Internet-Draft | Oblivious HTTP | September 2022 |
Thomson & Wood | Expires 30 March 2023 | [Page] |
This document describes a system for forwarding encrypted HTTP messages. This allows a client to make multiple requests to an origin server without that server being able to link those requests to the client or to identify the requests as having come from the same client, while placing only limited trust in the nodes used to forward the messages.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
The latest revision of this draft can be found at https://ietf-wg-ohai.github.io/oblivious-http/draft-ietf-ohai-ohttp.html. Status information for this document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ohai-ohttp/.¶
Discussion of this document takes place on the Oblivious HTTP Application Intermediation Working Group mailing list (mailto:ohai@ietf.org), which is archived at https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/ohai/. Subscribe at https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ohai/.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/ietf-wg-ohai/oblivious-http.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.¶
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."¶
This Internet-Draft will expire on 30 March 2023.¶
Copyright (c) 2022 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 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
An HTTP request reveals information about the client's identity to the server. Some of that information is in the request content, and therefore under the control of the client. However, the source IP address of the underlying connection reveals information that the client has only limited control over.¶
Even where an IP address is not directly associated with an individual, the requests made from it can be correlated over time to assemble a profile of client behavior. In particular, connection reuse improves performance, but provides servers with the ability to correlate requests that share a connection.¶
Client-configured HTTP proxies can provide a degree of protection against IP address tracking, and systems like virtual private networks and the Tor network [Dingledine2004] provide additional options for clients.¶
However, even when IP address tracking is mitigated using one of these techniques, each request needs to be on a completely new TLS connection to avoid the connection itself being used to correlate behavior. This imposes considerable performance and efficiency overheads, due to the additional round trip to the server (at a minumum), additional data exchanged, and additional CPU cost of cryptographic computations.¶
This document defines two kinds of HTTP resources -- Oblivious Relay Resources and Oblivious Gateway Resources -- that process encapsulated binary HTTP messages [BINARY] using Hybrid Public Key Encryption (HPKE; [HPKE]). They can be composed to protect the content of encapsulated requests and responses, thereby separating the identity of a requester from the request.¶
Although this scheme requires support for two new kinds of oblivious resources, it represents a performance improvement over options that perform just one request in each connection. With limited trust placed in the Oblivious Relay Resource (see Section 6), Clients are assured that requests are not uniquely attributed to them or linked to other requests.¶
A Oblivious HTTP Client must initially know the following:¶
This information allows the Client to make a request of a Target Resource with that resource having only a limited ability to correlate that request with the Client IP or other requests that the Client might make to that server.¶
In order to make a request to a Target Resource, the following steps occur, as shown in Figure 1:¶
Oblivious HTTP has limited applicability. Many uses of HTTP benefit from being able to carry state between requests, such as with cookies ([COOKIES]), authentication (Section 11 of [HTTP]), or even alternative services ([RFC7838]). Oblivious HTTP removes linkage at the transport layer, which is only useful for an application that does not carry state between requests.¶
Oblivious HTTP is primarily useful where privacy risks associated with possible stateful treatment of requests are sufficiently large that the cost of deploying this protocol can be justified. Oblivious HTTP is simpler and less costly than more robust systems, like Prio ([PRIO]) or Tor ([Dingledine2004]), which can provide stronger guarantees at higher operational costs.¶
Oblivious HTTP is more costly than a direct connection to a server. Some costs, like those involved with connection setup, can be amortized, but there are several ways in which Oblivious HTTP is more expensive than a direct request:¶
Examples of where preventing the linking of requests might justify these costs include:¶
These are examples of requests where there is information in a request that - if it were connected to the identity of the user - might allow a server to learn something about that user even if the identity of the user is pseudonymous. Other examples include the submission of anonymous surveys, making search queries, or requesting location-specific content (such as retrieving tiles of a map display).¶
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.¶
A Client originates Oblivious HTTP requests. A Client is also an HTTP client in two ways: for the Target Resource and for the Oblivious Relay Resource. However, when referring to the HTTP definition of client (Section 3.3 of [HTTP]), the term "HTTP client" is used; see Section 5.¶
An HTTP request that is encapsulated in an HPKE-encrypted message; see Section 4.3.¶
An HTTP response that is encapsulated in an HPKE-encrypted message; see Section 4.4.¶
An intermediary that forwards encapsulated requests and responses between Clients and a single Oblivious Gateway Resource.¶
A resource that can receive an encapsulated request, extract the contents of that request, forward it to a Target Resource, receive a response, encapsulate that response, then return that response.¶
The resource that is the target of an encapsulated request. This resource logically handles only regular HTTP requests and responses and so might be ignorant of the use of Oblivious HTTP to reach it.¶
This draft includes pseudocode that uses the functions and conventions defined in [HPKE].¶
Encoding an integer to a sequence of bytes in network byte order is described
using the function encode(n, v)
, where n
is the number of bytes and v
is
the integer value. ASCII [ASCII] encoding of a string s
is
indicated using the function encode_str(s)
. The function len()
returns the
length of a sequence of bytes.¶
Formats are described using notation from Section 1.3 of [QUIC]. An extension to that notation expresses the number of bits in a field using a simple mathematical function.¶
A Client needs to acquire information about the key configuration of the Oblivious Gateway Resource in order to send encapsulated requests. In order to ensure that Clients do not encapsulate messages that other entities can intercept, the key configuration MUST be authenticated and have integrity protection.¶
