CURDLE - CURves, Deprecating and a Little more Encryption The CURDLE working group is chartered to add a small set of cryptographic mechanisms to some IETF protocols, and to deprecate old algorithms where there is IETF consensus to do so. The focus with regards to adding mechanisms is for those mechanisms that enjoy broad support from implementers. The set of new algorithms that can be introduced are limited to key agreement (ECDH) and digital signatures (EdDSA) with Curve25519 and Curve448 as defined by CFRG [1] [2], and the AEAD mode ciphers consisting of ChaCha20 and Poly1305 also defined by CFRG [3]. Other variants of mechanisms, such as the ChaCha20-Poly1305 construct deployed for SSH, may also be considered as well as AES-CCM[4] and AES-GCM [5] where those are not already defined and where there is implementer interest. Related specifications such as private and public key formats are also within scope. The relevant IETF protocols are primarily those protocols that are standardized through the IETF and that do not have an active working group, or where the working group decides to not take on the work. To be concrete, the protocols in scope are Secure Shell (SSH), DNSSEC, PKIX, CMS, XML Digital Signatures and potentially Kerberos and JSON. Where initial drafts for this work have been produced those will be immediately considered for adoption as working group documents. These include, for SSH, Curve25519/Curve448 digital signatures [6] and key exchange [7]; for DNSSEC, Ed25519 [8] and Curve448 [9]; for PKIX, Curve25519/448 NamedCurve [10] and EdDSA signatures [11]; for JSON curves and signatures [12]. As the CURDLE working group will be handling changes to protocols and registries some of which include what are now considered outdated algorithm options, the working group can also choose to propose deprecation of such algorithms. Such deprecation needs to be done with care, ensuring that interoperability and the needs of existing implementers and deployments are properly considered. Where deprecation is practical, the working group is encouraged to deprecate. Where there is an IETF working group or area group with expertise in a relevant topic the CURDLE working group will defer to the consensus of the more specific working group as to where work will be done. For example, the TLS, OpenPGP and IPSECME WGs are actively considering some of these topics. The CURDLE working group is expected to be a short-lived working group that may not need to ever meet face-to-face. Once the work on the initially adopted set of drafts has completed the working group will close or re-charter. The CURDLE working group is not chartered to consider allocating new codepoints for any algorithms or modes other than those mentioned above. Should someone wish to propose such work, a re-charter will be required. At this time, there is no expectation that such a re-charter will be requested. [1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-irtf-cfrg-curves [2] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-irtf-cfrg-eddsa-00 [3] RFC 7539 [4] RFC 3610 [5] RFC5288 [6] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bjh21-ssh-ed25519-02 [7] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-ssh-curves-00 [8] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-sury-dnskey-ed25519-03 [9] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-sury-dnskey-ed448-00 [10] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-pkix-newcurves-01 [11] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-pkix-eddsa-04 [12] http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/jose/current/msg05357.html