W3C

Exclusive XML Canonicalization
Version 1.0

W3C Proposed Recommendation 24 May 2002

This version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/PR-xml-exc-c14n-20020524/
Latest version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-exc-c14n
Previous version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/CR-xml-exc-c14n-20020212
Authors/Editors:
John Boyer, PureEdge Solutions Inc., jboyer@PureEdge.com
Donald E. Eastlake 3rd, Motorola, Donald.Eastlake@Motorola.com
Joseph Reagle, W3C, reagle@w3.org

Abstract

Canonical XML [XML-C14N] specifies a standard serialization of XML that, when applied to a subdocument, includes the subdocument's ancestor context including all of the namespace declarations and attributes in the "xml:" namespace. However, some applications require a method which, to the extent practical, excludes ancestor context from a canonicalized subdocument. For example, one might require a digital signature over an XML payload (subdocument) in an XML message that will not break when that subdocument is removed from its original message and/or inserted into a different context. This requirement is satisfied by Exclusive XML Canonicalization.

Status of this document

This document is a Proposed Recommendations (PR) of the W3C. The IETF/W3C XML Signature Working Group (W3C Activity Statement) believes this specification incorporates the resolution of all last call issues and its specification is sufficient for the creation of independent interoperable implementations. The exit criteria of at least two interoperable implementations over every feature, one implementation of all features, reports of satisfactory performance and adequacy in an application context (e.g., SOAP, SAML, etc.) has been satisfied as documented in the Interoperability Report.

W3C Advisory Committee Members are invited to send formal review comments to the W3C Team until 21 June 2002 at xml-dsig-review@w3.org. The public is invited to send comments to the editors and the public mailing list w3c-ietf-xmldsig@w3.org (archive ).After the review the Director will announce the document's disposition. This announcement should not be expected sooner than 14 days after the end of the review.

Patent disclosures relevant to this specification may be found on the Working Group's patent disclosure page, in conformance with W3C policy, and the IETF Page of Intellectual Property Rights Notices, in conformance with IETF policy.

Publication as a Proposed Recommendation does not imply endorsement by the W3C membership. This is still a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite a W3C Proposed Recommendations as other than a "work in progress." A list of current W3C Recommendations and other technical documents can be found at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
    1. Terminology
    2. Applications
    3. Limitations
  2. The Need for Exclusive XML Canonicalization
    1. A Simple Example
    2. General Problems with Enveloping and de-Enveloping
  3. Specification of Exclusive XML Canonicalization
  4. Use in XML Security
  5. Security Considerations
  6. References
  7. Acknowledgements

1. Introduction

The XML Recommendation [XML] specifies the syntax of a class of objects called XML documents. The Names in XML Recommendation [XML-NS] specifies additional syntax and semantics for XML documents. It is normal for XML documents and subdocuments which are equivalent for the purposes of many applications to differ in their physical representation. For example, they may differ in their entity structure, attribute ordering, and character encoding. The goal of this specification is to establish a method for serializing the XPath node set representation of an XML document or subset such that:

  1. The node set is minimally affected by any XML context which has been omitted.
  2. The canonicalization of a nodeset representing well-balanced XML [XML-Fragment] will be unaltered by further applications of exclusive canonicalization.
  3. It can be determined whether two node sets are identical except for transformations considered insignificant by this specification under [XML,XML-NS].

An understanding of the Canonical XML Recommendation [XML-C14N] is required.

1.1 Terminology

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 [Keywords].

The XPath 1.0 Recommendation [XPath] defines the term node-set and specifies a data model for representing an input XML document as a set of nodes of various types (element, attribute, namespace, text, comment, processing instruction, and root). The nodes are included in or excluded from a node-set based on the evaluation of an expression. Within this specification and [XML-C14N], a node-set is used to directly indicate whether or not each node should be rendered in the canonical form (in this sense, it is used as a formal mathematical set). A node that is excluded from the set is not rendered in the canonical form being generated, even if its parent node is included in the node-set. However, an omitted node may still impact the rendering of its descendants (e.g. by affecting the namespace context of the descendants).

A document subset is a portion of an XML document indicated by an XPath node-set that may not include all of the nodes in the document. An apex node is an element node in a document subset having no element node ancestor in the document subset. An orphan node is an element node whose parent element node is not in the document subset. The output parent of an orphan node that is not an apex node is the nearest ancestor element of the orphan node that is in the document subset; an apex node has no output parent. The output parent of a non-orphan node is the parent of the node. An output ancestor is any ancestor element node in the document subset.

For example given a document tree with three generations under the root node A and where capitalization denotes the node is in the document subset (A,E,G).