This document does not define how that acquisition occurs. However, in order to help facilitate interoperability, it does specify a format for the keys. This ensures that different Client implementations can be configured in the same way and also enables advertising key configurations in a consistent format. This format might be used, for example with HTTPS, as part of a system for configuring or discovering key configurations. Note however that such a system needs to consider the potential for key configuration to be used to compromise Client privacy; see Section 7.¶
A Client might have multiple key configurations to select from when encapsulating a request. Clients are responsible for selecting a preferred key configuration from those it supports. Clients need to consider both the key encapsulation method (KEM) and the combinations of key derivation function (KDF) and authenticated encryption with associated data (AEAD) in this decision.¶
A single key configuration consists of a key identifier, a public key, an identifier for the KEM that the public key uses, and a set HPKE symmetric algorithms. Each symmetric algorithm consists of an identifier for a KDF and an identifier for an AEAD.¶
Figure 2 shows a single key configuration.¶
The definitions for the identifiers used in HPKE and the semantics of the
algorithms they identify can be found in [HPKE]. The Npk
parameter is
determined by the choice of HPKE KEM, which can also be found in [HPKE].¶
The "application/ohttp-keys" format is a media type that identifies a serialized collection of key configurations. The content of this media type comprises one or more key configuration encodings (see Section 3.1) that are concatenated; see Section 9.1 for a definition of the media type.¶
Evolution of the key configuration format is supported through the definition of new formats that are identified by new media types.¶
This document defines how a binary-encoded HTTP message [BINARY] is encapsulated using HPKE [HPKE]. Separate media types are defined to distinguish request and response messages:¶
message/ohttp-req
" media type (Section 9.2).¶
message/ohttp-res
" media type (Section 9.3).¶
Alternative encapsulations or message formats are indicated using the media type; see Section 4.5 and Section 4.6.¶
A message in "message/ohttp-req
" format protects a binary HTTP request
message; see Figure 3.¶
This plaintext Request is encapsulated into a message in "message/ohttp-req
"
form by generating an Encapsulated Request. An Encapsulated Request is
comprised of a key identifier; HPKE parameters for the chosen KEM, KDF, and
AEAD; the encapsulated KEM shared secret (or enc
); and the HPKE-protected
binary HTTP request message.¶
An Encapsulated Request is shown in Figure 4. Section 4.3 describes the process for constructing and processing an Encapsulated Request.¶
The Nenc parameter corresponding to the KEM used in HPKE can be found in Section 7.1 of [HPKE]. Nenc refers to the size of the encapsulated KEM shared secret, in bytes.¶
A message in "message/ohttp-res
" format protects a binary HTTP response
message; see Figure 5.¶
This plaintext Response is encapsulated into a message in "message/ohttp-res
"
form by generating an Encapsulated Response. An Encapsulated Response is
comprised of a nonce and the AEAD-protected binary HTTP response message.¶
An Encapsulated Response is shown in Figure 6. Section 4.4 describes the process for constructing and processing an Encapsulated Response.¶
The Nn and Nk values correspond to parameters of the AEAD used in HPKE, which is defined in Section 7.3 of [HPKE]. Nn and Nk refer to the size of the AEAD nonce and key respectively, in bytes. The Encapsulated Response nonce length is set to the larger of these two lengths, i.e., max(Nn, Nk).¶
Clients encapsulate a request request
using values from a key configuration:¶
key_id
, with the corresponding KEM
identified by kem_id
,¶
pkR
, and¶
kdf_id
, and AEAD, identified by
aead_id
.¶
The Client then constructs an Encapsulated Request, enc_request
, from a binary
encoded HTTP request, request
, as follows:¶
hdr
, by concatenating the values of key_id
,
kem_id
, kdf_id
, and aead_id
, as one 8-bit integer and three 16-bit
integers, respectively, each in network byte order.¶
info
by concatenating the ASCII-encoded string "message/bhttp
request", a zero byte, and the header. Note: Section 4.6 discusses how
alternative message formats might use a different info
value.¶
SetupBaseS()
(Section 5.1.1 of [HPKE]) with the public key of the receiver pkR
and info
. This yields
the context sctxt
and an encapsulation key enc
.¶
request
by invoking the Seal()
method on sctxt
(Section 5.2 of [HPKE]) with empty associated data aad
, yielding ciphertext ct
.¶
hdr
, enc
, and ct
, yielding an Encrypted
Request enc_request
.¶
Note that enc
is of fixed-length, so there is no ambiguity in parsing this
structure.¶
In pseudocode, this procedure is as follows:¶
hdr = concat(encode(1, key_id), encode(2, kem_id), encode(2, kdf_id), encode(2, aead_id)) info = concat(encode_str("message/bhttp request"), encode(1, 0), hdr) enc, sctxt = SetupBaseS(pkR, info) ct = sctxt.Seal("", request) enc_request = concat(hdr, enc, ct)¶
Servers decrypt an Encapsulated Request by reversing this process. Given an
Encapsulated Request enc_request
, a server:¶
Parses enc_request
into key_id
, kem_id
, kdf_id
, aead_id
, enc
, and
ct
(indicated using the function parse()
in pseudocode). The server is
then able to find the HPKE private key, skR
, corresponding to key_id
.¶
a. If key_id
does not identify a key matching the type of kem_id
, the
server returns an error.¶
b. If kdf_id
and aead_id
identify a combination of KDF and AEAD that the
server is unwilling to use with skR
, the server returns an error.¶
info
by concatenating the ASCII-encoded string "message/bhttp
request", a zero byte, key_id
as an 8-bit integer, plus kem_id
, kdf_id
,
and aead_id
as three 16-bit integers.¶
SetupBaseR()
(Section 5.1.1 of [HPKE]) with skR
, enc
, and info
. This produces a context rctxt
.¶
ct
by invoking the Open()
method on rctxt
(Section 5.2 of [HPKE]), with an empty associated data aad
, yielding request
or an error
on failure. If decryption fails, the server returns an error.¶
In pseudocode, this procedure is as follows:¶
key_id, kem_id, kdf_id, aead_id, enc, ct = parse(enc_request) info = concat(encode_str("message/bhttp request"), encode(1, 0), encode(1, key_id), encode(2, kem_id), encode(2, kdf_id), encode(2, aead_id)) rctxt = SetupBaseR(enc, skR, info) request, error = rctxt.Open("", ct)¶
Given an HPKE context context
, a request message request
, and a response
response
, servers generate an Encapsulated Response enc_response
as
follows:¶
secret
from context
, using the string "message/bhttp
response" as context. The length of this secret is max(Nn, Nk)
, where Nn
and Nk
are the length of AEAD key and nonce associated with context
.
