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rfc:rfc9449



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) D. Fett Request for Comments: 9449 Authlete Category: Standards Track B. Campbell ISSN: 2070-1721 Ping Identity

                                                            J. Bradley
                                                                Yubico
                                                        T. Lodderstedt
                                                               Tuconic
                                                              M. Jones
                                                Self-Issued Consulting
                                                              D. Waite
                                                         Ping Identity
                                                        September 2023
         OAuth 2.0 Demonstrating Proof of Possession (DPoP)

Abstract

 This document describes a mechanism for sender-constraining OAuth 2.0
 tokens via a proof-of-possession mechanism on the application level.
 This mechanism allows for the detection of replay attacks with access
 and refresh tokens.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 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).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9449.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2023 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
 (https://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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
 Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
 in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
   1.1.  Conventions and Terminology
 2.  Objectives
 3.  Concept
 4.  DPoP Proof JWTs
   4.1.  The DPoP HTTP Header
   4.2.  DPoP Proof JWT Syntax
   4.3.  Checking DPoP Proofs
 5.  DPoP Access Token Request
   5.1.  Authorization Server Metadata
   5.2.  Client Registration Metadata
 6.  Public Key Confirmation
   6.1.  JWK Thumbprint Confirmation Method
   6.2.  JWK Thumbprint Confirmation Method in Token Introspection
 7.  Protected Resource Access
   7.1.  The DPoP Authentication Scheme
   7.2.  Compatibility with the Bearer Authentication Scheme
   7.3.  Client Considerations
 8.  Authorization Server-Provided Nonce
   8.1.  Nonce Syntax
   8.2.  Providing a New Nonce Value
 9.  Resource Server-Provided Nonce
 10. Authorization Code Binding to a DPoP Key
   10.1.  DPoP with Pushed Authorization Requests
 11. Security Considerations
   11.1.  DPoP Proof Replay
   11.2.  DPoP Proof Pre-generation
   11.3.  DPoP Nonce Downgrade
   11.4.  Untrusted Code in the Client Context
   11.5.  Signed JWT Swapping
   11.6.  Signature Algorithms
   11.7.  Request Integrity
   11.8.  Access Token and Public Key Binding
   11.9.  Authorization Code and Public Key Binding
   11.10. Hash Algorithm Agility
   11.11. Binding to Client Identity
 12. IANA Considerations
   12.1.  OAuth Access Token Types Registration
   12.2.  OAuth Extensions Error Registration
   12.3.  OAuth Parameters Registration
   12.4.  HTTP Authentication Schemes Registration
   12.5.  Media Type Registration
   12.6.  JWT Confirmation Methods Registration
   12.7.  JSON Web Token Claims Registration
     12.7.1.  "nonce" Registration Update
   12.8.  Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Field Name Registration
   12.9.  OAuth Authorization Server Metadata Registration
   12.10. OAuth Dynamic Client Registration Metadata
 13. References
   13.1.  Normative References
   13.2.  Informative References
 Acknowledgements
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 Demonstrating Proof of Possession (DPoP) is an application-level
 mechanism for sender-constraining OAuth [RFC6749] access and refresh
 tokens.  It enables a client to prove the possession of a public/
 private key pair by including a DPoP header in an HTTP request.  The
 value of the header is a JSON Web Token (JWT) [RFC7519] that enables
 the authorization server to bind issued tokens to the public part of
 a client's key pair.  Recipients of such tokens are then able to
 verify the binding of the token to the key pair that the client has
 demonstrated that it holds via the DPoP header, thereby providing
 some assurance that the client presenting the token also possesses
 the private key.  In other words, the legitimate presenter of the
 token is constrained to be the sender that holds and proves
 possession of the private part of the key pair.
 The mechanism specified herein can be used in cases where other
 methods of sender-constraining tokens that utilize elements of the
 underlying secure transport layer, such as [RFC8705] or
 [TOKEN-BINDING], are not available or desirable.  For example, due to
 a sub-par user experience of TLS client authentication in user agents
 and a lack of support for HTTP token binding, neither mechanism can
 be used if an OAuth client is an application that is dynamically
 downloaded and executed in a web browser (sometimes referred to as a
 "single-page application").  Additionally, applications that are
 installed and run directly on a user's device are well positioned to
 benefit from DPoP-bound tokens that guard against the misuse of
 tokens by a compromised or malicious resource.  Such applications
 often have dedicated protected storage for cryptographic keys.
 DPoP can be used to sender-constrain access tokens regardless of the
 client authentication method employed, but DPoP itself is not used
 for client authentication.  DPoP can also be used to sender-constrain
 refresh tokens issued to public clients (those without authentication
 credentials associated with the client_id).

1.1. Conventions and Terminology

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.
 This specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF)
 notation of [RFC5234].
 This specification uses the terms "access token", "refresh token",
 "authorization server", "resource server", "authorization endpoint",
 "authorization request", "authorization response", "token endpoint",
 "grant type", "access token request", "access token response",
 "client", "public client", and "confidential client" defined by "The
 OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework" [RFC6749].
 The terms "request", "response", "header field", and "target URI" are
 imported from [RFC9110].
 The terms "JOSE" and "JOSE Header" are imported from [RFC7515].
 This document contains non-normative examples of partial and complete
 HTTP messages.  Some examples use a single trailing backslash to
 indicate line wrapping for long values, as per [RFC8792].  The
 character and leading spaces on wrapped lines are not part of the
 value.

2. Objectives

 The primary aim of DPoP is to prevent unauthorized or illegitimate
 parties from using leaked or stolen access tokens, by binding a token
 to a public key upon issuance and requiring that the client proves
 possession of the corresponding private key when using the token.
 This constrains the legitimate sender of the token to only the party
 with access to the private key and gives the server receiving the
 token added assurances that the sender is legitimately authorized to
 use it.
 Access tokens that are sender-constrained via DPoP thus stand in
 contrast to the typical bearer token, which can be used by any party
 in possession of such a token.  Although protections generally exist
 to prevent unintended disclosure of bearer tokens, unforeseen vectors
 for leakage have occurred due to vulnerabilities and implementation
 issues in other layers in the protocol or software stack (see, e.g.,
 Compression Ratio Info-leak Made Easy (CRIME) [CRIME], Browser
 Reconnaissance and Exfiltration via Adaptive Compression of Hypertext
 (BREACH) [BREACH], Heartbleed [Heartbleed], and the Cloudflare parser
 bug [Cloudbleed]).  There have also been numerous published token
 theft attacks on OAuth implementations themselves ([GitHub.Tokens] is
 just one high-profile example).  DPoP provides a general defense in
 depth against the impact of unanticipated token leakage.  DPoP is
 not, however, a substitute for a secure transport and MUST always be
 used in conjunction with HTTPS.
 The very nature of the typical OAuth protocol interaction
 necessitates that the client discloses the access token to the
 protected resources that it accesses.  The attacker model in
 [SECURITY-TOPICS] describes cases where a protected resource might be
 counterfeit, malicious, or compromised and plays received tokens
 against other protected resources to gain unauthorized access.
 Audience-restricted access tokens (e.g., using the JWT [RFC7519] aud
 claim) can prevent such misuse.  However, doing so in practice has
 proven to be prohibitively cumbersome for many deployments (despite
 extensions such as [RFC8707]).  Sender-constraining access tokens is
 a more robust and straightforward mechanism to prevent such token
 replay at a different endpoint, and DPoP is an accessible
 application-layer means of doing so.
 Due to the potential for cross-site scripting (XSS), browser-based
 OAuth clients bring to bear added considerations with respect to
 protecting tokens.  The most straightforward XSS-based attack is for
 an attacker to exfiltrate a token and use it themselves completely
 independent of the legitimate client.  A stolen access token is used
 for protected resource access, and a stolen refresh token is used for
 obtaining new access tokens.  If the private key is non-extractable
 (as is possible with [W3C.WebCryptoAPI]), DPoP renders exfiltrated
 tokens alone unusable.
 XSS vulnerabilities also allow an attacker to execute code in the
 context of the browser-based client application and maliciously use a
 token indirectly through the client.  That execution context has
 access to utilize the signing key; thus, it can produce DPoP proofs
 to use in conjunction with the token.  At this application layer,
 there is most likely no feasible defense against this threat except
 generally preventing XSS; therefore, it is considered out of scope
 for DPoP.
 Malicious XSS code executed in the context of the browser-based
 client application is also in a position to create DPoP proofs with
 timestamp values in the future and exfiltrate them in conjunction
 with a token.  These stolen artifacts can later be used independent
 of the client application to access protected resources.  To prevent
 this, servers can optionally require clients to include a server-
 chosen value into the proof that cannot be predicted by an attacker
 (nonce).  In the absence of the optional nonce, the impact of pre-
 computed DPoP proofs is limited somewhat by the proof being bound to
 an access token on protected resource access.  Because a proof
 covering an access token that does not yet exist cannot feasibly be
 created, access tokens obtained with an exfiltrated refresh token and
 pre-computed proofs will be unusable.
 Additional security considerations are discussed in Section 11.

3. Concept

 The main data structure introduced by this specification is a DPoP
 proof JWT that is sent as a header in an HTTP request, as described
 in detail below.  A client uses a DPoP proof JWT to prove the
 possession of a private key corresponding to a certain public key.
 Roughly speaking, a DPoP proof is a signature over:
  • some data of the HTTP request to which it is attached,
  • a timestamp,
  • a unique identifier,
  • an optional server-provided nonce, and
  • a hash of the associated access token when an access token is

present within the request.

 +--------+                                          +---------------+
 |        |--(A)-- Token Request ------------------->|               |
 | Client |        (DPoP Proof)                      | Authorization |
 |        |                                          |     Server    |
 |        |<-(B)-- DPoP-Bound Access Token ----------|               |
 |        |        (token_type=DPoP)                 +---------------+
 |        |
 |        |
 |        |                                          +---------------+
 |        |--(C)-- DPoP-Bound Access Token --------->|               |
 |        |        (DPoP Proof)                      |    Resource   |
 |        |                                          |     Server    |
 |        |<-(D)-- Protected Resource ---------------|               |
 |        |                                          +---------------+
 +--------+
                       Figure 1: Basic DPoP Flow
 The basic steps of an OAuth flow with DPoP (without the optional
 nonce) are shown in Figure 1.
 A.  In the token request, the client sends an authorization grant
     (e.g., an authorization code, refresh token, etc.) to the
     authorization server in order to obtain an access token (and
     potentially a refresh token).  The client attaches a DPoP proof
     to the request in an HTTP header.
 B.  The authorization server binds (sender-constrains) the access
     token to the public key claimed by the client in the DPoP proof;
     that is, the access token cannot be used without proving
     possession of the respective private key.  If a refresh token is
     issued to a public client, it is also bound to the public key of
     the DPoP proof.
 C.  To use the access token, the client has to prove possession of
     the private key by, again, adding a header to the request that
     carries a DPoP proof for that request.  The resource server needs
     to receive information about the public key to which the access
     token is bound.  This information may be encoded directly into
     the access token (for JWT-structured access tokens) or provided
     via token introspection endpoint (not shown).  The resource
     server verifies that the public key to which the access token is
     bound matches the public key of the DPoP proof.  It also verifies
     that the access token hash in the DPoP proof matches the access
     token presented in the request.
 D.  The resource server refuses to serve the request if the signature
     check fails or if the data in the DPoP proof is wrong, e.g., the
     target URI does not match the URI claim in the DPoP proof JWT.
     The access token itself, of course, must also be valid in all
     other respects.
 The DPoP mechanism presented herein is not a client authentication
 method.  In fact, a primary use case of DPoP is for public clients
 (e.g., single-page applications and applications on a user's device)
 that do not use client authentication.  Nonetheless, DPoP is designed
 to be compatible with private_key_jwt and all other client
 authentication methods.
 DPoP does not directly ensure message integrity, but it relies on the
 TLS layer for that purpose.  See Section 11 for details.