Pictorial Representation:

diagram of nodes

Textual Representation:

  A-+-b
    `-c-+-d
        `-E-+-f
            `-G

The following characteristics apply:

An element E in a document subset visibly utilizes a namespace declaration, i.e. a namespace prefix P and bound value V, if E or an attribute node in the document subset with parent E has a qualified name in which P is the namespace prefix. A similar definition applies for an element E in a document subset that visibly utilizes the default namespace declaration, which occurs if E has no namespace prefix

The namespace axis of an element contains nodes for all non-default namespace declarations made within the element as well as non-default namespace declarations inherited from ancestors of the element. The namespace axis also contains a node representing the default namespace if it is not the empty string, whether the default namespace was declared within the element or by an ancestor of the element. Any subset of the nodes in a namespace axis can be included in a document subset.

The method of canonicalization described in this specification receives an InclusiveNamespaces PrefixList parameter, which lists namespace prefixes that are handled in the manner described by the Canonical XML Recommendation [XML-C14N].

The exclusive canonical form of a document subset is a physical representation of the XPath node-set, that is an octet sequence, produced by the method described in this specification. It is as defined in the Canonical XML Recommendation [XML-C14N] except for the changes summarized as follows:

The term exclusive canonical XML refers to XML that is in exclusive canonical form. The exclusive XML canonicalization method is the algorithm defined by this specification that generates the exclusive canonical form of a given XML document subset. The term exclusive XML canonicalization refers to the process of applying the exclusive XML canonicalization method to an XML document subset.

1.2 Applications

The applications of Exclusive XML Canonicalization are very similar to those for Canonical XML [XML-C14N]. However, exclusive canonicalization, or equivalent means of excluding most XML context, is necessary for signature applications where the XML context of signed XML will change. This sort of change is typical of many protocol applications.

Note that in the case of the SignedInfo element of [XML-DSig], the specification of an appropriate canonicalization method is the only technique available to protect the signature from insignificant changes in physical form and changes in XML context.

1.3 Limitations

Exclusive XML Canonicalization has the limitations of Canonical XML [XML-C14N] plus two additional limitations as follows:

  1. The XML being canonicalized may depend on the effect of xml namespace attributes, such as xml:lang, xml:space, and xml:base appearing in ancestor nodes. To avoid problems due to the non-importation of such attributes into an enveloped document subset, either they must be explicitly given in the apex nodes of the XML document subset being canonicalized or they must always be declared with an equivalent value in every context in which the XML document subset will be interpreted.
  2. Applications that use the XML being canonicalized may depend on the effect of XML namespace declarations where the namespace prefix being bound is not visibly utilized. An example would be an attribute whose value is an XPath expression and whose evaluation therefore depends upon namespace prefixes referenced in the expression. Or, an attribute value might be considered a QName [XML-NS] by some applications, but it is only a string-value to XPath:

    <number xsi:type="xsd:decimal">10.09</number>.

    To avoid problems with such namespace declarations,

2. The Need for Exclusive XML Canonicalization

In some cases, particularly for signed XML in protocol applications, there is a need to canonicalize a subdocument in such a way that it is substantially independent of its XML context. This is because, in protocol applications, it is common to envelope XML in various layers of message or transport elements, to strip off such enveloping, and to construct new protocol messages, parts of which were extracted from different messages previously received. If the pieces of XML in question are signed, they need to be canonicalized in a way such that these operations do not break the signature but the signature still provides as much security as can be practically obtained.

2.1 A Simple Example

As a simple example of the type of problem that changes in XML context can cause for signatures, consider the following document:

   <n1:elem1 xmlns:n1="http://b.example">
       content
   </n1:elem1>

this is then enveloped in another document:

   <n0:pdu xmlns:n0="http://a.example">
      <n1:elem1 xmlns:n1="http://b.example">
          content
      </n1:elem1>
   </n0:pdu>

The first document above is in canonical form. But assume that document is enveloped as in the second case. The subdocument with elem1 as its apex node can be extracted from this second case with an XPath expression such as

 (//. | //@* | //namespace::*)[ancestor-or-self::n1:elem1]

The result of applying Canonical XML to the resulting XPath node set is the following (except for line wrapping to fit this document):

   <n1:elem1 xmlns:n0="http://a.example"
             xmlns:n1="http://b.example">
       content
   </n1:elem1>

Note that the n0 namespace has been included by Canonical XML because it includes namespace context. This change which would break a signature over elem1 based on the first version.