Note: Section 4.6 discusses how alternative message formats might use a
different context
value.¶
max(Nn, Nk)
bytes, called
response_nonce
.¶
prk
using the Extract
function provided by
the KDF algorithm associated with context
. The ikm
input to this
function is secret
; the salt
input is the concatenation of enc
(from
enc_request
) and response_nonce
¶
Expand
function provided by the same KDF to extract an AEAD key
key
, of length Nk
- the length of the keys used by the AEAD associated
with context
. Generating aead_key
uses a label of "key".¶
Expand
function to extract a nonce nonce
of length Nn
-
the length of the nonce used by the AEAD. Generating aead_nonce
uses a
label of "nonce".¶
response
, passing the AEAD function Seal the values of aead_key
,
aead_nonce
, an empty aad
, and a pt
input of response
, which yields ct
.¶
response_nonce
and ct
, yielding an Encapsulated Response
enc_response
. Note that response_nonce
is of fixed-length, so there is no
ambiguity in parsing either response_nonce
or ct
.¶
In pseudocode, this procedure is as follows:¶
secret = context.Export("message/bhttp response", Nk) response_nonce = random(max(Nn, Nk)) salt = concat(enc, response_nonce) prk = Extract(salt, secret) aead_key = Expand(prk, "key", Nk) aead_nonce = Expand(prk, "nonce", Nn) ct = Seal(aead_key, aead_nonce, "", response) enc_response = concat(response_nonce, ct)¶
Clients decrypt an Encapsulated Response by reversing this process. That is,
they first parse enc_response
into response_nonce
and ct
. They then
follow the same process to derive values for aead_key
and aead_nonce
.¶
The Client uses these values to decrypt ct
using the Open function provided by
the AEAD. Decrypting might produce an error, as follows:¶
reponse, error = Open(aead_key, aead_nonce, "", ct)¶
Media types are used to identify Encapsulated Requests and Responses; see Section 9.2 and Section 9.3 for definitions of these media types.¶
Evolution of the format of Encapsulated Requests and Responses is supported through the definition of new formats that are identified by new media types. New media types might be defined to use similar encapsulation with a different HTTP message format than in [BINARY]; see Section 4.6 for guidance on reusing this encapsulation. Alternatively, a new encapsulation method might be defined.¶
The encrypted payload of an OHTTP request and response is a binary HTTP message [BINARY]. The Client and Oblivious Gateway Resource agree on this encrypted payload type by specifying the media type "message/bhttp" in the HPKE info string and HPKE export context string for request and response encryption, respectively.¶
Future specifications may repurpose the encapsulation mechanism described in this document. This requires that the specification define a new media type. The encapsulation process for that content type can follow the same process, using new constant strings for the HPKE info and exporter context inputs.¶
For example, a future specification might encapsulate DNS messages, which use the "application/dns-message" media type [RFC8484]. In creating a new, encrypted media types, specifications might define the use of string "application/dns-message request" (plus a zero byte and the header for the full value) for request encryption and the string "application/dns-message response" for response encryption.¶
A Client interacts with the Oblivious Relay Resource by constructing an Encapsulated Request. This Encapsulated Request is included as the content of a POST request to the Oblivious Relay Resource. This request MUST only contain those fields necessary to carry the Encapsulated Request: a method of POST, a target URI of the Oblivious Relay Resource, a header field containing the content type (see (Section 9.2), and the Encapsulated Request as the request content. In the request to the Oblivious Relay Resource, Clients MAY include additional fields. However, those fields MUST be independent of the Encapsulated Request and MUST be fields that the Oblivious Relay Resource will remove before forwarding the Encapsulated Request towards the target, such as the Connection or Proxy-Authorization header fields [HTTP].¶
The Client role in this protocol acts as an HTTP client both with respect to the Oblivious Relay Resource and the Target Resource. For the request the Clients makes to the Target Resource, this diverges from typical HTTP assumptions about the use of a connection (see Section 3.3 of [HTTP]) in that the request and response are encrypted rather than sent over a connection. The Oblivious Relay Resource and the Oblivious Gateway Resource also act as HTTP clients toward the Oblivious Gateway Resource and Target Resource respectively.¶
In order to achieve the privacy and security goals of the protocol a Client also needs to observe the guidance in Section 6.1.¶
The Oblivious Relay Resource interacts with the Oblivious Gateway Resource as an HTTP client by constructing a request using the same restrictions as the Client request, except that the target URI is the Oblivious Gateway Resource. The content of this request is copied from the Client. An Oblivious Relay Resource MAY reject requests that are obviously invalid, such as a request with no content. The Oblivious Relay Resource MUST NOT add information to the request without the Client being aware of the type of information that might be added; see Section 6.2 for more information on relay responsibilities.¶
When a response is received from the Oblivious Gateway Resource, the Oblivious Relay Resource forwards the response according to the rules of an HTTP proxy; see Section 7.6 of [HTTP]. In case of timeout or error, the Oblivious Relay Resource can generate a response with an appropriate status code.¶
In order to achieve the privacy and security goals of the protocol an Oblivious Relay Resource also needs to observe the guidance in Section 6.2.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource acts as a gateway for requests to the Target Resource (see Section 7.6 of [HTTP]). The one exception is that any information it might forward in a response MUST be encapsulated, unless it is responding to errors it detects before removing encapsulation of the request; see Section 5.2.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource, if it receives any response from the Target Resource, sends a single 200 response containing the encapsulated response. Like the request from the Client, this response MUST only contain those fields necessary to carry the encapsulated response: a 200 status code, a header field indicating the content type, and the encapsulated response as the response content. As with requests, additional fields MAY be used to convey information that does not reveal information about the encapsulated response.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource that does not receive a response can itself generate a response with an appropriate error status code (such as 504 (Gateway Timeout); see Section 15.6.5 of [HTTP]), which is then encapsulated in the same way as a successful response.¶
In order to achieve the privacy and security goals of the protocol an Oblivious Gateway Resource also needs to observe the guidance in Section 6.3.¶
This encapsulation does not permit progressive processing of responses. Though the binary HTTP response format does support the inclusion of informational (1xx) status codes, the AEAD encapsulation cannot be removed until the entire message is received.¶
In particular, the Expect header field with 100-continue (see Section 10.1.1 of [HTTP]) cannot be used. Clients MUST NOT construct a request that includes a 100-continue expectation; the Oblivious Gateway Resource MUST generate an error if a 100-continue expectation is received.¶
A server that receives an invalid message for any reason MUST generate an HTTP response with a 4xx status code.¶
Errors detected by the Oblivious Relay Resource and errors detected by the Oblivious Gateway Resource before removing protection (including being unable to remove encapsulation for any reason) result in the status code being sent without protection in response to the POST request made to that resource.¶
Errors detected by the Oblivious Gateway Resource after successfully removing encapsulation and errors detected by the Target Resource MUST be sent in an Encapsulated Response. This might be because the request is malformed or the Target Resource does not produce a response. In either case the Oblivious Gateway Resource can generate a response with an appropriate error status code (such as 400 (Bad Request) or 504 (Gateway Timeout); see Section 15.5.1 of [HTTP] and Section 15.6.5 of [HTTP], respectively). This response is encapsulated in the same way as a successful response.¶
Errors in the encapsulation of requests mean that responses cannot be encapsulated. This includes cases where the key configuration is incorrect or outdated. The Oblivious Gateway Resource can generate and send a response with an error status to the Oblivious Relay Resource. This response MAY be forwarded to the Client or treated by the Oblivious Relay Resource as a failure. If a Client receives a response that is not an Encapsulated Response, this could indicate that the client configuration used to construct the request is incorrect or out of date.¶
