RFC 9374 | DRIP Entity Tag (DET) | March 2023 |
Moskowitz, et al. | Standards Track | [Page] |
This document describes the use of Hierarchical Host Identity Tags (HHITs) as self-asserting IPv6 addresses, which makes them trustable identifiers for use in Unmanned Aircraft System Remote Identification (UAS RID) and tracking.¶
Within the context of RID, HHITs will be called DRIP Entity Tags (DETs). HHITs provide claims to the included explicit hierarchy that provides registry (via, for example, DNS, RDAP) discovery for third-party identifier endorsement.¶
This document updates RFCs 7343 and 7401.¶
This is an Internet Standards Track document.¶
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.¶
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9374.¶
Copyright (c) 2023 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
Drone Remote ID Protocol (DRIP) Requirements [RFC9153] describe an Unmanned Aircraft System Remote ID (UAS ID) as unique (ID-4), non-spoofable (ID-5), and identify a registry where the ID is listed (ID‑2); all within a 19-character identifier (ID-1).¶
This RFC is a foundational document of DRIP, as it describes the use of Hierarchical Host Identity Tags (HHITs) (Section 3) as self-asserting IPv6 addresses and thereby a trustable identifier for use as the UAS Remote ID (see Section 3 of [DRIP-ARCH]). All other DRIP-related technologies will enable or use HHITs as multipurpose remote identifiers. HHITs add explicit hierarchy to the 128-bit HITs, enabling DNS HHIT queries (Host ID for authentication, e.g., [DRIP-AUTH]) and use with a Differentiated Access Control (e.g., Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) [RFC9224]) for 3rd-party identification endorsement (e.g., [DRIP-AUTH]).¶
The addition of hierarchy to HITs is an extension to [RFC7401] and requires an update to [RFC7343]. As this document also adds EdDSA (Section 3.4) for Host Identities (HIs), a number of Host Identity Protocol (HIP) parameters in [RFC7401] are updated, but these should not be needed in a DRIP implementation that does not use HIP.¶
HHITs as used within the context of UAS are labeled as DRIP Entity Tags (DETs). Throughout this document, HHIT and DET will be used appropriately. HHIT will be used when covering the technology, and DET will be used in the context of UAS RID.¶
HHITs provide self-claims of the HHIT registry. A HHIT can only be in a single registry within a registry system (e.g., DNS).¶
HHITs are valid, though non-routable, IPv6 addresses [RFC8200]. As such, they fit in many ways within various IETF technologies.¶
HHITs are statistically unique through the cryptographic hash feature of second-preimage resistance. The cryptographically bound addition of the hierarchy and a HHIT registration process [DRIP-REG] provide complete, global HHIT uniqueness. If the HHITs cannot be looked up with services provided by the DRIP Identity Management Entity (DIME) identified via the embedded hierarchical information or its registration validated by registration endorsement messages [DRIP-AUTH], then the HHIT is either fraudulent or revoked/expired. In-depth discussion of these processes are out of scope for this document.¶
This contrasts with using general identifiers (e.g., Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs) [RFC4122] or device serial numbers) as the subject in an X.509 [RFC5280] certificate. In either case, there can be no unique proof of ownership/registration.¶
For example, in a multi-Certificate Authority (multi-CA) PKI alternative to HHITs, a Remote ID as the Subject (Section 4.1.2.6 of [RFC5280]) can occur in multiple CAs, possibly fraudulently. CAs within the PKI would need to implement an approach to enforce assurance of the uniqueness achieved with HHITs.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "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.¶
The document includes a set of algorithms and recommends the ones that should be supported by implementations. The following term is used for that purpose: RECOMMENDED.¶
This document uses the terms defined in Section 2.2 of [RFC9153] and in Section 2 of [DRIP-ARCH]. The following terms are used in the document:¶
The HHIT is a small but important enhancement over the flat Host Identity Tag (HIT) space, constructed as an Overlay Routable Cryptographic Hash IDentifier (ORCHID) [RFC7343]. By adding two levels of hierarchical administration control, the HHIT provides for device registration/ownership, thereby enhancing the trust framework for HITs.¶
The 128-bit HHITs represent the HI in only a 64-bit hash, rather than the 96 bits in HITs. 4 of these 32 freed up bits expand the Suite ID to 8 bits, and the other 28 bits are used to create a hierarchical administration organization for HIT domains. HHIT construction is defined in Section 3.5. The input values for the encoding rules are described in Section 3.5.1.¶
A HHIT is built from the following fields (Figure 1):¶
28-bit HID which provides the structure to organize HITs into administrative domains. HIDs are further divided into two fields:¶
The Context ID (generated with openssl rand) for the ORCHID hash is:¶
Context ID := 0x00B5 A69C 795D F5D5 F008 7F56 843F 2C40¶
Context IDs are allocated out of the namespace introduced for Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGA) Type Tags [RFC3972].¶
The IPv6 HHIT prefix MUST be distinct from that used in the flat-space HIT as allocated in [RFC7343]. Without this distinct prefix, the first 4 bits of the RAA would be interpreted as the HIT Suite ID per HIPv2 [RFC7401].¶
Initially, the IPv6 prefix listed in Table 1 is assigned for DET use. It has been registered in the "IANA IPv6 Special-Purpose Address Registry" [RFC6890].¶
HHIT Use | Bits | Value |
---|---|---|
DET | 28 | 2001:30::/28 |
