<?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-rfc2629 version 1.6.4 (Ruby 2.6.6) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-richardson-t2trg-idevid-considerations-09" category="info" tocInclude="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.13.1 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="IDevID Considerations">A Taxonomy of operational security considerations for manufacturer installed keys and Trust Anchors</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-richardson-t2trg-idevid-considerations-09"/>
    <author initials="M." surname="Richardson" fullname="Michael Richardson">
      <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
      <address>
        <email>mcr+ietf@sandelman.ca</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2022" month="November" day="06"/>
    <workgroup>T2TRG Research Group</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document provides a taxonomy of methods used by manufacturers of silicon and devices
to secure private keys and public trust anchors.
This deals with two related activities: how trust anchors and private keys
are installed into devices during manufacturing, and how the related
manufacturer held private keys are secured against disclosure.</t>
      <t>This document does not evaluate the different mechanisms, but rather just
serves to name them in a consistent manner in order to aid in communication.</t>
      <t>RFCEDITOR: please remove this paragraph. This work is occurring in https://github.com/mcr/idevid-security-considerations</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>An increasing number of protocols derive a significant part of their security by using trust anchors <xref target="RFC4949"/> that are installed by manufacturers.
Disclosure of the list of trust anchors does not usually cause a problem, but changing them in any way does.
This includes adding, replacing or deleting anchors.</t>
      <t>The document <xref target="RFC6024"/> deals with how trust anchor stores are managed in the device which uses them.
This document deals with how the PKI associated with such a trust anchor is managed.</t>
      <t>Many protocols also leverage manufacturer installed identities.
These identities are usually in the form of <xref target="ieee802-1AR"/> Initial Device Identity certificates (IDevID).
The identity has two components: a private key that must remain under the strict control of a trusted part of the device, and a public part (the certificate), which (ignoring, for the moment, personal privacy concerns) may be freely disclosed.</t>
      <t>There also situations where identities are tied up in the provision of symmetric shared secrets.
<!-- FIXME: -->
A common example is the SIM card (<xref target="_3GPP.51.011"/>), it now comes as a virtual SIM, but which is usually not provisioned at the factory.
The provision of an initial, per-device default password also falls into the category of symmetric shared secret.</t>
      <t>It is further not unusual for many devices (particularly smartphones) to also have one or more group identity keys.
This is used, for instance, in <xref target="fidotechnote"/> to make claims about being a particular model of phone (see <xref target="I-D.richardson-rats-usecases"/>).
The key pair that does this is loaded into large batches of phones for privacy reasons.</t>
      <t>The trust anchors are used for a variety of purposes.
Trust anchors are used to verify:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>the signature on a software update (as per <xref target="I-D.ietf-suit-architecture"/>),</li>
        <li>a TLS Server Certificate, such as when setting up an HTTPS connection,</li>
        <li>the <xref target="RFC8366"/> format voucher that provides proof of an ownership change.</li>
      </ul>
      <t>Device identity keys are used when performing enrollment requests (in <xref target="RFC8995"/>, and in some uses of <xref target="I-D.ietf-emu-eap-noob"/>.
The device identity certificate is also used to sign Evidence by an Attesting Environment (see <xref target="I-D.ietf-rats-architecture"/>).</t>
      <t>These security artifacts are used to anchor other chains of information: an EAT Claim as to the version of software/firmware running on a device (<xref target="I-D.birkholz-suit-coswid-manifest"/>), an EAT claim about legitimate network activity (via <xref target="I-D.birkholz-rats-mud"/>, or embedded in the IDevID in <xref target="RFC8520"/>).</t>
      <t>Known software versions lead directly to vendor/distributor signed Software Bill of Materials (SBOM), such as those described by <xref target="I-D.ietf-sacm-coswid"/> and the NTIA/SBOM work <xref target="ntiasbom"/> and CISQ/OMG SBOM work underway <xref target="cisqsbom"/>.</t>
      <t>In order to manage risks and assess vulnerabilities in a Supply Chain, it is necessary to determine a degree of trustworthiness in each device.
A device may mislead audit systems as to its provenance, about its software load or even about what kind of device it is (see <xref target="RFC7168"/> for a humorous example).</t>
      <t>In order to properly assess the security of a Supply Chain it is necessary to understand the kinds and severity of the threats which a device has been designed to resist.
To do this, it is necessary to understand the ways in which the different trust anchors and identities are initially provisioned, are protected, and are updated.</t>
      <t>To do this, this document details the different trust anchors (TrAnc) and identities (IDs) found in typical devices.
The privacy and integrity of the TrAncs and IDs is often provided by a different, superior artifact.
This relationship is examined.</t>
      <t>While many might desire to assign numerical values to different mitigation techniques in order to be able to rank them,  this document does not attempt to do that, as there are too many other (mostly human) factors that would come into play.
Such an effort is more properly in the purview of a formal ISO9001 process such as ISO14001.</t>
      <section anchor="terminology">
        <name>Terminology</name>
        <t>This document is not a standards track document, and it does not make use of formal requirements language.</t>
        <t>This section will be expanded to include needed terminology as required.</t>
        <t>The words Trust Anchor are contracted to TrAnc rather than TA, in order not to confuse with <xref target="I-D.ietf-teep-architecture"/>'s "Trusted Application".</t>
        <t>This document defines a number of hyphenated terms, and they are summarized here:</t>
        <dl>
          <dt>device-generated:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>a private or symmetric key which is generated on the device</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>infrastructure-generated:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>a private or symmetric key which is generated by some system, likely
located at the factory that built the device</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>mechanically-installed:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>when a key or certificate is programmed into non-volatile storage by
an out-of-band mechanism such as JTAG <xref target="JTAG"/></t>
          </dd>
          <dt>mechanically-transferred:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>when a key or certificate is transferred into a system via private interface, such as serial console, JTAG managed mailbox, or other physically private interface</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>network-transferred:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>when a key or certificate is transferred into a system using a network interface which would be available after the device has shipped.  This applies even if the network is physically attached using a bed-of-nails <xref target="BedOfNails"/>.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>device/infrastructure-co-generated:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>when a private or symmetric key is derived from a secret previously synchronized between the silicon vendor and the factory using a common algorithm.</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="applicability-model">
      <name>Applicability Model</name>
      <t>There is a wide variety of devices to which this analysis can apply.
(See <xref target="I-D.bormann-lwig-7228bis"/>.)
This document will use a J-group processor as a sample.
This class is sufficiently large to experience complex issues among multiple CPUs, packages and operating systems, but at the same time, small enough that this class is often deployed in single-purpose IoT-like uses.
Devices in this class often have Secure Enclaves (such as the "Grapeboard"), and can include silicon manufacturer controlled processors in the boot process (the Raspberry PI boots under control of the GPU).</t>
      <t>Almost all larger systems (servers, laptops, desktops) include a Baseboard Management Controller (BMC), which ranges from a M-Group Class 3 MCU, to a J-Group Class 10 CPU (see, for instance <xref target="openbmc"/> which uses a Linux kernel and system inside the BMC).
As the BMC usually has complete access to the main CPU's memory, I/O hardware and disk, the boot path security of such a system needs to be understood first as being about the security of the BMC.</t>
      <section anchor="a-reference-manufacturingboot-process">
        <name>A reference manufacturing/boot process</name>
        <t>In order to provide for immutability and privacy of the critical TrAnc and IDs, many CPU manufacturers will provide for some kind of private memory area which is only accessible when the CPU is in certain privileged states.
See the Terminology section of <xref target="I-D.ietf-teep-architecture"/>, notably TEE, REE, and TAM, and also section 4, Architecture.</t>
        <t>The private memory that is important is usually non-volatile and rather small.
It may be located inside the CPU silicon die, or it may be located externally.
If the memory is external, then it is usually encrypted by a hardware mechanism on the CPU, with only the key kept inside the CPU.</t>
        <t>The entire mechanism may be external to the CPU in the form of a hardware-TPM module, or it may be entirely internal to the CPU in the form of a firmware-TPM.
It may use a custom interface to the rest of the system, or it may implement the TPM 1.2 or TPM 2.0 specifications.
Those details are important to performing a full evaluation, but do not matter much to this model (see initial-enclave-location below).</t>
        <t>During the manufacturing process, once the components have been soldered to the board, the system is usually put through a system-level test.
This is often done as a "bed-of-nails" test <xref target="BedOfNails"/>, where the board has key points attached mechanically to a test system.
A <xref target="JTAG"/> process tests the System Under Test, and then initializes some firmware into the still empty flash storage.</t>
        <t>It is now common for a factory test image to be loaded first: this image will include code to initialize the private memory key described above, and will include a first-stage bootloader and some kind of (primitive) Trusted Application Manager (TAM).
(The TAM is a piece of software that lives within the trusted execution environment.)</t>
        <t>Embedded in the stage one bootloader will be a Trust Anchor that is able to verify the second-stage bootloader image.</t>
        <t>After the system has undergone testing, the factory test image is erased, leaving the first-stage bootloader.
