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150 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
150 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# Passphrase Redesign In 1.9.0 / 2.3.0
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On the T1, passphrase must be entered on the host PC and sent to Trezor. On the TT, the
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user can choose whether to enter the passphrase on host or on Trezor's touch screen.
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In versions 1.9.0 and 2.3.0 we have redesigned how the passphrase is
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communicated between the Host and the Device. The new design is documented
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thoroughly in [passphrase.md](passphrase.md) and this document should help
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with the transition from the old design.
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## New features
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* Passphrase flow is now identical for T1 and TT.
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* By keeping track of _sessions_, it is possible to avoid having to send passphrase repeatedly.
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* The choice between entering on Host or Device for TT has been moved from Device to Host.
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* Multiple passphrases are cached simultaneously.
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## Backwards compatibility
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T1 1.9.0 is fully backwards-compatible and works with existing Host code.
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TT 2.3.0 communicating with old Host software degrades to T1-level features: entering
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passphrase on device will not be available, and on-device passphrase caching via the
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`state` field will not be available.
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As a workaround, it is possible to use the "passphrase always on device" feature on the
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new TT firmware. When enabled, the passphrase flow is completely hidden from the Host
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software, and the Device itself prompts the user to enter the passphrase.
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## Implementation guide
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### Protobuf changes
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Protobuf has built-in backwards compatibility mechanisms, so a conforming implementation
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should continue to work with old protobuf definitions.
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To restore support for TT on-device passphrase entry, and to make use of the new
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features, you will need to update to newer protobuf definitions from `trezor-common`
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(TODO: link to commit in trezor-common).
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The gist of the changes is:
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- `PassphraseRequest.on_device` was deprecated, and renamed to `_on_device`. New Devices
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will never send this field.
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- Corresponding field `PassphraseAck.on_device` was added.
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- `PassphraseAck.state` was deprecated, and renamed to `_state`. It is retained for
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code compatibility, but the field should never be set.
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- `PassphraseStateRequest`/`PassphraseStateAck` messages were deprecated, and renamed
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with a `Deprecated_` prefix. New Devices will not send or accept these messages.
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- `Initialize.state` was renamed to `Initialize.session_id`.
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- Corresponding field `Features.session_id` was added. New Devices will always send this
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field in response to `Initialize` call.
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- A new value `Capability_PassphraseEntry` was added to the `Features.Capability`
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enum. This capability will be sent from a Device that supports on-device passphrase
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entry (currently only TT).
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### Restoring on-device entry for TT
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The Host software reacts to a `PassphraseRequest` message by prompting the user for a
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passphrase and sending it in the `PassphraseAck.passphrase` field.
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A new UI element should be added: when the passphrase prompt is displayed on Host, there
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should be an option to "enter passphrase on device". When the user selects this option,
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the Host must send a `PassphraseAck(passphrase=null, on_device=true)`.
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The "enter passphrase on device" option should be displayed when `Features.capabilities`
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contain the `Capability_PassphraseEntry` value, regardless of reported Trezor version or
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model. Firmwares older than 2.3.0 or 1.9.0 never set this value, so this ensures
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forwards and backwards compatibility.
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### Cross-version compatibility for TT
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TT version \< 2.3.0 will send `PassphraseRequest(_on_device=true)` if the user selected
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on-device entry. Neither T1 nor TT >= 2.3.0 will ever set this field to true.
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If the Host receives `PassphraseRequest(_on_device=true)`, it should immediately respond
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with `PassphraseAck()` with no fields set.
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TT version \< 2.3.0 will send `Deprecated_PassphraseStateRequest(state=[bytes])` after
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receiving `PassphraseAck`. The Host should immediately respond with
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`Deprecated_PassphraseStateAck()` with no fields set. If the Host does session
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management, it should store the value of `state` as the session ID.
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### Triggering passphrase prompt
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Use `GetAddress(coin_name="Testnet", address_n=[44'/1'/0'/0/0])` (the first address of
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the first account of Testnet) to ensure that the Device asks for a passphrase if
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needed, and caches it for future use.
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### Validating passphrases
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You can store the result of the above call, and in the future, compare it to a newly
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received address. This is a good way to check if the user is using the same passphrase
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as last time.
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Do not store user-entered passphrases for the purpose of validation, even in hashed,
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encrypted, or otherwise obfuscated format.
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### Session support
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A call to `Initialize` can include a `session_id` field. When starting a new user
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session, this field should be left empty.
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The response `Features` message will always include a `session_id` field. The value of
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this field should be stored. When calling `Initialize` again, the stored value should
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be sent as `session_id`. If the received `Features.session_id` is the same, it means
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that session was resumed successfully and the user will not be prompted for passphrase.
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```
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--> Initialize()
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<-- Features(session_id=0xABCDEF, ...)
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--> Initialize(session_id=0xABCDEF)
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<-- Features(session_id=0xABCDEF)
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# (session resumed successfully)
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--> Initialize(session_id=0xABCDEF)
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<-- Features(session_id=0x123456)
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# (session was not resumed, user will be prompted for passphrase again)
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```
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Session support is identical on T1 and TT, and both models support multiple sessions,
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i.e., it is possible to seamlessly switch between using multiple passphrases.
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### Cross-version compatible algorithm summary
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The following algorithm will ensure that your Host application works properly with
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both T1 and TT with both older and newer firmwares.
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1. If you have a session ID stored, call `Initialize(session_id=stored_session_id)`
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2. Check the value of `Features.session_id`. If it is identical to `stored_session_id`,
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the session was resumed and user will not need to be prompted for a passphrase.
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1. If `Features.session_id` is not set, you are communicating with an older Device.
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Do not store the null value as session ID.
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2. Otherwise store the value as `stored_session_id`.
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3. When you receive a `PassphraseRequest(_on_device=true)`, respond with
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`PassphraseAck()` with no fields set.
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4. When you receive a `PassphraseRequest`, prompt the user for passphrase.
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1. If `Features.capabilities` contains value `Capability_PassphraseEntry`, display a
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UI element that allows the user to enter passphrase on-device.
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2. If the user chooses this option, send `PassphraseAck(passphrase=null, on_device=true)`
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3. If the user enters the passphrase in your application, send
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`PassphraseAck(passphrase="user entered passphrase", on_device=false)`
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5. When you receive a `Deprecated_PassphraseStateRequest(state=...)`, store the value
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of `state` as `stored_session_id`, and respond with `Deprecated_PassphraseStateAck`
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with no fields set.
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Note: up to 64 bytes may be required to store the session ID. Firmwares < 2.3.0 use a
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64-byte value, newer firmwares use a 32-byte value.
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