TOC 
Network Working GroupM. Jones
Internet-DraftMicrosoft
Intended status: Standards TrackD. Balfanz
Expires: June 15, 2012Google
 J. Bradley
 independent
 Y. Goland
 Microsoft
 J. Panzer
 Google
 N. Sakimura
 Nomura Research Institute
 P. Tarjan
 Facebook
 December 13, 2011


JSON Web Token (JWT)
draft-jones-json-web-token-07

Abstract

JSON Web Token (JWT) is a means of representing claims to be transferred between two parties. The claims in a JWT are encoded as a JSON object that is digitally signed using JSON Web Signature (JWS) and/or encrypted using JSON Web Encryption (JWE).

The suggested pronunciation of JWT is the same as the English word "jot".

Requirements Language

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.) [RFC2119].

Status of this Memo

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 http://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 June 15, 2012.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2011 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 (http://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 Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.



Table of Contents

1.  Introduction
2.  Terminology
3.  JSON Web Token (JWT) Overview
    3.1.  Example JWT
4.  JWT Claims
    4.1.  Reserved Claim Names
    4.2.  Public Claim Names
    4.3.  Private Claim Names
5.  JWT Header
6.  Plaintext JWTs
    6.1.  Example Plaintext JWT
7.  Rules for Creating and Validating a JWT
8.  Cryptographic Algorithms
9.  IANA Considerations
10.  Security Considerations
    10.1.  Unicode Comparison Security Issues
11.  Open Issues and Things To Be Done (TBD)
12.  References
    12.1.  Normative References
    12.2.  Informative References
Appendix A.  Relationship of JWTs to SAML Tokens
Appendix B.  Relationship of JWTs to Simple Web Tokens (SWTs)
Appendix C.  Acknowledgements
Appendix D.  Document History
§  Authors' Addresses




 TOC 

1.  Introduction

JSON Web Token (JWT) is a compact token format intended for space constrained environments such as HTTP Authorization headers and URI query parameters. JWTs encode claims to be transmitted as a JSON object (as defined in RFC 4627 (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627]) that is base64url encoded and digitally signed and/or encrypted. Signing is accomplished using JSON Web Signature (JWS) [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.). Encryption is accomplished using JSON Web Encryption (JWE) [JWE] (Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.).

The suggested pronunciation of JWT is the same as the English word "jot".



 TOC 

2.  Terminology

JSON Web Token (JWT)
A string consisting of three parts: the Encoded JWT Header, the JWT Second Part, and the JWT Third Part, in that order, with the parts being separated by period ('.') characters, and each part containing base64url encoded content.
JWT Header
A string representing a JSON object that describes the cryptographic operations applied to the JWT. When the JWT is signed, the JWT Header is the JWS Header. When the JWT is encrypted, the JWT Header is the JWE Header.
Header Parameter Names
The names of the members within the JWT Header.
Header Parameter Values
The values of the members within the JWT Header.
JWT Second Part
When the JWT is signed, the JWT Second Part is the Encoded JWS Payload. When the JWT is encrypted, the JWT Second Part is the Encoded JWE Encrypted Key.
JWT Third Part
When the JWT is signed, the JWT Third Part is the Encoded JWS Signature. When the JWT is encrypted, the JWT Third Part is the Encoded JWE Ciphertext.
JWT Claims Set
A string representing a JSON object that contains the claims conveyed by the JWT. When the JWT is signed, the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claims Set are base64url encoded to create the Encoded JWS Payload. When the JWT is encrypted, the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claims Set are used as the JWE Plaintext.
Claim Names
The names of the members of the JSON object represented by the JWT Claims Set.
Claim Values
The values of the members of the JSON object represented by the JWT Claims Set.
Encoded JWT Header
Base64url encoding of the bytes of the UTF-8 RFC 3629 (Yergeau, F., “UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646,” November 2003.) [RFC3629] representation of the JWT Header.
Base64url Encoding
For the purposes of this specification, this term always refers to the URL- and filename-safe Base64 encoding described in RFC 4648 (Josefsson, S., “The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings,” October 2006.) [RFC4648], Section 5, with the (non URL-safe) '=' padding characters omitted, as permitted by Section 3.2. (See Appendix C of [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.) for notes on implementing base64url encoding without padding.)



