XML-Signature Syntax and Processing
XML-Signature Syntax and Processing
Abstract
This document specifies XML digital signature processing rules and syntax. XML Signatures provide integrity, message authentication,
and/or signer authentication services for data of any type, whether located within the XML that includes the signature or elsewhere.
This specification was produced by the IETF/W3C XML Signature Working Group (W3C Activity Statement) which believes the
specification is sufficient for the creation of independent interoperable implementations; the Interoperability Report shows at least 10
implementations with at least two interoperable implementations over every feature.
Patent disclosures relevant to this specification may be found on the Working Group's patent disclosure page, in conformance with W3C
policy, and the IETF Page of Intellectual Property Rights Notices, in conformance with IETF policy.
The English version of this specification is the only normative version. Information about translations of this document (if any) is
available http://www.w3.org/Signature/2002/02/xmldsig-translations
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1. Editorial Conventions
2. Design Philosophy
3. Versions, Namespaces and Identifiers
4. Acknowledgements
2. Signature Overview and Examples
1. Simple Example (Signature, SignedInfo, Methods, and References)
1. More on Reference
2. Extended Example (Object and SignatureProperty)
3. Extended Example (Object and Manifest)
3. Processing Rules
1. Signature Generation
2. Signature Validation
4. Core Signature Syntax
1. The Signature element
2. The SignatureValue Element
3. The SignedInfo Element
1. The CanonicalizationMethod Element
2. The SignatureMethod Element
3. The Reference Element
1. The URI Attribute
2. The Reference Processing Model
3. Same-Document URI-References
4. The Transforms Element
5. The DigestMethod Element
6. The DigestValue Element
4. The KeyInfo Element
1. The KeyName Element
2. The KeyValue Element
1. The DSAKeyValue Element
2. The RSAKeyValue Element
3. The RetrievalMethod Element
4. The X509Data Element
5. The PGPData Element
6. The SPKIData Element
7. The MgmtData Element
5. The Object Element
5. Additional Signature Syntax
1. The Manifest Element
2. The SignatureProperties Element
3. Processing Instructions
4. Comments in dsig Elements
6. Algorithms
1. Algorithm Identifiers and Implementation Requirements
2. Message Digests
3. Message Authentication Codes
4. Signature Algorithms
5. Canonicalization Algorithms
6. Transform Algorithms
1. Canonicalization
2. Base64
3. XPath Filtering
4. Enveloped Signature Transform
5. XSLT Transform
7. XML Canonicalization and Syntax Constraint Considerations
1. XML 1.0, Syntax Constraints, and Canonicalization
2. DOM/SAX Processing and Canonicalization
3. Namespace Context and Portable Signatures
8. Security Considerations
1. Transforms
1. Only What is Signed is Secure
2. Only What is "Seen" Should be Signed
3. "See" What is Signed
2. Check the Security Model
3. Algorithms, Key Lengths, Etc.
9. Schema, DTD, Data Model, and Valid Examples
10. Definitions
11. References
12. Authors' Address
1.0 Introduction
This document specifies XML syntax and processing rules for creating and representing digital signatures. XML Signatures can be
applied to any digital content (data object), including XML. An XML Signature may be applied to the content of one or more resources.
Enveloped or enveloping signatures are over data within the same XML document as the signature; detached signatures are over
data external to the signature element. More specifically, this specification defines an XML signature element type and an XML
signature application; conformance requirements for each are specified by way of schema definitions and prose respectively. This
specification also includes other useful types that identify methods for referencing collections of resources, algorithms, and keying and
management information.
The XML Signature is a method of associating a key with referenced data (octets); it does not normatively specify how keys are
associated with persons or institutions, nor the meaning of the data being referenced and signed. Consequently, while this specification
is an important component of secure XML applications, it itself is not sufficient to address all application security/trust concerns,
particularly with respect to using signed XML (or other data formats) as a basis of human-to-human communication and agreement.
Such an application must specify additional key, algorithm, processing and rendering requirements. For further information, please see
Security Considerations (section 8).
This specification provides an XML Schema [XML-schema] and DTD [XML]. The schema definition is normative.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this specification are to be interpreted as described in RFC2119 [KEYWORDS]:
"they MUST only be used where it is actually required for interoperation or to limit behavior which has potential for causing
harm (e.g., limiting retransmissions)"
Consequently, we use these capitalized key words to unambiguously specify requirements over protocol and application features and
behavior that affect the interoperability and security of implementations. These key words are not used (capitalized) to describe XML
grammar; schema definitions unambiguously describe such requirements and we wish to reserve the prominence of these terms for the
natural language descriptions of protocols and features. For instance, an XML attribute might be described as being "optional."
Compliance with the Namespaces in XML specification [XML-ns] is described as "REQUIRED."
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#"
This namespace is also used as the prefix for algorithm identifiers used by this specification. While applications MUST support XML and
XML namespaces, the use of internal entities [XML] or our "dsig" XML namespace prefix and defaulting/scoping conventions are
OPTIONAL; we use these facilities to provide compact and readable examples.
This specification uses Uniform Resource Identifiers [URI] to identify resources, algorithms, and semantics. The URI in the namespace
declaration above is also used as a prefix for URIs under the control of this specification. For resources not under the control of this
specification, we use the designated Uniform Resource Names [URN] or Uniform Resource Locators [URL] defined by its normative
external specification. If an external specification has not allocated itself a Uniform Resource Identifier we allocate an identifier under
our own namespace. For instance:
Finally, in order to provide for terse namespace declarations we sometimes use XML internal entities [ XML] within URIs. For instance:
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<!DOCTYPE Signature SYSTEM
"xmldsig-core-schema.dtd" [ <!ENTITY dsig
"http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#"> ]>
<Signature xmlns="&dsig;" Id="MyFirstSignature">
<SignedInfo>
...
1.4 Acknowledgements
The contributions of the following Working Group members to this specification are gratefully acknowledged:
In this section, an informal representation and examples are used to describe the structure of the XML signature syntax. This
representation and examples may omit attributes, details and potential features that are fully explained later.
XML Signatures are applied to arbitrary digital content (data objects) via an indirection. Data objects are digested, the resulting value is
placed in an element (with other information) and that element is then digested and cryptographically signed. XML digital signatures are
represented by the Signature element which has the following structure (where "?" denotes zero or one occurrence; "+" denotes one or
more occurrences; and "*" denotes zero or more occurrences):
<Signature ID?>
<SignedInfo>
<CanonicalizationMethod/>
<SignatureMethod/>
(<Reference URI? >
(<Transforms>)?
<DigestMethod>
<DigestValue>
</Reference>)+
</SignedInfo>
<SignatureValue>
(<KeyInfo>)?
(<Object ID?>)*
</Signature>
Signatures are related to data objects via URIs [URI]. Within an XML document, signatures are related to local data objects via fragment
identifiers. Such local data can be included within an enveloping signature or can enclose an enveloped signature. Detached signatures
are over external network resources or local data objects that reside within the same XML document as sibling elements; in this case,
the signature is neither enveloping (signature is parent) nor enveloped (signature is child). Since a Signature element (and its Id attribute
value/name) may co-exist or be combined with other elements (and their IDs) within a single XML document, care should be taken in
choosing names such that there are no subsequent collisions that violate the ID uniqueness validity constraint [XML].
The required SignedInfo element is the information that is actually signed. Core validation of SignedInfo consists of two
[s02-12]
mandatory processes: validation of the signature over SignedInfo and validation of each Reference digest within SignedInfo. Note that the
algorithms used in calculating the SignatureValue are also included in the signed information while the SignatureValue element is outside
SignedInfo.
[s03]The CanonicalizationMethod is the algorithm that is used to canonicalize the SignedInfo element before it is digested as part of the
signature operation. Note that this example, and all examples in this specification, are not in canonical form.
[s04] The SignatureMethod is the algorithm that is used to convert the canonicalized SignedInfo into the SignatureValue. It is a combination
of a digest algorithm and a key dependent algorithm and possibly other algorithms such as padding, for example RSA-SHA1. The
algorithm names are signed to resist attacks based on substituting a weaker algorithm. To promote application interoperability we
specify a set of signature algorithms that MUST be implemented, though their use is at the discretion of the signature creator. We
specify additional algorithms as RECOMMENDED or OPTIONAL for implementation; the design also permits arbitrary user specified
algorithms.
[s05-11] Each Reference element includes the digest method and resulting digest value calculated over the identified data object. It also
may include transformations that produced the input to the digest operation. A data object is signed by computing its digest value and a
signature over that value. The signature is later checked via reference and signature validation.
[s14-16] KeyInfo indicates the key to be used to validate the signature. Possible forms for identification include certificates, key names,
and key agreement algorithms and information -- we define only a few. KeyInfo is optional for two reasons. First, the signer may not wish
to reveal key information to all document processing parties. Second, the information may be known within the application's context and
need not be represented explicitly. Since KeyInfo is outside of SignedInfo, if the signer wishes to bind the keying information to the
signature, a Reference can easily identify and include the KeyInfo as part of the signature.
[s05] The optional URI attribute of Reference identifies the data object to be signed. This attribute may be omitted on at most one
Reference in a Signature. (This limitation is imposed in order to ensure that references and objects may be matched unambiguously.)
[s05-08] This identification, along with the transforms, is a description provided by the signer on how they obtained the signed data
object in the form it was digested (i.e. the digested content). The verifier may obtain the digested content in another method so long as
the digest verifies. In particular, the verifier may obtain the content from a different location such as a local store than that specified in
the URI.
[s06-08] Transforms is an optional ordered list of processing steps that were applied to the resource's content before it was digested.
