Network Working Group M. Jones Internet-Draft Microsoft Intended status: Standards Track D. Balfanz Expires: July 1, 2011 Google J. Bradley independent Y. Goland Microsoft J. Panzer Google N. Sakimura Nomura Research Institute December 28, 2010 JSON Web Token (JWT) draft-jones-json-web-token-00 Abstract JSON Web Token (JWT) defines a token format that can encode claims transferred between two parties. The claims in a JWT are encoded as a JSON object that is digitally signed. Requirements Language The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119]. Status of this Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on July 1, 2011. Copyright Notice Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 1] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Copyright (c) 2010 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 (http://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 Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 2] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. JSON Web Token (JWT) Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3.1. Example JWT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4. JWT Claims . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.1. Reserved Claim Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.2. Public Claim Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 4.3. Private Claim Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 5. JWT Envelope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.1. Reserved Envelope Parameter Names . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.2. Public Envelope Parameter Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5.3. Private Envelope Parameter Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 6. General Rules for Creating and Validating a JWT . . . . . . . 12 7. Base64url encoding as used by JWTs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 8. Signing JWTs with Cryptographic Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . 15 8.1. Signing a JWT with HMAC SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 8.2. Signing a JWT with RSA SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 8.3. Signing a JWT with ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . 17 8.4. Additional Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 9. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 10.1. Unicode Comparison Security Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 11. Open Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 12. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 13. Appendix - Non-Normative - JWT Examples . . . . . . . . . . . 21 13.1. JWT using HMAC SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 13.1.1. Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 13.1.2. Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 13.1.3. Validating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 13.2. JWT using RSA SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 13.2.1. Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 13.2.2. Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 13.2.3. Validating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 13.3. JWT using ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 13.3.1. Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 13.3.2. Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 13.3.3. Validating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 14. Appendix - Non-Normative - Notes on implementing base64url encoding without padding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 15. Appendix - Non-Normative - Relationship of JWTs to SAML Tokens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 16. Appendix - Non-Normative - Relationship of JWTs to Simple Web Tokens (SWTs) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 17. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 17.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 17.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 3] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 4] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 1. Introduction JSON Web Token (JWT) is a simple token format intended for space constrained environments such as HTTP Authorization headers and URI query parameters. JWTs encode the claims to be transmitted as a JSON object (as defined in RFC 4627 [RFC4627]) that is base64url encoded and digitally signed. The suggested pronunciation of JWT is the same as the English word "jot". 2. Terminology JSON Web Token (JWT) A string consisting of three JWT Token Segments: the JWT Envelope Segment, the JWT Claim Segment, and the JWT Crypto Segment, in that order, with the segments being separated by period ('.') characters. JWT Token Segment One of the three parts that make up a JSON Web Token (JWT). JWT Token Segments are always base64url encoded values. JWT Envelope Segment A JWT Token Segment containing a base64url encoded JSON object that describes the signature applied to the JWT Claim Segment. JWT Claim Segment A JWT Token Segment containing a base64url encoded JSON object that encodes the claims represented by the JWT. JWT Crypto Segment A JWT Token Segment containing base64url encoded cryptographic signature material that secures the JWT Crypto Segment's contents. Decoded JWT Envelope Segment A JWT Envelope Segment that has been base64url decoded back into a JSON object. Decoded JWT Claim Segment A JWT Claim Segment that has been base64url decoded back into a JSON object. Decoded JWT Crypto Segment A JWT Crypto Segment that has been base64url decoded back into cryptographic material. Base64url Encoding For the purposes of this specification, this term always refers to the he URL- and filename-safe Base64 encoding described in RFC 4648 [RFC4648], Section 5, with the '=' padding characters omitted, as permitted by Section 3.2; see Section 7 for more details. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 5] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 3. JSON Web Token (JWT) Overview JWTs represent a set of claims as a JSON object that is base64url encoded and digitally signed. As per RFC 4627 [RFC4627] Section 2.2, the JSON object consists of zero or more name/value pairs (or members), where the names are strings and the values are arbitrary JSON values. These members are the claims represented by the JWT. The JSON object is base64url encoded to produce the JWT Claim Segment. An accompanying base64url encoded JSON envelope object describes the signature method used. The names within the object MUST be unique. The names within the JSON object are referred to as Claim Names. The corresponding values are referred to as Claim Values. JWTs contain a signature that ensures the integrity of the content of the JSON Claim Segment. This signature value is carried in the JWT Crypto Segment. The JSON Envelope object MUST contain an "alg" parameter, the value of which is a string that unambiguously identifies the algorithm used to sign the JWT Claim Segment to produce the JWT Crypto Segment. 