Internet-Draft | Txn-Tokens | August 2023 |
Tulshibagwale, et al. | Expires 3 March 2024 | [Page] |
Transaction Tokens (Txn-Tokens) enable workloads in a trusted domain to ensure that user identity and authorization context of an external programmatic request, such as an API invocation, are preserved and available to all workloads that are invoked as part of processing such a request. Txn-Tokens also enable workloads within the trusted domain to optionally immutably assert to downstream workloads that they were invoked in the call chain of the request.¶
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Modern computing architectures often use multiple independently running components called workloads. In many cases, external invocations through externally visible interfaces such as APIs result in a number of internal workloads being invoked in order to process the external invocation. These workloads often run in virtually or physically isolated networks. These networks and the workloads running within their perimeter may be compromised by attackers through software supply chain, privileged user compromise or other attacks. Workloads compromised through external attacks, malicious insiders or software errors can cause any or all of the following unauthorized actions:¶
The results of these actions are unauthorised access to resources.¶
Transaction Tokens (Txn-Token) are a means to mitigate damage from such attacks or spurious invocations. A valid Txn-Token indicates a valid external invocation. They ensure that the identity of the user or a workload that made the external request is preserved throughout subsequent workload invocations. They preserve any context such as:¶
Cryptographically protected Txn-Tokens ensure that downstream workloads cannot make unauthorized modifications to such information, and cannot make spurious calls without the presence of an external trigger.¶
Txn-Tokens are short-lived, signed JWTs [RFC7519] that assert the identity of a user or a workload and assert an authorization context. The authorization context provides information expected to remain constant during the execution of a call as it passes through multiple workloads.¶
When necessary, a Txn-Token may include embedded tokens, as described in [JWTEmbeddedTokens]. This is called a Nested Txn-Token. This nesting enables workloads in a call chain to assert their invocation during the call chain to downstream workloads.¶
Txn-Tokens are typically created when a workload is invoked using an endpoint that is externally visible, and is authorized using a separate mechanism, such as an OAuth [RFC6749] access token or an OpenID Connect [OpenIdConnect] ID token. We call this token a "Leaf Txn-Token". This workload then performs an OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange [RFC8693] to obtain a Txn-Token. To do this, it invokes a special Token Service (the Txn-Token Service) and provides context that is sufficient for it to generate a Txn-Token. This context MAY include:¶
The Txn-Token Service responds to a successful invocation by generating a Txn-Token. The calling workload then uses the Txn-Token to authorize its calls to subsequent workloads. Subsequent workloads may obtain Txn-Tokens of their own.¶
A Nested Txn-Token is a means for a workloads to record their processing of a Txn-Token and for downstream workloads to verify that a certain upstream workload has been invoked in the call chain.¶
A workload within the call chain of such an external call MAY generate a new Nested Txn-Token. To generate the Nested Txn-Token, it creates a self-signed JWT Embedded Token [JWTEmbeddedTokens] that includes the received Txn-Token by value. Subsequent workloads can therefore know that the signing workload was in the path of the call chain.¶
A service within a call chain may choose to replace the Txn-Token. This can typically happen due to the following reasons:¶
To get a replacement Txn-Token, a service will request a new Txn-Token from the Txn-Token Service and provide the current Txn-Token and other parameters in the request. The Txn-Token service must exercise caution in what kinds of replacement requests it supports so as to not negate the entire value of Txn-Tokens.¶
Txn-Tokens are expected to be short-lived (order of minutes, e.g., 5 minutes), and as a result MAY be used only for the expected duration of an external invocation. If a long-running process such as an batch or offline task is involved, it can use a separate mechanism to perform the external invocation, but the resulting Txn-Token is still short-lived.¶
Txn-Tokens help prevent spurious invocations by ensuring that a workload receiving an invocation can independently verify the user or workload on whose behalf an external call was made and any context relevant to the processing of the call. Through the presence of additional signatures on the Txn-Token, a workload receiving an invocation can also independently verify that specific workloads were within the path of the call before it was invoked.¶
Figure 1 shows the basic flow of how Txn-Tokens are used in an a multi-workload environment.¶
Figure 2 shows an internal microservice generating a Nested Txn-Token in the flow¶