 TOC 

3.  JSON Web Token (JWT) Overview

JWTs represent a set of claims as a JSON object that is base64url encoded and digitally signed and/or encrypted. The JWT Claims Set represents this JSON object. As per RFC 4627 (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627] Section 2.2, the JSON object consists of zero or more name/value pairs (or members), where the names are strings and the values are arbitrary JSON values. These members are the claims represented by the JWT.

The member names within the JWT Claims Set are referred to as Claim Names. The corresponding values are referred to as Claim Values.

The bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claims Set are signed in the manner described in JSON Web Signature (JWS) [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.) and/or encrypted in the manner described in JSON Web Encryption (JWE) [JWE] (Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.).

The contents of the JWT Header describe the cryptographic operations applied to the JWT Claims Set. If the JWT Header is a JWS Header, the claims are signed. If the JWT Header is a JWE Header, the claims are encrypted.

A JWT is represented as the concatenation of the Encoded JWT Header, the JWT Second Part, and the JWT Third Part, in that order, with the parts being separated by period ('.') characters. When signed, the three parts of the JWT are the three parts of a JWS used to represent the JWT. When encrypted, the three parts of the JWT are the three parts of a JWE used to represent the JWT.



 TOC 

3.1.  Example JWT

The following example JWT Header declares that the encoded object is a JSON Web Token (JWT) and the JWT is signed using the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm:

{"typ":"JWT",
 "alg":"HS256"}

Base64url encoding the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Header yields this Encoded JWS Header value, which is used as the Encoded JWT Header:

eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9

The following is an example of a JWT Claims Set:

{"iss":"joe",
 "exp":1300819380,
 "http://example.com/is_root":true}

Base64url encoding the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JSON Claims Set yields this Encoded JWS Payload, which is used as the JWT Second Part (with line breaks for display purposes only):

eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly
9leGFtcGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ

Signing the Encoded JWS Header and Encoded JWS Payload with the HMAC SHA-256 algorithm and base64url encoding the signature in the manner specified in [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.), yields this Encoded JWS Signature, which is used as the JWT Third Part:

dBjftJeZ4CVP-mB92K27uhbUJU1p1r_wW1gFWFOEjXk

Concatenating these parts in the order Header.Second.Third with period characters between the parts yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only):

eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9
.
eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFt
cGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ
.
dBjftJeZ4CVP-mB92K27uhbUJU1p1r_wW1gFWFOEjXk

This computation is illustrated in more detail in [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.), Appendix A.1.



 TOC 

4.  JWT Claims

The JWT Claims Set represents a JSON object whose members are the claims conveyed by the JWT. The Claim Names within this object MUST be unique. Note however, that the set of claims that a JWT must contain to be considered valid is context-dependent and is outside the scope of this specification. When used in a security-related context, implementations MUST understand and support all of the claims present; otherwise, the JWT MUST be rejected for processing.

There are three classes of JWT Claim Names: Reserved Claim Names, Public Claim Names, and Private Claim Names.



 TOC 

4.1.  Reserved Claim Names

The following claim names are reserved. None of the claims defined in the table below are intended to be mandatory, but rather, provide a starting point for a set of useful, interoperable claims. All the names are short because a core goal of JWTs is for the tokens to be compact.



Claim NameJSON Value TypeClaim SyntaxClaim Semantics
exp number IntDate The exp (expiration time) claim identifies the expiration time on or after which the token MUST NOT be accepted for processing. The processing of the exp claim requires that the current date/time MUST be before the expiration date/time listed in the exp claim. Implementers MAY provide for some small leeway, usually no more than a few minutes, to account for clock skew. This claim is OPTIONAL.
nbf number IntDate The nbf (not before) claim identifies the time before which the token MUST NOT be accepted for processing. The processing of the nbf claim requires that the current date/time MUST be after or equal to the not-before date/time listed in the nbf claim. Implementers MAY provide for some small leeway, usually no more than a few minutes, to account for clock skew. This claim is OPTIONAL.
iat number IntDate The iat (issued at) claim identifies the time at which the JWT was issued. This claim can be used to determine the age of the token. This claim is OPTIONAL.
iss string StringOrURI The iss (issuer) claim identifies the principal that issued the JWT. The processing of this claim is generally application specific. The iss value is case sensitive. This claim is OPTIONAL.
aud string StringOrURI The aud (audience) claim identifies the audience that the JWT is intended for. The principal intended to process the JWT MUST be identified with the value of the audience claim. If the principal processing the claim does not identify itself with the identifier in the aud claim value then the JWT MUST be rejected. The interpretation of the audience value is generally application specific. The aud value is case sensitive. This claim is OPTIONAL.
prn string StringOrURI The prn (principal) claim identifies the subject of the JWT. The processing of this claim is generally application specific. The prn value is case sensitive. This claim is OPTIONAL.
jti string String The jti (JWT ID) claim provides a unique identifier for the JWT. The identifier value MUST be assigned in a manner that ensures that there is a negligible probability that the same value will be accidentally assigned to a different data object. The jti claim can be used to prevent the JWT from being replayed. The jti value is case sensitive. This claim is OPTIONAL.
typ string String The typ (type) claim is used to declare a type for the contents of this JWT Claims Set. The typ value is case sensitive. This claim is OPTIONAL.

