RFC8894

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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) P. Gutmann Request for Comments: 8894 University of Auckland Category: Informational September 2020 ISSN: 2070-1721


                Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol

Abstract

  This document specifies the Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol
  (SCEP), a PKI protocol that leverages existing technology by using
  Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS, formerly known as PKCS #7) and
  PKCS #10 over HTTP.  SCEP is the evolution of the enrolment protocol
  sponsored by Cisco Systems, which enjoys wide support in both client
  and server implementations, as well as being relied upon by numerous
  other industry standards that work with certificates.

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.
  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
  approved by the IESG are candidates for any level of Internet
  Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8894.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.
  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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  This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
  10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
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  modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
  Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
  the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
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  it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
  than English.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
    1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document
  2.  SCEP Overview
    2.1.  SCEP Entities
      2.1.1.  Client
      2.1.2.  Certificate Authority
    2.2.  CA Certificate Distribution
    2.3.  Client Authentication
    2.4.  Enrolment Authorisation
    2.5.  Certificate Enrolment/Renewal
      2.5.1.  Client State Transitions
    2.6.  Certificate Access
    2.7.  CRL Access
    2.8.  Certificate Revocation
    2.9.  Mandatory-to-Implement Functionality
  3.  SCEP Secure Message Objects
    3.1.  SCEP Message Object Processing
    3.2.  SCEP pkiMessage
      3.2.1.  Signed Transaction Attributes
        3.2.1.1.  transactionID
        3.2.1.2.  messageType
        3.2.1.3.  pkiStatus
        3.2.1.4.  failInfo and failInfoText
        3.2.1.5.  senderNonce and recipientNonce
      3.2.2.  SCEP pkcsPKIEnvelope
    3.3.  SCEP pkiMessage types
      3.3.1.  PKCSReq/RenewalReq
      3.3.2.  CertRep
        3.3.2.1.  CertRep SUCCESS
        3.3.2.2.  CertRep FAILURE
        3.3.2.3.  CertRep PENDING
      3.3.3.  CertPoll (GetCertInitial)
      3.3.4.  GetCert and GetCRL
    3.4.  Degenerate certificates-only CMS SignedData
    3.5.  CA Capabilities
      3.5.1.  GetCACaps HTTP Message Format
      3.5.2.  CA Capabilities Response Format
  4.  SCEP Transactions
    4.1.  HTTP POST and GET Message Formats
    4.2.  Get CA Certificate
      4.2.1.  Get CA Certificate Response Message Format
        4.2.1.1.  CA Certificate Response Message Format
        4.2.1.2.  CA Certificate Chain Response Message Format
    4.3.  Certificate Enrolment/Renewal
      4.3.1.  Certificate Enrolment/Renewal Response Message
    4.4.  Poll for Client Initial Certificate
      4.4.1.  Polling Response Message Format
    4.5.  Certificate Access
      4.5.1.  Certificate Access Response Message Format
    4.6.  CRL Access
      4.6.1.  CRL Access Response Message Format
    4.7.  Get Next Certificate Authority Certificate
      4.7.1.  Get Next CA Response Message Format
  5.  SCEP Transaction Examples
    5.1.  Successful Transactions
    5.2.  Transactions with Errors
  6.  IANA Considerations
    6.1.  Registration of the application/x-x509-ca-cert Media Type
    6.2.  Registration of the application/x-x509-ca-ra-cert Media
          Type
    6.3.  Registration of the application/x-x509-next-ca-cert Media
          Type
    6.4.  Registration of the application/x-pki-message Media Type
  7.  Security Considerations
    7.1.  General Security
    7.2.  Use of the CA Private Key
    7.3.  ChallengePassword Shared Secret Value
    7.4.  Lack of Certificate Issue Confirmation
    7.5.  GetCACaps Issues
    7.6.  Lack of PoP in Renewal Requests
    7.7.  Traffic Monitoring
    7.8.  Unnecessary Cryptography
    7.9.  Use of SHA-1
    7.10. Use of HTTP
  8.  References
    8.1.  Normative References
    8.2.  Informative References
  Appendix A.  Background Notes
  Acknowledgements
  Author's Address

1. Introduction

  X.509 certificates serve as the basis for several standardised
  security protocols such as TLS [RFC8446], S/MIME [RFC8551], and IKE/
  IPsec [RFC7296].  When an X.509 certificate is issued, there
  typically is a need for a certificate management protocol to enable a
  PKI client to request or renew a certificate from a Certificate
  Authority (CA).  This specification defines a protocol, the Simple
  Certificate Enrolment Protocol (SCEP), for certificate management and
  certificate and CRL queries.
  The SCEP protocol supports the following general operations:
  *  CA public key distribution
  *  Certificate enrolment and issue
  *  Certificate renewal
  *  Certificate query
  *  CRL query
  SCEP makes extensive use of CMS [RFC5652] and PKCS #10 [RFC2986].

1.1. Conventions Used in This Document

  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.
  This document uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation as
  specified in [RFC5234] for defining formal syntax of commands.  Non-
  terminals not defined in [RFC5234] are defined in Section 4.1.

2. SCEP Overview

  This section provides an overview of the functionality of SCEP.

2.1. SCEP Entities

  The entity types defined in SCEP are a client requesting a
  certificate and a Certificate Authority (CA) that issues the
  certificate.  These are described in the following sections.

2.1.1. Client

  A client MUST have the following information locally configured:
  1.  The CA's fully qualified domain name or IP address.
  2.  Any identification and/or authorisation information required by
      the CA before a certificate will be issued, as described in
      Section 3.3.1.
  3.  The identifying information that is used for authentication of
      the CA in Section 4.2.1, typically a certificate fingerprint.

2.1.2. Certificate Authority

  A SCEP CA is the entity that signs client certificates.  A CA may
  enforce policies and apply them to certificate requests, and it may
  reject a request for any reason.
  Since the client is expected to perform signature verification and
  optionally encryption using the CA certificate, the keyUsage
  extension in the CA certificate MUST indicate that it is valid for
  digitalSignature and keyEncipherment (if the key is to be used for
  en/decryption) alongside the usual CA usages of keyCertSign and/or
  cRLSign.

2.2. CA Certificate Distribution

  If the CA certificate(s) have not previously been acquired by the
  client through some other means, the client MUST retrieve them before
  any PKI operation (Section 3) can be started.  Since no public key
  has yet been exchanged between the client and the CA, the messages
  cannot be secured using CMS, and the CA certificate request and
  response data is instead transferred in the clear.
  If an intermediate CA is in use, a certificates-only CMS SignedData
  message with a certificate chain consisting of all CA certificates is
  returned.  Otherwise, the CA certificate itself is returned.
  The CA certificate MAY be provided out of band to the client.
  Alternatively, the CA certificate fingerprint MAY be used to
  authenticate a CA certificate distributed by the GetCACert response
  (Section 4.2) or via HTTP certificate-store access [RFC4387].  The
  fingerprint is created by calculating a SHA-256 hash over the whole
  CA certificate.  (For legacy reasons, a SHA-1 hash may be used by
  some implementations.)
  After the client gets the CA certificate, it SHOULD authenticate it
  in some manner unless this is deemed unnecessary, for example,
  because the device is being provisioned inside a trusted environment.
  For example, the client could compare the certificate's fingerprint
  with locally configured, out-of-band distributed, identifying
  information, or by some equivalent means such as a direct comparison
  with a locally stored copy of the certificate.
  Intermediate CA certificates, if any, are signed by a higher-level
  CA, so there is no need to authenticate them against the out-of-band
  data.  Since intermediate CA certificates are rolled over more
  frequently than long-lived top-level CA certificates, clients MUST
  verify intermediate-level CA certificates before use during protocol
  exchanges in case the intermediate CA certificate has expired or
  otherwise been invalidated.
  When a CA certificate expires, certificates that have been signed by
  it may no longer be regarded as valid.  CA key rollover provides a
  mechanism by which the CA can distribute a new CA certificate that
  will be valid in the future once the current certificate has expired.
  This is done via the GetNextCACert message (Section 4.7).

2.3. Client Authentication

  As with every protocol that uses public-key cryptography, the
  association between the public keys used in the protocol and the
  identities with which they are associated must be authenticated in a
  cryptographically secure manner.  Communications between the client
  and the CA are secured using SCEP Secure Message Objects as explained
  in Section 3, which specifies how CMS is used to encrypt and sign the
  data.  In order to perform the signing operation, the client uses an
  appropriate local certificate:
  1.  If the client does not have an appropriate existing certificate,
      then a locally generated self-signed certificate MUST be used.
      The keyUsage extension in the certificate MUST indicate that it
      is valid for digitalSignature and keyEncipherment (if available).
      The self-signed certificate SHOULD use the same subject name and
      key as in the PKCS #10 request.  In this case, the messageType is
      PKCSReq (see Section 3.2.1.2).
  2.  If the client already has a certificate issued by the SCEP CA,
      and the CA supports renewal (see Section 2.5), that certificate
      SHOULD be used.  In this case, the messageType is RenewalReq (see
      Section 3.2.1.2).
  3.  Alternatively, if the client has no certificate issued by the
      SCEP CA but has credentials from an alternate CA, then the
      certificate issued by the alternate CA MAY be used in a renewal
      request as described above.  The SCEP CA's policy will determine
      whether the request can be accepted or not.
  Note that although the above text describes several different types
  of operations, for historical reasons, most implementations always
  apply the first one, even if an existing certificate already exists.
  For this reason, support for the first case is mandatory while
  support for the latter ones are optional (see Section 2.9).
  During the certificate-enrolment process, the client MUST use the
  selected certificate's key when signing the CMS envelope (see
  Section 3).  This certificate will be either the self-signed one
  matching the PKCS #10 request or the CA-issued one used to authorise
  a renewal, and it MUST be included in the signedData certificates
  field (possibly as part of a full certificate chain).  If the key
  being certified allows encryption, then the CA's CertResp will use
  the same certificate's public key when encrypting the response.
  Note that, in the case of renewal operations, this means that the
  request will be signed and authenticated with the key in the
  previously issued certificate rather than the key in the PKCS #10
  request, and the response may similarly be returned encrypted with
  the key in the previously issued certificate.  This has security
  implications; see Section 7.6.

2.4. Enrolment Authorisation

  PKCS #10 [RFC2986] specifies a PKCS #9 [RFC2985] challengePassword
  attribute to be sent as part of the enrolment request.  When
  utilising the challengePassword, the CA distributes a shared secret
  to the client, which will be used to authenticate the request from
  the client.  It is RECOMMENDED that the challengePassword be a one-
  time authenticator value to limit the ability of an attacker who can
  capture the authenticator from the client or CA and reuse it to
  request further certificates.
  Inclusion of the challengePassword by the SCEP client is RECOMMENDED;
  however, its omission allows for unauthenticated authorisation of
  enrolment requests (which may, however, require manual approval of
  each certificate issue if other security measures to control issue
  aren't in place; see below).  Inclusion is OPTIONAL for renewal
  requests that are authenticated by being signed with an existing
  certificate.  The CMS envelope protects the privacy of the
  challengePassword.
  A client that is performing certificate renewal as per Section 2.5
  SHOULD omit the challengePassword but MAY send the originally
  distributed shared secret in the challengePassword attribute.  The
  SCEP CA MAY authenticate the request using the challengePassword in
  addition to the previously issued certificate that signs the request.
  The SCEP CA MUST NOT attempt to authenticate a client based on a
  self-signed certificate unless it has been verified through out-of-
  band means such as a certificate fingerprint.
  To perform the authorisation in manual mode, the client's request is
  placed in the PENDING state until the CA operator authorises or
  rejects it.  Manual authorisation is used when the client has only a
  self-signed certificate that hasn't been previously authenticated by
  the CA and/or a challengePassword is not available.  The SCEP CA MAY
  either reject unauthorised requests or mark them for manual
  authorisation according to CA policy.

2.5. Certificate Enrolment/Renewal

  A client starts an enrolment transaction (Section 3.3.1) by creating
  a certificate request using PKCS #10 and sends the request to the CA
  enveloped using CMS (Section 3).
  If the CA supports certificate renewal and the CA policy permits,
  then a new certificate with new validity dates can be issued, even
  though the old one is still valid.  To renew an existing certificate,
  the client uses the RenewalReq message (see Section 3.3) and signs it
  with the existing client certificate.  The client SHOULD use a new
  keypair when requesting a new certificate but MAY request a new
  certificate using the old keypair.
  If the CA returns a CertRep message (Section 3.3.2) with status set
  to PENDING, the client enters into polling mode by periodically
  sending a CertPoll message (Section 3.3.3) to the CA until the CA
  operator completes the manual authentication (approving or denying
  the request).  The frequency of the polling operation is a CA/client
  configuration issue and may range from seconds or minutes when the
  issue process is automatic but not instantaneous, through to hours or
  days if the certificate-issue operation requires manual approval.
  If polling mode is being used, then the client will send a single
  PKCSReq/RenewalReq message (Section 3.3.1), followed by 0 or more
  CertPoll messages (Section 3.3.3).  The CA will, in return, send 0 or
  more CertRep messages (Section 3.3.2) with status set to PENDING in
  response to CertPolls, followed by a single CertRep message
  (Section 3.3.2) with status set to either SUCCESS or FAILURE.

2.5.1. Client State Transitions

  The client state transitions during the SCEP process are indicated in
  Figure 1.
                                  CertPoll
                                +-----<----+
                                |          |
                                |          | CertRep(PENDING)
                                |          |
  [CERT-NONEXISTENT] ------> [CERT-REQ-PENDING] --------> [CERT-ISSUED]
        ^            PKCSReq    |           CertRep(SUCCESS)
        |          RenewalReq   |
        |                       |
        +-----------------------+
        CertRep(FAILURE) or
        Max-time/max-polls exceeded
                    Figure 1: State Transition Diagram
  The certificate-issue process starts at state CERT-NONEXISTENT.
  Sending a PKCSReq/RenewalReq message changes the state to CERT-REQ-
  PENDING.
  If the CA returns a CertRep message with pkiStatus set to SUCCESS,
  then the state changes to CERT-ISSUED.
  If the CA returns a CertRep message with pkiStatus set to FAILURE or
  there is no response, then the state reverts back to CERT-
  NONEXISTENT.
  If the CA returns a CertRep message with pkiStatus set to PENDING,
  then the client will keep polling by sending a CertPoll message until
  either a CertRep message with status set to SUCCESS or FAILURE is
  received, a timeout occurs, or the maximum number of polls has been
  exceeded.
  Figure 2 shows a successful transaction in automatic mode
      CLIENT                              CA SERVER
  PKCSReq: PKI cert. enrolment message
  --------------------------------> CertRep: pkiStatus = SUCCESS
                                    Certificate attached
                                    <------------------------------
  Receive issued certificate.
                         Figure 2: Automatic Mode
  Figure 3 shows a successful transaction in manual mode:
      CLIENT                              CA SERVER
  PKCSReq: PKI cert. enrolment message
  --------------------------------> CertRep: pkiStatus = PENDING
                                    <------------------------------
  CertPoll: Polling message
  --------------------------------> CertRep: pkiStatus = PENDING
                                    <------------------------------
  ................ <Manual identity authentication> ...............
  CertPoll: Polling message
  --------------------------------> CertRep: pkiStatus = SUCCESS
                                    Certificate attached
                                    <------------------------------
  Receive issued certificate.
                          Figure 3: Manual Mode

2.6. Certificate Access

  A certificate query message is defined for clients to retrieve a copy
  of their own certificate from the CA.  It allows clients that do not
  store their certificates locally to obtain a copy when needed.  This
  functionality is not intended to provide a general-purpose
  certificate-access service, which may be achieved instead via HTTP
  certificate-store access [RFC4387] or Lightweight Directory Access
  Protocol (LDAP).
  To retrieve a certificate from the CA, a client sends a request
  consisting of the certificate's issuer name and serial number.  This
  assumes that the client has saved the issuer name and the serial
  number of the issued certificate from the previous enrolment
  transaction.  The transaction to retrieve a certificate consists of
  one GetCert (Section 3.3.4) message and one CertRep (Section 3.3.2)
  message, as shown in Figure 4.
     CLIENT                               CA SERVER
  GetCert: PKI certificate query message
  -------------------------------> CertRep: pkiStatus = SUCCESS
                                   Certificate attached
                                   <-----------------------------
  Receive the certificate.
                    Figure 4: Retrieving a Certificate

2.7. CRL Access

  SCEP clients MAY request a CRL via one of three methods:
  1.  If the CA supports the CRL Distribution Points (CRLDPs) extension
      [RFC5280] in issued certificates, then the CRL MAY be retrieved
      via the mechanism specified in the CRLDP.
  2.  If the CA supports HTTP certificate-store access [RFC4387], then
      the CRL MAY be retrieved via the AuthorityInfoAcces [RFC5280]
      location specified in the certificate.
  3.  Only if the CA does not support CRLDPs or HTTP access should a
      CRL query be composed by creating a GetCRL message consisting of
      the issuer name and serial number from the certificate whose
      revocation status is being queried.
  The message is sent to the SCEP CA in the same way as the other SCEP
  requests.  The transaction to retrieve a CRL consists of one GetCRL
  PKI message and one CertRep PKI message, which contains only the CRL
  (no certificates) in a degenerate certificates-only CMS SignedData
  message (Section 3.4), as shown in Figure 5.
         CLIENT                           CA SERVER
     GetCRL: PKI CRL query message
  ---------------------------------->
                                    CertRep: CRL attached
                                    <-----------------------------
  Receive the CRL
                        Figure 5: Retrieving a CRL

2.8. Certificate Revocation

  SCEP does not specify a method to request certificate revocation.  In
  order to revoke a certificate, the client must contact the CA using a
  non-SCEP-defined mechanism.

2.9. Mandatory-to-Implement Functionality

  At a minimum, all SCEP implementations compliant with this
  specification MUST support GetCACaps (Section 3.5.1), GetCACert
  (Section 4.2), PKCSReq (Section 3.3.1) (and its associated response
  messages), communication of binary data via HTTP POST (Section 4.1),
  and the AES128-CBC [AES] and SHA-256 [SHA2] algorithms to secure
  pkiMessages (Section 3.2).
  For historical reasons, implementations MAY support communications of
  binary data via HTTP GET (Section 4.1), and the triple DES-CBC and
  SHA-1 algorithms to secure pkiMessages (Section 3.2).
  Implementations MUST NOT support the obsolete and/or insecure single
  DES and MD5 algorithms used in earlier versions of this
  specification, since the unsecured nature of GetCACaps means that an
  in-path attacker can trivially roll back the encryption used to these
  insecure algorithms; see Section 7.5.

3. SCEP Secure Message Objects

  CMS is a general enveloping mechanism that enables both signed and
  encrypted transmission of arbitrary data.  SCEP messages that require
  confidentiality use two layers of CMS, as shown using ASN.1-like
  pseudocode in Figure 6.  By applying both enveloping and signing
  transformations, the SCEP message is protected both for the integrity
  of its end-to-end transaction information and the confidentiality of
  its information portion.
  pkiMessage {
    contentType = signedData { pkcs-7 2 },
    content {
      digestAlgorithms,
      encapsulatedContentInfo {
        eContentType = data { pkcs-7 1 },
        eContent {           -- pkcsPKIEnvelope, optional
          contentType = envelopedData { pkcs-7 3 },
          content {
            recipientInfo,
            encryptedContentInfo {
              contentType = data { pkcs-7 1 },
              contentEncrAlgorithm,
              encryptedContent {
                messageData  -- Typically PKCS #10 request
                }
              }
            }
          }
        },
      certificates,          -- Optional
      crls,                  -- Optional
      signerInfo {
        signedAttrs {
          transactionID,
          messageType,
          pkiStatus,
          failInfo,          -- Optional
          senderNonce / recipientNonce,
          },
        signature
        }
      }
    }
                          Figure 6: CMS Layering
  When a particular SCEP message carries data, this data is carried in
  the messageData.  CertRep messages will lack any signed content and
  consist only of a pkcsPKIEnvelope (Section 3.2.2).
  The remainder of this document will refer only to "messageData", but
  it is understood to always be encapsulated in the pkcsPKIEnvelope
  (Section 3.2.2).  The format of the data in the messageData is
  defined by the messageType attribute (see Section 3.2) of the
  SignedData.  If there is no messageData to be transmitted, the entire
  pkcsPKIEnvelope MUST be omitted.
  Samples of SCEP messages are available through the JSCEP project
  [JSCEP] in the src/samples directory.

3.1. SCEP Message Object Processing

  Creating a SCEP message consists of several stages.  The content to
  be conveyed (in other words, the messageData) is first encrypted, and
  the encrypted content is then signed.
  The form of encryption to be applied depends on the capabilities of
  the recipient's public key.  If the key is encryption capable (for
  example, RSA), then the messageData is encrypted using the
  recipient's public key with the CMS KeyTransRecipientInfo mechanism.
  If the key is not encryption capable (for example, DSA or ECDSA),
  then the messageData is encrypted using the challengePassword with
  the CMS PasswordRecipientInfo mechanism.
  Once the messageData has been encrypted, it is signed with the
  sender's public key.  This completes the SCEP message, which is then
  sent to the recipient.
  Note that some early implementations of this specification dealt with
  keys that were not encryption capable by omitting the encryption
  stage, based on the text in Section 3 that indicated that "the
  EnvelopedData is omitted".  This alternative processing mechanism
  SHOULD NOT be used since it exposes in cleartext the
  challengePassword used to authorise the certificate issue.


3.2. SCEP pkiMessage

  The basic building block of all secured SCEP messages is the SCEP
  pkiMessage.  It consists of a CMS SignedData content type.  The
  following restrictions apply:
  *  The eContentType in encapsulatedContentInfo MUST be data ({pkcs-7
     1}).
  *  The signed content, if present (FAILURE and PENDING CertRep
     messages will lack any signed content), MUST be a pkcsPKIEnvelope
     (Section 3.2.2) and MUST match the messageType attribute.
  *  The SignerInfo MUST contain a set of authenticatedAttributes
     (Section 3.2.1).

3.2.1. Signed Transaction Attributes

  At a minimum, all messages MUST contain the following
  authenticatedAttributes:
  *  A transactionID attribute (see Section 3.2.1.1).
  *  A messageType attribute (see Section 3.2.1.2).
  *  A fresh senderNonce attribute (see Section 3.2.1.5).  However,
     note the comment about senderNonces and polling in Section 3.3.2
  *  Any attributes required by CMS.
  If the message is a CertRep, it MUST also include the following
  authenticatedAttributes:
  *  A pkiStatus attribute (see Section 3.2.1.3).
  *  failInfo and optional failInfoText attributes (see
     Section 3.2.1.4) if pkiStatus = FAILURE.
  *  A recipientNonce attribute (see Section 3.2.1.5) copied from the
     senderNonce in the request that this is a response to.
  The following transaction attributes are encoded as authenticated
  attributes and carried in the SignerInfo for this SignedData.
  +================+=================+==============================+
  | Attribute      | Encoding        | Comment                      |
  +================+=================+==============================+
  | transactionID  | PrintableString | Unique ID for this           |
  |                |                 | transaction as a text string |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | messageType    | PrintableString | Decimal value as a numeric   |
  |                |                 | text string                  |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | pkiStatus      | PrintableString | Decimal value as a numeric   |
  |                |                 | text string                  |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | failInfo       | PrintableString | Decimal value as a numeric   |
  |                |                 | text string                  |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | failInfoText   | UTF8String      | Descriptive text for the     |
  |                |                 | failInfo value               |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | senderNonce    | OCTET STRING    | Random nonce as a 16-byte    |
  |                |                 | binary data string           |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
  | recipientNonce | OCTET STRING    | Random nonce as a 16-byte    |
  |                |                 | binary data string           |
  +----------------+-----------------+------------------------------+
                        Table 1: SCEP Attributes
  The OIDs used for these attributes are as follows:
  +======================+===============================+
  | Name                 | ASN.1 Definition              |
  +======================+===============================+
  | id-VeriSign          | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {2 16   |
  |                      | US(840) 1 VeriSign(113733)}   |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-pki               | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | VeriSign pki(1)}              |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-attributes        | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-pki |
  |                      | attributes(9)}                |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-transactionID     | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes transactionID(7)}  |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-messageType       | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes messageType(2)}    |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-pkiStatus         | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes pkiStatus(3)}      |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-failInfo          | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes failInfo(4)}       |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-senderNonce       | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes senderNonce(5)}    |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-recipientNonce    | OBJECT_IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | attributes recipientNonce(6)} |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-scep              | OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | pkix 24}                      |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
  | id-scep-failInfoText | OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {id-    |
  |                      | scep 1}                       |
  +----------------------+-------------------------------+
                Table 2: SCEP Attribute OIDs
  The attributes are detailed in the following sections.

3.2.1.1. transactionID

  A PKI operation is a transaction consisting of the messages exchanged
  between a client and the CA.  The transactionID is a text string
  provided by the client when starting a transaction.  The client MUST
  use a unique string as the transaction identifier, encoded as a
  PrintableString, which MUST be used for all PKI messages exchanged
  for a given operation, such as a certificate issue.
  Note that the transactionID must be unique, but not necessarily
  randomly generated.  For example, it may be a value assigned by the
  CA to allow the client to be identified by their transactionID, using
  a value such as the client device's Extended Unique Identifier (EUI),
  Remote Terminal Unit (RTU) ID, or a similar unique identifier.  This
  can be useful when the client doesn't have a preassigned
  Distinguished Name through which the CA can identify their request --
  for example, when enrolling Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
  (SCADA) devices.

3.2.1.2. messageType

  The messageType attribute specifies the type of operation performed
  by the transaction.  This attribute MUST be included in all PKI
  messages.  The following message types are defined:
   +=======+============+============================================+
   | Value | Name       | Description                                |
   +=======+============+============================================+
   | 0     | Reserved   |                                            |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 3     | CertRep    | Response to certificate or CRL request.    |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 17    | RenewalReq | PKCS #10 certificate request authenticated |
   |       |            | with an existing certificate.              |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 19    | PKCSReq    | PKCS #10 certificate request authenticated |
   |       |            | with a shared secret.                      |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 20    | CertPoll   | Certificate polling in manual enrolment.   |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 21    | GetCert    | Retrieve a certificate.                    |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
   | 22    | GetCRL     | Retrieve a CRL.                            |
   +-------+------------+--------------------------------------------+
                       Table 3: SCEP Message Types
  Message types not defined above MUST be treated as errors unless
  their use has been negotiated through GetCACaps (Section 3.5.1).

3.2.1.3. pkiStatus

  All response messages MUST include transaction status information,
  which is defined as a pkiStatus attribute:
      +=======+=========+========================================+
      | Value | Name    | Description                            |
      +=======+=========+========================================+
      | 0     | SUCCESS | Request granted.                       |
      +-------+---------+----------------------------------------+
      | 2     | FAILURE | Request rejected.  In this case, the   |
      |       |         | failInfo attribute, as defined in      |
      |       |         | Section 3.2.1.4, MUST also be present. |
      +-------+---------+----------------------------------------+
      | 3     | PENDING | Request pending for manual approval.   |
      +-------+---------+----------------------------------------+
                     Table 4: pkiStatus Attributes
  PKI status values not defined above MUST be treated as errors unless
  their use has been negotiated through GetCACaps (Section 3.5.1).

3.2.1.4. failInfo and failInfoText

  The failInfo attribute MUST contain one of the following failure
  reasons:
     +=======+=================+==================================+
     | Value | Name            | Description                      |
     +=======+=================+==================================+
     | 0     | badAlg          | Unrecognised or unsupported      |
     |       |                 | algorithm.                       |
     +-------+-----------------+----------------------------------+
     | 1     | badMessageCheck | Integrity check (meaning         |
     |       |                 | signature verification of the    |
     |       |                 | CMS message) failed.             |
     +-------+-----------------+----------------------------------+
     | 2     | badRequest      | Transaction not permitted or     |
     |       |                 | supported.                       |
     +-------+-----------------+----------------------------------+
     | 3     | badTime         | The signingTime attribute from   |
     |       |                 | the CMS authenticatedAttributes  |
     |       |                 | was not sufficiently close to    |
     |       |                 | the system time.  This condition |
     |       |                 | may occur if the CA is concerned |
     |       |                 | about replays of old messages.   |
     +-------+-----------------+----------------------------------+
     | 4     | badCertId       | No certificate could be          |
     |       |                 | identified matching the provided |
     |       |                 | criteria.                        |
     +-------+-----------------+----------------------------------+
                      Table 5: failInfo Attributes
  Failure reasons not defined above MUST be treated as errors unless
  their use has been negotiated through GetCACaps (Section 3.5.1).
  The failInfoText is a free-form UTF-8 text string that provides
  further information in the case of pkiStatus = FAILURE.  In
  particular, it may be used to provide details on why a certificate
  request was not granted that go beyond what's provided by the near-
  universal failInfo = badRequest status.  Since this is a free-form
  text string intended for interpretation by humans, implementations
  SHOULD NOT assume that it has any type of machine-processable
  content.

3.2.1.5. senderNonce and recipientNonce

  The senderNonce and recipientNonce attributes are each a 16-byte
  random number generated for each transaction.  These are intended to
  prevent replay attacks.
  When a sender sends a PKI message to a recipient, a fresh senderNonce
  MUST be included in the message.  The recipient MUST copy the
  senderNonce into the recipientNonce of the reply as a proof of
  liveliness.  The original sender MUST verify that the recipientNonce
  of the reply matches the senderNonce it sent in the request.  If the
  nonce does not match, then the message MUST be rejected.
  Note that since SCEP exchanges consist of a single request followed
  by a single response, the use of distinct sender and recipient nonces
  is redundant, since the client sends a nonce in its request and the
  CA responds with the same nonce in its reply.  In effect, there's
  just a single nonce, identified as senderNonce in the client's
  request and recipientNonce in the CA's reply.

3.2.2. SCEP pkcsPKIEnvelope

  The information portion of a SCEP message is carried inside an
  EnvelopedData content type, as defined in CMS, with the following
  restrictions:
  *  contentType in encryptedContentInfo MUST be data ({pkcs-7 1}).
  *  encryptedContent MUST be the SCEP message being transported (see
     Section 4) and MUST match the messageType authenticated Attribute
     in the pkiMessage.

3.3. SCEP pkiMessage types

  All of the messages in this section are pkiMessages (Section 3.2),
  where the type of the message MUST be specified in the "messageType"
  authenticated Attribute.  Each section defines a valid message type,
  the corresponding messageData formats, and mandatory authenticated
  attributes for that type.

3.3.1. PKCSReq/RenewalReq

  The messageData for this type consists of a PKCS #10 Certificate
  Request.  The certificate request MUST contain at least the following
  items:
  *  The subject Distinguished Name.
  *  The subject public key.
  *  For a PKCSReq, if authorisation based on a shared secret is being
     used, a challengePassword attribute.
  In addition, the message must contain the authenticatedAttributes
  specified in Section 3.2.1.

3.3.2. CertRep

  The messageData for this type consists of a degenerate certificates-
  only CMS SignedData message (Section 3.4).  The exact content
  required for the reply depends on the type of request that this
  message is a response to.  The request types are detailed in Sections
  3.3.2.1 and 4.  In addition, the message must contain the
  authenticatedAttributes specified in Section 3.2.1.
  Earlier draft versions of this specification required that this
  message include a senderNonce alongside the recipientNonce, which was
  to be used to chain to subsequent polling operations.  However, if a
  single message was lost during the potentially extended interval over
  which polling could take place (see Section 5 for an example of
  this), then if the implementation were to enforce this requirement,
  the overall transaction would fail, even though nothing had actually
  gone wrong.  Because of this issue, implementations mostly ignored
  the requirement to either carry this nonce over to subsequent polling
  messages or verify its presence.  More recent versions of the
  specification no longer require the chaining of nonces across polling
  operations.

3.3.2.1. CertRep SUCCESS

  When the pkiStatus attribute is set to SUCCESS, the messageData for
  this message consists of a degenerate certificates-only CMS
  SignedData message (Section 3.4).  The content of this degenerate
  certificates-only SignedData message depends on what the original
  request was, as outlined in Table 6.
  +==============+===============================================+
  | Request-type | Reply-contents                                |
  +==============+===============================================+
  | PKCSReq      | The reply MUST contain at least the issued    |
  |              | certificate in the certificates field of the  |
  |              | SignedData.  The reply MAY contain additional |
  |              | certificates, but the issued certificate MUST |
  |              | be the leaf certificate.                      |
  +--------------+-----------------------------------------------+
  | RenewalReq   | Same as PKCSReq                               |
  +--------------+-----------------------------------------------+
  | CertPoll     | Same as PKCSReq                               |
  +--------------+-----------------------------------------------+
  | GetCert      | The reply MUST contain at least the requested |
  |              | certificate in the certificates field of the  |
  |              | SignedData.  The reply MAY contain additional |
  |              | certificates, but the requested certificate   |
  |              | MUST be the leaf certificate.                 |
  +--------------+-----------------------------------------------+
  | GetCRL       | The reply MUST contain the CRL in the crls    |
  |              | field of the SignedData.                      |
  +--------------+-----------------------------------------------+
                  Table 6: CertRep Response Types

3.3.2.2. CertRep FAILURE

  When the pkiStatus attribute is set to FAILURE, the reply MUST also
  contain a failInfo (Section 3.2.1.4) attribute set to the appropriate
  error condition describing the failure.  The reply MAY also contain a
  failInfoText attribute providing extended details on why the
  operation failed, typically to expand on the catchall failInfo =
  badRequest status.  The pkcsPKIEnvelope (Section 3.2.2) MUST be
  omitted.

3.3.2.3. CertRep PENDING

  When the pkiStatus attribute is set to PENDING, the pkcsPKIEnvelope
  (Section 3.2.2) MUST be omitted.

3.3.3. CertPoll (GetCertInitial)

  This message is used for certificate polling.  For unknown reasons,
  it was referred to as "GetCertInitial" in earlier draft versions of
  this specification.  The messageData for this type consists of an
  IssuerAndSubject:
  issuerAndSubject ::= SEQUENCE {
      issuer     Name,
      subject    Name
      }
  The issuer is set to the subjectName of the CA (in other words, the
  intended issuerName of the certificate that's being requested).  The
  subject is set to the subjectName used when requesting the
  certificate.
  Note that both of these fields are redundant; the CA is identified by
  the recipientInfo in the pkcsPKIEnvelope (or in most cases, simply by
  the server that the message is being sent to), and the client/
  transaction being polled is identified by the transactionID.  Both of
  these fields can be processed by the CA without going through the
  cryptographically expensive process of unwrapping and processing the
  issuerAndSubject.  For this reason, implementations SHOULD assume
  that the polling operation will be controlled by the recipientInfo
  and transactionID rather than the contents of the messageData.  In
  addition, the message must contain the authenticatedAttributes
  specified in Section 3.2.1.

3.3.4. GetCert and GetCRL

  The messageData for these types consist of an IssuerAndSerialNumber,
  as defined in CMS, that uniquely identifies the certificate being
  requested, either the certificate itself for GetCert or its
  revocation status via a CRL for GetCRL.  In addition, the message
  must contain the authenticatedAttributes specified in Section 3.2.1.
  These message types, while included here for completeness, apply
  unnecessary cryptography and messaging overhead to the simple task of
  transferring a certificate or CRL (see Section 7.8).  Implementations
  SHOULD prefer HTTP certificate-store access [RFC4387] or LDAP over
  the use of these messages.

3.4. Degenerate certificates-only CMS SignedData

  CMS includes a degenerate case of the SignedData content type in
  which there are no signers.  The use of such a degenerate case is to
  disseminate certificates and CRLs.  For SCEP, the content field of
  the ContentInfo value of a degenerate certificates-only SignedData
  MUST be omitted.  When carrying certificates, the certificates are
  included in the certificates field of the SignedData.  When carrying
  a CRL, the CRL is included in the crls field of the SignedData.

3.5. CA Capabilities

  In order to provide support for future enhancements to the protocol,
  CAs MUST implement the GetCACaps message to allow clients to query
  which functionality is available from the CA.

3.5.1. GetCACaps HTTP Message Format

  This message requests capabilities from a CA, with the format as
  described in Section 4.1:
  "GET" SP SCEPPATH "?operation=GetCACaps" SP HTTP-version CRLF

3.5.2. CA Capabilities Response Format

  The response for a GetCACaps message is a list of CA capabilities, in
  plain text and in any order, separated by <CR><LF> or <LF>
  characters.  This specification defines the following keywords
  (quotation marks are not sent):
  +==================+========================================+
  | Keyword          | Description                            |
  +==================+========================================+
  | AES              | CA supports the AES128-CBC encryption  |
  |                  | algorithm.                             |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | DES3             | CA supports the triple DES-CBC         |
  |                  | encryption algorithm.                  |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | GetNextCACert    | CA supports the GetNextCACert message. |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | POSTPKIOperation | CA supports PKIOPeration messages sent |
  |                  | via HTTP POST.                         |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | Renewal          | CA supports the Renewal CA operation.  |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | SHA-1            | CA supports the SHA-1 hashing          |
  |                  | algorithm.                             |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | SHA-256          | CA supports the SHA-256 hashing        |
  |                  | algorithm.                             |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | SHA-512          | CA supports the SHA-512 hashing        |
  |                  | algorithm.                             |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
  | SCEPStandard     | CA supports all mandatory-to-implement |
  |                  | sections of the SCEP standard.  This   |
  |                  | keyword implies "AES",                 |
  |                  | "POSTPKIOperation", and "SHA-256", as  |
  |                  | well as the provisions of Section 2.9. |
  +------------------+----------------------------------------+
               Table 7: GetCACaps Response Keywords
  Table 7 lists all of the keywords that are defined in this
  specification.  A CA MAY provide additional keywords advertising
  further capabilities and functionality.  A client MUST be able to
  accept and ignore any unknown keywords that might be sent by a CA.
  The CA MUST use the text case specified here, but clients SHOULD
  ignore the text case when processing this message.  Clients MUST
  accept the standard HTTP-style text delimited by <CR><LF> as well as
  the text delimited by <LF> specified in an earlier draft version of
  this specification.
  The client SHOULD use SHA-256 in preference to SHA-1 hashing and
  AES128-CBC in preference to triple DES-CBC if they are supported by
  the CA.  Although the CMS format allows any form of AES and SHA-2 to
  be specified, in the interests of interoperability the de facto
  universal standards of AES128-CBC and SHA-256 SHOULD be used.
  Announcing some of these capabilities individually is redundant,
  since they're required as mandatory-to-implement functionality (see
  Section 2.9) whose presence as a whole is signalled by the
  "SCEPStandard" capability.  However, it may be useful to announce
  them in order to deal with older implementations that would otherwise
  default to obsolete, insecure algorithms and mechanisms.
  If the CA supports none of the above capabilities, it SHOULD return
  an empty message.  A CA MAY simply return an HTTP error.  A client
  that receives an empty message or an HTTP error SHOULD interpret the
  response as if none of the capabilities listed are supported by the
  CA.
  Note that at least one widely deployed server implementation supports
  several of the above operations but doesn't support the GetCACaps
  message to indicate that it supports them, and it will close the
  connection if sent a GetCACaps message.  This means that the
  equivalent of GetCACaps must be performed through server
  fingerprinting, which can be done using the ID string "Microsoft-
  IIS".  Newer versions of the same server, if sent a SCEP request
  using AES and SHA-2, will respond with an invalid response that can't
  be decrypted, requiring the use of 3DES and SHA-1 in order to obtain
  a response that can be processed, even if AES and/or SHA-2 are
  allegedly supported.  In addition, the server will generate CA
  certificates that only have one, but not both, of the keyEncipherment
  and digitalSignature keyUsage flags set, requiring that the client
  ignore the keyUsage flags in order to use the certificates for SCEP.
  The Content-type of the reply SHOULD be "text/plain".  Clients SHOULD
  ignore the Content-type, as older implementations of SCEP may send
  various Content-types.
  Example:
  GET /cgi-bin/pkiclient.exe?operation=GetCACaps HTTP/1.1
  might return:
  AES
  GetNextCACert
  POSTPKIOperation
  SCEPStandard
  SHA-256
  This means that the CA supports modern crypto algorithms, and the
  GetNextCACert message allows PKIOperation messages (PKCSReq/
  RenewalReq, GetCert, CertPoll, ...) to be sent using HTTP POST and is
  compliant with the final version of the SCEP standard.