One or more second-stage bootloader images are installed.
The production image may be installed at that time, or if the second-stage bootloader is able to install it over the network, it may be done that way instead.</t>
        <t>There are many variations of the above process, and this section is not attempting to be prescriptive, but to be provide enough illustration to motivate subsequent terminology.</t>
        <t>The process may be entirely automated, or it may be entirely driven by humans working in the factory, or a combination of the above.</t>
        <t>These steps may all occur on an access-controlled assembly line, or the system boards may be shipped from one place to another (maybe another country) before undergoing testing.</t>
        <t>Some systems are intended to be shipped in a tamper-proof state, but it is usually not desirable that bed-of-nails testing be possible without tampering, so the initialization process is usually done prior to rendering the system tamper-proof.
An example of a one-way tamper-proof, weather resistant treatment might to mount the system board in a case and fill the case with resin.</t>
        <t>Quality control testing may be done prior to as well as after the application of tamper-proofing, as systems which do not pass inspection may be reworked to fix flaws, and this should ideally be impossible once the system has been made tamper-proof.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="types-of-trust-anchors">
      <name>Types of Trust Anchors</name>
      <t>Trust Anchors (TrAnc) are fundamentally public keys with authorizations implicitly attached through the code that references them.</t>
      <t>They are used to validate other digitally signed artifacts.
Typically, these are chains of PKIX certificates leading to an End-Entity certificate (EE).</t>
      <t>The chains are usually presented as part of an externally provided object, with the term "externally" to be understood as being as close as untrusted flash, to as far as objects retrieved over a network.</t>
      <t>There is no requirement that there be any chain at all: the trust anchor can be used to validate a signature over a target object directly.</t>
      <t>The trust anchors are often stored in the form of self-signed certificates.
The self-signature does not offer any cryptographic assurance, but it does provide a form of error detection, providing verification against non-malicious forms of data corruption.
If storage is at a premium (such as inside-CPU non-volatile storage) then only the public key itself need to be stored.
For a 256-bit ECDSA key, this is 32 bytes of space.</t>
      <t>When evaluating the degree of trust for each trust anchor there are four aspects that need to be determined:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>can the trust anchor be replaced or modified?</li>
        <li>can additional trust anchors be added?</li>
        <li>can trust anchors be removed?</li>
        <li>how is the private key associated with the trust anchor, maintained by the manufacturer, maintained?</li>
      </ul>
      <t>The first three things are device specific properties of how the integrity of the trust anchor is maintained.</t>
      <t>The fourth property has nothing to do with the device, but has to do with the reputation and care of the entity that maintains the private key.</t>
      <t>Different anchors have different authorizations associated with them.</t>
      <t>These are:</t>
      <section anchor="secured-first-boot-trust-anchor">
        <name>Secured First Boot Trust Anchor</name>
        <t>This anchor is part of the first-stage boot loader, and it is used to validate a second-stage bootloader which may be stored in external flash.
This is called the initial software trust anchor.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="software-update-trust-anchor">
        <name>Software Update Trust Anchor</name>
        <t>This anchor is used to validate the main application (or operating system) load for the device.</t>
        <t>It can be stored in a number of places.
First, it may be identical to the Secure Boot Trust Anchor.</t>
        <t>Second, it may be stored in the second-stage bootloader, and therefore its integrity is protected by the Secured First Boot Trust Anchor.</t>
        <t>Third, it may be stored in the application code itself, where the application validates updates to the application directly (update in place), or via a double-buffer arrangement.
The initial (factory) load of the application code initializes the trust arrangement.</t>
        <t>In this situation the application code is not in a secured boot situation, as the second-stage bootloader does not validate the application/operating system before starting it, but it may still provide measured boot mechanism.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="trusted-application-manager-anchor">
        <name>Trusted Application Manager anchor</name>
        <t>This anchor is the secure key for the <xref target="I-D.ietf-teep-architecture"/> Trusted Application Manager (TAM).
Code which is signed by this anchor will be given execution privileges as described by the manifest which accompanies the code.
This privilege may include updating anchors.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="public-webpki-anchors">
        <name>Public WebPKI anchors</name>
        <t>These anchors are used to verify HTTPS certificates from web sites.
These anchors are typically distributed as part of desktop browsers, and via desktop operating systems.</t>
        <t>The exact set of these anchors is not precisely defined: it is usually determined by the browser vendor (e.g., Mozilla, Google, Apple, Safari, Microsoft), or the operating system vendor (e.g., Apple, Google, Microsoft, Ubuntu).
In most cases these vendors look to the CA/Browser Forum <xref target="CABFORUM"/> for inclusion criteria.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="dnssec-root">
        <name>DNSSEC root</name>
        <t>This anchor is part of the DNS Security extensions.
It provides an anchor for securing DNS lookups.
Secure DNS lookups may be important in order to get access to software updates.
This anchor is now scheduled to change approximately every 3 years, with the new key announced several years before it is used, making it possible to embed keys that
will be valid for up to five years.</t>
        <t>This trust anchor is typically part of the application/operating system code and is usually updated by the manufacturer when they do updates.
However, a system that is connected to the Internet may update the DNSSEC anchor itself through the mechanism described in <xref target="RFC5011"/>.</t>
        <t>There are concerns that there may be a chicken and egg situation for devices that have remained in a powered off state (or disconnected from the Internet) for some period of years.
That upon being reconnected, that the device would be unable to do DNSSEC validation.
This failure would result in them being unable to obtain operating system updates that would then include the updates to the DNSSEC key.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="privatecloud-pki-anchors">
        <name>Private/Cloud PKI anchors</name>
        <t>It is common for many IoT and network appliances to have links to vendor provided services.
For instance, the IoT device that calls home for control purposes, or the network appliance that needs to validate a license key before it can operate.
(This may be identical to, or distinct from a Software Update anchor.  In particular, the device might call home over HTTPS to learn if there is a software update that needs to be done, but the update is signed by another key)</t>
        <t>Such vendor services can be provided with public certificates, but often the update policies such public anchors precludes their use in many operational environments.
Instead a private PKI anchor is included.
This can be in the form a multi-level PKI (as described in <xref target="pkilevel"/>), or degenerate to a level-1 PKI: a self-signed certificate.
A level-1 PKI is very simple to create and operate, and there are innumerable situations where there is just a call to "curl" with the "--pinnedpubkey" option has been used.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="onboarding-and-other-enrollment-anchors">
        <name>Onboarding and other Enrollment anchors</name>
        <t><xref target="RFC8995"/>, <xref target="RFC8572"/> and <xref target="RFC8366"/> specifies a mechanism for onboarding of new devices.
The voucher archifact is transfered to the device by different means, and the device must verify the signature on it.
This requires a trust anchor to be built-in to the device, and some kind of private PKI be maintained by the vendor (or it's authorized designate).
<xref target="I-D.anima-masa-considerations"/> provides some advice on choices in PKI design for a MASA.
The taxomony presented in this document apply to describing how this PKI has been designed.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="onboarded-network-local-anchors">
        <name>Onboarded network-local anchors</name>
        <t><xref target="RFC7030"/>, <xref target="RFC8995"/> and <xref target="I-D.ietf-netconf-trust-anchors"/> provide mechanisms by which new trust anchors may be loaded by a device during an onboarding process.
The trust anchors involved are typically local to an enterprise and are used to validate connections to other devices in the network.
This typically includes connections to network management systems that may also load or modify other trust anchors in the system.
<xref target="I-D.anima-masa-considerations"/> provides some advice in the BRSKI (<xref target="RFC8995"/>) case for appropriate PKI complexity for such local PKIs</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="what-else">
        <name>What else?</name>
        <t>what anchors are still missing?</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="types-of-identities">
      <name>Types of Identities</name>
      <t>Identities are installed during manufacturing time for a variety of purposes.</t>
      <t>Identities require some private component.
Asymmetric identities (e.g., RSA, ECDSA, EdDSA systems) require a corresponding public component, usually in the form of a certificate signed by a trusted third party.</t>
      <t>This certificate associates the identity with attributes.</t>
      <t>The process of making this coordinated key pair and then installing it into the device is called identity provisioning.</t>
      <section anchor="manufacturer-installed-idevid-certificates">
        <name>Manufacturer installed IDevID certificates</name>
        <t><xref target="ieee802-1AR"/> defines a category of certificates that are installed by the manufacturer which contain a device unique serial number.</t>
        <t>A number of protocols depend upon this certificate.</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <xref target="RFC8572"/> and <xref target="RFC8995"/> introduce mechanisms for new devices (called pledges) to be onboarded into a network without intervention from an expert operator. A number of derived protocols such as <xref target="I-D.ietf-anima-brski-async-enroll"/>,                <xref target="I-D.ietf-anima-constrained-voucher"/>, <xref target="I-D.richardson-anima-voucher-delegation"/>, <xref target="I-D.friel-anima-brski-cloud"/> extend this in a number of ways.</li>
          <li>
            <xref target="I-D.ietf-rats-architecture"/> depends upon a key provisioned into the Attesting Environment to sign Evidence.</li>
          <li>
            <xref target="I-D.ietf-suit-architecture"/> may depend upon a key provisioned into the
device in order to decrypt software updates.