 Table 1: Reserved Claim Definitions 

Additional reserved claim names MAY be defined via the IANA JSON Web Token Claims registry, as per Section 9 (IANA Considerations). The syntax values used above are defined as follows:



Syntax NameSyntax Definition
IntDate The number of seconds from 1970-01-01T0:0:0Z as measured in UTC until the desired date/time. See RFC 3339 (Klyne, G., Ed. and C. Newman, “Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps,” July 2002.) [RFC3339] for details regarding date/times in general and UTC in particular.
String Any string value MAY be used.
StringOrURI Any string value MAY be used but a value containing a ":" character MUST be a URI as defined in RFC 3986 (Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, “Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax,” January 2005.) [RFC3986].

 Table 2: Claim Syntax Definitions 



 TOC 

4.2.  Public Claim Names

Claim names can be defined at will by those using JWTs. However, in order to prevent collisions, any new claim name SHOULD either be defined in the IANA JSON Web Token Claims registry or be defined as a URI that contains a collision resistant namespace. Examples of collision resistant namespaces include:

In each case, the definer of the name or value needs to take reasonable precautions to make sure they are in control of the part of the namespace they use to define the claim name.



 TOC 

4.3.  Private Claim Names

A producer and consumer of a JWT may agree to any claim name that is not a Reserved Name Section 4.1 (Reserved Claim Names) or a Public Name Section 4.2 (Public Claim Names). Unlike Public Names, these private names are subject to collision and should be used with caution.



 TOC 

5.  JWT Header

The members of the JSON object represented by the JWT Header describe the cryptographic operations applied to the JWT and optionally, additional properties of the JWT. The member names within the JWT Header are referred to as Header Parameter Names. These names MUST be unique. The corresponding values are referred to as Header Parameter Values.

Implementations MUST understand the entire contents of the header; otherwise, the JWT MUST be rejected for processing.

There are two ways of distinguishing whether the JWT is a JWS or JWE. The first is by examining the alg (algorithm) header value. If the value represents a signature algorithm, the JWT is a JWS; if it represents an encryption algorithm, the JWT is a JWE. A second method is determining whether an enc (encryption method) member exists. If the enc member exists, the JWT is a JWE; otherwise, the JWT is a JWS. Both methods will yield the same result.

JWS Header Parameters are defined by [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.). JWE Header Parameters are defined by [JWE] (Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.). This specification further specifies the use of the following header parameters in both the cases where the JWT is a JWS and where it is a JWE.



Header Parameter NameJSON Value TypeHeader Parameter SyntaxHeader Parameter Semantics
typ string String The typ (type) header parameter is used to declare structural information about the JWT. In the normal case where nested signing or encryption operations are not employed, the use of this header parameter is OPTIONAL, and if present, it is RECOMMENDED that its value be either "JWT" or "http://openid.net/specs/jwt/1.0". In the case that nested signing or encryption steps are employed, the use of this header parameter is REQUIRED; in this case, the value MUST either be "JWS", to indicate that a nested signed JWT is carried in this JWT or "JWE", to indicate that a nested encrypted JWT is carried in this JWT.

 Table 3: Reserved Header Parameter Usage 



 TOC 

6.  Plaintext JWTs

To support use cases where the JWT content is secured by a means other than a signature and/or encryption contained within the token (such as a signature on a data structure containing the token), JWTs MAY also be created without a signature or encryption. Plaintext JWTs MUST use the alg value none, and are formatted identically to a signed JWT with an empty signature. This means that the base64url encoding of the bytes representing the UTF-8 encoding of the JWT Claims Set is the JWT Second Part, and the empty string is the JWT Third Part.