4. SCEP Transactions

  This section describes the SCEP Transactions and their HTTP [RFC7230]
  transport mechanism.
  Note that SCEP doesn't follow best current practices on usage of
  HTTP.  In particular, it recommends ignoring some media types and
  hard-codes specific URI paths.  Guidance on the appropriate
  application of HTTP in these circumstances may be found in [HTTP].

4.1. HTTP POST and GET Message Formats

  SCEP uses the HTTP POST and GET methods [RFC7230] to exchange
  information with the CA.  The following defines the ABNF syntax of
  HTTP POST and GET methods sent from a client to a CA:
  POSTREQUEST = "POST" SP SCEPPATH "?operation=" OPERATION
                SP HTTP-version CRLF
  GETREQUEST = "GET" SP SCEPPATH "?operation=" OPERATION
               "&message=" MESSAGE SP HTTP-version CRLF
  where:
  *  SCEPPATH is the HTTP URL path for accessing the CA.  Clients
     SHOULD set SCEPPATH to the fixed string "/cgi-bin/pkiclient.exe"
     unless directed to do otherwise by the CA.
  *  OPERATION depends on the SCEP transaction and is defined in the
     following sections.
  *  HTTP-version is the HTTP version string, which is "HTTP/1.1" for
     [RFC7230].
  *  SP and CRLF are space and carriage return/linefeed, as defined in
     [RFC5234].
  The CA will typically ignore SCEPPATH, since it's unlikely to be
  issuing certificates via a web server.  Clients SHOULD set SCEPPATH
  to the fixed string "/cgi-bin/pkiclient.exe" unless directed to do
  otherwise by the CA.  The CA SHOULD ignore the SCEPPATH unless its
  precise format is critical to the CA's operation.
  Early SCEP drafts performed all communications via GET messages,
  including non-idempotent ones that should have been sent via POST
  messages; see [HTTP] for details.  This has caused problems because
  of the way that the (supposedly) idempotent GET interacts with caches
  and proxies, and because the extremely large GET requests created by
  encoding CMS messages may be truncated in transit.  These issues are
  typically not visible when testing on a LAN, but crop up during
  deployment over WANs.  If the remote CA supports POST, the CMS-
  encoded SCEP messages MUST be sent via HTTP POST instead of HTTP GET.
  This applies to any SCEP message except GetCACert, GetNextCACert, and
  GetCACaps and avoids the need for base64 and URL encoding that's
  required for GET messaging.  The client can verify that the CA
  supports SCEP messages via POST by looking for the "SCEPStandard" or
  "POSTPKIOperation" capability (see Section 3.5.2).
  If a client or CA uses HTTP GET and encounters HTTP-related problems
  such as messages being truncated, seeing errors such as HTTP 414
  ("Request-URI too long"), or simply having the message not sent/
  received at all when standard requests to the server (for example,
  via a web browser) work, then this is a symptom of the problematic
  use of HTTP GET.  The solution to this problem is to update the
  implementation to use HTTP POST instead.  In addition, when using
  GET, it's recommended to test the implementation from as many
  different network locations as possible to determine whether the use
  of GET will cause problems with communications.
  When using GET messages to communicate binary data, base64 encoding
  as specified in Section 4 of [RFC4648] MUST be used.  The
  base64-encoded data is distinct from "base64url" and may contain URI
  reserved characters; thus, it MUST be escaped as specified in
  [RFC3986] in addition to being base64 encoded.  Finally, the encoded
  data is inserted into the MESSAGE portion of the HTTP GET request.

4.2. Get CA Certificate

  To get the CA certificate(s), the client sends a GetCACert message to
  the CA.  The OPERATION MUST be set to "GetCACert".  There is no
  request data associated with this message.

4.2.1. Get CA Certificate Response Message Format

  The response for GetCACert is different between the case where the CA
  directly communicates with the client during the enrolment and the
  case where an intermediate CA exists and the client communicates with
  this CA during the enrolment.

4.2.1.1. CA Certificate Response Message Format

  If the CA does not have any intermediate CA certificates, the
  response consists of a single X.509 CA certificate.  The response
  will have a Content-Type of "application/x-x509-ca-cert".
  "Content-Type: application/x-x509-ca-cert"
  <binary X.509>

4.2.1.2. CA Certificate Chain Response Message Format

  If the CA has intermediate CA certificates, the response consists of
  a degenerate certificates-only CMS SignedData message (Section 3.4)
  containing the certificates, with the intermediate CA certificate(s)
  as the leaf certificate(s).  The response will have a Content-Type of
  "application/x-x509-ca-ra-cert".  Note that this designation is used
  for historical reasons due to its use in older versions of this
  specification -- no special meaning should be attached to the label.
  "Content-Type: application/x-x509-ca-ra-cert"
  <binary CMS>

4.3. Certificate Enrolment/Renewal

  A PKCSReq/RenewalReq (Section 3.3.1) message is used to perform a
  certificate enrolment or renewal transaction.  The OPERATION MUST be
  set to "PKIOperation".  Note that when used with HTTP POST, the only
  OPERATION possible is "PKIOperation", so many CAs don't check this
  value or even notice its absence.  When implemented using HTTP POST,
  the message is sent with a Content-Type of "application/x-pki-
  message" and might look as follows:
  POST /cgi-bin/pkiclient.exe?operation=PKIOperation HTTP/1.1
  Content-Length: <length of data>
  Content-Type: application/x-pki-message
  <binary CMS data>
  When implemented using HTTP GET, this might look as follows:
  GET /cgi-bin/pkiclient.exe?operation=PKIOperation& \
  message=MIAGCSqGSIb3DQEHA6CAMIACAQAxgDCBzAIBADB2MG \
  IxETAPBgNVBAcTCE......AAAAAA== HTTP/1.1

4.3.1. Certificate Enrolment/Renewal Response Message

  If the request is granted, a CertRep SUCCESS message
  (Section 3.3.2.1) is returned.  If the request is rejected, a CertRep
  FAILURE message (Section 3.3.2.2) is returned.  If the CA is
  configured to manually authenticate the client, a CertRep PENDING
  message (Section 3.3.2.3) MAY be returned.  The CA MAY return a
  PENDING for other reasons.
  The response will have a Content-Type of "application/x-pki-message".
  "Content-Type: application/x-pki-message"
  <binary CertRep message>

4.4. Poll for Client Initial Certificate

  When the client receives a CertRep message with pkiStatus set to
  PENDING, it will enter the polling state by periodically sending
  CertPoll messages to the CA until either the request is granted and
  the certificate is sent back or the request is rejected or some
  preconfigured time limit for polling or maximum number of polls is
  exceeded.  The OPERATION MUST be set to "PKIOperation".
  CertPoll messages exchanged during the polling period MUST carry the
  same transactionID attribute as the previous PKCSReq/RenewalReq.  A
  CA receiving a CertPoll for which it does not have a matching
  PKCSReq/RenewalReq MUST reject this request.
  Since at this time the certificate has not been issued, the client
  can only use its own subject name (which was contained in the
  original PKCS# 10 sent via PKCSReq/RenewalReq) to identify the polled
  certificate request (but see the note on identification during
  polling in Section 3.3.3).  In theory, there can be multiple
  outstanding requests from one client (for example, if different keys
  and different key usages were used to request multiple certificates),
  so the transactionID must also be included to disambiguate between
  multiple requests.  In practice, however, the client SHOULD NOT have
  multiple requests outstanding at any one time, since this tends to
  confuse some CAs.

4.4.1. Polling Response Message Format

  The response messages for CertPoll are the same as in Section 4.3.1.

4.5. Certificate Access

  A client can query an issued certificate from the SCEP CA, as long as
  the client knows the issuer name and the issuer-assigned certificate
  serial number.
  This transaction consists of one GetCert (Section 3.3.4) message sent
  to the CA by a client and one CertRep (Section 3.3.2) message sent
  back from the CA.  The OPERATION MUST be set to "PKIOperation".

4.5.1. Certificate Access Response Message Format

  In this case, the CertRep from the CA is same as in Section 4.3.1,
  except that the CA will either grant the request (SUCCESS) or reject
  it (FAILURE).

4.6. CRL Access

  Clients can request a CRL from the SCEP CA, as described in
  Section 2.7.  The OPERATION MUST be set to "PKIOperation".

4.6.1. CRL Access Response Message Format

  The CRL is sent back to the client in a CertRep (Section 3.3.2)
  message.  The information portion of this message is a degenerate
  certificates-only SignedData (Section 3.4) that contains only the
  most recent CRL in the crls field of the SignedData.

4.7. Get Next Certificate Authority Certificate

  When a CA certificate is about to expire, clients need to retrieve
  the CA's next CA certificate (i.e., the rollover certificate).  This
  is done via the GetNextCACert message.  The OPERATION MUST be set to
  "GetNextCACert".  There is no request data associated with this
  message.

4.7.1. Get Next CA Response Message Format

  The response consists of a SignedData CMS message, signed by the
  current CA signing key.  Clients MUST validate the signature on the
  message before trusting any of its contents.  The response will have
  a Content-Type of "application/x-x509-next-ca-cert".
  "Content-Type: application/x-x509-next-ca-cert"
  <binary CMS>
  The content of the SignedData message is a degenerate certificates-
  only SignedData message (Section 3.4) containing the new CA
  certificate(s) to be used when the current CA certificate expires.

5. SCEP Transaction Examples

  The following section gives several examples of client-to-CA
  transactions.  Client actions are indicated in the left column, CA
  actions are indicated in the right column, and the transactionID is
  given in parentheses.  For ease of reading, small integer values have
  been used; in practice, full transaction IDs would be used.  The
  first transaction, for example, would read like this:
  |  Client Sends PKCSReq message with transactionID 1 to the CA.  The
  |  CA signs the certificate and constructs a CertRep Message
  |  containing the signed certificate with a transaction ID 1.  The
  |  client receives the message and installs the certificate locally.

