W3C

Web Authentication:
An API for accessing Public Key Credentials
Level 1

W3C Recommendation,

This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2019/REC-webauthn-1-20190304/
Latest version of Level 1:
https://www.w3.org/TR/webauthn-1/
Latest version of Web Authentication:
https://www.w3.org/TR/webauthn/
Editor's Draft:
https://w3c.github.io/webauthn/
Previous Versions:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2019/PR-webauthn-20190117/
Issue Tracking:
GitHub
Editors:
(Google)
(Google)
(Google)
(Mozilla)
(Microsoft)
(Microsoft)
(Microsoft)
(Nok Nok Labs)
(Yubico)
Former Editors:
(Microsoft)
(Google)
(PayPal)
Contributors:
Christiaan Brand (Google)
Adam Langley (Google)
Giridhar Mandyam (Qualcomm)
Mike West (Google)
Jeffrey Yasskin (Google)
Tests:
web-platform-tests webauthn/ (ongoing work)

Please check the errata for any errors or issues reported since publication.


Abstract

This specification defines an API enabling the creation and use of strong, attested, scoped, public key-based credentials by web applications, for the purpose of strongly authenticating users. Conceptually, one or more public key credentials, each scoped to a given WebAuthn Relying Party, are created by and bound to authenticators as requested by the web application. The user agent mediates access to authenticators and their public key credentials in order to preserve user privacy. Authenticators are responsible for ensuring that no operation is performed without user consent. Authenticators provide cryptographic proof of their properties to Relying Parties via attestation. This specification also describes the functional model for WebAuthn conformant authenticators, including their signature and attestation functionality.

Status of this document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document was published by the Web Authentication Working Group as a W3C Recommendation. Feedback and comments on this specification are welcome. Please use Github issues. Discussions may also be found in the public-webauthn@w3.org archives.

An implementation report is available.

By publishing this Recommendation, W3C expects the functionality specified in this Recommendation will not be affected by changes to Credential Management Level 1 as this specification proceeds to Recommendation.

This document has been reviewed by W3C Members, by software developers, and by other W3C groups and interested parties, and is endorsed by the Director as a W3C Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited from another document. W3C's role in making the Recommendation is to draw attention to the specification and to promote its widespread deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability of the Web.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 1 February 2018 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is not normative.

This specification defines an API enabling the creation and use of strong, attested, scoped, public key-based credentials by web applications, for the purpose of strongly authenticating users. A public key credential is created and stored by an authenticator at the behest of a WebAuthn Relying Party, subject to user consent. Subsequently, the public key credential can only be accessed by origins belonging to that Relying Party. This scoping is enforced jointly by conforming User Agents and authenticators. Additionally, privacy across Relying Parties is maintained; Relying Parties are not able to detect any properties, or even the existence, of credentials scoped to other Relying Parties.

Relying Parties employ the Web Authentication API during two distinct, but related, ceremonies involving a user. The first is Registration, where a public key credential is created on an authenticator, and scoped to a Relying Party with the present user’s account (the account might already exist or might be created at this time). The second is Authentication, where the Relying Party is presented with an Authentication Assertion proving the presence and consent of the user who registered the public key credential. Functionally, the Web Authentication API comprises a PublicKeyCredential which extends the Credential Management API [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1], and infrastructure which allows those credentials to be used with navigator.credentials.create() and navigator.credentials.get(). The former is used during Registration, and the latter during Authentication.

Broadly, compliant authenticators protect public key credentials, and interact with user agents to implement the Web Authentication API. Implementing compliant authenticators is possible in software executing (a) on a general-purpose computing device, (b) on an on-device Secure Execution Environment, Trusted Platform Module (TPM), or a Secure Element (SE), or (c) off device. Authenticators being implemented on device are called platform authenticators. Authenticators being implemented off device (roaming authenticators) can be accessed over a transport such as Universal Serial Bus (USB), Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), or Near Field Communications (NFC).

1.1. Specification Roadmap

While many W3C specifications are directed primarily to user agent developers and also to web application developers (i.e., "Web authors"), the nature of Web Authentication requires that this specification be correctly used by multiple audiences, as described below. All audiences ought to begin with §1.2 Use Cases, §12 Sample Scenarios, and §4 Terminology, and should also refer to [WebAuthnAPIGuide] for an overall tutorial.

Note: Along with the Web Authentication API itself, this specification defines a request-response cryptographic protocol between a WebAuthn Relying Party server and an authenticator, where the Relying Party's request consists of a challenge and other input data supplied by the Relying Party and sent to the authenticator. The request is conveyed via the combination of HTTPS, the Relying Party web application, the WebAuthn API, and the platform-specific communications channel between the user agent and the authenticator. The authenticator replies with a digitally signed authenticator data message and other output data, which is conveyed back to the Relying Party server via the same path in reverse. Protocol details vary according to whether an authentication or registration operation is invoked by the Relying Party. See also Figure 1 and Figure 2.

It is important for Web Authentication deployments' end-to-end security that the role of each component—the Relying Party server, the client, and the authenticator— as well as §13 Security Considerations and §14 Privacy Considerations, are understood by all audiences.

1.2. Use Cases

The below use case scenarios illustrate use of two very different types of authenticators, as well as outline further scenarios. Additional scenarios, including sample code, are given later in §12 Sample Scenarios.

1.2.1. Registration

1.2.2. Authentication

1.2.3. New Device Registration

This use case scenario illustrates how a Relying Party can leverage a combination of a roaming authenticator (e.g., a USB security key fob) and a platform authenticator (e.g., a built-in fingerprint sensor) such that the user has:

Note: This approach of registering multiple authenticators for an account is also useful in account recovery use cases.

1.2.4. Other Use Cases and Configurations

A variety of additional use cases and configurations are also possible, including (but not limited to):

1.3. Platform-Specific Implementation Guidance

This specification defines how to use Web Authentication in the general case. When using Web Authentication in connection with specific platform support (e.g. apps), it is recommended to see platform-specific documentation and guides for additional guidance and limitations.

2. Conformance

This specification defines three conformance classes. Each of these classes is specified so that conforming members of the class are secure against non-conforming or hostile members of the other classes.

2.1. User Agents

A User Agent MUST behave as described by §5 Web Authentication API in order to be considered conformant. Conforming User Agents MAY implement algorithms given in this specification in any way desired, so long as the end result is indistinguishable from the result that would be obtained by the specification’s algorithms.

A conforming User Agent MUST also be a conforming implementation of the IDL fragments of this specification, as described in the “Web IDL” specification. [WebIDL]

2.2. Authenticators

An authenticator MUST provide the operations defined by §6 WebAuthn Authenticator Model, and those operations MUST behave as described there. This is a set of functional and security requirements for an authenticator to be usable by a Conforming User Agent.

As described in §1.2 Use Cases, an authenticator may be implemented in the operating system underlying the User Agent, or in external hardware, or a combination of both.

2.2.1. Backwards Compatibility with FIDO U2F

Authenticators that only support the §8.6 FIDO U2F Attestation Statement Format have no mechanism to store a user handle, so the returned userHandle will always be null.

2.3. WebAuthn Relying Parties

A WebAuthn Relying Party MUST behave as described in §7 WebAuthn Relying Party Operations to obtain all the security benefits offered by this specification. See §13.3 Security Benefits for WebAuthn Relying Parties for further discussion of this.

2.4. All Conformance Classes

All CBOR encoding performed by the members of the above conformance classes MUST be done using the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form. All decoders of the above conformance classes SHOULD reject CBOR that is not validly encoded in the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form and SHOULD reject messages with duplicate map keys.

3. Dependencies

This specification relies on several other underlying specifications, listed below and in Terms defined by reference.

Base64url encoding

The term Base64url Encoding refers to the base64 encoding using the URL- and filename-safe character set defined in Section 5 of [RFC4648], with all trailing '=' characters omitted (as permitted by Section 3.2) and without the inclusion of any line breaks, whitespace, or other additional characters.

CBOR

A number of structures in this specification, including attestation statements and extensions, are encoded using the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form of the Compact Binary Object Representation (CBOR) [RFC7049], as defined in [FIDO-CTAP].

CDDL

This specification describes the syntax of all CBOR-encoded data using the CBOR Data Definition Language (CDDL) [CDDL].

COSE

CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) [RFC8152]. The IANA COSE Algorithms registry established by this specification is also used.

Credential Management

The API described in this document is an extension of the Credential concept defined in [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1].

DOM

DOMException and the DOMException values used in this specification are defined in [DOM4].

ECMAScript

%ArrayBuffer% is defined in [ECMAScript].

HTML

The concepts of relevant settings object, origin, opaque origin, and is a registrable domain suffix of or is equal to are defined in [HTML52].

URL

The concept of same site is defined in [URL].

Web IDL

Many of the interface definitions and all of the IDL in this specification depend on [WebIDL]. This updated version of the Web IDL standard adds support for Promises, which are now the preferred mechanism for asynchronous interaction in all new web APIs.

FIDO AppID

The algorithms for determining the FacetID of a calling application and determining if a caller’s FacetID is authorized for an AppID (used only in the AppID extension) are defined by [FIDO-APPID].

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 [RFC2119].

4. Terminology

Assertion

See Authentication Assertion.

Attestation

Generally, attestation is a statement serving to bear witness, confirm, or authenticate. In the WebAuthn context, attestation is employed to attest to the provenance of an authenticator and the data it emits; including, for example: credential IDs, credential key pairs, signature counters, etc. An attestation statement is conveyed in an attestation object during registration. See also §6.4 Attestation and Figure 5. Whether or how the client conveys the attestation statement and AAGUID portions of the attestation object to the Relying Party is described by attestation conveyance.

Attestation Certificate

A X.509 Certificate for the attestation key pair used by an authenticator to attest to its manufacture and capabilities. At registration time, the authenticator uses the attestation private key to sign the Relying Party-specific credential public key (and additional data) that it generates and returns via the authenticatorMakeCredential operation. Relying Parties use the attestation public key conveyed in the attestation certificate to verify the attestation signature. Note that in the case of self attestation, the authenticator has no distinct attestation key pair nor attestation certificate, see self attestation for details.

Authentication
Authentication Ceremony

The ceremony where a user, and the user’s client (containing at least one authenticator) work in concert to cryptographically prove to a Relying Party that the user controls the credential private key associated with a previously-registered public key credential (see Registration). Note that this includes a test of user presence or user verification.

Authentication Assertion

The cryptographically signed AuthenticatorAssertionResponse object returned by an authenticator as the result of an authenticatorGetAssertion operation.

This corresponds to the [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1] specification’s single-use credentials.

Authenticator

A cryptographic entity used by a WebAuthn Client to (i) generate a public key credential and register it with a Relying Party, and (ii) authenticate by potentially verifying the user, and then cryptographically signing and returning, in the form of an Authentication Assertion, a challenge and other data presented by a WebAuthn Relying Party (in concert with the WebAuthn Client).

Authorization Gesture

An authorization gesture is a physical interaction performed by a user with an authenticator as part of a ceremony, such as registration or authentication. By making such an authorization gesture, a user provides consent for (i.e., authorizes) a ceremony to proceed. This MAY involve user verification if the employed authenticator is capable, or it MAY involve a simple test of user presence.

Biometric Recognition

The automated recognition of individuals based on their biological and behavioral characteristics [ISOBiometricVocabulary].

Biometric Authenticator

Any authenticator that implements biometric recognition.

Bound credential

A public key credential source or public key credential is said to be bound to its managing authenticator. This means that only the managing authenticator can generate assertions for the public key credential sources bound to it.

Ceremony

The concept of a ceremony [Ceremony] is an extension of the concept of a network protocol, with human nodes alongside computer nodes and with communication links that include user interface(s), human-to-human communication, and transfers of physical objects that carry data. What is out-of-band to a protocol is in-band to a ceremony. In this specification, Registration and Authentication are ceremonies, and an authorization gesture is often a component of those ceremonies.

Client Platform

A client device and a client together make up a client platform. A single hardware device MAY be part of multiple distinct client platforms at different times by running different operating systems and/or clients.

Client-Side

This refers in general to the combination of the user’s client platform, authenticators, and everything gluing it all together.

Resident Credential
Client-side-resident Public Key Credential Source

A Client-side-resident Public Key Credential Source, or Resident Credential for short, is a public key credential source whose credential private key is stored in the authenticator, client or client device. Such client-side storage requires a resident credential capable authenticator and has the property that the authenticator is able to select the credential private key given only an RP ID, possibly with user assistance (e.g., by providing the user a pick list of credentials scoped to the RP ID). By definition, the credential private key is always exclusively controlled by the authenticator. In the case of a resident credential, the authenticator might offload storage of wrapped key material to the client device, but the client device is not expected to offload the key storage to remote entities (e.g., WebAuthn Relying Party Server).

Conforming User Agent

A user agent implementing, in cooperation with the underlying client device, the Web Authentication API and algorithms given in this specification, and handling communication between authenticators and Relying Parties.

Credential ID

A probabilistically-unique byte sequence identifying a public key credential source and its authentication assertions.

Credential IDs are generated by authenticators in two forms:

  1. At least 16 bytes that include at least 100 bits of entropy, or

  2. The public key credential source, without its Credential ID, encrypted so only its managing authenticator can decrypt it. This form allows the authenticator to be nearly stateless, by having the Relying Party store any necessary state.

    Note: [FIDO-UAF-AUTHNR-CMDS] includes guidance on encryption techniques under "Security Guidelines".

Relying Parties do not need to distinguish these two Credential ID forms.

Credential Public Key
User Public Key

The public key portion of a Relying Party-specific credential key pair, generated by an authenticator and returned to a Relying Party at registration time (see also public key credential). The private key portion of the credential key pair is known as the credential private key. Note that in the case of self attestation, the credential key pair is also used as the attestation key pair, see self attestation for details.

Note: The credential public key is referred to as the user public key in FIDO UAF [UAFProtocol], and in FIDO U2F [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats] and some parts of this specification that relate to it.

Human Palatability

An identifier that is human-palatable is intended to be rememberable and reproducible by typical human users, in contrast to identifiers that are, for example, randomly generated sequences of bits [EduPersonObjectClassSpec].

Public Key Credential Source

A credential source ([CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1]) used by an authenticator to generate authentication assertions. A public key credential source consists of a struct with the following items:

type

whose value is of PublicKeyCredentialType, defaulting to public-key.

id

A Credential ID.

privateKey

The credential private key.

rpId

The Relying Party Identifier, for the Relying Party this public key credential source is scoped to.

userHandle

The user handle associated when this public key credential source was created. This item is nullable.

otherUI

OPTIONAL other information used by the authenticator to inform its UI. For example, this might include the user’s displayName.

The authenticatorMakeCredential operation creates a public key credential source bound to a managing authenticator and returns the credential public key associated with its credential private key. The Relying Party can use this credential public key to verify the authentication assertions created by this public key credential source.

Public Key Credential

Generically, a credential is data one entity presents to another in order to authenticate the former to the latter [RFC4949]. The term public key credential refers to one of: a public key credential source, the possibly-attested credential public key corresponding to a public key credential source, or an authentication assertion. Which one is generally determined by context.

Note: This is a willful violation of [RFC4949]. In English, a "credential" is both a) the thing presented to prove a statement and b) intended to be used multiple times. It’s impossible to achieve both criteria securely with a single piece of data in a public key system. [RFC4949] chooses to define a credential as the thing that can be used multiple times (the public key), while this specification gives "credential" the English term’s flexibility. This specification uses more specific terms to identify the data related to an [RFC4949] credential:
"Authentication information" (possibly including a private key)

Public key credential source

"Signed value"

Authentication assertion

[RFC4949] "credential"

Credential public key or attestation object

At registration time, the authenticator creates an asymmetric key pair, and stores its private key portion and information from the Relying Party into a public key credential source. The public key portion is returned to the Relying Party, who then stores it in conjunction with the present user’s account. Subsequently, only that Relying Party, as identified by its RP ID, is able to employ the public key credential in authentication ceremonies, via the get() method. The Relying Party uses its stored copy of the credential public key to verify the resultant authentication assertion.

Rate Limiting

The process (also known as throttling) by which an authenticator implements controls against brute force attacks by limiting the number of consecutive failed authentication attempts within a given period of time. If the limit is reached, the authenticator should impose a delay that increases exponentially with each successive attempt, or disable the current authentication modality and offer a different authentication factor if available. Rate limiting is often implemented as an aspect of user verification.

Registration
Registration Ceremony

The ceremony where a user, a Relying Party, and the user’s client (containing at least one authenticator) work in concert to create a public key credential and associate it with the user’s Relying Party account. Note that this includes employing a test of user presence or user verification.

Relying Party

See WebAuthn Relying Party.

Relying Party Identifier
RP ID

A valid domain string that identifies the WebAuthn Relying Party on whose behalf a given registration or authentication ceremony is being performed. A public key credential can only be used for authentication with the same entity (as identified by RP ID) it was registered with.

By default, the RP ID for a WebAuthn operation is set to the caller’s origin's effective domain. This default MAY be overridden by the caller, as long as the caller-specified RP ID value is a registrable domain suffix of or is equal to the caller’s origin's effective domain. See also §5.1.3 Create a New Credential - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method and §5.1.4 Use an Existing Credential to Make an Assertion - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Get]](options) Method.

Note: An RP ID is based on a host's domain name. It does not itself include a scheme or port, as an origin does. The RP ID of a public key credential determines its scope. I.e., it determines the set of origins on which the public key credential may be exercised, as follows:

For example, given a Relying Party whose origin is https://login.example.com:1337, then the following RP IDs are valid: login.example.com (default) and example.com, but not m.login.example.com and not com.

This is done in order to match the behavior of pervasively deployed ambient credentials (e.g., cookies, [RFC6265]). Please note that this is a greater relaxation of "same-origin" restrictions than what document.domain's setter provides.

Test of User Presence

A test of user presence is a simple form of authorization gesture and technical process where a user interacts with an authenticator by (typically) simply touching it (other modalities may also exist), yielding a Boolean result. Note that this does not constitute user verification because a user presence test, by definition, is not capable of biometric recognition, nor does it involve the presentation of a shared secret such as a password or PIN.

User Consent

User consent means the user agrees with what they are being asked, i.e., it encompasses reading and understanding prompts. An authorization gesture is a ceremony component often employed to indicate user consent.

User Handle

The user handle is specified by a Relying Party, as the value of user.id, and used to map a specific public key credential to a specific user account with the Relying Party. Authenticators in turn map RP IDs and user handle pairs to public key credential sources.

A user handle is an opaque byte sequence with a maximum size of 64 bytes. User handles are not meant to be displayed to users. The user handle SHOULD NOT contain personally identifying information about the user, such as a username or e-mail address; see §14.9 User Handle Contents for details.

User Verification

The technical process by which an authenticator locally authorizes the invocation of the authenticatorMakeCredential and authenticatorGetAssertion operations. User verification MAY be instigated through various authorization gesture modalities; for example, through a touch plus pin code, password entry, or biometric recognition (e.g., presenting a fingerprint) [ISOBiometricVocabulary]. The intent is to be able to distinguish individual users. Note that invocation of the authenticatorMakeCredential and authenticatorGetAssertion operations implies use of key material managed by the authenticator. Note that for security, user verification and use of credential private keys must occur within a single logical security boundary defining the authenticator.

User verification procedures MAY implement rate limiting as a protection against brute force attacks.

User Present
UP

Upon successful completion of a user presence test, the user is said to be "present".

User Verified
UV

Upon successful completion of a user verification process, the user is said to be "verified".

Client
WebAuthn Client

Also referred to herein as simply a client. See also Conforming User Agent. A WebAuthn Client is an intermediary entity typically implemented in the user agent (in whole, or in part). Conceptually, it underlies the Web Authentication API and embodies the implementation of the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) and [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) internal methods. It is responsible for both marshalling the inputs for the underlying authenticator operations, and for returning the results of the latter operations to the Web Authentication API's callers.

The WebAuthn Client runs on, and is distinct from, a WebAuthn Client Device.

Client Device
WebAuthn Client Device

The hardware device on which the WebAuthn Client runs, for example a smartphone, a laptop computer or a desktop computer, and the operating system running on that hardware.

The distinction between this and the client is that one client device MAY support running multiple clients, i.e., browser implementations, which all have access to the same authenticators available on that client device; and that platform authenticators are bound to a WebAuthn Client Device rather than a WebAuthn Client. A client device and a client together make up a client platform.

WebAuthn Relying Party

The entity whose web application utilizes the Web Authentication API to register and authenticate users.

Note: While the term Relying Party is also often used in other contexts (e.g., X.509 and OAuth), an entity acting as a Relying Party in one context is not necessarily a Relying Party in other contexts. In this specification, the term WebAuthn Relying Party is often shortened to be just Relying Party, and explicitly refers to a Relying Party in the WebAuthn context. Note that in any concrete instantiation a WebAuthn context may be embedded in a broader overall context, e.g., one based on OAuth.

5. Web Authentication API

This section normatively specifies the API for creating and using public key credentials. The basic idea is that the credentials belong to the user and are managed by an authenticator, with which the WebAuthn Relying Party interacts through the client platform. Relying Party scripts can (with the user’s consent) request the browser to create a new credential for future use by the Relying Party. See Figure 1, below.

Registration Flow

Scripts can also request the user’s permission to perform authentication operations with an existing credential. See Figure 2, below.

Authentication Flow

All such operations are performed in the authenticator and are mediated by the client platform on the user’s behalf. At no point does the script get access to the credentials themselves; it only gets information about the credentials in the form of objects.

In addition to the above script interface, the authenticator MAY implement (or come with client software that implements) a user interface for management. Such an interface MAY be used, for example, to reset the authenticator to a clean state or to inspect the current state of the authenticator. In other words, such an interface is similar to the user interfaces provided by browsers for managing user state such as history, saved passwords, and cookies. Authenticator management actions such as credential deletion are considered to be the responsibility of such a user interface and are deliberately omitted from the API exposed to scripts.

The security properties of this API are provided by the client and the authenticator working together. The authenticator, which holds and manages credentials, ensures that all operations are scoped to a particular origin, and cannot be replayed against a different origin, by incorporating the origin in its responses. Specifically, as defined in §6.3 Authenticator Operations, the full origin of the requester is included, and signed over, in the attestation object produced when a new credential is created as well as in all assertions produced by WebAuthn credentials.

Additionally, to maintain user privacy and prevent malicious Relying Parties from probing for the presence of public key credentials belonging to other Relying Parties, each credential is also scoped to a Relying Party Identifier, or RP ID. This RP ID is provided by the client to the authenticator for all operations, and the authenticator ensures that credentials created by a Relying Party can only be used in operations requested by the same RP ID. Separating the origin from the RP ID in this way allows the API to be used in cases where a single Relying Party maintains multiple origins.

The client facilitates these security measures by providing the Relying Party's origin and RP ID to the authenticator for each operation. Since this is an integral part of the WebAuthn security model, user agents only expose this API to callers in secure contexts.

The Web Authentication API is defined by the union of the Web IDL fragments presented in the following sections. A combined IDL listing is given in the IDL Index.

5.1. PublicKeyCredential Interface

The PublicKeyCredential interface inherits from Credential [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1], and contains the attributes that are returned to the caller when a new credential is created, or a new assertion is requested.

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface PublicKeyCredential : Credential {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer              rawId;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute AuthenticatorResponse    response;
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs getClientExtensionResults();
};
id

This attribute is inherited from Credential, though PublicKeyCredential overrides Credential's getter, instead returning the base64url encoding of the data contained in the object’s [[identifier]] internal slot.

rawId

This attribute returns the ArrayBuffer contained in the [[identifier]] internal slot.

response, of type AuthenticatorResponse, readonly

This attribute contains the authenticator's response to the client’s request to either create a public key credential, or generate an authentication assertion. If the PublicKeyCredential is created in response to create(), this attribute’s value will be an AuthenticatorAttestationResponse, otherwise, the PublicKeyCredential was created in response to get(), and this attribute’s value will be an AuthenticatorAssertionResponse.

getClientExtensionResults()

This operation returns the value of [[clientExtensionsResults]], which is a map containing extension identifierclient extension output entries produced by the extension’s client extension processing.

