Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
olm.md 12.8 KiB
Newer Older
  • Learn to ignore specific revisions
  • # Olm: A Cryptographic Ratchet
    
    An implementation of the double cryptographic ratchet described by
    https://whispersystems.org/docs/specifications/doubleratchet/.
    
    ## Notation
    
    This document uses $`\parallel`$ to represent string concatenation. When
    $`\parallel`$ appears on the right hand side of an $`=`$ it means that
    the inputs are concatenated. When $`\parallel`$ appears on the left hand
    side of an $`=`$ it means that the output is split.
    
    When this document uses $`ECDH\left(K_A,\,K_B\right)`$ it means that each
    party computes a Diffie-Hellman agreement using their private key and the
    remote party's public key.
    So party $`A`$ computes $`ECDH\left(K_B^{public},\,K_A^{private}\right)`$
    and party $`B`$ computes $`ECDH\left(K_A^{public},\,K_B^{private}\right)`$.
    
    Where this document uses $`HKDF\left(salt,\,IKM,\,info,\,L\right)`$ it
    refers to the [HMAC-based key derivation function][] with a salt value of
    $`salt`$, input key material of $`IKM`$, context string $`info`$,
    and output keying material length of $`L`$ bytes.
    
    ## The Olm Algorithm
    
    ### Initial setup
    
    The setup takes four [Curve25519][] inputs: Identity keys for Alice and Bob,
    $`I_A`$ and $`I_B`$, and one-time keys for Alice and Bob,
    $`E_A`$ and $`E_B`$. A shared secret, $`S`$, is generated using
    [Triple Diffie-Hellman][]. The initial 256 bit root key, $`R_0`$, and 256
    bit chain key, $`C_{0,0}`$, are derived from the shared secret using an
    HMAC-based Key Derivation Function using [SHA-256][] as the hash function
    ([HKDF-SHA-256][]) with default salt and ``"OLM_ROOT"`` as the info.
    
    ```math
    \begin{aligned}
        S&=ECDH\left(I_A,\,E_B\right)\;\parallel\;ECDH\left(E_A,\,I_B\right)\;
            \parallel\;ECDH\left(E_A,\,E_B\right)\\
        R_0\;\parallel\;C_{0,0}&=
                HKDF\left(0,\,S,\,\text{"OLM\_ROOT"},\,64\right)
    \end{aligned}
    ```
    
    ### Advancing the root key
    
    Advancing a root key takes the previous root key, $`R_{i-1}`$, and two
    Curve25519 inputs: the previous ratchet key, $`T_{i-1}`$, and the current
    ratchet key $`T_i`$. The even ratchet keys are generated by Alice.
    The odd ratchet keys are generated by Bob. A shared secret is generated
    using Diffie-Hellman on the ratchet keys. The next root key, $`R_i`$, and
    chain key, $`C_{i,0}`$, are derived from the shared secret using
    [HKDF-SHA-256][] using $`R_{i-1}`$ as the salt and ``"OLM_RATCHET"`` as the
    info.
    
    ```math
    \begin{aligned}
        R_i\;\parallel\;C_{i,0}&=HKDF\left(
            R_{i-1},\,
            ECDH\left(T_{i-1},\,T_i\right),\,
            \text{"OLM\_RATCHET"},\,
            64
        \right)
    \end{aligned}
    ```
    
    ### Advancing the chain key
    
    Advancing a chain key takes the previous chain key, $`C_{i,j-1}`$. The next
    chain key, $`C_{i,j}`$, is the [HMAC-SHA-256][] of ``"\x02"`` using the
    previous chain key as the key.
    
    ```math
    \begin{aligned}
        C_{i,j}&=HMAC\left(C_{i,j-1},\,\text{"\x02"}\right)
    \end{aligned}
    ```
    
    ### Creating a message key
    
    Creating a message key takes the current chain key, $`C_{i,j}`$. The
    message key, $`M_{i,j}`$, is the [HMAC-SHA-256][] of ``"\x01"`` using the
    current chain key as the key. The message keys where $`i`$ is even are used
    by Alice to encrypt messages. The message keys where $`i`$ is odd are used
    by Bob to encrypt messages.
    
    ```math
    \begin{aligned}
        M_{i,j}&=HMAC\left(C_{i,j},\,\text{"\x01"}\right)
    \end{aligned}
    ```
    
    ## The Olm Protocol
    
    ### Creating an outbound session
    
    Bob publishes the public parts of his identity key, $`I_B`$, and some
    single-use one-time keys $`E_B`$.
    
    Alice downloads Bob's identity key, $`I_B`$, and a one-time key,
    $`E_B`$. She generates a new single-use key, $`E_A`$, and computes a
    root key, $`R_0`$, and a chain key $`C_{0,0}`$. She also generates a
    new ratchet key $`T_0`$.
    
    ### Sending the first pre-key messages
    
    Alice computes a message key, $`M_{0,j}`$, and a new chain key,
    $`C_{0,j+1}`$, using the current chain key. She replaces the current chain
    key with the new one.
    