The problem type [PROBLEM] of "https://iana.org/assignments/http-problem-types#ohttp-key" is defined. An Oblivious Gateway Resource MAY use this problem type in a response to indicate that an Encapsulated Request used an outdated or incorrect key configuration.¶
Figure 7 shows an example response in HTTP/1.1 format.¶
As this response cannot be encrypted, it might not reach the Client. A Client cannot rely on the Oblivious Gateway Resource using this problem type. A Client might also be configured to disregard responses that are not encapsulated on the basis that they might be subject to observation or modification by an Oblivious Relay Resource. A Client might manage the risk of an outdated key configuration using a heuristic approach whereby it periodically refreshes its key configuration if it receives a response with an error status code that has not been encapsulated.¶
In this design, a Client wishes to make a request of a server that is authoritative for a Target Resource. The Client wishes to make this request without linking that request with either:¶
In order to ensure this, the Client selects a relay (that serves the Oblivious Relay Resource) that it trusts will protect this information by forwarding the Encapsulated Request and Response without passing it to the server (that serves the Oblivious Gateway Resource).¶
In this section, a deployment where there are three entities is considered:¶
Connections between the Client, Oblvious Relay Resource, and Oblivious Gateway Resource MUST use HTTPS in order to provide unlinkability in the presence of a network observer. The scheme of the encapsulated request determines what is used between the Oblivious Gateway and Target Resources, though using HTTPS is RECOMMENDED; see Section 6.3.¶
To achieve the stated privacy goals, the Oblivious Relay Resource cannot be operated by the same entity as the Oblivious Gateway Resource. However, colocation of the Oblivious Gateway Resource and Target Resource simplifies the interactions between those resources without affecting Client privacy.¶
As a consequence of this configuration, Oblivious HTTP prevents linkability described above. Informally, this means:¶
Traffic analysis that might affect these properties are outside the scope of this document; see Section 6.2.3.¶
A formal analysis of Oblivious HTTP is in [OHTTP-ANALYSIS].¶
Clients MUST ensure that the key configuration they select for generating Encapsulated Requests is integrity protected and authenticated so that it can be attributed to the Oblivious Gateway Resource; see Section 3.¶
Since Clients connect directly to the Oblivious Relay Resource instead of the Target Resource, application configurations wherein Clients make policy decisions about target connections, e.g., to apply certificate pinning, are incompatible with Oblivious HTTP. In such cases, alternative technologies such as HTTP CONNECT (Section 9.3.6 of [HTTP]) can be used. Applications could implement related policies on key configurations and relay connections, though these might not provide the same properties as policies enforced directly on target connections. When this difference is relevant, applications can instead connect directly to the target at the cost of either privacy or performance.¶
Clients cannot carry connection-level state between requests as they only establish direct connections to the relay responsible for the Oblivious Relay resource. However, the content of requests might be used by a server to correlate requests. Cookies [COOKIES] are the most obvious feature that might be used to correlate requests, but any identity information and authentication credentials might have the same effect. Clients also need to treat information learned from responses with similar care when constructing subsequent requests, which includes the identity of resources.¶
Clients MUST generate a new HPKE context for every request, using a good source of entropy ([RANDOM]) for generating keys. Key reuse not only risks requests being linked, reuse could expose request and response contents to the relay.¶
The request the Client sends to the Oblivious Relay Resource only requires minimal information; see Section 5. The request that carries the Encapsulated Request and is sent to the Oblivious Relay Resource MUST NOT include identifying information unless the Client ensures that this information is removed by the relay. A Client MAY include information only for the Oblivious Relay Resource in header fields identified by the Connection header field if it trusts the relay to remove these as required by Section 7.6.1 of [HTTP]. The Client needs to trust that the relay does not replicate the source addressing information in the request it forwards.¶
Clients rely on the Oblivious Relay Resource to forward Encapsulated Requests and responses. However, the relay can only refuse to forward messages, it cannot inspect or modify the contents of Encapsulated Requests or responses.¶
The relay that serves the Oblivious Relay Resource has a very simple function to perform. For each request it receives, it makes a request of the Oblivious Gateway Resource that includes the same content. When it receives a response, it sends a response to the Client that includes the content of the response from the Oblivious Gateway Resource.¶
When forwarding a request, the relay MUST follow the forwarding rules in Section 7.6 of [HTTP]. A generic HTTP intermediary implementation is suitable for the purposes of serving an Oblivious Relay Resource, but additional care is needed to ensure that Client privacy is maintained.¶
Firstly, a generic implementation will forward unknown fields. For Oblivious HTTP, a Oblivious Relay Resource SHOULD NOT forward unknown fields. Though Clients are not expected to include fields that might contain identifying information, removing unknown fields removes this privacy risk.¶
Secondly, generic implementations are often configured to augment requests with information about the Client, such as the Via field or the Forwarded field [FORWARDED]. A relay MUST NOT add information when forwarding requests that might be used to identify Clients, with the exception of information that a Client is aware of.¶
Finally, a relay can also generate responses, though it assumed to not be able to examine the content of a request (other than to observe the choice of key identifier, KDF, and AEAD), so it is also assumed that it cannot generate an Encapsulated Response.¶
A relay MAY add information to requests if the Client is aware of the nature of the information that could be added. The Client does not need to be aware of the exact value added for each request, but needs to know the range of possible values the relay might use. Importantly, information added by the relay - beyond what is already revealed through encapsulated requests from Clients - can reduce the size of the anonymity set of Clients at a gateway.¶
Moreover, relays MAY apply differential treatment to Clients that engage in abusive behavior, e.g., by sending too many requests in comparison to other Clients, or as a response to rate limits signalled from the gateway. Any such differential treatment can reveal information to the gateway that would not be revealed otherwise and therefore reduce the size of the anonymity set of Clients using a gateway. For example, if a relay chooses to rate limit or block an abusive Client, this means that any Client requests which are not treated this way are known to be non-abusive by the gateway. Clients should consider the likelihood of such differential treatment and the privacy risks when using a relay.¶
Some patterns of abuse cannot be detected without access to the request that is made to the target. This means that only the gateway or target are in a position to identify abuse. A gateway MAY send signals toward the relay to provide feedback about specific requests. For example, a gateway could respond differently to requests it cannot decapsulate, as mentioned in Section 5.2. A relay that acts on this feedback could - either inadvertently or by design - lead to Client deanonymization.¶
As there are privacy benefits from having a large rate of requests forwarded by the same relay (see Section 6.2.3), servers that operate the Oblivious Gateway Resource might need an arrangement with Oblivious Relay Resources. This arrangement might be necessary to prevent having the large volume of requests being classified as an attack by the server.¶
If a server accepts a larger volume of requests from a relay, it needs to trust that the relay does not allow abusive levels of request volumes from Clients. That is, if a server allows requests from the relay to be exempt from rate limits, the server might want to ensure that the relay applies a rate limiting policy that is acceptable to the server.¶
Servers that enter into an agreement with a relay that enables a higher request rate might choose to authenticate the relay to enable the higher rate.¶
Using HTTPS protects information about which resources are the subject of request and prevents a network observer from being able to trivially correlate messages on either side of a relay. However, using HTTPS does not prevent traffic analysis by such network observers.¶