Transforms can include operations such as canonicalization, encoding/decoding (including compression/inflation), XSLT, XPath, XML
schema validation, or XInclude. XPath transforms permit the signer to derive an XML document that omits portions of the source
document. Consequently those excluded portions can change without affecting signature validity. For example, if the resource being
signed encloses the signature itself, such a transform must be used to exclude the signature value from its own computation. If no
Transforms element is present, the resource's content is digested directly. While the Working Group has specified mandatory (and
optional) canonicalization and decoding algorithms, user specified transforms are permitted.
[s09-10] DigestMethod is the algorithm applied to the data after Transforms is applied (if specified) to yield the DigestValue. The signing of
the DigestValue is what binds a resources content to the signer's key.
Consider the preceding example with an additional reference to a local Object that includes a SignatureProperty element. (Such a
signature would not only be detached [p02] but enveloping [p03].)
[p04] The optional Type attribute of Reference provides information about the resource identified by the URI. In particular, it can indicate
that it is an Object, SignatureProperty, or Manifest element. This can be used by applications to initiate special processing of some
Reference elements. References to an XML data element within an Object element SHOULD identify the actual element pointed to.
Where the element content is not XML (perhaps it is binary or encoded data) the reference should identify the Object and the Reference
Type, if given, SHOULD indicate Object. Note that Type is advisory and no action based on it or checking of its correctness is required by
core behavior.
[p10] Objectis an optional element for including data objects within the signature element or elsewhere. The Object can be optionally
typed and/or encoded.
[p11-18] Signature properties, such as time of signing, can be optionally signed by identifying them from within a Reference. (These
properties are traditionally called signature "attributes" although that term has no relationship to the XML term "attribute".)
First, applications frequently need to efficiently sign multiple data objects even where the signature operation itself is an expensive
public key signature. This requirement can be met by including multiple Reference elements within SignedInfo since the inclusion of each
digest secures the data digested. However, some applications may not want the core validation behavior associated with this approach
because it requires every Reference within SignedInfo to undergo reference validation -- the DigestValue elements are checked. These
applications may wish to reserve reference validation decision logic to themselves. For example, an application might receive a
signature valid SignedInfo element that includes three Reference elements. If a single Reference fails (the identified data object when
digested does not yield the specified DigestValue) the signature would fail core validation. However, the application may wish to treat the
signature over the two valid Reference elements as valid or take different actions depending on which fails. To accomplish this,
SignedInfo would reference a Manifest element that contains one or more Reference elements (with the same structure as those in
SignedInfo). Then, reference validation of the Manifest is under application control.
Second, consider an application where many signatures (using different keys) are applied to a large number of documents. An
inefficient solution is to have a separate signature (per key) repeatedly applied to a large SignedInfo element (with many References); this
is wasteful and redundant. A more efficient solution is to include many references in a single Manifest that is then referenced from
multiple Signature elements.
The example below includes a Reference that signs a Manifest found within the Object element.
[ ] ...
[m01] <Reference URI="#MyFirstManifest"
[m02] Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#Manifest">
[m03] <DigestMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1"/>
[m04] <DigestValue>345x3rvEPO0vKtMup4NbeVu8nk=</DigestValue>
[m05] </Reference>
[ ] ...
[m06] <Object>
[m07] <Manifest Id="MyFirstManifest">
[m08] <Reference>
[m09] ...
[m10] </Reference>
[m11] <Reference>
[m12] ...
[m13] </Reference>
[m14] </Manifest>
[m15] </Object>
The REQUIRED steps include the generation of Reference elements and the SignatureValue over SignedInfo.
Note, if the Signature includes same-document references, [XML] or [XML-schema] validation of the document might introduce
changes that break the signature. Consequently, applications should be careful to consistently process the document or refrain
from using external contributions (e.g., defaults and entities).
The REQUIRED steps of core validation include (1) reference validation, the verification of the digest contained in each Reference in
SignedInfo, and (2) the cryptographic signature validation of the signature calculated over SignedInfo.
Note, there may be valid signatures that some signature applications are unable to validate. Reasons for this include failure to
implement optional parts of this specification, inability or unwillingness to execute specified algorithms, or inability or unwillingness to
dereference specified URIs (some URI schemes may cause undesirable side effects), etc.
Comparison of values in reference and signature validation are over the numeric (e.g., integer) or decoded octet sequence of the value.
Different implementations may produce different encoded digest and signature values when processing the same resources because of
variances in their encoding, such as accidental white space. But if one uses numeric or octet comparison (choose one) on both the
stated and computed values these problems are eliminated.
Note, SignedInfo is canonicalized in step 1. The application must ensure that the CanonicalizationMethod has no dangerous side affects,
such as rewriting URIs, (see CanonicalizationMethod (section 4.3)) and that it Sees What is Signed, which is the canonical form.
Note, KeyInfo (or some transformed version thereof) may be signed via a Reference element. Transformation and validation of this
reference (3.2.1) is orthogonal to Signature Validation which uses the KeyInfo as parsed.
Additionally, the SignatureMethod URI may have been altered by the canonicalization of SignedInfo (e.g., absolutization of relative URIs)
and it is the canonical form that MUST be used. However, the required canonicalization [XML-C14N] of this specification does not
change URIs.
Schema Definition:
<schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
xmlns:ds="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#"
targetNamespace="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#"
version="0.1" elementFormDefault="qualified">
DTD:
<!--
%foo.ANY permits the user to include their own element types from
other namespaces, for example:
<!ENTITY % KeyValue.ANY '| ecds:ECDSAKeyValue'>
...
<!ELEMENT ecds:ECDSAKeyValue (#PCDATA) >
-->
This specification defines the ds:CryptoBinary simple type for representing arbitrary-length integers (e.g. "bignums") in XML as octet
strings. The integer value is first converted to a "big endian" bitstring. The bitstring is then padded with leading zero bits so that the total
number of bits == 0 mod 8 (so that there are an integral number of octets). If the bitstring contains entire leading octets that are zero,
these are removed (so the high-order octet is always non-zero). This octet string is then base64 [MIME] encoded. (The conversion from
integer to octet string is equivalent to IEEE 1363's I2OSP [1363] with minimal length).
This type is used by "bignum" values such as RSAKeyValue and DSAKeyValue. If a value can be of type base64Binary or ds:CryptoBinary they
are defined as base64Binary. For example, if the signature algorithm is RSA or DSA then SignatureValue represents a bignum and could
be ds:CryptoBinary. However, if HMAC-SHA1 is the signature algorithm then SignatureValue could have leading zero octets that must be
preserved. Thus SignatureValue is generically defined as of type base64Binary.
Schema Definition:
<simpleType name="CryptoBinary">
<restriction base="base64Binary">
</restriction>
</simpleType>
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Schema Definition:
DTD:
SignedInfo does not include explicit signature or digest properties (such as calculation time, cryptographic device serial number, etc.). If
an application needs to associate properties with the signature or digest, it may include such information in a SignatureProperties
element within an Object element.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
CanonicalizationMethodis a required element that specifies the canonicalization algorithm applied to the SignedInfo element prior to
performing signature calculations. This element uses the general structure for algorithms described in Algorithm Identifiers and
Implementation Requirements (section 6.1). Implementations MUST support the REQUIRED canonicalization algorithms.
Alternatives to the REQUIRED canonicalization algorithms (section 6.5), such as Canonical XML with Comments (section 6.5.1) or a
minimal canonicalization (such as CRLF and charset normalization), may be explicitly specified but are NOT REQUIRED.
Consequently, their use may not interoperate with other applications that do not support the specified algorithm (see XML
Canonicalization and Syntax Constraint Considerations, section 7). Security issues may also arise in the treatment of entity processing
and comments if non-XML aware canonicalization algorithms are not properly constrained (see section 8.2: Only What is "Seen" Should
be Signed).
The way in which the SignedInfo element is presented to the canonicalization method is dependent on that method. The following
applies to algorithms which process XML as nodes or characters:
XML based canonicalization implementations MUST be provided with a [XPath] node-set originally formed from the document
containing the SignedInfo and currently indicating the SignedInfo, its descendants, and the attribute and namespace nodes of
SignedInfo and its descendant elements.
Text based canonicalization algorithms (such as CRLF and charset normalization) should be provided with the UTF-8 octets that
represent the well-formed SignedInfo element, from the first character to the last character of the XML representation, inclusive.
This includes the entire text of the start and end tags of the SignedInfo element as well as all descendant markup and character
data (i.e., the text) between those tags. Use of text based canonicalization of SignedInfo is NOT RECOMMENDED.
We recommend applications that implement a text-based instead of XML-based canonicalization -- such as resource constrained apps -
- generate canonicalized XML as their output serialization so as to mitigate interoperability and security concerns. For instance, such an
implementation SHOULD (at least) generate standalone XML instances [XML].