3.1. Example JWT The following is an example of a JSON object that can be encoded to produce a JWT: {"iss":"joe", "exp":1300819380, "http://example.com/is_root":true} Base64url encoding the UTF-8 representation of the JSON object yields this JWT Claim Segment value: eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ The following example JSON envelope object declares that the encoded object is a JSON Web Token (JWT) and the JWT Claim Segment is signed using the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm: {"typ":"JWT", "alg":"HS256"} Base64url encoding the UTF-8 representation of the JSON envelope object yields this JWT Envelope Segment value: eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9 Signing the JWT Claim Segment with the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm and base64url encoding the result, as per Section 8.1, yields this JWT Crypto Segment value: 35usWj9X8HwGS-CDcx1JP2NmqcrLwZ4EKp8sNThf3cY Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 6] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Combining these segments in the order Envelope.Claims.Signature with period characters between the segments yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only): eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9 . eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ . 35usWj9X8HwGS-CDcx1JP2NmqcrLwZ4EKp8sNThf3cY This computation is illustrated in more detail in Section 13.1. 4. JWT Claims The members of the JSON object represented by the Decoded JWT Claim Segment contain the claims. Note however, that the set of claims a JWT must contain to be considered valid is context-dependent and is outside the scope of this specification. There are three classes of JWT Claim Names: Reserved Claim Names, Public Claim Names, and Private Claim Names. 4.1. Reserved Claim Names The following claim names are reserved. None of the claims defined in the table below are intended to be mandatory, but rather, provide a starting point for a set of useful, interoperable claims. All the names are short because a core goal of JWTs is for the tokens themselves to be short. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 7] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 +-------+---------+--------------+----------------------------------+ | Claim | JSON | Claim Syntax | Claim Semantics | | Name | Value | | | | | Type | | | +-------+---------+--------------+----------------------------------+ | exp | integer | IntDate | The "exp" (expiration time) | | | | | claim identifies the expiration | | | | | time on or after which the token | | | | | MUST NOT be accepted for | | | | | processing. The processing of | | | | | the "exp" claim requires that | | | | | the current date/time MUST be | | | | | before the expiration date/time | | | | | listed in the "exp" claim. | | | | | Implementers MAY provide for | | | | | some small leeway, usually no | | | | | more than a few minutes, to | | | | | account for clock skew. This | | | | | claim is OPTIONAL. | | iss | string | StringAndURI | The "iss" (issuer) claim | | | | | identifies the principal that | | | | | issued the JWT. The processing | | | | | of this claim is generally | | | | | application specific. This | | | | | claim is OPTIONAL. | | aud | string | StringAndURI | The "aud" (audience) claim | | | | | identifies the audience that the | | | | | JWT is intended for. The | | | | | processing of this claim | | | | | requires that if a JWT consumer | | | | | receives a JWT with an "aud" | | | | | value that does not identify | | | | | itself as the JWT audience, then | | | | | the JWT MUST be rejected. The | | | | | interpretation of the audience | | | | | value is generally application | | | | | specific. This claim is | | | | | OPTIONAL. | | typ | string | StringAndURI | The "typ" (type) claim is used | | | | | to declare a type for the | | | | | contents this JWT. The value | | | | | MAY be a MIME [RFC2045] type. | | | | | This claim is OPTIONAL. | +-------+---------+--------------+----------------------------------+ Table 1: Reserved Claim Definitions Additional reserved claim names MAY be defined via the IANA JSON Web Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 8] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Token Claims registry, as per Section 9. The syntaxes referred to above are: +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+ | Syntax Name | Syntax Definition | +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+ | StringAndURI | Any string value MAY be used but a value | | | containing a ":" character MUST be a URI as | | | defined in RFC 3986 [RFC3986]. | | URI | A URI as defined in RFC 3986 [RFC3986]. | | IntDate | The number of seconds from 1970-01-01T0:0:0Z as | | | measured in UTC until the desired date/time. See | | | RFC 3339 [RFC3339] for details regarding | | | date/times in general and UTC in particular. | +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+ Table 2 4.2. Public Claim Names Claim names can be defined at will by those using JWTs. However, in order to prevent collisions, any new claim name SHOULD either be defined in the IANA JSON Web Token Claims registry or be defined as a URI that contains a collision resistant namespace. Examples of collision resistant namespaces include: o Domain Names, o Object Identifiers (OIDs) as defined in the ITU-T X 660 and X 670 Recommendation series or o Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) as defined in RFC 4122 [RFC4122]. In each case, the definer of the name or value MUST take reasonable precautions to make sure they are in control of the part of the namespace they use to define the claim name. 4.3. Private Claim Names A producer and consumer of a JWT may agree to any claim name that is not a Reserved Name Section 4.1 or a Public Name Section 4.2. Unlike Public Names, these private names are subject to collision and should be used with caution. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 9] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 5. JWT Envelope The members of the JSON object represented by the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment describe the signature applied to the JWT Claim Segment and optionally additional properties of the JWT. Implementations MUST understand the entire contents of the envelope; otherwise, the JWT MUST be rejected for processing. 5.1. Reserved Envelope Parameter Names The following envelope parameter names are reserved. All the names are short because a core goal of JWTs is for the tokens themselves to be short. +-----------+--------+--------------+-------------------------------+ | Envelope | JSON | Envelope | Envelope Parameter Semantics | | Parameter | Value | Parameter | | | Name | Type | Syntax | | +-----------+--------+--------------+-------------------------------+ | alg | string | StringAndURI | The "alg" (algorithm) | | | | | envelope parameter identifies | | | | | the cryptographic algorithm | | | | | used to secure the JWT. A | | | | | list of reserved alg values | | | | | is in Table 4. The | | | | | processing of the "alg" | | | | | (algorithm) envelope | | | | | parameter, if present, | | | | | requires that the value of | | | | | the "alg" envelope parameter | | | | | MUST be one that is both | | | | | supported and for which there | | | | | exists a key for use with | | | | | that algorithm associated | | | | | with the issuer of the JWT. | | | | | Note however, that if the | | | | | "iss" (issuer) claim is not | | | | | included in the JWT Claim | | | | | Segment, then the manner in | | | | | which the issuer is | | | | | determined is application | | | | | specific. This envelope | | | | | parameter is REQUIRED. | Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 10] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 | typ | string | StringAndURI | The "typ" (type) envelope | | | | | parameter is used to declare | | | | | that this data structure is a | | | | | JWT. If a "typ" parameter