Hi Kathleen, Ekr and Tony, 

 

Thank you so much for your fast feedback. 

I did google a bit before asking, but didn’t dig deep enough into the document 
to find the right one. 

Your answers were most helpful. 

And I will dig more into the RFC link from Kathleen and the github link from 
Tony. 

 

Thanks a lot!

 

Tobias

 

 

From: Kathleen Moriarty <kathleen.moriarty.i...@gmail.com> 
Sent: Monday, April 16, 2018 9:20 PM
To: Eric Rescorla <e...@rtfm.com>
Cc: Tobias Gondrom <tobias.gond...@gondrom.org>; <tls@ietf.org> <tls@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [TLS] question about verification of client side certificate for 
TLS session for mutual authentication

 

Hi Tobias,

 

If you use search terms that include pkix, authorization, access control, and 
attribute certificate profile, you’ll find a few documents.  This one should be 
helpful based on your description:

 

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5755

 

Best regards,

Kathleen 

Sent from my mobile device


On Apr 16, 2018, at 4:55 AM, Eric Rescorla <e...@rtfm.com 
<mailto:e...@rtfm.com> > wrote:

I am not aware of anywhere this is documented, primarily because it's so 
application-specifiic.

 

-Ekr

 

 

On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 2:56 AM, Tobias Gondrom <tobias.gond...@gondrom.org 
<mailto:tobias.gond...@gondrom.org> > wrote:

Hi dear TLS experts, 

 

Apologies for my stupid question for advise: 

I am currently working on some design requirements for mutual authentication 
and have a question regarding verification of client certificate. 

 

In many web scenarios the simple use is server authentication by certificate 
and verification of client id by username & password or by a simple 
verification of client certificate. 

 

Are there any RFCs that speak (beyond the general verification of the 
certificate in mutual TLS authentication) to the need to also verify the CN 
inside the client certificate against an additional whitelist _before_ 
establishing a TLS connection. 

 

For example in this scenario: 

A client with a valid certificate may be allowed to connect to application 1, 
but would not be allowed to connect to application 2. (for sake of separation 
application 1 and 2 are on separate servers (application 1 on server 1 and 
application 2 on server 2).) 

 

>From my current understanding, I would establish the TLS connection in both 
>cases, do mutual authentication and then let application 2 reject access based 
>on that the user is not allowed to access it. There is a question whether this 
>would expose to a risk that server resources could be exhausted by allowing to 
>establish the TLS connection before failing, but this does not seem too bad to 
>me. But maybe I am missing something…

 

Are there any informational (or standard) RFCs for TLS that speak about this 
risk and best practices to address it?  

(e.g. using additional whitelist checks of parameters inside the client 
certificate for access control checks already during phase of establishing the 
TLS connection)

 

Thank you and sorry for bothering, Tobias

 


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