Other prefixes may be added in the future either for DET use or other applications of HHITs. For a prefix to be added to the registry in Section 8.2, its usage and HID allocation process have to be publicly available.¶
The HHIT Suite IDs specify the HI and hash algorithms. These are a superset of the 4-bit and 8-bit HIT Suite IDs as defined in Section 5.2.10 of [RFC7401].¶
The HHIT values 1 - 15 map to the basic 4-bit HIT Suite IDs. HHIT values 17 - 31 map to the extended 8-bit HIT Suite IDs. HHIT values unique to HHIT will start with value 32.¶
As HHIT introduces a new Suite ID, EdDSA/cSHAKE128, and because this is of value to HIPv2, it will be allocated out of the 4-bit HIT space and result in an update to HIT Suite IDs. Future HHIT Suite IDs may be allocated similarly, or they may come out of the additional space made available by going to 8 bits.¶
The following HHIT Suite IDs are defined:¶
HHIT Suite | Value |
---|---|
RESERVED | 0 |
RSA,DSA/SHA-256 | 1 [RFC7401] |
ECDSA/SHA-384 | 2 [RFC7401] |
ECDSA_LOW/SHA-1 | 3 [RFC7401] |
EdDSA/cSHAKE128 | 5 |
Support for 8-bit HHIT Suite IDs allows for HDA custom HIT Suite IDs (see Table 3).¶
HHIT Suite | Value |
---|---|
HDA Private Use 1 | 254 |
HDA Private Use 2 | 255 |
These custom HIT Suite IDs, for example, may be used for large-scale experimentation with post-quantum computing hashes or similar domain-specific needs. Note that currently there is no support for domain-specific HI algorithms.¶
They should not be used to create a "de facto standardization". Section 8.2 states that additional Suite IDs can be made through IETF Review.¶
The HID provides the structure to organize HITs into administrative domains. HIDs are further divided into two fields:¶
The rationale for splitting the HID into two 14-bit domains is described in Appendix B.¶
The two levels of hierarchy allow for Civil Aviation Authorities (CAAs) to have it least one RAA for their National Air Space (NAS). Within its RAAs, the CAAs can delegate HDAs as needed. There may be other RAAs allowed to operate within a given NAS; this is a policy decision of each CAA.¶
An RAA is a business or organization that manages a registry of HDAs. For example, the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) or Japan Civil Aviation Bureau (JCAB) could be RAAs.¶
The RAA is a 14-bit field (16,384 RAAs). Management of this space is further described in [DRIP-REG]. An RAA MUST provide a set of services to allocate HDAs to organizations. It SHOULD have a public policy on what is necessary to obtain an HDA. The RAA need not maintain any HIP-related services. At minimum, it MUST maintain a DNS zone for the HDA zone delegation for discovering HIP RVS servers [RFC8004] for the HID. Zone delegation is covered in [DRIP-REG].¶
As DETs under administrative control may be used in many different domains (e.g., commercial, recreation, military), RAAs should be allocated in blocks (e.g., 16-19) with consideration of the likely size of a particular usage. Alternatively, different prefixes can be used to separate different domains of use of HHITs.¶
The RAA DNS zone within the UAS DNS tree may be a PTR for its RAA. It may be a zone in a HHIT-specific DNS zone. Assume that the RAA is decimal 100. The PTR record could be constructed as follows (where 20010030 is the DET prefix):¶
100.20010030.hhit.arpa. IN PTR raa.example.com.¶
Note that if the zone 20010030.hhit.arpa is ultimately used, a registrar will need to manage this for all HHIT applications. Thus, further thought will be needed in the actual DNS zone tree and registration process [DRIP-REG].¶
An HDA may be an Internet Service Provider (ISP), UAS Service Supplier (USS), or any third party that takes on the business to provide UAS services management, HIP RVSs or other needed services such as those required for HHIT and/or HIP-enabled devices.¶
The HDA is a 14-bit field (16,384 HDAs per RAA) assigned by an RAA and is further described in [DRIP-REG]. An HDA must maintain public and private UAS registration information and should maintain a set of RVS servers for UAS clients that may use HIP. How this is done and scales to the potentially millions of customers are outside the scope of this document; they are covered in [DRIP-REG]. This service should be discoverable through the DNS zone maintained by the HDA's RAA.¶
An RAA may assign a block of values to an individual organization. This is completely up to the individual RAA's published policy for delegation. Such a policy is out of scope for this document.¶
The Edwards-Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (EdDSA) [RFC8032] is specified here for use as HIs per HIPv2 [RFC7401].¶
The intent in this document is to add EdDSA as a HI algorithm for DETs, but doing so impacts the HIP parameters used in a HIP exchange. Sections 3.4.1 through 3.4.2 describe the required updates to HIP parameters. Other than the HIP DNS RR (Resource Record) [RFC8005], these should not be needed in a DRIP implementation that does not use HIP.¶
See Section 3.2 for use of the HIT Suite in the context of DRIP.¶
The HOST_ID parameter specifies the public key algorithm, and for elliptic curves, a name. The HOST_ID parameter is defined in Section 5.2.9 of [RFC7401]. Table 4 adds a new HI Algorithm.¶
Algorithm profile | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|
EdDSA | 13 | [RFC8032] |
The addition of EdDSA as a HI algorithm requires a subfield in the HIP HOST_ID parameter (Section 5.2.9 of [RFC7401]) as was done for ECDSA when used in a HIP exchange.¶
For HIP hosts that implement EdDSA as the algorithm, the following EdDSA curves are represented by the fields in Figure 2.¶
For hosts that implement EdDSA as a HIP algorithm, the following EdDSA curves are defined. Recommended curves are tagged accordingly:¶