[[type]]

The PublicKeyCredential interface object's [[type]] internal slot's value is the string "public-key".

Note: This is reflected via the type attribute getter inherited from Credential.

[[discovery]]

The PublicKeyCredential interface object's [[discovery]] internal slot's value is "remote".

[[identifier]]

This internal slot contains the credential ID, chosen by the authenticator. The credential ID is used to look up credentials for use, and is therefore expected to be globally unique with high probability across all credentials of the same type, across all authenticators.

Note: This API does not constrain the format or length of this identifier, except that it MUST be sufficient for the authenticator to uniquely select a key. For example, an authenticator without on-board storage may create identifiers containing a credential private key wrapped with a symmetric key that is burned into the authenticator.

[[clientExtensionsResults]]

This internal slot contains the results of processing client extensions requested by the Relying Party upon the Relying Party's invocation of either navigator.credentials.create() or navigator.credentials.get().

PublicKeyCredential's interface object inherits Credential's implementation of [[CollectFromCredentialStore]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors), and defines its own implementation of [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors), [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors), and [[Store]](credential, sameOriginWithAncestors).

5.1.1. CredentialCreationOptions Dictionary Extension

To support registration via navigator.credentials.create(), this document extends the CredentialCreationOptions dictionary as follows:

partial dictionary CredentialCreationOptions {
    PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions      publicKey;
};

5.1.2. CredentialRequestOptions Dictionary Extension

To support obtaining assertions via navigator.credentials.get(), this document extends the CredentialRequestOptions dictionary as follows:

partial dictionary CredentialRequestOptions {
    PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions      publicKey;
};

5.1.3. Create a New Credential - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method

PublicKeyCredential's interface object's implementation of the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) internal method [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1] allows WebAuthn Relying Party scripts to call navigator.credentials.create() to request the creation of a new public key credential source, bound to an authenticator. This navigator.credentials.create() operation can be aborted by leveraging the AbortController; see DOM §3.3 Using AbortController and AbortSignal objects in APIs for detailed instructions.

This internal method accepts three arguments:

origin

This argument is the relevant settings object's origin, as determined by the calling create() implementation.

options

This argument is a CredentialCreationOptions object whose options.publicKey member contains a PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions object specifying the desired attributes of the to-be-created public key credential.

sameOriginWithAncestors

This argument is a Boolean value which is true if and only if the caller’s environment settings object is same-origin with its ancestors.

Note: This algorithm is synchronous: the Promise resolution/rejection is handled by navigator.credentials.create().

Note: All BufferSource objects used in this algorithm must be snapshotted when the algorithm begins, to avoid potential synchronization issues. The algorithm implementations should get a copy of the bytes held by the buffer source and use that copy for relevant portions of the algorithm.

When this method is invoked, the user agent MUST execute the following algorithm:

  1. Assert: options.publicKey is present.

  2. If sameOriginWithAncestors is false, return a "NotAllowedError" DOMException.

    Note: This "sameOriginWithAncestors" restriction aims to address the concern raised in the Origin Confusion section of [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1], while allowing Relying Party script access to Web Authentication functionality, e.g., when running in a secure context framed document that is same-origin with its ancestors. However, in the future, this specification (in conjunction with [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1]) may provide Relying Parties with more fine-grained control--e.g., ranging from allowing only top-level access to Web Authentication functionality, to allowing cross-origin embedded cases--by leveraging [Feature-Policy] once the latter specification becomes stably implemented in user agents.

  3. Let options be the value of options.publicKey.

  4. If the timeout member of options is present, check if its value lies within a reasonable range as defined by the client and if not, correct it to the closest value lying within that range. Set a timer lifetimeTimer to this adjusted value. If the timeout member of options is not present, then set lifetimeTimer to a client-specific default.

    Note: A suggested reasonable range for the timeout member of options is 15 seconds to 120 seconds.

    Note: The user agent should take cognitive guidelines into considerations regarding timeout for users with special needs.

  5. Let callerOrigin be origin. If callerOrigin is an opaque origin, return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError", and terminate this algorithm.

  6. Let effectiveDomain be the callerOrigin’s effective domain. If effective domain is not a valid domain, then return a DOMException whose name is "SecurityError" and terminate this algorithm.

    Note: An effective domain may resolve to a host, which can be represented in various manners, such as domain, ipv4 address, ipv6 address, opaque host, or empty host. Only the domain format of host is allowed here. This is for simplification and also is in recognition of various issues with using direct IP address identification in concert with PKI-based security.

  7. If options.rp.id

    Is present

    If options.rp.id is not a registrable domain suffix of and is not equal to effectiveDomain, return a DOMException whose name is "SecurityError", and terminate this algorithm.

    Is not present

    Set options.rp.id to effectiveDomain.

    Note: options.rp.id represents the caller’s RP ID. The RP ID defaults to being the caller’s origin's effective domain unless the caller has explicitly set options.rp.id when calling create().

  8. Let credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs be a new list whose items are pairs of PublicKeyCredentialType and a COSEAlgorithmIdentifier.

  9. For each current of options.pubKeyCredParams:

    1. If current.type does not contain a PublicKeyCredentialType supported by this implementation, then continue.

    2. Let alg be current.alg.

    3. Append the pair of current.type and alg to credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs.

  10. If credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs is empty and options.pubKeyCredParams is not empty, return a DOMException whose name is "NotSupportedError", and terminate this algorithm.

  11. Let clientExtensions be a new map and let authenticatorExtensions be a new map.

  12. If the extensions member of options is present, then for each extensionIdclientExtensionInput of options.extensions:

    1. If extensionId is not supported by this client platform or is not a registration extension, then continue.

    2. Set clientExtensions[extensionId] to clientExtensionInput.

    3. If extensionId is not an authenticator extension, then continue.

    4. Let authenticatorExtensionInput be the (CBOR) result of running extensionId’s client extension processing algorithm on clientExtensionInput. If the algorithm returned an error, continue.

    5. Set authenticatorExtensions[extensionId] to the base64url encoding of authenticatorExtensionInput.

  13. Let collectedClientData be a new CollectedClientData instance whose fields are:

    type

    The string "webauthn.create".

    challenge

    The base64url encoding of options.challenge.

    origin

    The serialization of callerOrigin.

    tokenBinding

    The status of Token Binding between the client and the callerOrigin, as well as the Token Binding ID associated with callerOrigin, if one is available.

  14. Let clientDataJSON be the JSON-serialized client data constructed from collectedClientData.

  15. Let clientDataHash be the hash of the serialized client data represented by clientDataJSON.

  16. If the options.signal is present and its aborted flag is set to true, return a DOMException whose name is "AbortError" and terminate this algorithm.

  17. Let issuedRequests be a new ordered set.

  18. Let authenticators represent a value which at any given instant is a set of client platform-specific handles, where each item identifies an authenticator presently available on this client platform at that instant.

    Note: What qualifies an authenticator as "available" is intentionally unspecified; this is meant to represent how authenticators can be hot-plugged into (e.g., via USB) or discovered (e.g., via NFC or Bluetooth) by the client by various mechanisms, or permanently built into the client.

  19. Start lifetimeTimer.

  20. While lifetimeTimer has not expired, perform the following actions depending upon lifetimeTimer, and the state and response for each authenticator in authenticators:

    If lifetimeTimer expires,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    If the user exercises a user agent user-interface option to cancel the process,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests. Return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError".

    If the options.signal is present and its aborted flag is set to true,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests. Then return a DOMException whose name is "AbortError" and terminate this algorithm.

    If an authenticator becomes available on this client device,

    Note: This includes the case where an authenticator was available upon lifetimeTimer initiation.

    1. If options.authenticatorSelection is present:

      1. If options.authenticatorSelection.authenticatorAttachment is present and its value is not equal to authenticator’s authenticator attachment modality, continue.

      2. If options.authenticatorSelection.requireResidentKey is set to true and the authenticator is not capable of storing a client-side-resident public key credential source, continue.

      3. If options.authenticatorSelection.userVerification is set to required and the authenticator is not capable of performing user verification, continue.

    2. Let userVerification be the effective user verification requirement for credential creation, a Boolean value, as follows. If options.authenticatorSelection.userVerification

      is set to required

      Let userVerification be true.

      is set to preferred

      If the authenticator

      is capable of user verification

      Let userVerification be true.

      is not capable of user verification

      Let userVerification be false.

      is set to discouraged

      Let userVerification be false.

    3. Let userPresence be a Boolean value set to the inverse of userVerification.

    4. Let excludeCredentialDescriptorList be a new list.

    5. For each credential descriptor C in options.excludeCredentials:

      1. If C.transports is not empty, and authenticator is connected over a transport not mentioned in C.transports, the client MAY continue.

      2. Otherwise, Append C to excludeCredentialDescriptorList.

    6. Invoke the authenticatorMakeCredential operation on authenticator with clientDataHash, options.rp, options.user, options.authenticatorSelection.requireResidentKey, userPresence, userVerification, credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs, excludeCredentialDescriptorList, and authenticatorExtensions as parameters.

    7. Append authenticator to issuedRequests.

    If an authenticator ceases to be available on this client device,

    Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    If any authenticator returns a status indicating that the user cancelled the operation,
    1. Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    2. For each remaining authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove it from issuedRequests.

      Note: Authenticators may return an indication of "the user cancelled the entire operation". How a user agent manifests this state to users is unspecified.

    If any authenticator returns an error status equivalent to "InvalidStateError",
    1. Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    2. For each remaining authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove it from issuedRequests.

    3. Return a DOMException whose name is "InvalidStateError" and terminate this algorithm.

    Note: This error status is handled separately because the authenticator returns it only if excludeCredentialDescriptorList identifies a credential bound to the authenticator and the user has consented to the operation. Given this explicit consent, it is acceptable for this case to be distinguishable to the Relying Party.

    If any authenticator returns an error status not equivalent to "InvalidStateError",

    Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    Note: This case does not imply user consent for the operation, so details about the error are hidden from the Relying Party in order to prevent leak of potentially identifying information. See §14.5 Registration Ceremony Privacy for details.

    If any authenticator indicates success,
    1. Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    2. Let credentialCreationData be a struct whose items are:

      attestationObjectResult

      whose value is the bytes returned from the successful authenticatorMakeCredential operation.

      Note: this value is attObj, as defined in §6.4.4 Generating an Attestation Object.

      clientDataJSONResult

      whose value is the bytes of clientDataJSON.

      attestationConveyancePreferenceOption

      whose value is the value of options.attestation.

      clientExtensionResults

      whose value is an AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs object containing extension identifierclient extension output entries. The entries are created by running each extension’s client extension processing algorithm to create the client extension outputs, for each client extension in clientDataJSON.clientExtensions.

    3. Let constructCredentialAlg be an algorithm that takes a global object global, and whose steps are:

      1. If credentialCreationData.attestationConveyancePreferenceOption’s value is

        "none"

        Replace potentially uniquely identifying information with non-identifying versions of the same:

        1. If the AAGUID in the attested credential data is 16 zero bytes, credentialCreationData.attestationObjectResult.fmt is "packed", and "x5c" & "ecdaaKeyId" are both absent from credentialCreationData.attestationObjectResult, then self attestation is being used and no further action is needed.

        2. Otherwise

          1. Replace the AAGUID in the attested credential data with 16 zero bytes.

          2. Set the value of credentialCreationData.attestationObjectResult.fmt to "none", and set the value of credentialCreationData.attestationObjectResult.attStmt to be an empty CBOR map. (See §8.7 None Attestation Statement Format and §6.4.4 Generating an Attestation Object).

        "indirect"

        The client MAY replace the AAGUID and attestation statement with a more privacy-friendly and/or more easily verifiable version of the same data (for example, by employing an Anonymization CA).

        "direct"

        Convey the authenticator's AAGUID and attestation statement, unaltered, to the Relying Party.

      2. Let attestationObject be a new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of credentialCreationData.attestationObjectResult’s value.

      3. Let id be attestationObject.authData.attestedCredentialData.credentialId.

      4. Let pubKeyCred be a new PublicKeyCredential object associated with global whose fields are:

        [[identifier]]

        id

        response

        A new AuthenticatorAttestationResponse object associated with global whose fields are:

        clientDataJSON

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of credentialCreationData.clientDataJSONResult.

        attestationObject

        attestationObject

        [[clientExtensionsResults]]

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of credentialCreationData.clientExtensionResults.

      5. Return pubKeyCred.

    4. For each remaining authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove it from issuedRequests.

    5. Return constructCredentialAlg and terminate this algorithm.

  21. Return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError". In order to prevent information leak that could identify the user without consent, this step MUST NOT be executed before lifetimeTimer has expired. See §14.5 Registration Ceremony Privacy for details.

During the above process, the user agent SHOULD show some UI to the user to guide them in the process of selecting and authorizing an authenticator.

5.1.4. Use an Existing Credential to Make an Assertion - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Get]](options) Method

WebAuthn Relying Parties call navigator.credentials.get({publicKey:..., ...}) to discover and use an existing public key credential, with the user’s consent. Relying Party script optionally specifies some criteria to indicate what credential sources are acceptable to it. The client platform locates credential sources matching the specified criteria, and guides the user to pick one that the script will be allowed to use. The user may choose to decline the entire interaction even if a credential source is present, for example to maintain privacy. If the user picks a credential source, the user agent then uses §6.3.3 The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation to sign a Relying Party-provided challenge and other collected data into an assertion, which is used as a credential.

The get() implementation [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1] calls PublicKeyCredential.[[CollectFromCredentialStore]]() to collect any credentials that should be available without user mediation (roughly, this specification’s authorization gesture), and if it does not find exactly one of those, it then calls PublicKeyCredential.[[DiscoverFromExternalSource]]() to have the user select a credential source.

Since this specification requires an authorization gesture to create any credentials, the PublicKeyCredential.[[CollectFromCredentialStore]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) internal method inherits the default behavior of Credential.[[CollectFromCredentialStore]](), of returning an empty set.

This navigator.credentials.get() operation can be aborted by leveraging the AbortController; see DOM §3.3 Using AbortController and AbortSignal objects in APIs for detailed instructions.

5.1.4.1. PublicKeyCredential’s [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method

This internal method accepts three arguments:

origin

This argument is the relevant settings object's origin, as determined by the calling get() implementation, i.e., CredentialsContainer's Request a Credential abstract operation.

options

This argument is a CredentialRequestOptions object whose options.publicKey member contains a PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions object specifying the desired attributes of the public key credential to discover.

sameOriginWithAncestors

This argument is a Boolean value which is true if and only if the caller’s environment settings object is same-origin with its ancestors.

Note: This algorithm is synchronous: the Promise resolution/rejection is handled by navigator.credentials.get().

Note: All BufferSource objects used in this algorithm must be snapshotted when the algorithm begins, to avoid potential synchronization issues. The algorithm implementations should get a copy of the bytes held by the buffer source and use that copy for relevant portions of the algorithm.

When this method is invoked, the user agent MUST execute the following algorithm:

  1. Assert: options.publicKey is present.

  2. If sameOriginWithAncestors is false, return a "NotAllowedError" DOMException.

    Note: This "sameOriginWithAncestors" restriction aims to address the concern raised in the Origin Confusion section of [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1], while allowing Relying Party script access to Web Authentication functionality, e.g., when running in a secure context framed document that is same-origin with its ancestors. However, in the future, this specification (in conjunction with [CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1]) may provide Relying Parties with more fine-grained control--e.g., ranging from allowing only top-level access to Web Authentication functionality, to allowing cross-origin embedded cases--by leveraging [Feature-Policy] once the latter specification becomes stably implemented in user agents.

  3. Let options be the value of options.publicKey.

  4. If the timeout member of options is present, check if its value lies within a reasonable range as defined by the client and if not, correct it to the closest value lying within that range. Set a timer lifetimeTimer to this adjusted value. If the timeout member of options is not present, then set lifetimeTimer to a client-specific default.

    Note: A suggested reasonable range for the timeout member of options is 15 seconds to 120 seconds.

    Note: The user agent should take cognitive guidelines into considerations regarding timeout for users with special needs.

  5. Let callerOrigin be origin. If callerOrigin is an opaque origin, return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError", and terminate this algorithm.

  6. Let effectiveDomain be the callerOrigin’s effective domain. If effective domain is not a valid domain, then return a DOMException whose name is "SecurityError" and terminate this algorithm.

    Note: An effective domain may resolve to a host, which can be represented in various manners, such as domain, ipv4 address, ipv6 address, opaque host, or empty host. Only the domain format of host is allowed here. This is for simplification and also is in recognition of various issues with using direct IP address identification in concert with PKI-based security.

  7. If options.rpId is not present, then set rpId to effectiveDomain.

    Otherwise:

    1. If options.rpId is not a registrable domain suffix of and is not equal to effectiveDomain, return a DOMException whose name is "SecurityError", and terminate this algorithm.

    2. Set rpId to options.rpId.

      Note: rpId represents the caller’s RP ID. The RP ID defaults to being the caller’s origin's effective domain unless the caller has explicitly set options.rpId when calling get().

  8. Let clientExtensions be a new map and let authenticatorExtensions be a new map.

  9. If the extensions member of options is present, then for each extensionIdclientExtensionInput of options.extensions:

    1. If extensionId is not supported by this client platform or is not an authentication extension, then continue.

    2. Set clientExtensions[extensionId] to clientExtensionInput.

    3. If extensionId is not an authenticator extension, then continue.

    4. Let authenticatorExtensionInput be the (CBOR) result of running extensionId’s client extension processing algorithm on clientExtensionInput. If the algorithm returned an error, continue.

    5. Set authenticatorExtensions[extensionId] to the base64url encoding of authenticatorExtensionInput.

  10. Let collectedClientData be a new CollectedClientData instance whose fields are:

    type

    The string "webauthn.get".

    challenge

    The base64url encoding of options.challenge

    origin

    The serialization of callerOrigin.

    tokenBinding

    The status of Token Binding between the client and the callerOrigin, as well as the Token Binding ID associated with callerOrigin, if one is available.

  11. Let clientDataJSON be the JSON-serialized client data constructed from collectedClientData.

  12. Let clientDataHash be the hash of the serialized client data represented by clientDataJSON.

  13. If the options.signal is present and its aborted flag is set to true, return a DOMException whose name is "AbortError" and terminate this algorithm.

  14. Let issuedRequests be a new ordered set.

  15. Let savedCredentialIds be a new map.

  16. Let authenticators represent a value which at any given instant is a set of client platform-specific handles, where each item identifies an authenticator presently available on this client platform at that instant.

    Note: What qualifies an authenticator as "available" is intentionally unspecified; this is meant to represent how authenticators can be hot-plugged into (e.g., via USB) or discovered (e.g., via NFC or Bluetooth) by the client by various mechanisms, or permanently built into the client.

  17. Start lifetimeTimer.

  18. While lifetimeTimer has not expired, perform the following actions depending upon lifetimeTimer, and the state and response for each authenticator in authenticators:

    If lifetimeTimer expires,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    If the user exercises a user agent user-interface option to cancel the process,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests. Return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError".

    If the signal member is present and the aborted flag is set to true,

    For each authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove authenticator from issuedRequests. Then return a DOMException whose name is "AbortError" and terminate this algorithm.

    If issuedRequests is empty, options.allowCredentials is not empty, and no authenticator will become available for any public key credentials therein,

    Indicate to the user that no eligible credential could be found. When the user acknowledges the dialog, return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError".

    Note: One way a client platform can determine that no authenticator will become available is by examining the transports members of the present PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor items of options.allowCredentials, if any. For example, if all PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor items list only internal, but all internal authenticators have been tried, then there is no possibility of satisfying the request. Alternatively, all PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor items may list transports that the client platform does not support.

    If an authenticator becomes available on this client device,

    Note: This includes the case where an authenticator was available upon lifetimeTimer initiation.

    1. If options.userVerification is set to required and the authenticator is not capable of performing user verification, continue.

    2. Let userVerification be the effective user verification requirement for assertion, a Boolean value, as follows. If options.userVerification

      is set to required

      Let userVerification be true.

      is set to preferred

      If the authenticator

      is capable of user verification

      Let userVerification be true.

      is not capable of user verification

      Let userVerification be false.

      is set to discouraged

      Let userVerification be false.

    3. Let userPresence be a Boolean value set to the inverse of userVerification.

    4. If options.allowCredentials

      is not empty
      1. Let allowCredentialDescriptorList be a new list.

      2. Execute a client platform-specific procedure to determine which, if any, public key credentials described by options.allowCredentials are bound to this authenticator, by matching with rpId, options.allowCredentials.id, and options.allowCredentials.type. Set allowCredentialDescriptorList to this filtered list.

      3. If allowCredentialDescriptorList is empty, continue.

      4. Let distinctTransports be a new ordered set.

      5. If allowCredentialDescriptorList has exactly one value, set savedCredentialIds[authenticator] to allowCredentialDescriptorList[0].id’s value (see here in §6.3.3 The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation for more information).

      6. For each credential descriptor C in allowCredentialDescriptorList, append each value, if any, of C.transports to distinctTransports.

        Note: This will aggregate only distinct values of transports (for this authenticator) in distinctTransports due to the properties of ordered sets.

      7. If distinctTransports

        is not empty

        The client selects one transport value from distinctTransports, possibly incorporating local configuration knowledge of the appropriate transport to use with authenticator in making its selection.

        Then, using transport, invoke the authenticatorGetAssertion operation on authenticator, with rpId, clientDataHash, allowCredentialDescriptorList, userPresence, userVerification, and authenticatorExtensions as parameters.

        is empty

        Using local configuration knowledge of the appropriate transport to use with authenticator, invoke the authenticatorGetAssertion operation on authenticator with rpId, clientDataHash, allowCredentialDescriptorList, userPresence, userVerification, and authenticatorExtensions as parameters.

      is empty

      Using local configuration knowledge of the appropriate transport to use with authenticator, invoke the authenticatorGetAssertion operation on authenticator with rpId, clientDataHash, userPresence, userVerification and authenticatorExtensions as parameters.

      Note: In this case, the Relying Party did not supply a list of acceptable credential descriptors. Thus, the authenticator is being asked to exercise any credential it may possess that is scoped to the Relying Party, as identified by rpId.

    5. Append authenticator to issuedRequests.

    If an authenticator ceases to be available on this client device,

    Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    If any authenticator returns a status indicating that the user cancelled the operation,
    1. Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    2. For each remaining authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove it from issuedRequests.

      Note: Authenticators may return an indication of "the user cancelled the entire operation". How a user agent manifests this state to users is unspecified.

    If any authenticator returns an error status,

    Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    If any authenticator indicates success,
    1. Remove authenticator from issuedRequests.

    2. Let assertionCreationData be a struct whose items are:

      credentialIdResult

      If savedCredentialIds[authenticator] exists, set the value of credentialIdResult to be the bytes of savedCredentialIds[authenticator]. Otherwise, set the value of credentialIdResult to be the bytes of the credential ID returned from the successful authenticatorGetAssertion operation, as defined in §6.3.3 The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation.

      clientDataJSONResult

      whose value is the bytes of clientDataJSON.

      authenticatorDataResult

      whose value is the bytes of the authenticator data returned by the authenticator.

      signatureResult

      whose value is the bytes of the signature value returned by the authenticator.

      userHandleResult

      If the authenticator returned a user handle, set the value of userHandleResult to be the bytes of the returned user handle. Otherwise, set the value of userHandleResult to null.

      clientExtensionResults

      whose value is an AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs object containing extension identifierclient extension output entries. The entries are created by running each extension’s client extension processing algorithm to create the client extension outputs, for each client extension in clientDataJSON.clientExtensions.

