The historical practice of deploying HTTP over SSL3 [3] has
distinguished the combination from HTTP alone by a unique URI scheme
and the TCP port number. The scheme 'http' meant the HTTP protocol
alone on port 80, while 'https' meant the HTTP protocol over SSL on
port 443. Parallel well-known port numbers have similarly been
requested -- and in some cases, granted -- to distinguish between
secured and unsecured use of other application protocols (e.g.
snews, ftps). This approach effectively halves the number of
available well known ports.
At the Washington DC IETF meeting in December 1997, the Applications
Area Directors and the IESG reaffirmed that the practice of issuing
parallel "secure" port numbers should be deprecated. The HTTP/1.1
Upgrade mechanism can apply Transport Layer Security [6] to an open
HTTP connection.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 2]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
In the nearly two years since, there has been broad acceptance of the
concept behind this proposal, but little interest in implementing
alternatives to port 443 for generic Web browsing. In fact, nothing
in this memo affects the current interpretation of https: URIs.
However, new application protocols built atop HTTP, such as the
Internet Printing Protocol [7], call for just such a mechanism in
order to move ahead in the IETF standards process.
The Upgrade mechanism also solves the "virtual hosting" problem.
Rather than allocating multiple IP addresses to a single host, an
HTTP/1.1 server will use the Host: header to disambiguate the
intended web service. As HTTP/1.1 usage has grown more prevalent,
more ISPs are offering name-based virtual hosting, thus delaying IP
address space exhaustion.
TLS (and SSL) have been hobbled by the same limitation as earlier
versions of HTTP: the initial handshake does not specify the intended
hostname, relying exclusively on the IP address. Using a cleartext
HTTP/1.1 Upgrade: preamble to the TLS handshake -- choosing the
certificates based on the initial Host: header -- will allow ISPs to
provide secure name-based virtual hosting as well.
TLS, a.k.a., SSL (Secure Sockets Layer), establishes a private end-
to-end connection, optionally including strong mutual authentication,
using a variety of cryptosystems. Initially, a handshake phase uses
three subprotocols to set up a record layer, authenticate endpoints,
set parameters, as well as report errors. Then, there is an ongoing
layered record protocol that handles encryption, compression, and
reassembly for the remainder of the connection. The latter is
intended to be completely transparent. For example, there is no
dependency between TLS's record markers and or certificates and
HTTP/1.1's chunked encoding or authentication.
Either the client or server can use the HTTP/1.1 [1] Upgrade
mechanism (Section 14.42) to indicate that a TLS-secured connection
is desired or necessary. This memo defines the "TLS/1.0" Upgrade
token, and a new HTTP Status Code, "426 Upgrade Required".
Section 3 and Section 4 describe the operation of a directly
connected client and server. Intermediate proxies must establish an
end-to-end tunnel before applying those operations, as explained in
Section 5.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 3]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
Keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT" and
"MAY" that appear in this document are to be interpreted as described
in RFC 2119 [11].
When the client sends an HTTP/1.1 request with an Upgrade header
field containing the token "TLS/1.0", it is requesting the server to
complete the current HTTP/1.1 request after switching to TLS/1.0.
A client MAY offer to switch to secured operation during any clear
HTTP request when an unsecured response would be acceptable:
GET http://example.bank.com/acct_stat.html?749394889300 HTTP/1.1
Host: example.bank.com
Upgrade: TLS/1.0
Connection: Upgrade
In this case, the server MAY respond to the clear HTTP operation
normally, OR switch to secured operation (as detailed in the next
section).
Note that HTTP/1.1 [1] specifies "the upgrade keyword MUST be
supplied within a Connection header field (section 14.10) whenever
Upgrade is present in an HTTP/1.1 message".
If an unsecured response would be unacceptable, a client MUST send an
OPTIONS request first to complete the switch to TLS/1.0 (if
possible).
OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1
Host: example.bank.com
Upgrade: TLS/1.0
Connection: Upgrade
As specified in HTTP/1.1 [1], if the server is prepared to initiate
the TLS handshake, it MUST send the intermediate "101 Switching
Protocol" and MUST include an Upgrade response header specifying the
tokens of the protocol stack it is switching to:
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 4]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols
Upgrade: TLS/1.0, HTTP/1.1
Connection: Upgrade
Note that the protocol tokens listed in the Upgrade header of a 101
Switching Protocols response specify an ordered 'bottom-up' stack.
As specified in HTTP/1.1 [1], Section 10.1.2: "The server will
switch protocols to those defined by the response's Upgrade header
field immediately after the empty line which terminates the 101
response".
Once the TLS handshake completes successfully, the server MUST
continue with the response to the original request. Any TLS handshake
failure MUST lead to disconnection, per the TLS error alert
specification.
The Upgrade response header field advertises possible protocol
upgrades a server MAY accept. In conjunction with the "426 Upgrade
Required" status code, a server can advertise the exact protocol
upgrade(s) that a client MUST accept to complete the request.
As specified in HTTP/1.1 [1], the server MAY include an Upgrade
header in any response other than 101 or 426 to indicate a
willingness to switch to any (combination) of the protocols listed.
A server MAY indicate that a client request can not be completed
without TLS using the "426 Upgrade Required" status code, which MUST
include an an Upgrade header field specifying the token of the
required TLS version.
HTTP/1.1 426 Upgrade Required
Upgrade: TLS/1.0, HTTP/1.1
Connection: Upgrade
The server SHOULD include a message body in the 426 response which
indicates in human readable form the reason for the error and
describes any alternative courses which may be available to the user.
Note that even if a client is willing to use TLS, it must use the
operations in Section 3 to proceed; the TLS handshake cannot begin
immediately after the 426 response.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 5]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
As a hop-by-hop header, Upgrade is negotiated between each pair of
HTTP counterparties. If a User Agent sends a request with an Upgrade
header to a proxy, it is requesting a change to the protocol between
itself and the proxy, not an end-to-end change.
Since TLS, in particular, requires end-to-end connectivity to provide
authentication and prevent man-in-the-middle attacks, this memo
specifies the CONNECT method to establish a tunnel across proxies.
Once a tunnel is established, any of the operations in Section 3 can
be used to establish a TLS connection.
If an origin server receives an Upgrade header from a proxy and
responds with a 101 Switching Protocols response, it is changing the
protocol only on the connection between the proxy and itself.
Similarly, a proxy might return a 101 response to its client to
change the protocol on that connection independently of the protocols
it is using to communicate toward the origin server.
These scenarios also complicate diagnosis of a 426 response. Since
Upgrade is a hop-by-hop header, a proxy that does not recognize 426
might remove the accompanying Upgrade header and prevent the client
from determining the required protocol switch. If a client receives
a 426 status without an accompanying Upgrade header, it will need to
request an end to end tunnel connection as described in Section 5.2
and repeat the request in order to obtain the required upgrade
information.
This hop-by-hop definition of Upgrade was a deliberate choice. It
allows for incremental deployment on either side of proxies, and for
optimized protocols between cascaded proxies without the knowledge of
the parties that are not a part of the change.
A CONNECT method requests that a proxy establish a tunnel connection
on its behalf. The Request-URI portion of the Request-Line is always
an 'authority' as defined by URI Generic Syntax [2], which is to say
the host name and port number destination of the requested connection
separated by a colon:
CONNECT server.example.com:80 HTTP/1.1
Host: server.example.com:80
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 6]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
Other HTTP mechanisms can be used normally with the CONNECT method --
except end-to-end protocol Upgrade requests, of course, since the
tunnel must be established first.
For example, proxy authentication might be used to establish the
authority to create a tunnel:
CONNECT server.example.com:80 HTTP/1.1
Host: server.example.com:80
Proxy-Authorization: basic aGVsbG86d29ybGQ=
Like any other pipelined HTTP/1.1 request, data to be tunneled may be
sent immediately after the blank line. The usual caveats also apply:
data may be discarded if the eventual response is negative, and the
connection may be reset with no response if more than one TCP segment
is outstanding.