is | | | | | present, its value MUST be | | | | | "JWT". This envelope | | | | | parameter is OPTIONAL. | | | | | (Non-normative note: Other | | | | | values could be used by other | | | | | specifications to declare | | | | | data structures other than | | | | | JWTs, for instance, encrypted | | | | | JSON tokens.) | | keyid | string | String | The "keyid" (key ID) envelope | | | | | parameter is a hint | | | | | indicating which specific key | | | | | owned by the signer should be | | | | | used to validate the | | | | | signature. This allows | | | | | signers to explicitly signal | | | | | a change of key to | | | | | recipients. Omitting this | | | | | parameter is equivalent to | | | | | setting it to an empty | | | | | string. The format of this | | | | | parameter is unspecified. | | | | | This envelope parameter is | | | | | OPTIONAL. | | curi | string | URI | The "curi" (certificates URI) | | | | | envelope parameter is a URI | | | | | that points to X.509 public | | | | | key certificates that can be | | | | | used to validate the | | | | | signature. This envelope | | | | | parameter is OPTIONAL. | | ctp | string | String | The "ctp" (certificate | | | | | thumbprint) envelope | | | | | parameter provides a | | | | | base64url encoded SHA-1 | | | | | thumbprint of the DER | | | | | encoding of a certificate | | | | | that can be used to validate | | | | | the signature. This envelope | | | | | parameter is OPTIONAL. | +-----------+--------+--------------+-------------------------------+ Table 3: Reserved Envelope Parameter Definitions Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 11] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Additional reserved envelope parameter names MAY be defined via the IANA JSON Web Token Envelope Parameters registry, as per Section 9. The envelope value syntaxes referred to above are defined in Table 2. 5.2. Public Envelope Parameter Names Additional envelope parameter names can be defined by those using JWTs. However, in order to prevent collisions, any new envelope parameter name or algorithm value SHOULD either be defined in the IANA JSON Web Token Envelope Parameters registry or be defined as a URI that contains a collision resistant namespace. In each case, the definer of the name or value MUST take reasonable precautions to make sure they are in control of the part of the namespace they use to define the envelope parameter name. New envelope parameters should be introduced sparingly, as they can result in non-interoperable JWTs. Nonetheless, some extensions needed for some use cases may require them, such as an extension to enable the inclusion of multiple signatures. 5.3. Private Envelope Parameter Names A producer and consumer of a JWT may agree to any envelope parameter name that is not a Reserved Name Section 5.1 or a Public Name Section 5.2. Unlike Public Names, these private names are subject to collision and should be used with caution. New envelope parameters should be introduced sparingly, as they can result in non-interoperable JWTs. 6. General Rules for Creating and Validating a JWT To create a JWT one MUST follow these steps: 1. Create a JSON object containing the desired claims. Note that white space is explicitly allowed in the representation and no canonicalization is performed before encoding. 2. Translate this JSON object's Unicode code points into UTF-8, as defined in RFC 3629 [RFC3629]. 3. Base64url encode the UTF-8 representation of this JSON object as defined in this specification (without padding). This encoding becomes the JWT Claim Segment. 4. Create a different JSON object containing the desired envelope parameters. Note that white space is explicitly allowed in the Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 12] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 representation and no canonicalization is performed before encoding. 5. Translate this JSON object's Unicode code points into UTF-8, as defined in RFC 3629 [RFC3629]. 6. Base64url encode the UTF-8 representation of this JSON object as defined in this specification (without padding). This encoding becomes the JWT Envelope Segment. 7. Construct the JWT Crypto Segment as defined for the particular algorithm being used. The "alg" envelope parameter MUST be present in the JSON Envelope Segment, with the algorithm value accurately representing the algorithm used to construct the JWT Crypto Segment. 8. Combine the JWT Envelope Segment, the JWT Claim Segment and then the JWT Crypto Segment in that order, separating each by period characters, to create the JWT. When validating a JWT the following steps MUST be taken. If any of the listed steps fails then the token MUST be rejected for processing. 1. The JWT MUST contain two period characters. 2. The JWT MUST be split on the two period characters resulting in three non-empty segments. The first segment is the JWT Envelope Segment; the second is the JWT Claim Segment; the third is the JWT Crypto Segment. 3. The JWT Envelope Segment MUST be successfully base64url decoded following the restriction given in this spec that no padding characters may have been used. 4. The Decoded JWT Envelope Segment MUST be completely valid JSON syntax. 5. The JWT Claim Segment MUST be successfully base64url decoded following the restriction given in this spec that no padding characters may have been used. 6. The Decoded JWT Claim Segment MUST be completely valid JSON syntax. 7. The JWT Crypto Segment MUST be successfully base64url decoded following the restriction given in this spec that no padding characters may have been used. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 13] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 8. The JWT Envelope Segment MUST be validated to only include parameters and values whose syntax and semantics are both understood and supported. 9. When used in a security-related context, the JWT Claim Segment MUST be validated to only include claims whose syntax and semantics are both understood and supported. 10. The JWT Crypto Segment MUST be successfully validated against the JWT Claim Segment in the manner defined for the algorithm being used, which MUST be accurately represented by the value of the "alg" envelope parameter, which MUST be present. Processing a JWT inevitably requires comparing known strings to values in the token. For example, in checking what the algorithm is, the Unicode string encoding "alg" will be checked against the member names in the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment to see if there is a matching envelope parameter name. A similar process occurs when determining if the value of the "alg" envelope parameter represents a supported algorithm. Comparing Unicode strings, however, has significant security implications, as per Section 10. Comparisons between JSON strings and other Unicode strings MUST be performed as specified below: 1. Remove any JSON applied escaping to produce an array of Unicode code points. 2. Unicode Normalization [USA15] MUST NOT be applied at any point to either the JSON string or to the string it is to be compared against. 3. Comparisons between the two strings MUST be performed as a Unicode code point to code point equality comparison. 7. Base64url encoding as used by JWTs JWTs make use of the base64url encoding as defined in RFC 4648 [RFC4648]. As allowed by Section 3.2 of the RFC, this specification mandates that base64url encoding when used with JWTs MUST NOT use padding. The reason for this restriction is that the padding character ('=') is not URL safe. For notes on implementing base64url encoding without padding, see Section 14. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 14] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 8. Signing JWTs with Cryptographic Algorithms JWTs use specific cryptographic algorithms to sign the contents of the JWT Claim Segment. The use of the following algorithms for producing JWTs is defined in this section. The table below is the list of "alg" envelope parameter values reserved by this specification, each of which is explained in more detail in the following sections: +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+ | Alg Claim Value | Algorithm | +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+ | HS256 | HMAC using SHA-256 hash algorithm | | HS384 | HMAC using SHA-384 hash algorithm | | HS512 | HMAC using SHA-512 hash algorithm | | RS256 | RSA using SHA-256 hash algorithm | | RS384 | RSA using SHA-384 hash algorithm | | RS512 | RSA using SHA-512 hash algorithm | | ES256 | ECDSA using P-256 curve and SHA-256 hash | | | algorithm | | ES384 | ECDSA using P-384 curve and SHA-384 hash | | | algorithm | | ES512 | ECDSA using P-521 curve and SHA-512 hash | | | algorithm | +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+ Table 4: JSON Web Token Reserved Algorithm Values Of these algorithms, only HMAC SHA-256 and RSA SHA-256 MUST be implemented. It is RECOMMENDED that implementations also implement at least the ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 algorithm. 8.1. Signing a JWT with HMAC SHA-256 Hash based Message Authentication Codes (HMACs) enable one to use a secret plus a cryptographic hash function to generate a Message Authentication Code (MAC). This can be used to demonstrate that the MAC matches the hashed content, in this case the JWT Claim Segment, which therefore demonstrates that whoever generated the MAC was in possession of the secret. The algorithm for implementing and validating HMACs is provided in RFC 2104 [RFC2104]. Although any HMAC can be used with JWTs, this section defines the use of the SHA-256 cryptographic hash function as defined in FIPS 180-3 [FIPS.180-3]. The reserved "alg" envelope parameter value "HS256" is used in the JWT Envelope Segment to indicate that the JWT Crypto Segment contains a base64url encoded HMAC SHA-256 HMAC value. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 15] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 The HMAC SHA-256 MAC is generated as follows: 1. Take the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment and execute the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm on them using the shared key to produce an HMAC. 2. Base64url encode the HMAC as defined in this document. The output is placed in the JWT Crypto Segment for that JWT. The HMAC SHA-256 MAC on a JWT is validated as follows: 1. Take the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment and calculate an HMAC SHA-256 MAC on them using the shared key. 2. Base64url encode the previously generated HMAC as defined in this document. 3. If the JWT Crypto Segment and the previously calculated value exactly match in a character by character, case sensitive comparison, then one has confirmation that the key was used to generate the HMAC on the JWT and that the contents of the JWT Claim Segment have not be tampered with. 4. If the validation fails, the token MUST be rejected. Signing with the HMAC SHA-384 and HMAC SHA-512 algorithms is performed identically to the procedure for HMAC SHA-256 - just with correspondingly longer key and result values. JWT implementations MUST support the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm. Support for the HMAC SHA-384 and HMAC SHA-512 algorithms is OPTIONAL. 8.2. Signing a JWT with RSA SHA-256 This section defines the use of the RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 signature algorithm as defined in RFC 3447 [RFC3447], Section 8.2 (commonly known as PKCS#1), using SHA-256 as the hash function. Note that the use of the RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 algorithm is permitted in FIPS 186-3 [FIPS.186-3], Section 5.5, as is the SHA-256 cryptographic hash function, which is defined in FIPS 180-3 [FIPS.180-3]. The reserved "alg" envelope parameter value "RS256" is used in the JWT Envelope Segment to indicate that the JWT Crypto Segment contains an RSA SHA- 256 signature. A 2048-bit or longer key length MUST be used with this algorithm. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 16] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 The RSA SHA-256 signature is generated as follows: 1. Let K be the signer's RSA private key and let M be the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment. 2. Compute the octet string S = RSASSA-PKCS1-V1_5-SIGN (K, M). 3. Base64url encode the octet string S, as defined in this document. The output is placed in the JWT Crypto Segment for that JWT. The RSA SHA-256 signature on a JWT is validated as follows: 1. Take the JWT Crypto Segment and base64url decode it into an octet string S. If decoding fails, then the token MUST be rejected. 2. Let M be the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment and let (n, e) be the public key corresponding to the private key used by the signer. 3. Validate the signature with RSASSA-PKCS1-V1_5-VERIFY ((n, e), M, S). 4. If the validation fails, the token MUST be rejected. Signing with the RSA SHA-384 and RSA SHA-512 algorithms is performed identically to the procedure for RSA SHA-256 - just with correspondingly longer key and result values. JWT implementations MUST support the RSA SHA-256 algorithm. Support for the RSA SHA-384 and RSA SHA-512 algorithms is OPTIONAL. 8.3. Signing a JWT with ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 The Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) is defined by FIPS 186-3 [FIPS.186-3]. ECDSA provides for the use of Elliptic Curve cryptography, which is able to provide equivalent security to RSA cryptography but using shorter key lengths and with greater processing speed. This means that ECDSA signatures will be substantially smaller in terms of length than equivalently strong RSA Digital Signatures. This specification defines the use of ECDSA with the P-256 curve and the SHA-256 cryptographic hash function. The P-256 curve is also defined in FIPS 186-3. The reserved "alg" envelope parameter value "ES256" is used in the JWT Envelope Segment to indicate that the JWT Crypto Segment contains a ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 signature. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 17] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 A JWT is signed with an ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 signature as follows: 1. Take the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment and generate a digital signature of them using ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 with the desired private key. The output will be the EC point (R, S), where R and S are unsigned integers. 2. Turn R and S into byte arrays in big endian order. Each array will be 32 bytes long. 3. Concatenate the two byte arrays in the order R and then S. 4. Base64url encode the 64 byte array as defined in this specification. The output becomes the JWT Crypto Segment for the JWT. The following procedure is used to validate the ECDSA signature of a JWT: 1. Take the JWT Crypto Segment and base64url decode it into a byte array. If decoding fails, the token MUST be rejected. 