NOTE: The signature application must exercise great care in accepting and executing an arbitrary CanonicalizationMethod. For example,
the canonicalization method could rewrite the URIs of the References being validated. Or, the method could massively transform
SignedInfo so that validation would always succeed (i.e., converting it to a trivial signature with a known key over trivial data). Since
CanonicalizationMethod is inside SignedInfo, in the resulting canonical form it could erase itself from SignedInfo or modify the SignedInfo
element so that it appears that a different canonicalization function was used! Thus a Signature which appears to authenticate the
desired data with the desired key, DigestMethod, and SignatureMethod, can be meaningless if a capricious CanonicalizationMethod is used.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
SignatureMethod is a required element that specifies the algorithm used for signature generation and validation. This algorithm identifies
all cryptographic functions involved in the signature operation (e.g. hashing, public key algorithms, MACs, padding, etc.). This element
uses the general structure here for algorithms described in section 6.1: Algorithm Identifiers and Implementation Requirements. While
there is a single identifier, that identifier may specify a format containing multiple distinct signature values.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Reference is an element that may occur one or more times. It specifies a digest algorithm and digest value, and optionally an identifier of
the object being signed, the type of the object, and/or a list of transforms to be applied prior to digesting. The identification (URI) and
transforms describe how the digested content (i.e., the input to the digest method) was created. The Type attribute facilitates the
processing of referenced data. For example, while this specification makes no requirements over external data, an application may wish
to signal that the referent is a Manifest. An optional ID attribute permits a Reference to be referenced from elsewhere.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
The URI attribute identifies a data object using a URI-Reference, as specified by RFC2396 [URI]. The set of allowed characters for URI
attributes is the same as for XML, namely [Unicode]. However, some Unicode characters are disallowed from URI references including
all non-ASCII characters and the excluded characters listed in RFC2396 [URI, section 2.4]. However, the number sign (#), percent sign
(%), and square bracket characters re-allowed in RFC 2732 [URI-Literal] are permitted. Disallowed characters must be escaped as
follows:
XML signature applications MUST be able to parse URI syntax. We RECOMMEND they be able to dereference URIs in the HTTP
scheme. Dereferencing a URI in the HTTP scheme MUST comply with the Status Code Definitions of [HTTP] (e.g., 302, 305 and 307
redirects are followed to obtain the entity-body of a 200 status code response). Applications should also be cognizant of the fact that
protocol parameter and state information, (such as HTTP cookies, HTML device profiles or content negotiation), may affect the content
yielded by dereferencing a URI.
If a resource is identified by more than one URI, the most specific should be used (e.g. http://www.w3.org/2000/06/interop-
pressrelease.html.en instead of http://www.w3.org/2000/06/interop-pressrelease). (See the Reference Validation (section 3.2.1) for a
further information on reference processing.)
If the URI attribute is omitted altogether, the receiving application is expected to know the identity of the object. For example, a
lightweight data protocol might omit this attribute given the identity of the object is part of the application context. This attribute may be
omitted from at most one Reference in any particular SignedInfo, or Manifest.
The optional Type attribute contains information about the type of object being signed. This is represented as a URI. For example:
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#Object"
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#Manifest"
The Type attribute applies to the item being pointed at, not its contents. For example, a reference that identifies an Object element
containing a SignatureProperties element is still of type #Object. The type attribute is advisory. No validation of the type information is
required by this specification.
Note: XPath is RECOMMENDED. Signature applications need not conform to [XPath] specification in order to conform to this
specification. However, the XPath data model, definitions (e.g., node-sets) and syntax is used within this document in order to
describe functionality for those that want to process XML-as-XML (instead of octets) as part of signature generation. For those that
want to use these features, a conformant [XPath] implementation is one way to implement these features, but it is not required. Such
applications could use a sufficiently functional replacement to a node-set and implement only those XPath expression behaviors
REQUIRED by this specification. However, for simplicity we generally will use XPath terminology without including this qualification
on every point. Requirements over "XPath node-sets" can include a node-set functional equivalent. Requirements over XPath
processing can include application behaviors that are equivalent to the corresponding XPath behavior.
The data-type of the result of URI dereferencing or subsequent Transforms is either an octet stream or an XPath node-set.
The Transforms specified in this document are defined with respect to the input they require. The following is the default signature
application behavior:
If the data object is an octet stream and the next transform requires a node-set, the signature application MUST attempt to parse
the octets yielding the required node-set via [XML] well-formed processing.
If the data object is a node-set and the next transform requires octets, the signature application MUST attempt to convert the
node-set to an octet stream using Canonical XML [XML-C14N].
Users may specify alternative transforms that override these defaults in transitions between transforms that expect different inputs. The
final octet stream contains the data octets being secured. The digest algorithm specified by DigestMethod is then applied to these data
octets, resulting in the DigestValue.
Unless the URI-Reference is a 'same-document' reference as defined in [URI, Section 4.2], the result of dereferencing the URI-
Reference MUST be an octet stream. In particular, an XML document identified by URI is not parsed by the signature application unless
the URI is a same-document reference or unless a transform that requires XML parsing is applied. (See Transforms (section 4.3.3.1).)
When a fragment is preceded by an absolute or relative URI in the URI-Reference, the meaning of the fragment is defined by the
resource's MIME type. Even for XML documents, URI dereferencing (including the fragment processing) might be done for the signature
application by a proxy. Therefore, reference validation might fail if fragment processing is not performed in a standard way (as defined in
the following section for same-document references). Consequently, we RECOMMEND that the URI attribute not include fragment
identifiers and that such processing be specified as an additional XPath Transform.
When a fragment is not preceded by a URI in the URI-Reference, XML signature applications MUST support the null URI and barename
XPointer. We RECOMMEND support for the same-document XPointers '#xpointer(/)' and '#xpointer(id('ID'))' if the application also
intends to support any canonicalization that preserves comments. (Otherwise URI="#foo" will automatically remove comments before
the canonicalization can even be invoked.) All other support for XPointers is OPTIONAL, especially all support for barename and other
XPointers in external resources since the application may not have control over how the fragment is generated (leading to
interoperability problems and validation failures).
The following examples demonstrate what the URI attribute identifies and how it is dereferenced:
URI="http://example.com/bar.xml"
Identifies the octets that represent the external resource 'http://example.com/bar.xml', that is probably an XML document given its
file extension.
URI="http://example.com/bar.xml#chapter1"
Identifies the element with ID attribute value 'chapter1' of the external XML resource 'http://example.com/bar.xml', provided as an
octet stream. Again, for the sake of interoperability, the element identified as 'chapter1' should be obtained using an XPath
transform rather than a URI fragment (barename XPointer resolution in external resources is not REQUIRED in this specification).
URI=""
Identifies the node-set (minus any comment nodes) of the XML resource containing the signature
URI="#chapter1"
Identifies a node-set containing the element with ID attribute value 'chapter1' of the XML resource containing the signature. XML
Signature (and its applications) modify this node-set to include the element plus all descendents including namespaces and
attributes -- but not comments.
Dereferencing a same-document reference MUST result in an XPath node-set suitable for use by Canonical XML [XML-C14N].
Specifically, dereferencing a null URI (URI="") MUST result in an XPath node-set that includes every non-comment node of the XML
document containing the URI attribute. In a fragment URI, the characters after the number sign ('#') character conform to the XPointer
syntax [Xptr]. When processing an XPointer, the application MUST behave as if the root node of the XML document containing the URI
attribute were used to initialize the XPointer evaluation context. The application MUST behave as if the result of XPointer processing
were a node-set derived from the resultant location-set as follows:
The second to last replacement is necessary because XPointer typically indicates a subtree of an XML document's parse tree using just
the element node at the root of the subtree, whereas Canonical XML treats a node-set as a set of nodes in which absence of
descendant nodes results in absence of their representative text from the canonical form.
The last step is performed for null URIs, barename XPointers and child sequence XPointers. It's necessary because when [XML-C14N]
is passed a node-set, it processes the node-set as is: with or without comments. Only when it's called with an octet stream does it
invoke its own XPath expressions (default or without comments). Therefore to retain the default behavior of stripping comments when
passed a node-set, they are removed in the last step if the URI is not a full XPointer. To retain comments while selecting an element by
an identifier ID, use the following full XPointer: URI='#xpointer(id('ID'))'. To retain comments while selecting the entire document, use
the following full XPointer: URI='#xpointer(/)'. This XPointer contains a simple XPath expression that includes the root node, which the
second to last step above replaces with all nodes of the parse tree (all descendants, plus all attributes, plus all namespaces nodes).
The optional Transforms element contains an ordered list of Transform elements; these describe how the signer obtained the data object
that was digested. The output of each Transform serves as input to the next Transform. The input to the first Transform is the result of
dereferencing the URI attribute of the Reference element. The output from the last Transform is the input for the DigestMethod algorithm.
When transforms are applied the signer is not signing the native (original) document but the resulting (transformed) document. (See
Only What is Signed is Secure (section 8.1).)
Each Transform consists of an Algorithm attribute and content parameters, if any, appropriate for the given algorithm. The Algorithm
attribute value specifies the name of the algorithm to be performed, and the Transform content provides additional data to govern the
algorithm's processing of the transform input. (See Algorithm Identifiers and Implementation Requirements (section 6).)
As described in The Reference Processing Model (section 4.3.3.2), some transforms take an XPath node-set as input, while others
require an octet stream. If the actual input matches the input needs of the transform, then the transform operates on the unaltered input.
If the transform input requirement differs from the format of the actual input, then the input must be converted.
Some Transforms may require explicit MIME type, charset (IANA registered "character set"), or other such information concerning the
data they are receiving from an earlier Transform or the source data, although no Transform algorithm specified in this document needs
such explicit information. Such data characteristics are provided as parameters to the Transform algorithm and should be described in
the specification for the algorithm.
Examples of transforms include but are not limited to base64 decoding [MIME], canonicalization [XML-C14N], XPath filtering [XPath],
and XSLT [XSLT]. The generic definition of the Transform element also allows application-specific transform algorithms. For example, the
transform could be a decompression routine given by a Java class appearing as a base64 encoded parameter to a Java Transform
algorithm. However, applications should refrain from using application-specific transforms if they wish their signatures to be verifiable
outside of their application domain. Transform Algorithms (section 6.6) defines the list of standard transformations.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
DigestMethod is a required element that identifies the digest algorithm to be applied to the signed object. This element uses the general
structure here for algorithms specified in Algorithm Identifiers and Implementation Requirements (section 6.1).
If the result of the URI dereference and application of Transforms is an XPath node-set (or sufficiently functional replacement
implemented by the application) then it must be converted as described in the Reference Processing Model (section 4.3.3.2). If the
result of URI dereference and application of transforms is an octet stream, then no conversion occurs (comments might be present if the
Canonical XML with Comments was specified in the Transforms). The digest algorithm is applied to the data octets of the resulting octet
stream.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
DigestValue is an element that contains the encoded value of the digest. The digest is always encoded using base64 [MIME].