Both symmetric and asymmetric keys are possible.
In both cases, the decrypt operation depends upon the device having access to
a private key provisioned in advance.
The IDevID can be used for this if algorithm choices permit.
ECDSA keys do not directly support encryption in the same way that RSA does, for
instance, but the addition of ECIES can solve this.
There may be other legal considerations why the IDevID might not be used, and
a second key provisioned.</li>
          <li>TBD</li>
        </ul>
        <section anchor="operational-considerations-for-manufacturer-idevid-public-key-infrastructure">
          <name>Operational Considerations for Manufacturer IDevID Public Key Infrastructure</name>
          <t>The manufacturer has the responsibility to provision a key pair into each
device as part of the manufacturing process.
There are a variety of mechanisms to accomplish this, which this document will overview.</t>
          <t>There are three fundamental ways to generate IDevID certificates for devices:</t>
          <ol spacing="normal" type="1"><li>generating a private key on the device, creating a Certificate Signing
Request (or equivalent), and then returning a certificate to the device.</li>
            <li>generating a private key outside the device, signing the certificate, and
the installing both into the device.</li>
            <li>deriving the private key from a previously installed secret seed, that is shared with only the manufacturer.</li>
          </ol>
          <t>There is a fourth situation where the IDevID is provided as part of a Trusted
Platform Module (TPM), in which case the TPM vendor may be making the same
tradeoffs.</t>
          <t>The document <xref target="I-D.moskowitz-ecdsa-pki"/> provides some practical instructions
on setting up a reference implementation for ECDSA keys using a three-tier
mechanism.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="key-generation-process">
          <name>Key Generation process</name>
          <section anchor="on-device-private-key-generation">
            <name>On-device private key generation</name>
            <t>Generating the key on-device has the advantage that the private key never leaves the device.
The disadvantage is that the device may not have a verified random number generator.
<xref target="factoringrsa"/> is an example of a successful attack on this scenario.</t>
            <t>There are a number of options of how to get the public key securely from the
device to the certification authority.</t>
            <t>This transmission must be done in an integral manner, and must be securely associated with the assigned serial number.
The serial number goes into the certificate, and the resulting certificate needs to be loaded into the manufacturer's asset database.</t>
            <t>One way to do the transmission is during a factory Bed of Nails test (see <xref target="BedOfNails"/>) or Boundary Scan.
When done via a physical connection like this, then this is referred to as a
<em>device-generated</em> / <em>mechanically-transferred</em> method.</t>
            <t>There are other ways that could be used where a certificate signing request is sent over a special network channel when the device is powered up in the factory.
This is referred to as the <em>device-generated</em> / <em>network-transferred</em>  method.</t>
            <t>Regardless of how the certificate signing request is sent from the device to the factory, and how the certificate is returned to the device, a concern from production line managers is that the assembly line may have to wait for the certification authority to respond with the certificate.</t>
            <t>After the key generation, the device needs to set a flag such that it no longer will generate a new key / will accept a new IDevID via the factory connection.
This may be a software setting, or could be as dramatic as blowing a fuse.</t>
            <t>The risk is that if an attacker with physical access is able to put the device back into an unconfigured mode, then the attacker may be able to substitute a new certificate into the device.
It is difficult to construct a rationale for doing this, unless the network initialization also permits an attacker to load or replace trust anchors at the same time.</t>
            <t>Devices are typically constructed in a fashion such that the device is unable to ever disclose the private key via an external interface.
This is usually done using a secure-enclave provided by the CPU architecture in combination with on-chip non-volatile memory.</t>
          </section>
          <section anchor="off-device-private-key-generation">
            <name>Off-device private key generation</name>
            <t>Generating the key off-device has the advantage that the randomness of the private key can be better analyzed.
As the private key is available to the manufacturing infrastructure, the authenticity of the public key is well known ahead of time.</t>
            <t>If the device does not come with a serial number in silicon, then one should be assigned and placed into a certificate.
The private key and certificate could be programmed into the device along with the initial bootloader firmware in a single step.</t>
            <t>As the private key can be known to the factory in advance of the device being ready for it, the certificate can also be generated in advance.
This hides the latency to talk to the CA, and allows for the connectivity to the CA to be less reliable without shutting down the assembly line.
A single write to the flash of the device can contain the entire firmware of the device, including configuration of trust anchors and private keys.</t>
            <t>The major downside to generating the private key off-device is that it could be seen by the manufacturing infrastructure.
It could be compromised by humans in the factory, or the equipment could be compromised.
The use of this method increases the value of attacking the manufacturing infrastructure.</t>
            <t>If private keys are generated by the manufacturing plant, and are immediately installed, but never stored, then the window in which an attacker can gain access to the private key is immensely reduced.</t>
            <t>As in the previous case, the transfer may be done via physical interfaces such as bed-of-nails, giving the <em>infrastructure-generated</em> / <em>mechanically-transferred</em> method.</t>
            <t>There is also the possibility of having a <em>infrastructure-generated</em> / <em>network-transferred</em>
key.
There is a support for "server-generated" keys in <xref target="RFC7030"/>, <xref target="RFC8894"/>, and <xref target="RFC4210"/>.
All methods strongly recommend encrypting the private key for transfer.
This is difficult to comply with here as there is not yet any private key material in the device, so in many cases it will not be possible to encrypt the private key.</t>
          </section>
          <section anchor="key-setup-based-on-256-bit-secret-seed">
            <name>Key setup based on 256 bit secret seed</name>
            <t>A hybrid of the previous two methods leverages a symmetric key that is often provided by a silicon vendor to OEM manufacturers.</t>
            <t>Each CPU (or a Trusted Execution Environment <xref target="I-D.ietf-teep-architecture"/>, or a TPM) is provisioned at fabrication time with a unique, secret seed, usually at least 256 bits in size.</t>
            <t>This value is revealed to the OEM board manufacturer only via a secure channel.
Upon first boot, the system (probably within a TEE, or within a TPM) will generate a key pair using the seed to initialize a Pseudo-Random-Number-Generator (PRNG).
The OEM, in a separate system, will initialize the same PRNG and generate the same key pair.
The OEM then derives the public key part, signs it and turns it into a certificate.
The private part is then destroyed, ideally never stored or seen by anyone.
The certificate (being public information) is placed into a database, in some cases it is loaded by the device as its IDevID certificate, in other cases, it is retrieved during the onboarding process based upon a unique serial number asserted by the device.</t>
            <t>This method appears to have all of the downsides of the previous two methods: the device must correctly derive its own private key, and the OEM has access to the private key, making it also vulnerable.
The secret seed must be created in a secure way and it must also be communicated securely.</t>
            <t>There are some advantages to the OEM however: the major one is that the problem of securely communicating with the device is outsourced to the silicon vendor.
The private keys and certificates may be calculated by the OEM asynchronously to the manufacturing process, either done in batches in advance of actual manufacturing, or on demand when an IDevID is demanded.
Doing the processing in this way permits the key derivation system to be completely disconnected from any network, and requires placing very little trust in the system assembly factory.
<!-- FIXME: What? -->
Operational security such as often incorrectly presented fictionalized stories of a "mainframe" system to which only physical access is permitted begins to become realistic.
That trust has been replaced with a heightened trust placed in the silicon (integrated circuit) fabrication facility.</t>
            <t>The downsides of this method to the OEM are: they must be supplied by a trusted silicon fabrication system, which must communicate the set of secrets seeds to the OEM in batches, and they OEM must store and care for these keys very carefully.
There are some operational advantages to keeping the secret seeds around in some form, as the same secret seed could be used for other things.
There are some significant downsides to keeping that secret seed around.</t>
          </section>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="public-key-infrastructures-pki">
      <name>Public Key Infrastructures (PKI)</name>
      <t><xref target="RFC5280"/> describes the format for certificates, and numerous mechanisms
for doing enrollment have been defined (including: EST <xref target="RFC7030"/>, CMP <xref target="RFC4210"/>,
SCEP <xref target="RFC8894"/>).</t>
      <t><xref target="RFC5280"/> provides mechanisms to deal with multi-level certification
authorities, but it is not always clear what operating rules apply.</t>
      <t>The certification authority (CA) that is central to <xref target="RFC5280"/>-style public key infrastructures can suffer three kinds of failures:</t>
      <ol spacing="normal" type="1"><li>disclosure of a private key,</li>
        <li>loss of a private key,</li>
        <li>inappropriate signing of a certificate from an unauthorized source.</li>
      </ol>
      <t>A PKI which discloses one or more private certification authority keys is no
longer secure.</t>
      <t>An attacker can create new identities, and forge certificates connecting
existing identities to attacker controlled public/private keypairs.
