Internet-Draft | SSLKEYLOGFILE | April 2024 |
Thomson | Expires 1 November 2024 | [Page] |
A format that supports the logging information about the secrets used in a TLS connection is described. Recording secrets to a file in SSLKEYLOGFILE format allows diagnostic and logging tools that use this file to decrypt messages exchanged by TLS endpoints.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
The latest revision of this draft can be found at https://tlswg.github.io/sslkeylogfile/draft-ietf-tls-keylogfile.html. Status information for this document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-tls-keylogfile/.¶
Discussion of this document takes place on the Transport Layer Security Working Group mailing list (mailto:tls@ietf.org), which is archived at https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/tls/. Subscribe at https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/tls/.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/tlswg/sslkeylogfile.¶
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Debugging or analyzing protocols can be challenging when TLS [TLS13] is used to protect the content of communications. Inspecting the content of encrypted messages in diagnostic tools can enable more thorough analysis.¶
Over time, multiple TLS implementations have informally adopted a file format that logging the secret values generated by the TLS key schedule. In many implementations, the file that the secrets are logged to is specified in an environment variable named "SSLKEYLOGFILE", hence the name of SSLKEYLOGFILE format. Note the use of "SSL" as this convention originally predates the adoption of TLS as the name of the protocol.¶
This document describes the SSLKEYLOGFILE format. This format can be used for TLS 1.2 [TLS12] and TLS 1.3 [TLS13]. The format also supports earlier TLS versions, though use of earlier versions is forbidden [RFC8996]. This format can also be used with DTLS [DTLS13], QUIC [RFC9000][RFC9001], and other protocols that also use the TLS key schedule. Use of this format could complement other protocol-specific logging such as QLOG [QLOG].¶
The artifact that this document describes - if made available to entities other than endpoints - completely undermines the core guarantees that TLS provides. This format is intended for use in systems where TLS only protects test data. While the access that this information provides to TLS connections can be useful for diagnosing problems while developing systems, this mechanism MUST NOT be used in a production system.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
A file in SSLKEYLOGFILE format is a text file. This document specifies the character encoding as UTF-8 [RFC3629]. Though the format itself only includes ASCII characters [RFC0020], comments MAY contain other characters. Though Unicode is permitted in comments, the file MUST NOT contain a Unicode byte order mark (U+FEFF).¶
Lines are terminated using the line ending convention of the platform on which the file is generated. Tools that process these files MUST accept CRLF (U+13 followed by U+10), CR (U+13), or LF (U+10) as a line terminator. Lines are ignored if they are empty or if the first character is an octothorp character ('#', U+23). Other lines of the file each contain a single secret.¶
Implementations that record secrets to a file do so continuously as those secrets are generated.¶
Each secret is described using a single line composed of three values that are separated by a single space character (U+20). These values are:¶
The label identifies the type of secret that is being conveyed; see Section 2.1 for a description of the labels that are defined in this document.¶
The 32-byte value of the Random field from the ClientHello message that established the TLS connection. This value is encoded as 64 hexadecimal characters. Including this field allows a single file to include secrets from multiple connections and for the secrets to be applied to the correct connection, though this depends on being able to match records to the correct ClientHello message.¶
The value of the identified secret for the identified connection. This value is encoded in hexadecimal, with a length that depends on the size of the secret.¶
For the hexadecimal values of the client_random
or secret
, no convention
exists for the case of characters 'a' through 'f' (or 'A' through 'F'). Files
can be generated with either, so either form MUST be accepted when processing a
file.¶
Diagnostic tools that accept files in this format might choose to ignore lines that do not conform to this format in the interest of ensuring that secrets can be obtained from corrupted files.¶