The time at which Encapsulated Request or response messages are sent can reveal information to a network observer. Though messages exchanged between the Oblivious Relay Resource and the Oblivious Gateway Resource might be sent in a single connection, traffic analysis could be used to match messages that are forwarded by the relay.¶
A relay could, as part of its function, delay requests before forwarding them. Delays might increase the anonymity set into which each request is attributed. Any delay also increases the time that a Client waits for a response, so delays SHOULD only be added with the consent - or at least awareness - of Clients.¶
A relay that forwards large volumes of exchanges can provide better privacy by providing larger sets of messages that need to be matched.¶
Traffic analysis is not restricted to network observers. A malicious Oblivious Relay Resource could use traffic analysis to learn information about otherwise encrypted requests and responses relayed between Clients and gateways. An Oblivious Relay Resource terminates TLS connections from Clients, so they see message boundaries. This privileged position allows for richer feature extraction from encrypted data, which might improve traffic analysis.¶
Clients can use padding to reduce the effectiveness of traffic analysis. Padding is a capability provided by binary HTTP messages; see Section 3.8 of [BINARY]. If the encapsulation method described in this document is used to protect a different message type (see Section 4.6), that message format might need to include padding support.¶
The Oblivious Gateway Resource can be operated by a different entity than the Target Resource. However, this means that the Client needs to trust the Oblivious Gateway Resource not to modify requests or responses. This analysis concerns itself with a deployment scenario where a single server provides both the Oblivious Gateway Resource and Target Resource.¶
A server that operates both Oblivious Gateway and Target Resources is responsible for removing request encryption, generating a response to the Encapsulated Request, and encrypting the response.¶
Servers should account for traffic analysis based on response size or generation time. Techniques such as padding or timing delays can help protect against such attacks; see Section 6.2.3.¶
If separate entities provide the Oblivious Gateway Resource and Target Resource, these entities might need an arrangement similar to that between server and relay for managing denial of service; see Section 6.2.2.¶
Nonsecure requests - such those with the "http" scheme as opposed to the "https" scheme - SHOULD NOT be used if the Oblivious Gateway and Target Resources are operated by different entities as that would expose both requests and response to modification or inspection by a network attacker.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource needs to have a plan for replacing keys. This might include regular replacement of keys, which can be assigned new key identifiers. If an Oblivious Gateway Resource receives a request that contains a key identifier that it does not understand or that corresponds to a key that has been replaced, the server can respond with an HTTP 422 (Unprocessable Content) status code.¶
A server can also use a 422 status code if the server has a key that corresponds to the key identifier, but the Encapsulated Request cannot be successfully decrypted using the key.¶
A server MUST ensure that the HPKE keys it uses are not valid for any other protocol that uses HPKE with the "message/bhttp request" label. Designers of protocols that reuse this encryption format, especially new versions of this protocol, can ensure key diversity by choosing a different label in their use of HPKE. The "message/bhttp response" label was chosen for symmetry only as it provides key diversity only within the HPKE context created using the "message/bhttp request" label; see Section 4.6.¶
A server is responsible for either rejecting replayed requests or ensuring that the effect of replays does not adversely affect Clients or resources.¶
Encrypted requests can be copied and replayed by the Oblivious Relay resource. The threat model for Oblivious HTTP allows the possibility that an Oblivious Relay Resource might replay requests. Furthermore, if a Client sends an Encapsulated Request in TLS early data (see Section 8 of [TLS] and [RFC8470]), a network-based adversary might be able to cause the request to be replayed. In both cases, the effect of a replay attack and the mitigations that might be employed are similar to TLS early data.¶
It is the responsibility of the application that uses Oblivious HTTP to either reject replayed requests or to ensure that replayed requests have no adverse affects on their operation. This section describes some approaches that are universally applicable and suggestions for more targeted techniques.¶
A Client or Oblivious Relay Resource MUST NOT automatically attempt to retry a failed request unless it receives a positive signal indicating that the request was not processed or forwarded. The HTTP/2 REFUSED_STREAM error code (Section 8.1.4 of [HTTP/2]), the HTTP/3 H3_REQUEST_REJECTED error code (Section 8.1 of [HTTP/3]), or a GOAWAY frame with a low enough identifier (in either protocol version) are all sufficient signals that no processing occurred. Connection failures or interruptions are not sufficient signals that no processing occurred.¶
The anti-replay mechanisms described in Section 8 of [TLS] are generally
applicable to Oblivious HTTP requests. The encapsulated keying material (or
enc
) can be used in place of a nonce to uniquely identify a request. This
value is a high-entropy value that is freshly generated for every request, so
two valid requests will have different values with overwhelming probability.¶
The mechanism used in TLS for managing differences in Client and server clocks cannot be used as it depends on being able to observe previous interactions. Oblivious HTTP explicitly prevents such linkability.¶
The considerations in [RFC8470] as they relate to managing the risk of replay also apply, though there is no option to delay the processing of a request.¶
Limiting requests to those with safe methods might not be satisfactory for some applications, particularly those that involve the submission of data to a server. The use of idempotent methods might be of some use in managing replay risk, though it is important to recognize that different idempotent requests can be combined to be not idempotent.¶
Even without replay prevention, the server-chosen response_nonce
field
ensures that responses have unique AEAD keys and nonces even when requests are
replayed.¶
Clients SHOULD include a Date
header field in Encapsulated Requests, unless
the Oblivious Gateway Resource does not use Date
for anti-replay purposes.¶
Though HTTP requests often do not include a Date
header field, the value of
this field might be used by a server to limit the amount of requests it needs to
track if it needs to prevent replay attacks.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource can maintain state for requests for a small window
of time over which it wishes to accept requests. The Oblivious Gateway Resource
can store all requests it processes within this window. Storing just the enc
field of a request, which should be unique to each request, is sufficient. The
Oblivious Gateway Resource then rejects requests if the request is the same as
one that was previously answered within that time window, or if the Date
header field from the decrypted request is outside of the current time window.¶
Oblivious Gateway Resources SHOULD allow for the time it takes requests to arrive from the Client, with a time window that is large enough to allow for differences in clocks.¶
Oblivious Gateway Resources MUST NOT treat the time window as secret
information. An attacker can actively probe with different values for the Date
field to determine the time window over which the server will accept responses.¶
An Oblivious Gateway Resource can reject requests that contain a Date
value
that is outside of its active window with a 400 series status code. The problem
type [PROBLEM] of
"https://iana.org/assignments/http-problem-types#date" is defined to allow the
server to signal that the Date
value in the request was unacceptable.¶
Figure 8 shows an example response in HTTP/1.1 format.¶
Disagreements about time are unlikely if both Client and Oblivious Gateway Resource have a good source of time; see [NTP]. However, clock differences are known to be commonplace; see Section 7.1 of [CLOCKSKEW].¶
Including a Date
header field in the response allows the Client to correct
clock errors by retrying the same request using the value of the Date
field
provided by the Oblivious Gateway Resource. The value of the Date
field can
be copied if the request is fresh, with an adjustment based on the Age
field
otherwise. When retrying a request, the Client MUST create a fresh encryption
of the modified request, using a new HPKE context.¶
Intermediaries can sometimes rewrite the Date
field when forwarding responses.