Algorithm | Curve | Values |
---|---|---|
EdDSA | RESERVED | 0 |
EdDSA | EdDSA25519 | 1 [RFC8032] (RECOMMENDED) |
EdDSA | EdDSA25519ph | 2 [RFC8032] |
EdDSA | EdDSA448 | 3 [RFC8032] (RECOMMENDED) |
EdDSA | EdDSA448ph | 4 [RFC8032] |
The HIT_SUITE_LIST parameter contains a list of the HIT suite IDs that the HIP Responder supports. The HIT_SUITE_LIST allows the HIP Initiator to determine which source HIT Suite IDs are supported by the Responder. The HIT_SUITE_LIST parameter is defined in Section 5.2.10 of [RFC7401].¶
The following HIT Suite ID is defined:¶
HIT Suite | Value |
---|---|
EdDSA/cSHAKE128 | 5 |
Table 7 provides more detail on the above HIT Suite combination.¶
The output of cSHAKE128 is variable per the needs of a specific ORCHID construction. It is at most 96 bits long and is directly used in the ORCHID (without truncation).¶
Index | Hash function | HMAC | Signature algorithm family | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | cSHAKE128 | KMAC128 | EdDSA | EdDSA HI hashed with cSHAKE128, output is variable |
This section improves on ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] with three enhancements:¶
The cSHAKE XOF hash function based on Keccak [Keccak] is a variable output length hash function. As such, it does not use the truncation operation that other hashes need. The invocation of cSHAKE specifies the desired number of bits in the hash output. Further, cSHAKE has a parameter 'S' as a customization bit string. This parameter will be used for including the ORCHID Context Identifier in a standard fashion.¶
This ORCHID construction includes the fields in the ORCHID in the hash to protect them against substitution attacks. It also provides for inclusion of additional information (in particular, the hierarchical bits of the HHIT) in the ORCHID generation. This should be viewed as an update to ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343], as it can produce ORCHIDv2 output.¶
The following subsections define the new general ORCHID construct with the specific application for HHITs. Thus items like the hash size are only discussed in terms of how they impact the HHIT's 64-bit hash. Other hash sizes should be discussed for other specific uses of this new ORCHID construct.¶
ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] is defined as consisting of three components:¶
ORCHID := Prefix | OGA ID | Encode_96( Hash )¶
where:¶
The new ORCHID function is as follows:¶
ORCHID := Prefix (p) | Info (n) | OGA ID (o) | Hash (m)¶
where:¶
Sizeof(p + n + o + m) = 128 bits¶
The ORCHID length MUST be 128 bits. For HHITs with a 28-bit IPv6 prefix, there are 100 bits remaining to be divided in any manner between the additional information ("Info"), OGA ID, and the hash output. Consideration must be given to the size of the hash portion, taking into account risks like pre-image attacks. 64 bits, as used here for HHITs, may be as small as is acceptable. The size of 'n', for the HID, is then determined as what is left; in the case of the 8-bit OGA used for HHIT, this is 28 bits.¶
This update adds a different encoding process to that currently used in ORCHIDv2. The input to the hash function explicitly includes all the header content plus the Context ID. The header content consists of the Prefix, the Additional Information ("Info"), and the OGA ID (HIT Suite ID). Secondly, the length of the resulting hash is set by the sum of the length of the ORCHID header fields. For example, a 28-bit prefix with 28 bits for the HID and 8 bits for the OGA ID leaves 64 bits for the hash length.¶
To achieve the variable length output in a consistent manner, the cSHAKE hash is used. For this purpose, cSHAKE128 is appropriate. The cSHAKE function call is:¶
cSHAKE128(Input, L, "", Context ID) Input := Prefix | Additional Information | OGA ID | HOST_ID L := Length in bits of the hash portion of ORCHID¶
For full Suite ID support (those that use fixed length hashes like SHA256), the following hashing can be used (Note: this does not produce output identical to ORCHIDv2 for a /28 prefix and Additional Information of zero length):¶
Hash[L](Context ID | Input) Input := Prefix | Additional Information | OGA ID | HOST_ID L := Length in bits of the hash portion of ORCHID Hash[L] := An extraction function in which output is obtained by extracting the middle L-bit-long bitstring from the argument bitstring.¶
The middle L-bits are those bits from the source number where either there is an equal number of bits before and after these bits, or there is one more bit prior (when the difference between hash size and L is odd).¶
HHITs use the Context ID defined in Section 3.¶
This section discusses how to provide backwards compatibility for ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] as used in HIPv2 [RFC7401].¶
For HIPv2, the Prefix is 2001:20::/28 (Section 6 of [RFC7343]). 'Info' is zero-length (i.e., not included), and OGA ID is 4-bit. Thus, the HI Hash is 96 bits in length. Further, the Prefix and OGA ID are not included in the hash calculation. Thus, the following ORCHID calculations for fixed output length hashes are used:¶
Hash[L](Context ID | Input) Input := HOST_ID L := 96 Context ID := 0xF0EF F02F BFF4 3D0F E793 0C3C 6E61 74EA Hash[L] := An extraction function in which output is obtained by extracting the middle L-bit-long bitstring from the argument bitstring.¶
For variable output length hashes use:¶
Hash[L](Context ID | Input) Input := HOST_ID L := 96 Context ID := 0xF0EF F02F BFF4 3D0F E793 0C3C 6E61 74EA Hash[L] := The L-bit output from the hash function¶
Then, the ORCHID is constructed as follows:¶
Prefix | OGA ID | Hash Output¶
With this update, the decoding of an ORCHID is determined by the Prefix and OGA ID. ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] decoding is selected when the Prefix is: 2001:20::/28.¶
