💾 Archived View for gemini.bortzmeyer.org › rfc-mirror › rfc8181.txt captured on 2023-12-28 at 16:29:10.

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2021-11-30)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-







Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         S. Weiler
Request for Comments: 8181                                     W3C / MIT
Category: Standards Track                                    A. Sonalker
ISSN: 2070-1721                                               STEER Tech
                                                              R. Austein
                                                    Dragon Research Labs
                                                               July 2017


A Publication Protocol for the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI)

Abstract

   This document defines a protocol for publishing Resource Public Key
   Infrastructure (RPKI) objects.  Even though the RPKI will have many
   participants issuing certificates and creating other objects, it is
   operationally useful to consolidate the publication of those objects.
   Even in cases where a certificate issuer runs its own publication
   repository, it can be useful to run the certificate engine itself on
   a different machine from the publication repository.  This document
   defines a protocol which addresses these needs.

Status of This Memo

   This is an Internet Standards Track document.

   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
   received public review and has been approved for publication by the
   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
   Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
   http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8181.
















Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
   described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
     1.1.  Historical Note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     1.2.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   2.  Protocol Specification  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     2.1.  Common XML Message Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
     2.2.  Publication and Withdrawal  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     2.3.  Listing the Repository  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     2.4.  Error Handling  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     2.5.  Error Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     2.6.  XML Schema  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   3.  Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     3.1.  <publish/> Query, No Existing Object  . . . . . . . . . .  12
     3.2.  <publish/> Query, Overwriting Existing Object . . . . . .  12
     3.3.  <withdraw/> Query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     3.4.  <success/> Reply  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     3.5.  <report_error/> with Optional Elements  . . . . . . . . .  13
     3.6.  <report_error/> without Optional Elements . . . . . . . .  14
     3.7.  Error Handling with Multi-Element Queries . . . . . . . .  14
       3.7.1.  Multi-Element Query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
       3.7.2.  Successful Multi-Element Response . . . . . . . . . .  15
       3.7.3.  Failure Multi-Element Response, First Error Only  . .  15
       3.7.4.  Failure Multi-Element Response, All Errors  . . . . .  16
     3.8.  <list/> Query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
     3.9.  <list/> Reply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
   4.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
   5.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   6.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     6.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     6.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21



Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


1.  Introduction

   This document assumes a working knowledge of the Resource Public Key
   Infrastructure (RPKI), which is intended to support improved routing
   security on the Internet.  See [RFC6480] for an overview of the RPKI.

   In order to make participation in the RPKI easier, it is helpful to
   have a few consolidated repositories for RPKI objects, thus saving
   every participant from the cost of maintaining a new service.
   Similarly, relying parties using the RPKI objects will find it faster
   and more reliable to retrieve the necessary set from a smaller number
   of repositories.

   These consolidated RPKI object repositories will in many cases be
   outside the administrative scope of the organization issuing a given
   RPKI object.  In some cases, outsourcing operation of the repository
   will be an explicit goal: some resource holders who strongly wish to
   control their own RPKI private keys may lack the resources to operate
   a 24x7 repository or may simply not wish to do so.

   The operator of an RPKI publication repository may well be an
   Internet registry which issues certificates to its customers, but it
   need not be; conceptually, operation of an RPKI publication
   repository is separate from operation of an RPKI Certification
   Authority (CA).

   Even in cases where a resource holder operates both a certificate
   engine and a publication repository, it can be useful to separate the
   two functions, as they have somewhat different operational and
   security requirements.

   This document defines an RPKI publication protocol which allows
   publication either within or across organizational boundaries and
   which makes fairly minimal demands on both the CA engine and the
   publication service.

   The authentication and message integrity architecture of the
   publication protocol is essentially identical to the architecture
   used in [RFC6492] because the participants in this protocol are the
   same CA engines as in RFC 6492; this allows reuse of the same
   "Business PKI" (BPKI) (see Section 1.2) infrastructure used to
   support RFC 6492.  As in RFC 6492, authorization is a matter of
   external configuration: we assume that any given publication
   repository has some kind of policy controlling which certificate
   engines are allowed to publish, modify, or withdraw particular RPKI
   objects, most likely following the recommendation in [RFC6480],





Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   Section 4.4; the details of this policy are a private matter between
   the operator of a certificate engine and the operator of the chosen
   publication repository.

