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---
layout: post
title: "Trouble with OCSP"
date: 2019-08-06
comments: true
tags: ocsp, tor, security, privacy
---
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> This is a post about side channel information leak present in OnionBrowser OCSP requests. This post omits a lot of details about OCSP protocol.
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Digital certificates usually have long expiration, to reduce
maintenance overhead. Most of the cases CAs issue a certificate for
few years.
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But what are we to do when a certificate is compromised? We can
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re-issue a certificate, but compromised certificate is still in the
wind. Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) is designed to help
with this exact situation. It defines a way to check validity of a
certificate in a timely[^1] manner.
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OCSP[^2] works roughly as follows in an https connection:
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1. Client looks up the OCSP responder server from `AuthorityInfoAccess` section in the certificate.
2. Client crafts a OCSP request and sends it to OCSP responder (server provided by the CA).
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3. Responder returns the current status of the certificate, one of `good` , `revoked` or `unknown`
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There are many other interactions defined in the OCSP ecosystem. Maybe the most important one is [OCSP Stapling ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OCSP_stapling ). In stapling the original request server sends back OCSP validation message with the certificate itself, removing the need for another seperate request.
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## Dissecting an OCSP Request
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If the request is less than `255 bytes` , OCSP allows it to be passed as a GET path. A typical request looks like this
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```bash
GET http://ocsp.int-x3.letsencrypt.org/MFgwVqADAgEAME8wTTBLMAkGBSsOAwIaBQAEFH7maudymrP8%2BKIgZGwWoS1gcQhdBBSoSmpjBH3duubRObemRWXv86jsoQISA6D%2BPqgUVCy3wtolHIxq%2Bk0e
```
The request is `URL-Encoded > BASE64 encoded > ASN-1` data. After decoding, one can use `ocsptool` from [GnuTLS ](https://www.gnutls.org/ ) to read it.
```bash
echo -n "MFgwVqADAgEAME8wTTBLMAkGBSsOAwIaBQAEFH7maudymrP8%2BKIgZGwWoS1gcQhdBBSoSmpjBH3duubRObemRWXv86jsoQISA6D%2BPqgUVCy3wtolHIxq%2Bk0e" \
| python -c "import sys, urllib.parse as ul; print(ul.unquote(sys.stdin.read()));" \
| base64 -d \
| ocsptool -i
OCSP Request Information:
Version: 1
Request List:
Certificate ID:
Hash Algorithm: SHA1
Issuer Name Hash: 7ee66ae7729ab3fcf8a220646c16a12d6071085d
Issuer Key Hash: a84a6a63047dddbae6d139b7a64565eff3a8eca1
Serial Number: 03a0fe3ea814542cb7c2da251c8c6afa4d1e
```
.. and then lookup the cert parameters
```bash
curl https://crt.sh/?serial=03a0fe3ea814542cb7c2da251c8c6afa4d1e
```
```bash
...
Issuer: (CA ID: 16418)
commonName = Let's Encrypt Authority X3
organizationName = Let's Encrypt
countryName = US
Validity
Not Before: Mar 29 00:08:51 2019 GMT
Not After : Jun 27 00:08:51 2019 GMT
Subject:
commonName = check.torproject.org
...
```
## Privacy Takes a Backseat.
Careful examination of above workflow will reveal that the OCSP flow
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is happening over HTTP. With the above dissecting example, an attacker
will know that it is highly probable that user is accessing
< https: / / check . torproject . org > .
Most issuers seem to stick to http; possibly to avoid cyclical
dependencies. This means man-in-the-middle leakage of certificates a
user is validating is happening, and by extension leakage of websites
user is accessing.
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## Onion Browser
iOS has inbuilt mechanism for checking revocations. They seem to be
only enforced for
[EV ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Validation_Certificate )
certificates though. This is not a bad thing at all, but it creates a
weird situation where it leaks urls with EV certs from [Onion
Browser](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/onion-browser/id519296448). Semi-Official
(as far as I can tell) Tor browser on iOS.
Whenever Onion Browser accesses a website with EV cert, (for e.g
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< https: / / check . torproject . org > ), the OCSP request is routed via
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**regular** transport, not via onion network as one would assume.
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An attacker observing network can see any of the OCSP requests, and
thus know a subset of sites user is visiting, even if they are on Tor.
A weird detail is that the [**`.onion` endpoint of NYTimes has
an EV certificate**](https://crt.sh/?id=939411753). The ocsp request
for it is send via plain transport and gets leaked, if you were using
OnionBrowser to access it.
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I stumbled upon this accidently while inspecting requests from my
iPhone with [mitmproxy ](https://mitmproxy.org/ ). The bug was reported
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to Onion Browser team and [they have a nice write up of the
situation](https://github.com/OnionBrowser/OnionBrowser/wiki/2019-178:-sites-with-EV-HTTPS-certificates-leak-information-via-OCSP). Unfortunately,
it is hard to fix. :-(
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> Many thanks to [\@konarkmodi](https://twitter.com/konarkmodi) for helping me verify my findings and reviewing this post.
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[^1]: Opposed to checking against a [Certificate Revocation List ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_revocation_list ).
[^2]: Familiar readers will note that this is plain OCSP, the non-stapling kind.