For HHITs, the decoding is determined by the presence of the HHIT Prefix as specified in Section 8.2.¶
HHITs for UAS ID (called, DETs) use the new EdDSA/SHAKE128 HIT suite defined in Section 3.4 (GEN-2 in [RFC9153]). This hierarchy, cryptographically bound within the HHIT, provides the information for finding the UA's HHIT registry (ID-3 in [RFC9153]).¶
The ASTM Standard Specification for Remote ID and Tracking [F3411-22a] adds support for DETs. This is only available via the new UAS ID type 4, "Specific Session ID (SSI)".¶
This new SSI uses the first byte of the 20-byte UAS ID for the SSI Type, thus restricting the UAS ID of this type to a maximum of 19 bytes. The SSI Types initially assigned are:¶
A HI and its DET SHOULD NOT be transferable between UAs or even between replacement electronics (e.g., replacement of damaged controller CPU) for a UA. The private key for the HI SHOULD be held in a cryptographically secure component.¶
In some cases, it is advantageous to encode HHITs as a CTA 2063-A Serial Number [CTA2063A]. For example, the FAA Remote ID Rules [FAA_RID] state that a Remote ID Module (i.e., not integrated with UA controller) must only use "the serial number of the unmanned aircraft"; CTA 2063-A meets this requirement.¶
Encoding a HHIT within the CTA 2063-A format is not simple. The CTA 2063-A format is defined as follows:¶
Serial Number := MFR Code | Length Code | MFR SN¶
where:¶
There is no place for the HID; there will need to be a mapping service from Manufacturer Code to HID. The HHIT Suite ID and ORCHID hash will take the full 15 characters (as described below) of the MFR SN field.¶
A character in a CTA 2063-A Serial Number "shall include any combination of digits and uppercase letters, except the letters O and I, but may include all digits". This would allow for a Base34 encoding of the binary HHIT Suite ID and ORCHID hash in 15 characters. Although, programmatically, such a conversion is not hard, other technologies (e.g., credit card payment systems) that have used such odd base encoding have had performance challenges. Thus, here a Base32 encoding will be used by also excluding the letters Z and S (because they are too similar to the digits 2 and 5, respectively). See Appendix C for the encoding scheme.¶
The low-order 72 bits (HHIT Suite ID | ORCHID hash) of the HHIT SHALL be left-padded with 3 bits of zeros. This 75-bit number will be encoded into the 15-character MFR SN field using the digit/letters as described above. The manufacturer MUST use a Length Code of F (15).¶
Note: The manufacturer MAY use the same Manufacturer Code with a Length Code of 1 - E (1 - 14) for other types of serial numbers.¶
Using the sample DET from Section 5 that is for HDA=20 under RAA=10 and having the ICAO CTA MFR Code of 8653, the 20-character CTA 2063-A Serial Number would be:¶
8653F02T7B8RA85D19LX¶
A mapping service (e.g., DNS) MUST provide a trusted (e.g., via DNSSEC [RFC4034]) conversion of the 4-character Manufacturer Code to high-order 58 bits (Prefix | HID) of the HHIT. That is, given a Manufacturer Code, a returned Prefix|HID value is reliable. Definition of this mapping service is out of scope of this document.¶
It should be noted that this encoding would only be used in the Basic ID Message (Section 2.2 of [RFC9153]). The DET is used in the Authentication Messages (i.e., the messages that provide framing for authentication data only).¶
UAS Remote ID DET may be one of a number of uses of HHITs. However, it is out of the scope of the document to elaborate on other uses of HHITs. As such these follow-on uses need to be considered in allocating the RAAs (Section 3.3.1) or HHIT prefix assignments (Section 8).¶
ORCHIDS, as defined in [RFC7343], do not cryptographically bind an IPv6 prefix or the OGA ID (the HIT Suite ID) to the hash of the HI. At the time ORCHID was being developed, the rationale was attacks against these fields are Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks against protocols using ORCHIDs and thus it was up to those protocols to address the issue.¶
HHITs, as defined in Section 3.5, cryptographically bind all content in the ORCHID through the hashing function. A recipient of a DET that has the underlying HI can directly trust and act on all content in the HHIT. This provides a strong, self-claim for using the hierarchy to find the DET Registry based on the HID (Section 4.5).¶
DETs are registered to HDAs. The registration process defined in [DRIP-REG] ensures DET global uniqueness (ID-4 in Section 4.2.1 of [RFC9153]). It also allows the mechanism to create UAS public/private data that are associated with the DET (REG-1 and REG-2 in Section 4.4.1 of [RFC9153]).¶
The EdDSA25519 HI (Section 3.4) underlying the DET can be used in an 88-byte self-proof evidence (timestamps, HHIT, and signature of these) to provide proof to Observers of Remote ID ownership (GEN-1 in Section 4.1.1 of [RFC9153]). In practice, the Wrapper and Manifest authentication formats (Sections 6.3.3 and 6.3.4 of [DRIP-AUTH]) implicitly provide this self-proof evidence. A lookup service like DNS can provide the HI and registration proof (GEN-3 in [RFC9153]).¶
Similarly, for Observers without Internet access, a 200-byte offline self-endorsement (Section 3.1.2 of [DRIP-AUTH]) could provide the same Remote ID ownership proof. This endorsement would contain the HDA's signing of the UA's HHIT, itself signed by the UA's HI. Only a small cache (also Section 3.1.2 of [DRIP-AUTH]) that contains the HDA's HI/HHIT and HDA meta-data is needed by the Observer. However, such an object would just fit in the ASTM Authentication Message (Section 2.2 of [RFC9153]) with no room for growth. In practice, [DRIP-AUTH] provides this offline self-endorsement in two authentication messages: the HDA's endorsement of the UA's HHIT registration in a Link authentication message whose hash is sent in a Manifest authentication message.¶
