xref: /freebsd/crypto/openssh/PROTOCOL.u2f (revision 95eb4b873b6a8b527c5bd78d7191975dfca38998)
1This document describes OpenSSH's support for U2F/FIDO security keys.
2
3Background
4----------
5
6U2F is an open standard for two-factor authentication hardware, widely
7used for user authentication to websites. U2F tokens are ubiquitous,
8available from a number of manufacturers and are currently by far the
9cheapest way for users to achieve hardware-backed credential storage.
10
11The U2F protocol however cannot be trivially used as an SSH protocol key
12type as both the inputs to the signature operation and the resultant
13signature differ from those specified for SSH. For similar reasons,
14integration of U2F devices cannot be achieved via the PKCS#11 API.
15
16U2F also offers a number of features that are attractive in the context
17of SSH authentication. They can be configured to require indication
18of "user presence" for each signature operation (typically achieved
19by requiring the user touch the key). They also offer an attestation
20mechanism at key enrollment time that can be used to prove that a
21given key is backed by hardware. Finally the signature format includes
22a monotonic signature counter that can be used (at scale) to detect
23concurrent use of a private key, should it be extracted from hardware.
24
25U2F private keys are generated through an enrollment operation,
26which takes an application ID - a URL-like string, typically "ssh:"
27in this case, but a HTTP origin for the case of web authentication,
28and a challenge string (typically randomly generated). The enrollment
29operation returns a public key, a key handle that must be used to invoke
30the hardware-backed private key, some flags and signed attestation
31information that may be used to verify that a private key is hosted on a
32particular hardware instance.
33
34It is common for U2F hardware to derive private keys from the key handle
35in conjunction with a small per-device secret that is unique to the
36hardware, thus requiring little on-device storage for an effectively
37unlimited number of supported keys. This drives the requirement that
38the key handle be supplied for each signature operation. U2F tokens
39primarily use ECDSA signatures in the NIST-P256 field, though the FIDO2
40standard specifies additional key types, including one based on Ed25519.
41
42Use of U2F security keys does not automatically imply multi-factor
43authentication. From sshd's perspective, a security key constitutes a
44single factor of authentication, even if protected by a PIN or biometric
45authentication.  To enable multi-factor authentication in ssh, please
46refer to the AuthenticationMethods option in sshd_config(5).
47
48
49SSH U2F Key formats
50-------------------
51
52OpenSSH integrates U2F as new key and corresponding certificate types:
53
54	sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com
55	sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256-cert-v01@openssh.com
56	sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com
57	sk-ssh-ed25519-cert-v01@openssh.com
58
59While each uses ecdsa-sha256-nistp256 as the underlying signature primitive,
60keys require extra information in the public and private keys, and in
61the signature object itself. As such they cannot be made compatible with
62the existing ecdsa-sha2-nistp* key types.
63
64The format of a sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com public key is:
65
66	string		"sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com"
67	string		curve name
68	ec_point	Q
69	string		application (user-specified, but typically "ssh:")
70
71The corresponding private key contains:
72
73	string		"sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com"
74	string		curve name
75	ec_point	Q
76	string		application (user-specified, but typically "ssh:")
77	uint8		flags
78	string		key_handle
79	string		reserved
80
81The format of a sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com public key is:
82
83	string		"sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com"
84	string		public key
85	string		application (user-specified, but typically "ssh:")
86
87With a private half consisting of:
88
89	string		"sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com"
90	string		public key
91	string		application (user-specified, but typically "ssh:")
92	uint8		flags
93	string		key_handle
94	string		reserved
95
96The certificate form for SSH U2F keys appends the usual certificate
97information to the public key:
98
99	string		"sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256-cert-v01@openssh.com"
100	string		nonce
101	string		curve name
102	ec_point	Q
103	string		application
104	uint64		serial
105	uint32		type
106	string		key id
107	string		valid principals
108	uint64		valid after
109	uint64		valid before
110	string		critical options
111	string		extensions
112	string		reserved
113	string		signature key
114	string		signature
115
116and for security key ed25519 certificates:
117
118	string		"sk-ssh-ed25519-cert-v01@openssh.com"
119	string		nonce
120	string		public key
121	string		application
122	uint64		serial
123	uint32		type
124	string		key id
125	string		valid principals
126	uint64		valid after
127	uint64		valid before
128	string		critical options
129	string		extensions
130	string		reserved
131	string		signature key
132	string		signature
133
134Both security key certificates use the following encoding for private keys:
135
136	string		type (e.g. "sk-ssh-ed25519-cert-v01@openssh.com")
137	string		pubkey (the above key/cert structure)
138	string		application
139	uint8		flags
140	string		key_handle
141	string		reserved
142
143During key generation, the hardware also returns attestation information
144that may be used to cryptographically prove that a given key is
145hardware-backed. Unfortunately, the protocol required for this proof is
146not privacy-preserving and may be used to identify U2F tokens with at
147least manufacturer and batch number granularity. For this reason, we
148choose not to include this information in the public key or save it by
149default.