This can permit the attacker to impersonate any specific device.</t>
      <t>There is an additional kind of failure when the CA is convinced to sign (or issue) a certificate which it is not authorized to do so.
See for instance <xref target="ComodoGate"/>.
This is an authorization failure, and while a significant event, it does not result in the CA having to be re-initialized from scratch.</t>
      <t>This is distinguished from when a loss as described above renders the CA completely useless and likely requires a recall of all products that have ever had an IDevID issued from this CA.</t>
      <t>If the PKI uses Certificate Revocation Lists (CRL)s, then an attacker that has access to the private key can also revoke existing identities.</t>
      <t>In the other direction, a PKI which loses access to a private key can no
longer function.
This does not immediately result in a failure, as existing identities remain valid until their expiry time (notAfter).
However, if CRLs or OCSP are in use, then the inability to sign a fresh CRL or OCSP response will result in all identities becoming invalid once the existing CRLs or OCSP statements expire.</t>
      <t>This section details some nomenclature about the structure of certification
authorities.</t>
      <section anchor="pkilevel">
        <name>Number of levels of certification authorities (pkilevel)</name>
        <t>Section 6.1 of <xref target="RFC5280"/> provides a Basic Path Validation.
In the formula, the certificates are arranged into a list.</t>
        <t>The certification authority (CA) starts with a Trust Anchor (TrAnc).
This is counted as the first level of the authority.</t>
        <t>In the degenerate case of a self-signed certificate, then this a one level PKI.</t>
        <artset>
          <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="96" width="136" viewBox="0 0 136 96" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px">
              <path d="M 8,32 L 8,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 96,32 L 96,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 120,32 L 120,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,32 L 96,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 104,64 L 120,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,80 L 96,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <g class="text">
                <text x="108" y="36">&lt;-</text>
                <text x="40" y="52">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="80" y="52">X</text>
                <text x="48" y="68">Subject=X</text>
              </g>
            </svg>
          </artwork>
          <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
.----------.<-.
|Issuer= X |  | 
|Subject=X |--'
'----------'
]]></artwork>
        </artset>
        <t>The private key associated with the Trust Anchor signs one or more certificates.
When this first level authority trusts only End-Entity (EE) certificates,
then this is a two level PKI.</t>
        <artset>
          <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="256" width="232" viewBox="0 0 232 256" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px">
              <path d="M 8,32 L 8,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,160 L 8,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,80 L 32,152" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 80,80 L 80,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 96,32 L 96,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 96,160 L 96,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 120,32 L 120,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,160 L 136,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 144,112 L 144,152" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 224,160 L 224,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,32 L 96,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 96,64 L 120,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,80 L 96,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 80,112 L 144,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,160 L 40,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,160 L 96,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,160 L 168,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 192,160 L 224,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,208 L 96,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,208 L 224,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="152,152 140,146.4 140,157.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,144,152)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="40,152 28,146.4 28,157.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,32,152)"/>
              <g class="text">
                <text x="108" y="36">&lt;-</text>
                <text x="40" y="52">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="80" y="52">X</text>
                <text x="164" y="52">root</text>
                <text x="48" y="68">Subject=X</text>
                <text x="164" y="68">CA</text>
                <text x="52" y="164">EE</text>
                <text x="180" y="164">EE</text>
                <text x="40" y="180">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="80" y="180">X</text>
                <text x="168" y="180">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="208" y="180">X</text>
                <text x="52" y="196">Subject=Y1</text>
                <text x="180" y="196">Subject=Y2</text>
              </g>
            </svg>
          </artwork>
          <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
.----------.<-.
|Issuer= X |  |   root
|Subject=X +--'    CA
'--+-----+-'
   |     |
   |     '-------.
   |             |
   v             v
.----EE----.    .----EE----.
|Issuer= X |    |Issuer= X |
|Subject=Y1|    |Subject=Y2|
'----------'    '----------'


]]></artwork>
        </artset>
        <t>When this first level authority signs subordinate certification authorities,
and those certification authorities sign End-Entity certificates, then
this is a three level PKI.</t>
        <artset>
          <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="432" width="480" viewBox="0 0 480 432" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px">
              <path d="M 8,288 L 8,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,160 L 32,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,240 L 32,280" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 56,112 L 56,152" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 56,208 L 56,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 88,208 L 88,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 96,288 L 96,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 120,160 L 120,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 128,32 L 128,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,288 L 136,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 152,80 L 152,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 152,240 L 152,280" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 200,80 L 200,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 216,32 L 216,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 224,288 L 224,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 240,32 L 240,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 256,288 L 256,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 272,240 L 272,280" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,160 L 280,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 304,112 L 304,152" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 304,208 L 304,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,208 L 344,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,288 L 344,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 368,160 L 368,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 384,288 L 384,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 400,240 L 400,280" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 472,288 L 472,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 128,32 L 216,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 216,64 L 240,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 128,80 L 216,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 56,112 L 152,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 200,112 L 304,112" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,160 L 120,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,160 L 368,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,208 L 120,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 280,208 L 368,208" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 32,240 L 56,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 88,240 L 152,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 272,240 L 304,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,240 L 400,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,288 L 40,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,288 L 96,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,288 L 168,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 192,288 L 224,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 256,288 L 288,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 312,288 L 344,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 384,288 L 416,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 440,288 L 472,288" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,336 L 96,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 136,336 L 224,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 256,336 L 344,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 384,336 L 472,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="408,280 396,274.4 396,285.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,400,280)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="312,152 300,146.4 300,157.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,304,152)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="280,280 268,274.4 268,285.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,272,280)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="160,280 148,274.4 148,285.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,152,280)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="64,152 52,146.4 52,157.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,56,152)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="40,280 28,274.4 28,285.6 " fill="black" transform="rotate(90,32,280)"/>
              <g class="text">
                <text x="228" y="36">&lt;-</text>
                <text x="44" y="52">root</text>
                <text x="160" y="52">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="200" y="52">X</text>
                <text x="44" y="68">CA</text>
                <text x="168" y="68">Subject=X</text>
                <text x="64" y="180">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="104" y="180">X</text>
                <text x="200" y="180">subordinate</text>
                <text x="312" y="180">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="352" y="180">X</text>
                <text x="76" y="196">Subject=Y1</text>
                <text x="196" y="196">CA</text>
                <text x="324" y="196">Subject=Y2</text>
                <text x="52" y="292">EE</text>
                <text x="180" y="292">EE</text>
                <text x="300" y="292">EE</text>
                <text x="428" y="292">EE</text>
                <text x="40" y="308">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="84" y="308">Y1</text>
                <text x="168" y="308">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="212" y="308">Y1</text>
                <text x="288" y="308">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="332" y="308">Y2</text>
                <text x="416" y="308">Issuer=</text>
                <text x="460" y="308">Y2</text>
                <text x="52" y="324">Subject=Z1</text>
                <text x="180" y="324">Subject=Z1</text>
                <text x="300" y="324">Subject=Z3</text>
                <text x="428" y="324">Subject=Z4</text>
              </g>
            </svg>
          </artwork>
          <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
               .----------.<-.
   root        |Issuer= X |  |
    CA         |Subject=X +--'
               '--+-----+-'
                  |     |
      .-----------'     '------------.
      |                              |
      v                              v
   .----------.                   .----------.
   |Issuer= X |    subordinate    |Issuer= X |
   |Subject=Y1|        CA         |Subject=Y2|
   '--+---+---'                   '--+----+--'
      |   |                          |    |
   .--'   '-------.              .---'    '------.
   |              |              |               |
   v              v              v               v
.----EE----.    .----EE----.   .----EE----.    .----EE----.
|Issuer= Y1|    |Issuer= Y1|   |Issuer= Y2|    |Issuer= Y2|
|Subject=Z1|    |Subject=Z1|   |Subject=Z3|    |Subject=Z4|
'----------'    '----------'   '----------'    '----------'





]]></artwork>
        </artset>
        <t>In general, when arranged as a tree, with the End-Entity certificates at the
bottom, and the Trust Anchor at the top, then the level is where the deepest EE
certificates are, counting from one.</t>
        <t>It is quite common to have a three-level PKI, where the root (level one) of the CA is
stored in a Hardware Security Module in a way that it cannot be continuously accessed ("offline"), while the level two subordinate CA can sign certificates at any time ("online").</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="protection-of-ca-private-keys">
        <name>Protection of CA private keys</name>
        <t>The private key for the certification authorities must be protected from
disclosure.
The strongest protection is afforded by keeping them in a offline device,
passing Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs) to the offline device by human
process.</t>
        <t>For examples of extreme measures, see <xref target="kskceremony"/>.
There is however a wide spectrum of needs, as exampled in <xref target="rootkeyceremony"/>.
The SAS70 audit standard is usually used as a basis for the Ceremony, see <xref target="keyceremony2"/>.</t>
        <t>This is inconvenient, and may involve latencies of days, possibly even weeks
to months if the offline device is kept in a locked environment that requires
multiple keys to be present.</t>
        <t>There is therefore a tension between protection and convenience.
