| Internet-Draft | Extensions to TLS FATT Process | March 2026 |
| Sardar | Expires 3 September 2026 | [Page] |
This document applies only to non-trivial extensions of TLS, which require formal analysis. It proposes the authors provide a threat model and informal security goals in the Security Considerations section, as well as motivation and a protocol diagram in the draft. We also briefly present a few pain points of the team doing the formal analysis which -- we believe -- require refining the process:¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
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While the TLS FATT process [TLS-FATT] marks a historic change in achieving high cryptographic assurances by tightly integrating formal methods in the working group (WG) process, the current FATT process has some practical limitations. Given a relatively smaller formal methods community, and a steep learning curve as well as very low consideration of usability in the existing formal analysis tools, this document proposes some solutions to make the FATT process sustainable.¶
Specifically, the TLS FATT process does not outline the division of responsibility between the authors and the team doing the formal analysis (the latter is hereafter referred to as the "Verifier"). This document aims to propose some solutions without putting an extensive burden on either party.¶
An argument is often presented by the authors that an Internet-Draft is written for the implementers. We make several counter-arguments here:¶
Researchers and protocol designers are also stakeholders of such specifications [I-D.irtf-cfrg-cryptography-specification].¶
Even implementers may like to understand the security implications before blindly starting to implement it.¶
With the FATT process, this argument is clearly invalid. The Verifier may not be the same as the implementer.¶
This document outlines the corresponding changes in the way Internet-Drafts are typically written. For the Internet-Draft to be useful for the formal analysis, this document proposes that the draft should contain four main items, namely:¶
motivation,¶
a threat model,¶
informal security goals, and¶
a protocol diagram (Section 2.1).¶
Each one of these is summarized in Section 4. Future versions of this draft will include concrete examples.¶
Responsibilities of the Verifier are summarized in Section 6.¶
A clear separation of responsibilities would help IRTF UFMRG to train the authors and verifiers separately to fulfill their own responsibilities.¶
Moreover, we believe that the experiences can help improve the FATT process.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
In the context of this document, a Protocol Diagram specifies the proposed cryptographically-relevant changes compared to the standard TLS protocol [I-D.ietf-tls-rfc8446bis]. This is conceptually similar to the Protocol Model in [RFC4101]. However, while [RFC4101] only recommends diagrams, we consider diagrams to be essential.¶
In this document, the Verifier refers to the person (team) doing the formal analysis.¶
Any ambiguity originating from the threat model, informal security goals, and a Protocol Diagram is to be considered as an attack. The authors are, therefore, encouraged to be as precise as possible. The Verifier may propose text for consideration by authors/WG to disambiguate or propose a fix to the attack.¶
From the two extremes -- [I-D.ietf-tls-8773bis] where Russ kindly provided all requested inputs and we were able to get it through (with a small change) without any formal analysis to [I-D.fossati-tls-attestation-08] where formal analysis revealed vulnerabilities [ID-Crisis] and resulted in a separate WG to tackle this problem -- we summarize the pain points of the Verifier with the hope that we can refine the process.¶
Note that we are not at all asserting that the authors have no pain points. They very likely have their own -- that is another indication that the process needs a refinement.¶
The process [TLS-FATT] states:¶
When a document is adopted by the working group the chairs will make a determination whether the change proposed by the document requires review by the FATT to determine if formal protocol analysis is necessary for the change. For example a proposal that modifies the TLS key schedule or the authentication process or any other part of the cryptographic protocol that has been formally modeled and analyzed in the past would likely result in asking the FATT, whereas a change such as modifying the SSLKEYLOG format would not. The working group chairs will inform the working group of this decision.¶
However, such information has not been provided to the WG for at least the following 2 documents:¶
For the draft [I-D.ietf-tls-mlkem], the chairs acknowledge that the process was not followed:¶
Unfortunately, the chairs did not announce this decision on the list (this is something that should be corrected in the process).¶
However:¶
It remains unclear what exactly "corrected in the process" entails.¶
The chairs made this decision because the mechanism in this draft fits into a well defined place in the TLS protocol and does not change the protocol itself.¶
We believe this argument does not stand, given the single data point that has gone through the FATT process -- [RFC8773bis]. Both of the mentioned conditions apply equally to [RFC8773bis] which indeed went through FATT process. The mechanism defined in [RFC8773bis] "fits into a well defined place in the TLS protocol" and "did not change the protocol itself". So we request clarification of the matter in comparison to [RFC8773bis].¶
We believe the security considerations of {{I-D.ietf-tls-mlkem}} are
insufficient. We also believe FATT review could have significantly
improved it, including but not limited to the key reuse ambiguity.
