-dig-sig/standardization">
        <front>
          <title>AddSig</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="BPQS" target="https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/658.pdf">
        <front>
          <title>BPQS</title>
          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>
          <date>n.d.</date>
        </front>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.irtf-cfrg-bbs-signatures">
        <front>
          <title>The BBS Signature Scheme</title>
          <author fullname="Tobias Looker" initials="T." surname="Looker">
            <organization>MATTR</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Vasilis Kalos" initials="V." surname="Kalos">
            <organization>MATTR</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Andrew Whitehead" initials="A." surname="Whitehead">
            <organization>Portage</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Mike Lodder" initials="M." surname="Lodder">
            <organization>CryptID</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="3" month="March" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document describes the BBS Signature scheme, a secure, multi-
   message digital signature protocol, supporting proving knowledge of a
   signature while selectively disclosing any subset of the signed
   messages.  Concretely, the scheme allows for signing multiple
   messages whilst producing a single, constant size, digital signature.
   Additionally, the possessor of a BBS signatures is able to create
   zero-knowledge, proofs of knowledge of a signature, while selectively
   disclosing subsets of the signed messages.  Being zero-knowledge, the
   BBS proofs do not reveal any information about the undisclosed
   messages or the signature itself, while at the same time,
   guaranteeing the authenticity and integrity of the disclosed
   messages.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-irtf-cfrg-bbs-signatures-08"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC6090">
        <front>
          <title>Fundamental Elliptic Curve Cryptography Algorithms</title>
          <author fullname="D. McGrew" initials="D." surname="McGrew"/>
          <author fullname="K. Igoe" initials="K." surname="Igoe"/>
          <author fullname="M. Salter" initials="M." surname="Salter"/>
          <date month="February" year="2011"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This note describes the fundamental algorithms of Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) as they were defined in some seminal references from 1994 and earlier. These descriptions may be useful for implementing the fundamental algorithms without using any of the specialized methods that were developed in following years. Only elliptic curves defined over fields of characteristic greater than three are in scope; these curves are those used in Suite B. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6090"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6090"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC8391">
        <front>
          <title>XMSS: eXtended Merkle Signature Scheme</title>
          <author fullname="A. Huelsing" initials="A." surname="Huelsing"/>
          <author fullname="D. Butin" initials="D." surname="Butin"/>
          <author fullname="S. Gazdag" initials="S." surname="Gazdag"/>
          <author fullname="J. Rijneveld" initials="J." surname="Rijneveld"/>
          <author fullname="A. Mohaisen" initials="A." surname="Mohaisen"/>
          <date month="May" year="2018"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This note describes the eXtended Merkle Signature Scheme (XMSS), a hash-based digital signature system that is based on existing descriptions in scientific literature. This note specifies Winternitz One-Time Signature Plus (WOTS+), a one-time signature scheme; XMSS, a single-tree scheme; and XMSS^MT, a multi-tree variant of XMSS. Both XMSS and XMSS^MT use WOTS+ as a main building block. XMSS provides cryptographic digital signatures without relying on the conjectured hardness of mathematical problems. Instead, it is proven that it only relies on the properties of cryptographic hash functions. XMSS provides strong security guarantees and is even secure when the collision resistance of the underlying hash function is broken. It is suitable for compact implementations, is relatively simple to implement, and naturally resists side-channel attacks. Unlike most other signature systems, hash-based signatures can so far withstand known attacks using quantum computers.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8391"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8391"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC8554">
        <front>
          <title>Leighton-Micali Hash-Based Signatures</title>
          <author fullname="D. McGrew" initials="D." surname="McGrew"/>
          <author fullname="M. Curcio" initials="M." surname="Curcio"/>
          <author fullname="S. Fluhrer" initials="S." surname="Fluhrer"/>
          <date month="April" year="2019"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This note describes a digital-signature system based on cryptographic hash functions, following the seminal work in this area of Lamport, Diffie, Winternitz, and Merkle, as adapted by Leighton and Micali in 1995. It specifies a one-time signature scheme and a general signature scheme. These systems provide asymmetric authentication without using large integer mathematics and can achieve a high security level. They are suitable for compact implementations, are relatively simple to implement, and are naturally resistant to side-channel attacks. Unlike many other signature systems, hash-based signatures would still be secure even if it proves feasible for an attacker to build a quantum computer.</t>
            <t>This document is a product of the Crypto Forum Research Group (CFRG) in the IRTF. This has been reviewed by many researchers, both in the research group and outside of it. The Acknowledgements section lists many of them.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8554"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8554"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC9180">
        <front>
          <title>Hybrid Public Key Encryption</title>
          <author fullname="R. Barnes" initials="R." surname="Barnes"/>
          <author fullname="K. Bhargavan" initials="K." surname="Bhargavan"/>
          <author fullname="B. Lipp" initials="B." surname="Lipp"/>
          <author fullname="C. Wood" initials="C." surname="Wood"/>