4. DPoP Proof JWTs

 DPoP introduces the concept of a DPoP proof, which is a JWT created
 by the client and sent with an HTTP request using the DPoP header
 field.  Each HTTP request requires a unique DPoP proof.
 A valid DPoP proof demonstrates to the server that the client holds
 the private key that was used to sign the DPoP proof JWT.  This
 enables authorization servers to bind issued tokens to the
 corresponding public key (as described in Section 5) and enables
 resource servers to verify the key-binding of tokens that it receives
 (see Section 7.1), which prevents said tokens from being used by any
 entity that does not have access to the private key.
 The DPoP proof demonstrates possession of a key and, by itself, is
 not an authentication or access control mechanism.  When presented in
 conjunction with a key-bound access token as described in
 Section 7.1, the DPoP proof provides additional assurance about the
 legitimacy of the client to present the access token.  However, a
 valid DPoP proof JWT is not sufficient alone to make access control
 decisions.

4.1. The DPoP HTTP Header

 A DPoP proof is included in an HTTP request using the following
 request header field.
 DPoP:  A JWT that adheres to the structure and syntax of Section 4.2.
 Figure 2 shows an example DPoP HTTP header field.  The example uses
 "\" line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 DPoP: eyJ0eXAiOiJkcG9wK2p3dCIsImFsZyI6IkVTMjU2IiwiandrIjp7Imt0eSI6Ik\
  VDIiwieCI6Imw4dEZyaHgtMzR0VjNoUklDUkRZOXpDa0RscEJoRjQyVVFVZldWQVdCR\
  nMiLCJ5IjoiOVZFNGpmX09rX282NHpiVFRsY3VOSmFqSG10NnY5VERWclUwQ2R2R1JE\
  QSIsImNydiI6IlAtMjU2In19.eyJqdGkiOiItQndDM0VTYzZhY2MybFRjIiwiaHRtIj\
  oiUE9TVCIsImh0dSI6Imh0dHBzOi8vc2VydmVyLmV4YW1wbGUuY29tL3Rva2VuIiwia\
  WF0IjoxNTYyMjYyNjE2fQ.2-GxA6T8lP4vfrg8v-FdWP0A0zdrj8igiMLvqRMUvwnQg\
  4PtFLbdLXiOSsX0x7NVY-FNyJK70nfbV37xRZT3Lg
                     Figure 2: Example DPoP Header
 Note that per [RFC9110], header field names are case insensitive;
 thus, DPoP, DPOP, dpop, etc., are all valid and equivalent header
 field names.  However, case is significant in the header field value.
 The DPoP HTTP header field value uses the token68 syntax defined in
 Section 11.2 of [RFC9110] and is repeated below in Figure 3 for ease
 of reference.
 DPoP       = token68
 token68    = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT /
                  "-" / "." / "_" / "~" / "+" / "/" ) *"="
                    Figure 3: DPoP Header Field ABNF

4.2. DPoP Proof JWT Syntax

 A DPoP proof is a JWT [RFC7519] that is signed (using JSON Web
 Signature (JWS) [RFC7515]) with a private key chosen by the client
 (see below).  The JOSE Header of a DPoP JWT MUST contain at least the
 following parameters:
 typ:  A field with the value dpop+jwt, which explicitly types the
    DPoP proof JWT as recommended in Section 3.11 of [RFC8725].
 alg:  An identifier for a JWS asymmetric digital signature algorithm
    from [IANA.JOSE.ALGS].  It MUST NOT be none or an identifier for a
    symmetric algorithm (Message Authentication Code (MAC)).
 jwk:  Represents the public key chosen by the client in JSON Web Key
    (JWK) [RFC7517] format as defined in Section 4.1.3 of [RFC7515].
    It MUST NOT contain a private key.
 The payload of a DPoP proof MUST contain at least the following
 claims:
 jti:  Unique identifier for the DPoP proof JWT.  The value MUST be
    assigned such that there is a negligible probability that the same
    value will be assigned to any other DPoP proof used in the same
    context during the time window of validity.  Such uniqueness can
    be accomplished by encoding (base64url or any other suitable
    encoding) at least 96 bits of pseudorandom data or by using a
    version 4 Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) string according to
    [RFC4122].  The jti can be used by the server for replay detection
    and prevention; see Section 11.1.
 htm:  The value of the HTTP method (Section 9.1 of [RFC9110]) of the
    request to which the JWT is attached.
 htu:  The HTTP target URI (Section 7.1 of [RFC9110]) of the request
    to which the JWT is attached, without query and fragment parts.
 iat:  Creation timestamp of the JWT (Section 4.1.6 of [RFC7519]).
 When the DPoP proof is used in conjunction with the presentation of
 an access token in protected resource access (see Section 7), the
 DPoP proof MUST also contain the following claim:
 ath:  Hash of the access token.  The value MUST be the result of a
    base64url encoding (as defined in Section 2 of [RFC7515]) the
    SHA-256 [SHS] hash of the ASCII encoding of the associated access
    token's value.
 When the authentication server or resource server provides a DPoP-
 Nonce HTTP header in a response (see Sections 8 and 9), the DPoP
 proof MUST also contain the following claim:
 nonce:  A recent nonce provided via the DPoP-Nonce HTTP header.
 A DPoP proof MAY contain other JOSE Header Parameters or claims as
 defined by extension, profile, or deployment-specific requirements.
 Figure 4 is a conceptual example showing the decoded content of the
 DPoP proof in Figure 2.  The JSON of the JWT header and payload are
 shown, but the signature part is omitted.  As usual, line breaks and
 extra spaces are included for formatting and readability.
 {
   "typ":"dpop+jwt",
   "alg":"ES256",
   "jwk": {
     "kty":"EC",
     "x":"l8tFrhx-34tV3hRICRDY9zCkDlpBhF42UQUfWVAWBFs",
     "y":"9VE4jf_Ok_o64zbTTlcuNJajHmt6v9TDVrU0CdvGRDA",
     "crv":"P-256"
   }
 }
 .
 {
   "jti":"-BwC3ESc6acc2lTc",
   "htm":"POST",
   "htu":"https://server.example.com/token",
   "iat":1562262616
 }
             Figure 4: Example JWT Content of a DPoP Proof
 Of the HTTP request, only the HTTP method and URI are included in the
 DPoP JWT; therefore, only these two message parts are covered by the
 DPoP proof.  The idea is to sign just enough of the HTTP data to
 provide reasonable proof of possession with respect to the HTTP
 request.  This design approach of using only a minimal subset of the
 HTTP header data is to avoid the substantial difficulties inherent in
 attempting to normalize HTTP messages.  Nonetheless, DPoP proofs can
 be extended to contain other information of the HTTP request (see
 also Section 11.7).

