From 4bfd864f10b68b71482b35c818559068ef8d5797 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Voss Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2024 20:54:24 +0100 Subject: doc: Add RFC documents --- doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt | 899 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 899 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt (limited to 'doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt') diff --git a/doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt b/doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8c964f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/rfc/rfc6238.txt @@ -0,0 +1,899 @@ + + + + + + +Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) D. M'Raihi +Request for Comments: 6238 Verisign, Inc. +Category: Informational S. Machani +ISSN: 2070-1721 Diversinet Corp. + M. Pei + Symantec + J. Rydell + Portwise, Inc. + May 2011 + + + TOTP: Time-Based One-Time Password Algorithm + +Abstract + + This document describes an extension of the One-Time Password (OTP) + algorithm, namely the HMAC-based One-Time Password (HOTP) algorithm, + as defined in RFC 4226, to support the time-based moving factor. The + HOTP algorithm specifies an event-based OTP algorithm, where the + moving factor is an event counter. The present work bases the moving + factor on a time value. A time-based variant of the OTP algorithm + provides short-lived OTP values, which are desirable for enhanced + security. + + The proposed algorithm can be used across a wide range of network + applications, from remote Virtual Private Network (VPN) access and + Wi-Fi network logon to transaction-oriented Web applications. The + authors believe that a common and shared algorithm will facilitate + adoption of two-factor authentication on the Internet by enabling + interoperability across commercial and open-source implementations. + +Status of This Memo + + This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is + published for informational purposes. + + This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force + (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has + received public review and has been approved for publication by the + Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Not all documents + approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet + Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741. + + Information about the current status of this document, any errata, + and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at + http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6238. + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 1] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +Copyright Notice + + Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the + document authors. All rights reserved. + + This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal + Provisions Relating to IETF Documents + (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of + publication of this document. Please review these documents + carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect + to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must + include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of + the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as + described in the Simplified BSD License. + +Table of Contents + + 1. Introduction ....................................................2 + 1.1. Scope ......................................................2 + 1.2. Background .................................................3 + 2. Notation and Terminology ........................................3 + 3. Algorithm Requirements ..........................................3 + 4. TOTP Algorithm ..................................................4 + 4.1. Notations ..................................................4 + 4.2. Description ................................................4 + 5. Security Considerations .........................................5 + 5.1. General ....................................................5 + 5.2. Validation and Time-Step Size ..............................6 + 6. Resynchronization ...............................................7 + 7. Acknowledgements ................................................7 + 8. References ......................................................8 + 8.1. Normative References .......................................8 + 8.2. Informative References .....................................8 + Appendix A. TOTP Algorithm: Reference Implementation ...............9 + Appendix B. Test Vectors ..........................................14 + +1. Introduction + +1.1. Scope + + This document describes an extension of the One-Time Password (OTP) + algorithm, namely the HMAC-based One-Time Password (HOTP) algorithm, + as defined in [RFC4226], to support the time-based moving factor. + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 2] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +1.2. Background + + As defined in [RFC4226], the HOTP algorithm is based on the + HMAC-SHA-1 algorithm (as specified in [RFC2104]) and applied to an + increasing counter value representing the message in the HMAC + computation. + + Basically, the output of the HMAC-SHA-1 calculation is truncated to + obtain user-friendly values: + + HOTP(K,C) = Truncate(HMAC-SHA-1(K,C)) + + where Truncate represents the function that can convert an HMAC-SHA-1 + value into an HOTP value. K and C represent the shared secret and + counter value; see [RFC4226] for detailed definitions. + + TOTP is the time-based variant of this algorithm, where a value T, + derived from a time reference and a time step, replaces the counter C + in the HOTP computation. + + TOTP implementations MAY use HMAC-SHA-256 or HMAC-SHA-512 functions, + based on SHA-256 or SHA-512 [SHA2] hash functions, instead of the + HMAC-SHA-1 function that has been specified for the HOTP computation + in [RFC4226]. + +2. Notation and Terminology + + The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", + "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this + document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. + +3. Algorithm Requirements + + This section summarizes the requirements taken into account for + designing the TOTP algorithm. + + R1: The prover (e.g., token, soft token) and verifier (authentication + or validation server) MUST know or be able to derive the current + Unix time (i.e., the number of seconds elapsed since midnight UTC + of January 1, 1970) for OTP generation. See [UT] for a more + detailed definition of the commonly known "Unix time". The + precision of the time used by the prover affects how often the + clock synchronization should be done; see Section 6. + + R2: The prover and verifier MUST either share the same secret or the + knowledge of a secret transformation to generate a shared secret. + + R3: The algorithm MUST use HOTP [RFC4226] as a key building block. + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 3] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + R4: The prover and verifier MUST use the same time-step value X. + + R5: There MUST be a unique secret (key) for each prover. + + R6: The keys SHOULD be randomly generated or derived using key + derivation algorithms. + + R7: The keys MAY be stored in a tamper-resistant device and SHOULD be + protected against unauthorized access and usage. + +4. TOTP Algorithm + + This variant of the HOTP algorithm specifies the calculation of a + one-time password value, based on a representation of the counter as + a time factor. + +4.1. Notations + + o X represents the time step in seconds (default value X = + 30 seconds) and is a system parameter. + + o T0 is the Unix time to start counting time steps (default value is + 0, i.e., the Unix epoch) and is also a system parameter. + +4.2. Description + + Basically, we define TOTP as TOTP = HOTP(K, T), where T is an integer + and represents the number of time steps between the initial counter + time T0 and the current Unix time. + + More specifically, T = (Current Unix time - T0) / X, where the + default floor function is used in the computation. + + For example, with T0 = 0 and Time Step X = 30, T = 1 if the current + Unix time is 59 seconds, and T = 2 if the current Unix time is + 60 seconds. + + The implementation of this algorithm MUST support a time value T + larger than a 32-bit integer when it is beyond the year 2038. The + value of the system parameters X and T0 are pre-established during + the provisioning process and communicated between a prover and + verifier as part of the provisioning step. The provisioning flow is + out of scope of this document; refer to [RFC6030] for such + provisioning container specifications. + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 4] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +5. Security Considerations + +5.1. General + + The security and strength of this algorithm depend on the properties + of the underlying building block HOTP, which is a construction based + on HMAC [RFC2104] using SHA-1 as the hash function. + + The conclusion of the security analysis detailed in [RFC4226] is + that, for all practical purposes, the outputs of the dynamic + truncation on distinct inputs are uniformly and independently + distributed strings. + + The analysis demonstrates that the best possible attack against the + HOTP function is the brute force attack. + + As indicated in the algorithm requirement section, keys SHOULD be + chosen at random or using a cryptographically strong pseudorandom + generator properly seeded with a random value. + + Keys SHOULD be of the length of the HMAC output to facilitate + interoperability. + + We RECOMMEND following the recommendations in [RFC4086] for all + pseudorandom and random number generations. The pseudorandom numbers + used for generating the keys SHOULD successfully pass the randomness + test specified in [CN], or a similar well-recognized test. + + All the communications SHOULD take place over a secure channel, e.g., + Secure Socket Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) [RFC5246] or + IPsec connections [RFC4301]. + + We also RECOMMEND storing the keys securely in the validation system, + and, more specifically, encrypting them using tamper-resistant + hardware encryption and exposing them only when required: for + example, the key is decrypted when needed to verify an OTP value, and + re-encrypted immediately to limit exposure in the RAM to a short + period of time. + + The key store MUST be in a secure area, to avoid, as much as + possible, direct attack on the validation system and secrets + database. Particularly, access to the key material should be limited + to programs and processes required by the validation system only. + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 5] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +5.2. Validation and Time-Step Size + + An OTP generated within the same time step will be the same. When an + OTP is received at a validation