This might cause problems if the Oblivious Gateway Resource and intermediary
clocks differ by enough to cause the retry to be rejected. Therefore, Clients
MUST NOT retry a request with an adjusted date more than once.¶
Oblivious Gateway Resources that condition their responses on the Date
header
field SHOULD either ensure that intermediaries do not cache responses (by
including a Cache-Control
directive of no-store
) or designate the response
as conditional on the value of the Date
request header field (by including the
token "date" in a Vary
header field).¶
Clients MUST NOT use the date provided by the Oblivious Gateway Resource for any other purpose, including future requests to any resource. Any request that uses information provided by the Oblivious Gateway Resource might be correlated using that information.¶
This document does not provide forward secrecy for either requests or responses during the lifetime of the key configuration. A measure of forward secrecy can be provided by generating a new key configuration then deleting the old keys after a suitable period.¶
This design does not provide post-compromise security for responses.¶
A Client only needs to retain keying material that might be used compromise the confidentiality and integrity of a response until that response is consumed, so there is negligible risk associated with a Client compromise.¶
A server retains a secret key that might be used to remove protection from messages over much longer periods. A server compromise that provided access to the Oblivious Gateway Resource secret key could allow an attacker to recover the plaintext of all requests sent toward affected keys and all of the responses that were generated.¶
Even if server keys are compromised, an adversary cannot access messages exchanged by the Client with the Oblivious Relay Resource as messages are protected by TLS. Use of a compromised key also requires that the Oblivious Relay Resource cooperate with the attacker or that the attacker is able to compromise these TLS connections.¶
The total number of affected messages affected by server key compromise can be limited by regular rotation of server keys.¶
Including a Date
field in requests reveals some information about the Client
clock. This might be used to fingerprint Clients [UWT] or to identify Clients
that are vulnerable to attacks that depend on incorrect clocks.¶
Clients can randomize the value that they provide for Date
to obscure the true
value of their clock and reduce the chance of linking of requests over time.
However, this increases the risk that their request is rejected as outside the
acceptable window.¶
One goal of this design is that independent Client requests are only linkable by their content. However, the choice of Client configuration might be used to correlate requests. A Client configuration includes the Oblivious Relay Resource URI, the Oblivious Gateway key configuration (KeyConfig), and Oblivious Gateway Resource URI. A configuration is active if Clients can successfully use it for interacting with with a target.¶
Oblivious Relay and Gateway Resources can identify when requests use the same configuration by matching the key ID from the key configuration or the Oblivious Gateway Resource URI. The Oblivious Gateway Resource might use the source address of requests to correlate requests that use an Oblivious Relay Resource run by the same operator. If the Oblivious Gateway Resource is willing to use trial decryption, requests can be further separated into smaller groupings based on the keys that are used.¶
Each active Client configuration partitions the Client anonymity set. In practice, it is infeasible to reduce the number of active configurations to one. Enabling diversity in choice of Oblivious Relay Resource naturally increases the number of active configurations. A small number of configurations might need to be active to allow for key rotation and server maintenance.¶
Client privacy depends on having each configuration used by many other Clients. It is critical prevent the use of unique Client configurations, which might be used to track of individual Clients, but it is also important to avoid creating small groupings of Clients that might weaken privacy protections.¶
A specific method for a Client to acquire configurations is not included in this specification. Applications using this design MUST provide accommodations to mitigate tracking using Client configurations. [CONSISTENCY] provides options for ensuring that Client configurations are consistent between Clients.¶
The content of requests or responses, if used in forming new requests, can be used to correlate requests. This includes obvious methods of linking requests, like cookies [COOKIES], but it also includes any information in either message that might affect how subsequent requests are formulated. For example, [FIELDING] describes how interactions that are individually stateless can be used to build a stateful system when a Client acts on the content of a response.¶
This section discusses various operational and deployment considerations.¶
Using Oblivious HTTP adds both cryptographic overhead and latency to requests relative to a simple HTTP request-response exchange. Deploying relay services that are on path between Clients and servers avoids adding significant additional delay due to network topology. A study of a similar system [ODoH] found that deploying proxies close to servers was most effective in minimizing additional latency.¶
This protocol assumes a fixed, one-to-one mapping between the Oblivious Relay Resource and the Oblivious Gateway Resource. This means that any encrypted request sent to the Oblivious Relay Resource will always be forwarded to the Oblivious Gateway Resource. This constraint was imposed to simplify relay configuration and mitigate against the Oblivious Relay Resource being used as a generic relay for unknown Oblivious Gateway Resources. The relay will only forward for Oblivious Gateway Resources that it has explicitly configured and allowed.¶
It is possible for a server to be configured with multiple Oblivious Relay Resources, each for a different Oblivious Gateway Resource as needed. If the goal is to support a large number of Oblivious Gateway Resources, Clients might be provided with a URI template [TEMPLATE], from which multiple Oblivious Relay Resources could be constructed.¶
Oblivious HTTP might be incompatible with network interception regimes, such as those that rely on configuring Clients with trust anchors and intercepting TLS connections. While TLS might be intercepted successfully, interception middleboxes devices might not receive updates that would allow Oblivious HTTP to be correctly identified using the media types defined in Section 9.2 and Section 9.3.¶
Oblivious HTTP has a simple key management design that is not trivially altered to enable interception by intermediaries. Clients that are configured to enable interception might choose to disable Oblivious HTTP in order to ensure that content is accessible to middleboxes.¶
Please update the "Media Types" registry at https://iana.org/assignments/media-types for the media types "application/ohttp-keys" (Section 9.1), "message/ohttp-req" (Section 9.2), and "message/ohttp-res" (Section 9.3).¶
Please update the "HTTP Problem Types" registry at https://iana.org/assignments/http-problem-types for the types "date" (Section 9.4) and "ohttp-key" (Section 9.5).¶
The "application/ohttp-keys" media type identifies a key configuration used by Oblivious HTTP.¶