2.2 General Problems with re-Enveloping

As a more complete example of the changes in canonical form that can occur when the enveloping context of a document subset is changed, consider the following document:

   <n0:local xmlns:n0="foo:bar"
             xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org">
      <n1:elem2 xmlns:n1="http://example.net"
                xml:lang="en">
          <n3:stuff xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org"/>
      </n1:elem2>
   </n0:local>

And the following which has been produced by changing the enveloping of elem2:

   <n2:pdu xmlns:n1="http://example.com"
           xmlns:n2="http://foo.example"
           xml:lang="fr"
           xml:space="retain">
      <n1:elem2 xmlns:n1="http://example.net"
                xml:lang="en">
          <n3:stuff xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org"/>
      </n1:elem2>
   </n2:pdu>

Assume an XPath node set produced from each case by applying the following XPath expression

 (//. | //@* | //namespace::*)[ancestor-or-self::n1:elem2]

Applying Canonical XML to the node set produced from the first document yields the following serialization (except for line wrapping to fit in this document):

   <n1:elem2 xmlns:n0="foo:bar"
             xmlns:n1="http://example.net"
             xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org"
             xml:lang="en">
       <n3:stuff></n3:stuff>
   </n1:elem2>

However, although elem2 is represented by the same octet sequence in both pieces of external XML above, the Canonical XML version of elem2 from the second case would be (except for line wrapping so it will fit into this document) as follows:

   <n1:elem2 xmlns:n1="http://example.net"
             xmlns:n2="http://foo.example"
             xml:lang="en"
             xml:space="retain">
       <n3:stuff xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org"></n3:stuff>
   </n1:elem2>

Note that the change in context has resulted in lots of changes in the subdocument as serialized by the inclusive Canonical XML [XML-C14N]. In the first example, n0 had been included from the context and the presence of an identical n3 namespace declaration in the context had elevated that declaration to the apex of the canonicalized form. In the second example, n0 has gone away but n2 has appeared, n3 is no longer elevated, and an xml:space declaration has appeared, due to changes in context. But not all context changes have effect. In the second example, the presence at ancestor nodes of an xml:lang and n1 prefix namespace declaration have no effect because of existing declarations at the elem2 node.

On the other hand, using Exclusive XML Canonicalization as specified herein, the physical form of elem2 as extracted by the XPath expression above is (except for line wrapping so it will fit into this document) as follows:

   <n1:elem2 xmlns:n1="http://example.net"
             xml:lang="en">
       <n3:stuff xmlns:n3="ftp://example.org"></n3:stuff>
   </n1:elem2>

in both cases.

3. Specification of Exclusive XML Canonicalization

The data model, processing, input parameters, and output data for Exclusive XML Canonicalization are the same as for Canonical XML [XML-C14N] with the following exceptions:

  1. Canonical XML applied to a document subset requires the search of the ancestor nodes of each orphan element node for attributes in the xml namespace, such as xml:lang and xml:space. These are copied into the element node except if a declaration of the same attribute is already in the attribute axis of the element (whether or not it is included in the document subset). This search and copying are omitted from the Exclusive XML Canonicalization method.
  2. The Exclusive XML Canonicalization method may receive an additional, possibly null, parameter InclusiveNamespace-PrefixList containing a list of namespace prefixes and/or a token indicating the presense of the default namespace. All namespace nodes appearing on this list are handled as provided in Canonical XML [XML-C14N].
  3. For every namespace node with a prefix that does not appear in the InclusiveNamespacePrefix List, a namespace declaration is output at every output element where that prefix is visibly utilized and that prefix and its value does not appear in the nearest output ancestor with the same prefix.

One method (non-normative) for implementing the Exclusive XML Canonicalization method is as follows:

  1. Recursively process the entire tree (from which the XPath node-set was selected) in document order starting with the root. (The operation of copying ancestor xml: namespace attributes into output apex element nodes is not done.)
  2. If the node is not in the XPath subset, process its children element nodes recursively.
  3. If the element node is in the XPath subset then output the node in accordance with Canonical XML except for namespace nodes which are rendered as follows:
    1. Render each namespace node iff:
      • it is visibly utilized by the immediate parent element or one of its attributes, or is present in InclusiveNamespaces PrefixList, and
      • its prefix and value do not appear in ns_rendered. ns_rendered is obtained by popping the state stack in order to obtain a list of prefixes and their values which have already been rendered by an output ancestor of the namespace node's parent element.
    2. Append the rendered namespace node to the list ns_rendered of namespace nodes rendered by output ancestors. Push ns_rendered on state stack and recurse.
    3. After the recursion returns, pop thestate stack.

    (Note, some XPath implementations do not correctly distinguish namespace nodes from attribute nodes. In [XPath] an element's namespace axis is distinct from attribute nodes and it contains all the namespace declarations from its ancestors. For non-conformant implementations additional processing and stacks are required to separate a namespace node list from the attribute node list and keep a stack of a list of namespace nodes in effect for one's parent.)

4. Use in XML Security

Exclusive Canonicalization may be used as a Transform or CanonicalizationMethod algorithm in XML Digital Signature [XML-DSig] and XML Encryption [XML-Enc].