Any successful (2xx) response to a CONNECT request indicates that the
proxy has established a connection to the requested host and port,
and has switched to tunneling the current connection to that server
connection.
It may be the case that the proxy itself can only reach the requested
origin server through another proxy. In this case, the first proxy
SHOULD make a CONNECT request of that next proxy, requesting a tunnel
to the authority. A proxy MUST NOT respond with any 2xx status code
unless it has either a direct or tunnel connection established to the
authority.
An origin server which receives a CONNECT request for itself MAY
respond with a 2xx status code to indicate that a connection is
established.
If at any point either one of the peers gets disconnected, any
outstanding data that came from that peer will be passed to the other
one, and after that also the other connection will be terminated by
the proxy. If there is outstanding data to that peer undelivered,
that data will be discarded.
Reliable, interoperable negotiation of Upgrade features requires an
unambiguous failure signal. The 426 Upgrade Required status code
allows a server to definitively state the precise protocol extensions
a given resource must be served with.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 7]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
It might at first appear that the response should have been some form
of redirection (a 3xx code), by analogy to an old-style redirection
to an https: URI. User agents that do not understand Upgrade:
preclude this.
Suppose that a 3xx code had been assigned for "Upgrade Required"; a
user agent that did not recognize it would treat it as 300. It would
then properly look for a "Location" header in the response and
attempt to repeat the request at the URL in that header field. Since
it did not know to Upgrade to incorporate the TLS layer, it would at
best fail again at the new URL.
The HTTP Status Code Registry defines the name space for the Status-
Code token in the Status line of an HTTP response. The initial
values for this name space are those specified by:
1. Draft Standard for HTTP/1.1 [1]
2. Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning [4] [defines 420-424]
3. WebDAV Advanced Collections [5] (Work in Progress) [defines 425]
4. Section 6 [defines 426]
Values to be added to this name space SHOULD be subject to review in
the form of a standards track document within the IETF Applications
Area. Any such document SHOULD be traceable through statuses of
either 'Obsoletes' or 'Updates' to the Draft Standard for
HTTP/1.1 [1].
The HTTP Upgrade Token Registry defines the name space for product
tokens used to identify protocols in the Upgrade HTTP header field.
Each registered token should be associated with one or a set of
specifications, and with contact information.
The Draft Standard for HTTP/1.1 [1] specifies that these tokens obey
the production for 'product':
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 8]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
product = token ["/" product-version]
product-version = token
Registrations should be allowed on a First Come First Served basis as
described in BCP 26 [10]. These specifications need not be IETF
documents or be subject to IESG review, but should obey the following
rules:
1. A token, once registered, stays registered forever.
2. The registration MUST name a responsible party for the
registration.
3. The registration MUST name a point of contact.
4. The registration MAY name the documentation required for the
token.
5. The responsible party MAY change the registration at any time.
The IANA will keep a record of all such changes, and make them
available upon request.
6. The responsible party for the first registration of a "product"
token MUST approve later registrations of a "version" token
together with that "product" token before they can be registered.
7. If absolutely required, the IESG MAY reassign the responsibility
for a token. This will normally only be used in the case when a
responsible party cannot be contacted.
This specification defines the protocol token "TLS/1.0" as the
identifier for the protocol specified by The TLS Protocol [6].
It is NOT required that specifications for upgrade tokens be made
publicly available, but the contact information for the registration
SHOULD be.
The potential for a man-in-the-middle attack (deleting the Upgrade
header) remains the same as current, mixed http/https practice:
o Removing the Upgrade header is similar to rewriting web pages to
change https:// links to http:// links.
o The risk is only present if the server is willing to vend such
information over both a secure and an insecure channel in the
first place.
o If the client knows for a fact that a server is TLS-compliant, it
can insist on it by only sending an Upgrade request with a no-op
method like OPTIONS.
o Finally, as the https: specification warns, "users should
carefully examine the certificate presented by the server to
determine if it meets their expectations".