    3. Let constructAssertionAlg be an algorithm that takes a global object global, and whose steps are:

      1. Let pubKeyCred be a new PublicKeyCredential object associated with global whose fields are:

        [[identifier]]

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.credentialIdResult.

        response

        A new AuthenticatorAssertionResponse object associated with global whose fields are:

        clientDataJSON

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.clientDataJSONResult.

        authenticatorData

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.authenticatorDataResult.

        signature

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.signatureResult.

        userHandle

        If assertionCreationData.userHandleResult is null, set this field to null. Otherwise, set this field to a new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.userHandleResult.

        [[clientExtensionsResults]]

        A new ArrayBuffer, created using global’s %ArrayBuffer%, containing the bytes of assertionCreationData.clientExtensionResults.

      2. Return pubKeyCred.

    4. For each remaining authenticator in issuedRequests invoke the authenticatorCancel operation on authenticator and remove it from issuedRequests.

    5. Return constructAssertionAlg and terminate this algorithm.

  19. Return a DOMException whose name is "NotAllowedError". In order to prevent information leak that could identify the user without consent, this step MUST NOT be executed before lifetimeTimer has expired. See §14.6 Authentication Ceremony Privacy for details.

During the above process, the user agent SHOULD show some UI to the user to guide them in the process of selecting and authorizing an authenticator with which to complete the operation.

5.1.5. Store an Existing Credential - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Store]](credential, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method

The [[Store]](credential, sameOriginWithAncestors) method is not supported for Web Authentication’s PublicKeyCredential type, so it always returns an error.

Note: This algorithm is synchronous; the Promise resolution/rejection is handled by navigator.credentials.store().

This internal method accepts two arguments:

credential

This argument is a PublicKeyCredential object.

sameOriginWithAncestors

This argument is a Boolean value which is true if and only if the caller’s environment settings object is same-origin with its ancestors.

When this method is invoked, the user agent MUST execute the following algorithm:

  1. Return a DOMException whose name is "NotSupportedError", and terminate this algorithm

5.1.6. Preventing Silent Access to an Existing Credential - PublicKeyCredential’s [[preventSilentAccess]](credential, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method

Calling the [[preventSilentAccess]](credential, sameOriginWithAncestors) method will have no effect on authenticators that require an authorization gesture, but setting that flag may potentially exclude authenticators that can operate without user intervention.

This internal method accepts no arguments.

5.1.7. Availability of User-Verifying Platform Authenticator - PublicKeyCredential’s isUserVerifyingPlatformAuthenticatorAvailable() Method

WebAuthn Relying Parties use this method to determine whether they can create a new credential using a user-verifying platform authenticator. Upon invocation, the client employs a client platform-specific procedure to discover available user-verifying platform authenticators. If any are discovered, the promise is resolved with the value of true. Otherwise, the promise is resolved with the value of false. Based on the result, the Relying Party can take further actions to guide the user to create a credential.

This method has no arguments and returns a Boolean value.

partial interface PublicKeyCredential {
    static Promise<boolean> isUserVerifyingPlatformAuthenticatorAvailable();
};

5.2. Authenticator Responses (interface AuthenticatorResponse)

Authenticators respond to Relying Party requests by returning an object derived from the AuthenticatorResponse interface:

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      clientDataJSON;
};
clientDataJSON, of type ArrayBuffer, readonly

This attribute contains a JSON serialization of the client data passed to the authenticator by the client in its call to either create() or get().

5.2.1. Information About Public Key Credential (interface AuthenticatorAttestationResponse)

The AuthenticatorAttestationResponse interface represents the authenticator's response to a client’s request for the creation of a new public key credential. It contains information about the new credential that can be used to identify it for later use, and metadata that can be used by the WebAuthn Relying Party to assess the characteristics of the credential during registration.

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorAttestationResponse : AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      attestationObject;
};
clientDataJSON

This attribute, inherited from AuthenticatorResponse, contains the JSON-serialized client data (see §6.4 Attestation) passed to the authenticator by the client in order to generate this credential. The exact JSON serialization MUST be preserved, as the hash of the serialized client data has been computed over it.

attestationObject, of type ArrayBuffer, readonly

This attribute contains an attestation object, which is opaque to, and cryptographically protected against tampering by, the client. The attestation object contains both authenticator data and an attestation statement. The former contains the AAGUID, a unique credential ID, and the credential public key. The contents of the attestation statement are determined by the attestation statement format used by the authenticator. It also contains any additional information that the Relying Party's server requires to validate the attestation statement, as well as to decode and validate the authenticator data along with the JSON-serialized client data. For more details, see §6.4 Attestation, §6.4.4 Generating an Attestation Object, and Figure 5.

5.2.2. Web Authentication Assertion (interface AuthenticatorAssertionResponse)

The AuthenticatorAssertionResponse interface represents an authenticator's response to a client’s request for generation of a new authentication assertion given the WebAuthn Relying Party's challenge and OPTIONAL list of credentials it is aware of. This response contains a cryptographic signature proving possession of the credential private key, and optionally evidence of user consent to a specific transaction.

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorAssertionResponse : AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      authenticatorData;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      signature;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer?     userHandle;
};
clientDataJSON

This attribute, inherited from AuthenticatorResponse, contains the JSON-serialized client data (see §5.10.1 Client Data Used in WebAuthn Signatures (dictionary CollectedClientData)) passed to the authenticator by the client in order to generate this assertion. The exact JSON serialization MUST be preserved, as the hash of the serialized client data has been computed over it.

authenticatorData, of type ArrayBuffer, readonly

This attribute contains the authenticator data returned by the authenticator. See §6.1 Authenticator Data.

signature, of type ArrayBuffer, readonly

This attribute contains the raw signature returned from the authenticator. See §6.3.3 The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation.

userHandle, of type ArrayBuffer, readonly, nullable

This attribute contains the user handle returned from the authenticator, or null if the authenticator did not return a user handle. See §6.3.3 The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation.

5.3. Parameters for Credential Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialParameters)

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialParameters {
    required PublicKeyCredentialType      type;
    required COSEAlgorithmIdentifier      alg;
};
This dictionary is used to supply additional parameters when creating a new credential.
type, of type PublicKeyCredentialType

This member specifies the type of credential to be created.

alg, of type COSEAlgorithmIdentifier

This member specifies the cryptographic signature algorithm with which the newly generated credential will be used, and thus also the type of asymmetric key pair to be generated, e.g., RSA or Elliptic Curve.

Note: we use "alg" as the latter member name, rather than spelling-out "algorithm", because it will be serialized into a message to the authenticator, which may be sent over a low-bandwidth link.

5.4. Options for Credential Creation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions)

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions {
    required PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity         rp;
    required PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity       user;

    required BufferSource                             challenge;
    required sequence<PublicKeyCredentialParameters>  pubKeyCredParams;

    unsigned long                                timeout;
    sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor>      excludeCredentials = [];
    AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria               authenticatorSelection;
    AttestationConveyancePreference              attestation = "none";
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs         extensions;
};
rp, of type PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity

This member contains data about the Relying Party responsible for the request.

Its value’s name member is REQUIRED. See §5.4.1 Public Key Entity Description (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialEntity) for further details.

Its value’s id member specifies the RP ID the credential should be scoped to. If omitted, its value will be the CredentialsContainer object’s relevant settings object's origin's effective domain. See §5.4.2 Relying Party Parameters for Credential Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity) for further details.

user, of type PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity

This member contains data about the user account for which the Relying Party is requesting attestation.

Its value’s name, displayName and id members are REQUIRED. See §5.4.1 Public Key Entity Description (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialEntity) and §5.4.3 User Account Parameters for Credential Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity) for further details.

challenge, of type BufferSource

This member contains a challenge intended to be used for generating the newly created credential’s attestation object. See the §13.1 Cryptographic Challenges security consideration.

pubKeyCredParams, of type sequence<PublicKeyCredentialParameters>

This member contains information about the desired properties of the credential to be created. The sequence is ordered from most preferred to least preferred. The client makes a best-effort to create the most preferred credential that it can.

timeout, of type unsigned long

This member specifies a time, in milliseconds, that the caller is willing to wait for the call to complete. This is treated as a hint, and MAY be overridden by the client.

excludeCredentials, of type sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor>, defaulting to None

This member is intended for use by Relying Parties that wish to limit the creation of multiple credentials for the same account on a single authenticator. The client is requested to return an error if the new credential would be created on an authenticator that also contains one of the credentials enumerated in this parameter.

authenticatorSelection, of type AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria

This member is intended for use by Relying Parties that wish to select the appropriate authenticators to participate in the create() operation.

attestation, of type AttestationConveyancePreference, defaulting to "none"

This member is intended for use by Relying Parties that wish to express their preference for attestation conveyance. The default is none.

extensions, of type AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs

This member contains additional parameters requesting additional processing by the client and authenticator. For example, the caller may request that only authenticators with certain capabilities be used to create the credential, or that particular information be returned in the attestation object. Some extensions are defined in §9 WebAuthn Extensions; consult the IANA "WebAuthn Extension Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries] for an up-to-date list of registered WebAuthn Extensions.

5.4.1. Public Key Entity Description (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialEntity)

The PublicKeyCredentialEntity dictionary describes a user account, or a WebAuthn Relying Party, which a public key credential is associated with or scoped to, respectively.

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    required DOMString    name;
    USVString             icon;
};
name, of type DOMString

A human-palatable name for the entity. Its function depends on what the PublicKeyCredentialEntity represents:

  • When inherited by PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity it is a human-palatable identifier for the Relying Party, intended only for display. For example, "ACME Corporation", "Wonderful Widgets, Inc." or "ОАО Примертех".

    • Relying Parties SHOULD perform enforcement, as prescribed in Section 2.3 of [RFC8266] for the Nickname Profile of the PRECIS FreeformClass [RFC8264], when setting name's value, or displaying the value to the user.

    • Clients SHOULD perform enforcement, as prescribed in Section 2.3 of [RFC8266] for the Nickname Profile of the PRECIS FreeformClass [RFC8264], on name's value prior to displaying the value to the user or including the value as a parameter of the authenticatorMakeCredential operation.

  • When inherited by PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity, it is a human-palatable identifier for a user account. It is intended only for display, i.e., aiding the user in determining the difference between user accounts with similar displayNames. For example, "alexm", "alex.p.mueller@example.com" or "+14255551234".

    • The Relying Party MAY let the user choose this value. The Relying Party SHOULD perform enforcement, as prescribed in Section 3.4.3 of [RFC8265] for the UsernameCasePreserved Profile of the PRECIS IdentifierClass [RFC8264], when setting name's value, or displaying the value to the user.

    • Clients SHOULD perform enforcement, as prescribed in Section 3.4.3 of [RFC8265] for the UsernameCasePreserved Profile of the PRECIS IdentifierClass [RFC8264], on name's value prior to displaying the value to the user or including the value as a parameter of the authenticatorMakeCredential operation.

When clients, client platforms, or authenticators display a name's value, they should always use UI elements to provide a clear boundary around the displayed value, and not allow overflow into other elements [css-overflow-3].

Authenticators MUST accept and store a 64-byte minimum length for a name member’s value. Authenticators MAY truncate a name member’s value to a length equal to or greater than 64 bytes.

icon, of type USVString

A serialized URL which resolves to an image associated with the entity. For example, this could be a user’s avatar or a Relying Party's logo. This URL MUST be an a priori authenticated URL. Authenticators MUST accept and store a 128-byte minimum length for an icon member’s value. Authenticators MAY ignore an icon member’s value if its length is greater than 128 bytes. The URL’s scheme MAY be "data" to avoid fetches of the URL, at the cost of needing more storage.

5.4.2. Relying Party Parameters for Credential Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity)

The PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity dictionary is used to supply additional Relying Party attributes when creating a new credential.

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity : PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    DOMString      id;
};
id, of type DOMString

A unique identifier for the Relying Party entity, which sets the RP ID.

5.4.3. User Account Parameters for Credential Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity)

The PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity dictionary is used to supply additional user account attributes when creating a new credential.

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity : PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    required BufferSource   id;
    required DOMString      displayName;
};
id, of type BufferSource

The user handle of the user account entity. To ensure secure operation, authentication and authorization decisions MUST be made on the basis of this id member, not the displayName nor name members. See Section 6.1 of [RFC8266].

displayName, of type DOMString

A human-palatable name for the user account, intended only for display. For example, "Alex P. Müller" or "田中 倫". The Relying Party SHOULD let the user choose this, and SHOULD NOT restrict the choice more than necessary.

When clients, client platforms, or authenticators display a displayName's value, they should always use UI elements to provide a clear boundary around the displayed value, and not allow overflow into other elements [css-overflow-3].

Authenticators MUST accept and store a 64-byte minimum length for a displayName member’s value. Authenticators MAY truncate a displayName member’s value to a length equal to or greater than 64 bytes.

5.4.4. Authenticator Selection Criteria (dictionary AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria)

WebAuthn Relying Parties may use the AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria dictionary to specify their requirements regarding authenticator attributes.

dictionary AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria {
    AuthenticatorAttachment      authenticatorAttachment;
    boolean                      requireResidentKey = false;
    UserVerificationRequirement  userVerification = "preferred";
};
authenticatorAttachment, of type AuthenticatorAttachment

If this member is present, eligible authenticators are filtered to only authenticators attached with the specified §5.4.5 Authenticator Attachment Enumeration (enum AuthenticatorAttachment).

requireResidentKey, of type boolean, defaulting to false

This member describes the Relying Party's requirements regarding resident credentials. If the parameter is set to true, the authenticator MUST create a client-side-resident public key credential source when creating a public key credential.

userVerification, of type UserVerificationRequirement, defaulting to "preferred"

This member describes the Relying Party's requirements regarding user verification for the create() operation. Eligible authenticators are filtered to only those capable of satisfying this requirement.

5.4.5. Authenticator Attachment Enumeration (enum AuthenticatorAttachment)

enum AuthenticatorAttachment {
    "platform",
    "cross-platform"
};

This enumeration’s values describe authenticators' attachment modalities. Relying Parties use this for two purposes:

platform

This value indicates platform attachment.

cross-platform

This value indicates cross-platform attachment.

Note: An authenticator attachment modality selection option is available only in the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) operation. The Relying Party may use it to, for example, ensure the user has a roaming credential for authenticating on another client device; or to specifically register a platform credential for easier reauthentication using a particular client device. The [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) operation has no authenticator attachment modality selection option, so the Relying Party SHOULD accept any of the user’s registered credentials. The client and user will then use whichever is available and convenient at the time.

5.4.6. Attestation Conveyance Preference Enumeration (enum AttestationConveyancePreference)

WebAuthn Relying Parties may use AttestationConveyancePreference to specify their preference regarding attestation conveyance during credential generation.

enum AttestationConveyancePreference {
    "none",
    "indirect",
    "direct"
};
none

This value indicates that the Relying Party is not interested in authenticator attestation. For example, in order to potentially avoid having to obtain user consent to relay identifying information to the Relying Party, or to save a roundtrip to an Attestation CA.

This is the default value.

indirect

This value indicates that the Relying Party prefers an attestation conveyance yielding verifiable attestation statements, but allows the client to decide how to obtain such attestation statements. The client MAY replace the authenticator-generated attestation statements with attestation statements generated by an Anonymization CA, in order to protect the user’s privacy, or to assist Relying Parties with attestation verification in a heterogeneous ecosystem.

Note: There is no guarantee that the Relying Party will obtain a verifiable attestation statement in this case. For example, in the case that the authenticator employs self attestation.

direct

This value indicates that the Relying Party wants to receive the attestation statement as generated by the authenticator.

5.5. Options for Assertion Generation (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions)

The PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions dictionary supplies get() with the data it needs to generate an assertion. Its challenge member MUST be present, while its other members are OPTIONAL.

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions {
    required BufferSource                challenge;
    unsigned long                        timeout;
    USVString                            rpId;
    sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor> allowCredentials = [];
    UserVerificationRequirement          userVerification = "preferred";
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs extensions;
};
challenge, of type BufferSource

This member represents a challenge that the selected authenticator signs, along with other data, when producing an authentication assertion. See the §13.1 Cryptographic Challenges security consideration.

timeout, of type unsigned long

This OPTIONAL member specifies a time, in milliseconds, that the caller is willing to wait for the call to complete. The value is treated as a hint, and MAY be overridden by the client.

rpId, of type USVString

This OPTIONAL member specifies the relying party identifier claimed by the caller. If omitted, its value will be the CredentialsContainer object’s relevant settings object's origin's effective domain.

allowCredentials, of type sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor>, defaulting to None

This OPTIONAL member contains a list of PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor objects representing public key credentials acceptable to the caller, in descending order of the caller’s preference (the first item in the list is the most preferred credential, and so on down the list).

userVerification, of type UserVerificationRequirement, defaulting to "preferred"

This OPTIONAL member describes the Relying Party's requirements regarding user verification for the get() operation. Eligible authenticators are filtered to only those capable of satisfying this requirement.

extensions, of type AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs

This OPTIONAL member contains additional parameters requesting additional processing by the client and authenticator. For example, if transaction confirmation is sought from the user, then the prompt string might be included as an extension.

5.6. Abort Operations with AbortSignal

Developers are encouraged to leverage the AbortController to manage the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) and [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) operations. See DOM §3.3 Using AbortController and AbortSignal objects in APIs section for detailed instructions.

Note: DOM §3.3 Using AbortController and AbortSignal objects in APIs section specifies that web platform APIs integrating with the AbortController must reject the promise immediately once the aborted flag is set. Given the complex inheritance and parallelization structure of the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) and [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) methods, the algorithms for the two APIs fulfills this requirement by checking the aborted flag in three places. In the case of [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors), the aborted flag is checked first in Credential Management 1 §2.5.4 Create a Credential immediately before calling [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors), then in §5.1.3 Create a New Credential - PublicKeyCredential’s [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) Method right before authenticator sessions start, and finally during authenticator sessions. The same goes for [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors).

The visibility and focus state of the Window object determines whether the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) and [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) operations should continue. When the Window object associated with the [Document loses focus, [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) and [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) operations SHOULD be aborted.

The WHATWG HTML WG is discussing whether to provide a hook when a browsing context gains or loses focuses. If a hook is provided, developers should use it to determine the focus state. See WHATWG HTML WG Issue #2711 for more details.

5.7. Authentication Extensions Client Inputs (typedef AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs)

dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
};

This is a dictionary containing the client extension input values for zero or more WebAuthn extensions, as defined in §9 WebAuthn Extensions.

5.8. Authentication Extensions Client Outputs (typedef AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs)

dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
};

This is a dictionary containing the client extension output values for zero or more WebAuthn extensions, as defined in §9 WebAuthn Extensions.

5.9. Authentication Extensions Authenticator Inputs (typedef AuthenticationExtensionsAuthenticatorInputs)

typedef record<DOMString, DOMString> AuthenticationExtensionsAuthenticatorInputs;

This is a dictionary containing the authenticator extension input values for zero or more WebAuthn extensions, as defined in §9 WebAuthn Extensions.

5.10. Supporting Data Structures

The public key credential type uses certain data structures that are specified in supporting specifications. These are as follows.

5.10.1. Client Data Used in WebAuthn Signatures (dictionary CollectedClientData)

The client data represents the contextual bindings of both the WebAuthn Relying Party and the client. It is a key-value mapping whose keys are strings. Values can be any type that has a valid encoding in JSON. Its structure is defined by the following Web IDL.

Note: The CollectedClientData may be extended in the future. Therefore it’s critical when parsing to be tolerant of unknown keys and of any reordering of the keys.

dictionary CollectedClientData {
    required DOMString           type;
    required DOMString           challenge;
    required DOMString           origin;
    TokenBinding                 tokenBinding;
};

dictionary TokenBinding {
    required TokenBindingStatus status;
    DOMString id;
};

enum TokenBindingStatus { "present", "supported" };
type, of type DOMString

This member contains the string "webauthn.create" when creating new credentials, and "webauthn.get" when getting an assertion from an existing credential. The purpose of this member is to prevent certain types of signature confusion attacks (where an attacker substitutes one legitimate signature for another).

challenge, of type DOMString

This member contains the base64url encoding of the challenge provided by the Relying Party. See the §13.1 Cryptographic Challenges security consideration.

origin, of type DOMString

This member contains the fully qualified origin of the requester, as provided to the authenticator by the client, in the syntax defined by [RFC6454].

tokenBinding, of type TokenBinding

This OPTIONAL member contains information about the state of the Token Binding protocol [TokenBinding] used when communicating with the Relying Party. Its absence indicates that the client doesn’t support token binding.

status, of type TokenBindingStatus

This member is one of the following:

supported

Indicates the client supports token binding, but it was not negotiated when communicating with the Relying Party.

present

Indicates token binding was used when communicating with the Relying Party. In this case, the id member MUST be present.

id, of type DOMString

This member MUST be present if status is present, and MUST be a base64url encoding of the Token Binding ID that was used when communicating with the Relying Party.

Note: Obtaining a Token Binding ID is a client platform-specific operation.

The CollectedClientData structure is used by the client to compute the following quantities:

JSON-serialized client data

This is the result of JSON-serializing to bytes a CollectedClientData dictionary.

Hash of the serialized client data

This is the hash (computed using SHA-256) of the JSON-serialized client data, as constructed by the client.

5.10.2. Credential Type Enumeration (enum PublicKeyCredentialType)

enum PublicKeyCredentialType {
    "public-key"
};
This enumeration defines the valid credential types. It is an extension point; values can be added to it in the future, as more credential types are defined. The values of this enumeration are used for versioning the Authentication Assertion and attestation structures according to the type of the authenticator.

Currently one credential type is defined, namely "public-key".

5.10.3. Credential Descriptor (dictionary PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor)

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor {
    required PublicKeyCredentialType      type;
    required BufferSource                 id;
    sequence<AuthenticatorTransport>      transports;
};

This dictionary contains the attributes that are specified by a caller when referring to a public key credential as an input parameter to the create() or get() methods. It mirrors the fields of the PublicKeyCredential object returned by the latter methods.

type, of type PublicKeyCredentialType

This member contains the type of the public key credential the caller is referring to.

id, of type BufferSource

This member contains the credential ID of the public key credential the caller is referring to.

transports, of type sequence<AuthenticatorTransport>

This OPTIONAL member contains a hint as to how the client might communicate with the managing authenticator of the public key credential the caller is referring to.

5.10.4. Authenticator Transport Enumeration (enum AuthenticatorTransport)

enum AuthenticatorTransport {
    "usb",
    "nfc",
    "ble",
    "internal"
};
Authenticators may implement various transports for communicating with clients. This enumeration defines hints as to how clients might communicate with a particular authenticator in order to obtain an assertion for a specific credential. Note that these hints represent the WebAuthn Relying Party's best belief as to how an authenticator may be reached. A Relying Party may obtain a list of transports hints from some attestation statement formats or via some out-of-band mechanism; it is outside the scope of this specification to define that mechanism.
usb

Indicates the respective authenticator can be contacted over removable USB.

nfc

Indicates the respective authenticator can be contacted over Near Field Communication (NFC).

ble

Indicates the respective authenticator can be contacted over Bluetooth Smart (Bluetooth Low Energy / BLE).

internal

Indicates the respective authenticator is contacted using a client device-specific transport. These authenticators are not removable from the client device.

5.10.5. Cryptographic Algorithm Identifier (typedef COSEAlgorithmIdentifier)

typedef long COSEAlgorithmIdentifier;
A COSEAlgorithmIdentifier's value is a number identifying a cryptographic algorithm. The algorithm identifiers SHOULD be values registered in the IANA COSE Algorithms registry [IANA-COSE-ALGS-REG], for instance, -7 for "ES256" and -257 for "RS256".