Identifier:
http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#

http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#WithComments

Just as with [XML-C14N] one may use the "#WithComments" parameter to include the serialization of XML comments. This algorithm also takes an optional explicit parameter of an empty InclusiveNamespaces element with a PrefixList attribute. The value of this attribute, which may be null, is a whitespace delimited list of namespace prefixes, and where #default indicates the default namespace, to be handled as per [XML-C14N]. The list is in NMTOKENS format (a white space separated list). For example:

   <ds:Transform
      Algorithm="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#">
      <ec:InclusiveNamespaces PrefixList="dsig soap #default"
          xmlns:ec="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#"/>
   </ds:Transform>

indicates the exclusive canonicalization transform, but that namespaces with prefix "dsig" or "soap" and default namespaces should be processed according to [XML-C14N].

   Schema Definition:

   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
   <!DOCTYPE schema
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XMLSchema 200102//EN" "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema.dtd"
    [
      <!ATTLIST schema 
        xmlns:ec CDATA #FIXED 'http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#'>
      <!ENTITY ec 'http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#'> 
      <!ENTITY % p ''>
      <!ENTITY % s ''>
     ]>

   <schema xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
           xmlns:ec="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#"
           targetNamespace="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#"
           version="0.1" elementFormDefault="qualified">

     <element name="InclusiveNamespaces"
              type="ec:InclusiveNamespaces"/>
     <complexType name="InclusiveNamespaces">
        <attribute name="PrefixList" type="NMTOKENS"/>
     </complexType>
   </schema>
   DTD:
   <!ELEMENT InclusiveNamespaces    EMPTY >
   <!ATTLIST InclusiveNamespaces
      PrefixList    NMTOKENS    #REQUIRED >

5. Security Considerations

This specification is used to serialize an XPath nodeset under certain assumptions given in [XML-C14N] and this specification. For example, implementations of [XML-C14N] do not render an XML declaration; implementations of this specification only render attributes from the "xml" namespace (e.g., xml:lang, xml:space, and xml:base) when they are in in the subset being serialized; and implementations of this specification do not consider the appearance of a namespace prefix within an attribute value to be visibly utilized. While we feel such choices are consistent with other XML specifications and satisfy our application requirements it is important that an XML application carefully construct its transforms such that the result is meaningful and unambiguous in its application context. The Limitations of this specification, the Resolutions of [XML-C14N], and the Security Considerations of [XML-DSig] should be carefully attended to.

5.1 "Esoteric" Nodesets

Consider an application that might use this specification or [XML-C14N] to serialize a single attribute node. An implementation of either specification will not emit a namespace declaration for that single attribute node. Consequently, a "carefully constructed" transform should create a nodeset containing the attribute and the relevant namespace declaration for serialization.

We provide this example to caution that as one moves beyond well-formed [XML] and then well-balanced XML [XML-Fragment], it becomes increasingly difficult to create a result that "is meaningful and unambiguous in its application context."

6. References

Keywords
RFC 2119. Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. Best Current Practice. S. Bradner. March 1997.S. Bradner. March 1997.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt
URI
RFC 2396 . Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax. T. Berners-Lee, R. Fielding, L. Masinter. August 1998.
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
XML
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Second Edition). W3C Recommendation. T. Bray, E. Maler, J. Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen. October 2000.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xml-20001006 .
XML-C14N
Canonical XML. W3C Recommendation. J. Boyer. March 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xml-c14n-20010315
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3076.txt
XML-DSig
XML-Signature Syntax and Processing. IETF Draft Standard/W3C Recommendation. D. Eastlake, J. Reagle, and D. Solo. 31 August 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/REC-xmldsig-core-20020212/
XML-Fragment
XML Fragment Interchange. W3C Candidate Recommendation. P. Grosso, D. Veillard. February 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/CR-xml-fragment-20010212
XML-NS
Namespaces in XML. W3C Recommendation. T. Bray, D. Hollander, and A. Layman. January 1999.
http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xml-names-19990114/
XML-Enc
XML Encryption Syntax and Processing. D. Eastlake, and J. Reagle. W3C Candidate Recommendation. March 2002.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/CR-xmlenc-core-20020304/
XML-schema
XML Schema Part 1: Structures W3C Recommendation. D. Beech, M. Maloney, N. Mendelsohn, H. Thompson. May 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-1-20010502/
XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes W3C Recommendation. P. Biron, A. Malhotra. May 2001.
http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-2-20010502/
XPath
XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0 , W3C Recommendation. eds. James Clark and Steven DeRose. 16 November 1999. http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116.

7. Acknowledgements (Informative)

The following people provided valuable feedback that improved the quality of this specification: