Paper 2019/889
Securing DNSSEC Keys via Threshold ECDSA From Generic MPC
Anders Dalskov and Marcel Keller and Claudio Orlandi and Kris Shrishak and Haya Shulman
Abstract
A surge in DNS cache poisoning attacks in the recent years generated an incentive to push the deployment of DNSSEC forward. ICANN accredited registrars are required to support DNSSEC signing for their customers, and the number of signed domains is slowly increasing. Yet with the increase in number of signed domains, the number of vulnerable DNSSEC deployments is also increasing. However, due to lack of support for other, more efficient algorithms, the most popular cryptographic algorithm is RSA. Furthermore, to avoid overhead, the network operators typically use short keys ($ >1024 $ bits) which are no longer considered secure. In this work, we propose an automated DNSSEC keys generation and zone files signing with threshold ECDSA. We show that a generic transformation suffices to turn essentially any MPC protocol into an equally secure and efficient protocol that computes ECDSA signatures in a threshold setting. The generality of this approach means that DNS operators can pick from a variety of existing efficient MPC solutions which satisfy different security/availability trade-offs. We stress that several of these options were not supported by any previous solution (as a new protocols would have had to be designed for each scenario). We benchmark all the protocols achievable from our transformation. Moreover, as many of the underlying MPC protocols naturally support preprocessing, so does our threshold ECDSA solution (in a way that is independent of both the DNS zone being signed, and the key being used to sign them). We argue that this sort of preprocessing is crucial for pushing deployment of DNSSEC, as it allows DNS operators to sign requests with almost no overhead, compared to the common approach where one operators is completely in charge of their customer's keys. Depending on the security level and the network configuration, our protocols can preprocess tens, hundreds, or even thousands of signatures per second. Then, the online time for signing essentially matches the RTT for all but the LAN configuration (where signing is still incredibly fast at less than 0.3ms). When comparing with prior work for the same security level, our protocol is never slower and significantly faster in many configurations. For instance, we can generate 4 times as many signatures per second in WAN. Finally, we perform the first study to measure the extent to which multiple DNS operators are used in the Internet and we integrate our novel threshold ECDSA protocols into a DNS application.
Metadata
- Available format(s)
- Category
- Cryptographic protocols
- Publication info
- Preprint. MINOR revision.
- Keywords
- Multiparty computationThreshold ECDSAHonest majorityDishonest majorityDNSSEC
- Contact author(s)
-
anderspkd @ cs au dk
kris shrishak @ sit tu-darmstadt de - History
- 2020-09-15: last of 2 revisions
- 2019-08-05: received
- See all versions
- Short URL
- https://ia.cr/2019/889
- License
-
CC BY