          <date month="February" year="2022"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This document describes a scheme for hybrid public key encryption (HPKE). This scheme provides a variant of public key encryption of arbitrary-sized plaintexts for a recipient public key. It also includes three authenticated variants, including one that authenticates possession of a pre-shared key and two optional ones that authenticate possession of a key encapsulation mechanism (KEM) private key. HPKE works for any combination of an asymmetric KEM, key derivation function (KDF), and authenticated encryption with additional data (AEAD) encryption function. Some authenticated variants may not be supported by all KEMs. We provide instantiations of the scheme using widely used and efficient primitives, such as Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key agreement, HMAC-based key derivation function (HKDF), and SHA2.</t>
            <t>This document is a product of the Crypto Forum Research Group (CFRG) in the IRTF.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9180"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9180"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-ietf-lake-edhoc">
        <front>
          <title>Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC)</title>
          <author fullname="Göran Selander" initials="G." surname="Selander">
            <organization>Ericsson AB</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="John Preuß Mattsson" initials="J. P." surname="Mattsson">
            <organization>Ericsson AB</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Francesca Palombini" initials="F." surname="Palombini">
            <organization>Ericsson AB</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="22" month="January" year="2024"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document specifies Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC), a
   very compact and lightweight authenticated Diffie-Hellman key
   exchange with ephemeral keys.  EDHOC provides mutual authentication,
   forward secrecy, and identity protection.  EDHOC is intended for
   usage in constrained scenarios and a main use case is to establish an
   OSCORE security context.  By reusing COSE for cryptography, CBOR for
   encoding, and CoAP for transport, the additional code size can be
   kept very low.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-lake-edhoc-23"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-ounsworth-cfrg-kem-combiners">
        <front>
          <title>Combiner function for hybrid key encapsulation mechanisms (Hybrid KEMs)</title>
          <author fullname="Mike Ounsworth" initials="M." surname="Ounsworth">
            <organization>Entrust Limited</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Aron Wussler" initials="A." surname="Wussler">
            <organization>Proton AG</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Stavros Kousidis" initials="S." surname="Kousidis">
            <organization>BSI</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="31" month="January" year="2024"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   The migration to post-quantum cryptography often calls for performing
   multiple key encapsulations in parallel and then combining their
   outputs to derive a single shared secret.

   This document defines a comprehensible and easy to implement Keccak-
   based KEM combiner to join an arbitrary number of key shares, that is
   compatible with NIST SP 800-56Cr2 [SP800-56C] when viewed as a key
   derivation function.  The combiners defined here are practical split-
   key PRFs and are CCA-secure as long as at least one of the ingredient
   KEMs is.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ounsworth-cfrg-kem-combiners-05"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-connolly-cfrg-xwing-kem">
        <front>
          <title>X-Wing: general-purpose hybrid post-quantum KEM</title>
          <author fullname="Deirdre Connolly" initials="D." surname="Connolly">
            <organization>SandboxAQ</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Peter Schwabe" initials="P." surname="Schwabe">
            <organization>MPI-SP &amp; Radboud University</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Bas Westerbaan" initials="B." surname="Westerbaan">
            <organization>Cloudflare</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="21" month="October" year="2024"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This memo defines X-Wing, a general-purpose post-quantum/traditional
   hybrid key encapsulation mechanism (PQ/T KEM) built on X25519 and ML-
   KEM-768.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-connolly-cfrg-xwing-kem-06"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-lamps-dilithium-certificates">
        <front>
          <title>Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure: Algorithm Identifiers for ML-DSA</title>
          <author fullname="Jake Massimo" initials="J." surname="Massimo">
            <organization>AWS</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Panos Kampanakis" initials="P." surname="Kampanakis">
            <organization>AWS</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Sean Turner" initials="S." surname="Turner">
            <organization>sn3rd</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Bas Westerbaan" initials="B." surname="Westerbaan">
            <organization>Cloudflare</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="25" month="April" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   Digital signatures are used within X.509 certificates, Certificate
   Revocation Lists (CRLs), and to sign messages.  This document
   describes the conventions for using FIPS 204, the Module-Lattice-
   Based Digital Signature Algorithm (ML-DSA) in Internet X.509
   certificates and certificate revocation lists.  The conventions for
   the associated signatures, subject public keys, and private key are
   also described.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-lamps-dilithium-certificates-08"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC8446">
        <front>
          <title>The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3</title>
          <author fullname="E. Rescorla" initials="E." surname="Rescorla"/>
          <date month="August" year="2018"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This document specifies version 1.3 of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol. TLS allows client/server applications to communicate over the Internet in a way that is designed to prevent eavesdropping, tampering, and message forgery.</t>
            <t>This document updates RFCs 5705 and 6066, and obsoletes RFCs 5077, 5246, and 6961. This document also specifies new requirements for TLS 1.2 implementations.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8446"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8446"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC4033">
        <front>
          <title>DNS Security Introduction and Requirements</title>
          <author fullname="R. Arends" initials="R." surname="Arends"/>