application¶
ohttp-keys¶
N/A¶
None¶
only "8bit" or "binary" is permitted¶
N/A¶
this specification¶
Oblivious HTTP and applications that use Oblivious HTTP¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
COMMON¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
IESG¶
The "message/ohttp-req" identifies an encrypted binary HTTP request. This is a binary format that is defined in Section 4.3.¶
message¶
ohttp-req¶
N/A¶
None¶
only "8bit" or "binary" is permitted¶
N/A¶
this specification¶
Oblivious HTTP and applications that use Oblivious HTTP¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
COMMON¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
IESG¶
The "message/ohttp-res" identifies an encrypted binary HTTP response. This is a binary format that is defined in Section 4.4.¶
message¶
ohttp-res¶
N/A¶
None¶
only "8bit" or "binary" is permitted¶
N/A¶
this specification¶
Oblivious HTTP and applications that use Oblivious HTTP¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
COMMON¶
N/A¶
see Authors' Addresses section¶
IESG¶
IANA are requested to create a new entry in the "HTTP Problem Type" registry established by [PROBLEM].¶
https://iana.org/assignments/http-problem-types#date¶
Date Not Acceptable¶
400¶
Section 6.5.2 of this document¶
IANA are requested to create a new entry in the "HTTP Problem Type" registry established by [PROBLEM].¶
https://iana.org/assignments/http-problem-types#ohttp-key¶
Oblivious HTTP key configuration not acceptable¶
400¶
Section 5.3 of this document¶
A single request and response exchange is shown here. Binary values (key
configuration, secret keys, the content of messages, and intermediate values)
are shown in hexadecimal. The request and response here are minimal; the purpose
of this example is to show the cryptographic operations. In this example, the
Client is configured with the Oblivious Relay Resource URI of
https://proxy.example.org/request.example.net/proxy
, and the proxy is
configured to map requests to this URI to the Oblivious Gateway URI
https://example.com/oblivious/request
. The Target Resource URI, i.e., the
resource the Client ultimately wishes to query, is https://example.com
.¶
To begin the process, the Oblivious Gateway Resource generates a key pair. In this example the server chooses DHKEM(X25519, HKDF-SHA256) and generates an X25519 key pair [X25519]. The X25519 secret key is:¶
3c168975674b2fa8e465970b79c8dcf09f1c741626480bd4c6162fc5b6a98e1a¶
The Oblivious Gateway Resource constructs a key configuration that includes the corresponding public key as follows:¶
01002031e1f05a740102115220e9af918f738674aec95f54db6e04eb705aae8e 79815500080001000100010003¶
This key configuration is somehow obtained by the Client. Then when a Client
wishes to send an HTTP GET request to the target https://example.com
, it
constructs the following binary HTTP message:¶
00034745540568747470730b6578616d706c652e636f6d012f¶
The Client then reads the Oblivious Gateway Resource key configuration and selects a mutually supported KDF and AEAD. In this example, the Client selects HKDF-SHA256 and AES-128-GCM. The Client then generates an HPKE sending context that uses the server public key. This context is constructed from the following ephemeral secret key:¶
bc51d5e930bda26589890ac7032f70ad12e4ecb37abb1b65b1256c9c48999c73¶
The corresponding public key is:¶
4b28f881333e7c164ffc499ad9796f877f4e1051ee6d31bad19dec96c208b472¶
And an info
parameter of:¶
6d6573736167652f626874747020726571756573740001002000010001¶
Applying the Seal operation from the HPKE context produces an encrypted message, allowing the Client to construct the following Encapsulated Request:¶
010020000100014b28f881333e7c164ffc499ad9796f877f4e1051ee6d31bad1 9dec96c208b4726374e469135906992e1268c594d2a10c695d858c40a026e796 5e7d86b83dd440b2c0185204b4d63525¶
The Client then sends this to the Oblivious Relay Resource in a POST request, which might look like the following HTTP/1.1 request:¶
The Oblivious Relay Resource receives this request and forwards it to the Oblivious Gateway Resource, which might look like:¶
The Oblivous Gateway Resource receives this request, selects the key it generated previously using the key identifier from the message, and decrypts the message. As this request is directed to the same server, the Oblivious Gateway Resource does not need to initiate an HTTP request to the Target Resource. The request can be served directly by the Target Resource, which generates a minimal response (consisting of just a 200 status code) as follows:¶
0140c8¶
The response is constructed by extracting a secret from the HPKE context:¶
62d87a6ba569ee81014c2641f52bea36¶
The key derivation for the Encapsulated Response uses both the encapsulated KEM key from the request and a randomly selected nonce. This produces a salt of:¶
4b28f881333e7c164ffc499ad9796f877f4e1051ee6d31bad19dec96c208b472 c789e7151fcba46158ca84b04464910d¶
The salt and secret are both passed to the Extract function of the selected KDF (HKDF-SHA256) to produce a pseudorandom key of:¶
979aaeae066cf211ab407b31ae49767f344e1501e475c84e8aff547cc5a683db¶
The pseudorandom key is used with the Expand function of the KDF and an info field of "key" to produce a 16-byte key for the selected AEAD (AES-128-GCM):¶
5d0172a080e428b16d298c4ea0db620d¶
With the same KDF and pseudorandom key, an info field of "nonce" is used to generate a 12-byte nonce:¶
f6bf1aeb88d6df87007fa263¶
The AEAD Seal()
function is then used to encrypt the response, which is added
to the randomized nonce value to produce the Encapsulated Response:¶
c789e7151fcba46158ca84b04464910d86f9013e404feea014e7be4a441f234f 857fbd¶
The Oblivious Gateway Resource constructs a response with the same content:¶
The same response might then be generated by the Oblivious Relay Resource which might change as little as the Date header. The Client is then able to use the HPKE context it created and the nonce from the Encapsulated Response to construct the AEAD key and nonce and decrypt the response.¶
This design is based on a design for Oblivious DoH, described in [ODOH]. David Benjamin, Mark Nottingham, and Eric Rescorla made technical contributions. The authors also thank Ralph Giles, Lucas Pardue, and Tommy Pauly for invaluable assistance.¶
Section 1, Paragraph 3; Section 2, Paragraph 1; Section 2, Paragraph 3; Section 2, Paragraph 3; Section 2, Paragraph 3; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 1; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 2; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 3; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 9; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 10; Section 2.2; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.2.1; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.2.1; Section 3, Paragraph 1; Section 3, Paragraph 2; Section 3, Paragraph 2; Section 3, Paragraph 3; Section 4.3, Paragraph 3; Section 4.4, Paragraph 6; Section 4.6, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 3; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 8; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 6, Paragraph 1; Section 6, Paragraph 1; Section 6, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 2, Item 2; Section 6, Paragraph 3; Section 6, Paragraph 5, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 6; Section 6, Paragraph 7; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 2; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 2; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 3; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5, Paragraph 2; Section 6.5, Paragraph 4; Section 6.5, Paragraph 6; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 4; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 5; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 5; Section 6.7, Paragraph 2; Section 6.7, Paragraph 2; Section 6.7, Paragraph 4; Section 6.8, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 3; Section 7, Paragraph 3; Section 7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 5; Section 7, Paragraph 5; Section 7, Paragraph 5; Section 7, Paragraph 6; Appendix A, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 6; Appendix A, Paragraph 6; Appendix A, Paragraph 8; Appendix A, Paragraph 8; Appendix A, Paragraph 8; Appendix A, Paragraph 14; Appendix A, Paragraph 16; Appendix A, Paragraph 36¶