5.10.6. User Verification Requirement Enumeration (enum UserVerificationRequirement)

enum UserVerificationRequirement {
    "required",
    "preferred",
    "discouraged"
};

A WebAuthn Relying Party may require user verification for some of its operations but not for others, and may use this type to express its needs.

required

This value indicates that the Relying Party requires user verification for the operation and will fail the operation if the response does not have the UV flag set.

preferred

This value indicates that the Relying Party prefers user verification for the operation if possible, but will not fail the operation if the response does not have the UV flag set.

discouraged

This value indicates that the Relying Party does not want user verification employed during the operation (e.g., in the interest of minimizing disruption to the user interaction flow).

6. WebAuthn Authenticator Model

The Web Authentication API implies a specific abstract functional model for an authenticator. This section describes that authenticator model.

Client platforms MAY implement and expose this abstract model in any way desired. However, the behavior of the client’s Web Authentication API implementation, when operating on the authenticators supported by that client platform, MUST be indistinguishable from the behavior specified in §5 Web Authentication API.

Note: [FIDO-CTAP] is an example of a concrete instantiation of this model, but it is one in which there are differences in the data it returns and those expected by the WebAuthn API's algorithms. The CTAP2 response messages are CBOR maps constructed using integer keys rather than the string keys defined in this specification for the same objects. The client is expected to perform any needed transformations on such data. The [FIDO-CTAP] specification details the mapping between CTAP2 integer keys and WebAuthn string keys, in section §6.2. Responses.

For authenticators, this model defines the logical operations that they MUST support, and the data formats that they expose to the client and the WebAuthn Relying Party. However, it does not define the details of how authenticators communicate with the client device, unless they are necessary for interoperability with Relying Parties. For instance, this abstract model does not define protocols for connecting authenticators to clients over transports such as USB or NFC. Similarly, this abstract model does not define specific error codes or methods of returning them; however, it does define error behavior in terms of the needs of the client. Therefore, specific error codes are mentioned as a means of showing which error conditions MUST be distinguishable (or not) from each other in order to enable a compliant and secure client implementation.

Relying Parties may influence authenticator selection, if they deem necessary, by stipulating various authenticator characteristics when creating credentials and/or when generating assertions, through use of credential creation options or assertion generation options, respectively. The algorithms underlying the WebAuthn API marshal these options and pass them to the applicable authenticator operations defined below.

In this abstract model, the authenticator provides key management and cryptographic signatures. It can be embedded in the WebAuthn client or housed in a separate device entirely. The authenticator itself can contain a cryptographic module which operates at a higher security level than the rest of the authenticator. This is particularly important for authenticators that are embedded in the WebAuthn client, as in those cases this cryptographic module (which may, for example, be a TPM) could be considered more trustworthy than the rest of the authenticator.

Each authenticator stores a credentials map, a map from (rpId, [userHandle]) to public key credential source.

Additionally, each authenticator has an AAGUID, which is a 128-bit identifier indicating the type (e.g. make and model) of the authenticator. The AAGUID MUST be chosen by the manufacturer to be identical across all substantially identical authenticators made by that manufacturer, and different (with high probability) from the AAGUIDs of all other types of authenticators. The AAGUID for a given type of authenticator SHOULD be randomly generated to ensure this. The Relying Party MAY use the AAGUID to infer certain properties of the authenticator, such as certification level and strength of key protection, using information from other sources.

The primary function of the authenticator is to provide WebAuthn signatures, which are bound to various contextual data. These data are observed and added at different levels of the stack as a signature request passes from the server to the authenticator. In verifying a signature, the server checks these bindings against expected values. These contextual bindings are divided in two: Those added by the Relying Party or the client, referred to as client data; and those added by the authenticator, referred to as the authenticator data. The authenticator signs over the client data, but is otherwise not interested in its contents. To save bandwidth and processing requirements on the authenticator, the client hashes the client data and sends only the result to the authenticator. The authenticator signs over the combination of the hash of the serialized client data, and its own authenticator data.

The goals of this design can be summarized as follows.

Authenticators produce cryptographic signatures for two distinct purposes:

  1. An attestation signature is produced when a new public key credential is created via an authenticatorMakeCredential operation. An attestation signature provides cryptographic proof of certain properties of the authenticator and the credential. For instance, an attestation signature asserts the authenticator type (as denoted by its AAGUID) and the credential public key. The attestation signature is signed by an attestation private key, which is chosen depending on the type of attestation desired. For more details on attestation, see §6.4 Attestation.

  2. An assertion signature is produced when the authenticatorGetAssertion method is invoked. It represents an assertion by the authenticator that the user has consented to a specific transaction, such as logging in, or completing a purchase. Thus, an assertion signature asserts that the authenticator possessing a particular credential private key has established, to the best of its ability, that the user requesting this transaction is the same user who consented to creating that particular public key credential. It also asserts additional information, termed client data, that may be useful to the caller, such as the means by which user consent was provided, and the prompt shown to the user by the authenticator. The assertion signature format is illustrated in Figure 4, below.

The formats of these signatures, as well as the procedures for generating them, are specified below.

6.1. Authenticator Data

The authenticator data structure encodes contextual bindings made by the authenticator. These bindings are controlled by the authenticator itself, and derive their trust from the WebAuthn Relying Party's assessment of the security properties of the authenticator. In one extreme case, the authenticator may be embedded in the client, and its bindings may be no more trustworthy than the client data. At the other extreme, the authenticator may be a discrete entity with high-security hardware and software, connected to the client over a secure channel. In both cases, the Relying Party receives the authenticator data in the same format, and uses its knowledge of the authenticator to make trust decisions.

The authenticator data has a compact but extensible encoding. This is desired since authenticators can be devices with limited capabilities and low power requirements, with much simpler software stacks than the client platform.

The authenticator data structure is a byte array of 37 bytes or more, laid out as shown in Table 1.

Name Length (in bytes) Description
rpIdHash 32 SHA-256 hash of the RP ID the credential is scoped to.
flags 1 Flags (bit 0 is the least significant bit):
signCount 4 Signature counter, 32-bit unsigned big-endian integer.
attestedCredentialData variable (if present) attested credential data (if present). See §6.4.1 Attested Credential Data for details. Its length depends on the length of the credential ID and credential public key being attested.
extensions variable (if present) Extension-defined authenticator data. This is a CBOR [RFC7049] map with extension identifiers as keys, and authenticator extension outputs as values. See §9 WebAuthn Extensions for details.
Authenticator data layout. The names in the Name column are only for reference within this document, and are not present in the actual representation of the authenticator data.

The RP ID is originally received from the client when the credential is created, and again when an assertion is generated. However, it differs from other client data in some important ways. First, unlike the client data, the RP ID of a credential does not change between operations but instead remains the same for the lifetime of that credential. Secondly, it is validated by the authenticator during the authenticatorGetAssertion operation, by verifying that the RP ID that the requested credential is scoped to exactly matches the RP ID supplied by the client.

Authenticators perform the following steps to generate an authenticator data structure:

The figure below shows a visual representation of the authenticator data structure.

Authenticator data layout.
Note: authenticator data describes its own length: If the AT and ED flags are not set, it is always 37 bytes long. The attested credential data (which is only present if the AT flag is set) describes its own length. If the ED flag is set, then the total length is 37 bytes plus the length of the attested credential data (if the AT flag is set), plus the length of the extensions output (a CBOR map) that follows.

Determining attested credential data's length, which is variable, involves determining credentialPublicKey’s beginning location given the preceding credentialId’s length, and then determining the credentialPublicKey’s length (see also Section 7 of [RFC8152]).

6.1.1. Signature Counter Considerations

Authenticators SHOULD implement a signature counter feature. The signature counter is incremented for each successful authenticatorGetAssertion operation by some positive value, and its value is returned to the WebAuthn Relying Party within the authenticator data. The signature counter's purpose is to aid Relying Parties in detecting cloned authenticators. Clone detection is more important for authenticators with limited protection measures.

A Relying Party stores the signature counter of the most recent authenticatorGetAssertion operation. Upon a new authenticatorGetAssertion operation, the Relying Party compares the stored signature counter value with the new signCount value returned in the assertion’s authenticator data. If this new signCount value is less than or equal to the stored value, a cloned authenticator may exist, or the authenticator may be malfunctioning.

Detecting a signature counter mismatch does not indicate whether the current operation was performed by a cloned authenticator or the original authenticator. Relying Parties should address this situation appropriately relative to their individual situations, i.e., their risk tolerance.

Authenticators:

6.1.2. FIDO U2F Signature Format Compatibility

The format for assertion signatures, which sign over the concatenation of an authenticator data structure and the hash of the serialized client data, are compatible with the FIDO U2F authentication signature format (see Section 5.4 of [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats]).

This is because the first 37 bytes of the signed data in a FIDO U2F authentication response message constitute a valid authenticator data structure, and the remaining 32 bytes are the hash of the serialized client data. In this authenticator data structure, the rpIdHash is the FIDO U2F application parameter, all flags except UP are always zero, and the attestedCredentialData and extensions are never present. FIDO U2F authentication signatures can therefore be verified by the same procedure as other assertion signatures generated by the authenticatorMakeCredential operation.

6.2. Authenticator Taxonomy

Authenticator types vary along several different dimensions: authenticator attachment modality, employed transport(s), credential storage modality, and authentication factor capability. The combination of these dimensions defines an authenticator's authenticator type, which in turn determines the broad use cases the authenticator supports. Table 2 defines names for some authenticator types.

Authenticator Type Authenticator Attachment Modality Credential Storage Modality Authentication Factor Capability
Second-factor platform authenticator platform Server-side storage Single-factor
User-verifying platform authenticator platform Server-side storage Multi-factor
First-factor platform authenticator platform Client-side storage Multi-factor
Second-factor roaming authenticator cross-platform Server-side storage Single-factor
User-verifying roaming authenticator cross-platform Server-side storage Multi-factor
First-factor roaming authenticator cross-platform Client-side storage Multi-factor
Definitions of names for some authenticator types.

These types can be further broken down into subtypes, such as which transport(s) a roaming authenticator supports. The following sections define the terms authenticator attachment modality, credential storage modality and authentication factor capability.

6.2.1. Authenticator Attachment Modality

Clients can communicate with authenticators using a variety of mechanisms. For example, a client MAY use a client device-specific API to communicate with an authenticator which is physically bound to a client device. On the other hand, a client can use a variety of standardized cross-platform transport protocols such as Bluetooth (see §5.10.4 Authenticator Transport Enumeration (enum AuthenticatorTransport)) to discover and communicate with cross-platform attached authenticators. We refer to authenticators that are part of the client device as platform authenticators, while those that are reachable via cross-platform transport protocols are referred to as roaming authenticators.

Some platform authenticators could possibly also act as roaming authenticators depending on context. For example, a platform authenticator integrated into a mobile device could make itself available as a roaming authenticator via Bluetooth. In this case the client would recognize it only as a roaming authenticator, and not as a platform authenticator.

A primary use case for platform authenticators is to register a particular client device as a "trusted device" available as a something you have authentication factor for future authentication. This gives the user the convenience benefit of not needing a roaming authenticator for future authentication ceremonies, e.g., the user will not have to dig around in their pocket for their key fob or phone.

A primary use case for roaming authenticators is for initial authentication on a new client device, or on client devices that are rarely used or do not include a platform authenticator; or when policy or preference dictates that the authenticator be kept separate from the clients it is used with. A roaming authenticator can also be used to hold backup credentials in case another authenticator is lost.

6.2.2. Credential Storage Modality

An authenticator can store a public key credential source in one of two ways:

  1. In persistent storage embedded in the authenticator, client or client device, e.g., in a secure element. A public key credential source stored in this way is a resident credential.

  2. By encrypting (i.e., wrapping) the credential private key such that only this authenticator can decrypt (i.e., unwrap) it and letting the resulting ciphertext be the credential ID for the public key credential source. The credential ID is stored by the Relying Party and returned to the authenticator via the allowCredentials option of get(), which allows the authenticator to decrypt and use the credential private key.

    This enables the authenticator to have unlimited storage capacity for credential private keys, since the encrypted credential private keys are stored by the Relying Party instead of by the authenticator - but it means that a credential stored in this way must be retrieved from the Relying Party before the authenticator can use it.

Which of these storage strategies an authenticator supports defines the authenticator's credential storage modality as follows:

Note that a resident credential capable authenticator MAY support both storage strategies. In this case, the authenticator MAY at its discretion use different storage strategies for different credentials, though subject to the requireResidentKey option of create().

6.2.3. Authentication Factor Capability

There are three broad classes of authentication factors that can be used to prove an identity during an authentication ceremony: something you have, something you know and something you are. Examples include a physical key, a password, and a fingerprint, respectively.

All WebAuthn authenticators belong to the something you have class, but an authenticator that supports user verification can also act as one or two additional kinds of authentication factor. For example, if the authenticator can verify a PIN, the PIN is something you know, and a biometric authenticator can verify something you are. Therefore, an authenticator that supports user verification is multi-factor capable. Conversely, an authenticator that is not multi-factor capable is single-factor capable. Note that a single multi-factor capable authenticator could support several modes of user verification, meaning it could act as all three kinds of authentication factor.

Although user verification is performed locally on the authenticator and not by the Relying Party, the authenticator indicates if user verification was performed by setting the UV flag in the signed response returned to the Relying Party. The Relying Party can therefore use the UV flag to verify that additional authentication factors were used in a registration or authentication ceremony. The authenticity of the UV flag can in turn be assessed by inspecting the authenticator's attestation statement.

6.3. Authenticator Operations

A WebAuthn Client MUST connect to an authenticator in order to invoke any of the operations of that authenticator. This connection defines an authenticator session. An authenticator must maintain isolation between sessions. It may do this by only allowing one session to exist at any particular time, or by providing more complicated session management.

The following operations can be invoked by the client in an authenticator session.

6.3.1. Lookup Credential Source by Credential ID Algorithm

The result of looking up a credential id credentialId in an authenticator authenticator is the result of the following algorithm:

  1. If authenticator can decrypt credentialId into a public key credential source credSource:

    1. Set credSource.id to credentialId.

    2. Return credSource.

  2. For each public key credential source credSource of authenticator’s credentials map:

    1. If credSource.id is credentialId, return credSource.

  3. Return null.

6.3.2. The authenticatorMakeCredential Operation

It takes the following input parameters:

hash

The hash of the serialized client data, provided by the client.

rpEntity

The Relying Party's PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity.

userEntity

The user account’s PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity, containing the user handle given by the Relying Party.

requireResidentKey

The authenticatorSelection.requireResidentKey value given by the Relying Party.

requireUserPresence

A Boolean value provided by the client, which in invocations from a WebAuthn Client's [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) method is always set to the inverse of requireUserVerification.

requireUserVerification

The effective user verification requirement for credential creation, a Boolean value provided by the client.

credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs

A sequence of pairs of PublicKeyCredentialType and public key algorithms (COSEAlgorithmIdentifier) requested by the Relying Party. This sequence is ordered from most preferred to least preferred. The authenticator makes a best-effort to create the most preferred credential that it can.

excludeCredentialDescriptorList

An OPTIONAL list of PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor objects provided by the Relying Party with the intention that, if any of these are known to the authenticator, it SHOULD NOT create a new credential. excludeCredentialDescriptorList contains a list of known credentials.

extensions

A CBOR map from extension identifiers to their authenticator extension inputs, created by the client based on the extensions requested by the Relying Party, if any.

Note: Before performing this operation, all other operations in progress in the authenticator session MUST be aborted by running the authenticatorCancel operation.

When this operation is invoked, the authenticator MUST perform the following procedure:

  1. Check if all the supplied parameters are syntactically well-formed and of the correct length. If not, return an error code equivalent to "UnknownError" and terminate the operation.

  2. Check if at least one of the specified combinations of PublicKeyCredentialType and cryptographic parameters in credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs is supported. If not, return an error code equivalent to "NotSupportedError" and terminate the operation.

  3. For each descriptor of excludeCredentialDescriptorList:

    1. If looking up descriptor.id in this authenticator returns non-null, and the returned item's RP ID and type match rpEntity.id and excludeCredentialDescriptorList.type respectively, then obtain user consent for creating a new credential. The method of obtaining user consent MUST include a test of user presence. If the user

      confirms consent to create a new credential

      return an error code equivalent to "InvalidStateError" and terminate the operation.

      does not consent to create a new credential

      return an error code equivalent to "NotAllowedError" and terminate the operation.

  4. If requireResidentKey is true and the authenticator cannot store a client-side-resident public key credential source, return an error code equivalent to "ConstraintError" and terminate the operation.

  5. If requireUserVerification is true and the authenticator cannot perform user verification, return an error code equivalent to "ConstraintError" and terminate the operation.

  6. Once user consent has been obtained, generate a new credential object:

    1. Let (publicKey, privateKey) be a new pair of cryptographic keys using the combination of PublicKeyCredentialType and cryptographic parameters represented by the first item in credTypesAndPubKeyAlgs that is supported by this authenticator.

    2. Let userHandle be userEntity.id.

    3. Let credentialSource be a new public key credential source with the fields:

      type

      public-key.

      privateKey

      privateKey

      rpId

      rpEntity.id

      userHandle

      userHandle

      otherUI

      Any other information the authenticator chooses to include.

    4. If requireResidentKey is true or the authenticator chooses to create a client-side-resident public key credential source:

      1. Let credentialId be a new credential id.

      2. Set credentialSource.id to credentialId.

      3. Let credentials be this authenticator’s credentials map.

      4. Set credentials[(rpEntity.id, userHandle)] to credentialSource.

    5. Otherwise:

      1. Let credentialId be the result of serializing and encrypting credentialSource so that only this authenticator can decrypt it.

  7. If any error occurred while creating the new credential object, return an error code equivalent to "UnknownError" and terminate the operation.

  8. Let processedExtensions be the result of authenticator extension processing for each supported extension identifierauthenticator extension input in extensions.

  9. If the authenticator supports:

    a global signature counter

    Use the global signature counter's actual value when generating authenticator data.

    a per credential signature counter

    allocate the counter, associate it with the new credential, and initialize the counter value as zero.

    no signature counter

    let the signature counter value for the new credential be constant at zero.

  10. Let attestedCredentialData be the attested credential data byte array including the credentialId and publicKey.

  11. Let authenticatorData be the byte array specified in §6.1 Authenticator Data, including attestedCredentialData as the attestedCredentialData and processedExtensions, if any, as the extensions.

  12. Return the attestation object for the new credential created by the procedure specified in §6.4.4 Generating an Attestation Object using an authenticator-chosen attestation statement format, authenticatorData, and hash. For more details on attestation, see §6.4 Attestation.

On successful completion of this operation, the authenticator returns the attestation object to the client.

6.3.3. The authenticatorGetAssertion Operation

It takes the following input parameters:

rpId

The caller’s RP ID, as determined by the user agent and the client.

hash

The hash of the serialized client data, provided by the client.

allowCredentialDescriptorList

An OPTIONAL list of PublicKeyCredentialDescriptors describing credentials acceptable to the Relying Party (possibly filtered by the client), if any.

requireUserPresence

A Boolean value provided by the client, which in invocations from a WebAuthn Client's [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) method is always set to the inverse of requireUserVerification.

requireUserVerification

The effective user verification requirement for assertion, a Boolean value provided by the client.

extensions

A CBOR map from extension identifiers to their authenticator extension inputs, created by the client based on the extensions requested by the Relying Party, if any.

Note: Before performing this operation, all other operations in progress in the authenticator session MUST be aborted by running the authenticatorCancel operation.

When this method is invoked, the authenticator MUST perform the following procedure:

  1. Check if all the supplied parameters are syntactically well-formed and of the correct length. If not, return an error code equivalent to "UnknownError" and terminate the operation.

  2. Let credentialOptions be a new empty set of public key credential sources.

  3. If allowCredentialDescriptorList was supplied, then for each descriptor of allowCredentialDescriptorList:

    1. Let credSource be the result of looking up descriptor.id in this authenticator.

    2. If credSource is not null, append it to credentialOptions.

  4. Otherwise (allowCredentialDescriptorList was not supplied), for each keycredSource of this authenticator’s credentials map, append credSource to credentialOptions.

  5. Remove any items from credentialOptions whose rpId is not equal to rpId.

  6. If credentialOptions is now empty, return an error code equivalent to "NotAllowedError" and terminate the operation.

  7. Prompt the user to select a public key credential source selectedCredential from credentialOptions. Obtain user consent for using selectedCredential. The prompt for obtaining this consent may be shown by the authenticator if it has its own output capability, or by the user agent otherwise.

    If requireUserVerification is true, the method of obtaining user consent MUST include user verification.

    Note: For the overall WebAuthn security properties to hold, the user verified here must be the same user that was verified when this authenticator created this public key credential in Step 6 of §6.3.2 The authenticatorMakeCredential Operation.

    If requireUserPresence is true, the method of obtaining user consent MUST include a test of user presence.

    If the user does not consent, return an error code equivalent to "NotAllowedError" and terminate the operation.

  8. Let processedExtensions be the result of authenticator extension processing for each supported extension identifierauthenticator extension input in extensions.

  9. Increment the credential associated signature counter or the global signature counter value, depending on which approach is implemented by the authenticator, by some positive value. If the authenticator does not implement a signature counter, let the signature counter value remain constant at zero.

  10. Let authenticatorData be the byte array specified in §6.1 Authenticator Data including processedExtensions, if any, as the extensions and excluding attestedCredentialData.

  11. Let signature be the assertion signature of the concatenation authenticatorData || hash using the privateKey of selectedCredential as shown in Figure 4, below. A simple, undelimited concatenation is safe to use here because the authenticator data describes its own length. The hash of the serialized client data (which potentially has a variable length) is always the last element.

    Generating an assertion signature.
  12. If any error occurred while generating the assertion signature, return an error code equivalent to "UnknownError" and terminate the operation.

  13. Return to the user agent:
    • selectedCredential.id, if either a list of credentials (i.e., allowCredentialDescriptorList) of length 2 or greater was supplied by the client, or no such list was supplied.

      Note: If, within allowCredentialDescriptorList, the client supplied exactly one credential and it was successfully employed, then its credential ID is not returned since the client already knows it. This saves transmitting these bytes over what may be a constrained connection in what is likely a common case.

    • authenticatorData

    • signature

    • selectedCredential.userHandle

      Note: the returned userHandle value may be null, see: userHandleResult.

If the authenticator cannot find any credential corresponding to the specified Relying Party that matches the specified criteria, it terminates the operation and returns an error.

6.3.4. The authenticatorCancel Operation

This operation takes no input parameters and returns no result.

When this operation is invoked by the client in an authenticator session, it has the effect of terminating any authenticatorMakeCredential or authenticatorGetAssertion operation currently in progress in that authenticator session. The authenticator stops prompting for, or accepting, any user input related to authorizing the canceled operation. The client ignores any further responses from the authenticator for the canceled operation.

This operation is ignored if it is invoked in an authenticator session which does not have an authenticatorMakeCredential or authenticatorGetAssertion operation currently in progress.

6.4. Attestation

Authenticators MUST also provide some form of attestation. The basic requirement is that the authenticator can produce, for each credential public key, an attestation statement verifiable by the WebAuthn Relying Party. Typically, this attestation statement contains a signature by an attestation private key over the attested credential public key and a challenge, as well as a certificate or similar data providing provenance information for the attestation public key, enabling the Relying Party to make a trust decision. However, if an attestation key pair is not available, then the authenticator MUST perform self attestation of the credential public key with the corresponding credential private key. All this information is returned by authenticators any time a new public key credential is generated, in the overall form of an attestation object. The relationship of the attestation object with authenticator data (containing attested credential data) and the attestation statement is illustrated in figure 5, below.

Attestation object layout illustrating the included authenticator data (containing attested credential data) and the attestation statement.
This figure illustrates only the packed attestation statement format. Several additional attestation statement formats are defined in §8 Defined Attestation Statement Formats.