Hashes of any previously sent ASTM messages can be placed in a Manifest authentication message (GEN-2 in [RFC9153]). When a Location/Vector Message (i.e., a message that provides UA location, altitude, heading, speed, and status) hash along with the hash of the HDA's UA HHIT endorsement are sent in a Manifest authentication message and the Observer can visually see a UA at the claimed location, the Observer has very strong proof of the UA's Remote ID.¶
This behavior and how to mix these authentication messages into the flow of UA operation messages are detailed in [DRIP-AUTH].¶
There are two approaches for storing and retrieving DETs using DNS. The following are examples of how this may be done. This serves as guidance to the actual deployment of DETs in DNS. However, this document does not provide a recommendation about which approach to use. Further DNS-related considerations are covered in [DRIP-REG].¶
A DET can be used to construct an FQDN that points to the USS that has the public/private information for the UA (REG-1 and REG-2 in Section 4.4.1 of [RFC9153]). For example, the USS for the HHIT could be found via the following: assume the RAA is decimal 100 and the HDA is decimal 50. The PTR record is constructed as follows:¶
100.50.20010030.hhit.arpa. IN PTR foo.uss.example.org.¶
The HDA SHOULD provide DNS service for its zone and provide the HHIT detail response.¶
The DET reverse lookup can be a standard IPv6 reverse look up, or it can leverage off the HHIT structure. Using the allocated prefix for HHITs 2001:30::/28 (see Section 3.1), the RAA is decimal 10 and the HDA is decimal 20, the DET is:¶
2001:30:280:1405:a3ad:1952:ad0:a69e¶
See Appendix B.1 for how the upper 64 bits, above, are constructed. A DET reverse lookup could be:¶
a69e.0ad0.1952.a3ad.1405.0280.20.10.20010030.hhit.arpa.¶
or:¶
a3ad19520ad0a69e.5.20.10.20010030.hhit.arpa.¶
A 'standard' ip6.arpa RR has the advantage of only one Registry service supported.¶
$ORIGIN 5.0.4.1.0.8.2.0.0.3.0.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa. e.9.6.a.0.d.a.0.2.5.9.1.d.a.3.a IN PTR a3ad1952ad0a69e.20.10.20010030.hhit.arpa.¶
This DNS entry for the DET can also provide a revocation service. For example, instead of returning the HI RR it may return some record showing that the HI (and thus DET) has been revoked. Guidance on revocation service will be provided in [DRIP-REG].¶
HHITs will be used within the UTM architecture beyond DET (and USS in UA ID registration and authentication), for example, as a Ground Control Station (GCS) HHIT ID. Some GCS will use its HHIT for securing its Network Remote ID (to USS HHIT) and Command and Control (C2, Section 2.2.2 of [RFC9153]) transports.¶
Observers may have their own HHITs to facilitate UAS information retrieval (e.g., for authorization to private UAS data). They could also use their HHIT for establishing a HIP connection with the UA Pilot for direct communications per authorization. Details about such issues are out of the scope of this document.¶
This document provides the details to solutions for GEN 1 - 3, ID 1 - 5, and REG 1 - 2 requirements that are described in [RFC9153].¶
Since the DET format is not compatible with [RFC7343], IANA has allocated the following prefix per this template for the "IANA IPv6 Special-Purpose Address Registry" [IPv6-SPECIAL].¶
IANA has created the "Drone Remote ID Protocol" registry. The following two subregistries have been created within the "Drone Remote ID Protocol" group.¶
Initially, for DET use, one 28-bit prefix has been assigned out of the IANA IPv6 Special Purpose Address Block, namely 2001::/23, as per [RFC6890]. Future additions to this subregistry are to be made through Expert Review (Section 4.5 of [RFC8126]). Entries with network-specific prefixes may be present in the registry.¶
HHIT Use | Bits | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
DET | 28 | 2001:30::/28 | RFC 9374 |
Criteria that should be applied by the designated experts includes determining whether the proposed registration duplicates existing functionality and whether the registration description is clear and fits the purpose of this registry.¶
Registration requests MUST be sent to drip-reg-review@ietf.org and be evaluated within a three-week review period on the advice of one or more designated experts. Within that review period, the designated experts will either approve or deny the registration request, and communicate their decision to the review list and IANA. Denials should include an explanation and, if applicable, suggestions to successfully register the prefix.¶
Registration requests that are undetermined for a period longer than 28 days can be brought to the IESG's attention for resolution.¶
This 8-bit value subregistry is a superset of the 4/8-bit "HIT Suite ID" subregistry of the "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Parameters" registry [IANA-HIP]. Future additions to this subregistry are to be made through IETF Review (Section 4.8 of [RFC8126]). The following HHIT Suite IDs are defined.¶
HHIT Suite | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|
RESERVED | 0 | RFC 9374 |
RSA,DSA/SHA-256 | 1 | [RFC7401] |
ECDSA/SHA-384 | 2 | [RFC7401] |
ECDSA_LOW/SHA-1 | 3 | [RFC7401] |
EdDSA/cSHAKE128 | 5 | RFC 9374 |
HDA Private Use 1 | 254 | RFC 9374 |
HDA Private Use 2 | 255 | RFC 9374 |
The HHIT Suite ID values 1 - 31 are reserved for IDs that MUST be replicated as HIT Suite IDs (Section 8.4) as is 5 here. Higher values (32 - 255) are for those Suite IDs that need not or cannot be accommodated as a HIT Suite ID.¶
This document has been added as a reference for the "CGA Extension Type Tags" registry [IANA-CGA]. IANA has the following Context ID in this registry:¶