 TOC 

6.1.  Example Plaintext JWT

The following example JWT Header declares that the encoded object is a Plaintext JWT:

{"alg":"none"}

Base64url encoding the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Header yields this Encoded JWT Header:

eyJhbGciOiJub25lIn0

The following is an example of a JWT Claims Set:

{"iss":"joe",
 "exp":1300819380,
 "http://example.com/is_root":true}

Base64url encoding the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JSON Claims Set yields this Encoded JWS Payload, which is used as the JWT Second Part (with line breaks for display purposes only):

eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFt
cGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ

The JWT Third Part is the empty string.

Concatenating these parts in the order Header.Second.Third with period characters between the parts yields this complete JWT (with line breaks for display purposes only):

eyJhbGciOiJub25lIn0
.
eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFt
cGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ
.


 TOC 

7.  Rules for Creating and Validating a JWT

To create a JWT, one MUST perform these steps:

  1. Create a JWT Claims Set containing the desired claims. Note that white space is explicitly allowed in the representation and no canonicalization is performed before encoding.
  2. Let the Message be the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Claims Set.
  3. Create a JWT Header containing the desired set of header parameters. If the JWT is to be signed or encrypted, they MUST conform to either the [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.) or [JWE] (Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.) specifications, respectively. Else, if the JWT is to be plaintext, the alg value none MUST be used. Note that white space is explicitly allowed in the representation and no canonicalization is performed before encoding.
  4. Base64url encode the bytes of the UTF-8 representation of the JWT Header. Let this be the Encoded JWT Header.
  5. Depending upon whether the JWT is to be signed, encrypted, or plaintext, there are three cases:
  6. Concatenate the Encoded JWT Header, the JWT Second Part, and the JWT Third Part in that order, separating each by period ('.') characters.
  7. If a nested signing or encryption operation will be performed, let the Message be this concatenation, and return to Step 3, using a typ value of either "JWS" or "JWE" respectively in the new JWT Header created in that step.
  8. Otherwise, let the resulting JWT be this concatenation.

When validating a JWT the following steps MUST be taken. If any of the listed steps fails then the token MUST be rejected for processing.

  1. The JWT MUST contain exactly two period characters.
  2. The JWT MUST be split on the two period characters resulting in three strings. The first string is the Encoded JWT Header; the second is the JWT Second Part; the third is the JWT Third Part.
  3. The Encoded JWT Header MUST be successfully base64url decoded following the restriction given in this specification that no padding characters have been used.
  4. The JWT Header MUST be completely valid JSON syntax conforming to RFC 4627 (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627].
  5. The JWT Header MUST be validated to only include parameters and values whose syntax and semantics are both understood and supported.
  6. Determine whether the JWT is signed, encrypted, or plaintext by examining the alg (algorithm) header value and optionally, the enc (encryption method) header value, if present.
  7. Depending upon whether the JWT signed, encrypted, or plaintext, there are three cases:
  8. If the JWT Header contains a typ value of either "JWS" or "JWE", then the Message contains a JWT that was the subject of nested signing or encryption operations, respectively. In this case, return to Step 1, using the Message as the JWT.
  9. Otherwise, let the JWT Claims Set be the Message.
  10. The JWT Claims Set MUST be completely valid JSON syntax conforming to RFC 4627 (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627].
  11. When used in a security-related context, the JWT Claims Set MUST be validated to only include claims whose syntax and semantics are both understood and supported.

Processing a JWT inevitably requires comparing known strings to values in the token. For example, in checking what the algorithm is, the Unicode string encoding alg will be checked against the member names in the JWT Header to see if there is a matching header parameter name. A similar process occurs when determining if the value of the alg header parameter represents a supported algorithm.

Comparisons between JSON strings and other Unicode strings MUST be performed as specified below:

  1. Remove any JSON applied escaping to produce an array of Unicode code points.
  2. Unicode Normalization (Davis, M., Whistler, K., and M. Dürst, “Unicode Normalization Forms,” 09 2009.) [USA15] MUST NOT be applied at any point to either the JSON string or to the string it is to be compared against.
  3. Comparisons between the two strings MUST be performed as a Unicode code point to code point equality comparison.