Convenient and timely access to sign new artifacts is not something that is just nice to have.
If access is inconvenient then it may cause delays for signing of new code releases,
or it may incentivize technical staff to build in work arounds in order that they can get their job done faster.
The compromise between situations is often mitigated by having some levels of the PKI be offline, and some levels of the PKI be online.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="preservation-of-ca-and-trust-anchor-private-keys">
        <name>Preservation of CA and Trust Anchor private keys</name>
        <t>A public key (or certificate) is installed into target device(s) as a trust anchor.
Is it there in order to verify further artifacts, and it represents a significant investment.
Trust anchors must not be easily replaced by attackers, and securing the trust anchor against such tampering may involve burning the trust anchor into unchangeable fuses inside a CPU.</t>
        <t>Replacement of the anchor can involve a physical recall of every single device.
It therefore important that the trust anchor is useable for the entire lifetime of every single one of the devices.</t>
        <t>The previous section deals with attacks against the infrastructure: the attacker wants to get access to the private key material, or to convince the infrastructure to use the private key material to their bidding.
Such an event, if undetected would be catastrosphic.
But, when detected, would render almost every device useless (or potentially dangerous) until the anchor could be replaced.</t>
        <t>There is a different situation, however, which would lead to a similiar result.
If the legitimate owner of the trust anchor infrastructure loses access the private keys, then an equally catastrophic situation occurs.</t>
        <t>There are many situations that could lead to this.
The most typical situation would seem to be some kind of physical damage: a flood, a fire.
Less obvious situations could occur if a human forgets a password, or if the human with the password(s) dies, or becomes incapacited.</t>
        <t>Backups of critical material is routinely done.
Storage of backups offsite deals with physical damage, and in many cases the organization maintains an entire set of equipment at another location.</t>
        <t>The question then becomes: how are the backups unlocked, or activated.
Why attack the primary site physically if an attacker can target the backup site, or the people whose job it is to activate the backup site?</t>
        <t>Consider the situation where a hurricane or earthquake takes out all power and communications at an organizations' primary location,  and it becomes necessary to activate the backup site.
What does it take to do that?</t>
        <t>Typically the secrets will be split using <xref target="shamir79"/> into multiple pieces, each piece being carried with a different trusted employee.</t>
        <t>In <xref target="kskceremony"/>, the pieces are stored on smartcards which are kept in a vault, and the trusted people carry keys to the vault.</t>
        <t>One advantage of this mechanism is that if necessary, the doors to the vault can be drilled out.
This takes some significant time and leaves significant evidence, so it can not be done quietly by an attacker.
In the case of the DNSSEC Root, a failure of the vault to open actually required this to be done.</t>
        <t>In other systems the digital pieces are carried on the person themselves, ideally encrypted with a password known only to that person.</t>
        <t><xref target="shamir79"/> allows for keys to be split up into n-components, where only some smaller number of them, k, need to be present to reconstruct the secret.
This is known as a (k, n) threshold scheme.</t>
        <section anchor="splittingnumbers">
          <name>Secret splitting, k-of-n</name>
          <t>In this document, each of the people who hold a piece of the secret are referred to as Key Executives.</t>
          <t>The choice of n, and the choice of k is therefore of critical concern.
It seems unwise for an organizations to publish them, as it provides some evidence as to how many Key Executives would need to be coerced.</t>
          <t>The identities of the n Key Executive should also be confidential.
The list of who they are should probably be limited to the members of the board and executive.
There does not seem to be any particular reason for the Key Executives to be members of the board, but having a long term relationship with the enterprise seems reasonable, and a clear understanding of when to use the piece.</t>
          <t>The number k, which is the minimum number of people that would need to be coerced should also remain confidential.</t>
          <t>A number that can be published is the difference between k and n, which represents the number of redundant Key Executives that exist.</t>
          <t>An enterprise that has operations in multiple places may be better positioned to survive  incidents that disrupt travel.
For instance, an earthquake, tsunami, or pandemic not only has the possibility to kill Key Executives or the smartcard or USB key that they are stored on.
<xref target="shamir79"/> suggests that n=2k-1, which implies that a simple majority of Key Executives are needed to reconstruct the secret, other values of k have some interesting advantages.</t>
          <t>A value of k set to be less than a simple majority, where the Key Executives are split between two or more continents (with each continent having at least k Key Executives) would allow either  continent to continue operations without the other group.</t>
          <t>This might be a very good way to manage a code signing or update signing key.
Split it among development groups in three time zones (eight hours apart), such that any of those development groups can issue an emergency security patch.
(Another way would be to have three End-Entity certificates that can sign code, and have each time zone sign their own code.  That implies that there is at least a level two PKI around the code signing process, and that any bootloaders that need to verify the code being starting it are able to do PKI operations)</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="supporting-provisioned-anchors-in-devices">
        <name>Supporting provisioned anchors in devices</name>
        <t>IDevID-type Identity (or Birth) Certificates which are provisioned into
devices need to be signed by a certification authority maintained by the manufacturer.
During the period of manufacture of new product, the manufacturer needs to be be able to sign new Identity Certificates.</t>
        <t>During the anticipated lifespan of the devices the manufacturer needs to maintain the ability for third parties to validate the Identity Certificates.
If there are Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) involved, then they will need to re-signed during this period.
Even for devices with a short active lifetime, the lifespan of the device could very long if devices are kept in a warehouse for many decades before being activated.</t>
        <t>Trust anchors which are provisioned in the devices will have corresponding
private keys maintained by the manufacturer.
The trust anchors will often anchor a PKI which is going to be used for a
particular purpose.
There will be End-Entity (EE) certificates of this PKI which will be used to sign
particular artifacts (such as software updates), or messages in communications protocols
(such as TLS connections).
The private keys associated with these EE certificates are not stored in the
device, but are maintained by the manufacturer.
These need even more care than the private keys stored in the devices, as
compromise of the software update key compromises all of the devices, not
just a single device.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="evaluation-questions">
      <name>Evaluation Questions</name>
      <t>This section recaps the set of questions that may need to be answered.
This document does not assign valuation to the answers.</t>
      <section anchor="integrity-and-privacy-of-on-device-data">
        <name>Integrity and Privacy of on-device data</name>
        <dl>
          <dt>initial-enclave-location:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>Is the location of the initial software trust anchor internal to the CPU package?
Some systems have a software verification public key which is built into the CPU package, while other systems store that initial key in a non-volatile device external to the CPU.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>initial-enclave-integrity-key:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>If the first-stage bootloader is external to the CPU, and if it is integrity protected, where is the key used to check the integrity?</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>initial-enclave-privacy-key:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>If the first-stage data is external to the CPU, is it kept confidential by use of encryption?</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>first-stage-exposure:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The number of people involved in the first stage initialization.
An entirely automated system would have a number zero.
A factory with three 8 hour shifts might have a number that is a multiple of three.
A system with humans involved may be subject to bribery attacks, while a system with no humans may be subject to attacks on the system which are hard to notice.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>first-second-stage-gap:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how far and long does a board travel between being initialized with a first-stage bootloader to where it is locked down so that changes to the bootloader can no longer be made.
For many situations, there is no distance at all as they occur in the same factory, but for other situations boards are manufactured and tested in one location, but are initialized elsewhere.</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
      <section anchor="integrity-and-privacy-of-device-identify-infrastructure">
        <name>Integrity and Privacy of device identify infrastructure</name>
        <t>For IDevID provisioning, which includes a private key and matching
certificate installed into the device, the associated public key
infrastructure that anchors this identity must be maintained by the
manufacturer.</t>
        <dl>
          <dt>identity-pki-level:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>referring to <xref target="pkilevel"/>, the level number at which End-Entity certificates are present.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>identity-time-limits-per-subordinate:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how long is each subordinate CA maintained before a new
subordinate CA key is generated?  There may be no time limit, only a device
count limit.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>identity-number-per-subordinate:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how many identities are signed by a particular subordinate CA before it is
retired?  There may be no numeric limit, only a time limit.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>identity-anchor-storage:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how is the root CA key stored? An open description that might include whether an HSM is used, or not, or even the model of it.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>identity-shared-split-extra:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>referring to <xref target="splittingnumbers"/>, where a private key is split up into n-components, of which k are required to recover the key, this number is n-k.
This is the number of spare shares.
Publishing this provides a measure of how much redundancy is present while not actually revealing either k or n.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>identity-shared-split-continents:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>the number of continents on which the private key can be recovered without travel by any of the secret share holders</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
      <section anchor="integrity-and-privacy-of-included-trust-anchors">
        <name>Integrity and Privacy of included trust anchors</name>
        <t>For each trust anchor (public key) stored in the device, there will be an
associated PKI.