4.3. Checking DPoP Proofs

 To validate a DPoP proof, the receiving server MUST ensure the
 following:
 1.   There is not more than one DPoP HTTP request header field.
 2.   The DPoP HTTP request header field value is a single and well-
      formed JWT.
 3.   All required claims per Section 4.2 are contained in the JWT.
 4.   The typ JOSE Header Parameter has the value dpop+jwt.
 5.   The alg JOSE Header Parameter indicates a registered asymmetric
      digital signature algorithm [IANA.JOSE.ALGS], is not none, is
      supported by the application, and is acceptable per local
      policy.
 6.   The JWT signature verifies with the public key contained in the
      jwk JOSE Header Parameter.
 7.   The jwk JOSE Header Parameter does not contain a private key.
 8.   The htm claim matches the HTTP method of the current request.
 9.   The htu claim matches the HTTP URI value for the HTTP request in
      which the JWT was received, ignoring any query and fragment
      parts.
 10.  If the server provided a nonce value to the client, the nonce
      claim matches the server-provided nonce value.
 11.  The creation time of the JWT, as determined by either the iat
      claim or a server managed timestamp via the nonce claim, is
      within an acceptable window (see Section 11.1).
 12.  If presented to a protected resource in conjunction with an
      access token,
      *  ensure that the value of the ath claim equals the hash of
         that access token, and
      *  confirm that the public key to which the access token is
         bound matches the public key from the DPoP proof.
 To reduce the likelihood of false negatives, servers SHOULD employ
 syntax-based normalization (Section 6.2.2 of [RFC3986]) and scheme-
 based normalization (Section 6.2.3 of [RFC3986]) before comparing the
 htu claim.
 These checks may be performed in any order.