    Alice encrypts her plain-text with the message key, $`M_{0,j}`$, using an
    authenticated encryption scheme (see below) to get a cipher-text,
    $`X_{0,j}`$.
    
    She then sends the following to Bob:
     * The public part of her identity key, $`I_A`$
     * The public part of her single-use key, $`E_A`$
     * The public part of Bob's single-use key, $`E_B`$
     * The current chain index, $`j`$
     * The public part of her ratchet key, $`T_0`$
     * The cipher-text, $`X_{0,j}`$
    
    Alice will continue to send pre-key messages until she receives a message from
    Bob.
    
    ### Creating an inbound session from a pre-key message
    
    Bob receives a pre-key message as above.
    
    Bob looks up the private part of his single-use key, $`E_B`$. He can now
    compute the root key, $`R_0`$, and the chain key, $`C_{0,0}`$, from
    $`I_A`$, $`E_A`$, $`I_B`$, and $`E_B`$.
    
    Bob then advances the chain key $`j`$ times, to compute the chain key used
    by the message, $`C_{0,j}`$. He now creates the
    message key, $`M_{0,j}`$, and attempts to decrypt the cipher-text,
    $`X_{0,j}`$. If the cipher-text's authentication is correct then Bob can
    discard the private part of his single-use one-time key, $`E_B`$.
    
    Bob stores Alice's initial ratchet key, $`T_0`$, until he wants to
    send a message.
    
    ### Sending normal messages
    
    Once a message has been received from the other side, a session is considered
    established, and a more compact form is used.
    
    To send a message, the user checks if they have a sender chain key,
    $`C_{i,j}`$. Alice uses chain keys where $`i`$ is even. Bob uses chain
    keys where $`i`$ is odd. If the chain key doesn't exist then a new ratchet
    key $`T_i`$ is generated and a new root key $`R_i`$ and chain key
    $`C_{i,0}`$ are computed using $`R_{i-1}`$, $`T_{i-1}`$ and
    $`T_i`$.
    
    A message key,
    $`M_{i,j}`$ is computed from the current chain key, $`C_{i,j}`$, and
    the chain key is replaced with the next chain key, $`C_{i,j+1}`$. The
    plain-text is encrypted with $`M_{i,j}`$, using an authenticated encryption
    scheme (see below) to get a cipher-text, $`X_{i,j}`$.
    
    The user then sends the following to the recipient:
     * The current chain index, $`j`$
     * The public part of the current ratchet key, $`T_i`$
     * The cipher-text, $`X_{i,j}`$
    
    ### Receiving messages
    
    The user receives a message as above with the sender's current chain index, $`j`$,
    the sender's ratchet key, $`T_i`$, and the cipher-text, $`X_{i,j}`$.
    
    The user checks if they have a receiver chain with the correct
    $`i`$ by comparing the ratchet key, $`T_i`$. If the chain doesn't exist
    then they compute a new root key, $`R_i`$, and a new receiver chain, with
    chain key $`C_{i,0}`$, using $`R_{i-1}`$, $`T_{i-1}`$ and
    $`T_i`$.
    
    If the $`j`$ of the message is less than
    the current chain index on the receiver then the message may only be decrypted
    if the receiver has stored a copy of the message key $`M_{i,j}`$. Otherwise
    the receiver computes the chain key, $`C_{i,j}`$. The receiver computes the
    message key, $`M_{i,j}`$, from the chain key and attempts to decrypt the
    cipher-text, $`X_{i,j}`$.
    
    If the decryption succeeds the receiver updates the chain key for $`T_i`$
    with $`C_{i,j+1}`$ and stores the message keys that were skipped in the
    process so that they can decode out of order messages. If the receiver created
    a new receiver chain then they discard their current sender chain so that
    they will create a new chain when they next send a message.
    
    ## The Olm Message Format
    
    Olm uses two types of messages. The underlying transport protocol must provide
    a means for recipients to distinguish between them.
    
    ### Normal Messages
    
    Olm messages start with a one byte version followed by a variable length
    payload followed by a fixed length message authentication code.
    
    ```
     +--------------+------------------------------------+-----------+
     | Version Byte | Payload Bytes                      | MAC Bytes |
     +--------------+------------------------------------+-----------+
    ```
    
    The version byte is ``"\x03"``.
    
    The payload consists of key-value pairs where the keys are integers and the
    values are integers and strings. The keys are encoded as a variable length
    integer tag where the 3 lowest bits indicates the type of the value:
    0 for integers, 2 for strings. If the value is an integer then the tag is
    followed by the value encoded as a variable length integer. If the value is
    a string then the tag is followed by the length of the string encoded as
    a variable length integer followed by the string itself.
    
    Olm uses a variable length encoding for integers. Each integer is encoded as a
    sequence of bytes with the high bit set followed by a byte with the high bit
    clear. The seven low bits of each byte store the bits of the integer. The least
    significant bits are stored in the first byte.
    