Logged secret values are not annotated with the cipher suite or other connection parameters. A record of the TLS handshake might therefore be needed to use the logged secrets.¶
An implementation of TLS 1.3 produces a number of values as part of the key schedule (see Section 7.1 of [TLS13]). Each of the following labels correspond to the equivalent secret produced by the key schedule:¶
This secret is used to protect records sent by the client as early data, if early data is attempted by the client. Note that a server that rejects early data will not log this secret, though a client that attempts early data can do so unconditionally.¶
This secret is used for early exporters. Like the CLIENT_EARLY_TRAFFIC_SECRET, this is only generated when early data is attempted and might not be logged by a server if early data is rejected.¶
This secret is used to protect handshake records sent by the client.¶
This secret is used to protect handshake records sent by the server.¶
This secret is used to protect application_data records sent by the client
immediately after the handshake completes. This secret is identified as
client_application_traffic_secret_0
in the TLS 1.3 key schedule.¶
This secret is used to protect application_data records sent by the server
immediately after the handshake completes. This secret is identified as
server_application_traffic_secret_0
in the TLS 1.3 key schedule.¶
This secret is used in generating exporters Section 7.5 of [TLS13].¶
These labels all appear in uppercase in the key log, but they correspond to
lowercase labels in the TLS key schedule (Section 7.1 of [TLS13]), except for
the application data secrets as noted. For example, "EXPORTER_SECRET" in the
log file corresponds to the secret named exporter_secret
.¶
Note that the order that labels appear here corresponds to the order in which they are presented in [TLS13], but there is no guarantee that implementations will log secrets strictly in this order.¶
Key updates (Section 7.2 of [TLS13]) result in new secrets being generated
for protecting application_data
records. The label used for these secrets
comprises a base label of "CLIENT_TRAFFIC_SECRET_" for a client or
"SERVER_TRAFFIC_SECRET_" for a server, plus the decimal value of a counter.
This counter identifies the number of key updates that occurred to produce this
secret. This counter starts at 0, which produces the first application data
traffic secret, as above. Note that with knowledge of "_TRAFFIC_SECRET_N",
all subsequent application data traffic secret can be derived without any
additional information.¶
An implementation of TLS 1.2 [TLS12] (and also earlier versions) use the label "CLIENT_RANDOM" to identify the "master" secret for the connection.¶
Access to the content of a file in SSLKEYLOGFILE format allows an attacker to break the confidentiality and integrity protection on any TLS connections that are included in the file. This includes both active connections and connections for which encrypted records were previously stored. Ensuring adequate access control on these files therefore becomes very important.¶
Implementations that support logging this data need to ensure that logging can only be enabled by those who are authorized. Allowing logging to be initiated by any entity that is not otherwise authorized to observe or modify the content of connections for which secrets are logged could represent a privilege escalation attack. Implementations that enable logging also need to ensure that access to logged secrets is limited, using appropriate file permissions or equivalent access control mechanisms.¶
In order to support decryption, the secrets necessary to remove record protection are logged. However, as the keys that can be derived from these secrets are symmetric, an adversary with access to these secrets is also able to encrypt data for an active connection. This might allow for injection or modification of application data on a connection that would otherwise be protected by TLS.¶
As some protocols rely on TLS for generating encryption keys, the SSLKEYLOGFILE format includes keys that identify the secret used in TLS exporters or early exporters (Section 7.5 of [TLS13]. Knowledge of these secrets can enable more than inspection or modification of encrypted data, depending on how an application protocol uses exporters. For instance, exporters might be used for session bindings (e.g., [RFC8471]), authentication (e.g., [RFC9261]), or other derived secrets that are used in application context. An adversary that obtains these secrets might be able to use this information to attack these applications. A TLS implementation might either choose to omit these secrets in contexts where the information might be abused or require separate authorization to enable logging of exporter secrets.¶
