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PKI Technologies

Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, Windows Server 2003 with SP2

PKI Technologies

Organizations need enhanced security for data and strong credentials for identity management. You can use certificates to secure data and manage identification credentials from users and computers both within and outside your organization.

A public key infrastructure (PKI) is the combination of software, encryption technologies, processes, and services that enable an organization to secure its communications and business transactions. The ability of a PKI to secure communications and business transactions is based on the exchange of digital certificates between authenticated users and trusted resources.

You can design a PKI solution to meet the following security and technical requirements of your organization:

  • Confidentiality. You use a PKI to encrypt data that is stored or transmitted.

  • Integrity. You use a PKI to digitally sign data. A digital signature helps you identify whether another user or process modified the data.

  • Authenticity. A PKI provides several authenticity mechanisms. Authentication data passes through hash algorithms, such as Shivest Hash Algorithm 1 (SHA1), to produce a message digest. The message digest is then digitally signed by using the sender’s private key to prove that the message digest was produced by the sender.

  • Nonrepudiation. When data is digitally signed, the digital signature provides proof of the integrity of the signed data and proof of the origin of the data. A third party can verify the integrity and origin of the data at any time. This verification cannot be refuted by the owner of the certificate that digitally signed the data.

PKI Technologies Architecture

The architecture of a PKI involves implementing various interdependent technologies and processes to make it possible to issue, validate, renew, and revoke certificates. These technologies include:

  • One of more servers running Certificate Services and that provide certificate enrollment, revocation and other certificate management services.

  • Active Directory directory service or another directory service that provides account management, policy distribution, and certificate publication services.

  • Domain controllers that can authenticate end users and computers when they request certificates.

  • Domain client computers and users, who request, receive, and use certificates for specific purposes. Although certificates can also be used by services and by non-domain clients, in most Windows PKI environments, domain users and computers are the primary recipients and users of certificates. In some cases, the domain client can be a subordinate CA that requests and receives a certificate authorizing it to issue certificates of its own.

The following figure illustrates the architecture of PKI technologies.

PKI Technologies Architecture

PKI Technologies Architecture

PKI Technologies Components

The key technology components of a PKI and their relation to the PKI architecture diagram are described in the following table.

Components of a PKI

Components Description

Certificates

Provide the foundation of a PKI. Digital certificates are electronic credentials that are associated with a public key and a private key that an organization uses to authenticate users. Certificates are created on servers running Certificate Services and stored on clients and in a directory such as Active Directory.

Certificate templates

Can be used to define the content and purpose of a digital certificate, including issuance requirements; implemented extensions, such as application policy or extended key usage; and enrollment permissions for certificates that a CA issues. Certificate templates are stored in the Active Directory and used by enterprise CAs to provide the default attributes for a certificate.

Certificate Services

The part of the core operating system that allows a business to act as its own CA, and issue and manage digital certificates. Certificate Services includes tools to manage issued certificates, publish CA certificates and CRLs, configure CAs, import and export certificates and keys, and recover archived private keys.

CAs

Servers on which Certificate Services has been configured to issue, validate, and manage certificates. Windows Server 2003 supports multiple levels of a CA hierarchy and a cross-certified trust network. This includes offline and online CAs.

Certificate Revocation Lists

List of certificates that a CA considers no longer usable. Certificates have a specified lifetime, but CAs can reduce this lifetime by a process known as certificate revocation. Publishers can use any kind of directory service, including X.500, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), or directories in a specific operating system, including Active Directory, to store CRLs. Publishers can also publish CRLs on Web servers.

Certificate policy and practice statements

The two documents that outline how a CA and its certificates are to be used, the degree of trust that can be placed in these certificates, legal liabilities if the trust is broken, and so on. These documents can also define or impact PKI designs, operations, and usage, including how a CA is configured, how client requests are processed, and guidelines and procedures for revoking certificates.

Certificate policies

Configurable limitations on the scope of a certificate. Certificate policies can be implemented as required and allowed certification path length, the range of namespaces that are permitted or excluded by a qualified subordinate CA, the extent to which an organization trusts the identity presented in a certificate, and the applications that can be used in conjunction with certain certificates.

Certificate and CRL repositories

A directory service or other location where certificates are stored and published. In a Windows Server 2003 domain environment, the Active Directory is the most likely publication point for certificates issued by Windows Server 2003–based CAs.