An important component of the attestation object is the attestation statement. This is a specific type of signed data object, containing statements about a public key credential itself and the authenticator that created it. It contains an attestation signature created using the key of the attesting authority (except for the case of self attestation, when it is created using the credential private key). In order to correctly interpret an attestation statement, a Relying Party needs to understand these two aspects of attestation:

  1. The attestation statement format is the manner in which the signature is represented and the various contextual bindings are incorporated into the attestation statement by the authenticator. In other words, this defines the syntax of the statement. Various existing components and OS platforms (such as TPMs and the Android OS) have previously defined attestation statement formats. This specification supports a variety of such formats in an extensible way, as defined in §6.4.2 Attestation Statement Formats.

  2. The attestation type defines the semantics of attestation statements and their underlying trust models. Specifically, it defines how a Relying Party establishes trust in a particular attestation statement, after verifying that it is cryptographically valid. This specification supports a number of attestation types, as described in §6.4.3 Attestation Types.

In general, there is no simple mapping between attestation statement formats and attestation types. For example, the "packed" attestation statement format defined in §8.2 Packed Attestation Statement Format can be used in conjunction with all attestation types, while other formats and types have more limited applicability.

The privacy, security and operational characteristics of attestation depend on:

It is expected that most authenticators will support a small number of attestation types and attestation statement formats, while Relying Parties will decide what attestation types are acceptable to them by policy. Relying Parties will also need to understand the characteristics of the authenticators that they trust, based on information they have about these authenticators. For example, the FIDO Metadata Service [FIDOMetadataService] provides one way to access such information.

6.4.1. Attested Credential Data

Attested credential data is a variable-length byte array added to the authenticator data when generating an attestation object for a given credential. Its format is shown in Table 3.

Name Length (in bytes) Description
aaguid 16 The AAGUID of the authenticator.
credentialIdLength 2 Byte length L of Credential ID, 16-bit unsigned big-endian integer.
credentialId L Credential ID
credentialPublicKey variable The credential public key encoded in COSE_Key format, as defined in Section 7 of [RFC8152], using the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form. The COSE_Key-encoded credential public key MUST contain the "alg" parameter and MUST NOT contain any other OPTIONAL parameters. The "alg" parameter MUST contain a COSEAlgorithmIdentifier value. The encoded credential public key MUST also contain any additional REQUIRED parameters stipulated by the relevant key type specification, i.e., REQUIRED for the key type "kty" and algorithm "alg" (see Section 8 of [RFC8152]).
Attested credential data layout. The names in the Name column are only for reference within this document, and are not present in the actual representation of the attested credential data.
6.4.1.1. Examples of credentialPublicKey Values Encoded in COSE_Key Format

This section provides examples of COSE_Key-encoded Elliptic Curve and RSA public keys for the ES256, PS256, and RS256 signature algorithms. These examples adhere to the rules defined above for the credentialPublicKey value, and are presented in [CDDL] for clarity.

[RFC8152] Section 7 defines the general framework for all COSE_Key-encoded keys. Specific key types for specific algorithms are defined in other sections of [RFC8152] as well as in other specifications, as noted below.

Below is an example of a COSE_Key-encoded Elliptic Curve public key in EC2 format (see [RFC8152] Section 13.1), on the P-256 curve, to be used with the ES256 signature algorithm (ECDSA w/ SHA-256, see [RFC8152] Section 8.1):

{
  1:   2,  ; kty: EC2 key type
  3:  -7,  ; alg: ES256 signature algorithm
 -1:   1,  ; crv: P-256 curve
 -2:   x,  ; x-coordinate as byte string 32 bytes in length
           ; e.g., in hex: 65eda5a12577c2bae829437fe338701a10aaa375e1bb5b5de108de439c08551d
 -3:   y   ; y-coordinate as byte string 32 bytes in length
           ; e.g., in hex: 1e52ed75701163f7f9e40ddf9f341b3dc9ba860af7e0ca7ca7e9eecd0084d19c
}

Below is the above Elliptic Curve public key encoded in the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form, whitespace and line breaks are included here for clarity and to match the [CDDL] presentation above:

A5
   01  02

   03  26

   20  01

   21  58 20   65eda5a12577c2bae829437fe338701a10aaa375e1bb5b5de108de439c08551d

   22  58 20   1e52ed75701163f7f9e40ddf9f341b3dc9ba860af7e0ca7ca7e9eecd0084d19c

Below is an example of a COSE_Key-encoded 2048-bit RSA public key (see [RFC8230] Section 4), to be used with the PS256 signature algorithm (RSASSA-PSS with SHA-256, see [RFC8230] Section 2):

{
  1:   3,  ; kty: RSA key type
  3: -37,  ; alg: PS256
 -1:   n,  ; n:   RSA modulus n byte string 256 bytes in length
           ;      e.g., in hex (middle bytes elided for brevity): DB5F651550...6DC6548ACC3
 -2:   e   ; e:   RSA public exponent e byte string 3 bytes in length
           ;      e.g., in hex: 010001
}

Below is an example of the same COSE_Key-encoded RSA public key as above, to be used with the RS256 signature algorithm (RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 with SHA-256, see §11.3 COSE Algorithm Registrations):

{
  1:   3,  ; kty: RSA key type
  3:-257,  ; alg: RS256
 -1:   n,  ; n:   RSA modulus n byte string 256 bytes in length
           ;      e.g., in hex (middle bytes elided for brevity): DB5F651550...6DC6548ACC3
 -2:   e   ; e:   RSA public exponent e byte string 3 bytes in length
           ;      e.g., in hex: 010001
}

6.4.2. Attestation Statement Formats

As described above, an attestation statement format is a data format which represents a cryptographic signature by an authenticator over a set of contextual bindings. Each attestation statement format MUST be defined using the following template:

The initial list of specified attestation statement formats is in §8 Defined Attestation Statement Formats.

6.4.3. Attestation Types

WebAuthn supports several attestation types, defining the semantics of attestation statements and their underlying trust models:

Note: This specification does not define any data structures explicitly expressing the attestation types employed by authenticators. Relying Parties engaging in attestation statement verification — i.e., when calling navigator.credentials.create() they select an attestation conveyance other than none and verify the received attestation statement — will determine the employed attestation type as a part of verification. See the "Verification procedure" subsections of §8 Defined Attestation Statement Formats. See also §14.4 Attestation Privacy.

Basic Attestation (Basic)

In the case of basic attestation [UAFProtocol], the authenticator’s attestation key pair is specific to an authenticator model. Thus, authenticators of the same model often share the same attestation key pair. See §14.4 Attestation Privacy for further information.

Self Attestation (Self)

In the case of self attestation, also known as surrogate basic attestation [UAFProtocol], the Authenticator does not have any specific attestation key. Instead it uses the credential private key to create the attestation signature. Authenticators without meaningful protection measures for an attestation private key typically use this attestation type.

Attestation CA (AttCA)

In this case, an authenticator is based on a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) and holds an authenticator-specific "endorsement key" (EK). This key is used to securely communicate with a trusted third party, the Attestation CA [TCG-CMCProfile-AIKCertEnroll] (formerly known as a "Privacy CA"). The authenticator can generate multiple attestation identity key pairs (AIK) and requests an Attestation CA to issue an AIK certificate for each. Using this approach, such an authenticator can limit the exposure of the EK (which is a global correlation handle) to Attestation CA(s). AIKs can be requested for each authenticator-generated public key credential individually, and conveyed to Relying Parties as attestation certificates.

Note: This concept typically leads to multiple attestation certificates. The attestation certificate requested most recently is called "active".

Note: Attestation statements conveying attestations of type AttCA use the same data structure as attestation statements conveying attestations of type Basic, so the two attestation types are, in general, distinguishable only with externally provided knowledge regarding the contents of the attestation certificates conveyed in the attestation statement.

Elliptic Curve based Direct Anonymous Attestation (ECDAA)

In this case, the Authenticator receives direct anonymous attestation (DAA) credentials from a single DAA-Issuer. These DAA credentials are used along with blinding to sign the attested credential data. The concept of blinding avoids the DAA credentials being misused as global correlation handle. WebAuthn supports DAA using elliptic curve cryptography and bilinear pairings, called ECDAA (see [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]) in this specification. Consequently we denote the DAA-Issuer as ECDAA-Issuer (see [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]).

No attestation statement (None)

In this case, no attestation information is available. See also §8.7 None Attestation Statement Format.

6.4.4. Generating an Attestation Object

To generate an attestation object (see: Figure 5) given:

attestationFormat

An attestation statement format.

authData

A byte array containing authenticator data.

hash

The hash of the serialized client data.

the authenticator MUST:

  1. Let attStmt be the result of running attestationFormat’s signing procedure given authData and hash.

  2. Let fmt be attestationFormat’s attestation statement format identifier

  3. Return the attestation object as a CBOR map with the following syntax, filled in with variables initialized by this algorithm:

        attObj = {
                    authData: bytes,
                    $$attStmtType
                 }
    
        attStmtTemplate = (
                              fmt: text,
                              attStmt: { * tstr => any } ; Map is filled in by each concrete attStmtType
                          )
    
        ; Every attestation statement format must have the above fields
        attStmtTemplate .within $$attStmtType
    

6.4.5. Signature Formats for Packed Attestation, FIDO U2F Attestation, and Assertion Signatures

7. WebAuthn Relying Party Operations

A registration or authentication ceremony begins with the WebAuthn Relying Party creating a PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions or PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions object, respectively, which encodes the parameters for the ceremony. The Relying Party SHOULD take care to not leak sensitive information during this stage; see §14.10 Username Enumeration for details.

Upon successful execution of create() or get(), the Relying Party's script receives a PublicKeyCredential containing an AuthenticatorAttestationResponse or AuthenticatorAssertionResponse structure, respectively, from the client. It must then deliver the contents of this structure to the Relying Party server, using methods outside the scope of this specification. This section describes the operations that the Relying Party must perform upon receipt of these structures.

7.1. Registering a New Credential

When registering a new credential, represented by an AuthenticatorAttestationResponse structure response and an AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs structure clientExtensionResults, as part of a registration ceremony, a Relying Party MUST proceed as follows:

  1. Let JSONtext be the result of running UTF-8 decode on the value of response.clientDataJSON.

    Note: Using any implementation of UTF-8 decode is acceptable as long as it yields the same result as that yielded by the UTF-8 decode algorithm. In particular, any leading byte order mark (BOM) MUST be stripped.

  2. Let C, the client data claimed as collected during the credential creation, be the result of running an implementation-specific JSON parser on JSONtext.

    Note: C may be any implementation-specific data structure representation, as long as C’s components are referenceable, as required by this algorithm.

  3. Verify that the value of C.type is webauthn.create.

  4. Verify that the value of C.challenge matches the challenge that was sent to the authenticator in the create() call.

  5. Verify that the value of C.origin matches the Relying Party's origin.

  6. Verify that the value of C.tokenBinding.status matches the state of Token Binding for the TLS connection over which the assertion was obtained. If Token Binding was used on that TLS connection, also verify that C.tokenBinding.id matches the base64url encoding of the Token Binding ID for the connection.

  7. Compute the hash of response.clientDataJSON using SHA-256.

  8. Perform CBOR decoding on the attestationObject field of the AuthenticatorAttestationResponse structure to obtain the attestation statement format fmt, the authenticator data authData, and the attestation statement attStmt.

  9. Verify that the rpIdHash in authData is the SHA-256 hash of the RP ID expected by the Relying Party.

  10. Verify that the User Present bit of the flags in authData is set.

  11. If user verification is required for this registration, verify that the User Verified bit of the flags in authData is set.

  12. Verify that the values of the client extension outputs in clientExtensionResults and the authenticator extension outputs in the extensions in authData are as expected, considering the client extension input values that were given as the extensions option in the create() call. In particular, any extension identifier values in the clientExtensionResults and the extensions in authData MUST be also be present as extension identifier values in the extensions member of options, i.e., no extensions are present that were not requested. In the general case, the meaning of "are as expected" is specific to the Relying Party and which extensions are in use.

    Note: Since all extensions are OPTIONAL for both the client and the authenticator, the Relying Party MUST be prepared to handle cases where none or not all of the requested extensions were acted upon.

  13. Determine the attestation statement format by performing a USASCII case-sensitive match on fmt against the set of supported WebAuthn Attestation Statement Format Identifier values. An up-to-date list of registered WebAuthn Attestation Statement Format Identifier values is maintained in the IANA registry of the same name [WebAuthn-Registries].

  14. Verify that attStmt is a correct attestation statement, conveying a valid attestation signature, by using the attestation statement format fmt’s verification procedure given attStmt, authData and the hash of the serialized client data computed in step 7.

    Note: Each attestation statement format specifies its own verification procedure. See §8 Defined Attestation Statement Formats for the initially-defined formats, and [WebAuthn-Registries] for the up-to-date list.

  15. If validation is successful, obtain a list of acceptable trust anchors (attestation root certificates or ECDAA-Issuer public keys) for that attestation type and attestation statement format fmt, from a trusted source or from policy. For example, the FIDO Metadata Service [FIDOMetadataService] provides one way to obtain such information, using the aaguid in the attestedCredentialData in authData.

  16. Assess the attestation trustworthiness using the outputs of the verification procedure in step 14, as follows:

  17. Check that the credentialId is not yet registered to any other user. If registration is requested for a credential that is already registered to a different user, the Relying Party SHOULD fail this registration ceremony, or it MAY decide to accept the registration, e.g. while deleting the older registration.

  18. If the attestation statement attStmt verified successfully and is found to be trustworthy, then register the new credential with the account that was denoted in the options.user passed to create(), by associating it with the credentialId and credentialPublicKey in the attestedCredentialData in authData, as appropriate for the Relying Party's system.

  19. If the attestation statement attStmt successfully verified but is not trustworthy per step 16 above, the Relying Party SHOULD fail the registration ceremony.

    NOTE: However, if permitted by policy, the Relying Party MAY register the credential ID and credential public key but treat the credential as one with self attestation (see §6.4.3 Attestation Types). If doing so, the Relying Party is asserting there is no cryptographic proof that the public key credential has been generated by a particular authenticator model. See [FIDOSecRef] and [UAFProtocol] for a more detailed discussion.

Verification of attestation objects requires that the Relying Party has a trusted method of determining acceptable trust anchors in step 15 above. Also, if certificates are being used, the Relying Party MUST have access to certificate status information for the intermediate CA certificates. The Relying Party MUST also be able to build the attestation certificate chain if the client did not provide this chain in the attestation information.

7.2. Verifying an Authentication Assertion

When verifying a given PublicKeyCredential structure (credential) and an AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs structure clientExtensionResults, as part of an authentication ceremony, the Relying Party MUST proceed as follows:

  1. If the allowCredentials option was given when this authentication ceremony was initiated, verify that credential.id identifies one of the public key credentials that were listed in allowCredentials.

  2. Identify the user being authenticated and verify that this user is the owner of the public key credential source credentialSource identified by credential.id:

    If the user was identified before the authentication ceremony was initiated,

    verify that the identified user is the owner of credentialSource. If credential.response.userHandle is present, verify that this value identifies the same user as was previously identified.

    If the user was not identified before the authentication ceremony was initiated,

    verify that credential.response.userHandle is present, and that the user identified by this value is the owner of credentialSource.

  3. Using credential’s id attribute (or the corresponding rawId, if base64url encoding is inappropriate for your use case), look up the corresponding credential public key.

  4. Let cData, authData and sig denote the value of credential’s response's clientDataJSON, authenticatorData, and signature respectively.

  5. Let JSONtext be the result of running UTF-8 decode on the value of cData.

    Note: Using any implementation of UTF-8 decode is acceptable as long as it yields the same result as that yielded by the UTF-8 decode algorithm. In particular, any leading byte order mark (BOM) MUST be stripped.

  6. Let C, the client data claimed as used for the signature, be the result of running an implementation-specific JSON parser on JSONtext.

    Note: C may be any implementation-specific data structure representation, as long as C’s components are referenceable, as required by this algorithm.

  7. Verify that the value of C.type is the string webauthn.get.

  8. Verify that the value of C.challenge matches the challenge that was sent to the authenticator in the PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions passed to the get() call.

  9. Verify that the value of C.origin matches the Relying Party's origin.

  10. Verify that the value of C.tokenBinding.status matches the state of Token Binding for the TLS connection over which the attestation was obtained. If Token Binding was used on that TLS connection, also verify that C.tokenBinding.id matches the base64url encoding of the Token Binding ID for the connection.

  11. Verify that the rpIdHash in authData is the SHA-256 hash of the RP ID expected by the Relying Party.

  12. Verify that the User Present bit of the flags in authData is set.

  13. If user verification is required for this assertion, verify that the User Verified bit of the flags in authData is set.

  14. Verify that the values of the client extension outputs in clientExtensionResults and the authenticator extension outputs in the extensions in authData are as expected, considering the client extension input values that were given as the extensions option in the get() call. In particular, any extension identifier values in the clientExtensionResults and the extensions in authData MUST be also be present as extension identifier values in the extensions member of options, i.e., no extensions are present that were not requested. In the general case, the meaning of "are as expected" is specific to the Relying Party and which extensions are in use.

    Note: Since all extensions are OPTIONAL for both the client and the authenticator, the Relying Party MUST be prepared to handle cases where none or not all of the requested extensions were acted upon.

  15. Let hash be the result of computing a hash over the cData using SHA-256.

  16. Using the credential public key looked up in step 3, verify that sig is a valid signature over the binary concatenation of authData and hash.

    Note: This verification step is compatible with signatures generated by FIDO U2F authenticators. See §6.1.2 FIDO U2F Signature Format Compatibility.

  17. If the signature counter value authData.signCount is nonzero or the value stored in conjunction with credential’s id attribute is nonzero, then run the following sub-step:

  18. If all the above steps are successful, continue with the authentication ceremony as appropriate. Otherwise, fail the authentication ceremony.

8. Defined Attestation Statement Formats

WebAuthn supports pluggable attestation statement formats. This section defines an initial set of such formats.

8.1. Attestation Statement Format Identifiers

Attestation statement formats are identified by a string, called an attestation statement format identifier, chosen by the author of the attestation statement format.

Attestation statement format identifiers SHOULD be registered per [WebAuthn-Registries] "Registries for Web Authentication (WebAuthn)". All registered attestation statement format identifiers are unique amongst themselves as a matter of course.

Unregistered attestation statement format identifiers SHOULD use lowercase reverse domain-name naming, using a domain name registered by the developer, in order to assure uniqueness of the identifier. All attestation statement format identifiers MUST be a maximum of 32 octets in length and MUST consist only of printable USASCII characters, excluding backslash and doublequote, i.e., VCHAR as defined in [RFC5234] but without %x22 and %x5c.

Note: This means attestation statement format identifiers based on domain names MUST incorporate only LDH Labels [RFC5890].

Implementations MUST match WebAuthn attestation statement format identifiers in a case-sensitive fashion.

Attestation statement formats that may exist in multiple versions SHOULD include a version in their identifier. In effect, different versions are thus treated as different formats, e.g., packed2 as a new version of the packed attestation statement format.

The following sections present a set of currently-defined and registered attestation statement formats and their identifiers. The up-to-date list of registered WebAuthn Extensions is maintained in the IANA "WebAuthn Attestation Statement Format Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries].

8.2. Packed Attestation Statement Format

This is a WebAuthn optimized attestation statement format. It uses a very compact but still extensible encoding method. It is implementable by authenticators with limited resources (e.g., secure elements).

Attestation statement format identifier

packed

Attestation types supported

Basic, Self, AttCA, ECDAA

Syntax

The syntax of a Packed Attestation statement is defined by the following CDDL:

    $$attStmtType //= (
                          fmt: "packed",
                          attStmt: packedStmtFormat
                      )

    packedStmtFormat = {
                           alg: COSEAlgorithmIdentifier,
                           sig: bytes,
                           x5c: [ attestnCert: bytes, * (caCert: bytes) ]
                       } //
                       {
                           alg: COSEAlgorithmIdentifier, (-260 for ED256 / -261 for ED512)
                           sig: bytes,
                           ecdaaKeyId: bytes
                       } //
                       {
                           alg: COSEAlgorithmIdentifier
                           sig: bytes,
                       }

The semantics of the fields are as follows:

alg

A COSEAlgorithmIdentifier containing the identifier of the algorithm used to generate the attestation signature.

sig

A byte string containing the attestation signature.

x5c

The elements of this array contain attestnCert and its certificate chain, each encoded in X.509 format. The attestation certificate attestnCert MUST be the first element in the array.

attestnCert

The attestation certificate, encoded in X.509 format.

ecdaaKeyId

The identifier of the ECDAA-Issuer public key. This is the BigNumberToB encoding of the component "c" of the ECDAA-Issuer public key as defined section 3.3, step 3.5 in [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm].

Signing procedure

The signing procedure for this attestation statement format is similar to the procedure for generating assertion signatures.

  1. Let authenticatorData denote the authenticator data for the attestation, and let clientDataHash denote the hash of the serialized client data.

  2. If Basic or AttCA attestation is in use, the authenticator produces the sig by concatenating authenticatorData and clientDataHash, and signing the result using an attestation private key selected through an authenticator-specific mechanism. It sets x5c to the certificate chain of the attestation public key and alg to the algorithm of the attestation private key.

  3. If ECDAA is in use, the authenticator produces sig by concatenating authenticatorData and clientDataHash, and signing the result using ECDAA-Sign (see section 3.5 of [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]) after selecting an ECDAA-Issuer public key related to the ECDAA signature private key through an authenticator-specific mechanism (see [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]). It sets alg to the algorithm of the selected ECDAA-Issuer public key and ecdaaKeyId to the identifier of the ECDAA-Issuer public key (see above).

  4. If self attestation is in use, the authenticator produces sig by concatenating authenticatorData and clientDataHash, and signing the result using the credential private key. It sets alg to the algorithm of the credential private key and omits the other fields.

Verification procedure

Given the verification procedure inputs attStmt, authenticatorData and clientDataHash, the verification procedure is as follows:

  1. Verify that attStmt is valid CBOR conforming to the syntax defined above and perform CBOR decoding on it to extract the contained fields.

  2. If x5c is present, this indicates that the attestation type is not ECDAA. In this case:

    • Verify that sig is a valid signature over the concatenation of authenticatorData and clientDataHash using the attestation public key in attestnCert with the algorithm specified in alg.

    • Verify that attestnCert meets the requirements in §8.2.1 Packed Attestation Statement Certificate Requirements.

    • If attestnCert contains an extension with OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.45724.1.1.4 (id-fido-gen-ce-aaguid) verify that the value of this extension matches the aaguid in authenticatorData.

    • Optionally, inspect x5c and consult externally provided knowledge to determine whether attStmt conveys a Basic or AttCA attestation.

    • If successful, return implementation-specific values representing attestation type Basic, AttCA or uncertainty, and attestation trust path x5c.

  3. If ecdaaKeyId is present, then the attestation type is ECDAA. In this case:

  4. If neither x5c nor ecdaaKeyId is present, self attestation is in use.

    • Validate that alg matches the algorithm of the credentialPublicKey in authenticatorData.

    • Verify that sig is a valid signature over the concatenation of authenticatorData and clientDataHash using the credential public key with alg.

    • If successful, return implementation-specific values representing attestation type Self and an empty attestation trust path.

8.2.1. Packed Attestation Statement Certificate Requirements

The attestation certificate MUST have the following fields/extensions:

8.3. TPM Attestation Statement Format

This attestation statement format is generally used by authenticators that use a Trusted Platform Module as their cryptographic engine.