    **Name**|**Tag**|**Type**|**Meaning**
    :-----:|:-----:|:-----:|:-----:
    Ratchet-Key|0x0A|String|The public part of the ratchet key, Ti, of the message
    Chain-Index|0x10|Integer|The chain index, j, of the message
    Cipher-Text|0x22|String|The cipher-text, Xi, j, of the message
    
    The length of the MAC is determined by the authenticated encryption algorithm
    being used. (Olm version 1 uses [HMAC-SHA-256][], truncated to 8 bytes). The
    MAC protects all of the bytes preceding the MAC.
    
    ### Pre-Key Messages
    
    Olm pre-key messages start with a one byte version followed by a variable
    length payload.
    
    ```
     +--------------+------------------------------------+
     | Version Byte | Payload Bytes                      |
     +--------------+------------------------------------+
    ```
    
    The version byte is ``"\x03"``.
    
    The payload uses the same key-value format as for normal messages.
    
    **Name**|**Tag**|**Type**|**Meaning**
    :-----:|:-----:|:-----:|:-----:
    One-Time-Key|0x0A|String|The public part of Bob's single-use key, Eb.
    Base-Key|0x12|String|The public part of Alice's single-use key, Ea.
    Identity-Key|0x1A|String|The public part of Alice's identity key, Ia.
    Message|0x22|String|An embedded Olm message with its own version and MAC.
    
    ## Olm Authenticated Encryption
    
    ### Version 1
    
    Version 1 of Olm uses [AES-256][] in [CBC][] mode with [PKCS#7][] padding for
    encryption and [HMAC-SHA-256][] (truncated to 64 bits) for authentication.  The
    256 bit AES key, 256 bit HMAC key, and 128 bit AES IV are derived from the
    message key using [HKDF-SHA-256][] using the default salt and an info of
    ``"OLM_KEYS"``.
    
    ```math
    \begin{aligned}
        AES\_KEY_{i,j}\;\parallel\;HMAC\_KEY_{i,j}\;\parallel\;AES\_IV_{i,j}
        &= HKDF\left(0,\,M_{i,j},\text{"OLM\_KEYS"},\,80\right) \\
    \end{aligned}
    ```
    
    The plain-text is encrypted with AES-256, using the key $`AES\_KEY_{i,j}`$
    and the IV $`AES\_IV_{i,j}`$ to give the cipher-text, $`X_{i,j}`$.
    
    Then the entire message (including the Version Byte and all Payload Bytes) are
    passed through [HMAC-SHA-256][]. The first 8 bytes of the MAC are appended to the message.
    
    ## Message authentication concerns
    
    To avoid unknown key-share attacks, the application must include identifying
    data for the sending and receiving user in the plain-text of (at least) the
    pre-key messages. Such data could be a user ID, a telephone number;
    alternatively it could be the public part of a keypair which the relevant user
    has proven ownership of.
    
    ### Example attacks
    
    1. Alice publishes her public [Curve25519][] identity key, $`I_A`$. Eve
       publishes the same identity key, claiming it as her own. Bob downloads
       Eve's keys, and associates $`I_A`$ with Eve. Alice sends a message to
       Bob; Eve intercepts it before forwarding it to Bob. Bob believes the
       message came from Eve rather than Alice.
    
       This is prevented if Alice includes her user ID in the plain-text of the
       pre-key message, so that Bob can see that the message was sent by Alice
       originally.
    
    2. Bob publishes his public [Curve25519][] identity key, $`I_B`$. Eve
       publishes the same identity key, claiming it as her own. Alice downloads
       Eve's keys, and associates $`I_B`$ with Eve. Alice sends a message to
       Eve; Eve cannot decrypt it, but forwards it to Bob. Bob believes the
       Alice sent the message to him, wheras Alice intended it to go to Eve.
    
       This is prevented by Alice including the user ID of the intended recpient
       (Eve) in the plain-text of the pre-key message. Bob can now tell that the
       message was meant for Eve rather than him.
    
    ## IPR
    
    The Olm specification (this document) is hereby placed in the public domain.
    
    ## Feedback
    
    Can be sent to olm at matrix.org.
    
    ## Acknowledgements
    
    The ratchet that Olm implements was designed by Trevor Perrin and Moxie
    Marlinspike - details at https://whispersystems.org/docs/specifications/doubleratchet/. Olm is
    an entirely new implementation written by the Matrix.org team.
    
    [Curve25519]: http://cr.yp.to/ecdh.html
    [Triple Diffie-Hellman]: https://whispersystems.org/blog/simplifying-otr-deniability/
    [HMAC-based key derivation function]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5869
    [HKDF-SHA-256]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5869
    [HMAC-SHA-256]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2104
    [SHA-256]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6234
    [AES-256]: http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips197/fips-197.pdf
    [CBC]: http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-38a/sp800-38a.pdf
    [PKCS#7]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2315