Bootstrapping Trust Part 3

Bootstrapping Trust Part 3

Certificates

If you have read through the entire series up to here, welcome! If you have not, please consider reading the whole series:

In the series, we have covered public-key cryptography, where we learned about public keys, private keys, and their uses for encryption and signing. Using keys to sign data will play an essential role in this article. It is vital that the reader understand that signatures verify both the content of the data and its source. For a refresher, see part two of this series.

This article covers how certificates and certificate authorities (CAs) work as "trust anchors." When a CA is a trust anchor, it means that a system can trust the CA to sign certificates that it can, in turn, trust. Throughout this entire article, "trusting certificates" is mentioned. Trusting a certificate (CA or otherwise) is a software or operating system configuration process. This configuration tells the system that the specified certificates are trustworthy in the eyes of the operator.

Certificates

Part two of this series covered keys, both public and private, but did not mention certificates. It is common to hear "certificate" used interchangeably with "public key" and, sometimes, "private key." A certificate must have the public key inside of it. Some storage formats allow certificates to be stored along with the matching private key. One example of this is PFX files. PFX files, which are PKCS#12 archives, are also sometimes generically referred to as "certificates". In this article "certificate" will always mean an x509 certificate that contains\ only the public key.

Certificates are a simple concept, but years of expansions and extensions have added to them and can be daunting uninitiated when you get into the nitty-gritty details. This article will strive to sit above that detail. If you venture into the realm of generating certificates, using OpenSSL and its configuration files, it can be a cumbersome experience to wade through. There are many great articles and tutorials available to get you started.

For this article, the word "certificate" will mean an "x509 Certificate". x509 is a public standard and is the de-facto standard for software systems dealing with public-key cryptography. There are other formats, but they are usually environment-specific, such as Card Verifiable Certificates. x509 good enough for general purpose use on most systems.

So, what is a certificate? It is yet another blob of data that is specially formatted. It can be stored anywhere data can be stored but is usually a file. For this conversation, we will focus on the following subset of information that a certificate contains:

  • Subject information
  • A public key
  • Distinguished Name
  • Issuer Information
  • Validity Period
  • Usage/Extensions
  • Signatures

Subject Information

Certificates contain more than keys. The Distinguished Name (DN) are text fields. They are useful mainly to humans to know what/who owns a certificate. It is sometimes used by software as display information or for comparison checks. Since humans provide the DN values or configure software with values, it is not always distinguishing. DN values have an alternate name: relatively distinguished names.

Related to the Subject DN is the Issuer Information. The Issuer Information is the subject of the certificate that issued the certificate. Because of this, both the issuer information has similar values to the subject DN. Both can include the following information:

  • CN - common name - a name
  • SN - surname
  • SERIALNUMBER - a number that is usually unique per certificate issuer, but not always
  • C - country
  • L - locality name
  • ST or S - state or province
  • STREET - street address
  • O - organization name
  • OU - organizational unit
  • T - title
  • G or GN - given name
  • E - email address
  • UID - user id
  • DC - domain component

Do not worry about memorizing that list. Simply knowing they exist and that they may or may not matter is good enough for now. If the reader is wondering when they might matter, well, that is generally when the system you are using complains about them.

Validity Period

The Validity Period specifies two points in time from when the certificate is valid. Before and after this window of time, the certificate is invalid and should not be trusted. Validity periods should be as small as possible to fit their use case. Shorter periods reduce the window of time that compromised private key can remain useful for an attack. The cost of this is overhead reissuing certificates as they reach the end of their validity period.

Usage/Extensions

Usage/Extension Data is interesting because it can limit what roles a certificate fulfills. Depending on the system, this may be adhered to or not. Some examples of usage that are common to see:

  • key usage: client authentication, server authentication, signatures, etc.
  • Subject Alternate Names (SANs)
  • Limits what IP address, email address, domain name, etc. the certificate can be associated with
  • Certificate Authority (CA) flag
  • and more

This series will not dive into the details of these usages. However, it is essential to be aware of them and that they can affect the roles a certificate can fulfill.

Signatures

The signature section of a certificate is a list of signatures from other entities that trust this certificate. A certificate that signs itself is a "self-signed certificate." Self-signed certificates must be individually trusted as no other certificate has expressed trust in it by signing it. Self-signed certificates are sometimes used for testing purposes as they are easy to create. They are also used as Root Certificate Authorities (root CAs).

Each signature on a certificate is the result of taking the contents of the certificate (without signatures), one-way hashing it, and then encrypting the hash with the signator's private key. The result is appended to the end of the signature list. During this process, the public certificate moves between systems to be signed.

The movement of the public certificate between systems is facilitated by Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs). CSRs can be transmitted electronically as files or as a data stream to the signer. CSRs contain only the public information of a certificate and a signature from the certificate's private key. Since CSRs only contain public information, they are not considered sensitive. The signature in a CSR allows the signer to verify that the CSR is from the subject specified in the CSR. If the signature is valid, the signator processes the CSR, and the result is a newly minted certificate with an additional signature.

Conclusion

Certificates are keys, usually public ones, with additional metadata that adds conventions and restrictions around certificate usages. They provide a place for signatures to resides and, through CSRs, provide a vehicle to request additional signatures. Certificates are useful because they package all of these concerns into a neat single file. In part four, we will explore how to create a formidable chain of trust by linking multiple certificates together.