Network Working Group R. Housley
Request for Comments: 3217 RSA Laboratories
Category: Informational December 2001
Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping
Status of this Memo
This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
This document specifies the algorithm for wrapping one Triple-DES key
with another Triple-DES key and the algorithm for wrapping one RC2
key with another RC2 key. These key wrap algorithms were originally
published in section 12.6 of RFC 2630. They are republished since
these key wrap algorithms have been found to be useful in contexts
beyond those supported by RFC 2630.
1 Introduction
Management of symmetric cryptographic keys often leads to situations
where one symmetric key is used to encrypt (or wrap) another. Key
wrap algorithms are commonly used in two situations. First, key
agreement algorithms (such as Diffie-Hellman [DH-X9.42]) generate a
pairwise key-encryption key, and a key wrap algorithm is used to
encrypt the content-encryption key or a multicast key with the
pairwise key-encryption key. Second, a key wrap algorithm is used to
encrypt the content-encryption key, multicast key, or session key in
a locally generated storage key-encryption key or a key-encryption
key that was distributed out-of-band.
This document specifies the algorithm for wrapping one Triple-DES key
with another Triple-DES key [3DES], and it specifies the algorithm
for wrapping one RC2 key with another RC2 key [RC2]. Encryption of a
Triple-DES key with another Triple-DES key uses the algorithm
specified in section 3. Encryption of a RC2 key with another RC2 key
uses the algorithm specified in section 4. Both of these algorithms
rely on the key checksum algorithm specified in section 2. Triple-
DES and RC2 content-encryption keys are encrypted in Cipher Block
Chaining (CBC) mode [MODES].
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
In this document, the key words MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHOULD,
SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, and MAY are to be interpreted as described
by Scott Bradner in [STDWORDS].
2 Key Checksum
The key checksum algorithm is used to provide a key integrity check
value. The algorithm is:
1. Compute a 20 octet SHA-1 [SHA1] message digest on the key that is
to be wrapped.
2. Use the most significant (first) eight octets of the message
digest value as the checksum value.
3 Triple-DES Key Wrapping and Unwrapping
This section specifies the algorithms for wrapping and unwrapping one
Triple-DES key with another Triple-DES key [3DES].
The same key wrap algorithm is used for both Two-key Triple-DES and
Three-key Triple-DES keys. When a Two-key Triple-DES key is to be
wrapped, a third DES key with the same value as the first DES key is
created. Thus, all wrapped Triple-DES keys include three DES keys.
However, a Two-key Triple-DES key MUST NOT be used to wrap a Three-
key Triple-DES key that is comprised of three unique DES keys.
The Triple-DES key wrap algorithm encrypts a Triple-DES key with a
Triple-DES key-encryption key. The Triple-DES key wrap algorithm is:
1. Set odd parity for each of the DES key octets comprising the
Three-Key Triple-DES key that is to be wrapped, call the result
CEK.
2. Compute an 8 octet key checksum value on CEK as described above in
Section 2, call the result ICV.
3. Let CEKICV = CEK || ICV.
4. Generate 8 octets at random, call the result IV.
5. Encrypt CEKICV in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use the
random value generated in the previous step as the initialization
vector (IV). Call the ciphertext TEMP1.
6. Let TEMP2 = IV || TEMP1.
7. Reverse the order of the octets in TEMP2. That is, the most
significant (first) octet is swapped with the least significant
(last) octet, and so on. Call the result TEMP3.
8. Encrypt TEMP3 in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use an
initialization vector (IV) of 0x4adda22c79e82105. The ciphertext
is 40 octets long.
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
Note: When the same Three-Key Triple-DES key is wrapped in different
key-encryption keys, a fresh initialization vector (IV) must be
generated for each invocation of the key wrap algorithm.
The Triple-DES key unwrap algorithm decrypts a Triple-DES key using a
Triple-DES key-encryption key. The Triple-DES key unwrap algorithm
is:
1. If the wrapped key is not 40 octets, then error.
2. Decrypt the wrapped key in CBC mode using the key-encryption key.
Use an initialization vector (IV) of 0x4adda22c79e82105. Call the
output TEMP3.
3. Reverse the order of the octets in TEMP3. That is, the most
significant (first) octet is swapped with the least significant
(last) octet, and so on. Call the result TEMP2.
4. Decompose TEMP2 into IV and TEMP1. IV is the most significant
(first) 8 octets, and TEMP1 is the least significant (last) 32
octets.
5. Decrypt TEMP1 in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use the
IV value from the previous step as the initialization vector.
Call the ciphertext CEKICV.
6. Decompose CEKICV into CEK and ICV. CEK is the most significant
(first) 24 octets, and ICV is the least significant (last) 8
octets.