For each of those PKI the following questions need to be answered.</t>
        <dl>
          <dt>pki-level:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how deep is the EE that will be evaluated, based upon the criteria in <xref target="pkilevel"/></t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-algorithms:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>what kind of algorithms and key sizes can actively be used with the device.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-lifespan:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>what is the timespan for this anchor.  Does it get replaced at some interval, and if so, by what means is this done?</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-level-locked:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>(a Boolean) is the level where the EE cert will be found locked by the device, or can
levels be added or deleted by the PKI operator without code changes to the
device.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-breadth:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how many different non-expired EE certificates is the PKI designed to manage?</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-lock-policy:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>can any EE certificate be used with this trust anchor to sign?  Or, is there
some kind of policy OID or Subject restriction?  Are specific subordinate
CAs needed that lead to the EE?</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>pki-anchor-storage:</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>how is the private key associated with this trust root stored? How many people are needed to recover it?</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="privacy-considerations">
      <name>Privacy Considerations</name>
      <t>many yet to be detailed</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>This entire document is about security considerations.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document makes no IANA requests.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="acknowledgements">
      <name>Acknowledgements</name>
      <t>Robert Martin of MITRE provided some guidance about citing the SBOM efforts.
Carsten Borman provides many editorial suggestions.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="changelog">
      <name>Changelog</name>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references>
      <name>References</name>
      <references>
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC5280" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280">
          <front>
            <title>Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile</title>
            <author fullname="D. Cooper" initials="D." surname="Cooper">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Santesson" initials="S." surname="Santesson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Farrell" initials="S." surname="Farrell">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Boeyen" initials="S." surname="Boeyen">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Housley" initials="R." surname="Housley">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="W. Polk" initials="W." surname="Polk">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2008"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo profiles the X.509 v3 certificate and X.509 v2 certificate revocation list (CRL) for use in the Internet.  An overview of this approach and model is provided as an introduction.  The X.509 v3 certificate format is described in detail, with additional information regarding the format and semantics of Internet name forms.  Standard certificate extensions are described and two Internet-specific extensions are defined.  A set of required certificate extensions is specified.  The X.509 v2 CRL format is described in detail along with standard and Internet-specific extensions.  An algorithm for X.509 certification path validation is described.  An ASN.1 module and examples are provided in the appendices.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5280"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5280"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="ieee802-1AR" target="http://standards.ieee.org/findstds/standard/802.1AR-2009.html">
          <front>
            <title>IEEE 802.1AR Secure Device Identifier</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IEEE Standard</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2009"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references>
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC8995" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8995">
          <front>
            <title>Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure (BRSKI)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Pritikin" initials="M." surname="Pritikin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Eckert" initials="T." surname="Eckert">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Behringer" initials="M." surname="Behringer">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="K. Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies automated bootstrapping of an Autonomic Control Plane.  To do this, a Secure Key Infrastructure is bootstrapped.  This is done using manufacturer-installed X.509 certificates, in combination with a manufacturer's authorizing service, both online and offline.  We call this process the Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure (BRSKI) protocol. Bootstrapping a new device can occur when using a routable address and a cloud service, only link-local connectivity, or limited/disconnected networks. Support for deployment models with less stringent security requirements is included. Bootstrapping is complete when the cryptographic identity of the new key infrastructure is successfully deployed to the device.  The established secure connection can be used to deploy a locally issued certificate to the device as well.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8995"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8995"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.richardson-anima-voucher-delegation" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-richardson-anima-voucher-delegation-03.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Delegated Authority for Bootstrap Voucher Artifacts</title>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Wei Pan" initials="W." surname="Pan">
              <organization>Huawei Technologies</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="22" month="March" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document describes an extension of the RFC8366 Voucher Artifact
   in order to support delegation of signing authority.  The initial
   voucher pins a public identity, and that public indentity can then
   issue additional vouchers.  This chain of authorization can support
   permission-less resale of devices, as well as guarding against
   business failure of the BRSKI [I-D.ietf-anima-bootstrapping-keyinfra]
   Manufacturer Authorized Signing Authority (MASA).

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-richardson-anima-voucher-delegation-03"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.friel-anima-brski-cloud" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-friel-anima-brski-cloud-04.txt">
          <front>
            <title>BRSKI Cloud Registrar</title>
            <author fullname="Owen Friel" initials="O." surname="Friel">
              <organization>Cisco</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Rifaat Shekh-Yusef" initials="R." surname="Shekh-Yusef">
              <organization>Auth0</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="6" month="April" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document specifies the behaviour of a BRSKI Cloud Registrar, and
   how a pledge can interact with a BRSKI Cloud Registrar when
   bootstrapping.

   RFCED REMOVE: It is being actively worked on at https://github.com/
   anima-wg/brski-cloud

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-friel-anima-brski-cloud-04"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-anima-constrained-voucher" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-anima-constrained-voucher-18.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Constrained Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure (BRSKI)</title>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Peter Van der Stok" initials="P." surname="Van der Stok">
              <organization>vanderstok consultancy</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Panos Kampanakis" initials="P." surname="Kampanakis">
              <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Esko Dijk" initials="E." surname="Dijk">
              <organization>IoTconsultancy.nl</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="11" month="July" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document defines the Constrained Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key
   Infrastructure (Constrained BRSKI) protocol, which provides a
   solution for secure zero-touch bootstrapping of resource-constrained
   (IoT) devices into the network of a domain owner.  This protocol is
   designed for constrained networks, which may have limited data
   throughput or may experience frequent packet loss.  Constrained BRSKI
   is a variant of the BRSKI protocol, which uses an artifact signed by
   the device manufacturer called the "voucher" which enables a new
   device and the owner's network to mutually authenticate.  While the
   BRSKI voucher is typically encoded in JSON, Constrained BRSKI defines
   a compact CBOR-encoded voucher.  The BRSKI voucher is extended with
   new data types that allow for smaller voucher sizes.  The Enrollment
   over Secure Transport (EST) protocol, used in BRSKI, is replaced with
   EST-over-CoAPS; and HTTPS used in BRSKI is replaced with CoAPS.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-anima-constrained-voucher-18"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-anima-brski-async-enroll" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-anima-brski-async-enroll-05.txt">
          <front>
            <title>BRSKI-AE: Alternative Enrollment Protocols in BRSKI</title>
            <author fullname="David von Oheimb" initials="D." surname="von Oheimb">
              <organization>Siemens AG</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Steffen Fries" initials="S." surname="Fries">
              <organization>Siemens AG</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Hendrik Brockhaus" initials="H." surname="Brockhaus">
              <organization>Siemens AG</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Eliot Lear" initials="E." surname="Lear">
              <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="7" month="March" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document enhances Bootstrapping Remote Secure Key Infrastructure
   (BRSKI, [RFC8995]) to allow employing alternative enrollment
   protocols, such as CMP.