5. DPoP Access Token Request

 To request an access token that is bound to a public key using DPoP,
 the client MUST provide a valid DPoP proof JWT in a DPoP header when
 making an access token request to the authorization server's token
 endpoint.  This is applicable for all access token requests
 regardless of grant type (e.g., the common authorization_code and
 refresh_token grant types and extension grants such as the JWT
 authorization grant [RFC7523]).  The HTTP request shown in Figure 5
 illustrates such an access token request using an authorization code
 grant with a DPoP proof JWT in the DPoP header.  Figure 5 uses "\"
 line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 POST /token HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com
 Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
 DPoP: eyJ0eXAiOiJkcG9wK2p3dCIsImFsZyI6IkVTMjU2IiwiandrIjp7Imt0eSI6Ik\
  VDIiwieCI6Imw4dEZyaHgtMzR0VjNoUklDUkRZOXpDa0RscEJoRjQyVVFVZldWQVdCR\
  nMiLCJ5IjoiOVZFNGpmX09rX282NHpiVFRsY3VOSmFqSG10NnY5VERWclUwQ2R2R1JE\
  QSIsImNydiI6IlAtMjU2In19.eyJqdGkiOiItQndDM0VTYzZhY2MybFRjIiwiaHRtIj\
  oiUE9TVCIsImh0dSI6Imh0dHBzOi8vc2VydmVyLmV4YW1wbGUuY29tL3Rva2VuIiwia\
  WF0IjoxNTYyMjYyNjE2fQ.2-GxA6T8lP4vfrg8v-FdWP0A0zdrj8igiMLvqRMUvwnQg\
  4PtFLbdLXiOSsX0x7NVY-FNyJK70nfbV37xRZT3Lg
 grant_type=authorization_code\
 &client_id=s6BhdRkqt\
 &code=SplxlOBeZQQYbYS6WxSbIA
 &redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fclient%2Eexample%2Ecom%2Fcb\
 &code_verifier=bEaL42izcC-o-xBk0K2vuJ6U-y1p9r_wW2dFWIWgjz-
  Figure 5: Token Request for a DPoP Sender-Constrained Token Using an
                           Authorization Code
 The DPoP HTTP header field MUST contain a valid DPoP proof JWT.  If
 the DPoP proof is invalid, the authorization server issues an error
 response per Section 5.2 of [RFC6749] with invalid_dpop_proof as the
 value of the error parameter.
 To sender-constrain the access token after checking the validity of
 the DPoP proof, the authorization server associates the issued access
 token with the public key from the DPoP proof, which can be
 accomplished as described in Section 6.  A token_type of DPoP MUST be
 included in the access token response to signal to the client that
 the access token was bound to its DPoP key and can be used as
 described in Section 7.1.  The example response shown in Figure 6
 illustrates such a response.
 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
 Content-Type: application/json
 Cache-Control: no-store
 {
  "access_token": "Kz~8mXK1EalYznwH-LC-1fBAo.4Ljp~zsPE_NeO.gxU",
  "token_type": "DPoP",
  "expires_in": 2677,
  "refresh_token": "Q..Zkm29lexi8VnWg2zPW1x-tgGad0Ibc3s3EwM_Ni4-g"
 }
                    Figure 6: Access Token Response
 The example response in Figure 6 includes a refresh token that the
 client can use to obtain a new access token when the previous one
 expires.  Refreshing an access token is a token request using the
 refresh_token grant type made to the authorization server's token
 endpoint.  As with all access token requests, the client makes it a
 DPoP request by including a DPoP proof, as shown in Figure 7.
 Figure 7 uses "\" line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 POST /token HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com
 Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
 DPoP: eyJ0eXAiOiJkcG9wK2p3dCIsImFsZyI6IkVTMjU2IiwiandrIjp7Imt0eSI6Ik\
  VDIiwieCI6Imw4dEZyaHgtMzR0VjNoUklDUkRZOXpDa0RscEJoRjQyVVFVZldWQVdCR\
  nMiLCJ5IjoiOVZFNGpmX09rX282NHpiVFRsY3VOSmFqSG10NnY5VERWclUwQ2R2R1JE\
  QSIsImNydiI6IlAtMjU2In19.eyJqdGkiOiItQndDM0VTYzZhY2MybFRjIiwiaHRtIj\
  oiUE9TVCIsImh0dSI6Imh0dHBzOi8vc2VydmVyLmV4YW1wbGUuY29tL3Rva2VuIiwia\
  WF0IjoxNTYyMjY1Mjk2fQ.pAqut2IRDm_De6PR93SYmGBPXpwrAk90e8cP2hjiaG5Qs\
  GSuKDYW7_X620BxqhvYC8ynrrvZLTk41mSRroapUA
 grant_type=refresh_token\
 &client_id=s6BhdRkqt\
 &refresh_token=Q..Zkm29lexi8VnWg2zPW1x-tgGad0Ibc3s3EwM_Ni4-g
  Figure 7: Token Request for a DPoP-Bound Token Using a Refresh Token
 When an authorization server supporting DPoP issues a refresh token
 to a public client that presents a valid DPoP proof at the token
 endpoint, the refresh token MUST be bound to the respective public
 key.  The binding MUST be validated when the refresh token is later
 presented to get new access tokens.  As a result, such a client MUST
 present a DPoP proof for the same key that was used to obtain the
 refresh token each time that refresh token is used to obtain a new
 access token.  The implementation details of the binding of the
 refresh token are at the discretion of the authorization server.
 Since the authorization server both produces and validates its
 refresh tokens, there is no interoperability consideration in the
 specific details of the binding.
 An authorization server MAY elect to issue access tokens that are not
 DPoP bound, which is signaled to the client with a value of Bearer in
 the token_type parameter of the access token response per [RFC6750].
 For a public client that is also issued a refresh token, this has the
 effect of DPoP-binding the refresh token alone, which can improve the
 security posture even when protected resources are not updated to
 support DPoP.
 If the access token response contains a different token_type value
 than DPoP, the access token protection provided by DPoP is not given.
 The client MUST discard the response in this case if this protection
 is deemed important for the security of the application; otherwise,
 the client may continue as in a regular OAuth interaction.
 Refresh tokens issued to confidential clients (those having
 established authentication credentials with the authorization server)
 are not bound to the DPoP proof public key because they are already
 sender-constrained with a different existing mechanism.  The OAuth
 2.0 Authorization Framework [RFC6749] already requires that an
 authorization server bind refresh tokens to the client to which they
 were issued and that confidential clients authenticate to the
 authorization server when presenting a refresh token.  As a result,
 such refresh tokens are sender-constrained by way of the client
 identifier and the associated authentication requirement.  This
 existing sender-constraining mechanism is more flexible (e.g., it
 allows credential rotation for the client without invalidating
 refresh tokens) than binding directly to a particular public key.

5.1. Authorization Server Metadata

 This document introduces the following authorization server metadata
 [RFC8414] parameter to signal support for DPoP in general and the
 specific JWS alg values the authorization server supports for DPoP
 proof JWTs.
 dpop_signing_alg_values_supported:  A JSON array containing a list of
    the JWS alg values (from the [IANA.JOSE.ALGS] registry) supported
    by the authorization server for DPoP proof JWTs.

5.2. Client Registration Metadata

 The Dynamic Client Registration Protocol [RFC7591] defines an API for
 dynamically registering OAuth 2.0 client metadata with authorization
 servers.  The metadata defined by [RFC7591], and registered
 extensions to it, also imply a general data model for clients that is
 useful for authorization server implementations even when the Dynamic
 Client Registration Protocol isn't in play.  Such implementations
 will typically have some sort of user interface available for
 managing client configuration.
 This document introduces the following client registration metadata
 [RFC7591] parameter to indicate that the client always uses DPoP when
 requesting tokens from the authorization server.
 dpop_bound_access_tokens:  A boolean value specifying whether the
    client always uses DPoP for token requests.  If omitted, the
    default value is false.
 If the value is true, the authorization server MUST reject token
 requests from the client that do not contain the DPoP header.