system, it doesn't know a client's + exact timestamp when an OTP was generated. The validation system may + typically use the timestamp when an OTP is received for OTP + comparison. Due to network latency, the gap (as measured by T, that + is, the number of time steps since T0) between the time that the OTP + was generated and the time that the OTP arrives at the receiving + system may be large. The receiving time at the validation system and + the actual OTP generation may not fall within the same time-step + window that produced the same OTP. When an OTP is generated at the + end of a time-step window, the receiving time most likely falls into + the next time-step window. A validation system SHOULD typically set + a policy for an acceptable OTP transmission delay window for + validation. The validation system should compare OTPs not only with + the receiving timestamp but also the past timestamps that are within + the transmission delay. A larger acceptable delay window would + expose a larger window for attacks. We RECOMMEND that at most one + time step is allowed as the network delay. + + The time-step size has an impact on both security and usability. A + larger time-step size means a larger validity window for an OTP to be + accepted by a validation system. There are implications for using a + larger time-step size, as follows: + + First, a larger time-step size exposes a larger window to attack. + When an OTP is generated and exposed to a third party before it is + consumed, the third party can consume the OTP within the time-step + window. + + We RECOMMEND a default time-step size of 30 seconds. This default + value of 30 seconds is selected as a balance between security and + usability. + + Second, the next different OTP must be generated in the next time- + step window. A user must wait until the clock moves to the next + time-step window from the last submission. The waiting time may not + be exactly the length of the time step, depending on when the last + OTP was generated. For example, if the last OTP was generated at the + halfway point in a time-step window, the waiting time for the next + OTP is half the length of the time step. In general, a larger time- + step window means a longer waiting time for a user to get the next + valid OTP after the last successful OTP validation. A too-large + window (for example, 10 minutes) most probably won't be suitable for + typical Internet login use cases; a user may not be able to get the + next OTP within 10 minutes and therefore will have to re-login to the + same site in 10 minutes. + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 6] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + Note that a prover may send the same OTP inside a given time-step + window multiple times to a verifier. The verifier MUST NOT accept + the second attempt of the OTP after the successful validation has + been issued for the first OTP, which ensures one-time only use of an + OTP. + +6. Resynchronization + + Because of possible clock drifts between a client and a validation + server, we RECOMMEND that the validator be set with a specific limit + to the number of time steps a prover can be "out of synch" before + being rejected. + + This limit can be set both forward and backward from the calculated + time step on receipt of the OTP value. If the time step is + 30 seconds as recommended, and the validator is set to only accept + two time steps backward, then the maximum elapsed time drift would be + around 89 seconds, i.e., 29 seconds in the calculated time step and + 60 seconds for two backward time steps. + + This would mean the validator could perform a validation against the + current time and then two further validations for each backward step + (for a total of 3 validations). Upon successful validation, the + validation server can record the detected clock drift for the token + in terms of the number of time steps. When a new OTP is received + after this step, the validator can validate the OTP with the current + timestamp adjusted with the recorded number of time-step clock drifts + for the token. + + Also, it is important to note that the longer a prover has not sent + an OTP to a validation system, the longer (potentially) the + accumulated clock drift between the prover and the verifier. In such + cases, the automatic resynchronization described above may not work + if the drift exceeds the allowed threshold. Additional + authentication measures should be used to safely authenticate the + prover and explicitly resynchronize the clock drift between the + prover and the validator. + +7. Acknowledgements + + The authors of this document would like to thank the following people + for their contributions and support to make this a better + specification: Hannes Tschofenig, Jonathan Tuliani, David Dix, + Siddharth Bajaj, Stu Veath, Shuh Chang, Oanh Hoang, John Huang, and + Siddhartha Mohapatra. + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 7] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +8. References + +8.1. Normative References + + [RFC2104] Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M., and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed- + Hashing for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, + February 1997. + + [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate + Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. + + [RFC4086] Eastlake 3rd, D., Schiller, J., and S. Crocker, + "Randomness Recommendations for Security", BCP 106, + RFC 4086, June 