   Using self-contained signed objects, the origin of enrollment
   requests and responses can be authenticated independently of message
   transfer.  This supports end-to-end security and asynchronous
   operation of certificate enrollment and provides flexibility where to
   authenticate and authorize certification requests.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-anima-brski-async-enroll-05"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.moskowitz-ecdsa-pki" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-moskowitz-ecdsa-pki-10.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Guide for building an ECC pki</title>
            <author fullname="Robert Moskowitz" initials="R." surname="Moskowitz">
              <organization>HTT Consulting</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer SIT</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Liang Xia" initials="L." surname="Xia">
              <organization>Huawei</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="31" month="January" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This memo provides a guide for building a PKI (Public Key
   Infrastructure) using openSSL.  All certificates in this guide are
   ECDSA, P-256, with SHA256 certificates.  Along with common End Entity
   certificates, this guide provides instructions for creating IEEE
   802.1AR iDevID Secure Device certificates.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-moskowitz-ecdsa-pki-10"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4949" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4949">
          <front>
            <title>Internet Security Glossary, Version 2</title>
            <author fullname="R. Shirey" initials="R." surname="Shirey">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="August" year="2007"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This Glossary provides definitions, abbreviations, and explanations of terminology for information system security. The 334 pages of entries offer recommendations to improve the comprehensibility of written material that is generated in the Internet Standards Process (RFC 2026). The recommendations follow the principles that such writing should (a) use the same term or definition whenever the same concept is mentioned; (b) use terms in their plainest, dictionary sense; (c) use terms that are already well-established in open publications; and (d) avoid terms that either favor a particular vendor or favor a particular technology or mechanism over other, competing techniques that already exist or could be developed.  This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="FYI" value="36"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4949"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4949"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5011" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5011">
          <front>
            <title>Automated Updates of DNS Security (DNSSEC) Trust Anchors</title>
            <author fullname="M. StJohns" initials="M." surname="StJohns">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2007"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes a means for automated, authenticated, and authorized updating of DNSSEC "trust anchors".  The method provides protection against N-1 key compromises of N keys in the trust point key set.  Based on the trust established by the presence of a current anchor, other anchors may be added at the same place in the hierarchy, and, ultimately, supplant the existing anchor(s).</t>
              <t>This mechanism will require changes to resolver management behavior (but not resolver resolution behavior), and the addition of a single flag bit to the DNSKEY record.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="STD" value="74"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5011"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5011"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8366" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8366">
          <front>
            <title>A Voucher Artifact for Bootstrapping Protocols</title>
            <author fullname="K. Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Pritikin" initials="M." surname="Pritikin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Eckert" initials="T." surname="Eckert">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="May" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a strategy to securely assign a pledge to an owner using an artifact signed, directly or indirectly, by the pledge's manufacturer.  This artifact is known as a "voucher".</t>
              <t>This document defines an artifact format as a YANG-defined JSON document that has been signed using a Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) structure.  Other YANG-derived formats are possible.  The voucher artifact is normally generated by the pledge's manufacturer (i.e., the Manufacturer Authorized Signing Authority (MASA)).</t>
              <t>This document only defines the voucher artifact, leaving it to other documents to describe specialized protocols for accessing it.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8366"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8366"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8572" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8572">
          <front>
            <title>Secure Zero Touch Provisioning (SZTP)</title>
            <author fullname="K. Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="I. Farrer" initials="I." surname="Farrer">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="M. Abrahamsson" initials="M." surname="Abrahamsson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="April" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document presents a technique to securely provision a networking device when it is booting in a factory-default state.  Variations in the solution enable it to be used on both public and private networks.  The provisioning steps are able to update the boot image, commit an initial configuration, and execute arbitrary scripts to address auxiliary needs.  The updated device is subsequently able to establish secure connections with other systems.  For instance, a device may establish NETCONF (RFC 6241) and/or RESTCONF (RFC 8040) connections with deployment-specific network management systems.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8572"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8572"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7030" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7030">
          <front>
            <title>Enrollment over Secure Transport</title>
            <author fullname="M. Pritikin" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Pritikin">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="P. Yee" initials="P." role="editor" surname="Yee">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Harkins" initials="D." role="editor" surname="Harkins">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document profiles certificate enrollment for clients using Certificate Management over CMS (CMC) messages over a secure transport.  This profile, called Enrollment over Secure Transport (EST), describes a simple, yet functional, certificate management protocol targeting Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) clients that need to acquire client certificates and associated Certification Authority (CA) certificates.  It also supports client-generated public/private key pairs as well as key pairs generated by the CA.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7030"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7030"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8894" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8894">
          <front>
            <title>Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol</title>
            <author fullname="P. Gutmann" initials="P." surname="Gutmann">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies the Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol (SCEP), a PKI protocol that leverages existing technology by using Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS, formerly known as PKCS #7) and PKCS #10 over HTTP.  SCEP is the evolution of the enrolment protocol sponsored by Cisco Systems, which enjoys wide support in both client and server implementations, as well as being relied upon by numerous other industry standards that work with certificates.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8894"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8894"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4210" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4210">
          <front>
            <title>Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate Management Protocol (CMP)</title>
            <author fullname="C. Adams" initials="C." surname="Adams">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="S. Farrell" initials="S." surname="Farrell">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Kause" initials="T." surname="Kause">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="T. Mononen" initials="T." surname="Mononen">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="September" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) Certificate Management Protocol (CMP).  Protocol messages are defined for X.509v3 certificate creation and management.  CMP provides on-line interactions between PKI components, including an exchange between a Certification Authority (CA) and a client system.  [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4210"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4210"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="_3GPP.51.011" target="http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Specs/archive/51_series/51.011/51011-4f0.zip">
          <front>
            <title>Specification of the Subscriber Identity Module - Mobile Equipment (SIM-ME) interface</title>
            <author>
              <organization abbrev="3GPP">3rd Generation Partnership Project</organization>
              <address>
                <postal>
                  <country>France</country>
                  <city>Sophia Antipolis Cedex</city>
                </postal>
              </address>
            </author>
            <author fullname="PHAN, Ly Thanh">
              <organization>Gemalto N.V.</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="15" month="June" year="2005"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6024" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6024">
          <front>
            <title>Trust Anchor Management Requirements</title>
            <author fullname="R. Reddy" initials="R." surname="Reddy">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="C. Wallace" initials="C." surname="Wallace">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="October" year="2010"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>A trust anchor represents an authoritative entity via a public key and associated data.  The public key is used to verify digital signatures, and the associated data is used to constrain the types of information for which the trust anchor is authoritative.  A relying party uses trust anchors to determine if a digitally signed object is valid by verifying a digital signature using the trust anchor's public key, and by enforcing the constraints expressed in the associated data for the trust anchor.  This document describes some of the problems associated with the lack of a standard trust anchor management mechanism and defines requirements for data formats and push-based protocols designed to address these problems.  This  document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6024"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6024"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="BedOfNails" target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-circuit_test#Bed_of_nails_tester">
          <front>
            <title>Bed of nails tester</title>
            <author>
              <organization>Wikipedia</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="July" day="01"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="pelionfcu" target="https://www.pelion.com/docs/device-management-provision/1.2/introduction/index.html">
          <front>
            <title>Factory provisioning overview</title>
            <author>
              <organization>ARM Pelion</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="June" day="28"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="factoringrsa" target="https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/204886987.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>Factoring RSA keys from certified smart cards: Coppersmith in the wild</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2013" month="September" day="16"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="kskceremony" target="https://www.iana.org/dnssec/dps/zsk-operator/dps-zsk-operator-v2.0.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>DNSSEC Practice Statement for the Root Zone ZSK Operator</title>
            <author>
              <organization>Verisign</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2017"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="rootkeyceremony" target="https://cryptography.fandom.com/wiki/Root_Key_Ceremony">
          <front>
            <title>Root Key Ceremony, Cryptography Wiki</title>
            <author>
              <organization>Community</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="April" day="04"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="keyceremony2" target="http://www.digi-sign.com/compliance/key%20ceremony/index">
          <front>
            <title>SAS 70 Key Ceremony</title>
            <author>
              <organization>Digi-Sign</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="April" day="04"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="shamir79" target="http://web.mit.edu/6.857/OldStuff/Fall03/ref/Shamir-HowToShareASecret.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>How to share a secret.</title>
            <author initials="A." surname="Shamir" fullname="Adi Shamir">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="1979"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="nistsp800-57" target="https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/800-57-part-1/rev-4/final">
          <front>
            <title>SP 800-57 Part 1 Rev. 4 Recommendation for Key Management, Part 1: General</title>
            <author>
              <organization>NIST</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2016" month="January" day="01"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="fidotechnote" target="https://fidoalliance.org/fido-technotes-the-truth-about-attestation/">
          <front>
            <title>FIDO TechNotes: The Truth about Attestation</title>
            <author>
              <organization>FIDO Alliance</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2018" month="July" day="19"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="ntiasbom" target="https://www.ntia.doc.gov/SoftwareTransparency">
          <front>
            <title>NTIA Software Component Transparency</title>
            <author>
              <organization>NTIA</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="July" day="01"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="cisqsbom" target="https://www.it-cisq.org/software-bill-of-materials/index.htm">
          <front>
            <title>TOOL-TO-TOOL SOFTWARE BILL OF MATERIALS EXCHANGE</title>
            <author>
              <organization>CISQ/Object Management Group</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="July" day="01"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="ComodoGate" target="https://www.theregister.com/2011/03/28/comodo_gate_hacker_breaks_cover/">
          <front>
            <title>Comodo-gate hacker brags about forged certificate exploit</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2011" month="March" day="28"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="openbmc" target="https://www.openbmc.org/">
          <front>
            <title>Defining a Standard Baseboard Management Controller Firmware Stack</title>
            <author>
              <organization>Linux Foundation/OpenBMC Group</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="July" day="01"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="JTAG" target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JTAG">
          <front>
            <title>Joint Test Action Group</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="August" day="26"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="JTAGieee" target="https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/5412866">
          <front>
            <title>1149.7-2009 - IEEE Standard for Reduced-Pin and Enhanced-Functionality Test Access Port and Boundary-Scan Architecture</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IEEE Standard</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2009"/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1109/IEEESTD.2010.5412866"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="rootkeyrollover" target="https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/proposal-future-rz-ksk-rollovers-01nov19-en.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>Proposal for Future Root Zone KSK Rollovers</title>
            <author>
              <organization>ICANN</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2019"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="CABFORUM" target="https://cabforum.org/wp-content/uploads/CA-Browser-Forum-BR-1.7.3.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>CA/Browser Forum Baseline Requirements for the Issuance and Management of Publicly-Trusted Certificates, v.1.7.3</title>
            <author>
              <organization>CA/Browser Forum</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="October"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.richardson-rats-usecases" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-richardson-rats-usecases-08.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Use cases for Remote Attestation common encodings</title>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Carl Wallace" initials="C." surname="Wallace">
              <organization>Red Hound Software</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Wei Pan" initials="W." surname="Pan">
              <organization>Huawei Technologies</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="2" month="November" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document details mechanisms created for performing Remote
   Attestation that have been used in a number of industries.  The
   document initially focuses on existing industry verticals, mapping
   terminology used in those specifications to the more abstract
   terminology used by the IETF RATS Working Group.

