ZKAC/docs/SECURITY.md
2026-04-09 20:11:46 +02:00

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# Security model and audit notes (ZKAC 0.2)
This document summarizes the design, residual risks, and recommendations for operators integrating **ZKAC**. It is not a substitute for independent review before high-assurance deployment.
## Goals
- **Authentication:** Only holders of a valid BBS+ credential for a registered role can complete `verify_auth` for that role.
- **Server identity:** The server proves its long-term identity to the client via a Schnorr signature over the session transcript; clients verify against a pinned public key. This prevents MITM attacks without requiring TLS.
- **Confidentiality & integrity:** Session payloads are authenticated-encrypted (ChaCha20-Poly1305) with a key derived from an ephemeral X25519 handshake.
- **Replay resistance:** Duplicate ciphertexts in a direction are rejected (sliding window + monotonic counter).
- **Unlinkability (credential layer):** BBS+ presentations are unlinkable across sessions when the presentation header (the session transcript hash) differs; the verifier learns only the disclosed attributes (opaque `role_id`, epoch) and validity. Client anonymity is preserved: the client never reveals its long-term key during the handshake.
- **Server cannot forge credentials:** The server stores only the issuer **public** key per role; forging requires the issuer secret key.
## Cryptographic components
| Layer | Primitive | Purpose |
|-------|-----------|---------|
| Transport | X25519 ephemeral DH, HKDF-SHA256, ChaCha20-Poly1305 | Session keys, AEAD |
| Identity | Schnorr on Ristretto255, BLAKE2b-512 challenge | Server identity binding |
| Credentials | BBS+ on BLS12-381 (zkryptium), SHAKE256 ciphersuite | Blind issuance, ZK presentations |
| Role IDs | BLAKE2b-512 (truncated to 32 bytes) | Opaque role identifiers |
## Protocol flow
```
Client Server
|--- init_msg (eph_pk) ------------>|
| | accept()
| | prove_identity() → sign(transcript)
|<-- response_msg + identity_pkt ---|
| complete DH |
| decrypt + verify server sig |
| encrypt BBS+ auth |
|--- encrypted BBS+ auth ---------> |
| | verify_auth()
|===== encrypted session ===========>|
```
## Threats considered
### Network attacker (passive)
- Observes ciphertexts; cannot break ChaCha20-Poly1305 or derive session keys without breaking X25519 / HKDF under standard assumptions.
### Network attacker (active / MITM)
- **Server impersonation:** The server signs the session transcript hash with its long-term Ristretto255 key (`prove_identity`). The client verifies this signature against the **pinned** server public key. A MITM running a separate DH exchange produces a different transcript; it cannot forge the server's signature. The client aborts on mismatch.
- **Client impersonation:** The BBS+ presentation is bound to the session transcript hash. A MITM cannot relay a presentation from one session to another (different transcripts) or forge one (requires a valid credential from the issuer).
- **Relay attack:** A MITM that relays the real server's identity proof to a client fails because the proof is encrypted under the MITM-to-server session keys (not the client-to-MITM keys), and the signature is over the wrong transcript.
### Malicious server
- Can **learn** opaque `role_id`, current epoch, and that *some* valid member authenticated.
- **Cannot** forge BBS+ credentials without the issuer secret key.
- **Cannot** learn `member_secret` from presentations under the BBS+ security assumptions.
- **Cannot** distinguish which specific member authenticated among valid credential holders (unlinkability holds against the verifier for distinct presentation headers).
- **Cannot** learn the client's long-term public key — it is never transmitted.
### Malicious client
- Cannot decrypt others' traffic without session keys.
- Cannot produce valid auth for a role without a valid credential + correct epoch + registry entry.
### Denial of service
- **Auth packet size:** Proof length is capped (`MAX_BBS_AUTH_PROOF_BYTES`, 256 KiB) to bound allocations.
- **Handshake:** Fixed 32-byte messages; no variable-length handshake parsing.
- General packet limits should still be enforced at the application layer (total message size, rate limits).
## Key distribution
The server's long-term `PublicKey` (32-byte Ristretto255 point) functions as a **self-authenticating identity** — no certificate authority is required. The client must obtain and pin this key before connecting.
Recommended strategies:
1. **Static configuration** (default): embed the server public key in client config, environment variable, or CLI flag. Equivalent to WireGuard's `[Peer] PublicKey = ...`.
2. **Trust On First Use (TOFU):** accept the server's key on first connection, pin it for subsequent sessions. Risk: first connection is vulnerable.
3. **Out-of-band verification:** compare public key fingerprints over a trusted side channel (phone, in-person, encrypted messaging).
4. **Key registry / directory:** a trusted service maps names to public keys. Shifts trust to the registry and its authentication channel.
## Operational requirements
1. **Issuer secret key:** Protect `BbsIssuer` secret material (HSM, KMS, or encrypted at rest). Compromise = ability to issue arbitrary credentials for that role.
2. **Server long-term key:** Protect the `Node` `Keypair` secret. Compromise = ability to impersonate the server. Rotate the key and distribute the new public key to clients if compromised.
3. **Member storage:** `member_secret` and finalized `Credential` material must be protected; loss = re-enrollment required.
4. **Epoch revocation:** On compromise or policy change, call `set_epoch` and re-issue credentials only to legitimate members; old credentials become invalid at verification time.
5. **Registry integrity:** The server's `(role_id → public key, epoch)` mapping must be integrity-protected (trusted storage or signed updates), or attackers could swap keys or epochs.
6. **Role ID privacy:** `role_id` is a hash of the role name only if you use `role_id("myrole")`; treat role names as secrets if enumeration is a concern, or derive role IDs with an additional secret salt known to members.
## Implementation notes (audit checklist)
- [x] BBS+ proof verification uses the same header and presentation binding as proof generation (`verify_presentation` in Rust).
- [x] Session transcript is included in the presentation via `present(transcript_hash)`.
- [x] Server identity proof: Schnorr signature over `transcript_hash`, verified against pinned public key before BBS+ auth proceeds.
- [x] Schnorr nonce is deterministic (`H(sk || msg)`) — no dependence on RNG quality at signing time.
- [x] Replay protection is symmetric per direction in `Session`.
- [x] Constant-time comparisons are used where critical in transport/replay paths (`subtle` crate).
- [x] Client long-term key is never transmitted, preserving BBS+ unlinkability.
- [ ] **External:** Python bindings surface raw bytes; callers must not log secrets (`secret_key_bytes`, `member_secret`, `prover_blind`).
- [ ] **External:** Use secure randomness from the OS (library uses OS RNG for key generation paths exposed in Rust).
## Design decisions
- **Server-only identity proof:** Only the server signs the transcript. Adding client long-term signing would break BBS+ unlinkability (the server could correlate sessions by client public key). Client authentication is handled entirely by the anonymous BBS+ credential.
- **Deterministic Schnorr nonces:** The signing nonce is derived as `H("zkac-schnorr-nonce" || sk || msg)`, eliminating a class of RNG-failure attacks (cf. PS3 ECDSA, Sony 2010). Same key + same message = same signature.
## Known limitations
- **No post-quantum** primitives: classical security assumptions only.
- **Epoch granularity:** Revocation is coarse (epoch bump); plan issuance and rotation policy accordingly.
- **zkryptium dependency:** Security follows the underlying crate and BLS12-381/BBS+ standards; keep dependencies updated.
- **Key distribution:** The library provides the cryptographic mechanism; initial key distribution is an application-layer responsibility.
## Reporting issues
Report security-sensitive findings through your project's private disclosure channel (configure `SECURITY.md` contact or GitHub security advisories when the repository is public).