 TOC 

8.  Cryptographic Algorithms

JWTs use JSON Web Signature (JWS) [JWS] (Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.) and JSON Web Encryption (JWE) [JWE] (Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.) to sign and/or encrypt the contents of the JWT.

Of the JWS signing algorithms, only HMAC SHA-256 MUST be implemented by conforming JWT implementations. It is RECOMMENDED that implementations also support the RSA SHA-256 and ECDSA P-256 SHA-256 algorithms. Support for other algorithms and key sizes is OPTIONAL.

If an implementation provides encryption capabilities, of the JWE encryption algorithms, only RSA-PKCS1-1.5 with 2048 bit keys, AES-128-CBC, and AES-256-CBC MUST be implemented by conforming implementations. It is RECOMMENDED that implementations also support ECDH-ES with 256 bit keys, AES-128-GCM, and AES-256-GCM. Support for other algorithms and key sizes is OPTIONAL.



 TOC 

9.  IANA Considerations

This specification calls for:



 TOC 

10.  Security Considerations

TBD: Lots of work to do here. We need to remember to look into any issues relating to security and JSON parsing. One wonders just how secure most JSON parsing libraries are. Were they ever hardened for security scenarios? If not, what kind of holes does that open up? Also, we need to walk through the JSON standard and see what kind of issues we have especially around comparison of names. For instance, comparisons of claim names and other parameters must occur after they are unescaped. Need to also put in text about: Importance of keeping secrets secret. Rotating keys. Strengths and weaknesses of the different algorithms.

TBD: Need to put in text about why strict JSON validation is necessary. Basically, that if malformed JSON is received then the intent of the sender is impossible to reliably discern. One example of malformed JSON that MUST be rejected is an object in which the same member name occurs multiple times. While in non-security contexts it's o.k. to be generous in what one accepts, in security contexts this can lead to serious security holes. For example, malformed JSON might indicate that someone has managed to find a security hole in the issuer's code and is leveraging it to get the issuer to issue "bad" tokens whose content the attacker can control.

TBD: Write about the need to secure the token content if a signature is not contained in the JWT itself.



 TOC 

10.1.  Unicode Comparison Security Issues

Claim names in JWTs are Unicode strings. For security reasons, the representations of these names must be compared verbatim after performing any escape processing (as per RFC 4627 (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627], Section 2.5).

This means, for instance, that these JSON strings must compare as being equal ("JWT", "\u004aWT"), whereas these must all compare as being not equal to the first set or to each other ("jwt", "Jwt", "JW\u0074").

JSON strings MAY contain characters outside the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane. For instance, the G clef character (U+1D11E) may be represented in a JSON string as "\uD834\uDD1E". Ideally, JWT implementations SHOULD ensure that characters outside the Basic Multilingual Plane are preserved and compared correctly; alternatively, if this is not possible due to these characters exercising limitations present in the underlying JSON implementation, then input containing them MUST be rejected.



 TOC 

11.  Open Issues and Things To Be Done (TBD)

The following items remain to be done in this draft:



 TOC 

12.  References



 TOC 

12.1. Normative References

[JWS] Jones, M., Balfanz, D., Bradley, J., Goland, Y., Panzer, J., Sakimura, N., and P. Tarjan, “JSON Web Signature (JWS),” December 2011.
[RFC2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, “Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies,” RFC 2045, November 1996 (TXT).
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[RFC3339] Klyne, G., Ed. and C. Newman, “Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps,” RFC 3339, July 2002 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[RFC3629] Yergeau, F., “UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646,” STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003 (TXT).
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, “Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax,” STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[RFC4627] Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” RFC 4627, July 2006 (TXT).
[RFC4648] Josefsson, S., “The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings,” RFC 4648, October 2006 (TXT).
[RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, “Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs,” BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008 (TXT).
[USA15] Davis, M., Whistler, K., and M. Dürst, “Unicode Normalization Forms,” Unicode Standard Annex 15, 09 2009.