We have provided significant feedback during the two WGLCs. However,
almost none of that is actually reflected in the updated editor's
version.
¶
The process [TLS-FATT] states:¶
The output of the FATT is posted to the working group by the FATT point person.¶
Based on authors' email, while it is great that FATT could find some threat, in our observation, the FATT process does not seem to be followed in spirit.¶
The FATT process restricts the Verifier from contacting the FATT directly. We argue that the Verifier should be allowed to contact the FATT (at least the FATT person for a specific draft) because of the following reasons:¶
Formal methods community is small and within this small community, those with deep knowledge of TLS are quite limited.¶
Such a restriction would not have been there if the Verifier were not a member of the TLS WG and analyzing the same draft and free to contact the same FATT for advice. Being a member of the TLS WG actually puts the Verifier at unnecessary disadvantage.¶
The authors need to understand that the task of the Verifier is to find the subtle corner cases where the protocol may fail. This is naturally opposed to the goal of the authors -- that is, to convince the WG that the protocol is good enough to be adopted/published.¶
Unless the Verifier remains really focused on checking subtleties, there is little value of formal analysis.¶
In particular, some topics like remote attestation need more precise specifications because small changes or ambiguites may make a big difference.¶
Formal analysis -- just like any other code development -- is an iterative process and needs to be progressively discussed with the WG (and not just authors!) to be able to propose secure solutions.¶
So at least some time should be allocated in the meetings for discussion of formal analysis.¶
We requested a slot for 10 minutes (and 5 minutes if tight on schedule) for discussion of our questions about [I-D.ietf-tls-extended-key-update] at IETF 124. It seemed that the slots were spread over the meeting time to show that there is no time left for our topic. In the end, the meeting ended one hour earlier where 10 minutes from that could have been utilized for discussion on formal analysis of [I-D.ietf-tls-extended-key-update]. Given that the authors were informed [FormalAnalysisKeyUpdate] about the issues, what the authors presented was not very helpful in terms of progressing the formal analysis work and proposing some solutions. Key schedule is a subtle topic and not something we can talk effectively on the mic without a proper diagram on display. It is unclear why formal analysis is such a low priority to the chairs.¶
If the authors are doing the formal analysis themselves, they should also present the current state of formal analysis for discussion. This will help the Verifier give any feedback and avoid any repititive effort.¶
While the needs may differ for some drafts, we propose the following baseline template, with an example of [I-D.wang-tls-service-affinity]:¶
TODO: Currently it is almost a copy of the guidance email to the authors. We will add details in next version.¶
Problem statement: Say in general what the problem is.¶
For [I-D.wang-tls-service-affinity], we believe this should not include CATS. Anyone unfamiliar with CATS should be able to understand your problem.¶
Define any terms not defined in RFC8446bis or point to other drafts from where the definition is used.¶
We really like how Russ motivates the problem statement in [I-D.ietf-tls-8773bis]. Use it as a sample.¶
Here authors should address all the concerns from WG, including justification with compelling arguments and authentic references why authors think it should be done within TLS WG (and within handshake).¶
For [I-D.wang-tls-service-affinity], authors could put CATS here as a motivational use case.¶
Protocol design with Protocol Diagram: we work on the formal analysis of TLS 1.3 exclusively. Please contact someone else if your draft relates to older versions.¶
As draft proceeds these desired security goals will become what the draft actually achieves.¶
When the authors declare the version as ready for formal analysis, the Verifier takes the above inputs, performs the formal analysis, and brings the results back to the authors and the WG. Based on the analysis, the verifier may propose updates to the Security Considerations section or other sections of the Internet-Draft.¶
The whole document is about improving security considerations.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
-02¶
-01¶
Pain points of Verifier Section 2.1¶
Small adjustment of phrasing¶