Attestation statement format identifier

tpm

Attestation types supported

AttCA, ECDAA

Syntax

The syntax of a TPM Attestation statement is as follows:

    $$attStmtType // = (
                           fmt: "tpm",
                           attStmt: tpmStmtFormat
                       )

    tpmStmtFormat = {
                        ver: "2.0",
                        (
                            alg: COSEAlgorithmIdentifier,
                            x5c: [ aikCert: bytes, * (caCert: bytes) ]
                        ) //
                        (
                            alg:  COSEAlgorithmIdentifier, (-260 for ED256 / -261 for ED512)
                            ecdaaKeyId: bytes
                        ),
                        sig: bytes,
                        certInfo: bytes,
                        pubArea: bytes
                    }

The semantics of the above fields are as follows:

ver

The version of the TPM specification to which the signature conforms.

alg

A COSEAlgorithmIdentifier containing the identifier of the algorithm used to generate the attestation signature.

x5c

aikCert followed by its certificate chain, in X.509 encoding.

aikCert

The AIK certificate used for the attestation, in X.509 encoding.

ecdaaKeyId

The identifier of the ECDAA-Issuer public key. This is the BigNumberToB encoding of the component "c" as defined section 3.3, step 3.5 in [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm].

sig

The attestation signature, in the form of a TPMT_SIGNATURE structure as specified in [TPMv2-Part2] section 11.3.4.

certInfo

The TPMS_ATTEST structure over which the above signature was computed, as specified in [TPMv2-Part2] section 10.12.8.

pubArea

The TPMT_PUBLIC structure (see [TPMv2-Part2] section 12.2.4) used by the TPM to represent the credential public key.

Signing procedure

Let authenticatorData denote the authenticator data for the attestation, and let clientDataHash denote the hash of the serialized client data.

Concatenate authenticatorData and clientDataHash to form attToBeSigned.

Generate a signature using the procedure specified in [TPMv2-Part3] Section 18.2, using the attestation private key and setting the extraData parameter to the digest of attToBeSigned using the hash algorithm corresponding to the "alg" signature algorithm. (For the "RS256" algorithm, this would be a SHA-256 digest.)

Set the pubArea field to the public area of the credential public key, the certInfo field to the output parameter of the same name, and the sig field to the signature obtained from the above procedure.

Verification procedure

Given the verification procedure inputs attStmt, authenticatorData and clientDataHash, the verification procedure is as follows:

Verify that attStmt is valid CBOR conforming to the syntax defined above and perform CBOR decoding on it to extract the contained fields.

Verify that the public key specified by the parameters and unique fields of pubArea is identical to the credentialPublicKey in the attestedCredentialData in authenticatorData.

Concatenate authenticatorData and clientDataHash to form attToBeSigned.

Validate that certInfo is valid:

  • Verify that magic is set to TPM_GENERATED_VALUE.

  • Verify that type is set to TPM_ST_ATTEST_CERTIFY.

  • Verify that extraData is set to the hash of attToBeSigned using the hash algorithm employed in "alg".

  • Verify that attested contains a TPMS_CERTIFY_INFO structure as specified in [TPMv2-Part2] section 10.12.3, whose name field contains a valid Name for pubArea, as computed using the algorithm in the nameAlg field of pubArea using the procedure specified in [TPMv2-Part1] section 16.

  • Note that the remaining fields in the "Standard Attestation Structure" [TPMv2-Part1] section 31.2, i.e., qualifiedSigner, clockInfo and firmwareVersion are ignored. These fields MAY be used as an input to risk engines.

If x5c is present, this indicates that the attestation type is not ECDAA. In this case:

If ecdaaKeyId is present, then the attestation type is ECDAA.

8.3.1. TPM Attestation Statement Certificate Requirements

TPM attestation certificate MUST have the following fields/extensions:

8.4. Android Key Attestation Statement Format

When the authenticator in question is a platform-provided Authenticator on the Android "N" or later platform, the attestation statement is based on the Android key attestation. In these cases, the attestation statement is produced by a component running in a secure operating environment, but the authenticator data for the attestation is produced outside this environment. The WebAuthn Relying Party is expected to check that the authenticator data claimed to have been used for the attestation is consistent with the fields of the attestation certificate’s extension data.

Attestation statement format identifier

android-key

Attestation types supported

Basic

Syntax

An Android key attestation statement consists simply of the Android attestation statement, which is a series of DER encoded X.509 certificates. See the Android developer documentation. Its syntax is defined as follows:

    $$attStmtType //= (
                          fmt: "android-key",
                          attStmt: androidStmtFormat
                      )

    androidStmtFormat = {
                          alg: COSEAlgorithmIdentifier,
                          sig: bytes,
                          x5c: [ credCert: bytes, * (caCert: bytes) ]
                        }

Signing procedure

Let authenticatorData denote the authenticator data for the attestation, and let clientDataHash denote the hash of the serialized client data.

Request an Android Key Attestation by calling keyStore.getCertificateChain(myKeyUUID) providing clientDataHash as the challenge value (e.g., by using setAttestationChallenge). Set x5c to the returned value.

The authenticator produces sig by concatenating authenticatorData and clientDataHash, and signing the result using the credential private key. It sets alg to the algorithm of the signature format.

Verification procedure

Given the verification procedure inputs attStmt, authenticatorData and clientDataHash, the verification procedure is as follows:

  • Verify that attStmt is valid CBOR conforming to the syntax defined above and perform CBOR decoding on it to extract the contained fields.

  • Verify that sig is a valid signature over the concatenation of authenticatorData and clientDataHash using the public key in the first certificate in x5c with the algorithm specified in alg.

  • Verify that the public key in the first certificate in x5c matches the credentialPublicKey in the attestedCredentialData in authenticatorData.

  • Verify that the attestationChallenge field in the attestation certificate extension data is identical to clientDataHash.

  • Verify the following using the appropriate authorization list from the attestation certificate extension data:

    • The AuthorizationList.allApplications field is not present on either authorization list (softwareEnforced nor teeEnforced), since PublicKeyCredential MUST be scoped to the RP ID.

    • For the following, use only the teeEnforced authorization list if the RP wants to accept only keys from a trusted execution environment, otherwise use the union of teeEnforced and softwareEnforced.

      • The value in the AuthorizationList.origin field is equal to KM_ORIGIN_GENERATED.

      • The value in the AuthorizationList.purpose field is equal to KM_PURPOSE_SIGN.

  • If successful, return implementation-specific values representing attestation type Basic and attestation trust path x5c.

8.4.1. Android Key Attestation Statement Certificate Requirements

Android Key Attestation attestation certificate's android key attestation certificate extension data is identified by the OID "1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.1.17".

8.5. Android SafetyNet Attestation Statement Format

When the authenticator in question is a platform-provided Authenticator on certain Android platforms, the attestation statement is based on the SafetyNet API. In this case the authenticator data is completely controlled by the caller of the SafetyNet API (typically an application running on the Android platform) and the attestation statement only provides some statements about the health of the platform and the identity of the calling application. This attestation does not provide information regarding provenance of the authenticator and its associated data. Therefore platform-provided authenticators SHOULD make use of the Android Key Attestation when available, even if the SafetyNet API is also present.

Attestation statement format identifier

android-safetynet

Attestation types supported

Basic

Syntax

The syntax of an Android Attestation statement is defined as follows:

    $$attStmtType //= (
                          fmt: "android-safetynet",
                          attStmt: safetynetStmtFormat
                      )

    safetynetStmtFormat = {
                              ver: text,
                              response: bytes
                          }

The semantics of the above fields are as follows:

ver

The version number of Google Play Services responsible for providing the SafetyNet API.

response

The UTF-8 encoded result of the getJwsResult() call of the SafetyNet API. This value is a JWS [RFC7515] object (see SafetyNet online documentation) in Compact Serialization.

Signing procedure

Let authenticatorData denote the authenticator data for the attestation, and let clientDataHash denote the hash of the serialized client data.

Concatenate authenticatorData and clientDataHash, perform SHA-256 hash of the concatenated string, and let the result of the hash form attToBeSigned.

Request a SafetyNet attestation, providing attToBeSigned as the nonce value. Set response to the result, and ver to the version of Google Play Services running in the authenticator.

Verification procedure

Given the verification procedure inputs attStmt, authenticatorData and clientDataHash, the verification procedure is as follows:

  • Verify that attStmt is valid CBOR conforming to the syntax defined above and perform CBOR decoding on it to extract the contained fields.

  • Verify that response is a valid SafetyNet response of version ver.

  • Verify that the nonce in the response is identical to the Base64 encoding of the SHA-256 hash of the concatenation of authenticatorData and clientDataHash.

  • Let attestationCert be the attestation certificate.

  • Verify that attestationCert is issued to the hostname "attest.android.com" (see SafetyNet online documentation).

  • Verify that the ctsProfileMatch attribute in the payload of response is true.

  • If successful, return implementation-specific values representing attestation type Basic and attestation trust path attestationCert.

8.6. FIDO U2F Attestation Statement Format

This attestation statement format is used with FIDO U2F authenticators using the formats defined in [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats].

Attestation statement format identifier

fido-u2f

Attestation types supported

Basic, AttCA

Syntax

The syntax of a FIDO U2F attestation statement is defined as follows:

    $$attStmtType //= (
                          fmt: "fido-u2f",
                          attStmt: u2fStmtFormat
                      )

    u2fStmtFormat = {
                        x5c: [ attestnCert: bytes ],
                        sig: bytes
                    }

The semantics of the above fields are as follows:

x5c

A single element array containing the attestation certificate in X.509 format.

sig

The attestation signature. The signature was calculated over the (raw) U2F registration response message [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats] received by the client from the authenticator.

Signing procedure

If the credential public key of the given credential is not of algorithm -7 ("ES256"), stop and return an error. Otherwise, let authenticatorData denote the authenticator data for the attestation, and let clientDataHash denote the hash of the serialized client data. (Since SHA-256 is used to hash the serialized client data, clientDataHash will be 32 bytes long.)

Generate a Registration Response Message as specified in [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats] Section 4.3, with the application parameter set to the SHA-256 hash of the RP ID that the given credential is scoped to, the challenge parameter set to clientDataHash, and the key handle parameter set to the credential ID of the given credential. Set the raw signature part of this Registration Response Message (i.e., without the user public key, key handle, and attestation certificates) as sig and set the attestation certificates of the attestation public key as x5c.

Verification procedure

Given the verification procedure inputs attStmt, authenticatorData and clientDataHash, the verification procedure is as follows:

  1. Verify that attStmt is valid CBOR conforming to the syntax defined above and perform CBOR decoding on it to extract the contained fields.

  2. Check that x5c has exactly one element and let attCert be that element. Let certificate public key be the public key conveyed by attCert. If certificate public key is not an Elliptic Curve (EC) public key over the P-256 curve, terminate this algorithm and return an appropriate error.

  3. Extract the claimed rpIdHash from authenticatorData, and the claimed credentialId and credentialPublicKey from authenticatorData.attestedCredentialData.

  4. Convert the COSE_KEY formatted credentialPublicKey (see Section 7 of [RFC8152]) to Raw ANSI X9.62 public key format (see ALG_KEY_ECC_X962_RAW in Section 3.6.2 Public Key Representation Formats of [FIDO-Registry]).

    • Let x be the value corresponding to the "-2" key (representing x coordinate) in credentialPublicKey, and confirm its size to be of 32 bytes. If size differs or "-2" key is not found, terminate this algorithm and return an appropriate error.

    • Let y be the value corresponding to the "-3" key (representing y coordinate) in credentialPublicKey, and confirm its size to be of 32 bytes. If size differs or "-3" key is not found, terminate this algorithm and return an appropriate error.

    • Let publicKeyU2F be the concatenation 0x04 || x || y.

      Note: This signifies uncompressed ECC key format.

  5. Let verificationData be the concatenation of (0x00 || rpIdHash || clientDataHash || credentialId || publicKeyU2F) (see Section 4.3 of [FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats]).

  6. Verify the sig using verificationData and certificate public key per [SEC1].

  7. Optionally, inspect x5c and consult externally provided knowledge to determine whether attStmt conveys a Basic or AttCA attestation.

  8. If successful, return implementation-specific values representing attestation type Basic, AttCA or uncertainty, and attestation trust path x5c.

8.7. None Attestation Statement Format

The none attestation statement format is used to replace any authenticator-provided attestation statement when a WebAuthn Relying Party indicates it does not wish to receive attestation information, see §5.4.6 Attestation Conveyance Preference Enumeration (enum AttestationConveyancePreference).

Attestation statement format identifier

none

Attestation types supported

None

Syntax

The syntax of a none attestation statement is defined as follows:

    $$attStmtType //= (
                          fmt: "none",
                          attStmt: emptyMap
                      )

    emptyMap = {}
Signing procedure

Return the fixed attestation statement defined above.

Verification procedure

Return implementation-specific values representing attestation type None and an empty attestation trust path.

9. WebAuthn Extensions

The mechanism for generating public key credentials, as well as requesting and generating Authentication assertions, as defined in §5 Web Authentication API, can be extended to suit particular use cases. Each case is addressed by defining a registration extension and/or an authentication extension.

Every extension is a client extension, meaning that the extension involves communication with and processing by the client. Client extensions define the following steps and data:

When creating a public key credential or requesting an authentication assertion, a WebAuthn Relying Party can request the use of a set of extensions. These extensions will be invoked during the requested operation if they are supported by the client and/or the authenticator. The Relying Party sends the client extension input for each extension in the get() call (for authentication extensions) or create() call (for registration extensions) to the client. The client performs client extension processing for each extension that the client platform supports, and augments the client data as specified by each extension, by including the extension identifier and client extension output values.

An extension can also be an authenticator extension, meaning that the extension involves communication with and processing by the authenticator. Authenticator extensions define the following steps and data:

For authenticator extensions, as part of the client extension processing, the client also creates the CBOR authenticator extension input value for each extension (often based on the corresponding client extension input value), and passes them to the authenticator in the create() call (for registration extensions) or the get() call (for authentication extensions). These authenticator extension input values are represented in CBOR and passed as name-value pairs, with the extension identifier as the name, and the corresponding authenticator extension input as the value. The authenticator, in turn, performs additional processing for the extensions that it supports, and returns the CBOR authenticator extension output for each as specified by the extension. Part of the client extension processing for authenticator extensions is to use the authenticator extension output as an input to creating the client extension output.

All WebAuthn extensions are OPTIONAL for both clients and authenticators. Thus, any extensions requested by a Relying Party MAY be ignored by the client browser or OS and not passed to the authenticator at all, or they MAY be ignored by the authenticator. Ignoring an extension is never considered a failure in WebAuthn API processing, so when Relying Parties include extensions with any API calls, they MUST be prepared to handle cases where some or all of those extensions are ignored.

Clients wishing to support the widest possible range of extensions MAY choose to pass through any extensions that they do not recognize to authenticators, generating the authenticator extension input by simply encoding the client extension input in CBOR. All WebAuthn extensions MUST be defined in such a way that this implementation choice does not endanger the user’s security or privacy. For instance, if an extension requires client processing, it could be defined in a manner that ensures such a naïve pass-through will produce a semantically invalid authenticator extension input value, resulting in the extension being ignored by the authenticator. Since all extensions are OPTIONAL, this will not cause a functional failure in the API operation. Likewise, clients can choose to produce a client extension output value for an extension that it does not understand by encoding the authenticator extension output value into JSON, provided that the CBOR output uses only types present in JSON.

When clients choose to pass through extensions they do not recognize, the JavaScript values in the client extension inputs are converted to CBOR values in the authenticator extension inputs. When the JavaScript value is an %ArrayBuffer%, it is converted to a CBOR byte array. When the JavaScript value is a non-integer number, it is converted to a 64-bit CBOR floating point number. Otherwise, when the JavaScript type corresponds to a JSON type, the conversion is done using the rules defined in Section 4.2 of [RFC7049] (Converting from JSON to CBOR), but operating on inputs of JavaScript type values rather than inputs of JSON type values. Once these conversions are done, canonicalization of the resulting CBOR MUST be performed using the CTAP2 canonical CBOR encoding form.

Likewise, when clients receive outputs from extensions they have passed through that they do not recognize, the CBOR values in the authenticator extension outputs are converted to JavaScript values in the client extension outputs. When the CBOR value is a byte string, it is converted to a JavaScript %ArrayBuffer% (rather than a base64url-encoded string). Otherwise, when the CBOR type corresponds to a JSON type, the conversion is done using the rules defined in Section 4.1 of [RFC7049] (Converting from CBOR to JSON), but producing outputs of JavaScript type values rather than outputs of JSON type values.

Note that some clients may choose to implement this pass-through capability under a feature flag. Supporting this capability can facilitate innovation, allowing authenticators to experiment with new extensions and Relying Parties to use them before there is explicit support for them in clients.

The IANA "WebAuthn Extension Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries] can be consulted for an up-to-date list of registered WebAuthn Extensions.

9.1. Extension Identifiers

Extensions are identified by a string, called an extension identifier, chosen by the extension author.

Extension identifiers SHOULD be registered per [WebAuthn-Registries] "Registries for Web Authentication (WebAuthn)". All registered extension identifiers are unique amongst themselves as a matter of course.

Unregistered extension identifiers SHOULD aim to be globally unique, e.g., by including the defining entity such as myCompany_extension.

All extension identifiers MUST be a maximum of 32 octets in length and MUST consist only of printable USASCII characters, excluding backslash and doublequote, i.e., VCHAR as defined in [RFC5234] but without %x22 and %x5c. Implementations MUST match WebAuthn extension identifiers in a case-sensitive fashion.

Extensions that may exist in multiple versions should take care to include a version in their identifier. In effect, different versions are thus treated as different extensions, e.g., myCompany_extension_01

§10 Defined Extensions defines an initial set of extensions and their identifiers. See the IANA "WebAuthn Extension Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries] for an up-to-date list of registered WebAuthn Extension Identifiers.

9.2. Defining Extensions

A definition of an extension MUST specify an extension identifier, a client extension input argument to be sent via the get() or create() call, the client extension processing rules, and a client extension output value. If the extension communicates with the authenticator (meaning it is an authenticator extension), it MUST also specify the CBOR authenticator extension input argument sent via the authenticatorGetAssertion or authenticatorMakeCredential call, the authenticator extension processing rules, and the CBOR authenticator extension output value.

Any client extension that is processed by the client MUST return a client extension output value so that the WebAuthn Relying Party knows that the extension was honored by the client. Similarly, any extension that requires authenticator processing MUST return an authenticator extension output to let the Relying Party know that the extension was honored by the authenticator. If an extension does not otherwise require any result values, it SHOULD be defined as returning a JSON Boolean client extension output result, set to true to signify that the extension was understood and processed. Likewise, any authenticator extension that does not otherwise require any result values MUST return a value and SHOULD return a CBOR Boolean authenticator extension output result, set to true to signify that the extension was understood and processed.

9.3. Extending Request Parameters

An extension defines one or two request arguments. The client extension input, which is a value that can be encoded in JSON, is passed from the WebAuthn Relying Party to the client in the get() or create() call, while the CBOR authenticator extension input is passed from the client to the authenticator for authenticator extensions during the processing of these calls.

A Relying Party simultaneously requests the use of an extension and sets its client extension input by including an entry in the extensions option to the create() or get() call. The entry key is the extension identifier and the value is the client extension input.

var assertionPromise = navigator.credentials.get({
    publicKey: {
        // The challenge is produced by the server; see the Security Considerations
        challenge: new Uint8Array([4,99,22 /* 29 more random bytes generated by the server */]),
        extensions: {
            "webauthnExample_foobar": 42
        }
    }
});

Extension definitions MUST specify the valid values for their client extension input. Clients SHOULD ignore extensions with an invalid client extension input. If an extension does not require any parameters from the Relying Party, it SHOULD be defined as taking a Boolean client argument, set to true to signify that the extension is requested by the Relying Party.

Extensions that only affect client processing need not specify authenticator extension input. Extensions that have authenticator processing MUST specify the method of computing the authenticator extension input from the client extension input. For extensions that do not require input parameters and are defined as taking a Boolean client extension input value set to true, this method SHOULD consist of passing an authenticator extension input value of true (CBOR major type 7, value 21).

Note: Extensions should aim to define authenticator arguments that are as small as possible. Some authenticators communicate over low-bandwidth links such as Bluetooth Low-Energy or NFC.

9.4. Client Extension Processing

Extensions MAY define additional processing requirements on the client during the creation of credentials or the generation of an assertion. The client extension input for the extension is used as an input to this client processing. For each supported client extension, the client adds an entry to the clientExtensions map with the extension identifier as the key, and the extension’s client extension input as the value.

Likewise, the client extension outputs are represented as a dictionary in the result of getClientExtensionResults() with extension identifiers as keys, and the client extension output value of each extension as the value. Like the client extension input, the client extension output is a value that can be encoded in JSON. There MUST NOT be any values returned for ignored extensions.

Extensions that require authenticator processing MUST define the process by which the client extension input can be used to determine the CBOR authenticator extension input and the process by which the CBOR authenticator extension output can be used to determine the client extension output.

9.5. Authenticator Extension Processing

The CBOR authenticator extension input value of each processed authenticator extension is included in the extensions parameter of the authenticatorMakeCredential and authenticatorGetAssertion operations. The extensions parameter is a CBOR map where each key is an extension identifier and the corresponding value is the authenticator extension input for that extension.

Likewise, the extension output is represented in the extensions part of the authenticator data. The extensions part of the authenticator data is a CBOR map where each key is an extension identifier and the corresponding value is the authenticator extension output for that extension.

For each supported extension, the authenticator extension processing rule for that extension is used create the authenticator extension output from the authenticator extension input and possibly also other inputs. There MUST NOT be any values returned for ignored extensions.

10. Defined Extensions

This section defines the initial set of extensions to be registered in the IANA "WebAuthn Extension Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries]. These MAY be implemented by user agents targeting broad interoperability.

10.1. FIDO AppID Extension (appid)

This extension allows WebAuthn Relying Parties that have previously registered a credential using the legacy FIDO JavaScript APIs to request an assertion. The FIDO APIs use an alternative identifier for Relying Parties called an AppID [FIDO-APPID], and any credentials created using those APIs will be scoped to that identifier. Without this extension, they would need to be re-registered in order to be scoped to an RP ID.

This extension does not allow FIDO-compatible credentials to be created. Thus, credentials created with WebAuthn are not backwards compatible with the FIDO JavaScript APIs.

Extension identifier

appid

Operation applicability

Authentication

Client extension input

A single USVString specifying a FIDO AppID.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  USVString appid;
};
Client extension processing
  1. Let facetId be the result of passing the caller’s origin to the FIDO algorithm for determining the FacetID of a calling application.

  2. Let appId be the extension input.

  3. Let output be the Boolean value false.

  4. Pass facetId and appId to the FIDO algorithm for determining if a caller’s FacetID is authorized for an AppID. If that algorithm rejects appId then return a "SecurityError" DOMException.

  5. When building allowCredentialDescriptorList, if a U2F authenticator indicates that a credential is inapplicable (i.e. by returning SW_WRONG_DATA) then the client MUST retry with the U2F application parameter set to the SHA-256 hash of appId. If this results in an applicable credential, the client MUST include the credential in allowCredentialDescriptorList and set output to true. The value of appId then replaces the rpId parameter of authenticatorGetAssertion.

Note: In practice, several implementations do not implement steps four and onward of the algorithm for determining if a caller’s FacetID is authorized for an AppID. Instead, in step three, the comparison on the host is relaxed to accept hosts on the same site.

Client extension output

Returns the value of output. If true, the AppID was used and thus, when verifying an assertion, the Relying Party MUST expect the rpIdHash to be the hash of the AppID, not the RP ID.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  boolean appid;
};
Authenticator extension input

None.

Authenticator extension processing

None.

Authenticator extension output

None.

10.2. Simple Transaction Authorization Extension (txAuthSimple)

This extension allows for a simple form of transaction authorization. A Relying Party can specify a prompt string, intended for display on a trusted device on the authenticator.

Extension identifier

txAuthSimple

Operation applicability

Authentication

Client extension input

A single USVString prompt.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  USVString txAuthSimple;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns the authenticator extension output string UTF-8 decoded into a USVString.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  USVString txAuthSimple;
};
Authenticator extension input

The client extension input encoded as a CBOR text string (major type 3).

CDDL:
txAuthSimpleInput = (tstr)
Authenticator extension processing

The authenticator MUST display the prompt to the user before performing either user verification or test of user presence. The authenticator MAY insert line breaks if needed.