2. The output of the base64url decoding MUST be a 64 byte array. 3. Split the 64 byte array into two 32 byte arrays. The first array will be R and the second S. Remember that the byte arrays are in big endian byte order; please check the ECDSA validator in use to see what byte order it requires. 4. Submit the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claim Segment, R, S and the public key (x, y) to the ECDSA P-256 SHA- 256 validator. 5. If the validation fails, the token MUST be rejected. The ECDSA validator will then determine if the digital signature is valid, given the inputs. Note that ECDSA digital signature contains a value referred to as K, which is a random number generated for each digital signature instance. This means that two ECDSA digital signatures using exactly the same input parameters will output different signatures because their K values will be different. The consequence of this is that one must validate an ECDSA signature by submitting the previously specified inputs to an ECDSA validator. Signing with the ECDSA P-384 SHA-384 and ECDSA P-521 SHA-512 algorithms is performed identically to the procedure for ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 - just with correspondingly longer key and result values. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 18] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 It is RECOMMENDED that JWT implementations support the ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 algorithm. Support for the ECDSA P-384 SHA-384 and ECDSA P-521 SHA-512 algorithms is OPTIONAL. 8.4. Additional Algorithms Additional algorithms MAY be used to protect JWTs with corresponding "alg" envelope parameter values being defined to refer to them. Like claim names, new "alg" envelope parameter values SHOULD either be defined in the IANA JSON Web Token Algorithms registry or be a URI that contains a collision resistant namespace. In particular, the use of algorithm identifiers defined in XML DSIG [RFC3275] and related specifications is permitted. 9. IANA Considerations This specification calls for: o A new IANA registry entitled "JSON Web Token Claims" for reserved claim names Section 4.1 used in a Decoded JWT Claim Segment. Inclusion in the registry is RFC Required in the RFC 5226 [RFC5226] sense for reserved JWT claim names that are intended to be interoperable between implementations. The registry will just record the reserved claim name and a pointer to the RFC that defines it. This specification defines inclusion of the claim names defined in Table 1. o A new IANA registry entitled "JSON Web Token Envelope Parameters" for reserved envelope parameter names Section 5.1 used in a Decoded JWT Envelope Parameter Segment. Inclusion in the registry is RFC Required in the RFC 5226 [RFC5226] sense for reserved JWT envelope parameter names that are intended to be interoperable between implementations. The registry will just record the reserved envelope parameter name and a pointer to the RFC that defines it. This specification defines inclusion of the envelope parameter names defined in Table 3. o A new IANA registry entitled "JSON Web Token Algorithms" for reserved values used with the "alg" envelope parameter values used in a decoded JWT Envelope Segment. Inclusion in the registry is RFC Required in the RFC 5226 [RFC5226] sense. The registry will just record the "alg" value and a pointer to the RFC that defines it. This specification defines inclusion of the algorithm values defined in Table 4. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 19] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 10. Security Considerations TBD: Lots of work to do here. We need to remember to look into any issues relating to security and JSON parsing. One wonders just how secure most JSON parsing libraries are. Were they ever hardened for security scenarios? If not, what kind of holes does that open up? Also, we need to walk through the JSON standard and see what kind of issues we have especially around comparison of names. For instance, comparisons of claim names and other parameters must occur after they are unescaped. Need to also put in text about: Importance of keeping secrets secret. Rotating keys. Strengths and weaknesses of the different algorithms. Case sensitivity and more generally Unicode comparison issues that can cause security holes, especially in claim names and explain why Unicode Normalization is such a problem. TBD: Need to put in text about why strict JSON validation is necessary. Basically, that if malformed JSON is received then the intent of the sender is impossible to reliably discern. While in non-security contexts it's o.k. to be generous in what one accepts, in security contexts this can lead to serious security holes. For example, malformed JSON might indicate that someone has managed to find a security hole in the issuer's code and is leveraging it to get the issuer to issue "bad" tokens whose content the attacker can control. 10.1. Unicode Comparison Security Issues Claim names in JWTs are Unicode strings. For security reasons, the representations these names must be compared verbatim after performing any escape processing (as per RFC 4627 [RFC4627], Section 2.5). In particular, Unicode Normalization [USA15] or case folding MUST NOT be applied at any point to either the JSON string or to the string it is to be compared against. This means, for instance, that these JSON strings must compare as being equal ("JWT", "\u004aWT"), whereas these must all compare as being not equal to the first set or to each other ("jwt", "Jwt", "JW\u0074"). JSON strings MAY contain characters outside the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane. For instance, the G clef character (U+1D11E) may be represented in a JSON string as "\uD834\uDD1E". Ideally, JWT implementations SHOULD ensure that characters outside the Basic Multilingual Plane are preserved and compared correctly; alternatively, if this is not possible due to these characters exercising limitations present in the underlying JSON implementation, then input containing them MUST be rejected. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 20] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 11. Open Issues The following open issues have been identified during review of previous drafts. Additional input on them is solicited. o The draft currently defines no mechanism(s) for retrieving public keys that are not encoded as X.509 certificates. A mechanism or mechanisms similar to the Magic Signatures key discovery process for Magic Keys could be added to future drafts. Some have suggested that they keys themselves also be encoded as JWTs. o Related to the above, it's not clear whether the "iss" claim should be expected to contain a location for retrieving non-X.509 public keys, or whether a separate issuer key location parameter should be defined. Also, does this belong in the envelope or the claims? 12. Acknowledgements The authors acknowledge that the design of JWTs was intentionally influenced by the design and simplicity of Simple Web Tokens [SWT]. Solutions for signing JSON tokens were also previously explored by Magic Signatures [MagicSignatures], JSON Simple Sign [JSS], and Canvas Applications [CanvasApp], all of which influenced this draft. 13. Appendix - Non-Normative - JWT Examples 13.1. JWT using HMAC SHA-256 13.1.1. Encoding The Decoded JWT Claim Segment used in this example is: {"iss":"joe", "exp":1300819380, "http://example.com/is_root":true} Note that white space is explicitly allowed in Decoded JWT Claim Segments and no canonicalization is performed before encoding. The following byte array contains the UTF-8 characters for the Decoded JWT Claim Segment: [123, 34, 105, 115, 115, 34, 58, 34, 106, 111, 101, 34, 44, 13, 10, 32, 34, 101, 120, 112, 34, 58, 49, 51, 48, 48, 56, 49, 57, 51, 56, 48, 44, 13, 10, 32, 34, 104, 116, 116, 112, 58, 47, 47, 101, 120, 97, 109, 112, 108, 101, 46, 99, 111, 109, 47, 105, 115, 95, 114, 111, 111, 116, 34, 58, 116, 114, 117, 101, 125] Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 21] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Base64url encoding the above yields the JWT Claim Segment value: eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ The following example JSON envelope object declares that the encoded object is a JSON Web Token (JWT) and the JWT Claim Segment is signed using the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm: {"typ":"JWT", "alg":"HS256"} The following byte array contains the UTF-8 characters for the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment: [123, 34, 116, 121, 112, 34, 58, 34, 74, 87, 84, 34, 44, 13, 10, 32, 34, 97, 108, 103, 34, 58, 34, 72, 83, 50, 53, 54, 34, 125] Base64url encoding this UTF-8 representation yields this JWT Envelope Segment value: eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9 HMACs are generated using keys. This example used the key represented by the following byte array: [83, 159, 117, 12, 235, 169, 168, 200, 131, 152, 227, 246, 214, 212, 188, 74, 71, 83, 244, 166, 90, 24, 239, 251, 32, 124, 6, 201, 194, 104, 241, 62, 174, 246, 65, 111, 49, 52, 210, 118, 212, 124, 34, 88, 167, 112, 84, 88, 83, 65, 155, 18, 234, 250, 224, 101, 147, 221, 23, 104, 219, 170, 146, 215] Running the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm on the JWT Claim Segment with this key yields the following byte array: [223, 155, 172, 90, 63, 87, 240, 124, 6, 75, 224, 131, 115, 29, 73, 63, 99, 102, 169, 202, 203, 193, 158, 4, 42, 159, 44, 53, 56, 95, 221, 198] Base64url encoding the above HMAC output yields the JWT Crypto Segment value: 35usWj9X8HwGS-CDcx1JP2NmqcrLwZ4EKp8sNThf3cY Combining these segments in the order Envelope.Claims.Signature with period characters between the segments yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only): eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9 . eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ . 35usWj9X8HwGS-CDcx1JP2NmqcrLwZ4EKp8sNThf3cY Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 22] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 13.1.2. Decoding Decoding the JWT first requires removing the base64url encoding from the JWT Envelope Segment and the JWT Claim Segment. We base64url decode the segments per Section 7 and turn them into the corresponding UTF-8 byte arrays, which we then translate into the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment and Decoded JWT Claim Segment strings. 13.1.3. Validating Next we validate the decoded results. Since the "alg" parameter in the envelope is "HS256", we validate the HMAC SHA-256 signature contained in the JWT Crypto Segment. If any of the validation steps fail, the token MUST be rejected. First, we validate that the decoded envelope and claim segment strings are both legal JSON. To validate the signature, we repeat the previous process of using the correct key and the JWT Claim Segment as input to a SHA-256 HMAC function and then taking the output, base64url encoding it, and determining if it matches the JWT Crypto Segment in the JWT. If it matches exactly, the token has been validated. 13.2. JWT using RSA SHA-256 13.2.1. Encoding The Decoded JWT Claim Segment used in this example is the same as in the previous example: {"iss":"joe", "exp":1300819380, "http://example.com/is_root":true} Since the JWT Claim Segment will therefore be the same, its computation is not repeated here. However, the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment is different in two ways: First, because a different algorithm is being used, the "alg" value is different. Second, for illustration purposes only, the optional "typ" parameter is not used. (This difference is not related to the signature algorithm employed.) The Decoded JWT Envelope Segment used is: {"alg":"RS256"} The following byte array contains the UTF-8 characters for the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment: [123, 34, 97, 108, 103, 34, 58, 34, 82, 83, 50, 53, 54, 34, 125] Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 23] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Base64url encoding this UTF-8 representation yields this JWT Envelope Segment value: eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiJ9 The RSA key consists of a public part (n, e), and a private exponent d. The values of the RSA key used in this example, presented as the byte arrays representing big endian integers are: +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ | Parameter | Value | | Name | | +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ | n | [210, 252, 123, 106, 10, 30, 108, 103, 16, 74, 235, | | | 143, 136, 178, 87, 102, 155, 77, 246, 121, 221, 173, | | | 9, 155, 92, 74, 108, 217, 168, 128, 21, 181, 161, 51, | | | 191, 11, 133, 108, 120, 113, 182, 223, 0, 11, 85, 79, | | | 206, 179, 194, 237, 81, 43, 182, 143, 20, 92, 110, | | | 132, 52, 117, 47, 171, 82, 161, 207, 193, 36, 64, | | | 143, 121, 181, 138, 69, 120, 193, 100, 40, 133, 87, | | | 137, 247, 162, 73, 227, 132, 203, 45, 159, 174, 45, | | | 103, 253, 150, 251, 146, 108, 25, 142, 7, 115, 153, | | | 253, 200, 21, 192, 175, 9, 125, 222, 90, 173, 239, | | | 244, 77, 231, 14, 130, 127, 72, 120, 67, 36, 57, 191, | | | 238, 185, 96, 104, 208, 71, 79, 197, 13, 109, 144, | | | 191, 58, 152, 223, 175, 16, 64, 200, 156, 2, 214, | | | 146, 171, 59, 60, 40, 150, 96, 157, 134, 253, 115, | | | 183, 116, 206, 7, 64, 100, 124, 238, 234, 163, 16, | | | 189, 18, 249, 133, 168, 235, 159, 89, 253, 212, 38, | | | 206, 165, 178, 18, 15, 79, 42, 52, 188, 171, 118, 75, | | | 126, 108, 84, 214, 132, 2, 56, 188, 196, 5, 135, 165, | | | 158, 102, 237, 31, 51, 137, 69, 119, 99, 92, 71, 10, | | | 247, 92, 249, 44, 32, 209, 218, 67, 225, 191, 196, | | | 25, 226, 34, 166, 240, 208, 187, 53, 140, 94, 56, | | | 249, 203, 5, 10, 234, 254, 144, 72, 20, 241, 172, 26, | | | 164, 156, 202, 158, 160, 202, 131] | | e | [1, 0, 1] | Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 24] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 | d | [95, 135, 19, 181, 226, 88, 254, 9, 248, 21, 131, | | | 236, 92, 31, 43, 117, 120, 177, 230, 252, 44, 131, | | | 81, 75, 55, 145, 55, 17, 161, 186, 68, 154, 21, 31, | | | 225, 203, 44, 160, 253, 51, 183, 113, 230, 138, 59, | | | 25, 68, 100, 157, 200, 103, 173, 28, 30, 82, 64, 187, | | | 133, 62, 95, 36, 179, 52, 89, 177, 64, 40, 210, 214, | | | 99, 107, 239, 236, 30, 141, 169, 116, 179, 82, 252, | | | 83, 211, 246, 18, 126, 168, 163, 194, 157, 209, 79, | | | 57, 65, 104, 44, 86, 167, 135, 104, 22, 78, 77, 218, | | | 143, 6, 203, 249, 199, 52, 170, 232, 0, 50, 36, 39, | | | 142, 169, 69, 74, 33, 177, 124, 176, 109, 23, 128, | | | 117, 134, 140, 192, 91, 61, 182, 255, 29, 253, 195, | | | 213, 99, 120, 180, 237, 173, 237, 240, 195, 122, 76, | | | 220, 38, 209, 212, 154, 194, 111, 111, 227, 181, 34, | | | 10, 93, 210, 147, 150, 98, 27, 188, 104, 140, 242, | | | 238, 226, 198, 224, 213, 77, 163, 199, 130, 1, 76, | | | 208, 115, 157, 178, 82, 204, 81, 202, 235, 168, 211, | | | 241, 184, 36, 186, 171, 36, 208, 104, 