Schema Definition:
DTD:
If KeyInfo is omitted, the recipient is expected to be able to identify the key based on application context. Multiple declarations within
KeyInfo refer to the same key. While applications may define and use any mechanism they choose through inclusion of elements from a
different namespace, compliant versions MUST implement KeyValue (section 4.4.2) and SHOULD implement RetrievalMethod (section
4.4.3).
The schema/DTD specifications of many of KeyInfo's children (e.g., PGPData, SPKIData, X509Data) permit their content to be
extended/complemented with elements from another namespace. This may be done only if it is safe to ignore these extension elements
while claiming support for the types defined in this specification. Otherwise, external elements, including alternative structures to those
defined by this specification, MUST be a child of KeyInfo. For example, should a complete XML-PGP standard be defined, its root
element MUST be a child of KeyInfo. (Of course, new structures from external namespaces can incorporate elements from the &dsig;
namespace via features of the type definition language. For instance, they can create a DTD that mixes their own and dsig qualified
elements, or a schema that permits, includes, imports, or derives new types based on &dsig; elements.)
The following list summarizes the KeyInfo types that are allocated an identifier in the &dsig; namespace; these can be used within the
RetrievalMethod Type attribute to describe a remote KeyInfo structure.
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#DSAKeyValue
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#RSAKeyValue
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#X509Data
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#PGPData
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#SPKIData
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#MgmtData
In addition to the types above for which we define an XML structure, we specify one additional type to indicate a binary (ASN.1 DER)
X.509 Certificate.
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rawX509Certificate
Schema Definition:
DTD:
The KeyName element contains a string value (in which white space is significant) which may be used by the signer to communicate a key
identifier to the recipient. Typically, KeyName contains an identifier related to the key pair used to sign the message, but it may contain
other protocol-related information that indirectly identifies a key pair. (Common uses of KeyName include simple string names for keys, a
key index, a distinguished name (DN), an email address, etc.)
Schema Definition:
DTD:
The KeyValue element contains a single public key that may be useful in validating the signature. Structured formats for defining DSA
(REQUIRED) and RSA (RECOMMENDED) public keys are defined in Signature Algorithms (section 6.4). The KeyValue element may
include externally defined public keys values represented as PCDATA or element types from an external namespace.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#DSAKeyValue"
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
DSA keys and the DSA signature algorithm are specified in [DSS]. DSA public key values can have the following fields:
P
a prime modulus meeting the [DSS] requirements
Q
an integer in the range 2**159 < Q < 2**160 which is a prime divisor of P-1
G
an integer with certain properties with respect to P and Q
Y
G**X mod P (where X is part of the private key and not made public)
J
(P - 1) / Q
seed
a DSA prime generation seed
pgenCounter
a DSA prime generation counter
Parameter J is available for inclusion solely for efficiency as it is calculatable from P and Q. Parameters seed and pgenCounter are
used in the DSA prime number generation algorithm specified in [DSS]. As such, they are optional but must either both be present or
both be absent. This prime generation algorithm is designed to provide assurance that a weak prime is not being used and it yields a P
and Q value. Parameters P, Q, and G can be public and common to a group of users. They might be known from application context. As
such, they are optional but P and Q must either both appear or both be absent. If all of P, Q, seed, and pgenCounter are present,
implementations are not required to check if they are consistent and are free to use either P and Q or seed and pgenCounter. All
parameters are encoded as base64 [MIME] values.
Arbitrary-length integers (e.g. "bignums" such as RSA moduli) are represented in XML as octet strings as defined by the ds:CryptoBinary
type.
Schema Definition:
DTD Definition:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#RSAKeyValue"
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
<RSAKeyValue>
<Modulus>xA7SEU+e0yQH5rm9kbCDN9o3aPIo7HbP7tX6WOocLZAtNfyxSZDU16ksL6W
jubafOqNEpcwR3RdFsT7bCqnXPBe5ELh5u4VEy19MzxkXRgrMvavzyBpVRgBUwUlV
5foK5hhmbktQhyNdy/6LpQRhDUDsTvK+g9Ucj47es9AQJ3U=
</Modulus>
<Exponent>AQAB</Exponent>
</RSAKeyValue>
Arbitrary-length integers (e.g. "bignums" such as RSA moduli) are represented in XML as octet strings as defined by the ds:CryptoBinary
type.
Schema Definition:
DTD Definition:
A RetrievalMethod element within KeyInfo is used to convey a reference to KeyInfo information that is stored at another location. For
example, several signatures in a document might use a key verified by an X.509v3 certificate chain appearing once in the document or
remotely outside the document; each signature's KeyInfo can reference this chain using a single RetrievalMethod element instead of
including the entire chain with a sequence of X509Certificate elements.
RetrievalMethoduses the same syntax and dereferencing behavior as Reference's URI (section 4.3.3.1) and The Reference Processing
Model (section 4.3.3.2) except that there is no DigestMethod or DigestValue child elements and presence of the URI is mandatory.
Type is an optional identifier for the type of data to be retrieved. The result of dereferencing a RetrievalMethod Reference for all KeyInfo
types defined by this specification (section 4.4) with a corresponding XML structure is an XML element or document with that element
as the root. The rawX509Certificate KeyInfo (for which there is no XML structure) returns a binary X509 certificate.
Schema Definition
DTD
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#X509Data "
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
An X509Data element within KeyInfo contains one or more identifiers of keys or X509 certificates (or certificates' identifiers or a revocation
list). The content of X509Data is:
1. At least one element, from the following set of element types; any of these may appear together or more than once iff (if and only
if) each instance describes or is related to the same certificate:
The X509IssuerSerial element, which contains an X.509 issuer distinguished name/serial number pair that SHOULD be
compliant with RFC2253 [ LDAP-DN],
The X509SubjectName element, which contains an X.509 subject distinguished name that SHOULD be compliant with
RFC2253 [LDAP-DN],
The X509SKI element, which contains the base64 encoded plain (i.e. non-DER-encoded) value of a X509 V.3
SubjectKeyIdentifier extension.
The X509Certificate element, which contains a base64-encoded [ X509v3] certificate, and
Elements from an external namespace which accompanies/complements any of the elements above.
The X509CRL element, which contains a base64-encoded certificate revocation list (CRL) [X509v3].
Any X509IssuerSerial, X509SKI, and X509SubjectName elements that appear MUST refer to the certificate or certificates containing the
validation key. All such elements that refer to a particular individual certificate MUST be grouped inside a single X509Data element and if
the certificate to which they refer appears, it MUST also be in that X509Data element.
Any X509IssuerSerial, X509SKI, and X509SubjectName elements that relate to the same key but different certificates MUST be grouped
within a single KeyInfo but MAY occur in multiple X509Data elements.
All certificates appearing in an X509Data element MUST relate to the validation key by either containing it or being part of a certification
chain that terminates in a certificate containing the validation key.
No ordering is implied by the above constraints. The comments in the following instance demonstrate these constraints:
<KeyInfo>
<X509Data> <!-- two pointers to certificate-A -->
<X509IssuerSerial>
<X509IssuerName>CN=TAMURA Kent, OU=TRL, O=IBM,
L=Yamato-shi, ST=Kanagawa, C=JP</X509IssuerName>
<X509SerialNumber>12345678</X509SerialNumber>
</X509IssuerSerial>
<X509SKI>31d97bd7</X509SKI>
</X509Data>
<X509Data><!-- single pointer to certificate-B -->
<X509SubjectName>Subject of Certificate B</X509SubjectName>
</X509Data>
<X509Data> <!-- certificate chain -->
<!--Signer cert, issuer CN=arbolCA,OU=FVT,O=IBM,C=US, serial 4-->
<X509Certificate>MIICXTCCA..</X509Certificate>
<!-- Intermediate cert subject CN=arbolCA,OU=FVT,O=IBM,C=US
issuer CN=tootiseCA,OU=FVT,O=Bridgepoint,C=US -->
<X509Certificate>MIICPzCCA...</X509Certificate>
<!-- Root cert subject CN=tootiseCA,OU=FVT,O=Bridgepoint,C=US -->
<X509Certificate>MIICSTCCA...</X509Certificate>
</X509Data>
</KeyInfo>
Note, there is no direct provision for a PKCS#7 encoded "bag" of certificates or CRLs. However, a set of certificates and CRLs can
occur within an X509Data element and multiple X509Data elements can occur in a KeyInfo. Whenever multiple certificates occur in an
X509Data element, at least one such certificate must contain the public key which verifies the signature.
Also, strings in DNames ( X509IssuerSerial,X509SubjectName, and KeyName if approriate) should be encoded as follows:
<complexType name="X509IssuerSerialType">
<sequence>
<element name="X509IssuerName" type="string"/>
<element name="X509SerialNumber" type="integer"/>
</sequence>
</complexType>
DTD
<!-- Note, this DTD and schema permit X509Data to be empty; this is
precluded by the text in KeyInfo Element (section 4.4) which states
that at least one element from the dsig namespace should be present
in the PGP, SPKI, and X509 structures. This is easily expressed for
the other key types, but not for X509Data because of its rich
structure. -->
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#PGPData "
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
The PGPData element within KeyInfo is used to convey information related to PGP public key pairs and signatures on such keys. The
PGPKeyID's value is a base64Binary sequence containing a standard PGP public key identifier as defined in [PGP, section 11.2]. The
PGPKeyPacket contains a base64-encoded Key Material Packet as defined in [PGP, section 5.5]. These children element types can be
complemented/extended by siblings from an external namespace within PGPData, or PGPData can be replaced all together with an
alternative PGP XML structure as a child of KeyInfo. PGPData must contain one PGPKeyID and/or one PGPKeyPacket and 0 or more elements
from an external namespace.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#SPKIData "
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
The SPKIData element within KeyInfo is used to convey information related to SPKI public key pairs, certificates and other SPKI data.