In the diagram above, steps 1-5 are the same as in Section 2.5.1.¶
An intermediate service may decide to obtain a replacement Txn-Token from the Txn-Token service. That flow is described below in Figure 3¶
In the diagram above, steps 1-5 are the same as in Section 2.5.1¶
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.¶
An independent computational unit that can autonomously receive and process invocations, and can generate invocations of other workloads. Examples of workloads include containerized microservices, monolithic services and infrastructure services such as managed databases.¶
A virtually or physically separated network, which contains two or more workloads. The workloads within an Trust Domain may be invoked only through published interfaces. A Trust Domain must have an identifier that is used as the aud
(audience) value in Txn-Tokens. The format of this identifier is a universal resource identifier. Each Trust Domain has exactly one Txn-Token Service.¶
A published interface to an Trust Domain that results in the invocation of a workload within the Trust Domain.¶
A sequence of invocations that results from the invocation of an external endpoint.¶
A signed JWT that has a short lifetime, which provides immutable information about the user or workload, certain parameters of the call and certain contextual attributes of the call. A Txn-Token may contain a nested Txn-Token.¶
A Txn-Token that does not contain a txn_token
claim in its JWT body.¶
A JWT Embedded Token [JWTEmbeddedTokens] that embeds a Txn-Token by value.¶
A JSON object containing a set of claims that represent the immutable context of a call chain.¶
A special service within the Trust Domain, which issues Txn-Tokens to requesting workloads. Each Trust Domain has exactly one Txn-Token Service.¶
A Txn-Token is a JSON Web Token [RFC7519] protected by a JSON Web Signature [RFC7515]. The following describes the required values in a Txn-Token:¶
In the JWT Header:¶
typ
claim MUST be present and MUST have the value txn_token
.¶
kid
claim.¶
Figure 4 is a non-normative example of the JWT Header of a Txn-Token¶
The JWT body MUST have the following claims regardless of whether the Txn-Token is a Leaf Txn-Token or a Nested Txn-Token:¶
iss
claim, whose value is a URN [RFC8141] that uniquely identifies the workload or the Txn-Token Service that created the Txn-Token.¶
iat
claim, whose value is the time at which the Txn-Token was created.¶
exp
claim, whose value is the time at which the Txn-Token expires. Note that if this claim is in a Nested Txn-Token, then this exp
value MUST NOT exceed the exp
value of the Txn-Token included in the JWT Body.¶
The following claims MUST be present in the JWT body of a Leaf Txn-Token:¶
tid
claim, whose value is the unique identifier of entire call chain.¶
sub_id
claim, whose value is the unique identifier of the user or workload on whose behalf the call chain is being executed. The format of this claim MAY be a Subject Identifier as specified in [SubjectIdentifiers].¶
azc
claim, whose value is a JSON object that contains values that remain constant in the call chain.¶
Figure 5 shows a non-normative example of the JWT body of a Leaf Txn-Token:¶
A Nested Txn-Token is a JWT Embedded Token [JWTEmbeddedTokens], which embeds a Txn-Token by value. The following claims MUST be present in a Nested Txn-Token:¶
type
claim, whose value is urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:txn_token
.¶
token
claim, whose value is an encoded JWT representation of a Txn-Token.¶
Figure 6 shows a non-normative example the JWT body of a nested Txn-Token¶
A Txn-Token Service provides a OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange [RFC8693] endpoint that can respond to Txn-Token issuance requests. The token exchange requests it supports require extra parameters than those defined in the OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange [RFC8693] specification. The unique properties of the Txn-Token requests and responses are described below. The Txn-Token Service MAY optionally support other OAuth 2.0 endpoints and features, but that is not a requirement for it to be a Txn-Token Service.¶
Each Trust Domain MUST have exactly one Txn-Token Service.¶
A workload requests a Txn-Token from a Transaction Token Service using OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange [RFC8693]. The request to obtain a Txn-Token using this method is called a Txn-Token Request, and a successful response is called a Txn-Token Response. A Txn-Token Request is a Token Exchange Request, as described in Section 2.1 of [RFC8693] with additional parameters. A Txn-Token Response is a OAuth 2.0 token endpoint response, as described in Section 5 of [RFC6749], where the token_type
in the response has the value txn_token
.¶
A Txn-Token Request is an OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange Request, as described in Section 2.1 of [RFC8693], with an additional parameter in the request. The following parameters are required in the Txn-Token Request by the OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange specification [RFC8693]:¶
audience
value MUST be set to the Trust Domain name¶
requested_token_type