 TOC 

12.2. Informative References

[CanvasApp] Facebook, “Canvas Applications,” 2010.
[JSS] Bradley, J. and N. Sakimura (editor), “JSON Simple Sign,” September 2010.
[JWE] Jones, M., Rescorla, E., and J. Hildebrand, “JSON Web Encryption (JWE),” December 2011.
[MagicSignatures] Panzer (editor), J., Laurie, B., and D. Balfanz, “Magic Signatures,” August 2010.
[OASIS.saml-core-2.0-os] Cantor, S., Kemp, J., Philpott, R., and E. Maler, “Assertions and Protocol for the OASIS Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) V2.0,” OASIS Standard saml-core-2.0-os, March 2005.
[RFC3275] Eastlake, D., Reagle, J., and D. Solo, “(Extensible Markup Language) XML-Signature Syntax and Processing,” RFC 3275, March 2002 (TXT).
[RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, “A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace,” RFC 4122, July 2005 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[SWT] Hardt, D. and Y. Goland, “Simple Web Token (SWT),” Version 0.9.5.1, November 2009.
[W3C.CR-xml11-20021015] Cowan, J., “Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1,” W3C CR CR-xml11-20021015, October 2002.


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Appendix A.  Relationship of JWTs to SAML Tokens

SAML 2.0 (Cantor, S., Kemp, J., Philpott, R., and E. Maler, “Assertions and Protocol for the OASIS Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) V2.0,” March 2005.) [OASIS.saml‑core‑2.0‑os] provides a standard for creating tokens with much greater expressivity and more security options than supported by JWTs. However, the cost of this flexibility and expressiveness is both size and complexity. In addition, SAML's use of XML (Cowan, J., “Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1,” October 2002.) [W3C.CR‑xml11‑20021015] and XML DSIG (Eastlake, D., Reagle, J., and D. Solo, “(Extensible Markup Language) XML-Signature Syntax and Processing,” March 2002.) [RFC3275] only contributes to the size of SAML tokens.

JWTs are intended to provide a simple token format that is small enough to fit into HTTP headers and query arguments in URIs. It does this by supporting a much simpler token model than SAML and using the JSON (Crockford, D., “The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON),” July 2006.) [RFC4627] object encoding syntax. It also supports securing tokens using Hash-based Message Authentication Codes (HMACs) and digital signatures using a smaller (and less flexible) format than XML DSIG.

Therefore, while JWTs can do some of the things SAML tokens do, JWTs are not intended as a full replacement for SAML tokens, but rather as a compromise token format to be used when space is at a premium.



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Appendix B.  Relationship of JWTs to Simple Web Tokens (SWTs)

Both JWTs and Simple Web Tokens SWT (Hardt, D. and Y. Goland, “Simple Web Token (SWT),” November 2009.) [SWT], at their core, enable sets of claims to be communicated between applications. For SWTs, both the claim names and claim values are strings. For JWTs, while claim names are strings, claim values can be any JSON type. Both token types offer cryptographic protection of their content: SWTs with HMAC SHA-256 and JWTs with a choice of algorithms, including HMAC SHA-256, RSA SHA-256, and ECDSA P-256 SHA-256.



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Appendix C.  Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge that the design of JWTs was intentionally influenced by the design and simplicity of Simple Web Tokens (Hardt, D. and Y. Goland, “Simple Web Token (SWT),” November 2009.) [SWT] and ideas for JSON tokens that Dick Hardt discussed within the OpenID community.

Solutions for signing JSON content were previously explored by Magic Signatures (Panzer (editor), J., Laurie, B., and D. Balfanz, “Magic Signatures,” August 2010.) [MagicSignatures], JSON Simple Sign (Bradley, J. and N. Sakimura (editor), “JSON Simple Sign,” September 2010.) [JSS], and Canvas Applications (Facebook, “Canvas Applications,” 2010.) [CanvasApp], all of which influenced this draft.



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Appendix D.  Document History

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Authors' Addresses

  Michael B. Jones
  Microsoft
Email:  mbj@microsoft.com
URI:  http://self-issued.info/
  
  Dirk Balfanz
  Google
Email:  balfanz@google.com
  
  John Bradley
  independent
Email:  ve7jtb@ve7jtb.com
  
  Yaron Y. Goland
  Microsoft
Email:  yarong@microsoft.com
  
  John Panzer
  Google
Email:  jpanzer@google.com
  
  Nat Sakimura
  Nomura Research Institute
Email:  n-sakimura@nri.co.jp
  
  Paul Tarjan
  Facebook
Email:  pt@fb.com