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 9]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
Furthermore, for clients that do not explicitly try to invoke TLS,
servers can use the Upgrade header in any response other than 101 or
426 to advertise TLS compliance. Since TLS compliance should be
considered a feature of the server and not the resource at hand, it
should be sufficient to send it once, and let clients cache that
fact.
While nothing in this memo affects the definition of the 'https' URI
scheme, widespread adoption of this mechanism for HyperText content
could use 'http' to identify both secure and non-secure resources.
The choice of what security characteristics are required on the
connection is left to the client and server. This allows either
party to use any information available in making this determination.
For example, user agents may rely on user preference settings or
information about the security of the network such as 'TLS required
on all POST operations not on my local net', or servers may apply
resource access rules such as 'the FORM on this page must be served
and submitted using TLS'.
A generic TCP tunnel is fraught with security risks. First, such
authorization should be limited to a small number of known ports.
The Upgrade: mechanism defined here only requires onward tunneling at
port 80. Second, since tunneled data is opaque to the proxy, there
are additional risks to tunneling to other well-known or reserved
ports. A putative HTTP client CONNECTing to port 25 could relay spam
via SMTP, for example.
References
[1] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., Masinter, L.,
Leach, P. and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --
HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.
[2] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R. and L. Masinter, "URI Generic
Syntax", RFC 2396, August 1998.
[3] Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, May 2000.
[4] Goland, Y., Whitehead, E., Faizi, A., Carter, S. and D. Jensen,
"Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning", RFC 2518, February
1999.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 10]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
[5] Slein, J., Whitehead, E.J., et al., "WebDAV Advanced Collections
Protocol", Work In Progress.
[6] Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol", RFC 2246, January
1999.
[7] Herriot, R., Butler, S., Moore, P. and R. Turner, "Internet
Printing Protocol/1.0: Encoding and Transport", RFC 2565, April
1999.
[8] Luotonen, A., "Tunneling TCP based protocols through Web proxy
servers", Work In Progress. (Also available in: Luotonen, Ari.
Web Proxy Servers, Prentice-Hall, 1997 ISBN:0136806120.)
[9] Rose, M., "Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML", RFC 2629, June
1999.
[10] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA
Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434, October 1998.
[11] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
Authors' Addresses
Rohit Khare
4K Associates / UC Irvine
3207 Palo Verde
Irvine, CA 92612
US
Phone: +1 626 806 7574
EMail: rohit@4K-associates.com
URI: http://www.4K-associates.com/
Scott Lawrence
Agranat Systems, Inc.
5 Clocktower Place
Suite 400
Maynard, MA 01754
US
Phone: +1 978 461 0888
EMail: lawrence@agranat.com
URI: http://www.agranat.com/
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 11]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
Appendix A. Acknowledgments
The CONNECT method was originally described in a Work in Progress
titled, "Tunneling TCP based protocols through Web proxy servers",
[8] by Ari Luotonen of Netscape Communications Corporation. It was
widely implemented by HTTP proxies, but was never made a part of any
IETF Standards Track document. The method name CONNECT was reserved,
but not defined in [1].
The definition provided here is derived directly from that earlier
memo, with some editorial changes and conformance to the stylistic
conventions since established in other HTTP specifications.
Additional Thanks to:
o Paul Hoffman for his work on the STARTTLS command extension for
ESMTP.
o Roy Fielding for assistance with the rationale behind Upgrade:
and its interaction with OPTIONS.
o Eric Rescorla for his work on standardizing the existing https:
practice to compare with.
o Marshall Rose, for the xml2rfc document type description and tools
[9].
o Jim Whitehead, for sorting out the current range of available HTTP
status codes.
o Henrik Frystyk Nielsen, whose work on the Mandatory extension
mechanism pointed out a hop-by-hop Upgrade still requires
tunneling.
o Harald Alvestrand for improvements to the token registration
rules.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 12]
RFC 2817 HTTP Upgrade to TLS May 2000
Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Acknowledgement
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
Khare & Lawrence Standards Track [Page 13]