SPKISexp is the base64 encoding of a SPKI canonical S-expression. SPKIData must have at least one SPKISexp; SPKISexp can be
complemented/extended by siblings from an external namespace within SPKIData, or SPKIData can be entirely replaced with an alternative
SPKI XML structure as a child of KeyInfo.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#MgmtData "
(this can be used within a RetrievalMethod or Reference element to identify the referent's type)
The MgmtData element within KeyInfo is a string value used to convey in-band key distribution or agreement data. For example, DH key
exchange, RSA key encryption, etc. Use of this element is NOT RECOMMENDED. It provides a syntactic hook where in-band key
distribution or agreement data can be placed. However, superior interoperable child elements of KeyInfo for the transmission of
encrypted keys and for key agreement are being specified by the W3C XML Encryption Working Group and they should be used
instead of MgmtData.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Objectis an optional element that may occur one or more times. When present, this element may contain any data. The Object element
may include optional MIME type, ID, and encoding attributes.
The Object's Encoding attributed may be used to provide a URI that identifies the method by which the object is encoded (e.g., a binary
file).
The MimeType attribute is an optional attribute which describes the data within the Object (independent of its encoding). This is a string
with values defined by [MIME]. For example, if the Object contains base64 encoded PNG, the Encoding may be specified as 'base64' and
the MimeType as 'image/png'. This attribute is purely advisory; no validation of the MimeType information is required by this specification.
Applications which require normative type and encoding information for signature validation should specify Transforms with well defined
resulting types and/or encodings.
The Object's Id is commonly referenced from a Reference in SignedInfo, or Manifest. This element is typically used for enveloping
signatures where the object being signed is to be included in the signature element. The digest is calculated over the entire Object
element including start and end tags.
Note, if the application wishes to exclude the <Object> tags from the digest calculation the Reference must identify the actual data object
(easy for XML documents) or a transform must be used to remove the Object tags (likely where the data object is non-XML). Exclusion
of the object tags may be desired for cases where one wants the signature to remain valid if the data object is moved from inside a
signature to outside the signature (or vice versa), or where the content of the Object is an encoding of an original binary document and it
is desired to extract and decode so as to sign the original bitwise representation.
Schema Definition:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#Manifest"
(this can be used within a Reference element to identify the referent's type)
The Manifest element provides a list of References. The difference from the list in SignedInfo is that it is application defined which, if any,
of the digests are actually checked against the objects referenced and what to do if the object is inaccessible or the digest compare
fails. If a Manifest is pointed to from SignedInfo, the digest over the Manifest itself will be checked by the core signature validation
behavior. The digests within such a Manifest are checked at the application's discretion. If a Manifest is referenced from another
Manifest, even the overall digest of this two level deep Manifest might not be checked.
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Identifier
Type="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#SignatureProperties"
(this can be used within a Reference element to identify the referent's type)
Additional information items concerning the generation of the signature(s) can be placed in a SignatureProperty element (i.e., date/time
stamp or the serial number of cryptographic hardware used in signature generation).
Schema Definition:
DTD:
Note that PIs placed inside SignedInfo by an application will be signed unless the CanonicalizationMethod algorithm discards them. (This
is true for any signed XML content.) All of the CanonicalizationMethods identified within this specification retain PIs. When a PI is part of
content that is signed (e.g., within SignedInfo or referenced XML documents) any change to the PI will obviously result in a signature
failure.
Note that unless CanonicalizationMethod removes comments within SignedInfo or any other referenced XML (which [XML-C14N] does),
they will be signed. Consequently, if they are retained, a change to the comment will cause a signature failure. Similarly, the XML
signature over any XML data will be sensitive to comment changes unless a comment-ignoring canonicalization/transform method, such
as the Canonical XML [XML-C14N], is specified.
6.0 Algorithms
This section identifies algorithms used with the XML digital signature specification. Entries contain the identifier to be used in Signature
elements, a reference to the formal specification, and definitions, where applicable, for the representation of keys and the results of
cryptographic operations.
This specification defines a set of algorithms, their URIs, and requirements for implementation. Requirements are specified over
implementation, not over requirements for signature use. Furthermore, the mechanism is extensible; alternative algorithms may be used
by signature applications.
Digest
1. Required SHA1
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1
Encoding
1. Required base64
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#base64
MAC
1. Required HMAC-SHA1
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#hmac-sha1
Signature
Canonicalization
Transform
1. Optional XSLT
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xslt-19991116
2. Recommended XPath
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116
3. Required Enveloped Signature*
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#enveloped-signature
* The Enveloped Signature transform removes the Signature element from the calculation of the signature when the signature is within
the content that it is being signed. This MAY be implemented via the RECOMMENDED XPath specification specified in 6.6.4:
Enveloped Signature Transform; it MUST have the same effect as that specified by the XPath Transform.
6.2 Message Digests
Only one digest algorithm is defined herein. However, it is expected that one or more additional strong digest algorithms will be
developed in connection with the US Advanced Encryption Standard effort. Use of MD5 [MD5] is NOT RECOMMENDED because
recent advances in cryptanalysis have cast doubt on its strength.
6.2.1 SHA-1
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1
The SHA-1 algorithm [SHA-1] takes no explicit parameters. An example of an SHA-1 DigestAlg element is:
<DigestMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1"/>
A SHA-1 digest is a 160-bit string. The content of the DigestValue element shall be the base64 encoding of this bit string viewed as a
20-octet octet stream. For example, the DigestValue element for the message digest:
<DigestValue>qZk+NkcGgWq6PiVxeFDCbJzQ2J0=</DigestValue>
6.3.1 HMAC
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#hmac-sha1
The HMAC algorithm (RFC2104 [HMAC]) takes the truncation length in bits as a parameter; if the parameter is not specified then all the
bits of the hash are output. An example of an HMAC SignatureMethod element:
<SignatureMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#hmac-sha1">
<HMACOutputLength>128</HMACOutputLength>
</SignatureMethod>
The output of the HMAC algorithm is ultimately the output (possibly truncated) of the chosen digest algorithm. This value shall be
base64 encoded in the same straightforward fashion as the output of the digest algorithms. Example: the SignatureValue element for
the HMAC-SHA1 digest
<SignatureValue>kpRyejY4uxwT9I74FYv8nQ==</SignatureValue>
Schema Definition:
<simpleType name="HMACOutputLengthType">
<restriction base="integer"/>
</simpleType>
DTD:
6.4.1 DSA
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#dsa-sha1
The DSA algorithm [DSS] takes no explicit parameters. An example of a DSA SignatureMethod element is:
<SignatureMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#dsa-sha1"/>
The output of the DSA algorithm consists of a pair of integers usually referred by the pair (r, s). The signature value consists of the
base64 encoding of the concatenation of two octet-streams that respectively result from the octet-encoding of the values r and s in that
order. Integer to octet-stream conversion must be done according to the I2OSP operation defined in the RFC 2437 [PKCS1]
specification with a l parameter equal to 20. For example, the SignatureValue element for a DSA signature ( r, s) with values specified
in hexadecimal:
<SignatureValue>
i6watmQQQ1y3GB+VsWq5fJKzQcBB4jRfH1bfJFj0JtFVtLotttzYyA==</SignatureValue>
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1
The expression "RSA algorithm" as used in this draft refers to the RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 algorithm described in RFC 2437 [PKCS1].
The RSA algorithm takes no explicit parameters. An example of an RSA SignatureMethod element is:
<SignatureMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1"/>
The SignatureValue content for an RSA signature is the base64 [MIME] encoding of the octet string computed as per RFC 2437 [PKCS1,
section 8.1.1: Signature generation for the RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 signature scheme]. As specified in the EMSA-PKCS1-V1_5-
ENCODE function RFC 2437 [PKCS1, section 9.2.1], the value input to the signature function MUST contain a pre-pended algorithm
object identifier for the hash function, but the availability of an ASN.1 parser and recognition of OIDs is not required of a signature
verifier. The PKCS#1 v1.5 representation appears as:
where "|" is concatenation, "01", "FF", and "00" are fixed octets of the corresponding hexadecimal value, "hash" is the SHA1 digest of
the data, and "prefix" is the ASN.1 BER SHA1 algorithm designator prefix required in PKCS1 [RFC 2437], that is,
hex 30 21 30 09 06 05 2B 0E 03 02 1A 05 00 04 14
This prefix is included to make it easier to use standard cryptographic libraries. The FF octet MUST be repeated the maximum number
of times such that the value of the quantity being CRYPTed is one octet shorter than the RSA modulus.
The resulting base64 [MIME] string is the value of the child text node of the SignatureValue element, e.g.
<SignatureValue>
IWijxQjUrcXBYoCei4QxjWo9Kg8D3p9tlWoT4t0/gyTE96639In0FZFY2/rvP+/bMJ01EArmKZsR5VW3rwoPxw=
</SignatureValue>
Various canonicalization algorithms require conversion to [UTF-8].The two algorithms below understand at least [UTF-8] and [UTF-16]
as input encodings. We RECOMMEND that externally specified algorithms do the same. Knowledge of other encodings is OPTIONAL.
Various canonicalization algorithms transcode from a non-Unicode encoding to Unicode. The two algorithms below perform text
normalization during transcoding [ NFC, NFC-Corrigendum]. We RECOMMEND that externally specified canonicalization algorithms do
the same. (Note, there can be ambiguities in converting existing charsets to Unicode, for an example see the XML Japanese Profile
[XML-Japanese] Note.)
<CanonicalizationMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xml-c14n-20010315"/>
The normative specification of Canonical XML is [XML-C14N]. The algorithm is capable of taking as input either an octet stream or an
XPath node-set (or sufficiently functional alternative). The algorithm produces an octet stream as output. Canonical XML is easily
parameterized (via an additional URI) to omit or retain comments.
Application developers are strongly encouraged to support all transforms listed in this section as RECOMMENDED unless the
application environment has resource constraints that would make such support impractical. Compliance with this recommendation will
maximize application interoperability and libraries should be available to enable support of these transforms in applications without
extensive development.
6.6.1 Canonicalization
Any canonicalization algorithm that can be used for CanonicalizationMethod (such as those in Canonicalization Algorithms (section 6.5))
can be used as a Transform.
6.6.2 Base64
Identifiers:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#base64
The normative specification for base64 decoding transforms is [MIME]. The base64 Transform element has no content. The input is
decoded by the algorithms. This transform is useful if an application needs to sign the raw data associated with the encoded content of
an element.
This transform requires an octet stream for input. If an XPath node-set (or sufficiently functional alternative) is given as input, then it is
converted to an octet stream by performing operations logically equivalent to 1) applying an XPath transform with expression
self::text(), then 2) taking the string-value of the node-set. Thus, if an XML element is identified by a barename XPointer in the
Reference URI, and its content consists solely of base64 encoded character data, then this transform automatically strips away the start
and end tags of the identified element and any of its descendant elements as well as any descendant comments and processing
instructions. The output of this transform is an octet stream.
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116
The normative specification for XPath expression evaluation is [XPath]. The XPath expression to be evaluated appears as the character
content of a transform parameter child element named XPath.
The input required by this transform is an XPath node-set. Note that if the actual input is an XPath node-set resulting from a null URI or
barename XPointer dereference, then comment nodes will have been omitted. If the actual input is an octet stream, then the application
MUST convert the octet stream to an XPath node-set suitable for use by Canonical XML with Comments. (A subsequent application of
the REQUIRED Canonical XML algorithm would strip away these comments.) In other words, the input node-set should be equivalent to
the one that would be created by the following process:
1. Initialize an XPath evaluation context by setting the initial node equal to the input XML document's root node, and set the context
position and size to 1.
2. Evaluate the XPath expression (//. | //@* | //namespace::*)
The evaluation of this expression includes all of the document's nodes (including comments) in the node-set representing the octet
stream.
The transform output is also an XPath node-set. The XPath expression appearing in the XPath parameter is evaluated once for each
node in the input node-set. The result is converted to a boolean. If the boolean is true, then the node is included in the output node-set.
If the boolean is false, then the node is omitted from the output node-set.
Note: Even if the input node-set has had comments removed, the comment nodes still exist in the underlying parse tree and can
separate text nodes. For example, the markup <e>Hello, <!-- comment -->world!</e> contains two text nodes. Therefore, the expression
self::text()[string()="Hello, world!"] would fail. Should this problem arise in the application, it can be solved by either canonicalizing
the document before the XPath transform to physically remove the comments or by matching the node based on the parent element's
string value (e.g. by using the expression self::text()[string(parent::e)="Hello, world!"]).
The primary purpose of this transform is to ensure that only specifically defined changes to the input XML document are permitted after
the signature is affixed. This is done by omitting precisely those nodes that are allowed to change once the signature is affixed, and
including all other input nodes in the output. It is the responsibility of the XPath expression author to include all nodes whose change
could affect the interpretation of the transform output in the application context.
An important scenario would be a document requiring two enveloped signatures. Each signature must omit itself from its own digest
calculations, but it is also necessary to exclude the second signature element from the digest calculations of the first signature so that
adding the second signature does not break the first signature.
The XPath transform establishes the following evaluation context for each node of the input node-set:
As a result of the context node setting, the XPath expressions appearing in this transform will be quite similar to those used in used in
[XSLT], except that the size and position are always 1 to reflect the fact that the transform is automatically visiting every node (in XSLT,
one recursively calls the command apply-templates to visit the nodes of the input tree).
The here function returns a node-set containing the attribute or processing instruction node or the parent element of the text node that
directly bears the XPath expression. This expression results in an error if the containing XPath expression does not appear in the same
XML document against which the XPath expression is being evaluated.
As an example, consider creating an enveloped signature (a Signature element that is a descendant of an element being signed).
Although the signed content should not be changed after signing, the elements within the Signature element are changing (e.g. the
digest value must be put inside the DigestValue and the SignatureValue must be subsequently calculated). One way to prevent these
changes from invalidating the digest value in DigestValue is to add an XPath Transform that omits all Signature elements and their
descendants. For example,
<Document>
...
<Signature xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#">
<SignedInfo>
...
<Reference URI="">
<Transforms>
<Transform Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116">
<XPath xmlns:dsig="&dsig;">
not(ancestor-or-self::dsig:Signature)
</XPath>
</Transform>
</Transforms>
<DigestMethod Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1"/>
<DigestValue></DigestValue>
</Reference>
</SignedInfo>
<SignatureValue></SignatureValue>
</Signature>
...
</Document>
Due to the null Reference URI in this example, the XPath transform input node-set contains all nodes in the entire parse tree starting at
the root node (except the comment nodes). For each node in this node-set, the node is included in the output node-set except if the
node or one of its ancestors has a tag of Signature that is in the namespace given by the replacement text for the entity &dsig;.
A more elegant solution uses the here function to omit only the Signature containing the XPath Transform, thus allowing enveloped
signatures to sign other signatures. In the example above, use the XPath element:
<XPath xmlns:dsig="&dsig;">
count(ancestor-or-self::dsig:Signature |
here()/ancestor::dsig:Signature[1]) >
count(ancestor-or-self::dsig:Signature)</XPath>
Since the XPath equality operator converts node sets to string values before comparison, we must instead use the XPath union
operator (|). For each node of the document, the predicate expression is true if and only if the node-set containing the node and its
Signature element ancestors does not include the enveloped Signature element containing the XPath expression (the union does not
produce a larger set if the enveloped Signature element is in the node-set given by ancestor-or-self::Signature).
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#enveloped-signature
An enveloped signature transform T removes the whole Signature element containing T from the digest calculation of the Reference
element containing T. The entire string of characters used by an XML processor to match the Signature with the XML production element
is removed. The output of the transform is equivalent to the output that would result from replacing T with an XPath transform containing
the following XPath parameter element:
<XPath xmlns:dsig="&dsig;">
count(ancestor-or-self::dsig:Signature |
here()/ancestor::dsig:Signature[1]) >
count(ancestor-or-self::dsig:Signature)</XPath>
The input and output requirements of this transform are identical to those of the XPath transform, but may only be applied to a node-set
from its parent XML document. Note that it is not necessary to use an XPath expression evaluator to create this transform. However,
this transform MUST produce output in exactly the same manner as the XPath transform parameterized by the XPath expression
above.
6.6.5 XSLT Transform
Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xslt-19991116
The normative specification for XSL Transformations is [XSLT]. Specification of a namespace-qualified stylesheet element, which MUST
be the sole child of the Transform element, indicates that the specified style sheet should be used. Whether this instantiates in-line
processing of local XSLT declarations within the resource is determined by the XSLT processing model; the ordered application of
multiple stylesheet may require multiple Transforms. No special provision is made for the identification of a remote stylesheet at a given
URI because it can be communicated via an xsl:include or xsl:import within the stylesheet child of the Transform.
This transform requires an octet stream as input. If the actual input is an XPath node-set, then the signature application should attempt
to convert it to octets (apply Canonical XML]) as described in the Reference Processing Model (section 4.3.3.2).
The output of this transform is an octet stream. The processing rules for the XSL style sheet or transform element are stated in the
XSLT specification [XSLT]. We RECOMMEND that XSLT transform authors use an output method of xml for XML and HTML. As XSLT
implementations do not produce consistent serializations of their output, we further RECOMMEND inserting a transform after the XSLT
transform to canonicalize the output. These steps will help to ensure interoperability of the resulting signatures among applications that
support the XSLT transform. Note that if the output is actually HTML, then the result of these steps is logically equivalent [XHTML].
XML is subject to surface representation changes and to processing which discards some surface information. For this reason, XML
digital signatures have a provision for indicating canonicalization methods in the signature so that a verifier can use the same
canonicalization as the signer.
Throughout this specification we distinguish between the canonicalization of a Signature element and other signed XML data objects. It
is possible for an isolated XML document to be treated as if it were binary data so that no changes can occur. In that case, the digest of
the document will not change and it need not be canonicalized if it is signed and verified as such. However, XML that is read and
processed using standard XML parsing and processing techniques is frequently changed such that some of its surface representation
information is lost or modified. In particular, this will occur in many cases for the Signature and enclosed SignedInfo elements since they,
and possibly an encompassing XML document, will be processed as XML.
Similarly, these considerations apply to Manifest, Object, and SignatureProperties elements if those elements have been digested, their
DigestValue is to be checked, and they are being processed as XML.
The kinds of changes in XML that may need to be canonicalized can be divided into four categories. There are those related to the
basic [XML], as described in 7.1 below. There are those related to [ DOM], [SAX], or similar processing as described in 7.2 below. Third,
there is the possibility of coded character set conversion, such as between UTF-8 and UTF-16, both of which all [XML] compliant
processors are required to support, which is described in the paragraph immediately below. And, fourth, there are changes that related
to namespace declaration and XML namespace attribute context as described in 7.3 below.
Any canonicalization algorithm should yield output in a specific fixed coded character set. All canonicalization algorithms identified in
this document use UTF-8 (without a byte order mark (BOM)) and do not provide character normalization. We RECOMMEND that
signature applications create XML content (Signature elements and their descendents/content) in Normalization Form C [NFC, NFC-
Corrigendum] and check that any XML being consumed is in that form as well; (if not, signatures may consequently fail to validate).
