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You'll now find information like this in the ipld/ipld meta-repo, and published to the web at https://ipld.io/ .

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Specification: DAG-JOSE

Status: Descriptive - Draft

JOSE is a standard for signing and encrypting JSON objects. The various specifications for JOSE can be found in the IETF datatracker.

Format

The are two kinds of JOSE objects: JWS (JSON web signature) and JWE (JSON web encryption). These two objects are primitives in JOSE and can be used to create JWT and JWM objects etc. The IETF RFCs specify a JSON encoding of JOSE objects. This specification maps the JSON encoding to CBOR. Upon encountering the dag-jose multiformat implementations can be sure that the block contains dag-cbor encoded data which matches the IPLD schema we specify below.

Mapping from the JOSE general JSON serialization to dag-jose serialization

Both JWS and JWE supports three different serialization formats: Compact Serialization, Flattened JSON Serialization, and General JSON Serialization. The first two are more concise, but they only allow for one recipient. Therefore DAG JOSE always uses the General Serialization which ensures maximum compatibility with minimum ambiguity. Libraries implementing serialization should accept all JOSE formats including the Decoded Representation (see below) and convert them if necessary.

To map the general JSON serialization to CBOR we do the following:

  • Any field which is represented as base64url(<data>) we map directly to Bytes . For fields like header and protected which are specified as the base64url(ascii(<some json>)) that means that the value is the ascii(<some json>) bytes.
  • For JWS we specify that the payload property MUST be a CID, and we set the payload of the encoded JOSE object to Bytes containing the bytes of the CID. For applications where an additional network request to retrieve the linked content is undesirable then an identity multihash should be used.
  • For JWE objects the ciphertext must decrypt to a cleartext which is the bytes of a CID. This is for the same reason as the payload being a CID, and the same approach of using an identity multihash can be used, and most likely will be the only way to retain the confidentiality of data.

Below we present an IPLD schema representing the encoded JOSE objects. Note that there are two IPLD schemas, EncodedJWE and EncodedJWS. The actual wire format is a single struct which contains all the keys from both the EncodedJWE and the EncodedJWS structs, implementors should follow section 9 of the JWE spec and distinguish between these two branches by checking if the payload attribute exists, and hence you have a JWS; or the ciphertext attribute, hence you have a JWE.

Encoded JOSE

type EncodedSignature struct {
  header optional {String:Any}
  protected optional Bytes
  signature Bytes
}

type EncodedRecipient struct {
  encrypted_key optional Bytes
  header optional {String:Any}
}

type EncodedJWE struct {
  aad optional Bytes
  ciphertext Bytes
  iv optional Bytes
  protected optional Bytes
  recipients [EncodedRecipient]
  tag optional Bytes
  unprotected optional {String:Any}
}

type EncodedJWS struct {
  payload optional Bytes
  signatures [EncodedSignature]
}

Padding for encryption

Applications may need to pad the cleartext when encrypting to avoid leaking the size of the cleartext. This raises the question of how the application knows what part of the decrypted cleartext is padding. In this case we use the fact that the cleartext MUST be a valid CID, implementations should parse the cleartext as a CID and discard any content beyond the multihash digest size - which we assume to be the padding.

Decoded JOSE

Typically implementations will want to decode this format into something more useful for applications. Exactly what that will look like depends on the language of the implementation, here we use the IPLD schema language to give a somewhat language agnostic description of what the decoded representation might look like at runtime. Note that everything which is specified as base64url(ascii(<some JSON>)) in the JOSE specs - and which we encode as Bytes in the wire format - is here decoded to a String. We also add the link: &Any attribute to the DecodedJWS, which allows applications to easily retrieve the authenticated content.

Also note that, as with the encoded representation, there are two different representations; DecodedJWE and DecodedJWS. Applications can distinguish between these two branches in the same way as with the Encoded representation described above.

type DecodedSignature struct {
  header optional {String:Any}
  protected optional String
  signature String
}

type DecodedJWS struct {
  payload String
  signatures [DecodedSignature]
  link: &Any
}

type DecodedRecipient struct {
  encrypted_key optional String
  header optional {String:Any}
}

type DecodedJWE struct {
  aad optional String
  ciphertext String
  iv String
  protected String
  recipients [DecodedRecipient]
  tag String
  unprotected optional {String:Any}
}

Implementations