7. Compute an 8 octet key checksum value on CEK as described above in
Section 2. If the computed key checksum value does not match the
decrypted key checksum value, ICV, then error.
8. Check for odd parity each of the DES key octets comprising CEK.
If parity is incorrect, then error.
9. Use CEK as a Triple-DES key.
Some security protocols employ ASN.1 [X.208-88, X.209-88], and these
protocols employ algorithm identifiers to name cryptographic
algorithms. To support these protocols, the Triple-DES key wrap
algorithm has been assigned the following algorithm identifier:
id-alg-CMS3DESwrap OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)
us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) alg(3) 6 }
The AlgorithmIdentifier parameter field MUST be NULL.
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
The RC2 key wrap algorithm encrypts a RC2 key with a RC2 key-
encryption key. The RC2 key wrap algorithm is:
1. Let the RC2 key be called CEK, and let the length of CEK in
octets be called LENGTH. LENGTH is a single octet.
2. Let LCEK = LENGTH || CEK.
3. Let LCEKPAD = LCEK || PAD. If the length of LCEK is a multiple
of 8, the PAD has a length of zero. If the length of LCEK is not
a multiple of 8, then PAD contains the fewest number of random
octets to make the length of LCEKPAD a multiple of 8.
4. Compute an 8 octet key checksum value on LCEKPAD as described
above in Section 2, call the result ICV.
5. Let LCEKPADICV = LCEKPAD || ICV.
6. Generate 8 octets at random, call the result IV.
7. Encrypt LCEKPADICV in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use
the random value generated in the previous step as the
initialization vector (IV). Call the ciphertext TEMP1.
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
8. Let TEMP2 = IV || TEMP1.
9. Reverse the order of the octets in TEMP2. That is, the most
significant (first) octet is swapped with the least significant
(last) octet, and so on. Call the result TEMP3.
10. Encrypt TEMP3 in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use an
initialization vector (IV) of 0x4adda22c79e82105.
Note: When the same RC2 key is wrapped in different key-encryption
keys, a fresh initialization vector (IV) must be generated for each
invocation of the key wrap algorithm.
The RC2 key unwrap algorithm decrypts a RC2 key using a RC2 key-
encryption key. The RC2 key unwrap algorithm is:
1. If the wrapped key is not a multiple of 8 octets, then error.
2. Decrypt the wrapped key in CBC mode using the key-encryption key.
Use an initialization vector (IV) of 0x4adda22c79e82105. Call
the output TEMP3.
3. Reverse the order of the octets in TEMP3. That is, the most
significant (first) octet is swapped with the least significant
(last) octet, and so on. Call the result TEMP2.
4. Decompose the TEMP2 into IV and TEMP1. IV is the most
significant (first) 8 octets, and TEMP1 is the remaining octets.
5. Decrypt TEMP1 in CBC mode using the key-encryption key. Use the
IV value from the previous step as the initialization vector.
Call the plaintext LCEKPADICV.
6. Decompose the LCEKPADICV into LCEKPAD, and ICV. ICV is the least
significant (last) octet 8 octets. LCEKPAD is the remaining
octets.
7. Compute an 8 octet key checksum value on LCEKPAD as described
above in Section 2. If the computed key checksum value does not
match the decrypted key checksum value, ICV, then error.
8. Decompose the LCEKPAD into LENGTH, CEK, and PAD. LENGTH is the
most significant (first) octet. CEK is the following LENGTH
octets. PAD is the remaining octets, if any.
9. If the length of PAD is more than 7 octets, then error.
10. Use CEK as an RC2 key.
Some security protocols employ ASN.1 [X.208-88, X.209-88], and these
protocols employ algorithm identifiers to name cryptographic
algorithms. To support these protocols, the RC2 key wrap algorithm
has been assigned the following algorithm identifier:
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
id-alg-CMSRC2wrap OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { iso(1) member-body(2)
us(840) rsadsi(113549) pkcs(1) pkcs-9(9) smime(16) alg(3) 7 }
The AlgorithmIdentifier parameter field MUST be RC2wrapParameter:
RC2wrapParameter ::= RC2ParameterVersion
RC2ParameterVersion ::= INTEGER
The RC2 effective-key-bits (key size) greater than 32 and less than
256 is encoded in the RC2ParameterVersion. For the effective-key-
bits of 40, 64, and 128, the rc2ParameterVersion values are 160, 120,
and 58 respectively. These values are not simply the RC2 key length.
Note that the value 160 must be encoded as two octets (00 A0),
because the one octet (A0) encoding represents a negative number.
This section contains a RC2 Key Wrap example. Intermediate values
corresponding to the named items in section 4.1 are given in
hexadecimal.