150
151Attestation information is useful for out-of-band key and certificate
152registration workflows, e.g. proving to a CA that a key is backed
153by trusted hardware before it will issue a certificate. To support this
154case, OpenSSH optionally allows retaining the attestation information
155at the time of key generation. It will take the following format:
156
157	string		"ssh-sk-attest-v01"
158	string		attestation certificate
159	string		enrollment signature
160	string		authenticator data (CBOR encoded)
161	uint32		reserved flags
162	string		reserved string
163
164A previous version of this format, emitted prior to OpenSSH 8.4 omitted
165the authenticator data.
166
167	string		"ssh-sk-attest-v00"
168	string		attestation certificate
169	string		enrollment signature
170	uint32		reserved flags
171	string		reserved string
172
173OpenSSH treats the attestation certificate and enrollment signatures as
174opaque objects and does no interpretation of them itself.
175
176SSH U2F signatures
177------------------
178
179In addition to the message to be signed, the U2F signature operation
180requires the key handle and a few additional parameters. The signature
181is signed over a blob that consists of:
182
183	byte[32]	SHA256(application)
184	byte		flags (including "user present", extensions present)
185	uint32		counter
186	byte[]		extensions
187	byte[32]	SHA256(message)
188
189No extensions are yet defined for SSH use. If any are defined in the future,
190it will be possible to infer their presence from the contents of the "flags"
191value.
192
193The signature returned from U2F hardware takes the following format:
194
195	byte		flags (including "user present")
196	uint32		counter
197	byte[]		ecdsa_signature (in X9.62 format).
198
199For use in the SSH protocol, we wish to avoid server-side parsing of ASN.1
200format data in the pre-authentication attack surface. Therefore, the
201signature format used on the wire in SSH2_USERAUTH_REQUEST packets will
202be reformatted to better match the existing signature encoding:
203
204	string		"sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com"
205	string		ecdsa_signature
206	byte		flags
207	uint32		counter
208
209Where the "ecdsa_signature" field follows the RFC5656 ECDSA signature
210encoding:
211
212	mpint		r
213	mpint		s
214
215For Ed25519 keys the signature is encoded as:
216
217	string		"sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com"
218	string		signature
219	byte		flags
220	uint32		counter
221
222webauthn signatures
223-------------------
224
225The W3C/FIDO webauthn[1] standard defines a mechanism for a web browser to
226interact with FIDO authentication tokens. This standard builds upon the
227FIDO standards, but requires different signature contents to raw FIDO
228messages. OpenSSH supports ECDSA/p256 webauthn signatures through the
229"webauthn-sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com" signature algorithm.
230
231The wire encoding for a webauthn-sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com
232signature is similar to the sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com format:
233
234	string		"webauthn-sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com"
235	string		ecdsa_signature
236	byte		flags
237	uint32		counter
238	string		origin
239	string		clientData
240	string		extensions
241
242Where "origin" is the HTTP origin making the signature, "clientData" is
243the JSON-like structure signed by the browser and "extensions" are any
244extensions used in making the signature.
245
246[1] https://www.w3.org/TR/webauthn-2/
247
248ssh-agent protocol extensions
249-----------------------------
250
251ssh-agent requires a protocol extension to support U2F keys. At
252present the closest analogue to Security Keys in ssh-agent are PKCS#11
253tokens, insofar as they require a middleware library to communicate with
254the device that holds the keys. Unfortunately, the protocol message used
255to add PKCS#11 keys to ssh-agent does not include any way to send the
256key handle to the agent as U2F keys require.
257
258To avoid this, without having to add wholly new messages to the agent
259protocol, we will use the existing SSH2_AGENTC_ADD_ID_CONSTRAINED message
260with a new key constraint extension to encode a path to the middleware
261library for the key. The format of this constraint extension would be:
262
263	byte		SSH_AGENT_CONSTRAIN_EXTENSION
264	string		sk-provider@openssh.com
265	string		middleware path
266
267This constraint-based approach does not present any compatibility
268problems.
269
270OpenSSH integration
271-------------------
272
273U2F tokens may be attached via a number of means, including USB and NFC.
274The USB interface is standardised around a HID protocol, but we want to
275be able to support other transports as well as dummy implementations for
276regress testing. For this reason, OpenSSH shall support a dynamically-
277loaded middleware libraries to communicate with security keys, but offer
278support for the common case of USB HID security keys internally.
279
280The middleware library need only expose a handful of functions and
281numbers listed in sk-api.h. Included in the defined numbers is a
282SSH_SK_VERSION_MAJOR that should be incremented for each incompatible
283API change.
284
285miscellaneous options may be passed to the middleware as a NULL-
286terminated array of pointers to struct sk_option. The middleware may
287ignore unsupported or unknown options unless the "required" flag is set,
288in which case it should return failure if an unsupported option is
289requested.
290
291At present the following options names are supported:
292
293	"device"
294
295	Specifies a specific FIDO device on which to perform the
296	operation. The value in this field is interpreted by the
297	middleware but it would be typical to specify a path to
298	a /dev node for the device in question.
299
300	"user"
301
302	Specifies the FIDO2 username used when enrolling a key,
303	overriding OpenSSH's default of using an all-zero username.
304
305In OpenSSH, the middleware will be invoked by using a similar mechanism to
306ssh-pkcs11-helper to provide address-space containment of the
307middleware from ssh-agent.
308
309$OpenBSD: PROTOCOL.u2f,v 1.26 2020/09/09 03:08:01 djm Exp $
310