   The following diagram attempts to convey where this publication
   protocol fits into the overall data flow between the certificate
   issuers and relying parties:

          +------+    +------+    +------+
          |  CA  |    |  CA  |    |  CA  |
          +------+    +------+    +------+
              |           |           |    Publication protocol
              |           |           |    business relationship
              +-------+   |  +--------+      perhaps set up by
                      |   |  |                    RFC 8183
                 +----v---v--v-----+
                 |                 |
                 |   Publication   |
                 |   Repository    |
                 |                 |
                 +-----------------+     Distribution protocols
                          |                   rsync or RRDP
           +--------------+----------------+
           |              |                |
   +-------v-----+ +------v------+  +------v------+
   |   Relying   | |   Relying   |  |   Relying   |
   |    Party    | |    Party    |  |    Party    |
   +-------------+ +-------------+  +-------------+

   The publication protocol itself is not visible to relying parties: a
   relying party sees the public interface of the publication server,
   which is an rsync or RPKI Repository Delta Protocol (RRDP) [RFC8182]
   server.

   Operators of certificate engines and publication repositories may
   find [RFC8183] a useful tool in setting up the pairwise relationships
   between these servers, but they are not required to use it.

1.1.  Historical Note

   This protocol started out as an informal collaboration between
   several of the early RPKI implementers, and while it was always the
   designers' intention that the resulting protocol end up on the IETF
   Standards Track, it took a few years to get there because
   standardization of other pieces of the overall RPKI protocol space
   was more urgent.  The Standards Track version of this publication





Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   protocol preserves the original XML namespace and protocol version
   scheme in order to maintain backwards compatibility with running code
   implemented against older versions of the specification.

1.2.  Terminology

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
   BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
   capitals, as shown here.

   "Publication engine" and "publication server" are used
   interchangeably to refer to the server providing the service
   described in this document.

   "Business Public Key Infrastructure" ("Business PKI" or "BPKI")
   refers to a PKI, separate from the RPKI, used to authenticate clients
   to the publication engine.  We use the term "Business PKI" here
   because an Internet registry might already have a PKI for
   authenticating its clients and might wish to reuse that PKI for this
   protocol.  There is, however, no requirement to reuse such a PKI.

2.  Protocol Specification

   The publication protocol uses XML [XML] messages wrapped in signed
   Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) messages, carried over HTTP
   transport [RFC7230].  The CMS encapsulation is identical to that used
   in Section 3.1 (and subsections) of RFC 6492 [RFC6492].

   The publication protocol uses a simple request/response interaction.
   The client passes a request to the server, and the server generates a
   corresponding response.

   A message exchange commences with the client initiating an HTTP POST
   with a content type of "application/rpki-publication", with the
   message object as the body.  The server's response will similarly be
   the body of the response with a content type of "application/
   rpki-publication".

   The content of the POST and the server's response will be a well-
   formed CMS [RFC5652] object with OID = 1.2.840.113549.1.7.2 as
   described in Section 3.1 of [RFC6492].

   The CMS signatures are used to protect the integrity of the protocol
   messages and to authenticate the client and server to each other.
   Authorization to perform particular operations is a local matter,




Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   perhaps determined by contractual agreements between the operators of
   any particular client-server pair, but in any case is beyond the
   scope of this specification.

2.1.  Common XML Message Format

   The XML schema for this protocol is below in Section 2.6.  The basic
   XML message format looks like this:

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <!-- Zero or more PDUs -->
   </msg>

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <!-- Zero or more PDUs -->
   </msg>

   As noted above, the outermost XML element is encapsulated in a signed
   CMS message.  Query messages are signed by the client, and reply
   messages are signed by the server.

   Common attributes:

   version:  The value of this attribute is the version of this
      protocol.  This document describes version 4.

   type:  The possible values of this attribute are "reply" and "query".

   A query PDU may be one of three types: <publish/>, <withdraw/>, or
   <list/>.

   A reply PDU may be one of three types: <success/>, <list/>, or
   <report_error/>.

   The <publish/> and <withdraw/> PDUs include a "tag" attribute to
   facilitate bulk operation.  When performing bulk operations, a CA
   engine will probably find it useful to specify a distinct tag value
   for each <publish/> or <withdraw/> PDU, to simplify matching an error
   with the PDU which triggered it.  The tag attribute is mandatory, to
   simplify parsing, but a CA engine which has no particular use for
   tagging MAY use any syntactically legal value, including simply using
   the empty string for all tag fields.



Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   This document describes version 4 of this protocol.  An
   implementation which understands only this version of the protocol
   MUST reject messages with a different protocol version attribute,
   signaling the error as described in Section 2.4.  Since "4" is
   currently the only value allowed for the version attribute in the
   schema (Section 2.6), an incorrect protocol version can be detected
   either by checking the version attribute directly or as a schema
   validation error.  Any future update to this protocol which is either
   syntactically or semantically incompatible with the current version
   will need to increment the protocol version number.

2.2.  Publication and Withdrawal

   The publication protocol uses a common message format to request
   publication of any RPKI object.  This format was chosen specifically
   to allow this protocol to accommodate new types of RPKI objects
   without needing changes to this protocol.

   Both the <publish/> and <withdraw/> PDUs have a payload of a tag and
   an rsync URI [RFC3986] [RFC5781].  The <publish/> query also contains
   the DER object to be published, encoded in Base64 ([RFC4648],
   Section 4, with line breaks within the Base64 text permitted but not
   required).

   Both the <publish/> and <withdraw/> PDUs also have a "hash"
   attribute, which carries a hash of an existing object at the
   specified repository URI, encoded as a hexadecimal string.  For
   <withdraw/> PDUs, the hash MUST be present, as this operation makes
   no sense if there is no existing object to withdraw.  For <publish/>
   PDUs, the hash MUST be present if the publication operation is
   overwriting an existing object, and it MUST NOT be present if this
   publication operation is writing to a new URI where no prior object
   exists.  Presence of an object when no "hash" attribute has been
   specified is an error, as is absence of an object or an incorrect
   hash value when a "hash" attribute has been specified.  Any such
   errors MUST be reported using the <report_error/> PDU.

   The hash algorithm is SHA-256 [SHS], to simplify comparison of
   publication protocol hashes with RPKI manifest hashes.

   The intent behind the "hash" attribute is to allow the client and
   server to detect any disagreements about the effect that a <publish/>
   or <withdraw/> PDU will have on the repository.

   Note that every publish and withdraw action requires a new manifest,
   thus every publish or withdraw action will involve at least two
   objects.




Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   Processing of a query message is handled atomically: either the
   entire query succeeds or none of it does.  When a query message
   contains multiple PDUs, failure of any PDU may require the server to
   roll back actions triggered by earlier PDUs.

   When a query message containing <publish/> or <withdraw/> PDUs
   succeeds, the server returns a single <success/> reply.

   When a query fails, the server returns one or more <report_error/>
   reply PDUs.  Typically, a server will only generate one
   <report_error/> corresponding to the first query PDU that failed, but
   servers MAY return multiple <report_error/> PDUs at the implementer's
   discretion.

2.3.  Listing the Repository

   The <list/> operation allows the client to ask the server for a
   complete listing of objects which the server believes the client has
   published.  This is intended primarily to allow the client to recover
   upon detecting (probably via use of the "hash" attribute; see
   Section 2.2) that they have somehow lost synchronization.

   The <list/> query consists of a single PDU.  A <list/> query MUST be
   the only PDU in a query -- it may not be combined with any <publish/>
   or <withdraw/> queries.

   The <list/> reply consists of zero or more PDUs, one per object
   published in this repository by this client, each PDU conveying the
   URI and hash of one published object.

2.4.  Error Handling

   Errors are handled at two levels.

   Errors that make it impossible to decode a query or encode a response
   are handled at the HTTP layer.  4xx and 5xx HTTP response codes
   indicate that something bad happened.

   In all other cases, errors result in an XML <report_error/> PDU.
   Like the rest of this protocol, <report_error/> PDUs are CMS-signed
   XML messages and thus can be archived to provide an audit trail.

   <report_error/> PDUs only appear in replies, never in queries.

   The "tag" attribute of the <report_error/> PDU associated with a
   <publish/> or <withdraw/> PDU MUST be set to the same value as the
   "tag" attribute in the PDU which generated the error.  A client can




Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   use the "tag" attribute to determine which PDU caused processing of
   an update to fail.

   The error itself is conveyed in the "error_code" attribute.  The
   value of this attribute is a token indicating the specific error that
   occurred.

   The body of the <report_error/> element contains two sub-elements:

   1.  An optional text element <error_text/>, which, if present,
       contains a text string with debugging information intended for
       human consumption.

   2.  An optional element <failed_pdu/>, which, if present, contains a
       verbatim copy of the query PDU whose failure triggered the
       <report_error/> PDU.  The quoted element must be syntactically
       valid.