6. Public Key Confirmation

 Resource servers MUST be able to reliably identify whether an access
 token is DPoP-bound and ascertain sufficient information to verify
 the binding to the public key of the DPoP proof (see Section 7.1).
 Such a binding is accomplished by associating the public key with the
 token in a way that can be accessed by the protected resource, such
 as embedding the JWK hash in the issued access token directly, using
 the syntax described in Section 6.1, or through token introspection
 as described in Section 6.2.  Other methods of associating a public
 key with an access token are possible per an agreement by the
 authorization server and the protected resource; however, they are
 beyond the scope of this specification.
 Resource servers supporting DPoP MUST ensure that the public key from
 the DPoP proof matches the one bound to the access token.

6.1. JWK Thumbprint Confirmation Method

 When access tokens are represented as JWTs [RFC7519], the public key
 information is represented using the jkt confirmation method member
 defined herein.  To convey the hash of a public key in a JWT, this
 specification introduces the following JWT Confirmation Method
 [RFC7800] member for use under the cnf claim.
 jkt:  JWK SHA-256 Thumbprint confirmation method.  The value of the
    jkt member MUST be the base64url encoding (as defined in
    [RFC7515]) of the JWK SHA-256 Thumbprint (according to [RFC7638])
    of the DPoP public key (in JWK format) to which the access token
    is bound.
 The following example JWT in Figure 8 with a decoded JWT payload
 shown in Figure 9 contains a cnf claim with the jkt JWK Thumbprint
 confirmation method member.  The jkt value in these examples is the
 hash of the public key from the DPoP proofs in the examples shown in
 Section 5.  The example uses "\" line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6IkJlQUxrYiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJzb21lb25lQGV4YW1\
 wbGUuY29tIiwiaXNzIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9zZXJ2ZXIuZXhhbXBsZS5jb20iLCJuYmYiOjE\
 1NjIyNjI2MTEsImV4cCI6MTU2MjI2NjIxNiwiY25mIjp7ImprdCI6IjBaY09DT1JaTll\
 5LURXcHFxMzBqWnlKR0hUTjBkMkhnbEJWM3VpZ3VBNEkifX0.3Tyo8VTcn6u_PboUmAO\
 YUY1kfAavomW_YwYMkmRNizLJoQzWy2fCo79Zi5yObpIzjWb5xW4OGld7ESZrh0fsrA
     Figure 8: JWT Containing a JWK SHA-256 Thumbprint Confirmation
 {
   "sub":"someone@example.com",
   "iss":"https://server.example.com",
   "nbf":1562262611,
   "exp":1562266216,
   "cnf":
   {
     "jkt":"0ZcOCORZNYy-DWpqq30jZyJGHTN0d2HglBV3uiguA4I"
   }
 }
  Figure 9: JWT Claims Set with a JWK SHA-256 Thumbprint Confirmation

6.2. JWK Thumbprint Confirmation Method in Token Introspection

 "OAuth 2.0 Token Introspection" [RFC7662] defines a method for a
 protected resource to query an authorization server about the active
 state of an access token.  The protected resource also determines
 metainformation about the token.
 For a DPoP-bound access token, the hash of the public key to which
 the token is bound is conveyed to the protected resource as
 metainformation in a token introspection response.  The hash is
 conveyed using the same cnf content with jkt member structure as the
 JWK Thumbprint confirmation method, described in Section 6.1, as a
 top-level member of the introspection response JSON.  Note that the
 resource server does not send a DPoP proof with the introspection
 request, and the authorization server does not validate an access
 token's DPoP binding at the introspection endpoint.  Rather, the
 resource server uses the data of the introspection response to
 validate the access token binding itself locally.
 If the token_type member is included in the introspection response,
 it MUST contain the value DPoP.
 The example introspection request in Figure 10 and corresponding
 response in Figure 11 illustrate an introspection exchange for the
 example DPoP-bound access token that was issued in Figure 6.
 POST /as/introspect.oauth2 HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com
 Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
 Authorization: Basic cnM6cnM6TWt1LTZnX2xDektJZHo0ZnNON2tZY3lhK1Rp
 token=Kz~8mXK1EalYznwH-LC-1fBAo.4Ljp~zsPE_NeO.gxU
                Figure 10: Example Introspection Request
 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
 Content-Type: application/json
 Cache-Control: no-store
 {
   "active": true,
   "sub": "someone@example.com",
   "iss": "https://server.example.com",
   "nbf": 1562262611,
   "exp": 1562266216,
   "cnf":
   {
     "jkt": "0ZcOCORZNYy-DWpqq30jZyJGHTN0d2HglBV3uiguA4I"
   }
 }
   Figure 11: Example Introspection Response for a DPoP-Bound Access
                                 Token

7. Protected Resource Access

 Requests to DPoP-protected resources MUST include both a DPoP proof
 as per Section 4 and the access token as described in Section 7.1.
 The DPoP proof MUST include the ath claim with a valid hash of the
 associated access token.
 Binding the token value to the proof in this way prevents a proof to
 be used with multiple different access token values across different
 requests.  For example, if a client holds tokens bound to two
 different resource owners, AT1 and AT2, and uses the same key when
 talking to the authorization server, it's possible that these tokens
 could be swapped.  Without the ath field to bind it, a captured
 signature applied to AT1 could be replayed with AT2 instead, changing
 the rights and access of the intended request.  This same
 substitution prevention remains for rotated access tokens within the
 same combination of client and resource owner -- a rotated token
 value would require the calculation of a new proof.  This binding
 additionally ensures that a proof intended for use with the access
 token is not usable without an access token, or vice-versa.
 The resource server is required to calculate the hash of the token
 value presented and verify that it is the same as the hash value in
 the ath field as described in Section 4.3.  Since the ath field value
 is covered by the DPoP proof's signature, its inclusion binds the
 access token value to the holder of the key used to generate the
 signature.
 Note that the ath field alone does not prevent replay of the DPoP
 proof or provide binding to the request in which the proof is
 presented, and it is still important to check the time window of the
 proof as well as the included message parameters, such as htm and
 htu.