236, 144, 50, | | | 100, 215, 214, 120, 171, 8, 240, 110, 201, 231, 226, | | | 61, 150, 6, 40, 183, 68, 191, 148, 179, 105, 70, 86, | | | 70, 60, 126, 65, 115, 153, 237, 115, 208, 118, 200, | | | 145, 252, 244, 99, 169, 170, 156, 230, 45, 169, 205, | | | 23, 226, 55, 220, 42, 128, 2, 241] | +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ The RSA private key (n, d) is then passed to the RSA signing function, which also takes the hash type, SHA-256, and the JWT Claim Segment as inputs. The result of the signature is a byte array S, which represents a big endian integer. In this example, S is: Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 25] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | Result | Value | | Name | | +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | S | [208, 141, 219, 44, 66, 129, 179, 230, 69, 120, 123, | | | 108, 203, 96, 182, 145, 66, 179, 198, 104, 43, 187, 199, | | | 159, 175, 5, 217, 101, 109, 236, 88, 136, 193, 133, 79, | | | 39, 162, 131, 58, 114, 133, 202, 171, 227, 135, 157, | | | 123, 188, 90, 111, 66, 241, 38, 238, 59, 18, 125, 146, | | | 129, 14, 54, 183, 10, 221, 33, 105, 37, 173, 119, 239, | | | 92, 27, 232, 175, 173, 49, 21, 28, 252, 237, 183, 107, | | | 98, 156, 113, 116, 162, 219, 53, 96, 44, 214, 175, 154, | | | 61, 100, 175, 90, 118, 247, 42, 196, 45, 74, 217, 145, | | | 92, 39, 123, 224, 247, 171, 206, 203, 91, 167, 103, 57, | | | 163, 87, 172, 67, 77, 255, 9, 218, 107, 62, 228, 71, | | | 239, 36, 246, 23, 96, 108, 28, 19, 179, 24, 167, 196, | | | 42, 97, 198, 80, 241, 79, 31, 0, 85, 17, 50, 6, 143, | | | 238, 214, 131, 246, 13, 49, 111, 30, 142, 182, 145, 200, | | | 17, 127, 76, 236, 69, 66, 133, 198, 137, 103, 45, 3, 48, | | | 123, 203, 17, 162, 1, 105, 133, 22, 105, 25, 63, 173, | | | 186, 231, 206, 246, 22, 243, 250, 53, 237, 209, 36, 111, | | | 168, 11, 40, 237, 179, 83, 125, 180, 84, 231, 129, 37, | | | 236, 172, 22, 234, 58, 198, 187, 124, 65, 145, 148, 227, | | | 122, 177, 16, 176, 84, 28, 1, 141, 179, 57, 96, 232, | | | 215, 51, 7, 49, 63, 195, 155, 94, 51, 22, 239, 90, 138, | | | 207, 41, 62] | +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ Base64url encoding the signature produces this value for the JWT Crypto Segment: 0I3bLEKBs-ZFeHtsy2C2kUKzxmgru8efrwXZZW3sWIjBhU8nooM6coXKq-OHnXu8Wm9C8SbuOxJ9koEONrcK3SFpJa1371wb6K-tMRUc_O23a2KccXSi2zVgLNavmj1kr1p29yrELUrZkVwne-D3q87LW6dnOaNXrENN_wnaaz7kR-8k9hdgbBwTsxinxCphxlDxTx8AVREyBo_u1oP2DTFvHo62kcgRf0zsRUKFxolnLQMwe8sRogFphRZpGT-tuufO9hbz-jXt0SRvqAso7bNTfbRU54El7KwW6jrGu3xBkZTjerEQsFQcAY2zOWDo1zMHMT_Dm14zFu9ais8pPg Combining these segments in the order Envelope.Claims.Signature with period characters between the segments yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only): eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiJ9 . eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ . 0I3bLEKBs-ZFeHtsy2C2kUKzxmgru8efrwXZZW3sWIjBhU8nooM6coXKq-OHnXu8Wm9C8SbuOxJ9koEONrcK3SFpJa1371wb6K-tMRUc_O23a2KccXSi2zVgLNavmj1kr1p29yrELUrZkVwne-D3q87LW6dnOaNXrENN_wnaaz7kR-8k9hdgbBwTsxinxCphxlDxTx8AVREyBo_u1oP2DTFvHo62kcgRf0zsRUKFxolnLQMwe8sRogFphRZpGT-tuufO9hbz-jXt0SRvqAso7bNTfbRU54El7KwW6jrGu3xBkZTjerEQsFQcAY2zOWDo1zMHMT_Dm14zFu9ais8pPg 13.2.2. Decoding Decoding the JWT from this example requires processing the JWT Envelope Segment and Claim Segment exactly as done in the first example. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 26] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 13.2.3. Validating Since the "alg" parameter in the envelope is "RS256", we validate the RSA SHA-256 signature contained in the JWT Crypto Segment. If any of the validation steps fail, the token MUST be rejected. First, we validate that the decoded envelope and claim segment strings are both legal JSON. Validating the JWT Crypto Segment is a little different from the previous example. First, we base64url decode the JWT Crypto Segment to produce a signature S to check. We then pass (n, e), S and the JWT Claim Segment to an RSA signature verifier that has been configured to use the SHA-256 hash function. 13.3. JWT using ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 13.3.1. Encoding The Decoded JWT Claim Segment used in this example is the same as in the previous examples: {"iss":"joe", "exp":1300819380, "http://example.com/is_root":true} Since the JWT Claim Segment will therefore be the same, its computation is not repeated here. However, the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment is differs from the previous example because a different algorithm is being used. The Decoded JWT Envelope Segment used is: {"alg":"ES256"} The following byte array contains the UTF-8 characters for the Decoded JWT Envelope Segment: [123, 34, 97, 108, 103, 34, 58, 34, 69, 83, 50, 53, 54, 34, 125] Base64url encoding this UTF-8 representation yields this JWT Envelope Segment value: eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiJ9 The ECDSA key consists of a public part, the EC point (x, y), and a private part d. The values of the ECDSA key used in this example, presented as the byte arrays representing big endian integers are: Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 27] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ | Parameter | Value | | Name | | +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ | x | [48, 160, 66, 76, 210, 28, 41, 68, 131, 138, 45, 117, | | | 201, 43, 55, 231, 110, 162, 13, 159, 0, 137, 58, 59, | | | 78, 238, 138, 60, 10, 175, 236, 62] | | y | [224, 75, 101, 233, 36, 86, 217, 136, 139, 82, 179, | | | 121, 189, 251, 213, 30, 232, 105, 239, 31, 15, 198, | | | 91, 102, 89, 105, 91, 108, 206, 8, 23, 35] | | d | [243, 189, 12, 7, 168, 31, 185, 50, 120, 30, 213, 39, | | | 82, 246, 12, 200, 154, 107, 229, 229, 25, 52, 254, 1, | | | 147, 141, 219, 85, 216, 247, 120, 1] | +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+ The ECDSA private part d is then passed to an ECDSA signing function, which also takes the curve type, P-256, the hash type, SHA-256, and the JWT Claim Segment as inputs. The result of the signature is the EC point (R, S), where R and S are unsigned integers. In this example, the R and S values, given as byte arrays representing big endian integers are: +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | Result | Value | | Name | | +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | R | [175, 11, 115, 42, 160, 182, 181, 28, 135, 222, 52, 154, | | | 182, 237, 206, 137, 82, 20, 243, 7, 12, 164, 107, 72, | | | 236, 187, 241, 190, 26, 76, 32, 181] | | S | [120, 23, 189, 205, 202, 13, 177, 187, 23, 47, 12, 227, | | | 237, 250, 230, 233, 245, 216, 9, 170, 24, 185, 198, 187, | | | 193, 94, 158, 117, 167, 88, 153, 196] | +--------+----------------------------------------------------------+ Concatenating the S array to the end of the R array and base64url encoding the result produces this value for the JWT Crypto Segment: rwtzKqC2tRyH3jSatu3OiVIU8wcMpGtI7LvxvhpMILV4F73Nyg2xuxcvDOPt-ubp9dgJqhi5xrvBXp51p1iZxA Combining these segments in the order Envelope.Claims.Signature with period characters between the segments yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only): eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiJ9 . eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ . rwtzKqC2tRyH3jSatu3OiVIU8wcMpGtI7LvxvhpMILV4F73Nyg2xuxcvDOPt-ubp9dgJqhi5xrvBXp51p1iZxA Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 28] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 13.3.2. Decoding Decoding the JWT from this example requires processing the JWT Envelope Segment and Claim Segment exactly as done in the first example. 