   See Section 3.7 for examples of a multi-element query and responses.

2.5.  Error Codes

   These are the defined error codes as well as some discussion of each.
   Text similar to these descriptions may be sent in an <error_text/>
   element to help explain the error encountered.

   xml_error:  Encountered an XML problem.  Note that some XML errors
      may be severe enough to require error reporting at the HTTP layer,
      instead.  Implementations MAY choose to report any or all XML
      errors at the HTTP layer.

   permission_failure:  Client does not have permission to update this
      URI.

   bad_cms_signature:  Bad CMS signature.

   object_already_present:  An object is already present at this URI,
      yet a "hash" attribute was not specified.  A "hash" attribute must
      be specified when overwriting or deleting an object.  Perhaps
      client and server are out of sync?

   no_object_present:  There is no object present at this URI, yet a
      "hash" attribute was specified.  Perhaps client and server are out
      of sync?

   no_object_matching_hash:  The "hash" attribute supplied does not
      match the "hash" attribute of the object at this URI.  Perhaps
      client and server are out of sync?



Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   consistency_problem:  Server detected an update that looks like it
      will cause a consistency problem (e.g., an object was deleted, but
      the manifest was not updated).  Note that a server is not required
      to make such checks.  Indeed, it may be unwise for a server to do
      so.  This error code just provides a way for the server to explain
      its (in-)action.

   other_error:  A meteor fell on the server.

2.6.  XML Schema

   The following is a [RELAX-NG] compact form schema describing the
   publication protocol.

   This schema is normative: in the event of a disagreement between this
   schema and the document text above, this schema is authoritative.

   # RELAX NG schema for RPKI publication protocol.

   default namespace =
       "http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/"

   # This is version 4 of the protocol.

   version = "4"

   # Top-level PDU is either a query or a reply.

   start |= element msg {
     attribute version { version },
     attribute type    { "query" },
     query_elt
   }

   start |= element msg {
     attribute version { version },
     attribute type    { "reply" },
     reply_elt
   }

   # Tag attributes for bulk operations.

   tag = attribute tag { xsd:token { maxLength="1024" } }

   # Base64-encoded DER stuff.

   base64 = xsd:base64Binary




Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   # Publication URIs.

   uri = attribute uri { xsd:anyURI { maxLength="4096" } }

   # Digest of an existing object (hexadecimal).

   hash = attribute hash { xsd:string { pattern = "[0-9a-fA-F]+" } }

   # Error codes.

   error |= "xml_error"
   error |= "permission_failure"
   error |= "bad_cms_signature"
   error |= "object_already_present"
   error |= "no_object_present"
   error |= "no_object_matching_hash"
   error |= "consistency_problem"
   error |= "other_error"

   # <publish/> and <withdraw/> query elements

   query_elt |= (
     element publish  { tag, uri, hash?, base64 } |
     element withdraw { tag, uri, hash          }
   )*

   # <success/> reply

   reply_elt |= element success { empty }

   # <list/> query and reply

   query_elt |= element list { empty }
   reply_elt |= element list { uri, hash }*

   # <report_error/> reply

   reply_elt |= element report_error {
     tag?,
     attribute error_code { error },
     element   error_text { xsd:string { maxLength="512000" }}?,
     element   failed_pdu { query_elt }?
   }*








Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.  Examples

   Following are examples of various queries and the corresponding
   replies for the RPKI publication protocol.

   Note that the authors have taken liberties with the Base64, hash, and
   URI text in these examples in the interest of making the examples fit
   nicely into RFC text format.  Similarly, these examples do not show
   the CMS signature wrapper around the XML, just the XML payload.

3.1.  <publish/> Query, No Existing Object

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <!-- body is base64(new-object) -->
     <publish
         tag=""
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Alice/01a97a70ac477f06.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgQWxpY2U=
       </publish>
   </msg>

3.2.  <publish/> Query, Overwriting Existing Object

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <!-- hash is hex(SHA-256(old-object)) -->
     <!-- body is base64(new-object) -->
     <publish
         hash="01a97a70ac477f06"
         tag="foo"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Alice/01a97a70ac477f06.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgQWxpY2U=
       </publish>
   </msg>












Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.3.  <withdraw/> Query

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <!-- hash is hex(SHA-256(old-object)) -->
     <withdraw
         hash="01a97a70ac477f06"
         tag="foo"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Alice/01a97a70ac477f06.cer"/>
   </msg>