PKI-enabled applications

Examples of PKI-enabled applications include: Encrypting File System (EFS), Microsoft Internet Explorer, Microsoft Money, Internet Information Services (IIS), Routing and Remote Access, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Outlook Express. Also included are a variety of third-party applications that work with Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003 Certificate Services.

PKI Technologies Scenarios

A PKI consists of one or more CAs that play specific roles. One or more CAs of each type can be combined in a CA hierarchy.

Roles in a CA Hierarchy

Each CA in a CA hierarchy is assigned a role, which is determined by the CA’s location in the CA hierarchy. Common roles in a CA hierarchy include a root CA, a policy CA, and an issuing CA.

Root CAs

A root CA is the highest CA in a CA hierarchy and is the trust point for all certificates that are issued by the CAs in the CA hierarchy. If a user, computer, or service trusts a root CA, they implicitly trust all certificates that are issued by all other CAs in the CA hierarchy.

A root CA is different from all other CAs in that it issues its own certificate. This means that the Issuer and Subject fields of the certificate contain the same distinguished name. A root CA only issues certificates to other CAs that are directly subordinate to it.

Policy CAs

A policy CA is typically located on the second-tier of a CA hierarchy, directly beneath the root CA. In this scenario, the root CA is often referred to as a parent CA, because the root CA issued a Subordinate Certification Authority certificate to the policy CA. In fact, any CA that issues a certificate to another CA is referred to as a parent CA. The CA that receives the certificate from a parent CA is known as a subordinate CA.

The role of a policy CA is to describe the policies and procedures that an organization implements to secure its PKI, the processes that validate the identity of certificate holders, and the processes that enforce the procedures that manage certificates. A policy CA issues certificates only to other CAs. The CAs that receive these certificates must uphold and enforce the policies that the policy CA defined.

It is not mandatory to use policy CAs unless different divisions, sectors, or locations of your organization require different issuance policies and procedures. However, if your organization requires different issuance policies and procedures, you must add policy CAs to the hierarchy to define each unique policy. For example, an organization can implement one policy CA for all certificates that it issues internally to employees and another policy CA for all certificates that it issues to non-employees.

Issuing CAs

An issuing CA is typically located on the lowest tier of a CA hierarchy. An issuing CA issues certificates to other computers, users, network devices, services, or other issuing CAs. An issuing CA is always online.

The parent CA for an issuing CA can be a root CA, a policy CA or another issuing CA. The issuing CA must enforce the policies and procedures that are described in the policy CA above the issuing CA in the CA hierarchy.

Types of CA Hierarchies

You can use one of two CA models: a root hierarchy or a cross-certification trust. Windows Server 2003 networks recognize and support both models.

Root Hierarchies

In a root CA hierarchy, all of the CAs in the organization’s CA hierarchy are chained to a common root CA. The following figure illustrates a root CA hierarchy.

Root CA Hierarchy

CA State Hierarchy

A root CA hierarchy:

  • Enhances security and scalability. It protects the upper layers of the CA hierarchy from network attacks by removing the upper layers of the CA hierarchy from the network.

  • Provides flexible administration to the CA hierarchy. You can use role separation to delegate CA management to separate administration groups in an organization.

  • Supports commercial CAs.All commercial CAs — such as VeriSign, GTE, Thawte, and RSA — implement trusted root CA hierarchies.

  • Supports most applications.Applications such as Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape Communicator support certificates that root CA hierarchies issue, as do IIS and Apache Web servers.

Cross-Certification Trusts

In a cross-certification trust, a CA in one organization’s root CA hierarchy issues a subordinate CA certificate to a CA in another organization’s CA hierarchy. The following figure illustrates a cross-certification hierarchy.

Cross-Certification Trust

Cross-Certification Trust

A cross-certification trust:

  • Provides interoperability between businesses and between products. When cross-certification is implemented, the certificates are logically chained to the trusted root CA of the organization that is evaluating the presented certificate.

  • Joins disparate PKI domains. You can issue a Cross Certification Authority certificate from any CA in your organization’s hierarchy to any CA in a partner organization’s CA hierarchy.

  • Assumes complete trust of a foreign CA hierarchy. Cross-certification does not enforce any constraints on the certificates that a partner organization issues. You must implement qualified subordination to implement constraints on those certificates.