7.1. The DPoP Authentication Scheme

 A DPoP-bound access token is sent using the Authorization request
 header field per Section 11.6.2 of [RFC9110] with an authentication
 scheme of DPoP.  The syntax of the Authorization header field for the
 DPoP scheme uses the token68 syntax defined in Section 11.2 of
 [RFC9110] for credentials and is repeated below for ease of
 reference.  The ABNF notation syntax for DPoP authentication scheme
 credentials is as follows:
 token68    = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT /
                  "-" / "." / "_" / "~" / "+" / "/" ) *"="
 credentials = "DPoP" 1*SP token68
               Figure 12: DPoP Authentication Scheme ABNF
 For such an access token, a resource server MUST check that a DPoP
 proof was also received in the DPoP header field of the HTTP request,
 check the DPoP proof according to the rules in Section 4.3, and check
 that the public key of the DPoP proof matches the public key to which
 the access token is bound per Section 6.
 The resource server MUST NOT grant access to the resource unless all
 checks are successful.
 Figure 13 shows an example request to a protected resource with a
 DPoP-bound access token in the Authorization header and the DPoP
 proof in the DPoP header.  The example uses "\" line wrapping per
 [RFC8792].  Figure 14 shows the decoded content of that DPoP proof.
 The JSON of the JWT header and payload are shown, but the signature
 part is omitted.  As usual, line breaks and indentation are included
 for formatting and readability.
 GET /protectedresource HTTP/1.1
 Host: resource.example.org
 Authorization: DPoP Kz~8mXK1EalYznwH-LC-1fBAo.4Ljp~zsPE_NeO.gxU
 DPoP: eyJ0eXAiOiJkcG9wK2p3dCIsImFsZyI6IkVTMjU2IiwiandrIjp7Imt0eSI6Ik\
  VDIiwieCI6Imw4dEZyaHgtMzR0VjNoUklDUkRZOXpDa0RscEJoRjQyVVFVZldWQVdCR\
  nMiLCJ5IjoiOVZFNGpmX09rX282NHpiVFRsY3VOSmFqSG10NnY5VERWclUwQ2R2R1JE\
  QSIsImNydiI6IlAtMjU2In19.eyJqdGkiOiJlMWozVl9iS2ljOC1MQUVCIiwiaHRtIj\
  oiR0VUIiwiaHR1IjoiaHR0cHM6Ly9yZXNvdXJjZS5leGFtcGxlLm9yZy9wcm90ZWN0Z\
  WRyZXNvdXJjZSIsImlhdCI6MTU2MjI2MjYxOCwiYXRoIjoiZlVIeU8ycjJaM0RaNTNF\
  c05yV0JiMHhXWG9hTnk1OUlpS0NBcWtzbVFFbyJ9.2oW9RP35yRqzhrtNP86L-Ey71E\
  OptxRimPPToA1plemAgR6pxHF8y6-yqyVnmcw6Fy1dqd-jfxSYoMxhAJpLjA
               Figure 13: DPoP-Protected Resource Request
 {
   "typ":"dpop+jwt",
   "alg":"ES256",
   "jwk": {
     "kty":"EC",
     "x":"l8tFrhx-34tV3hRICRDY9zCkDlpBhF42UQUfWVAWBFs",
     "y":"9VE4jf_Ok_o64zbTTlcuNJajHmt6v9TDVrU0CdvGRDA",
     "crv":"P-256"
   }
 }
 .
 {
   "jti":"e1j3V_bKic8-LAEB",
   "htm":"GET",
   "htu":"https://resource.example.org/protectedresource",
   "iat":1562262618,
   "ath":"fUHyO2r2Z3DZ53EsNrWBb0xWXoaNy59IiKCAqksmQEo"
 }
     Figure 14: Decoded Content of the DPoP Proof JWT in Figure 13
 Upon receipt of a request to a protected resource within the
 protection space requiring DPoP authentication, the server can
 respond with a challenge to the client to provide DPoP authentication
 information if the request does not include valid credentials or does
 not contain an access token sufficient for access.  Such a challenge
 is made using the 401 (Unauthorized) response status code ([RFC9110],
 Section 15.5.2) and the WWW-Authenticate header field ([RFC9110],
 Section 11.6.1).  The server MAY include the WWW-Authenticate header
 in response to other conditions as well.
 In such challenges:
  • The scheme name is DPoP.
  • The authentication parameter realm MAY be included to indicate the