Authenticator extension output

A single CBOR string, representing the prompt as displayed (including any eventual line breaks).

CDDL:
txAuthSimpleOutput = (tstr)

10.3. Generic Transaction Authorization Extension (txAuthGeneric)

This extension allows images to be used as transaction authorization prompts as well. This allows authenticators without a font rendering engine to be used and also supports a richer visual appearance.

Extension identifier

txAuthGeneric

Operation applicability

Authentication

Client extension input

A JavaScript object defined as follows:

dictionary txAuthGenericArg {
    required USVString contentType;    // MIME-Type of the content, e.g., "image/png"
    required ArrayBuffer content;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  txAuthGenericArg txAuthGeneric;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns the authenticator extension output value as an ArrayBuffer.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  ArrayBuffer txAuthGeneric;
};
Authenticator extension input

The client extension input encoded as a CBOR map.

Authenticator extension processing

The authenticator MUST display the content to the user before performing either user verification or test of user presence. The authenticator MAY add other information below the content. No changes are allowed to the content itself, i.e., inside content boundary box.

Authenticator extension output

The hash value of the content which was displayed. The authenticator MUST use the same hash algorithm as it uses for the signature itself.

10.4. Authenticator Selection Extension (authnSel)

This extension allows a WebAuthn Relying Party to guide the selection of the authenticator that will be leveraged when creating the credential. It is intended primarily for Relying Parties that wish to tightly control the experience around credential creation.

Extension identifier

authnSel

Operation applicability

Registration

Client extension input

A sequence of AAGUIDs:

typedef sequence<AAGUID> AuthenticatorSelectionList;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  AuthenticatorSelectionList authnSel;
};

Each AAGUID corresponds to an authenticator model that is acceptable to the Relying Party for this credential creation. The list is ordered by decreasing preference.

An AAGUID is defined as an array containing the globally unique identifier of the authenticator model being sought.

typedef BufferSource      AAGUID;
Client extension processing

If the client supports the Authenticator Selection Extension, it MUST use the first available authenticator whose AAGUID is present in the AuthenticatorSelectionList. If none of the available authenticators match a provided AAGUID, the client MUST select an authenticator from among the available authenticators to generate the credential.

Client extension output

Returns the value true to indicate to the Relying Party that the extension was acted upon.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  boolean authnSel;
};
Authenticator extension input

None.

Authenticator extension processing

None.

Authenticator extension output

None.

10.5. Supported Extensions Extension (exts)

This extension enables the WebAuthn Relying Party to determine which extensions the authenticator supports.

Extension identifier

exts

Operation applicability

Registration

Client extension input

The Boolean value true to indicate that this extension is requested by the Relying Party.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean exts;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns the list of supported extensions as an array of extension identifier strings.

typedef sequence<USVString> AuthenticationExtensionsSupported;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  AuthenticationExtensionsSupported exts;
};
Authenticator extension input

The Boolean value true, encoded in CBOR (major type 7, value 21).

Authenticator extension processing

The authenticator sets the authenticator extension output to be a list of extensions that the authenticator supports, as defined below. This extension can be added to attestation objects.

Authenticator extension output

The SupportedExtensions extension is a list (CBOR array) of extension identifier (UTF-8 encoded) strings.

10.6. User Verification Index Extension (uvi)

This extension enables use of a user verification index.

Extension identifier

uvi

Operation applicability

Registration and Authentication

Client extension input

The Boolean value true to indicate that this extension is requested by the Relying Party.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean uvi;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns the authenticator extension output as an ArrayBuffer.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  ArrayBuffer uvi;
};
Authenticator extension input

The Boolean value true, encoded in CBOR (major type 7, value 21).

Authenticator extension processing

The authenticator sets the authenticator extension output to be a user verification index indicating the method used by the user to authorize the operation, as defined below. This extension can be added to attestation objects and assertions.

Authenticator extension output

The user verification index (UVI) is a value uniquely identifying a user verification data record. The UVI is encoded as CBOR byte string (type 0x58). Each UVI value MUST be specific to the related key (in order to provide unlinkability). It also MUST contain sufficient entropy that makes guessing impractical. UVI values MUST NOT be reused by the Authenticator (for other biometric data or users).

The UVI data can be used by servers to understand whether an authentication was authorized by the exact same biometric data as the initial key generation. This allows the detection and prevention of "friendly fraud".

As an example, the UVI could be computed as SHA256(KeyID || SHA256(rawUVI)), where || represents concatenation, and the rawUVI reflects (a) the biometric reference data, (b) the related OS level user ID and (c) an identifier which changes whenever a factory reset is performed for the authenticator, e.g. rawUVI = biometricReferenceData || OSLevelUserID || FactoryResetCounter.

Example of authenticator data containing one UVI extension

...                                         -- RP ID hash (32 bytes)
81                                          -- UP and ED set
00 00 00 01                                 -- (initial) signature counter
...                                         -- all public key alg etc.
A1                                          -- extension: CBOR map of one element
    63                                      -- Key 1: CBOR text string of 3 bytes
        75 76 69                            -- "uvi" [=UTF-8 encoded=] string
    58 20                                   -- Value 1: CBOR byte string with 0x20 bytes
        43 B8 E3 BE 27 95 8C 28             -- the UVI value itself
        D5 74 BF 46 8A 85 CF 46
        9A 14 F0 E5 16 69 31 DA
        4B CF FF C1 BB 11 32 82

10.7. Location Extension (loc)

This extension provides the authenticator's current location to the WebAuthn WebAuthn Relying Party.

Extension identifier

loc

Operation applicability

Registration and Authentication

Client extension input

The Boolean value true to indicate that this extension is requested by the Relying Party.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean loc;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns a JavaScript object that encodes the location information in the authenticator extension output as a Coordinates value, as defined by [Geolocation-API].

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  Coordinates loc;
};
Authenticator extension input

The Boolean value true, encoded in CBOR (major type 7, value 21).

Authenticator extension processing

Determine the Geolocation value.

Authenticator extension output

A [Geolocation-API] Coordinates record encoded as a CBOR map. Values represented by the "double" type in JavaScript are represented as 64-bit CBOR floating point numbers. Per the Geolocation specification, the "latitude", "longitude", and "accuracy" values are REQUIRED and other values such as "altitude" are OPTIONAL.

10.8. User Verification Method Extension (uvm)

This extension enables use of a user verification method.

Extension identifier

uvm

Operation applicability

Registration and Authentication

Client extension input

The Boolean value true to indicate that this extension is requested by the Relying Party.

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean uvm;
};
Client extension processing

None, except creating the authenticator extension input from the client extension input.

Client extension output

Returns a JSON array of 3-element arrays of numbers that encodes the factors in the authenticator extension output.

typedef sequence<unsigned long> UvmEntry;
typedef sequence<UvmEntry> UvmEntries;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  UvmEntries uvm;
};
Authenticator extension input

The Boolean value true, encoded in CBOR (major type 7, value 21).

Authenticator extension processing

The authenticator sets the authenticator extension output to be one or more user verification methods indicating the method(s) used by the user to authorize the operation, as defined below. This extension can be added to attestation objects and assertions.

Authenticator extension output

Authenticators can report up to 3 different user verification methods (factors) used in a single authentication instance, using the CBOR syntax defined below:

    uvmFormat = [ 1*3 uvmEntry ]
    uvmEntry = [
                   userVerificationMethod: uint .size 4,
                   keyProtectionType: uint .size 2,
                   matcherProtectionType: uint .size 2
               ]

The semantics of the fields in each uvmEntry are as follows:

userVerificationMethod

The authentication method/factor used by the authenticator to verify the user. Available values are defined in Section 3.1 User Verification Methods of [FIDO-Registry].

keyProtectionType

The method used by the authenticator to protect the FIDO registration private key material. Available values are defined in Section 3.2 Key Protection Types of [FIDO-Registry].

matcherProtectionType

The method used by the authenticator to protect the matcher that performs user verification. Available values are defined in Section 3.3 Matcher Protection Types of [FIDO-Registry].

If >3 factors can be used in an authentication instance the authenticator vendor MUST select the 3 factors it believes will be most relevant to the Server to include in the UVM.

Example for authenticator data containing one UVM extension for a multi-factor authentication instance where 2 factors were used:

...                    -- RP ID hash (32 bytes)
81                     -- UP and ED set
00 00 00 01            -- (initial) signature counter
...                    -- all public key alg etc.
A1                     -- extension: CBOR map of one element
    63                 -- Key 1: CBOR text string of 3 bytes
        75 76 6d       -- "uvm" [=UTF-8 encoded=] string
    82                 -- Value 1: CBOR array of length 2 indicating two factor usage
        83              -- Item 1: CBOR array of length 3
            02           -- Subitem 1: CBOR integer for User Verification Method Fingerprint
            04           -- Subitem 2: CBOR short for Key Protection Type TEE
            02           -- Subitem 3: CBOR short for Matcher Protection Type TEE
        83              -- Item 2: CBOR array of length 3
            04           -- Subitem 1: CBOR integer for User Verification Method Passcode
            01           -- Subitem 2: CBOR short for Key Protection Type Software
            01           -- Subitem 3: CBOR short for Matcher Protection Type Software

10.9. Biometric Authenticator Performance Bounds Extension (biometricPerfBounds)

This extension allows WebAuthn Relying Parties to specify the desired performance bounds for selecting biometric authenticators as candidates to be employed in a registration ceremony.

Extension identifier

biometricPerfBounds

Operation applicability

Registration

Client extension input

Biometric performance bounds:

dictionary authenticatorBiometricPerfBounds{
    float FAR;
    float FRR;
    };

The FAR is the maximum false acceptance rate for a biometric authenticator allowed by the Relying Party.

The FRR is the maximum false rejection rate for a biometric authenticator allowed by the Relying Party.

Client extension processing

If the client supports this extension, it MUST NOT use a biometric authenticator whose FAR or FRR does not match the bounds as provided. The client can obtain information about the biometric authenticator’s performance from authoritative sources such as the FIDO Metadata Service [FIDOMetadataService] (see Sec. 3.2 of [FIDOUAFAuthenticatorMetadataStatements]).

Client extension output

Returns the JSON value true to indicate to the Relying Party that the extension was acted upon

Authenticator extension input

None.

Authenticator extension processing

None.

Authenticator extension output

None.

11. IANA Considerations

11.1. WebAuthn Attestation Statement Format Identifier Registrations

This section registers the attestation statement formats defined in Section §8 Defined Attestation Statement Formats in the IANA "WebAuthn Attestation Statement Format Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries].

11.2. WebAuthn Extension Identifier Registrations

This section registers the extension identifier values defined in Section §9 WebAuthn Extensions in the IANA "WebAuthn Extension Identifier" registry established by [WebAuthn-Registries].

11.3. COSE Algorithm Registrations

This section registers identifiers for the following ECDAA algorithms in the IANA COSE Algorithms registry [IANA-COSE-ALGS-REG]. Note that [WebAuthn-COSE-Algs] also registers RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5 [RFC8017] algorithms using SHA-2 and SHA-1 hash functions in the IANA COSE Algorithms registry [IANA-COSE-ALGS-REG], such as registering -257 for "RS256".

12. Sample Scenarios

This section is not normative.

In this section, we walk through some events in the lifecycle of a public key credential, along with the corresponding sample code for using this API. Note that this is an example flow and does not limit the scope of how the API can be used.

As was the case in earlier sections, this flow focuses on a use case involving a first-factor roaming authenticator with its own display. One example of such an authenticator would be a smart phone. Other authenticator types are also supported by this API, subject to implementation by the client platform. For instance, this flow also works without modification for the case of an authenticator that is embedded in the client device. The flow also works for the case of an authenticator without its own display (similar to a smart card) subject to specific implementation considerations. Specifically, the client platform needs to display any prompts that would otherwise be shown by the authenticator, and the authenticator needs to allow the client platform to enumerate all the authenticator’s credentials so that the client can have information to show appropriate prompts.

12.1. Registration

This is the first-time flow, in which a new credential is created and registered with the server. In this flow, the WebAuthn Relying Party does not have a preference for platform authenticator or roaming authenticators.

  1. The user visits example.com, which serves up a script. At this point, the user may already be logged in using a legacy username and password, or additional authenticator, or other means acceptable to the Relying Party. Or the user may be in the process of creating a new account.

  2. The Relying Party script runs the code snippet below.

  3. The client platform searches for and locates the authenticator.

  4. The client connects to the authenticator, performing any pairing actions if necessary.

  5. The authenticator shows appropriate UI for the user to select the authenticator on which the new credential will be created, and obtains a biometric or other authorization gesture from the user.

  6. The authenticator returns a response to the client, which in turn returns a response to the Relying Party script. If the user declined to select an authenticator or provide authorization, an appropriate error is returned.

  7. If a new credential was created,

    • The Relying Party script sends the newly generated credential public key to the server, along with additional information such as attestation regarding the provenance and characteristics of the authenticator.

    • The server stores the credential public key in its database and associates it with the user as well as with the characteristics of authentication indicated by attestation, also storing a friendly name for later use.

    • The script may store data such as the credential ID in local storage, to improve future UX by narrowing the choice of credential for the user.

The sample code for generating and registering a new key follows:

if (!window.PublicKeyCredential) { /* Client not capable. Handle error. */ }

var publicKey = {
  // The challenge is produced by the server; see the Security Considerations
  challenge: new Uint8Array([21,31,105 /* 29 more random bytes generated by the server */]),

  // Relying Party:
  rp: {
    name: "ACME Corporation"
  },

  // User:
  user: {
    id: Uint8Array.from(window.atob("MIIBkzCCATigAwIBAjCCAZMwggE4oAMCAQIwggGTMII="), c=>c.charCodeAt(0)),
    name: "alex.p.mueller@example.com",
    displayName: "Alex P. Müller",
    icon: "https://pics.example.com/00/p/aBjjjpqPb.png"
  },

  // This Relying Party will accept either an ES256 or RS256 credential, but
  // prefers an ES256 credential.
  pubKeyCredParams: [
    {
      type: "public-key",
      alg: -7 // "ES256" as registered in the IANA COSE Algorithms registry
    },
    {
      type: "public-key",
      alg: -257 // Value registered by this specification for "RS256"
    }
  ],

  timeout: 60000,  // 1 minute
  excludeCredentials: [], // No exclude list of PKCredDescriptors
  extensions: {"loc": true}  // Include location information
                                           // in attestation
};

// Note: The following call will cause the authenticator to display UI.
navigator.credentials.create({ publicKey })
  .then(function (newCredentialInfo) {
    // Send new credential info to server for verification and registration.
  }).catch(function (err) {
    // No acceptable authenticator or user refused consent. Handle appropriately.
  });

12.2. Registration Specifically with User-Verifying Platform Authenticator

This is flow for when the WebAuthn Relying Party is specifically interested in creating a public key credential with a user-verifying platform authenticator.

  1. The user visits example.com and clicks on the login button, which redirects the user to login.example.com.

  2. The user enters a username and password to log in. After successful login, the user is redirected back to example.com.

  3. The Relying Party script runs the code snippet below.

  4. The user agent asks the user whether they are willing to register with the Relying Party using an available platform authenticator.

  5. If the user is not willing, terminate this flow.

  6. The user is shown appropriate UI and guided in creating a credential using one of the available platform authenticators. Upon successful credential creation, the Relying Party script conveys the new credential to the server.

if (!window.PublicKeyCredential) { /* Client not capable of the API. Handle error. */ }

PublicKeyCredential.isUserVerifyingPlatformAuthenticatorAvailable()
    .then(function (userIntent) {

        // If the user has affirmed willingness to register with the
        // relying party using an available platform authenticator
        if (userIntent) {
            var publicKeyOptions = { /* Public key credential creation options. */};

            // Create and register credentials.
            return navigator.credentials.create({ "publicKey": publicKeyOptions });
        } else {

            // Record that the user does not intend to use a platform authenticator
            // and default the user to a password-based flow in the future.
        }

    }).then(function (newCredentialInfo) {
        // Send new credential info to server for verification and registration.
    }).catch( function(err) {
        // Something went wrong. Handle appropriately.
    });

12.3. Authentication

This is the flow when a user with an already registered credential visits a website and wants to authenticate using the credential.

  1. The user visits example.com, which serves up a script.

  2. The script asks the client for an Authentication Assertion, providing as much information as possible to narrow the choice of acceptable credentials for the user. This can be obtained from the data that was stored locally after registration, or by other means such as prompting the user for a username.

  3. The Relying Party script runs one of the code snippets below.

  4. The client platform searches for and locates the authenticator.

  5. The client connects to the authenticator, performing any pairing actions if necessary.

  6. The authenticator presents the user with a notification that their attention is needed. On opening the notification, the user is shown a friendly selection menu of acceptable credentials using the account information provided when creating the credentials, along with some information on the origin that is requesting these keys.

  7. The authenticator obtains a biometric or other authorization gesture from the user.

  8. The authenticator returns a response to the client, which in turn returns a response to the Relying Party script. If the user declined to select a credential or provide an authorization, an appropriate error is returned.

  9. If an assertion was successfully generated and returned,

    • The script sends the assertion to the server.

    • The server examines the assertion, extracts the credential ID, looks up the registered credential public key it is database, and verifies the assertion’s authentication signature. If valid, it looks up the identity associated with the assertion’s credential ID; that identity is now authenticated. If the credential ID is not recognized by the server (e.g., it has been deregistered due to inactivity) then the authentication has failed; each Relying Party will handle this in its own way.

    • The server now does whatever it would otherwise do upon successful authentication -- return a success page, set authentication cookies, etc.

If the Relying Party script does not have any hints available (e.g., from locally stored data) to help it narrow the list of credentials, then the sample code for performing such an authentication might look like this:

if (!window.PublicKeyCredential) { /* Client not capable. Handle error. */ }

// credentialId is generated by the authenticator and is an opaque random byte array
var credentialId = new Uint8Array([183, 148, 245 /* more random bytes previously generated by the authenticator */]);
var options = {
  // The challenge is produced by the server; see the Security Considerations
  challenge: new Uint8Array([4,101,15 /* 29 more random bytes generated by the server */]),
  timeout: 60000,  // 1 minute
  allowCredentials: [{ type: "public-key", id: credentialId }]
};

navigator.credentials.get({ "publicKey": options })
    .then(function (assertion) {
    // Send assertion to server for verification
}).catch(function (err) {
    // No acceptable credential or user refused consent. Handle appropriately.
});

On the other hand, if the Relying Party script has some hints to help it narrow the list of credentials, then the sample code for performing such an authentication might look like the following. Note that this sample also demonstrates how to use the extension for transaction authorization.

if (!window.PublicKeyCredential) { /* Client not capable. Handle error. */ }

var encoder = new TextEncoder();
var acceptableCredential1 = {
    type: "public-key",
    id: encoder.encode("BA44712732CE")
};
var acceptableCredential2 = {
    type: "public-key",
    id: encoder.encode("BG35122345NF")
};

var options = {
  // The challenge is produced by the server; see the Security Considerations
  challenge: new Uint8Array([8,18,33 /* 29 more random bytes generated by the server */]),
  timeout: 60000,  // 1 minute
  allowCredentials: [acceptableCredential1, acceptableCredential2],
  extensions: { 'txAuthSimple':
     "Wave your hands in the air like you just don’t care" }
};

navigator.credentials.get({ "publicKey": options })
    .then(function (assertion) {
    // Send assertion to server for verification
}).catch(function (err) {
    // No acceptable credential or user refused consent. Handle appropriately.
});

12.4. Aborting Authentication Operations

The below example shows how a developer may use the AbortSignal parameter to abort a credential registration operation. A similar procedure applies to an authentication operation.

const authAbortController = new AbortController();
const authAbortSignal = authAbortController.signal;

authAbortSignal.onabort = function () {
    // Once the page knows the abort started, inform user it is attempting to abort.
}

var options = {
    // A list of options.
}

navigator.credentials.create({
    publicKey: options,
    signal: authAbortSignal})
    .then(function (attestation) {
        // Register the user.
    }).catch(function (error) {
        if (error == "AbortError") {
            // Inform user the credential hasn’t been created.
            // Let the server know a key hasn’t been created.
        }
    });

// Assume widget shows up whenever authentication occurs.
if (widget == "disappear") {
    authAbortController.abort();
}

12.5. Decommissioning

The following are possible situations in which decommissioning a credential might be desired. Note that all of these are handled on the server side and do not need support from the API specified here.

13. Security Considerations

This specification defines a Web API and a cryptographic peer-entity authentication protocol. The Web Authentication API allows Web developers (i.e., "authors") to utilize the Web Authentication protocol in their registration and authentication ceremonies. The entities comprising the Web Authentication protocol endpoints are user-controlled authenticators and a WebAuthn Relying Party's computing environment hosting the Relying Party's web application. In this model, the user agent, together with the WebAuthn Client, comprise an intermediary between authenticators and Relying Parties. Additionally, authenticators can attest to Relying Parties as to their provenance.

At this time, this specification does not feature detailed security considerations. However, the [FIDOSecRef] document provides a security analysis which is overall applicable to this specification. Also, the [FIDOAuthnrSecReqs] document suite provides useful information about authenticator security characteristics.

The below subsections comprise the current Web Authentication-specific security considerations.

13.1. Cryptographic Challenges

As a cryptographic protocol, Web Authentication is dependent upon randomized challenges to avoid replay attacks. Therefore, the values of both PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions.challenge and PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions.challenge MUST be randomly generated by Relying Parties in an environment they trust (e.g., on the server-side), and the returned challenge value in the client’s response MUST match what was generated. This SHOULD be done in a fashion that does not rely upon a client’s behavior, e.g., the Relying Party SHOULD store the challenge temporarily until the operation is complete. Tolerating a mismatch will compromise the security of the protocol.

In order to prevent replay attacks, the challenges MUST contain enough entropy to make guessing them infeasible. Challenges SHOULD therefore be at least 16 bytes long.

13.2. Attestation Security Considerations

13.2.1. Attestation Certificate Hierarchy

A 3-tier hierarchy for attestation certificates is RECOMMENDED (i.e., Attestation Root, Attestation Issuing CA, Attestation Certificate). It is also RECOMMENDED that for each WebAuthn Authenticator device line (i.e., model), a separate issuing CA is used to help facilitate isolating problems with a specific version of an authenticator model.

If the attestation root certificate is not dedicated to a single WebAuthn Authenticator device line (i.e., AAGUID), the AAGUID SHOULD be specified in the attestation certificate itself, so that it can be verified against the authenticator data.

13.2.2. Attestation Certificate and Attestation Certificate CA Compromise

When an intermediate CA or a root CA used for issuing attestation certificates is compromised, WebAuthn authenticator attestation keys are still safe although their certificates can no longer be trusted. A WebAuthn Authenticator manufacturer that has recorded the public attestation keys for their authenticator models can issue new attestation certificates for these keys from a new intermediate CA or from a new root CA. If the root CA changes, the WebAuthn Relying Parties MUST update their trusted root certificates accordingly.

A WebAuthn Authenticator attestation certificate MUST be revoked by the issuing CA if its key has been compromised. A WebAuthn Authenticator manufacturer may need to ship a firmware update and inject new attestation keys and certificates into already manufactured WebAuthn Authenticators, if the exposure was due to a firmware flaw. (The process by which this happens is out of scope for this specification.) If the WebAuthn Authenticator manufacturer does not have this capability, then it may not be possible for Relying Parties to trust any further attestation statements from the affected WebAuthn Authenticators.

If attestation certificate validation fails due to a revoked intermediate attestation CA certificate, and the Relying Party's policy requires rejecting the registration/authentication request in these situations, then it is RECOMMENDED that the Relying Party also un-registers (or marks with a trust level equivalent to "self attestation") public key credentials that were registered after the CA compromise date using an attestation certificate chaining up to the same intermediate CA. It is thus RECOMMENDED that Relying Parties remember intermediate attestation CA certificates during Authenticator registration in order to un-register related public key credentials if the registration was performed after revocation of such certificates.