5.1. Successful Transactions

  PKCSReq (1)             ----------> CA issues certificate
                          <---------- CertRep (1) SUCCESS
  Client installs certificate
        Figure 7: Successful Enrolment Case: Automatic Processing
  PKCSReq (2)             ----------> Cert request goes into queue
                          <---------- CertRep (2) PENDING
  CertPoll (2)            ----------> Still pending
                          <---------- CertRep (2) PENDING
  CertPoll (2)            ----------> CA issues certificate
                          <---------- CertRep (2) SUCCESS
  Client installs certificate
   Figure 8: Successful Enrolment Case: Manual Authentication Required
  GetNextCACert         ---------->
                        <---------- New CA certificate
  PKCSReq*              ----------> CA issues certificate with
                                    new key
                        <---------- CertRep SUCCESS
  Client stores certificate
  for installation when
  existing certificate expires.
                  Figure 9: CA Certificate Rollover Case
  * Enveloped for the new CA certificate.  The CA will use the envelope
  to determine which key to use to issue the client certificate.

5.2. Transactions with Errors

  In the case of polled transactions that aren't completed
  automatically, there are two potential options for dealing with a
  transaction that's interrupted due to network or software/hardware
  issues.  The first is for the client to preserve its transaction
  state and resume the CertPoll polling when normal service is
  restored.  The second is for the client to begin a new transaction by
  sending a new PKCSReq/RenewalReq, rather than continuing the previous
  CertPoll.  Both options have their own advantages and disadvantages.
  The CertPoll continuation requires that the client maintain its
  transaction state for the time when it resumes polling.  This is
  relatively simple if the problem is a brief network outage, but less
  simple when the problem is a client crash and restart.  In addition,
  the CA may treat a lost network connection as the end of a
  transaction, so that a new connection followed by a CertPoll will be
  treated as an error.
  The PKCSReq/RenewalReq continuation doesn't require any state to be
  maintained, since it's a new transaction.  However, it may cause
  problems on the CA side if the certificate was successfully issued
  but the client never received it, since the resumed transaction
  attempt will appear to be a request for a duplicate certificate (see
  Section 7.4 for more on why this is a problem).  In this case, the CA
  may refuse the transaction or require manual intervention to remove/
  revoke the previous certificate before the client can request another
  one.
  Since the new-transaction resume is more robust in the presence of
  errors and doesn't require special-case handling by either the client
  or CA, clients SHOULD use the new-transaction option in preference to
  the resumed-CertPoll option to recover from errors.
  Resync Case 1: Client resyncs via new PKCSReq (recommended):
  PKCSReq (3)           ----------> Cert request goes into queue
                        <---------- CertRep (3) PENDING
  CertPoll (3)          ----------> Still pending
                          X-------- CertRep(3) PENDING
  (Network outage)
  (Client reconnects)
  PKCSReq (4)           ---------->
                        <---------- CertRep (4) PENDING
  etc...
                         Figure 10: Resync Case 1
  Resync Case 2: Client resyncs via resumed CertPoll after a network
  outage (not recommended; use PKCSReq to resync):
  PKCSReq (5)           ----------> Cert request goes into queue
                        <---------- CertRep (5) PENDING
  CertPoll (5)          ----------> Still pending
                          X-------- CertRep(5) PENDING
  (Network outage)
  (Client reconnects)
  CertPoll (5)          ----------> CA issues certificate
                        <---------- CertRep (5) SUCCESS
  Client installs certificate
                         Figure 11: Resync Case 2
  Resync Case 3: Special-case variation of Case 2 where the CertRep
  SUCCESS rather than the CertRep PENDING is lost (recommended):
  PKCSReq (6)           ----------> Cert request goes into queue
                        <---------- CertRep (6) PENDING
  CertPoll (6)          ----------> Still pending
                        <---------- CertRep (6) PENDING
  CertPoll (6)          ----------> CA issues certificate
                          X-------- CertRep(6) SUCCESS
  (Network outage)
  (Client reconnects)
  PKCSReq (7)           ----------> There is already a valid
                                    certificate with this
                                    Distinguished Name (DN).
                        <---------- CertRep (7) FAILURE
                                    Admin revokes certificate
  PKCSReq (8)           ----------> CA issues new certificate
                        <---------- CertRep (8) SUCCESS
  Client installs certificate
                         Figure 12: Resync Case 3
  Resync Case 4: Special-case variation of Case 1 where the CertRep
  SUCCESS rather than the CertRep PENDING is lost (not recommended; use
  PKCSReq to resync):
  PKCSReq (9)           ----------> Cert request goes into queue
                        <---------- CertRep (9) PENDING
  CertPoll (9)          ----------> Still pending
                        <---------- CertRep (9) PENDING
  CertPoll (9)          ----------> CA issues certificate
                          X-------- CertRep(9) SIGNED CERT
  (Network outage)
  (Client reconnects)
  CertPoll (9)          ----------> Certificate already issued
                        <---------- CertRep (9) SUCCESS
  Client installs certificate
                         Figure 13: Resync Case 4
  As these examples indicate, resumption from an error via a resumed
  CertPoll is tricky due to the state that needs to be held by both the
  client and/or the CA.  A PKCSReq/RenewalReq resume is the easiest to
  implement, since it's stateless and is identical for both polled and
  nonpolled transactions, whereas a CertPoll resume treats the two
  differently.  (A nonpolled transaction is resumed with a PKCSReq/
  RenewalReq; a polled transaction is resumed with a CertPoll.)  For
  this reason, error recovery SHOULD be handled via a new PKCSReq
  rather than a resumed CertPoll.

6. IANA Considerations

  An object identifier for an arc to assign SCEP Attribute Identifiers
  has been assigned in the "SMI Security for PKIX" registry
  (1.3.6.1.5.5.7).  This object identifer, Simple Certificate
  Enrollment Protocol Attributes, is denoted as id-scep:
  id-scep OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-pkix 24 }
  IANA created the "SMI Security for SCEP Attribute Identifiers"
  registry (1.3.6.1.5.5.7.24) with the following entries with
  references to this document:
  id-scep-failInfoText OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { id-scep 1 }
  Entries in the registry are assigned according to the "Specification
  Required" policy defined in [RFC8126].
  Section 3.2.1.2 describes an "SCEP Message Type" registry, and
  Section 3.5 describes an "SCEP CA Capabilities" registry; these
  registries are maintained by IANA and define a number of such code-
  point identifiers.  Entries in the registry are assigned according to
  the "Specification Required" policy defined in [RFC8126].
  The "SCEP Message Types" registry has "Value", "Name", "Description",
  and "Reference" columns.  The "Value" entry is a small positive
  integer; value "0" is reserved.
  The "SCEP CA Capabilities" registry has "Keyword", "Description", and
  "Reference" columns.  Although implementations SHOULD use the "SCEP
  CA Capabilities" registry, SCEP is often employed in situations where
  this isn't possible.  In this case, private-use CA capabilities may
  be specified using a unique prefix such as an organisation identifier
  or domain name under the control of the entity that defines the
  capability.  For example, the prefix would be "Example.com-", and the
  complete capability would be "Example.com-CapabilityName".
  IANA has registered four media types as defined in this document:
  *  application/x-x509-ca-cert
  *  application/x-x509-ca-ra-cert
  *  application/x-x509-next-ca-cert
  *  application/x-pki-message
  Note that these are grandfathered media types registered as per
  Appendix A of [RFC6838].  Templates for registrations are specified
  below.

6.1. Registration of the application/x-x509-ca-cert Media Type

  Type name:  application
  Subtype name:  x-x509-ca-cert
  Required parameters:  none
  Optional parameters:  none
  Encoding considerations:  binary
  Security considerations:  This media type contains a certificate; see
     the Security Considerations section of [RFC5280].  There is no
     executable content.
  Interoperability considerations:  This is a grandfathered
     registration of an alias to application/pkix-cert (basically a
     single DER-encoded Certification Authority certificate), which is
     only used in SCEP.
  Published specification:  RFC 8894
  Applications that use this media type:  SCEP uses this media type
     when returning a CA certificate.
  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A
  Additional information:
     Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A
     Magic number(s):  none
     File extension(s):  N/A
     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A
  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See the
     Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Intended usage:  LIMITED USE
  Restrictions on usage:  SCEP protocol
  Author:  See the Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894
  Change controller:  IETF
  Provisional registration?  No

6.2. Registration of the application/x-x509-ca-ra-cert Media Type

  Type name:  application
  Subtype name:  x-x509-ca-ra-cert
  Required parameters:  none
  Optional parameters:  none
  Encoding considerations:  binary
  Security considerations:  This media type consists of a degenerate
     certificates-only CMS SignedData message (Section 3.4) containing
     the certificates, with the intermediate CA certificate(s) as the
     leaf certificate(s).  There is no executable content.
  Interoperability considerations:  This is a grandfathered
     registration that is only used in SCEP.
  Published specification:  RFC 8894
  Applications that use this media type:  SCEP uses this media type
     when returning CA Certificate Chain Response.
  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A
  Additional information:
     Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A
     Magic number(s):  none
     File extension(s):  N/A
     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A
  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See the
     Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Intended usage:  LIMITED USE
  Restrictions on usage:  SCEP protocol
  Author:  See the Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Change controller:  IETF
  Provisional registration?  no

6.3. Registration of the application/x-x509-next-ca-cert Media Type

  Type name:  application
  Subtype name:  x-x509-next-ca-cert
  Required parameters:  none
  Optional parameters:  none
  Encoding considerations:  binary
  Security considerations:  This media type consists of a SignedData
     CMS message, signed by the current CA signing key.  There is no
     executable content.
  Interoperability considerations:  This is a grandfathered
     registration that is only used in SCEP.
  Published specification:  RFC 8894
  Applications that use this media type:  SCEP uses this media type
     when returning a Get Next CA response.
  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A
  Additional information:
     Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A
     Magic number(s):  none
     File extension(s):  N/A
     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A
  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See the
     Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Intended usage:  LIMITED USE
  Restrictions on usage:  SCEP protocol
  Author:  See the Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Change controller:  IETF
  Provisional registration?  no

6.4. Registration of the application/x-pki-message Media Type

  Type name:  application
  Subtype name:  x-pki-message
  Required parameters:  none
  Optional parameters:  none
  Encoding considerations:  binary
  Security considerations:  This media type consists of a degenerate
     certificates-only CMS SignedData message.  There is no executable
     content.
  Interoperability considerations:  This is a grandfathered
     registration that is only used in SCEP.
  Published specification:  RFC 8894
  Applications that use this media type:  SCEP uses this media type
     when returning a Certificate Enrolment/Renewal Response.
  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A
  Additional information:
     Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A
     Magic number(s):  none
     File extension(s):  N/A
     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A
  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See the
     Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Intended usage:  LIMITED USE
  Restrictions on usage:  SCEP protocol
  Author:  See the Authors' Addresses section of RFC 8894.
  Change controller:  IETF
  Provisional registration?  no

7. Security Considerations

  The security goal of SCEP is that no adversary can subvert the public
  key/identity binding from that intended.  An adversary is any entity
  other than the client and the CA participating in the protocol.
  This goal is met through the use of CMS and PKCS #10 encryption and
  digital signatures using authenticated public keys.  The CA's public
  key is authenticated via out-of-band means such as the checking of
  the CA fingerprint, and the SCEP client's public key is authenticated
  through manual or preshared secret authentication.