          <author fullname="R. Austein" initials="R." surname="Austein"/>
          <author fullname="M. Larson" initials="M." surname="Larson"/>
          <author fullname="D. Massey" initials="D." surname="Massey"/>
          <author fullname="S. Rose" initials="S." surname="Rose"/>
          <date month="March" year="2005"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>The Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC) add data origin authentication and data integrity to the Domain Name System. This document introduces these extensions and describes their capabilities and limitations. This document also discusses the services that the DNS security extensions do and do not provide. Last, this document describes the interrelationships between the documents that collectively describe DNSSEC. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4033"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4033"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC5652">
        <front>
          <title>Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)</title>
          <author fullname="R. Housley" initials="R." surname="Housley"/>
          <date month="September" year="2009"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This document describes the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS). This syntax is used to digitally sign, digest, authenticate, or encrypt arbitrary message content. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="STD" value="70"/>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5652"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5652"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-lamps-cms-sphincs-plus">
        <front>
          <title>Use of the SLH-DSA Signature Algorithm in the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)</title>
          <author fullname="Russ Housley" initials="R." surname="Housley">
            <organization>Vigil Security, LLC</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Scott Fluhrer" initials="S." surname="Fluhrer">
            <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Panos Kampanakis" initials="P." surname="Kampanakis">
            <organization>Amazon Web Services</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Bas Westerbaan" initials="B." surname="Westerbaan">
            <organization>Cloudflare</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="13" month="January" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   SLH-DSA is a stateless hash-based signature scheme.  This document
   specifies the conventions for using the SLH-DSA signature algorithm
   with the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS).  In addition, the
   algorithm identifier and public key syntax are provided.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-lamps-cms-sphincs-plus-19"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC9242">
        <front>
          <title>Intermediate Exchange in the Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2)</title>
          <author fullname="V. Smyslov" initials="V." surname="Smyslov"/>
          <date month="May" year="2022"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This document defines a new exchange, called "Intermediate Exchange", for the Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2). This exchange can be used for transferring large amounts of data in the process of IKEv2 Security Association (SA) establishment. An example of the need to do this is using key exchange methods resistant to Quantum Computers (QCs) for IKE SA establishment. The Intermediate Exchange makes it possible to use the existing IKE fragmentation mechanism (which cannot be used in the initial IKEv2 exchange), helping to avoid IP fragmentation of large IKE messages if they need to be sent before IKEv2 SA is established.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9242"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9242"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="RFC9370">
        <front>
          <title>Multiple Key Exchanges in the Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2)</title>
          <author fullname="CJ. Tjhai" initials="CJ." surname="Tjhai"/>
          <author fullname="M. Tomlinson" initials="M." surname="Tomlinson"/>
          <author fullname="G. Bartlett" initials="G." surname="Bartlett"/>
          <author fullname="S. Fluhrer" initials="S." surname="Fluhrer"/>
          <author fullname="D. Van Geest" initials="D." surname="Van Geest"/>
          <author fullname="O. Garcia-Morchon" initials="O." surname="Garcia-Morchon"/>
          <author fullname="V. Smyslov" initials="V." surname="Smyslov"/>
          <date month="May" year="2023"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>This document describes how to extend the Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2) to allow multiple key exchanges to take place while computing a shared secret during a Security Association (SA) setup.</t>
            <t>This document utilizes the IKE_INTERMEDIATE exchange, where multiple key exchanges are performed when an IKE SA is being established. It also introduces a new IKEv2 exchange, IKE_FOLLOWUP_KE, which is used for the same purpose when the IKE SA is being rekeyed or is creating additional Child SAs.</t>
            <t>This document updates RFC 7296 by renaming a Transform Type 4 from "Diffie-Hellman Group (D-H)" to "Key Exchange Method (KE)" and renaming a field in the Key Exchange Payload from "Diffie-Hellman Group Num" to "Key Exchange Method". It also renames an IANA registry for this Transform Type from "Transform Type 4 - Diffie- Hellman Group Transform IDs" to "Transform Type 4 - Key Exchange Method Transform IDs". These changes generalize key exchange algorithms that can be used in IKEv2.</t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9370"/>
        <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9370"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-pquip-pqt-hybrid-terminology">
        <front>
          <title>Terminology for Post-Quantum Traditional Hybrid Schemes</title>
          <author fullname="Flo D" initials="F." surname="D">
            <organization>UK National Cyber Security Centre</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Michael P" initials="M." surname="P">
            <organization>UK National Cyber Security Centre</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Britta Hale" initials="B." surname="Hale">
            <organization>Naval Postgraduate School</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="10" month="January" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   One aspect of the transition to post-quantum algorithms in
   cryptographic protocols is the development of hybrid schemes that
   incorporate both post-quantum and traditional asymmetric algorithms.
   This document defines terminology for such schemes.  It is intended
   to be used as a reference and, hopefully, to ensure consistency and
   clarity across different protocols, standards, and organisations.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-pquip-pqt-hybrid-terminology-06"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-tls-hybrid-design">
        <front>
          <title>Hybrid key exchange in TLS 1.3</title>
          <author fullname="Douglas Stebila" initials="D." surname="Stebila">
            <organization>University of Waterloo</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Scott Fluhrer" initials="S." surname="Fluhrer">
            <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Shay Gueron" initials="S." surname="Gueron">
            <organization>University of Haifa and Meta</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="14" month="January" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   Hybrid key exchange refers to using multiple key exchange algorithms
   simultaneously and combining the result with the goal of providing
   security even if all but one of the component algorithms is broken.
   It is motivated by transition to post-quantum cryptography.  This
   document provides a construction for hybrid key exchange in the
   Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol version 1.3.

   Discussion of this work is encouraged to happen on the TLS IETF
   mailing list tls@ietf.org or on the GitHub repository which contains
   the draft: https://github.com/dstebila/draft-ietf-tls-hybrid-design.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-tls-hybrid-design-12"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-lamps-pq-composite-sigs">
        <front>
          <title>Composite ML-DSA for use in X.509 Public Key Infrastructure and CMS</title>
          <author fullname="Mike Ounsworth" initials="M." surname="Ounsworth">
            <organization>Entrust Limited</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="John Gray" initials="J." surname="Gray">
            <organization>Entrust Limited</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Massimiliano Pala" initials="M." surname="Pala">
            <organization>OpenCA Labs</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Jan Klaußner" initials="J." surname="Klaußner">
            <organization>Bundesdruckerei GmbH</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Scott Fluhrer" initials="S." surname="Fluhrer">
            <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="3" month="March" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document defines combinations of ML-DSA [FIPS.204] in hybrid
   with traditional algorithms RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5, RSASSA-PSS, ECDSA,
   Ed25519, and Ed448.  These combinations are tailored to meet security
   best practices and regulatory requirements.  Composite ML-DSA is
   applicable in any application that uses X.509, PKIX, and CMS data
   structures and protocols that accept ML-DSA, but where the operator
   wants extra protection against breaks or catastrophic bugs in ML-DSA.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-lamps-pq-composite-sigs-04"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-lamps-cert-binding-for-multi-auth">
        <front>
          <title>Related Certificates for Use in Multiple Authentications within a Protocol</title>
          <author fullname="Alison Becker" initials="A." surname="Becker">
            <organization>National Security Agency</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Rebecca Guthrie" initials="R." surname="Guthrie">
            <organization>National Security Agency</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Michael J. Jenkins" initials="M. J." surname="Jenkins">
            <organization>National Security Agency</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="10" month="December" year="2024"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document defines a new CSR attribute, relatedCertRequest, and a
   new X.509 certificate extension, RelatedCertificate.  The use of the
   relatedCertRequest attribute in a CSR and the inclusion of the
   RelatedCertificate extension in the resulting certificate together
   provide additional assurance that two certificates each belong to the
   same end entity.  This mechanism is particularly useful in the
   context of non-composite hybrid authentication, which enables users
   to employ the same certificates in hybrid authentication as in
   authentication done with only traditional or post-quantum algorithms.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-lamps-cert-binding-for-multi-auth-06"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-bonnell-lamps-chameleon-certs">
        <front>
          <title>A Mechanism for Encoding Differences in Paired Certificates</title>
          <author fullname="Corey Bonnell" initials="C." surname="Bonnell">
            <organization>DigiCert</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="John Gray" initials="J." surname="Gray">
            <organization>Entrust</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="D. Hook" initials="D." surname="Hook">
            <organization>KeyFactor</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Tomofumi Okubo" initials="T." surname="Okubo">
            <organization>DigiCert</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Mike Ounsworth" initials="M." surname="Ounsworth">
            <organization>Entrust</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="16" month="April" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document specifies a method to efficiently convey the
   differences between two certificates in an X.509 version 3 extension.