CGA Type Tag | Reference |
---|---|
0x00B5 A69C 795D F5D5 F008 7F56 843F 2C40 | RFC 9374 |
IANA has updated the "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Parameters" registry [IANA-HIP] as described below.¶
Algorithm Profile | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|
EdDSA | 13 | [RFC8032] |
Algorithm | Curve | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
EdDSA | RESERVED | 0 | RFC 9374 |
EdDSA | EdDSA25519 | 1 | [RFC8032] |
EdDSA | EdDSA25519ph | 2 | [RFC8032] |
EdDSA | EdDSA448 | 3 | [RFC8032] |
EdDSA | EdDSA448ph | 4 | [RFC8032] |
5-65535 | Unassigned |
Suite ID | Value | Reference |
---|---|---|
EdDSA/cSHAKE128 | 5 | RFC 9374 |
The 64-bit hash in HHITs presents a real risk of second pre-image cryptographic hash attack (see Section 9.5). There are no known (to the authors) studies of hash size impact on cryptographic hash attacks.¶
However, with today's computing power, producing 264 EdDSA keypairs and then generating the corresponding HHIT is economically feasible. Consider that a *single* bitcoin mining ASIC can do on the order of 246 sha256 hashes per second or about 262 hashes in a single day. The point being, 264 is not prohibitive, especially as this can be done in parallel.¶
Note that the 264 attempts is for stealing a specific HHIT. Consider a scenario of a street photography company with 1,024 UAs (each with its own HHIT); an attacker may well be satisfied stealing any one of them. Then, rather than needing to satisfy a 64-bit condition on the cSHAKE128 output, an attacker only needs to satisfy what is equivalent to a 54-bit condition (since there are 210 more opportunities for success).¶
Thus, although the probability of a collision or pre-image attack is low in a collection of 1,024 HHITs out of a total population of 264 (per Section 9.5), it is computationally and economically feasible. Therefore, the HHIT registration is a MUST and HHIT/HI registration validation SHOULD be performed by Observers either through registry lookups or via broadcasted registration proofs (Section 3.1.2 of [DRIP-AUTH]).¶
The DET Registry services effectively block attempts to "take over" or "hijack" a DET. It does not stop a rogue attempting to impersonate a known DET. This attack can be mitigated by the receiver of messages containing DETs using DNS to find the HI for the DET. As such, use of DNSSEC by the DET registries is recommended to provide trust in HI retrieval.¶
Another mitigation of HHIT hijacking is when the HI owner (UA) supplies an object containing the HHIT that is signed by the HI private key of the HDA as detailed in [DRIP-AUTH].¶
The two risks with HHITs are the use of an invalid HID and forced HIT collisions. The use of a DNS zone (e.g., "det.arpa.") is strong protection against invalid HIDs. Querying an HDA's RVS for a HIT under the HDA protects against talking to unregistered clients. The Registry service [DRIP-REG], through its HHIT uniqueness enforcement, provides against forced or accidental HHIT hash collisions.¶
Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) provide an assurance of uniqueness. This is two-fold. The address (in this case the UAS ID) is a hash of a public key and a Registry hierarchy naming. Collision resistance (and more importantly, the implied second-preimage resistance) makes attacks statistically challenging. A registration process [DRIP-REG] within the HDA provides a level of assured uniqueness unattainable without mirroring this approach.¶
The second aspect of assured uniqueness is the digital signing (evidence) process of the DET by the HI private key and the further signing (evidence) of the HI public key by the Registry's key. This completes the ownership process. The observer at this point does not know what owns the DET but is assured, other than the risk of theft of the HI private key, that this UAS ID is owned by something and it is properly registered.¶
As stated in Section 8.1 of [DRIP-ARCH], there has been no effort to address post-quantum computing cryptography. UAs and Broadcast Remote ID communications are so constrained that current post-quantum computing cryptography is not applicable. In addition, because a UA may use a unique DET for each operation, the attack window could be limited to the duration of the operation.¶
HHITs contain the ID for the cryptographic suite used in its creation, a future algorithm that is safe for post-quantum computing that fits the Remote ID constraints may readily be added.¶
The DET in the ASTM Basic ID Message (Msg Type 0x0, the actual Remote ID message) does not provide any assertion of trust. Truncating 4 bytes from a HI signing of the HHIT (the UA ID field is 20 bytes and a HHIT is 16) within this Basic ID Message is the best that can be done. This is not trustable, as it is too open to a hash attack. Minimally, it takes 88 bytes (Section 4.6) to prove ownership of a DET with a full EdDSA signature. Thus, no attempt has been made to add DET trust directly within the very small Basic ID Message.¶
The ASTM Authentication Message (Msg Type 0x2) as shown in Section 4.6 can provide actual ownership proofs in a practical manner. The endorsements and evidence include timestamps to defend against replay attacks, but they do not prove which UA sent the message. The messages could have been sent by a dog running down the street with a Broadcast Remote ID module strapped to its back.¶
Proof of UA transmission comes, for example, when the Authentication Message includes proof of the ASTM Location/Vector Message (Msg Type 0x1) and a) the observer can see the UA or b) the location information is validated by ground multilateration. Only then does an observer gain full trust in the DET of the UA.¶