7.1. General Security

  Common key-management considerations such as keeping private keys
  truly private and using adequate lengths for symmetric and asymmetric
  keys must be followed in order to maintain the security of this
  protocol.  This is especially true for CA keys which, when
  compromised, compromise the security of all relying parties.

7.2. Use of the CA Private Key

  A CA private key is generally meant for, and usually flagged as,
  being usable for certificate (and CRL) signing exclusively rather
  than data signing or encryption.  The SCEP protocol, however, uses
  the CA private key to both sign and optionally encrypt CMS transport
  messages.  This is generally considered undesirable, as it widens the
  possibility of an implementation weakness and provides an additional
  location where the private key must be used (and hence is slightly
  more vulnerable to exposure) and where a side-channel attack might be
  applied.

7.3. ChallengePassword Shared Secret Value

  The security measures that should be applied to the challengePassword
  shared secret depend on the manner in which SCEP is employed.  In the
  simplest case, with SCEP used to provision devices with certificates
  in the manufacturing facility, the physical security of the facility
  may be enough to protect the certificate issue process with no
  additional measures explicitly required.  In general, though, the
  security of the issue process depends on the security employed around
  the use of the challengePassword shared secret.  While it's not
  possible to enumerate every situation in which SCEP may be utilised,
  the following security measures should be considered.
  *  The challengePassword, despite its name, shouldn't be a
     conventional password but a high-entropy shared-secret
     authentication string.  Using the base64 encoding of a keying
     value generated or exchanged as part of standard device
     authentication protocols like the Extensible Authentication
     Protocol (EAP) or DNP3 Secure Authentication (DNP3-SA) makes for a
     good challengePassword.  The use of high-entropy shared secrets is
     particularly important when the PasswordRecipientInfo option is
     used to encrypt SCEP messages; see Section 3.1.
  *  If feasible, the challengePassword should be a one-time value used
     to authenticate the issue of a single certificate (subsequent
     certificate requests will be authenticated by being signed with
     the initial certificate).  If the challengePassword is single use,
     then the arrival of subsequent requests using the same
     challengePassword can then be used to indicate a security breach.
  *  The lifetime of a challengePassword can be limited, so that it can
     be used during initial device provisioning but will have expired
     at a later date if an attacker manages to compromise the
     challengePassword value -- for example, by compromising the device
     that it's stored in.
  *  The CA should take appropriate measures to protect the
     challengePassword.  Examples of possible measures include:
     physical security measures; storing it as a salted iterated hash
     or equivalent memory-hard function; storing it as a keyed MAC
     value if it's not being used for encryption; and storing it in
     encrypted form if it is being used for encryption.

7.4. Lack of Certificate Issue Confirmation

  SCEP provides no confirmation that the issued certificate was
  successfully received and processed by the client.  This means that
  if the CertRep message is lost or can't be processed by the client,
  then the CA will consider the certificate successfully issued while
  the client won't.  If this situation is of concern, then the correct
  issuance of the certificate will need to be verified by out-of-band
  means, for example, through the client sending a message signed by
  the newly issued certificate to the CA.  This also provides the proof
  of possession that's not present in the case of a renewal operation;
  see Section 7.6.

7.5. GetCACaps Issues

  The GetCACaps response is not authenticated by the CA.  This allows
  an attacker to perform downgrade attacks on the cryptographic
  capabilities of the client/CA exchange.  In particular, if the server
  were to support MD5 and single DES, then an in-path attacker could
  trivially roll back the encryption to use these insecure algorithms.
  By taking advantage of the presence of large amounts of static known
  plaintext in the SCEP messages, as of 2017, a DES rainbow table
  attack can recover most encryption keys in under a minute, and MD5
  chosen-prefix collisions can be calculated for a few tens of cents of
  computing time using tools like HashClash.  It is for this reason
  that this specification makes single DES and MD5 a MUST NOT feature.
  Note that all known servers support at least triple DES and SHA-1
  (regardless of whether "DES3" and "SHA-1" are indicated in
  GetCACaps), so there should never be a reason to fall all the way
  back to single DES and MD5.
  One simple countermeasure to a GetCACaps downgrade attack is for
  clients that are operating in an environment where on-path attacks
  are possible and that expect the "SCEPStandard" capability to be
  indicated by the CA but don't see it in the GetCACaps response to
  treat its absence as a security issue, and either discontinue the
  exchange or continue as if "SCEPStandard" had been returned.  This
  requires a certain trade-off between compatibility with old servers
  and security against active attacks.

7.6. Lack of PoP in Renewal Requests

  Renewal operations (but not standard certificate-issue operations)
  are processed via a previously issued certificate and its associated
  private key, not the key in the PKCS #10 request.  This means that a
  client no longer demonstrates proof of possession (PoP) of the
  private key corresponding to the public key in the PKCS #10 request.
  It is therefore possible for a client to recertify an existing key
  used by a third party, so that two or more certificates exist for the
  same key.  By switching out the certificate in a signature, an
  attacker can appear to have a piece of data signed by their
  certificate rather than the original signer's certificate.  This, and
  other, attacks are described in S/MIME ESS [RFC2634].
  Avoiding these types of attacks requires situation-specific measures.
  For example, CMS/SMIME implementations may use the ESSCertID
  attribute from S/MIME ESS [RFC2634] or its successor, S/MIME ESSv2
  [RFC5035], to unambiguously identify the signing certificate.
  However, since other mechanisms and protocols that the certificates
  will be used with typically don't defend against this problem, it's
  unclear whether this is an actual issue with SCEP.

7.7. Traffic Monitoring

  SCEP messages are signed with certificates that may contain
  identifying information.  If these are sent over the public Internet
  and real identity information (rather than placeholder values or
  arbitrary device IDs) is included in the signing certificate data, an
  attacker may be able to monitor the identities of the entities
  submitting the certificate requests.  If this is an issue, then
  [RFC7258] should be consulted for guidance.

7.8. Unnecessary Cryptography

  Some of the SCEP exchanges use unnecessary signing and encryption
  operations.  In particular, the GetCert and GetCRL exchanges are
  encrypted and signed in both directions.  The information requested
  is public, and thus encrypting the requests is of questionable value.
  In addition, CRLs and certificates sent in responses are already
  signed by the CA and can be verified by the recipient without
  requiring additional signing and encryption.  More lightweight means
  of retrieving certificates and CRLs such as HTTP certificate-store
  access [RFC4387] and LDAP are recommended for this reason.

7.9. Use of SHA-1

  The majority of the large number of devices that use SCEP today
  default to SHA-1, with many supporting only that hash algorithm with
  no ability to upgrade to a newer one.  SHA-1 is no longer regarded as
  secure in all situations, but as used in SCEP, it's still safe.
  There are three reasons for this.  The first is that attacking SCEP
  would require creating a fully general SHA-1 collision in close to
  real time alongside breaking AES (more specifically, it would require
  creating a fully general SHA-1 collision for the PKCS #10 request,
  breaking the AES encryption around the PKCS #10 request, and then
  creating a second SHA-1 collision for the signature on the encrypted
  data), which won't be feasible for a long time.
  The second reason is that the signature over the message -- in other
  words, the SHA-1 hash that isn't protected by encryption -- doesn't
  serve any critical cryptographic purpose: The PKCS #10 data itself is
  authenticated through its own signature, protected by encryption, and
  the overall request is authorised by the (encrypted) shared secret.
  The sole exception to this will be the small number of
  implementations that support the Renewal operation, which may be
  authorised purely through a signature, but presumably any
  implementation recent enough to support Renewal also supports SHA-2.
  Any legacy implementation that supports the historic core SCEP
  protocol would not be affected.
  The third reason is that SCEP uses the same key for encryption and
  signing, so that even if an attacker were able to capture an outgoing
  renewal request that didn't include a shared secret (in other words,
  one that was only authorised through a signature), break the AES
  encryption, forge the SHA-1 hash in real time, and forward the forged
  request to the CA, they couldn't decrypt the returned certificate,
  which is protected with the same key that was used to generate the
  signature.  While Section 7.8 points out that SCEP uses unnecessary
  cryptography in places, the additional level of security provided by
  the extra crypto makes it immune to any issues with SHA-1.
  This doesn't mean that SCEP implementations should continue to use
  SHA-1 in perpetuity, merely that there's no need for a panicked
  switch to SHA-2.

7.10. Use of HTTP

  SCEP is an encrypted, authenticated certificate enrollment protocol
  that uses HTTP as a simple transport mechanism.  Since SCEP messages
  are already cryptographically secured, it does not require transport
  layer security.  Where HTTPS is elected, a performance hit may result
  from the TLS overhead, operational problems may result due to the
  more complex configuration, and potential security vulnerability may
  result due to the addition of an entire TLS protocol stack alongside
  the basic SCEP protocol.
  In particular, experience has shown that the issue of configuring
  certificates, CAs, and trust for both TLS and SCEP often leads to
  interoperability problems because different certificates and trust
  models are used in each.  Use of HTTPS to authenticate the server
  does not enable omission of the ChallengePassword or similar
  authenticator in the SCEP message on the assumption that using HTTPS
  instead of HTTP will somehow make this insecure usage secure again.
  HTTPS is not soy sauce for security and is unnecessary for SCEP,
  which uses cryptographically secured messages and does not require
  transport layer security.