Section 1, Paragraph 6; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.8.1; Section 3, Paragraph 1; Section 3, Paragraph 3; Section 3, Paragraph 3; Section 4.3, Paragraph 1; Section 4.4, Paragraph 5; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.1, Paragraph 4; Section 6.1, Paragraph 6; Section 6.2, Paragraph 3; Section 6.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.2, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 3; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 6; Section 6.5, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 7; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 9; Section 6.8, Paragraph 1; Section 6.8, Paragraph 1; Section 6.8, Paragraph 2; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 5; Section 8.1, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 2; Section 8.3, Paragraph 1; Section 8.3, Paragraph 2¶
Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 3; Section 2.2; Section 4, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 4.1, Paragraph 3; Section 4.1, Paragraph 3; Section 4.1, Paragraph 4; Section 4.1, Paragraph 4; Section 4.3, Paragraph 3; Section 4.3, Paragraph 8; Section 4.3, Paragraph 8; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6, Paragraph 3; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 2; Section 6.3, Paragraph 2; Section 6.4, Paragraph 2; Section 6.5, Paragraph 2; Appendix A, Paragraph 14¶
Section 2.2; Section 4, Paragraph 2, Item 2; Section 4.2, Paragraph 3; Section 4.2, Paragraph 3; Section 4.2, Paragraph 4; Section 4.2, Paragraph 4; Section 4.2, Paragraph 6; Section 4.4, Paragraph 1; Section 4.4, Paragraph 2, Item 7; Section 4.4, Paragraph 5; Section 5.2, Paragraph 3; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.2, Paragraph 5; Appendix A, Paragraph 24; Appendix A, Paragraph 32; Appendix A, Paragraph 36¶
Section 3, Paragraph 1; Section 3, Paragraph 1; Section 3, Paragraph 2; Section 3, Paragraph 3; Section 3.1, Paragraph 1; Section 3.1, Paragraph 2; Section 3.2, Paragraph 1; Section 3.2, Paragraph 2; Section 4.3, Paragraph 1; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 1; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 6.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.6, Paragraph 1; Section 6.6, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 2; Section 9.1, Paragraph 1; Section 9.5, Paragraph 2.4.1; Appendix A, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 4; Appendix A, Paragraph 6; Appendix A, Paragraph 8¶
Section 3, Paragraph 2; Section 3, Paragraph 2; Section 3, Paragraph 3; Section 3.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.1, Paragraph 2¶
Section 2, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 2, Paragraph 2, Item 1; Section 2, Paragraph 2, Item 2; Section 2, Paragraph 2, Item 3; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 5; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 6; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 8; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.8.1; Section 2.2; Section 3, Paragraph 1; Section 4.6, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 5; Section 5, Paragraph 7; Section 5, Paragraph 8; Section 5, Paragraph 9; Section 5, Paragraph 10; Section 5.1, Paragraph 2; Section 5.2, Paragraph 2; Section 5.2, Paragraph 3; Section 5.2, Paragraph 3; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 1; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 6, Paragraph 3; Section 6, Paragraph 5, Item 3; Section 6, Paragraph 6; Section 6, Paragraph 7; Section 6, Paragraph 7; Section 6.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 2; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.3, Paragraph 4; Section 6.4, Paragraph 1; Section 6.4, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 3; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 5; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 7; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 9; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 9; Section 6.7, Paragraph 3; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 2; Section 7, Paragraph 2; Section 7, Paragraph 2; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 2; Appendix A, Paragraph 2; Appendix A, Paragraph 4; Appendix A, Paragraph 8; Appendix A, Paragraph 18; Appendix A, Paragraph 20; Appendix A, Paragraph 34¶
Section 1, Paragraph 5; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 4; Section 6.5.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.5.2, Paragraph 8; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 2¶
Section 1, Paragraph 6; Section 2, Paragraph 2, Item 3; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 3; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 4; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 8; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 9; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.2.1; Section 2.2; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 1; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 4; Section 5, Paragraph 5; Section 5, Paragraph 5; Section 5, Paragraph 6; Section 5.2, Paragraph 2; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.2, Paragraph 4; Section 5.3, Paragraph 4; Section 6, Paragraph 3; Section 6, Paragraph 5, Item 2; Section 6, Paragraph 7; Section 6, Paragraph 9, Item 1; Section 6.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.1, Paragraph 6; Section 6.2, Paragraph 1; Section 6.2, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2, Paragraph 3; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 2; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2.3, Paragraph 5; Section 6.5, Paragraph 2; Section 6.5, Paragraph 4; Section 6.7, Paragraph 4; Section 6.7, Paragraph 4; Section 7, Paragraph 1; Section 7, Paragraph 2; Section 7, Paragraph 3; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 16; Appendix A, Paragraph 18; Appendix A, Paragraph 36¶
Section 1, Paragraph 5; Section 6.2.2, Paragraph 1; Section 8.2, Paragraph 2; Section 8.2, Paragraph 2¶
Section 2, Paragraph 3; Section 2, Paragraph 5; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 1; Section 2, Paragraph 6, Item 7; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.2.1; Section 2.2, Paragraph 2.10.1; Section 2.2; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 2; Section 5, Paragraph 7; Section 5, Paragraph 8; Section 5.2, Paragraph 3; Section 5.2, Paragraph 3; Section 6, Paragraph 1; Section 6, Paragraph 5, Item 3; Section 6, Paragraph 7; Section 6.1, Paragraph 2; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.3, Paragraph 1; Section 6.3, Paragraph 4; Appendix A, Paragraph 1; Appendix A, Paragraph 20; Appendix A, Paragraph 20¶