Re: Client-Cert Header draft

Very true that connection-level authentication doesn't always play well
with HTTP. But the intended scope of this draft isn't trying to address
that. It's only trying to bring some commonality to what's typically done
in practice now. I would think an HTTP 403 or even application level
controls on content is what's happening now regardless. The approach in
this draft does mean that authorization errors aren't going to be conveyed
back to the client at the connection level but, as you point out, doing so
is differently odd. So much so that I don't think the draft needs to do
anything to facilitate it.

On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 3:12 PM David Benjamin <davidben@chromium.org>
wrote:

> This draft isn't sufficient to properly move the access checks out of the
> TLS terminator. More care is needed here. There is a "distaste for client
> certificates from some quarters" for a reason.
>
> In general, connection-level authentication does not play well with HTTP.
> Server identities are generally public, so there is no complex policy
> around when to release them. Client identities are generally user
> identities and thus sensitive, with local policies, usually involving user
> prompts and selections. That interacts badly with client certificates. It
> just barely works today, but moving individual components without thought
> as to the overall picture will break it.
>
> In particular, client HTTP stacks necessarily cache client certificate
> decisions. Without caching, the user is potentially prompted on every HTTP
> request, but a user session involves many HTTP requests. Additionally, the
> decision is inherently cached by way of connection reuse and session
> resumption optimizations. Short of forcing a full TLS handshake on every
> HTTP request, clients could not prompt on every HTTP request if they wanted
> to. That means the HTTP stacks need an explicit signal, or no amount of
> reloads will allow the user to select a different identity.
>
> Currently, the only signal for a bad client certificate is a fatal TLS
> alert. If the access checks are moved, bad client certificate signals will
> come out of the origin server, which cannot generate those. This draft may
> need to define a suitable HTTP 4xx code to correspond with TLS client
> certificate authentication. Of course, existing clients won't know to
> process that, but perhaps the origin server should translate to a TLS
> alert? But then the response is never delivered, which may be differently
> odd. Then one must consider the interaction with HTTP/2, which multiplexes
> streams and potentially multiple origins together.
>
> There may be further problems here that I haven't thought through. The
> suggestion of this enabling finer-grained access control worries me.
>
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 3:29 PM Lucas Pardue <lucaspardue.24.7@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> +1 to everything Mike said
>>
>> On Fri, 17 Apr 2020, 20:24 Mike Bishop, <mbishop@evequefou.be> wrote:
>>
>>> Despite the distaste for client certificates from some quarters, they
>>> are still both used and useful.  I’m certainly interested in seeing this
>>> progress.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In today’s situation, the intermediary checks that the cert matches the
>>> rules it has been given to authenticate clients, and only forwards the
>>> requests from valid clients.  Arguably, the origin is offloading less trust
>>> in this draft’s model – the intermediary is responsible for validating that
>>> the client possesses the claimed certificate, but might leave the origin to
>>> decide what scope of access the certificate actually grants.  That allows
>>> finer-grained access control, but also allows greater ability to send
>>> requests back to the origin.  It also opens the door for intermediaries
>>> which don’t support this header to accidentally forward requests containing
>>> it.  Requiring intermediaries to drop it doesn’t get you much, since only
>>> those intermediaries aware of the spec will comply by dropping the header.
>>> To help address these, I’d like to see this mix in something that the
>>> intermediary holds and the client doesn’t, such as an exporter from its TLS
>>> connection to the server.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> But all that is refinement – the core concept here is beneficial, and
>>> I’d like to see more engagement here.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* Brian Campbell <bcampbell@pingidentity.com>
>>> *Sent:* Wednesday, April 15, 2020 5:01 PM
>>> *To:* HTTP Working Group <ietf-http-wg@w3.org>
>>> *Subject:* Client-Cert Header draft
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Hello HTTP Working Group,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I've somewhat inadvertently found myself working on this draft
>>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-bdc-something-something-certificate/,
>>> which aspires to define a "Client-Cert" HTTP header field that allows a TLS
>>> terminating reverse proxy to convey information about the client
>>> certificate of a mutually-authenticated TLS connection to an origin server
>>> in a common and predictable manner.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I presented the concept
>>> <https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/107/materials/slides-107-secdispatch-client-cert-http-header-00>
>>> at the recent virtual IETF 107 secdispatch meeting
>>> <https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/107/materials/minutes-107-secdispatch-00>
>>> and the outcome from that was basically that there seems to be some
>>> interest in pursuing the work and the suggestion that the conversation be
>>> taken to the HTTPbis WG (and also keep TLS WG involved - presumably if the
>>> work progresses). And that's what brings me here. I also hope to get a
>>> little bit of time at one of the upcoming virtual interims to
>>> present/discuss the draft.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> Brian
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>

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Received on Monday, 20 April 2020 22:14:58 UTC