If an ECDAA attestation key has been compromised, it can be added to the RogueList (i.e., the list of revoked authenticators) maintained by the related ECDAA-Issuer. The Relying Party SHOULD verify whether an authenticator belongs to the RogueList when performing ECDAA-Verify (see section 3.6 in [FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]). For example, the FIDO Metadata Service [FIDOMetadataService] provides one way to access such information.

13.3. Security Benefits for WebAuthn Relying Parties

The main benefits offered to WebAuthn Relying Parties by this specification include:

  1. Users and accounts can be secured using widely compatible, easy-to-use multi-factor authentication.

  2. The Relying Party does not need to provision authenticator hardware to its users. Instead, each user can independently obtain any conforming authenticator and use that same authenticator with any number of Relying Parties. The Relying Party can optionally enforce requirements on authenticators' security properties by inspecting the attestation statements returned from the authenticators.

  3. Registration and authentication ceremonies are resistant to man-in-the-middle attacks.

  4. The Relying Party can automatically support multiple types of user verification - for example PIN, biometrics and/or future methods - with little or no code change, and can let each user decide which they prefer to use via their choice of authenticator.

  5. The Relying Party does not need to store additional secrets in order to gain the above benefits.

As stated in the Conformance section, the Relying Party MUST behave as described in §7 WebAuthn Relying Party Operations to obtain all of the above security benefits. However, one notable use case that departs slightly from this is described in the next section.

13.3.1. Considerations for Self and None Attestation Types and Ignoring Attestation

When registering a new credential, the WebAuthn Relying Party MAY choose to accept an attestation statement of type Self or None, or to not verify the attestation statement. In all of these cases the Relying Party loses much of benefit (3) listed above, but retains the other benefits.

In these cases it is possible for a man-in-the-middle attacker - for example, a malicious client or script - to replace the credential public key to be registered, and subsequently tamper with future authentication assertions scoped for the same Relying Party and passing through the same attacker. Accepting these types of attestation statements therefore constitutes a leap of faith. In cases where registration was accomplished securely, subsequent authentication ceremonies remain resistant to man-in-the-middle attacks, i.e., benefit (3) is retained. Note, however, that such an attack would be easy to detect and very difficult to maintain, since any authentication ceremony that the same attacker does not or cannot tamper with would always fail.

The Relying Party SHOULD consider the above in its threat model when deciding its policy on what attestation types to accept or whether to ignore attestation.

Note: The default attestation type is None, since the above issues will likely not be a major concern in most Relying Parties' threat models. For example, the man-in-the-middle attack described above is more difficult than a man-in-the-middle attack against a Relying Party that only uses conventional password authentication.

13.4. Credential ID Unsigned

The credential ID is not signed. This is not a problem because all that would happen if an authenticator returns the wrong credential ID, or if an attacker intercepts and manipulates the credential ID, is that the WebAuthn Relying Party would not look up the correct credential public key with which to verify the returned signed authenticator data (a.k.a., assertion), and thus the interaction would end in an error.

13.5. Browser Permissions Framework and Extensions

Web Authentication API implementations SHOULD leverage the browser permissions framework as much as possible when obtaining user permissions for certain extensions. An example is the location extension (see §10.7 Location Extension (loc)), implementations of which SHOULD make use of the existing browser permissions framework for the Geolocation API.

13.6. Credential Loss and Key Mobility

This specification defines no protocol for backing up credential private keys, or for sharing them between authenticators. In general, it is expected that a credential private key never leaves the authenticator that created it. Losing an authenticator therefore, in general, means losing all credentials bound to the lost authenticator, which could lock the user out of an account if the user has only one credential registered with the Relying Party. Instead of backing up or sharing private keys, the Web Authentication API allows registering multiple credentials for the same user. For example, a user might register platform credentials on frequently used client devices, and one or more roaming credentials for use as backup and with new or rarely used client devices.

Relying Parties SHOULD allow and encourage users to register multiple credentials to the same account. Relying Parties SHOULD make use of the excludeCredentials and user.id options to ensure that these different credentials are bound to different authenticators.

14. Privacy Considerations

The privacy principles in [FIDO-Privacy-Principles] also apply to this specification.

14.1. De-anonymization Prevention Measures

This section is not normative.

Many aspects of the design of the Web Authentication API are motivated by privacy concerns. The main concern considered in this specification is the protection of the user’s personal identity, i.e., the identification of a human being or a correlation of separate identities as belonging to the same human being. Although the Web Authentication API does not use or provide any form of global identity, the following kinds of potentially correlatable identifiers are used:

Some of the above information is necessarily shared with the Relying Party. The following sections describe the measures taken to prevent malicious Relying Parties from using it to discover a user’s personal identity.

14.2. Anonymous, Scoped, Non-correlatable Public Key Credentials

This section is not normative.

Although Credential IDs and credential public keys are necessarily shared with the WebAuthn Relying Party to enable strong authentication, they are designed to be minimally identifying and not shared between Relying Parties.

Additionally, a client-side-resident public key credential source can optionally include a user handle specified by the Relying Party. The credential can then be used to both identify and authenticate the user. This means that a privacy-conscious Relying Party can allow the user to create an account without a traditional username, further improving non-correlatability between Relying Parties.

14.3. Authenticator-local Biometric Recognition

Biometric authenticators perform the biometric recognition internally in the authenticator - though for platform authenticators the biometric data might also be visible to the client, depending on the implementation. Biometric data is not revealed to the WebAuthn Relying Party; it is used only locally to perform user verification authorizing the creation and registration of, or authentication using, a public key credential. A malicious Relying Party therefore cannot discover the user’s personal identity via biometric data, and a security breach at a Relying Party cannot expose biometric data for an attacker to use for forging logins at other Relying Parties.

In the case where a Relying Party requires biometric recognition, this is performed locally by the biometric authenticator perfoming user verification and then signaling the result by setting the UV flag in the signed assertion response, instead of revealing the biometric data itself to the Relying Party.

14.4. Attestation Privacy

Attestation keys can be used to track users or link various online identities of the same user together. This can be mitigated in several ways, including:

14.5. Registration Ceremony Privacy

In order to protect users from being identified without consent, implementations of the [[Create]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) method need to take care to not leak information that could enable a malicious WebAuthn Relying Party to distinguish between these cases, where "excluded" means that at least one of the credentials listed by the Relying Party in excludeCredentials is bound to the authenticator:

If the above cases are distinguishable, information is leaked by which a malicious Relying Party could identify the user by probing for which credentials are available. For example, one such information leak is if the client returns a failure response as soon as an excluded authenticator becomes available. In this case - especially if the excluded authenticator is a platform authenticator - the Relying Party could detect that the ceremony was canceled before the timeout and before the user could feasibly have canceled it manually, and thus conclude that at least one of the credentials listed in the excludeCredentials parameter is available to the user.

The above is not a concern, however, if the user has consented to create a new credential before a distinguishable error is returned, because in this case the user has confirmed intent to share the information that would be leaked.

14.6. Authentication Ceremony Privacy

In order to protect users from being identified without consent, implementations of the [[DiscoverFromExternalSource]](origin, options, sameOriginWithAncestors) method need to take care to not leak information that could enable a malicious WebAuthn Relying Party to distinguish between these cases, where "named" means that the credential is listed by the Relying Party in allowCredentials:

If the above cases are distinguishable, information is leaked by which a malicious Relying Party could identify the user by probing for which credentials are available. For example, one such information leak is if the client returns a failure response as soon as the user denies consent to proceed with an authentication ceremony. In this case the Relying Party could detect that the ceremony was canceled by the user and not the timeout, and thus conclude that at least one of the credentials listed in the allowCredentials parameter is available to the user.

14.7. Privacy Between Operating System Accounts

If a platform authenticator is included in a client device with a multi-user operating system, the platform authenticator and client device SHOULD work together to ensure that the existence of any platform credential is revealed only to the operating system user that created that platform credential.

14.8. Privacy of personally identifying information Stored in Authenticators

Authenticators MAY provide additional information to clients outside what’s defined by this specification, e.g., to enable the client to provide a rich UI with which the user can pick which credential to use for an authentication ceremony. If an authenticator chooses to do so, it SHOULD NOT expose personally identifying information unless successful user verification has been performed. If the authenticator supports user verification with more than one concurrently enrolled user, the authenticator SHOULD NOT expose personally identifying information of users other than the currently verified user. Consequently, an authenticator that is not capable of user verification SHOULD NOT store personally identifying information.

For the purposes of this discussion, the user handle conveyed as the id member of PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity is not considered personally identifying information; see §14.9 User Handle Contents.

These recommendations serve to prevent an adversary with physical access to an authenticator from extracting personally identifying information about the authenticator's enrolled user(s).

14.9. User Handle Contents

Since the user handle is not considered personally identifying information in §14.8 Privacy of personally identifying information Stored in Authenticators, the Relying Party SHOULD NOT include personally identifying information, e.g., e-mail addresses or usernames, in the user handle. This includes hash values of personally identifying information, unless the hash function is salted with salt values private to the Relying Party, since hashing does not prevent probing for guessable input values. It is RECOMMENDED to let the user handle be 64 random bytes, and store this value in the user’s account.

14.10. Username Enumeration

While initiating a registration or authentication ceremony, there is a risk that the WebAuthn Relying Party might leak sensitive information about its registered users. For example, if a Relying Party uses e-mail addresses as usernames and an attacker attempts to initiate an authentication ceremony for "alex.p.mueller@example.com" and the Relying Party responds with a failure, but then successfully initiates an authentication ceremony for "j.doe@example.com", then the attacker can conclude that "j.doe@example.com" is registered and "alex.p.mueller@example.com" is not. The Relying Party has thus leaked the possibly sensitive information that "j.doe@example.com" has an account at this Relying Party.

The following is a non-normative, non-exhaustive list of measures the Relying Party may implement to mitigate or prevent information leakage due to such an attack:

15. Acknowledgements

We thank the following people for their reviews of, and contributions to, this specification: Yuriy Ackermann, James Barclay, Richard Barnes, Dominic Battré, John Bradley, Domenic Denicola, Rahul Ghosh, Brad Hill, Jing Jin, Wally Jones, Ian Kilpatrick, Axel Nennker, Yoshikazu Nojima, Kimberly Paulhamus, Adam Powers, Yaron Sheffer, Anne van Kesteren, Johan Verrept, and Boris Zbarsky.

Thanks to Adam Powers for creating the overall registration and authentication flow diagrams (Figure 1 and Figure 2).

We thank Anthony Nadalin, John Fontana, and Richard Barnes for their contributions as co-chairs of the Web Authentication Working Group.

We also thank Wendy Seltzer, Samuel Weiler, and Harry Halpin for their contributions as our W3C Team Contacts.

Index

Terms defined by this specification

Terms defined by reference

References

Normative References

[CDDL]
C. Vigano; H. Birkholz. CBOR data definition language (CDDL): a notational convention to express CBOR data structures. 21 September 2016. Internet Draft (work in progress). URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-greevenbosch-appsawg-cbor-cddl
[CREDENTIAL-MANAGEMENT-1]
Mike West. Credential Management Level 1. 17 January 2019. WD. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/credential-management-1/
[DOM4]
Anne van Kesteren. DOM Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://dom.spec.whatwg.org/
[ECMAScript]
ECMAScript Language Specification. URL: https://tc39.github.io/ecma262/
[ENCODING]
Anne van Kesteren. Encoding Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://encoding.spec.whatwg.org/
[FETCH]
Anne van Kesteren. Fetch Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/
[FIDO-APPID]
D. Balfanz; et al. FIDO AppID and Facet Specification. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-appid-and-facets-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[FIDO-CTAP]
M. Antoine; et al. Client to Authenticator Protocol. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-client-to-authenticator-protocol-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[FIDO-Privacy-Principles]
FIDO Alliance. FIDO Privacy Principles. FIDO Alliance Whitepaper. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/FIDO_Alliance_Whitepaper_Privacy_Principles.pdf
[FIDO-Registry]
R. Lindemann; D. Baghdasaryan; B. Hill. FIDO Registry of Predefined Values. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-registry-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[FIDO-U2F-Message-Formats]
D. Balfanz; J. Ehrensvard; J. Lang. FIDO U2F Raw Message Formats. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-u2f-v1.1-id-20160915/fido-u2f-raw-message-formats-v1.1-id-20160915.html
[FIDOEcdaaAlgorithm]
R. Lindemann; et al. FIDO ECDAA Algorithm. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-ecdaa-algorithm-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[Geolocation-API]
Andrei Popescu. Geolocation API Specification 2nd Edition. 8 November 2016. REC. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/geolocation-API/
[HTML]
Anne van Kesteren; et al. HTML Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/
[HTML52]
Steve Faulkner; et al. HTML 5.2. 14 December 2017. REC. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/html52/
[HTML53]
Patricia Aas; et al. HTML 5.3. 18 October 2018. WD. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/html53/
[IANA-COSE-ALGS-REG]
IANA CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) Algorithms Registry. URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/cose/cose.xhtml#algorithms
[INFRA]
Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola. Infra Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://infra.spec.whatwg.org/
[MIXED-CONTENT]
Mike West. Mixed Content. 2 August 2016. CR. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/mixed-content/
[PAGE-VISIBILITY]
Jatinder Mann; Arvind Jain. Page Visibility Level 2. 17 October 2017. PR. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/page-visibility/
[RFC2119]
S. Bradner. Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. March 1997. Best Current Practice. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119
[RFC4648]
S. Josefsson. The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings. October 2006. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4648
[RFC4949]
R. Shirey. Internet Security Glossary, Version 2. August 2007. Informational. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4949
[RFC5234]
D. Crocker, Ed.; P. Overell. Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF. January 2008. Internet Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5234
[RFC5890]
J. Klensin. Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework. August 2010. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5890
[RFC7049]
C. Bormann; P. Hoffman. Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR). October 2013. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7049
[RFC8152]
J. Schaad. CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE). July 2017. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8152
[RFC8230]
M. Jones. Using RSA Algorithms with CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) Messages. September 2017. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8230
[RFC8264]
P. Saint-Andre; M. Blanchet. PRECIS Framework: Preparation, Enforcement, and Comparison of Internationalized Strings in Application Protocols. October 2017. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8264
[RFC8265]
P. Saint-Andre; A. Melnikov. Preparation, Enforcement, and Comparison of Internationalized Strings Representing Usernames and Passwords. October 2017. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8265
[RFC8266]
P. Saint-Andre. Preparation, Enforcement, and Comparison of Internationalized Strings Representing Nicknames. October 2017. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8266
[SEC1]
SEC1: Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Version 2.0. URL: http://www.secg.org/sec1-v2.pdf
[SECURE-CONTEXTS]
Mike West. Secure Contexts. 15 September 2016. CR. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/secure-contexts/
[SP800-800-63r3]
Paul A. Grassi; Michael E. Garcia; James L. Fenton. NIST Special Publication 800-63: Digital Identity Guidelines. June 2017. URL: https://pages.nist.gov/800-63-3/sp800-63-3.html
[TCG-CMCProfile-AIKCertEnroll]
Scott Kelly; et al. TCG Infrastructure Working Group: A CMC Profile for AIK Certificate Enrollment. 24 March 2011. Published. URL: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/IWG_CMC_Profile_Cert_Enrollment_v1_r7.pdf
[TokenBinding]
A. Popov; et al. The Token Binding Protocol Version 1.0. October, 2018. IETF Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8471
[URL]
Anne van Kesteren. URL Standard. Living Standard. URL: https://url.spec.whatwg.org/
[WebAuthn-COSE-Algs]
Michael B. Jones. COSE Algorithms for Web Authentication (WebAuthn). May 2018. Active Internet-Draft. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-jones-webauthn-cose-algorithms
[WebAuthn-Registries]
Jeff Hodges; Giridhar Mandyam; Michael B. Jones. Registries for Web Authentication (WebAuthn). February 2018. Active Internet-Draft. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-hodges-webauthn-registries
[WebIDL]
Cameron McCormack; Boris Zbarsky; Tobie Langel. Web IDL Level 1. 15 December 2016. ED. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/WebIDL-1/

Informative References

[Ceremony]
Carl Ellison. Ceremony Design and Analysis. 2007. URL: https://eprint.iacr.org/2007/399.pdf
[CSS-OVERFLOW-3]
David Baron; Elika Etemad; Florian Rivoal. CSS Overflow Module Level 3. 31 July 2018. WD. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-overflow-3/
[EduPersonObjectClassSpec]
EduPerson Object Class Specification (200604a). May 15, 2007. URL: https://www.internet2.edu/media/medialibrary/2013/09/04/internet2-mace-dir-eduperson-200604.html
[Feature-Policy]
Feature Policy. Editor's draft. URL: https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-feature-policy/
[FIDO-UAF-AUTHNR-CMDS]
R. Lindemann; J. Kemp. FIDO UAF Authenticator Commands. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-uaf-v1.1-id-20170202/fido-uaf-authnr-cmds-v1.1-id-20170202.html
[FIDOAuthnrSecReqs]
D. Biggs; et al. FIDO Authenticator Security Requirements. FIDO Alliance Final Documents. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-security-requirements-v1.0-fd-20170524/
[FIDOMetadataService]
R. Lindemann; B. Hill; D. Baghdasaryan. FIDO Metadata Service. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-metadata-service-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[FIDOSecRef]
R. Lindemann; et al. FIDO Security Reference. 27 February 2018. FIDO Alliance Implementation Draft. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-v2.0-id-20180227/fido-security-ref-v2.0-id-20180227.html
[FIDOUAFAuthenticatorMetadataStatements]
B. Hill; D. Baghdasaryan; J. Kemp. FIDO UAF Authenticator Metadata Statements v1.0. FIDO Alliance Proposed Standard. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-uaf-v1.0-ps-20141208/fido-uaf-authnr-metadata-v1.0-ps-20141208.html
[ISOBiometricVocabulary]
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC37. Information technology — Vocabulary — Biometrics. 15 December 2012. International Standard: ISO/IEC 2382-37:2012(E) First Edition. URL: http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/c055194_ISOIEC_2382-37_2012.zip
[RFC3279]
L. Bassham; W. Polk; R. Housley. Algorithms and Identifiers for the Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile. April 2002. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3279
[RFC5280]
D. Cooper; et al. Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile. May 2008. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5280
[RFC6265]
A. Barth. HTTP State Management Mechanism. April 2011. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265
[RFC6454]
A. Barth. The Web Origin Concept. December 2011. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6454
[RFC7515]
M. Jones; J. Bradley; N. Sakimura. JSON Web Signature (JWS). May 2015. Proposed Standard. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7515
[RFC8017]
K. Moriarty, Ed.; et al. PKCS #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.2. November 2016. Informational. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8017
[TPMv2-EK-Profile]
TCG EK Credential Profile for TPM Family 2.0. URL: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/Credential_Profile_EK_V2.0_R14_published.pdf
[TPMv2-Part1]
Trusted Platform Module Library, Part 1: Architecture. URL: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/TPM-Rev-2.0-Part-1-Architecture-01.38.pdf
[TPMv2-Part2]
Trusted Platform Module Library, Part 2: Structures. URL: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/TPM-Rev-2.0-Part-2-Structures-01.38.pdf
[TPMv2-Part3]
Trusted Platform Module Library, Part 3: Commands. URL: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/TPM-Rev-2.0-Part-3-Commands-01.38.pdf
[UAFProtocol]
R. Lindemann; et al. FIDO UAF Protocol Specification v1.0. FIDO Alliance Proposed Standard. URL: https://fidoalliance.org/specs/fido-uaf-v1.0-ps-20141208/fido-uaf-protocol-v1.0-ps-20141208.html
[WebAuthnAPIGuide]
Web Authentication API Guide. Experimental. URL: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Authentication_API

IDL Index

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface PublicKeyCredential : Credential {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer              rawId;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute AuthenticatorResponse    response;
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs getClientExtensionResults();
};

partial dictionary CredentialCreationOptions {
    PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions      publicKey;
};

partial dictionary CredentialRequestOptions {
    PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions      publicKey;
};

partial interface PublicKeyCredential {
    static Promise<boolean> isUserVerifyingPlatformAuthenticatorAvailable();
};

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      clientDataJSON;
};

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorAttestationResponse : AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      attestationObject;
};

[SecureContext, Exposed=Window]
interface AuthenticatorAssertionResponse : AuthenticatorResponse {
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      authenticatorData;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer      signature;
    [SameObject] readonly attribute ArrayBuffer?     userHandle;
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialParameters {
    required PublicKeyCredentialType      type;
    required COSEAlgorithmIdentifier      alg;
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions {
    required PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity         rp;
    required PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity       user;

    required BufferSource                             challenge;
    required sequence<PublicKeyCredentialParameters>  pubKeyCredParams;

    unsigned long                                timeout;
    sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor>      excludeCredentials = [];
    AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria               authenticatorSelection;
    AttestationConveyancePreference              attestation = "none";
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs         extensions;
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    required DOMString    name;
    USVString             icon;
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRpEntity : PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    DOMString      id;
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialUserEntity : PublicKeyCredentialEntity {
    required BufferSource   id;
    required DOMString      displayName;
};

dictionary AuthenticatorSelectionCriteria {
    AuthenticatorAttachment      authenticatorAttachment;
    boolean                      requireResidentKey = false;
    UserVerificationRequirement  userVerification = "preferred";
};

enum AuthenticatorAttachment {
    "platform",
    "cross-platform"
};

enum AttestationConveyancePreference {
    "none",
    "indirect",
    "direct"
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions {
    required BufferSource                challenge;
    unsigned long                        timeout;
    USVString                            rpId;
    sequence<PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor> allowCredentials = [];
    UserVerificationRequirement          userVerification = "preferred";
    AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs extensions;
};

dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
};

dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
};

typedef record<DOMString, DOMString> AuthenticationExtensionsAuthenticatorInputs;

dictionary CollectedClientData {
    required DOMString           type;
    required DOMString           challenge;
    required DOMString           origin;
    TokenBinding                 tokenBinding;
};

dictionary TokenBinding {
    required TokenBindingStatus status;
    DOMString id;
};

enum TokenBindingStatus { "present", "supported" };

enum PublicKeyCredentialType {
    "public-key"
};

dictionary PublicKeyCredentialDescriptor {
    required PublicKeyCredentialType      type;
    required BufferSource                 id;
    sequence<AuthenticatorTransport>      transports;
};

enum AuthenticatorTransport {
    "usb",
    "nfc",
    "ble",
    "internal"
};

typedef long COSEAlgorithmIdentifier;

enum UserVerificationRequirement {
    "required",
    "preferred",
    "discouraged"
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  USVString appid;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  boolean appid;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  USVString txAuthSimple;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  USVString txAuthSimple;
};

dictionary txAuthGenericArg {
    required USVString contentType;    // MIME-Type of the content, e.g., "image/png"
    required ArrayBuffer content;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  txAuthGenericArg txAuthGeneric;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  ArrayBuffer txAuthGeneric;
};

typedef sequence<AAGUID> AuthenticatorSelectionList;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  AuthenticatorSelectionList authnSel;
};

typedef BufferSource      AAGUID;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  boolean authnSel;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean exts;
};

typedef sequence<USVString> AuthenticationExtensionsSupported;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  AuthenticationExtensionsSupported exts;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean uvi;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  ArrayBuffer uvi;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean loc;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  Coordinates loc;
};

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientInputs {
  boolean uvm;
};

typedef sequence<unsigned long> UvmEntry;
typedef sequence<UvmEntry> UvmEntries;

partial dictionary AuthenticationExtensionsClientOutputs {
  UvmEntries uvm;
};

dictionary authenticatorBiometricPerfBounds{
    float FAR;
    float FRR;
    };

Issues Index

The WHATWG HTML WG is discussing whether to provide a hook when a browsing context gains or loses focuses. If a hook is provided, developers should use it to determine the focus state. See WHATWG HTML WG Issue #2711 for more details.