Cryptography and Network Security: Chapter 14 - Authentication Applications
Cryptography and Network Security: Chapter 14 - Authentication Applications
Cryptography and Network Security: Chapter 14 - Authentication Applications
Security
Third Edition
by William Stallings
Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown
Chapter 14 Authentication
Applications
We cannot enter into alliance with
neighboring princes until we are
acquainted with their designs.
The Art of War, Sun Tzu
Authentication Applications
will consider authentication functions
developed to support application-level
authentication & digital signatures
will consider Kerberos a private-key
authentication service
then X.509 directory authentication service
Kerberos
trusted key server system from MIT
provides centralised private-key third-party
authentication in a distributed network
allows users access to services distributed
through network
without needing to trust all workstations
rather all trust a central authentication server
two versions in use: 4 & 5
Kerberos Requirements
first published report identified its
requirements as:
security
reliability
transparency
scalability
implemented using an authentication
protocol based on Needham-Schroeder
Kerberos 4 Overview
a basic third-party authentication scheme
have an Authentication Server (AS)
users initially negotiate with AS to identify self
AS provides a non-corruptible authentication
credential (ticket granting ticket TGT)
have a Ticket Granting server (TGS)
users subsequently request access to other
services from TGS on basis of users TGT
Kerberos 4 Overview
Kerberos Realms
a Kerberos environment consists of:
a Kerberos server
a number of clients, all registered with server
application servers, sharing keys with server
this is termed a realm
typically a single administrative domain
if have multiple realms, their Kerberos
servers must share keys and trust
Kerberos Version 5
developed in mid 1990s
provides improvements over v4
addresses environmental shortcomings
encryption alg, network protocol, byte order, ticket
lifetime, authentication forwarding, interrealmauth
and technical deficiencies
double encryption, non-std mode of use, session
keys, password attacks
specified as Internet standard RFC 1510
X.509 Authentication Service
part of CCITT X.500 directory service standards
distributed servers maintaining some info database
defines framework for authentication services
directory may store public-key certificates
with public key of user
signed by certification authority
also defines authentication protocols
uses public-key crypto & digital signatures
algorithms not standardised, but RSA recommended
X.509 Certificates
issued by a Certification Authority (CA), containing:
version (1, 2, or 3)
serial number (unique within CA) identifying certificate
signature algorithm identifier
issuer X.500 name (CA)
period of validity (from - to dates)
subject X.500 name (name of owner)
subject public-key info (algorithm, parameters, key)
issuer unique identifier (v2+)
subject unique identifier (v2+)
extension fields (v3)
signature (of hash of all fields in certificate)
notation CA<<A>>denotes certificate for A signed by CA
X.509 Certificates
Obtaining a Certificate
any user with access to CA can get any
certificate from it
only the CA can modify a certificate
because cannot be forged, certificates can
be placed in a public directory
CA Hierarchy
if both users share a common CA then they are
assumed to know its public key
otherwise CA's must form a hierarchy
use certificates linking members of hierarchy to
validate other CA's
each CA has certificates for clients (forward) and
parent (backward)
each client trusts parents certificates
enable verification of any certificate from one CA
by users of all other CAs in hierarchy
CA Hierarchy Use Certificate Revocation
certificates have a period of validity
may need to revoke before expiry, eg:
1. user's private key is compromised
2. user is no longer certified by this CA
3. CA's certificate is compromised
CAs maintain list of revoked certificates
the Certificate Revocation List (CRL)
users should check certs with CAs CRL
Authentication Procedures
X.509 includes three alternative
authentication procedures:
One-Way Authentication
Two-Way Authentication
Three-Way Authentication
all use public-key signatures
One-Way Authentication
1 message ( A->B) used to establish
the identity of A and that message is from A
message was intended for B
integrity & originality of message
message must include timestamp, nonce,
B's identity and is signed by A
Two-Way Authentication
2 messages (A->B, B->A) which also
establishes in addition:
the identity of B and that reply is from B
that reply is intended for A
integrity & originality of reply
reply includes original nonce from A, also
timestamp and nonce from B
Three-Way Authentication
3 messages (A->B, B->A, A->B) which
enables above authentication without
synchronized clocks
has reply from A back to B containing
signed copy of nonce from B
means that timestamps need not be
checked or relied upon
X.509 Version 3
has been recognised that additional
information is needed in a certificate
email/URL, policy details, usage constraints
rather than explicitly naming new fields
defined a general extension method
extensions consist of:
extension identifier
criticality indicator
extension value
Certificate Extensions
key and policy information
convey info about subject & issuer keys, plus
indicators of certificate policy
certificate subject and issuer attributes
support alternative names, in alternative
formats for certificate subject and/or issuer
certificate path constraints
allow constraints on use of certificates by
other CAs
Summary
have considered:
Kerberos trusted key server system
X.509 authentication and certificates