   This method allows a relying party to extract information sufficient
   to reconstruct the paired certificate and perform certification path
   validation using the reconstructed certificate.  In particular, this
   method is especially useful as part of a key or signature algorithm
   migration, where subjects may be issued multiple certificates
   containing different public keys or signed with different CA private
   keys or signature algorithms.  This method does not require any
   changes to the certification path validation algorithm as described
   in RFC 5280.  Additionally, this method does not violate the
   constraints of serial number uniqueness for certificates issued by a
   single certification authority.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-bonnell-lamps-chameleon-certs-06"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.draft-ietf-pquip-hybrid-signature-spectrums">
        <front>
          <title>Hybrid signature spectrums</title>
          <author fullname="Nina Bindel" initials="N." surname="Bindel">
            <organization>SandboxAQ</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Britta Hale" initials="B." surname="Hale">
            <organization>Naval Postgraduate School</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Deirdre Connolly" initials="D." surname="Connolly">
            <organization>SandboxAQ</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Flo D" initials="F." surname="D">
            <organization>UK National Cyber Security Centre</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="9" month="January" year="2025"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document describes classification of design goals and security
   considerations for hybrid digital signature schemes, including proof
   composability, non-separability of the component signatures given a
   hybrid signature, backwards/forwards compatibility, hybrid
   generality, and simultaneous verification.

   Discussion of this work is encouraged to happen on the IETF PQUIP
   mailing list pqc@ietf.org or on the GitHub repository which contains
   the draft: https://github.com/dconnolly/draft-ietf-pquip-hybrid-
   signature-spectrums

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-pquip-hybrid-signature-spectrums-06"/>
      </reference>
      <reference anchor="I-D.hale-mls-combiner">
        <front>
          <title>Flexible Hybrid PQ MLS Combiner</title>
          <author fullname="Joël" initials="" surname="Joël">
            <organization>AWS</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Britta Hale" initials="B." surname="Hale">
            <organization>Naval Postgraduate School</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Marta Mularczyk" initials="M." surname="Mularczyk">
            <organization>AWS</organization>
          </author>
          <author fullname="Xisen Tian" initials="X." surname="Tian">
            <organization>Naval Postgraduate School</organization>
          </author>
          <date day="26" month="September" year="2024"/>
          <abstract>
            <t>   This document describes a protocol for combining a traditional MLS
   session with a post-quantum (PQ) MLS session to achieve flexible and
   efficient hybrid PQ security that amortizes the computational cost of
   PQ Key Encapsulation Mechanisms and Digital Signature Algorithms.
   Specifically, we describe how to use the exporter secret of a PQ MLS
   session, i.e. an MLS session using a PQ ciphersuite, to seed PQ
   guarantees into an MLS session using a traditional ciphersuite.  By
   supporting on-demand traditional-only key updates (a.k.a.  PARTIAL
   updates) or hybrid-PQ key updates (a.k.a.  FULL updates), we can
   reduce the bandwidth and computational overhead associated with PQ
   operations while meeting the requirement of frequent key rotations.

            </t>
          </abstract>
        </front>
        <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-hale-mls-combiner-01"/>
      </reference>
    </references>
    <?line 812?>

<section numbered="false" anchor="acknowledgements">
      <name>Acknowledgements</name>
      <t>This document leverages text from an earlier draft by Paul Hoffman. Thanks to Dan Wing, Florence D, Thom Wiggers, Sophia Grundner-Culemann, Panos Kampanakis, Ben S, Sofia Celi, Melchior Aelmans, Falko Strenzke, Deirdre Connolly, Hani Ezzadeen, Britta Hale, and Daniel Van Geest for the discussion, review and comments.</t>
      <t>In particular, the authors would like to acknowledge the contributions to this document by Kris Kwiatkowski.</t>
    </section>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