Using an environment variable, such as SSLKEYLOGFILE
, to enable logging
implies that access to the launch context for the application is needed to
authorize logging. On systems that support specially-named files, logs might be
directed to these names so that logging does not result in storage, but enable
consumption by other programs. In both cases, applications might require
special authorization or they might rely on system-level access control to limit
access to these capabilities.¶
Forward secrecy guarantees provided in TLS 1.3 (see Section 1.2 and Appendix E.1 of [RFC8446]) and some modes of TLS 1.2 (such as those in Sections 2.2 and 2.4 of [RFC4492]) do not hold if key material is recorded. Access to key material allows an attacker to decrypt data exchanged in any previously logged TLS connections.¶
Logging the TLS 1.2 "master" secret provides the recipient of that secret far greater access to an active connection than TLS 1.3 secrets. In addition to reading and altering protected messages, the TLS 1.2 "master" secret confers the ability to resume the connection and impersonate either endpoint, insert records that result in renegotiation, and forge Finished messages. Implementations can avoid the risks associated with these capabilities by not logging this secret value.¶
The "application/sslkeylogfile
" media type can be used to describe content in
the SSLKEYLOGFILE format. IANA [has added/is requested to add] the following
information to the "Media Types" registry at
https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types:¶
application¶
sslkeylogfile¶
N/A¶
N/A¶
UTF-8 without BOM, or ASCII only¶
Line endings might differ from platform convention¶
RFC XXXX (RFC Editor: please update)¶
Diagnostic and analysis tools that need to decrypt data that is otherwise protected by TLS.¶
N/A¶
TLS WG (tls@ietf.org)¶
COMMON¶
N/A¶
IETF TLS Working Group¶
IESG¶
The following is a sample of a file in this format, including secrets from two TLS 1.3 connections.¶
# NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 CLIENT_HANDSHAKE_TRAFFIC_SECRET \ cf34899b3dcb8c9fe7160ceaf95d354a294793b67a2e49cb9cca4d69b43593a0 \ be4a28d81ce41242ff31c6d8a6615852178f2cd75eaca2ee8768f9ed51282b38 SERVER_HANDSHAKE_TRAFFIC_SECRET \ cf34899b3dcb8c9fe7160ceaf95d354a294793b67a2e49cb9cca4d69b43593a0 \ 258179721fa704e2f1ee16688b4b0419967ddea5624cd5ad0863288dc5ead35f CLIENT_HANDSHAKE_TRAFFIC_SECRET \ b2eb93b8ddab8c228993567947bca1e133736980c22754687874e3896f7d6d0a \ 59ec0981b211a743f22d5a46a1fc77a2b230e16ef0de6d4e418abfe90eff10bf SERVER_HANDSHAKE_TRAFFIC_SECRET \ b2eb93b8ddab8c228993567947bca1e133736980c22754687874e3896f7d6d0a \ a37fe4d3b6c9a6a372396b1562f6f8a40c1c3f85f1aa9b02d5ed46c4a1301365 CLIENT_TRAFFIC_SECRET_0 \ cf34899b3dcb8c9fe7160ceaf95d354a294793b67a2e49cb9cca4d69b43593a0 \ e9ca165bcb762fab8086068929d26c532e90ef2e2daa762d8b52346951a34c02 SERVER_TRAFFIC_SECRET_0 \ cf34899b3dcb8c9fe7160ceaf95d354a294793b67a2e49cb9cca4d69b43593a0 \ 4f93c61ac1393008d4c820f3723db3c67494f06574b65fcc21c9eef22f90071a EXPORTER_SECRET \ cf34899b3dcb8c9fe7160ceaf95d354a294793b67a2e49cb9cca4d69b43593a0 \ 011c900833468f837f7c55d836b2719beebd39b1648fdeda58772f48d94a1ffa CLIENT_TRAFFIC_SECRET_0 \ b2eb93b8ddab8c228993567947bca1e133736980c22754687874e3896f7d6d0a \ e9160bca1a531d871f5ecf51943d8cfb88833adeccf97701546b5fb93e030d79 SERVER_TRAFFIC_SECRET_0 \ b2eb93b8ddab8c228993567947bca1e133736980c22754687874e3896f7d6d0a \ fb1120b91e48d402fac20faa33880e77bace82c85d6688df0aa99bf5084430e4 EXPORTER_SECRET \ b2eb93b8ddab8c228993567947bca1e133736980c22754687874e3896f7d6d0a \ db1f4fa1a6942fb125d4cc47e02938b6f8030c6956bb81b9e3269f1cf855a8f8¶
Note that secrets from the two connections might be interleaved as shown here, because secrets could be logged as they are generated.¶
The following shows a log entry for a TLS 1.2 connection.¶
# NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 CLIENT_RANDOM \ ad52329fcadd34ee3aa07092680287f09954823e26d7b5ae25c0d47714152a6a \ 97af4c8618cfdc0b2326e590114c2ec04b43b08b7e2c3f8124cc61a3b068ba966\ 9517e744e3117c3ce6c538a2d88dfdf¶
The SSLKEYLOGFILE format originated in the NSS project, but it has evolved over time as TLS has changed. Many people contributed to this evolution. The author is only documenting the format as it is used.¶