8. References

8.1. Normative References

  [AES]      Technology, U. N. I. O. S. A., "The Advanced Encryption
             Standard (AES)", FIPS 197, DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.197,
             November 2001, <https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.FIPS.197>.
  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
  [RFC2985]  Nystrom, M. and B. Kaliski, "PKCS #9: Selected Object
             Classes and Attribute Types Version 2.0", RFC 2985,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2985, November 2000,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2985>.
  [RFC2986]  Nystrom, M. and B. Kaliski, "PKCS #10: Certification
             Request Syntax Specification Version 1.7", RFC 2986,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2986, November 2000,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2986>.
  [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
             Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
             RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.
  [RFC4648]  Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
             Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4648>.
  [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
             Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.
  [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
             Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
             Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
             (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>.
  [RFC5652]  Housley, R., "Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)", STD 70,
             RFC 5652, DOI 10.17487/RFC5652, September 2009,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5652>.
  [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
             Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
             RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.
  [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer
             Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",
             RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.
  [RFC7258]  Farrell, S. and H. Tschofenig, "Pervasive Monitoring Is an
             Attack", BCP 188, RFC 7258, DOI 10.17487/RFC7258, May
             2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7258>.
  [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
             Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
             RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.
  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
  [SHA2]     Technology, U. N. I. O. S. A., "Secure Hash Standard
             (SHS)", FIPS 180-3, October 2008.

8.2. Informative References

  [HTTP]     Nottingham, M., "Building Protocols with HTTP", Work in
             Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-httpbis-bcp56bis-09,
             November 1, 2019, <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-
             httpbis-bcp56bis-09>.
  [JSCEP]    "A Java implementation of the Simple Certificate Enrolment
             Protocol", commit 7410332, January 2020,
             <https://github.com/jscep/jscep>.
  [RFC2634]  Hoffman, P., Ed., "Enhanced Security Services for S/MIME",
             RFC 2634, DOI 10.17487/RFC2634, June 1999,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2634>.
  [RFC4387]  Gutmann, P., Ed., "Internet X.509 Public Key
             Infrastructure Operational Protocols: Certificate Store
             Access via HTTP", RFC 4387, DOI 10.17487/RFC4387, February
             2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4387>.
  [RFC5035]  Schaad, J., "Enhanced Security Services (ESS) Update:
             Adding CertID Algorithm Agility", RFC 5035,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5035, August 2007,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5035>.
  [RFC7296]  Kaufman, C., Hoffman, P., Nir, Y., Eronen, P., and T.
             Kivinen, "Internet Key Exchange Protocol Version 2
             (IKEv2)", STD 79, RFC 7296, DOI 10.17487/RFC7296, October
             2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7296>.
  [RFC8446]  Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
             Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.
  [RFC8551]  Schaad, J., Ramsdell, B., and S. Turner, "Secure/
             Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 4.0
             Message Specification", RFC 8551, DOI 10.17487/RFC8551,
             April 2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8551>.

Appendix A. Background Notes

  This specification has spent over twenty years in the draft stage.
  Its original goal, provisioning IPsec routers with certificates, has
  long since changed to general device/embedded system/IoT use.  To fit
  this role, extra features were bolted on in a haphazard manner
  through the addition of a growing list of appendices and by inserting
  additional, often conflicting, paragraphs in various locations in the
  body text.  Since existing features were never updated as newer ones
  were added, the specification accumulated large amounts of historical
  baggage over time.  If OpenPGP was described as "a museum of 1990s
  crypto", then the SCEP document was its graveyard.
  About five years ago, the specification, which even at that point had
  seen only sporadic reposts of the existing document, was more or less
  abandoned by its original sponsors.  Due to its widespread use in
  large segments of the industry, the specification was rebooted in
  2015, cleaning up fifteen years' worth of accumulated cruft, fixing
  errors, clarifying ambiguities, and bringing the algorithms and
  standards used into the current century (prior to the update, the de
  facto lowest-common-denominator algorithms used for interoperability
  were the insecure forty-year-old single DES and broken MD5 hash
  algorithms).
  Note that although the text of the current specification has changed
  significantly due to the consolidation of features and appendices
  into the main document, the protocol that it describes is identical
  on the wire to the original (with the unavoidable exception of the
  switch from single DES and MD5 to AES and SHA-2).  The only two
  changes introduced, the "SCEPStandard" indicator in GetCACaps and the
  failInfoText attribute, are both optional values and would be ignored
  by older implementations that don't support them, or can be omitted
  from messages if they are found to cause problems.
  Other changes include:
  *  Resolved contradictions in the text -- for example, a requirement
     given as a MUST in one paragraph and a SHOULD in the next, a MUST
     NOT in one paragraph and a MAY a few paragraphs later, a SHOULD
     NOT contradicted later by a MAY, and so on.
  *  Merged several later fragmentary addenda placed in appendices (for
     example, the handling of certificate renewal) with the body of the
     text.
  *  Merged the "SCEP Transactions" and "SCEP Transport" sections,
     since the latter mostly duplicated (with occasional
     inconsistencies) the former.
  *  Updated the algorithms to ones dating from at least this century.
  *  Did the same for normative references to other standards.
  *  Updated the text to use consistent terminology for the client and
     CA rather than a mixture of client, requester, requesting system,
     end entity, server, certificate authority, certification
     authority, and CA.
  *  Corrected incorrect references to other standards, e.g.,
     IssuerAndSerial -> IssuerAndSerialNumber.
  *  Corrected errors such as a statement that when both signature and
     encryption certificates existed, the signature certificate was
     used for encryption.
  *  Condensed redundant discussions of the same topic spread across
     multiple sections into a single location.  For example, the
     description of intermediate CA handling previously existed in
     three different locations, with slightly different requirements in
     each one.
  *  Added a description of how pkiMessages were processed, which was
     never made explicit in the original specification.  This led to
     creative interpretations that had security problems but were
     employed anyway due to the lack of specific guidance on what to
     do.
  *  Relaxed some requirements that didn't serve any obvious purpose
     and that major implementations didn't seem to be enforcing.  For
     example, the requirement that the self-signed certificate used
     with a request MUST contain a subject name that matched the one in
     the PKCS #10 request was relaxed to a SHOULD, because a number of
     implementations either ignored the issue entirely or at worst
     performed some minor action like creating a log entry, after which
     they continued anyway.
  *  Removed discussion of the transactionID from the security
     considerations, since the instructions there were directly
     contradicted by the discussion of the use of the transactionID in
     Section 5.
  *  Added a requirement that the signed message include the signing
     certificate(s) in the signedData certificates field.  This was
     implicit in the original specification (without it, the message
     couldn't be verified by the CA) and was handled by the fact that
     most PKCS #7/CMS libraries do this by default, but was never
     explicitly mentioned.
  *  Clarified sections that were unclear or even made no sense -- for
     example, the requirement for a "hash on the public key" [sic]
     encoded as a PrintableString.
  *  Renamed "RA certificates" to "intermediate CA certificates".  The
     original document at some point added mention of RA certificates
     without specifying how the client was to determine that an RA was
     in use, how the RA operations were identified in the protocol, or
     how it was used.  It's unclear whether what was meant was a true
     RA or merely an intermediate CA, as opposed to the default
     practice of having certificates issued directly from a single root
     CA certificate.  This update uses the term "intermediate CA
     certificates", since this seems to have been the original intent
     of the text.
  *  Redid the PKIMessage diagram to match what was specified in CMS;
     the original diagram omitted a number of fields and nested data
     structures, which meant that the diagram didn't match either the
     text or the CMS specification.
  *  Removed the requirement for a CertPoll to contain a
     recipientNonce, since CertPoll is a client message and will never
     be sent in response to a message containing a senderNonce.  See
     also the note in Section 3.3.2.
  *  Clarified certificate renewal.  This represents a capability that
     was bolted onto the original protocol with (at best) vaguely
     defined semantics, including a requirement by the CA to guess
     whether a particular request was a renewal or not.  In response to
     developer feedback that they either avoided renewal entirely
     because of this uncertainty or hard-coded in particular behaviour
     on a per-CA basis, this specification explicitly identifies
     renewal requests as such and provides proper semantics for them.
  *  Corrected the requirement that "undefined message types are
     treated as an error", since this negates the effect of GetCACaps,
     which is used to define new message types.  In particular,
     operations such as GetCACaps "Renewal" would be impossible if
     enforced as written, because the Renewal operation was an
     undefined message type at the time.
  *  In line with the above, added IANA registries for several entries
     that had previously been defined in an ad hoc manner in different
     locations in the text.
  *  Added the "SCEPStandard" keyword to GetCACaps to indicate that the
     CA complies with the final version of the SCEP standard, since the
     definition of what constitutes SCEP standards compliance has
     changed significantly over the years.
  *  Added the optional failInfoText attribute to deal with the fact
     that failInfo was incapable of adequately communicating to clients
     why a certificate request operation had been rejected.
  *  Removed the discussion in the security considerations of
     revocation issues, since SCEP doesn't support revocation as part
     of the protocol.
  *  Clarified the use of nonces, which if applied as originally
     specified would have made the use of polling in the presence of a
     lost message impossible.
  *  Removed the discussion of generating a given transactionID by
     hashing the public key, since this implied that there was some
     special significance in the value generated this way.  Since it
     was neither a MUST nor a MAY, it was unsound to imply that servers
     could rely on the value being generated a certain way.  In
     addition, it wouldn't work if multiple transactions as discussed
     in Section 4.4 were initiated, since the deterministic generation
     via hashing would lead to duplicate transactionIDs.
  *  Added examples of SCEP messages to give implementers something to
     aim for.

Acknowledgements

  The editor would like to thank all of the previous editors, authors,
  and contributors for their work maintaining the document over the
  years: Cheryl Madson, Xiaoyi Liu, David McGrew, David Cooper, Andy
  Nourse, Max Pritikin, Jan Vilhuber, and others.  The IETF reviewers
  provided much useful feedback that helped improve the document, and
  in particular spotted a number of things that were present in SCEP
  through established practice rather than by being explicitly
  described in the text.  Numerous other people have contributed during
  the long life cycle of the document, and all deserve thanks.  In
  addition, several PKCS #7 / CMS libraries contributed to
  interoperability by doing the right thing despite what earlier SCEP
  documents required.
  The authors of earlier draft versions of this document would like to
  thank Peter William of ValiCert, Inc. (formerly of VeriSign, Inc.),
  Alex Deacon of VeriSign, Inc., and Christopher Welles of IRE, Inc.
  for their contributions to early versions of this protocol and this
  document.

Author's Address

  Peter Gutmann
  University of Auckland
  Department of Computer Science
  Auckland
  New Zealand
  Email: [email protected]