   The document aspires to describe possible future use cases that would
   be enabled by common formats.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-richardson-rats-usecases-08"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-suit-architecture" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-suit-architecture-16.txt">
          <front>
            <title>A Firmware Update Architecture for Internet of Things</title>
            <author fullname="Brendan Moran" initials="B." surname="Moran">
              <organization>Arm Limited</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Hannes Tschofenig" initials="H." surname="Tschofenig">
              <organization>Arm Limited</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="David Brown" initials="D." surname="Brown">
              <organization>Linaro</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Milosch Meriac" initials="M." surname="Meriac">
              <organization>Consultant</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="27" month="January" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Vulnerabilities in Internet of Things (IoT) devices have raised the need for a reliable and secure firmware update mechanism suitable for devices with resource constraints. Incorporating such an update mechanism is a fundamental requirement for fixing vulnerabilities, but it also enables other important capabilities such as updating configuration settings and adding new functionality.

 In addition to the definition of terminology and an architecture, this document provides the motivation for the standardization of a manifest format as a transport-agnostic means for describing and protecting firmware updates.
              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-suit-architecture-16"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-emu-eap-noob" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-emu-eap-noob-06.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Nimble Out-of-Band Authentication for EAP (EAP-NOOB)</title>
            <author fullname="Tuomas Aura" initials="T." surname="Aura">
              <organization>Aalto University</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Mohit Sethi" initials="M." surname="Sethi">
              <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Aleksi Peltonen" initials="A." surname="Peltonen">
              <organization>Aalto University</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="3" month="September" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) provides support for multiple authentication methods.  This document defines the EAP-NOOB authentication method for nimble out-of-band (OOB) authentication and key derivation.  The EAP method is intended for bootstrapping all kinds of Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices that have no preconfigured authentication credentials.  The method makes use of a user-assisted, one-directional, out-of-band (OOB) message between the peer device and authentication server to authenticate the in-band key exchange.  The device must have a nonnetwork input or output interface, such as a display, microphone, speaker, or blinking light, that can send or receive dynamically generated messages of tens of bytes in length.
              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-emu-eap-noob-06"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-rats-architecture" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-rats-architecture-22.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Remote Attestation Procedures Architecture</title>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer SIT</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Dave Thaler" initials="D." surname="Thaler">
              <organization>Microsoft</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Michael Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson">
              <organization>Sandelman Software Works</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Ned Smith" initials="N." surname="Smith">
              <organization>Intel Corporation</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Wei Pan" initials="W." surname="Pan">
              <organization>Huawei Technologies</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="28" month="September" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   In network protocol exchanges it is often useful for one end of a
   communication to know whether the other end is in an intended
   operating state.  This document provides an architectural overview of
   the entities involved that make such tests possible through the
   process of generating, conveying, and evaluating evidentiary claims.
   An attempt is made to provide for a model that is neutral toward
   processor architectures, the content of claims, and protocols.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-rats-architecture-22"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.birkholz-suit-coswid-manifest" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-birkholz-suit-coswid-manifest-00.txt">
          <front>
            <title>A SUIT Manifest Extension for Concise Software Identifiers</title>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer SIT</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="17" month="July" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document defines a resource extension for Concise Software
   Identifiers (CoSWID) that represents a SUIT firmware manifest.  This
   extension combines the information elements of the SUIT information
   model with the semantic expressiveness of Software Identifiers.  In
   consequence, this composite enables the integration of Firmware
   Updates for the Internet of Things (SUIT) in existing work-flows for
   updates of software components in general.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-birkholz-suit-coswid-manifest-00"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.birkholz-rats-mud" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-birkholz-rats-mud-00.txt">
          <front>
            <title>MUD-Based RATS Resources Discovery</title>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer SIT</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="9" month="March" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   Manufacturer Usage Description (MUD) files and the MUD URI that point
   to them are defined in RFC 8520.  This document introduces a new type
   of MUD file to be delivered in conjunction with a MUD file signature
   and/or to be referenced via a MUD URI embedded in an IEEE 802.1AR
   Secure Device Identifier (DevID).  A DevID is a device specific pub-
   key identity document that can be presented to other entities, e.g. a
   network management system.  If this entity is also a verifier as
   defined by the IETF Remote ATtestation procedureS (RATS)
   architecture, this verifier can use the references found in the MUD
   file specified in this document in order to discover appropriate
   Reference Integrity Measurements (RIM), Endorsement Documents, or
   even globally suitable Remote Attestation Services (RAS).  All three
   types of theses resources are required to conduct RATS.  Hence, the
   MUD file defined in this document enables remote attestation
   procedures by supporting the discovery of these required resources or
   services.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-birkholz-rats-mud-00"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8520" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8520">
          <front>
            <title>Manufacturer Usage Description Specification</title>
            <author fullname="E. Lear" initials="E." surname="Lear">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="R. Droms" initials="R." surname="Droms">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author fullname="D. Romascanu" initials="D." surname="Romascanu">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="March" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo specifies a component-based architecture for Manufacturer Usage Descriptions (MUDs).  The goal of MUD is to provide a means for end devices to signal to the network what sort of access and network functionality they require to properly function.  The initial focus is on access control.  Later work can delve into other aspects.</t>
              <t>This memo specifies two YANG modules, IPv4 and IPv6 DHCP options, a Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) TLV, a URL, an X.509 certificate extension, and a means to sign and verify the descriptions.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8520"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8520"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-sacm-coswid" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-sacm-coswid-22.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Software Identification Tags</title>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer SIT</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Jessica Fitzgerald-McKay" initials="J." surname="Fitzgerald-McKay">
              <organization>National Security Agency</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Charles Schmidt" initials="C." surname="Schmidt">
              <organization>The MITRE Corporation</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="David Waltermire" initials="D." surname="Waltermire">
              <organization>National Institute of Standards and Technology</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="20" month="July" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   ISO/IEC 19770-2:2015 Software Identification (SWID) tags provide an
   extensible XML-based structure to identify and describe individual
   software components, patches, and installation bundles.  SWID tag
   representations can be too large for devices with network and storage
   constraints.  This document defines a concise representation of SWID
   tags: Concise SWID (CoSWID) tags.  CoSWID supports a similar set of
   semantics and features as SWID tags, as well as new semantics that
   allow CoSWIDs to describe additional types of information, all in a
   more memory efficient format.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-sacm-coswid-22"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7168" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7168">
          <front>
            <title>The Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol for Tea Efflux Appliances (HTCPCP-TEA)</title>
            <author fullname="I. Nazar" initials="I." surname="Nazar">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date month="April" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol (HTCPCP) specification does not allow for the brewing of tea, in all its variety and  complexity.  This paper outlines an extension to HTCPCP to allow  for pots to provide networked tea-brewing facilities.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7168"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7168"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.bormann-lwig-7228bis" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-bormann-lwig-7228bis-08.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Terminology for Constrained-Node Networks</title>
            <author fullname="Carsten Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann">
              <organization>Universität Bremen TZI</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Mehmet Ersue" initials="M." surname="Ersue">
         </author>
            <author fullname="Ari Keränen" initials="A." surname="Keränen">
              <organization>Ericsson</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Carles Gomez" initials="C." surname="Gomez">
              <organization>Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="5" month="April" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The Internet Protocol Suite is increasingly used on small devices
   with severe constraints on power, memory, and processing resources,
   creating constrained-node networks.  This document provides a number
   of basic terms that have been useful in the standardization work for
   constrained-node networks.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-bormann-lwig-7228bis-08"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.anima-masa-considerations">
          <front>
            <title>*** BROKEN REFERENCE ***</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-netconf-trust-anchors" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-netconf-trust-anchors-19.txt">
          <front>
            <title>A YANG Data Model for a Truststore</title>
            <author fullname="Kent Watsen" initials="K." surname="Watsen">
              <organization>Watsen Networks</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="19" month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document defines a YANG module for configuring bags of
   certificates and bags of public keys that can be referenced by other
   data models for trust.  Notifications are sent when certificates are
   about to expire.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-netconf-trust-anchors-19"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-teep-architecture" target="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-teep-architecture-19.txt">
          <front>
            <title>Trusted Execution Environment Provisioning (TEEP) Architecture</title>
            <author fullname="Mingliang Pei" initials="M." surname="Pei">
              <organization>Broadcom</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Hannes Tschofenig" initials="H." surname="Tschofenig">
              <organization>Arm Limited</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Dave Thaler" initials="D." surname="Thaler">
              <organization>Microsoft</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Dave Wheeler" initials="D. M." surname="Wheeler">
              <organization>Amazon</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="24" month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   A Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) is an environment that enforces
   that any code within that environment cannot be tampered with, and
   that any data used by such code cannot be read or tampered with by
   any code outside that environment.  This architecture document
   motivates the design and standardization of a protocol for managing
   the lifecycle of trusted applications running inside such a TEE.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-teep-architecture-19"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