Additionally, none of these algorithms provide data type normalization. Applications that normalize data types in varying formats (e.g.,
(true, false) or (1,0)) may not be able to validate each other's signatures.
1. line endings are normalized to the single character #xA by dropping #xD characters if they are immediately followed by a #xA and
replacing them with #xA in all other cases,
2. missing attributes declared to have default values are provided to the application as if present with the default value,
3. character references are replaced with the corresponding character,
4. entity references are replaced with the corresponding declared entity,
5. attribute values are normalized by
1. replacing character and entity references as above,
2. replacing occurrences of #x9, #xA, and #xD with #x20 (space) except that the sequence #xD#xA is replaced by a single
space, and
3. if the attribute is not declared to be CDATA, stripping all leading and trailing spaces and replacing all interior runs of spaces
with a single space.
Note that items (2), (4), and (5.3) depend on the presence of a schema, DTD or similar declarations. The Signature element type is laxly
schema valid [XML-schema], consequently external XML or even XML within the same document as the signature may be (only) well-
formed or from another namespace (where permitted by the signature schema); the noted items may not be present. Thus, a signature
with such content will only be verifiable by other signature applications if the following syntax constraints are observed when generating
any signed material including the SignedInfo element:
If an XML Signature is to be produced or verified on a system using the DOM or SAX processing, a canonical method is needed to
serialize the relevant part of a DOM tree or sequence of SAX events. XML canonicalization specifications, such as [ XML-C14N], are
based only on information which is preserved by DOM and SAX. For an XML Signature to be verifiable by an implementation using
DOM or SAX, not only must the XML 1.0 syntax constraints given in the previous section be followed but an appropriate XML
canonicalization MUST be specified so that the verifier can re-serialize DOM/SAX mediated input into the same octet stream that was
signed.
"Note: An element E has namespace nodes that represent its namespace declarations as well as any namespace
declarations made by its ancestors that have not been overridden in E's declarations, the default namespace if it is non-
empty, and the declaration of the prefix xml." [XML-C14N]
When serializing a Signature element or signed XML data that's the child of other elements using these data models, that Signature
element and its children, may contain namespace declarations from its ancestor context. In addition, the Canonical XML and Canonical
XML with Comments algorithms import all xml namespace attributes (such as xml:lang) from the nearest ancestor in which they are
declared to the apex node of canonicalized XML unless they are already declared at that node. This may frustrate the intent of the
signer to create a signature in one context which remains valid in another. For example, given a signature which is a child of B and a
grandchild of A:
<A xmlns:n1="&foo;">
<B xmlns:n2="&bar;">
<Signature xmlns="&dsig;"> ...
<Reference URI="#signme"/> ...
</Signature>
<C ID="signme" xmlns="&baz;"/>
</B>
</A>
when either the element B or the signed element C is moved into a [SOAP] envelope for transport:
<SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/">
...
<SOAP:Body>
<B xmlns:n2="&bar;">
<Signature xmlns="&dsig;">
...
</Signature>
<C ID="signme" xmlns="&baz;"/>
</B>
</SOAP:Body>
</SOAP:Envelope>
The canonical form of the signature in this context will contain new namespace declarations from the SOAP:Envelope context, invalidating
the signature. Also, the canonical form will lack namespace declarations it may have originally had from element A's context, also
invalidating the signature. To avoid these problems, the application may:
1. Rely upon the enveloping application to properly divorce its body (the signature payload) from the context (the envelope) before
the signature is validated. Or,
2. Use a canonicalization method that "repels/excludes" instead of "attracts" ancestor context. [XML-C14N] purposefully attracts
such context.
8.1 Transforms
A requirement of this specification is to permit signatures to "apply to a part or totality of a XML document." (See [XML-Signature-RD,
section 3.1.3].) The Transforms mechanism meets this requirement by permitting one to sign data derived from processing the content of
the identified resource. For instance, applications that wish to sign a form, but permit users to enter limited field data without invalidating
a previous signature on the form might use [XPath] to exclude those portions the user needs to change. Transforms may be arbitrarily
specified and may include encoding transforms, canonicalization instructions or even XSLT transformations. Three cautions are raised
with respect to this feature in the following sections.
Note, core validation behavior does not confirm that the signed data was obtained by applying each step of the indicated transforms.
(Though it does check that the digest of the resulting content matches that specified in the signature.) For example, some applications
may be satisfied with verifying an XML signature over a cached copy of already transformed data. Other applications might require that
content be freshly dereferenced and transformed.
First, obviously, signatures over a transformed document do not secure any information discarded by transforms: only what is signed is
secure.
Note that the use of Canonical XML [XML-C14N] ensures that all internal entities and XML namespaces are expanded within the
content being signed. All entities are replaced with their definitions and the canonical form explicitly represents the namespace that an
element would otherwise inherit. Applications that do not canonicalize XML content (especially the SignedInfo element) SHOULD NOT
use internal entities and SHOULD represent the namespace explicitly within the content being signed since they can not rely upon
canonicalization to do this for them. Also, users concerned with the integrity of the element type definitions associated with the XML
instance being signed may wish to sign those definitions as well (i.e., the schema, DTD, or natural language description associated with
the namespace/identifier).
Second, an envelope containing signed information is not secured by the signature. For instance, when an encrypted envelope contains
a signature, the signature does not protect the authenticity or integrity of unsigned envelope headers nor its ciphertext form, it only
secures the plaintext actually signed.
Additionally, the signature secures any information introduced by the transform: only what is "seen" (that which is represented to the
user via visual, auditory or other media) should be signed. If signing is intended to convey the judgment or consent of a user (an
automated mechanism or person), then it is normally necessary to secure as exactly as practical the information that was presented to
that user. Note that this can be accomplished by literally signing what was presented, such as the screen images shown a user.
However, this may result in data which is difficult for subsequent software to manipulate. Instead, one can sign the data along with
whatever filters, style sheets, client profile or other information that affects its presentation.
Just as a user should only sign what he or she "sees," persons and automated mechanism that trust the validity of a transformed
document on the basis of a valid signature should operate over the data that was transformed (including canonicalization) and signed,
not the original pre-transformed data. This recommendation applies to transforms specified within the signature as well as those
included as part of the document itself. For instance, if an XML document includes an embedded style sheet [XSLT] it is the transformed
document that should be represented to the user and signed. To meet this recommendation where a document references an external
style sheet, the content of that external resource should also be signed as via a signature Reference otherwise the content of that
external content might change which alters the resulting document without invalidating the signature.
Some applications might operate over the original or intermediary data but should be extremely careful about potential weaknesses
introduced between the original and transformed data. This is a trust decision about the character and meaning of the transforms that
an application needs to make with caution. Consider a canonicalization algorithm that normalizes character case (lower to upper) or
character composition ('e and accent' to 'accented-e'). An adversary could introduce changes that are normalized and consequently
inconsequential to signature validity but material to a DOM processor. For instance, by changing the case of a character one might
influence the result of an XPath selection. A serious risk is introduced if that change is normalized for signature validation but the
processor operates over the original data and returns a different result than intended.
As a result:
All documents operated upon and generated by signature applications MUST be in [ NFC, NFC-Corrigendum] (otherwise
intermediate processors might unintentionally break the signature)
Encoding normalizations SHOULD NOT be done as part of a signature transform, or (to state it another way) if normalization does
occur, the application SHOULD always "see" (operate over) the normalized form.
With public key signatures, any number of parties can hold the public key and verify signatures while only the parties with the private
key can create signatures. The number of holders of the private key should be minimized and preferably be one. Confidence by verifiers
in the public key they are using and its binding to the entity or capabilities represented by the corresponding private key is an important
issue, usually addressed by certificate or online authority systems.
Keyed hash authentication codes, based on secret keys, are typically much more efficient in terms of the computational effort required
but have the characteristic that all verifiers need to have possession of the same key as the signer. Thus any verifier can forge
signatures.
This specification permits user provided signature algorithms and keying information designators. Such user provided algorithms may
have different security models. For example, methods involving biometrics usually depend on a physical characteristic of the authorized
user that can not be changed the way public or secret keys can be and may have other security model differences.
Care must be exercised by applications in executing the various algorithms that may be specified in an XML signature and in the
processing of any "executable content" that might be provided to such algorithms as parameters, such as XSLT transforms. The
algorithms specified in this document will usually be implemented via a trusted library but even there perverse parameters might cause
unacceptable processing or memory demand. Even more care may be warranted with application defined algorithms.
The security of an overall system will also depend on the security and integrity of its operating procedures, its personnel, and on the
administrative enforcement of those procedures. All the factors listed in this section are important to the overall security of a system;
however, most are beyond the scope of this specification.
10.0 Definitions
Authentication Code (Protected Checksum)
A value generated from the application of a shared key to a message via a cryptographic algorithm such that it has the properties
of message authentication (and integrity) but not signer authentication. Equivalent to protected checksum, "A checksum that is
computed for a data object by means that protect against active attacks that would attempt to change the checksum to make it
match changes made to the data object." [ SEC]
Authentication, Message
The property, given an authentication code/protected checksum, that tampering with both the data and checksum, so as to
introduce changes while seemingly preserving integrity, are still detected. "A signature should identify what is signed, making it
impracticable to falsify or alter either the signed matter or the signature without detection." [Digital Signature Guidelines, ABA].
Authentication, Signer
The property that the identity of the signer is as claimed. "A signature should indicate who signed a document, message or record,
and should be difficult for another person to produce without authorization." [Digital Signature Guidelines, ABA] Note, signer
authentication is an application decision (e.g., does the signing key actually correspond to a specific identity) that is supported by,
but out of scope, of this specification.