CEK: b70a 25fb c9d8 6a86 050c e0d7 11ea d4d9
KEK: fd04 fd08 0607 07fb 0003 feff fd02 fe05
LENGTH: 10
LCEK: 10b7 0a25 fbc9 d86a 8605 0ce0 d711 ead4 d9
PAD: 4845 cce7 fd12 50
LCEKPAD: 10b7 0a25 fbc9 d86a 8605 0ce0 d711 ead4
d948 45cc e7fd 1250
ICV: 0a6f f19f db40 4988
LCEKPADICV: 10b7 0a25 fbc9 d86a 8605 0ce0 d711 ead4
d948 45cc e7fd 1250 0a6f f19f db40 4988
IV: c7d9 0059 b29e 97f7
TEMP1: a01d a259 3793 1260 e48c 55f5 04ce 70b8
ac8c d79e ffe8 9932 9fa9 8a07 a31f f7a7
TEMP2: c7d9 0059 b29e 97f7 a01d a259 3793 1260
e48c 55f5 04ce 70b8 ac8c d79e ffe8 9932
9fa9 8a07 a31f f7a7
TEMP3: a7f7 1fa3 078a a99f 3299 8eff 9ed7 8cac
b870 ce04 f555 8ce4 6012 9337 59a2 1da0
f797 9eb2 5900 d9c7
RESULT: 70e6 99fb 5701 f783 3330 fb71 e87c 85a4
20bd c99a f05d 22af 5a0e 48d3 5f31 3898
6cba afb4 b28d 4f35
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5 References
[3DES] American National Standards Institute. ANSI X9.52-1998,
Triple Data Encryption Algorithm Modes of Operation.
1998.
[CMS] Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax", RFC 2630,
June 1999.
[DES] American National Standards Institute. ANSI X3.106,
"American National Standard for Information Systems - Data
Link Encryption". 1983.
[DH-X9.42] Rescorla, E., "Diffie-Hellman Key Agreement Method", RFC
2631, June 1999.
[DSS] National Institute of Standards and Technology. FIPS Pub
186: Digital Signature Standard. 19 May 1994.
[MODES] National Institute of Standards and Technology. FIPS Pub
81: DES Modes of Operation. 2 December 1980.
[RANDOM] Eastlake, D., Crocker, S. and J. Schiller, "Randomness
Recommendations for Security", RFC 1750, December 1994.
[RC2] Rivest, R., "A Description of the RC2 (r) Encryption
Algorithm", RFC 2268, March 1998.
[SHA1] National Institute of Standards and Technology. FIPS Pub
180-1: Secure Hash Standard. 17 April 1995.
[STDWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[X.208-88] CCITT. Recommendation X.208: Specification of Abstract
Syntax Notation One (ASN.1). 1988.
[X.209-88] CCITT. Recommendation X.209: Specification of Basic
Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1).
1988.
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6 Security Considerations
Implementations must protect the key-encryption key. Compromise of
the key-encryption key may result in the disclosure of all keys that
have been wrapped with the key-encryption key, which may lead to the
disclosure of all traffic protected with those wrapped key.
Implementations must randomly generate initialization vectors (IVs)
and padding. The generation of quality random numbers is difficult.
RFC 1750 [RANDOM] offers important guidance in this area, and
Appendix 3 of FIPS Pub 186 [DSS] provides one quality PRNG technique.
If the key-encryption key and wrapped key are associated with
different symmetric encryption algorithms, the effective security
provided to data encrypted with the wrapped key is determined by the
weaker of the two algorithms. If, for example, data is encrypted
with 168-bit Triple-DES and that Triple-DES key is wrapped with a
40-bit RC2 key, then at most 40 bits of protection is provided. A
trivial search to determine the value of the 40-bit RC2 key can
recover Triple-DES key, and then the Triple-DES key can be used to
decrypt the content. Therefore, implementers must ensure that key-
encryption algorithms are as strong or stronger than content-
encryption algorithms.
These key wrap algorithms specified in this document have been
reviewed for use with Triple-DES and RC2, and they have not been
reviewed for use with other encryption algorithms. Similarly, the
key wrap algorithms make use of CBC mode [MODES], and they have not
been reviewed for use with other cryptographic modes.
7 Acknowledgments
This document is the result of contributions from many professionals.
I appreciate the hard work of all members of the IETF S/MIME Working
Group. I extend a special thanks to Carl Ellison, Peter Gutmann, Bob
Jueneman, Don Johnson, Burt Kaliski, John Pawling, and Jim Schaad for
their support in defining these algorithms and generating this
specification.
8 Author Address
Russell Housley
RSA Laboratories
918 Spring Knoll Drive
Herndon, VA 20170
USA
EMail: rhousley@rsasecurity.com
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RFC 3217 Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping December 2001
9 Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.
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Acknowledgement
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