DETs obtained via the Network RID path provide a different approach to trust. Here the UAS SHOULD be securely communicating to the USS, thus asserting DET trust.¶
The DNS entry for the DET can also provide a revocation service. For example, instead of returning the HI RR, it may return some record showing that the HI (and thus DET) has been revoked. Guidance on revocation service will be provided in [DRIP-REG].¶
There is no expectation of privacy for DETs; it is not part of the normative privacy requirements listed in Section 4.3.1 of [RFC9153]. DETs are broadcast in the clear over the open air via Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. They will be collected and collated with other public information about the UAS. This will include DET registration information and location and times of operations for a DET. A DET can be for the life of a UA if there is no concern about DET/UA activity harvesting.¶
Further, the Media Access Control (MAC) address of the wireless interface used for Remote ID broadcasts are a target for UA operation aggregation that may not be mitigated through MAC address randomization. For Bluetooth 4 Remote ID messaging, the MAC address is used by observers to link the Basic ID Message that contains the RID with other Remote ID messages, thus it must be constant for a UA operation. This use of MAC addresses to link messages may not be needed with the Bluetooth 5 or Wi-Fi PHYs. These PHYs provide for a larger message payload and can use the Message Pack (Msg Type 0xF) and the Authentication Message to transmit the RID with other Remote ID messages. However, sending the RID in a Message Pack or Authentication Message is not mandatory, so using the MAC address for UA message linking must be allowed. That is, the MAC address should be stable for at least a UA operation.¶
Finally, it is not adequate to simply change the DET and MAC for a UA per operation to defeat tracking the history of the UA's activity.¶
Any changes to the UA MAC may have impacts to C2 setup and use. A constant GCS MAC may well defeat any privacy gains in UA MAC and RID changes. UA/GCS binding is complicated if the UA MAC address can change; historically, UAS design assumed these to be "forever" and made setup a one-time process. Additionally, if IP is used for C2, a changing MAC may mean a changing IP address to further impact the UAS bindings. Finally, an encryption wrapper's identifier (such as ESP [RFC4303] SPI) would need to change per operation to ensure operation tracking separation.¶
Creating and maintaining UAS operational privacy is a multifaceted problem. Many communication pieces need to be considered to truly create a separation between UA operations. Changing the DET is only the start of the changes that need to be implemented.¶
These privacy realities may present challenges for the European Union (EU) U-space (Appendix A) program.¶
The 64-bit hash size here for DETs does have an increased risk of collisions over the 96-bit hash size used for the ORCHID [RFC7343] construct. There is a 0.01% probability of a collision in a population of 66 million. The probability goes up to 1% for a population of 663 million. See Appendix D for the collision probability formula.¶
However, this risk of collision is within a single "Additional Information" value, i.e., an RAA/HDA domain. The UAS/USS registration process should include registering the DET and MUST reject a collision, forcing the UAS to generate a new HI and thus HHIT and reapplying to the DET registration process (Section 6 of [DRIP-REG]).¶
Thus an adversary trying to generate a collision and 'steal' the DET would run afoul of this registration process and associated validation process mentioned in Section 1.1.¶
The EU is defining a future of airspace management known as U-space within the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) undertaking. The Concept of Operation for EuRopean UTM Systems (CORUS) project proposed low-level Concept of Operations [CORUS] for UAS in the EU. It introduces strong requirements for UAS privacy based on European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulations. It suggests that UAs are identified with agnostic IDs, with no information about UA type, the operators, or flight trajectory. Only authorized persons should be able to query the details of the flight with a record of access.¶
Due to the high privacy requirements, a casual observer can only query U-space if it is aware of a UA seen in a certain area. A general observer can use a public U-space portal to query UA details based on the UA transmitted "Remote identification" signal. Direct remote identification (DRID) is based on a signal transmitted by the UA directly. Network remote identification (NRID) is only possible for UAs being tracked by U-Space and is based on the matching the current UA position to one of the tracks.¶
This is potentially a contrary expectation as that presented in Section 9.4. U-space will have to deal with this reality within the GDPR regulations. Still, DETs as defined here present a large step in the right direction for agnostic IDs.¶
The project lists "E-Identification" and "E-Registrations" services as to be developed. These services can use DETs and follow the privacy considerations outlined in this document for DETs.¶
If an "agnostic ID" above refers to a completely random identifier, it creates a problem with identity resolution and detection of misuse. On the other hand, a classical HIT has a flat structure which makes its resolution difficult. The DET (HHIT) provides a balanced solution by associating a registry with the UA identifier. This is not likely to cause a major conflict with U-space privacy requirements, as the registries are typically few at a country level (e.g., civil personal, military, law enforcement, or commercial).¶