Checksum
"A value that (a) is computed by a function that is dependent on the contents of a data object and (b) is stored or transmitted
together with the object, for the purpose of detecting changes in the data." [SEC]
Core
The syntax and processing defined by this specification, including core validation. We use this term to distinguish other markup,
processing, and applications semantics from our own.
Data Object (Content/Document)
The actual binary/octet data being operated on (transformed, digested, or signed) by an application -- frequently an HTTP entity
[HTTP]. Note that the proper noun Object designates a specific XML element. Occasionally we refer to a data object as a
document or as a resource's content. The term element content is used to describe the data between XML start and end tags
[XML]. The term XML document is used to describe data objects which conform to the XML specification [XML].
Integrity
"The property that data has not been changed, destroyed, or lost in an unauthorized or accidental manner." [SEC] A simple
checksum can provide integrity from incidental changes in the data; message authentication is similar but also protects against an
active attack to alter the data whereby a change in the checksum is introduced so as to match the change in the data.
Object
An XML Signature element wherein arbitrary (non-core) data may be placed. An Object element is merely one type of digital data
(or document) that can be signed via a Reference.
Resource
"A resource can be anything that has identity. Familiar examples include an electronic document, an image, a service (e.g.,
'today's weather report for Los Angeles'), and a collection of other resources.... The resource is the conceptual mapping to an
entity or set of entities, not necessarily the entity which corresponds to that mapping at any particular instance in time. Thus, a
resource can remain constant even when its content---the entities to which it currently corresponds---changes over time, provided
that the conceptual mapping is not changed in the process." [URI] In order to avoid a collision of the term entity within the URI and
XML specifications, we use the term data object, content or document to refer to the actual bits/octets being operated upon.
Signature
Formally speaking, a value generated from the application of a private key to a message via a cryptographic algorithm such that it
has the properties of integrity, message authentication and/or signer authentication. (However, we sometimes use the term
signature generically such that it encompasses Authentication Code values as well, but we are careful to make the distinction
when the property of signer authentication is relevant to the exposition.) A signature may be (non-exclusively) described as
detached, enveloping, or enveloped.
Signature, Application
An application that implements the MANDATORY (REQUIRED/MUST) portions of this specification; these conformance
requirements are over application behavior, the structure of the Signature element type and its children (including SignatureValue)
and the specified algorithms.
Signature, Detached
The signature is over content external to the Signature element, and can be identified via a URI or transform. Consequently, the
signature is "detached" from the content it signs. This definition typically applies to separate data objects, but it also includes the
instance where the Signature and data object reside within the same XML document but are sibling elements.
Signature, Enveloping
The signature is over content found within an Object element of the signature itself. The Object (or its content) is identified via a
Reference (via a URI fragment identifier or transform).
Signature, Enveloped
The signature is over the XML content that contains the signature as an element. The content provides the root XML document
element. Obviously, enveloped signatures must take care not to include their own value in the calculation of the SignatureValue.
Transform
The processing of a data from its source to its derived form. Typical transforms include XML Canonicalization, XPath, and XSLT.
Validation, Core
The core processing requirements of this specification requiring signature validation and SignedInfo reference validation.
Validation, Reference
The hash value of the identified and transformed content, specified by Reference, matches its specified DigestValue.
Validation, Signature
The SignatureValue matches the result of processing SignedInfo with CanonicalizationMethod and SignatureMethod as specified in
Core Validation (section 3.2).
Validation, Trust/Application
The application determines that the semantics associated with a signature are valid. For example, an application may validate the
time stamps or the integrity of the signer key -- though this behavior is external to this core specification.
11.0 References
ABA
Digital Signature Guidelines.
http://www.abanet.org/scitech/ec/isc/dsgfree.html
DOM
Document Object Model (DOM) Level 1 Specification. W3C Recommendation. V. Apparao, S. Byrne, M. Champion, S. Isaacs, I.
Jacobs, A. Le Hors, G. Nicol, J. Robie, R. Sutor, C. Wilson, L. Wood. October 1998.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-DOM-Level-1-19981001/
DSS
FIPS PUB 186-2 . Digital Signature Standard (DSS). U.S. Department of Commerce/National Institute of Standards and
Technology.
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips186-2/fips186-2.pdf
HMAC
RFC 2104. HMAC: Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication. H. Krawczyk, M. Bellare, R. Canetti. February 1997.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2104.txt
HTTP
RFC 2616. Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1. J. Gettys, J. Mogul, H. Frystyk, L. Masinter, P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee. June
1999.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt
KEYWORDS
RFC 2119. Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. S. Bradner. March 1997.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt
LDAP-DN
RFC 2253. Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3): UTF-8 String Representation of Distinguished Names. M. Wahl, S. Kille, T.
Howes. December 1997.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2253.txt
MD5
RFC 1321. The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm. R. Rivest. April 1992.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1321.txt
MIME
RFC 2045. Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies. N. Freed & N.
Borenstein. November 1996.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2045.txt
NFC
TR15, Unicode Normalization Forms. M. Davis, M. Dürst. Revision 18: November 1999.
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/tr15-18.html.
NFC-Corrigendum
Normalization Corrigendum. The Unicode Consortium.
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/uni2errata/Normalization_Corrigendum.html.
PGP
RFC 2440. OpenPGP Message Format. J. Callas, L. Donnerhacke, H. Finney, R. Thayer. November 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2440.txt
RANDOM
RFC 1750. Randomness Recommendations for Security. D. Eastlake, S. Crocker, J. Schiller. December 1994.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1750.txt
RDF
Resource Description Framework (RDF) Schema Specification 1.0. W3C Candidate Recommendation. D. Brickley, R.V. Guha.
March 2000.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/CR-rdf-schema-20000327/
Resource Description Framework (RDF) Model and Syntax Specification. W3C Recommendation. O. Lassila, R. Swick. February
1999.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-rdf-syntax-19990222/
1363
IEEE 1363: Standard Specifications for Public Key Cryptography. August 2000.
PKCS1
RFC 2437. PKCS #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.0. B. Kaliski, J. Staddon. October 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2437.txt
SAX
SAX: The Simple API for XML. D. Megginson, et al. May 1998.
http://www.megginson.com/SAX/index.html
SEC
RFC 2828. Internet Security Glossary. R. Shirey. May 2000.
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2828.html
SHA-1
FIPS PUB 180-1. Secure Hash Standard. U.S. Department of Commerce/National Institute of Standards and Technology.
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips180-1/fip180-1.txt
SOAP
Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) Version 1.1. W3C Note. D. Box, D. Ehnebuske, G. Kakivaya, A. Layman, N. Mendelsohn,
H. Frystyk Nielsen, S. Thatte, D. Winer. May 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/NOTE-SOAP-20000508/
Unicode
The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode Standard.
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/standard.html
UTF-16
RFC 2781. UTF-16, an encoding of ISO 10646. P. Hoffman , F. Yergeau. February 2000.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2781.txt
UTF-8
RFC 2279. UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646. F. Yergeau. January 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2279.txt
URI
RFC 2396. Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax. T. Berners-Lee, R. Fielding, L. Masinter. August 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
URI-Literal
RFC 2732. Format for Literal IPv6 Addresses in URL's. R. Hinden, B. Carpenter, L. Masinter. December 1999.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2732.txt
URL
RFC 1738. Uniform Resource Locators (URL). T. Berners-Lee, L. Masinter, and M. McCahill. December 1994.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1738.txt
URN
RFC 2141. URN Syntax. R. Moats. May 1997.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2141.txt
RFC 2611. URN Namespace Definition Mechanisms. L. Daigle, D. van Gulik, R. Iannella, P. Falstrom. June 1999.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2611.txt
X509v3
ITU-T Recommendation X.509 version 3 (1997). "Information Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory
Authentication Framework" ISO/IEC 9594-8:1997.
XHTML 1.0
XHTML(tm) 1.0: The Extensible Hypertext Markup Language. W3C Recommendation. S. Pemberton, D. Raggett, et al. January
2000.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xhtml1-20000126/
XLink
XML Linking Language. W3C Recommendation. S. DeRose, E. Maler, D. Orchard. June 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xlink-20010627/
XML
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Second Edition). W3C Recommendation. T. Bray, E. Maler, J. Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-
McQueen. October 2000.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xml-20001006
XML-C14N
Canonical XML. W3C Recommendation. J. Boyer. March 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xml-c14n-20010315
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3076.txt
XML-Japanese
XML Japanese Profile. W3C Note. M. Murata April 2000 http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/NOTE-japanese-xml-20000414/
XML-MT
RFC 2376 . XML Media Types. E. Whitehead, M. Murata. July 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2376.txt
XML-ns
Namespaces in XML. W3C Recommendation. T. Bray, D. Hollander, A. Layman. January 1999.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xml-names-19990114
XML-schema
XML Schema Part 1: Structures. W3C Recommendation. D. Beech, M. Maloney, N. Mendelsohn, H. Thompson. May 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-1-20010502/
XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes W3C Recommendation. P. Biron, A. Malhotra. May 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-2-20010502/
XML-Signature-RD
RFC 2807. XML Signature Requirements. W3C Working Draft. J. Reagle, April 2000.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/WD-xmldsig-requirements-19991014
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2807.txt
XPath
XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0. W3C Recommendation. J. Clark, S. DeRose. October 1999.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116
XPointer
XML Pointer Language (XPointer). W3C Candidate Recommendation. S. DeRose, R. Daniel, E. Maler. January 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/CR-xptr-20010911/
XSL
Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL). W3C Recommendation. S. Adler, A. Berglund, J. Caruso, S. Deach, T. Graham, P. Grosso,
E. Gutentag, A. Milowski, S. Parnell, J. Richman, S. Zilles. October 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xsl-20011015/
XSLT
XSL Transforms (XSLT) Version 1.0. W3C Recommendation. J. Clark. November 1999.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xslt-19991116.html
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