2005. + + [RFC4226] M'Raihi, D., Bellare, M., Hoornaert, F., Naccache, D., and + O. Ranen, "HOTP: An HMAC-Based One-Time Password + Algorithm", RFC 4226, December 2005. + + [SHA2] NIST, "FIPS PUB 180-3: Secure Hash Standard (SHS)", + October 2008, . + +8.2. Informative References + + [CN] Coron, J. and D. Naccache, "An Accurate Evaluation of + Maurer's Universal Test", LNCS 1556, February 1999, + . + + [RFC4301] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the + Internet Protocol", RFC 4301, December 2005. + + [RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security + (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008. + + [RFC6030] Hoyer, P., Pei, M., and S. Machani, "Portable Symmetric + Key Container (PSKC)", RFC 6030, October 2010. + + [UT] Wikipedia, "Unix time", February 2011, + . + + + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 8] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +Appendix A. TOTP Algorithm: Reference Implementation + + + + /** + Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as + authors of the code. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to the license + terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set forth in Section + 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents + (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info). + */ + + import java.lang.reflect.UndeclaredThrowableException; + import java.security.GeneralSecurityException; + import java.text.DateFormat; + import java.text.SimpleDateFormat; + import java.util.Date; + import javax.crypto.Mac; + import javax.crypto.spec.SecretKeySpec; + import java.math.BigInteger; + import java.util.TimeZone; + + + /** + * This is an example implementation of the OATH + * TOTP algorithm. + * Visit www.openauthentication.org for more information. + * + * @author Johan Rydell, PortWise, Inc. + */ + + public class TOTP { + + private TOTP() {} + + /** + * This method uses the JCE to provide the crypto algorithm. + * HMAC computes a Hashed Message Authentication Code with the + * crypto hash algorithm as a parameter. + * + * @param crypto: the crypto algorithm (HmacSHA1, HmacSHA256, + * HmacSHA512) + * @param keyBytes: the bytes to use for the HMAC key + * @param text: the message or text to be authenticated + */ + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 9] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + private static byte[] hmac_sha(String crypto, byte[] keyBytes, + byte[] text){ + try { + Mac hmac; + hmac = Mac.getInstance(crypto); + SecretKeySpec macKey = + new SecretKeySpec(keyBytes, "RAW"); + hmac.init(macKey); + return hmac.doFinal(text); + } catch (GeneralSecurityException gse) { + throw new UndeclaredThrowableException(gse); + } + } + + + /** + * This method converts a HEX string to Byte[] + * + * @param hex: the HEX string + * + * @return: a byte array + */ + + private static byte[] hexStr2Bytes(String hex){ + // Adding one byte to get the right conversion + // Values starting with "0" can be converted + byte[] bArray = new BigInteger("10" + hex,16).toByteArray(); + + // Copy all the REAL bytes, not the "first" + byte[] ret = new byte[bArray.length - 1]; + for (int i = 0; i < ret.length; i++) + ret[i] = bArray[i+1]; + return ret; + } + + private static final int[] DIGITS_POWER + // 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 + = {1,10,100,1000,10000,100000,1000000,10000000,100000000 }; + + + + + + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 10] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + /** + * This method generates a TOTP value for the given + * set of parameters. + * + * @param key: the shared secret, HEX encoded + * @param time: a value that reflects a time + * @param returnDigits: number of digits to return + * + * @return: a numeric String in base 10 that includes + * {@link truncationDigits} digits + */ + + public static String generateTOTP(String key, + String time, + String returnDigits){ + return generateTOTP(key, time, returnDigits, "HmacSHA1"); + } + + + /** + * This method generates a TOTP value for the given + * set of parameters. + * + * @param key: the shared secret, HEX encoded + * @param time: a value that reflects a time + * @param returnDigits: number of digits to return + * + * @return: a numeric String in base 10 that includes + * {@link truncationDigits} digits + */ + + public static String generateTOTP256(String key, + String time, + String returnDigits){ + return generateTOTP(key, time, returnDigits, "HmacSHA256"); + } + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 11] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + /** + * This method generates a TOTP value for the given + * set of parameters. + * + * @param key: the shared secret, HEX encoded + * @param time: a value that reflects a time + * @param returnDigits: number of digits to return + * + * @return: a numeric String in base 10 that includes + * {@link truncationDigits} digits + */ + + public static String generateTOTP512(String key, + String time, + String returnDigits){ + return generateTOTP(key, time, returnDigits, "HmacSHA512"); + } + + + /** + * This method generates a TOTP value for the given + * set of parameters. + * + * @param key: the shared secret, HEX encoded + * @param time: a value that reflects a time + * @param returnDigits: number of digits to return + * @param crypto: the crypto function to use + * + * @return: a numeric String in base 10 that includes + * {@link truncationDigits} digits + */ + + public static String generateTOTP(String key, + String