13.3.3. Validating Since the "alg" parameter in the envelope is "ES256", we validate the ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 signature contained in the JWT Crypto Segment. If any of the validation steps fail, the token MUST be rejected. First, we validate that the decoded envelope and claim segment strings are both legal JSON. Validating the JWT Crypto Segment is a little different from the first example. First, we base64url decode the JWT Crypto Segment as in the previous examples but we then need to split the 64 member byte array that must result into two 32 byte arrays, the first R and the second S. We then pass (x, y), (R, S) and the JWT Claim Segment to an ECDSA signature verifier that has been configured to use the P-256 curve with the SHA-256 hash function. As explained in Section 8.3, the use of the k value in ECDSA means that we cannot validate the correctness of the signature in the same way we validated the correctness of the HMAC. Instead, implementations MUST use an ECDSA validator to validate the signature. 14. Appendix - Non-Normative - Notes on implementing base64url encoding without padding This appendix describes how to implement base64url encoding and decoding functions without padding based upon standard base64 encoding and decoding functions that do use padding. To be concrete, example C# code implementing these functions is shown below. Similar code could be used in other languages. Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 29] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 static string base64urlencode(byte [] arg) { string s = Convert.ToBase64String(arg); // Standard base64 encoder s = s.Split('=')[0]; // Remove any trailing '='s s = s.Replace('+', '-'); // 62nd char of encoding s = s.Replace('/', '_'); // 63rd char of encoding return s; } static byte [] base64urldecode(string arg) { string s = arg; s = s.Replace('-', '+'); // 62nd char of encoding s = s.Replace('_', '/'); // 63rd char of encoding switch (s.Length % 4) // Pad with trailing '='s { case 0: break; // No pad chars in this case case 2: s += "=="; break; // Two pad chars case 3: s += "="; break; // One pad char default: throw new System.Exception( "Illegal base64url string!"); } return Convert.FromBase64String(s); // Standard base64 decoder } As per the example code above, the number of '=' padding characters that needs to be added to the end of a base64url encoded string without padding to turn it into one with padding is a deterministic function of the length of the encoded string. Specifically, if the length mod 4 is 0, no padding is added; if the length mod 4 is 2, two '=' padding characters are added; if the length mod 4 is 3, one '=' padding character is added; if the length mod 4 is 1, the input is malformed. An example correspondence between unencoded and encoded values follows. The byte sequence below encodes into the string below, which when decoded, reproduces the byte sequence. 3 236 255 224 193 A-z_4ME 15. Appendix - Non-Normative - Relationship of JWTs to SAML Tokens SAML 2.0 [OASIS.saml-core-2.0-os] provides a standard for creating tokens with much greater expressivity and more security options than supported by JWTs. However, the cost of this flexibility and expressiveness is both size and complexity. In addition, SAML's use of XML [W3C.CR-xml11-20021015] and XML DSIG [RFC3275] only Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 30] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 contributes to the size of SAML tokens. JWTs are intended to provide a simple token format that is small enough to fit into HTTP headers and query arguments in URIs. It does this by supporting a much simpler token model than SAML and using the JSON [RFC4627] object encoding syntax. It also supports securing tokens using Hash-based Message Authentication Codes (HMACs) and digital signatures using a smaller (and less flexible) format than XML DSIG. Therefore, while JWTs can do some of the things SAML tokens do, JWTs are not intended as a full replacement for SAML tokens, but rather as a compromise token format to be used when space is at a premium. 16. Appendix - Non-Normative - Relationship of JWTs to Simple Web Tokens (SWTs) Both JWTs and Simple Web Tokens SWT [SWT], at their core, enable sets of claims to be communicated between applications. For SWTs, both the claim names and claim values are strings. For JWTs, while claim names are strings, claim values can be any JSON type. Both token types offer cryptographic protection of their content: SWTs with HMAC SHA-256 and JWTs with a choice of algorithms, including HMAC SHA-256, RSA SHA-256, and ECDSA P-256 SHA-256. 17. References 17.1. Normative References [FIPS.180-3] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Secure Hash Standard (SHS)", FIPS PUB 180-3, October 2008. [FIPS.186-3] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Digital Signature Standard (DSS)", FIPS PUB 186-3, June 2009. [RFC2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996. [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed- Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, February 1997. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 31] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC3339] Klyne, G., Ed. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps", RFC 3339, July 2002. [RFC3447] Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.1", RFC 3447, February 2003. [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003. [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005. [RFC4627] Crockford, D., "The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)", RFC 4627, July 2006. [RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 4648, October 2006. [RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008. [USA15] Davis, M., Whistler, K., and M. Duerst, "Unicode Normalization Forms", Unicode Standard Annex 15, 09 2009. 17.2. Informative References [CanvasApp] Facebook, "Canvas Applications", 2010. [JSS] Bradley, J. and N. Sakimura (editor), "JSON Simple Sign", September 2010. [MagicSignatures] Panzer (editor), J., Laurie, B., and D. Balfanz, "Magic Signatures", August 2010. [OASIS.saml-core-2.0-os] Cantor, S., Kemp, J., Philpott, R., and E. Maler, "Assertions and Protocol for the OASIS Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) V2.0", OASIS Standard saml-core- 2.0-os, March 2005. [RFC3275] Eastlake, D., Reagle, J., and D. Solo, "(Extensible Markup Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 32] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Language) XML-Signature Syntax and Processing", RFC 3275, March 2002. [RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122, July 2005. [SWT] Hardt, D. and Y. Goland, "Simple Web Token (SWT)", Version 0.9.5.1, November 2009. [W3C.CR-xml11-20021015] Cowan, J., "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1", W3C CR CR-xml11-20021015, October 2002. Authors' Addresses Michael B. Jones Microsoft Email: mbj@microsoft.com URI: http://self-issued.info/ Dirk Balfanz Google Email: balfanz@google.com John Bradley independent Email: ve7jtb@ve7jtb.com Yaron Y. Goland Microsoft Email: yarong@microsoft.com John Panzer Google Email: jpanzer@google.com Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 33] Internet-Draft JSON Web Token (JWT) December 2010 Nat Sakimura Nomura Research Institute Email: n-sakimura@nri.co.jp Jones, et al. Expires July 1, 2011 [Page 34]