3.4.  <success/> Reply

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <success/>
   </msg>

3.5.  <report_error/> with Optional Elements

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <report_error
         error_code="no_object_matching_hash"
         tag="foo">
       <error_text>
         Can't delete an object I don't have
       </error_text>
       <failed_pdu>
         <publish
             hash="01a97a70ac477f06"
             tag="foo"
             uri="rsync://wombat.example/Alice/01a97a70ac477f06.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgQWxpY2U=
       </publish>
       </failed_pdu>
     </report_error>
   </msg>







Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.6.  <report_error/> without Optional Elements

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <report_error
         error_code="object_already_present"
         tag="foo"/>
   </msg>

3.7.  Error Handling with Multi-Element Queries

3.7.1.  Multi-Element Query

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <publish
         tag="Alice"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Alice/01a97a70ac477f06.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgQWxpY2U=
       </publish>
     <withdraw
         hash="f46a4198efa3070e"
         tag="Bob"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Bob/f46a4198efa3070e.cer"/>
     <publish
         tag="Carol"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Carol/32e0544eeb510ec0.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgQ2Fyb2w=
       </publish>
     <withdraw
         hash="421ee4ac65732d72"
         tag="Dave"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Dave/421ee4ac65732d72.cer"/>
     <publish
         tag="Eve"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Eve/9dd859b01e5c2ebd.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgRXZl
       </publish>
   </msg>








Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.7.2.  Successful Multi-Element Response

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <success/>
   </msg>

3.7.3.  Failure Multi-Element Response, First Error Only

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <report_error
         error_code="no_object_matching_hash"
         tag="Dave">
       <failed_pdu>
         <withdraw
             hash="421ee4ac65732d72"
             tag="Dave"
             uri="rsync://wombat.example/Dave/421ee4ac65732d72.cer"/>
       </failed_pdu>
     </report_error>
   </msg>

























Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.7.4.  Failure Multi-Element Response, All Errors

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <report_error
         error_code="no_object_matching_hash"
         tag="Dave">
       <failed_pdu>
         <withdraw
             hash="421ee4ac65732d72"
             tag="Dave"
             uri="rsync://wombat.example/Dave/421ee4ac65732d72.cer"/>
       </failed_pdu>
     </report_error>
     <report_error
         error_code="object_already_present"
         tag="Eve">
       <failed_pdu>
         <publish
             tag="Eve"
             uri="rsync://wombat.example/Eve/9dd859b01e5c2ebd.cer">
         SGVsbG8sIG15IG5hbWUgaXMgRXZl
       </publish>
       </failed_pdu>
     </report_error>
   </msg>

3.8.  <list/> Query

   <msg
       type="query"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <list/>
   </msg>














Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


3.9.  <list/> Reply

   <msg
       type="reply"
       version="4"
       xmlns="http://www.hactrn.net/uris/rpki/publication-spec/">
     <list
         hash="eb719b72f0648cf4"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Fee/eb719b72f0648cf4.cer"/>
     <list
         hash="c7c50a68b7aa50bf"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Fie/c7c50a68b7aa50bf.cer"/>
     <list
         hash="f222481ded47445d"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Foe/f222481ded47445d.cer"/>
     <list
         hash="15b94e08713275bc"
         uri="rsync://wombat.example/Fum/15b94e08713275bc.cer"/>
   </msg>

4.  IANA Considerations

   IANA has registered the "application/rpki-publication" media type as
   follows:

      Type name:  application
      Subtype name:  rpki-publication
      Required parameters:  None
      Optional parameters:  None
      Encoding considerations:  binary
      Security considerations:  Carries an RPKI publication protocol
         message, as defined in RFC 8181.
      Interoperability considerations:  None
      Published specification:  RFC 8181
      Applications which use this media type: HTTP
      Additional information:
         Magic number(s):  None
         File extension(s):  None
         Macintosh File Type Code(s):  None
      Person & email address to contact for further information:
         Rob Austein <sra@hactrn.net>
      Intended usage:  COMMON
      Author/Change controller: IETF








Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


5.  Security Considerations

   The RPKI publication protocol and the data it publishes use entirely
   separate PKIs for authentication.  The published data is
   authenticated within the RPKI, and this protocol has nothing to do
   with that authentication, nor does it require that the published
   objects be valid in the RPKI.  The publication protocol uses a
   separate BPKI to authenticate its messages.