value MUST be urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:txn_token
¶
subject_token
value MUST be the external token received by the workload that authorized the call¶
subject_token_type
value MUST be present and indicate the type of the authorization token present in the subject_token
parameter¶
The following additional parameter MUST be present in a Txn-Token Request:¶
rctx
, whose value is a JSON object. This object contains the request context, i.e. any information the Transaction Token Service needs to understand the context of the incoming request¶
Figure 7 shows a non-normative example of a Txn-Token Request.¶
A successful response to a Txn-Token Request by a Transaction Token Service is called a Txn-Token Response. If the Transaction Token Service responds with an error, the error response is as described in Section 5.2 of [RFC6749]. The following describes required values of a Txn-Token Response:¶
token_type
value MUST be set to txn_token
¶
access_token
value MUST be the Txn-Token¶
expires_in
, refresh_token
and scope
¶
Figure 8 shows a non-normative example of a Txn-Token Response.¶
A workload within a call chain may request the Transaction Token Server to replace a Txn-Token. Replacement Txn-Tokens are Leaf Txn-Tokens.¶
Workloads MAY request replacement Txn-Tokens in order to change (add to, remove or modify) the asserted values within a Txn-Token, to remove nesting and / or reduce token bloat.¶
A Txn-Token Service replacing a Txn-Token must consider that modifying previously asserted values from existing Txn-Tokens can completely negate the benefits of Txn-Tokens. When issuing replacement Txn-Tokens, a Transaction Token Server therefore:¶
To request a replacement Txn-Token, the requester makes a Txn-Token Request as described in Section 7.1 but includes the Txn-Token to be replaced as the value of the subject_token
parameter.¶
A successful response by the Transaction Token Server to a Replacement Txn-Token Request is a Txn-Token Response as described in Section 7.2¶
A Replacement Txn-Token Request MAY include a Nested Txn-Token in its request. If the request is successful, the Transaction Token Server SHALL always respond with a Leaf Txn-Token.¶
If the Replacement Txn-Token Request has a Nested Txn-Token in the request's subject_token
parameter, then the Transaction Token Server MAY include information about services that had signed the Nested Txn-Token that is requested to be replaced.¶
If the Transaction Token Server wishes to include information about any nested Txn-Token signers, then it SHALL include a field named previous_signers
in the azc
value of the Txn-Token that it issues. The value of this field MUST be an array of strings. Each string is the value of the iss
field of a Nested Txn-Tokens received in the Replacement Txn-Token Request. Note that:¶
A Txn-Token Service MUST ensure that it authenticates any workloads requesting Txn-Tokens. In order to do so:¶
The requesting workload MUST have a pre-configured location for the Transaction Token Service. It SHOULD rely on mechanisms, such as [Spiffe], to securely authenticate the Transaction Token Service before making a Txn-Token Request.¶
A workload within a call chain MAY create a Nested Txn-Token. It does so by embedding the Txn-Token it receives by value in a JWT Embedded Token [JWTEmbeddedTokens]. Nested Txn-Tokens are self-signed and not requested from a separate service.¶
The expiration time of a enclosing Txn-Token MUST NOT exceed the expiration time of an embedded Txn-Token.¶
This memo includes no request to IANA.¶
A Txn-Token is not resistant to replay attacks. A long-lived Txn-Token therefore represents a risk if it is stored in a file, discovered by an attacker, and then replayed. For this reason, a Txn-Token lifetime must be kept short, not exceeding the lifetime of a call-chain. Even for long-running "batch" jobs, a longer lived access token should be used to initiate the request to the batch endpoint. It then obtains short-lived Txn-Tokens that may be used to authorize the call to downstream services in the call-chain.¶
Because Txn-Tokens are short-lived, the Txn-Token response from the Txn-Token service does not contain the refresh_token
field. A Txn-Token is also cannot be issued by presenting a refresh_token
.¶
The expires_in
and scope
fields of the OAuth 2.0 Token Exchange specification [RFC8693] are also not used in Txn-Token responses. The expires_in
is not required since the issued token has an exp
field, which indicates the token lifetime. The scope
field is omitted from the request and therefore omitted in the response.¶
Although Txn-Tokens are short-lived, they MAY be sender constrained as an additional layer of defence to prevent them from being re-used by a compromised or malicious workload under the control of a hostile actor.¶
When creating Txn-Tokens, the Txn-Token MUST NOT contain the Access Token presented to the external endpoint. If an Access Token is included in a Txn-Token, an attacker may extract the Access Token from the Txn-Token, and replay it to any Resource Server that can accept that Access Token. Txn-Token expiry does not protect against this attack since the Access Token may remain valid even after the Txn-Token has expired.¶