time, + String returnDigits, + String crypto){ + int codeDigits = Integer.decode(returnDigits).intValue(); + String result = null; + + // Using the counter + // First 8 bytes are for the movingFactor + // Compliant with base RFC 4226 (HOTP) + while (time.length() < 16 ) + time = "0" + time; + + // Get the HEX in a Byte[] + byte[] msg = hexStr2Bytes(time); + byte[] k = hexStr2Bytes(key); + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 12] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + byte[] hash = hmac_sha(crypto, k, msg); + + // put selected bytes into result int + int offset = hash[hash.length - 1] & 0xf; + + int binary = + ((hash[offset] & 0x7f) << 24) | + ((hash[offset + 1] & 0xff) << 16) | + ((hash[offset + 2] & 0xff) << 8) | + (hash[offset + 3] & 0xff); + + int otp = binary % DIGITS_POWER[codeDigits]; + + result = Integer.toString(otp); + while (result.length() < codeDigits) { + result = "0" + result; + } + return result; + } + + public static void main(String[] args) { + // Seed for HMAC-SHA1 - 20 bytes + String seed = "3132333435363738393031323334353637383930"; + // Seed for HMAC-SHA256 - 32 bytes + String seed32 = "3132333435363738393031323334353637383930" + + "313233343536373839303132"; + // Seed for HMAC-SHA512 - 64 bytes + String seed64 = "3132333435363738393031323334353637383930" + + "3132333435363738393031323334353637383930" + + "3132333435363738393031323334353637383930" + + "31323334"; + long T0 = 0; + long X = 30; + long testTime[] = {59L, 1111111109L, 1111111111L, + 1234567890L, 2000000000L, 20000000000L}; + + String steps = "0"; + DateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"); + df.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC")); + + + + + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 13] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + try { + System.out.println( + "+---------------+-----------------------+" + + "------------------+--------+--------+"); + System.out.println( + "| Time(sec) | Time (UTC format) " + + "| Value of T(Hex) | TOTP | Mode |"); + System.out.println( + "+---------------+-----------------------+" + + "------------------+--------+--------+"); + + for (int i=0; i + +Appendix B. Test Vectors + + This section provides test values that can be used for the HOTP time- + based variant algorithm interoperability test. + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 14] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + + The test token shared secret uses the ASCII string value + "12345678901234567890". With Time Step X = 30, and the Unix epoch as + the initial value to count time steps, where T0 = 0, the TOTP + algorithm will display the following values for specified modes and + timestamps. + + +-------------+--------------+------------------+----------+--------+ + | Time (sec) | UTC Time | Value of T (hex) | TOTP | Mode | + +-------------+--------------+------------------+----------+--------+ + | 59 | 1970-01-01 | 0000000000000001 | 94287082 | SHA1 | + | | 00:00:59 | | | | + | 59 | 1970-01-01 | 0000000000000001 | 46119246 | SHA256 | + | | 00:00:59 | | | | + | 59 | 1970-01-01 | 0000000000000001 | 90693936 | SHA512 | + | | 00:00:59 | | | | + | 1111111109 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523EC | 07081804 | SHA1 | + | | 01:58:29 | | | | + | 1111111109 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523EC | 68084774 | SHA256 | + | | 01:58:29 | | | | + | 1111111109 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523EC | 25091201 | SHA512 | + | | 01:58:29 | | | | + | 1111111111 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523ED | 14050471 | SHA1 | + | | 01:58:31 | | | | + | 1111111111 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523ED | 67062674 | SHA256 | + | | 01:58:31 | | | | + | 1111111111 | 2005-03-18 | 00000000023523ED | 99943326 | SHA512 | + | | 01:58:31 | | | | + | 1234567890 | 2009-02-13 | 000000000273EF07 | 89005924 | SHA1 | + | | 23:31:30 | | | | + | 1234567890 | 2009-02-13 | 000000000273EF07 | 91819424 | SHA256 | + | | 23:31:30 | | | | + | 1234567890 | 2009-02-13 | 000000000273EF07 | 93441116 | SHA512 | + | | 23:31:30 | | | | + | 2000000000 | 2033-05-18 | 0000000003F940AA | 69279037 | SHA1 | + | | 03:33:20 | | | | + | 2000000000 | 2033-05-18 | 0000000003F940AA | 90698825 | SHA256 | + | | 03:33:20 | | | | + | 2000000000 | 2033-05-18 | 0000000003F940AA | 38618901 | SHA512 | + | | 03:33:20 | | | | + | 20000000000 | 2603-10-11 | 0000000027BC86AA | 65353130 | SHA1 | + | | 11:33:20 | | | | + | 20000000000 | 2603-10-11 | 0000000027BC86AA | 77737706 | SHA256 | + | | 11:33:20 | | | | + | 20000000000 | 2603-10-11 | 0000000027BC86AA | 47863826 | SHA512 | + | | 11:33:20 | | | | + +-------------+--------------+------------------+----------+--------+ + + Table 1: TOTP Table + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 15] + +RFC 6238 HOTPTimeBased May 2011 + + +Authors' Addresses + + David M'Raihi + Verisign, Inc. + 685 E. Middlefield Road + Mountain View, CA 94043 + USA + + EMail: davidietf@gmail.com + + + Salah Machani + Diversinet Corp. + 2225 Sheppard Avenue East, Suite 1801 + Toronto, Ontario M2J 5C2 + Canada + + EMail: smachani@diversinet.com + + + Mingliang Pei + Symantec + 510 E. Middlefield Road + Mountain View, CA 94043 + USA + + EMail: Mingliang_Pei@symantec.com + + + Johan Rydell + Portwise, Inc. + 275 Hawthorne Ave., Suite 119 + Palo Alto, CA 94301 + USA + + EMail: johanietf@gmail.com + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +M'Raihi, et al. Informational [Page 16] + -- cgit v1.2.3