   Each RPKI publication protocol message is wrapped in a signed CMS
   message, which provides message integrity protection and an auditable
   form of message authentication.  Because of these protections at the
   application layer, and because all the data being published are
   intended to be public information in any case, this protocol does
   not, strictly speaking, require the use of HTTPS or other transport
   security mechanisms.  There may, however, be circumstances in which a
   particular publication operator may prefer HTTPS over HTTP anyway, as
   a matter of (BPKI) CA policy.  Use of HTTP versus HTTPS here is,
   essentially, a private matter between the repository operator and its
   clients.  Note, however, that even if a client/server pair uses HTTPS
   for this protocol, message authentication for this protocol is still
   based on the CMS signatures, not HTTPS.

   Although the hashes used in the <publish/> and <withdraw/> PDUs are
   cryptographically strong, the digest algorithm was selected for
   convenience in comparing these hashes with the hashes that appear in
   RPKI manifests.  The hashes used in the <publish/> and <withdraw/>
   PDUs are not particularly security sensitive because these PDUs are
   protected by the CMS signatures.  Because of this, the most likely
   reason for a change to this digest algorithm would be to track a
   corresponding change in the digest algorithm used in RPKI manifests.
   If and when such a change happens, it will require incrementing the
   version number of this publication protocol, but given that the most
   likely implementation of a publication server uses these hashes as
   lookup keys in a database, bumping the protocol version number would
   be a relatively minor portion of the effort of changing the
   algorithm.

   Compromise of a publication server, perhaps through mismanagement of
   BPKI private keys, could lead to a denial-of-service attack on the
   RPKI.  An attacker gaining access to BPKI private keys could use this
   protocol to delete (withdraw) RPKI objects, leading to routing
   changes or failures.  Accordingly, as in most PKIs, good key
   management practices are important.







Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


6.  References

6.1.  Normative References

   [RELAX-NG] Clark, J., "RELAX NG Compact Syntax", OASIS Committee
              Specification, November 2002,
              <https://www.oasis-open.org/committees/relax-ng/
              compact-20021121.html>.

   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
              RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.

   [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
              Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>.

   [RFC5652]  Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)", STD 70,
              RFC 5652, DOI 10.17487/RFC5652, September 2009,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5652>.

   [RFC5781]  Weiler, S., Ward, D., and R. Housley, "The rsync URI
              Scheme", RFC 5781, DOI 10.17487/RFC5781, February 2010,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5781>.

   [RFC6492]  Huston, G., Loomans, R., Ellacott, B., and R. Austein, "A
              Protocol for Provisioning Resource Certificates",
              RFC 6492, DOI 10.17487/RFC6492, February 2012,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6492>.

   [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer
              Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",
              RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.

   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
              2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
              May 2017, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.







Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


   [SHS]      National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Secure
              Hash Standard (SHS)", FIPS PUB 180-4,
              DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.180-4, August 2015,
              <http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/
              NIST.FIPS.180-4.pdf>.

   [XML]      Cowan, J., "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1", W3C
              Consortium Recommendation REC-xml11-20060816, October
              2002, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/CR-xml11-20021015>.

6.2.  Informative References

   [RFC6480]  Lepinski, M. and S. Kent, "An Infrastructure to Support
              Secure Internet Routing", RFC 6480, DOI 10.17487/RFC6480,
              February 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6480>.

   [RFC8182]  Bruijnzeels, T., Muravskiy, O., Weber, B., and R. Austein,
              "The RPKI Repository Delta Protocol (RRDP)", RFC 8182,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC8182, July 2017,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8182>.

   [RFC8183]  Austein, R., "An Out-of-Band Setup Protocol for Resource
              Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) Production Services",
              RFC 8183, DOI 10.17487/RFC8183, July 2017,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8183>.


























Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8181                RPKI Publication Protocol              July 2017


Acknowledgements

   The authors would like to thank: Geoff Huston, George Michaelson,
   Oleg Muravskiy, Paul Wouters, Randy Bush, Rob Loomans, Robert
   Kisteleki, Tim Bruijnzeels, Tom Petch, and anybody else who helped
   along the way but whose name(s) the authors have temporarily
   forgotten.

Authors' Addresses

   Samuel Weiler
   W3C / MIT

   Email: weiler@csail.mit.edu


   Anuja Sonalker
   STEER Tech

   Email: anuja@steer-tech.com


   Rob Austein
   Dragon Research Labs

   Email: sra@hactrn.net

























Weiler, et al.               Standards Track                   [Page 21]