The following explains the logic for dividing the 28 bits of the HID into two 14-bit components.¶
At this writing, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) has 193 member "States", and each may want to control RID assignment within its National Air Space (NAS). Some members may want separate RAAs to use for Civil, general Government, and Military use. They may also want allowances for competing Civil RAA operations. It is reasonable to plan for eight RAAs per ICAO member (plus regional aviation organizations like in the EU). Thus, as a start, a space of 4,096 RAAs is advised.¶
There will be requests by commercial entities for their own RAA allotments. Examples could include international organizations that will be using UAS and international delivery service associations. These may be smaller than the RAA space needed by ICAO member States and could be met with a 2,048 space allotment; however, as will be seen, these might as well be 4,096 as well.¶
This may well cover currently understood RAA entities. In the future, there will be new applications, branching off into new areas, so yet another space allocation should be set aside. If this is equal to all that has been reserved, we should allow for 16,384 (214) RAAs.¶
The HDA allocation follows a different logic from that of RAAs. Per Appendix D, an HDA should be able to easily assign 63M RIDs and even manage 663M with a "first come, first assigned" registration process. For most HDAs, this is more than enough, and a single HDA assignment within their RAA will suffice. Most RAAs will only delegate to a couple of HDAs for their operational needs. But there are major exceptions that point to some RAAs needing large numbers of HDA assignments.¶
Delivery service operators like Amazon (est. 30K delivery vans) and UPS (est. 500K delivery vans) may choose, for anti-tracking reasons, to use unique RIDs per day or even per operation. 30K delivery UAs could need between 11M and 44M RIDs. Anti-tracking would be hard to provide if the HID were the same for a delivery service fleet, so such a company may turn to an HDA that provides this service to multiple companies so that who's UA is who's is not evident in the HID. A USS providing this service could well use multiple HDA assignments per year, depending on strategy.¶
Perhaps a single RAA providing HDAs for delivery service (or a similar purpose) UAS could 'get by' with a 2048 HDA space (11 bits). So the HDA space could well be served with only 12 bits allocated out of the 28-bit HID space. However, as this is speculation and deployment experience will take years, a 14-bit HDA space has been selected.¶
There may also be 'small' ICAO member States that opt for a single RAA and allocate their HDAs for all UAs that are permitted in their NAS. The HDA space is large enough that a portion may be used for government needs as stated above and small commercial needs. Alternatively, the State may use a separate, consecutive RAA for commercial users. Thus it would be 'easy' to recognize State-approved UA by HID high-order bits.¶
The upper 64 bits of DET appear to be oddly constructed from nibbled fields, when typically seen in 8-bit representations. The following works out the construction of the example in Section 5.¶
In that example, the prefix is 2001:30::/28, the RAA is decimal 10, and the HDA is decimal 20. Below is the RAA and HDA in 14-bit format:¶
RAA 10 = 00000000001010 HDA 20 = 00000000010100¶
The leftmost 4 bits of the RAA, all zeros, combine with the prefix to form 2001:0030:, which leaves the remaining RAA and HDA to combine to:¶
0000|0010|1000|0000|0001|0100|¶
Which when combined with the OGA of x05 is 0280:1405, thus the whole upper 64 bits are 2001:0030:0280:1405.¶
The alphabet used in CTA 2063-A Serial Number does not map to any published Base32 encoding scheme. Therefore, the following Base32 Alphabet is used.¶
Each 5-bit group is used as an index into an array of 32 printable characters. The character referenced by the index is placed in the output string. These characters, identified below, are selected from US-ASCII digits and uppercase letters.¶
Value | Encoding | Value | Encoding | Value | Encoding | Value | Encoding |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 8 | 8 | 16 | G | 24 | Q |
1 | 1 | 9 | 9 | 17 | H | 25 | R |
2 | 2 | 10 | A | 18 | J | 26 | T |
3 | 3 | 11 | B | 19 | K | 27 | U |
4 | 4 | 12 | C | 20 | L | 28 | V |
5 | 5 | 13 | D | 21 | M | 29 | W |
6 | 6 | 14 | E | 22 | N | 30 | X |
7 | 7 | 15 | F | 23 | P | 31 | Y |
The accepted formula for calculating the probability of a collision is:¶
p = 1 - e{-k2/(2n)}¶
The following table provides the approximate population size for a collision for a given total population.¶
Total Population | Deployed Population With Collision Risk of | |
---|---|---|
.01% | 1% | |
296 | 4T | 42T |
272 | 1B | 10B |
268 | 250M | 2.5B |
264 | 66M | 663M |
260 | 16M | 160M |
Dr. Gurtov is an adviser on Cybersecurity to the Swedish Civil Aviation Administration.¶
Quynh Dang of NIST gave considerable guidance on using Keccak and the supporting NIST documents. Joan Deamen of the Keccak team was especially helpful in many aspects of using Keccak. Nicholas Gajcowski [CFRG-COMMENT] provided a concise hash pre-image security assessment via the CFRG list.¶
Many thanks to Michael Richardson and Brian Haberman for the iotdir review, Magnus Nystrom for the secdir review, Elwyn Davies for the genart review, and the DRIP co-chair and document shepherd, Mohamed Boucadair for his extensive comments and help on document clarity. And finally, many thanks to the Area Directors: Roman Danyliw, Erik Kline, Murray Kucherawy, Warren Kumari, John Scudder, Paul Wouters, and Sarker Zaheduzzaman, for the IESG review.¶