scope of protection in the manner described in [RFC9110],

    Section 11.5.
 *  A scope authentication parameter MAY be included as defined in
    [RFC6750], Section 3.
 *  An error parameter ([RFC6750], Section 3) SHOULD be included to
    indicate the reason why the request was declined, if the request
    included an access token but failed authentication.  The error
    parameter values described in [RFC6750], Section 3.1 are suitable,
    as are any appropriate values defined by extension.  The value
    use_dpop_nonce can be used as described in Section 9 to signal
    that a nonce is needed in the DPoP proof of a subsequent
    request(s).  Additionally, invalid_dpop_proof is used to indicate
    that the DPoP proof itself was deemed invalid based on the
    criteria of Section 4.3.
 *  An error_description parameter ([RFC6750], Section 3) MAY be
    included along with the error parameter to provide developers a
    human-readable explanation that is not meant to be displayed to
    end-users.
 *  An algs parameter SHOULD be included to signal to the client the
    JWS algorithms that are acceptable for the DPoP proof JWT.  The
    value of the parameter is a space-delimited list of JWS alg
    (Algorithm) header values ([RFC7515], Section 4.1.1).
 *  Additional authentication parameters MAY be used, and unknown
    parameters MUST be ignored by recipients.
 Figure 15 shows a response to a protected resource request without
 authentication.
  HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
  WWW-Authenticate: DPoP algs="ES256 PS256"
  Figure 15: HTTP 401 Response to a Protected Resource Request without
                             Authentication
 Figure 16 shows a response to a protected resource request that was
 rejected due to the failed confirmation of the DPoP binding in the
 access token.  Figure 16 uses "\" line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
 WWW-Authenticate: DPoP error="invalid_token", \
    error_description="Invalid DPoP key binding", algs="ES256"
   Figure 16: HTTP 401 Response to a Protected Resource Request with
                            an Invalid Token
 Note that browser-based client applications using Cross-Origin
 Resource Sharing (CORS) [WHATWG.Fetch] only have access to CORS-
 safelisted response HTTP headers by default.  In order for the
 application to obtain and use the WWW-Authenticate HTTP response
 header value, the server needs to make it available to the
 application by including WWW-Authenticate in the Access-Control-
 Expose-Headers response header list value.
 This authentication scheme is for origin-server authentication only.
 Therefore, this authentication scheme MUST NOT be used with the
 Proxy-Authenticate or Proxy-Authorization header fields.
 Note that the syntax of the Authorization header field for this
 authentication scheme follows the usage of the Bearer scheme defined
 in Section 2.1 of [RFC6750].  While it is not the preferred
 credential syntax of [RFC9110], it is compatible with the general
 authentication framework therein and is used for consistency and
 familiarity with the Bearer scheme.

7.2. Compatibility with the Bearer Authentication Scheme

 Protected resources simultaneously supporting both the DPoP and
 Bearer schemes need to update how the evaluation process is performed
 for bearer tokens to prevent downgraded usage of a DPoP-bound access
 token.  Specifically, such a protected resource MUST reject a DPoP-
 bound access token received as a bearer token per [RFC6750].
 Section 11.6.1 of [RFC9110] allows a protected resource to indicate
 support for multiple authentication schemes (i.e., Bearer and DPoP)
 with the WWW-Authenticate header field of a 401 (Unauthorized)
 response.
 A protected resource that supports only [RFC6750] and is unaware of
 DPoP would most presumably accept a DPoP-bound access token as a
 bearer token (JWT [RFC7519] says to ignore unrecognized claims,
 Introspection [RFC7662] says that other parameters might be present
 while placing no functional requirements on their presence, and
 [RFC6750] is effectively silent on the content of the access token
 since it relates to validity).  As such, a client can send a DPoP-
 bound access token using the Bearer scheme upon receipt of a WWW-
 Authenticate: Bearer challenge from a protected resource (or it can
 send a DPoP-bound access token if it has prior knowledge of the
 capabilities of the protected resource).  The effect of this likely
 simplifies the logistics of phased upgrades to protected resources in
 their support DPoP or prolonged deployments of protected resources
 with mixed token type support.
 If a protected resource supporting both Bearer and DPoP schemes
 elects to respond with multiple WWW-Authenticate challenges,
 attention should be paid to which challenge(s) should deliver the
 actual error information.  It is RECOMMENDED that the following rules
 be adhered to:
  • If no authentication information has been included with the

request, then the challenges SHOULD NOT include an error code or

    other error information, as per Section 3.1 of [RFC6750]
    (Figure 17).
  • If the mechanism used to attempt authentication could be

established unambiguously, then the corresponding challenge SHOULD

    be used to deliver error information (Figure 18).
  • Otherwise, both Bearer and DPoP challenges MAY be used to deliver

error information (Figure 19).

 The following examples use "\" line wrapping per [RFC8792].
 GET /protectedresource HTTP/1.1
 Host: resource.example.org
 HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
 WWW-Authenticate: Bearer, DPoP algs="ES256 PS256"
  Figure 17: HTTP 401 Response to a Protected Resource Request without
                             Authentication
 GET /protectedresource HTTP/1.1
 Host: resource.example.org
 Authorization: Bearer INVALID_TOKEN
 HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
 WWW-Authenticate: Bearer error="invalid_token", \
     error_description="Invalid token", DPoP algs="ES256 PS256"
   Figure 18: HTTP 401 Response to a Protected Resource Request with
                         Invalid Authentication
 GET /protectedresource HTTP/1.1
 Host: resource.example.org
 Authorization: Bearer Kz~8mXK1EalYznwH-LC-1fBAo.4Ljp~zsPE_NeO.gxU
 Authorization: DPoP Kz~8mXK1EalYznwH-LC-1fBAo.4Ljp~zsPE_NeO.gxU
 HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
 WWW-Authenticate: Bearer error="invalid_request", \
  error_description="Multiple methods used to include access token", \
  DPoP algs="ES256 PS256", error="invalid_request", \
  error_description="Multiple methods used to include access token"
   Figure 19: HTTP 400 Response to a Protected Resource Request with
                        Ambiguous Authentication

7.3. Client Considerations

 Authorization including a DPoP proof may not be idempotent (depending
 on server enforcement of jti, iat, and nonce claims).  Consequently,
 all previously idempotent requests for protected resources that were
 previously idempotent may no longer be idempotent.  It is RECOMMENDED
 that clients generate a unique DPoP proof, even when retrying
 idempotent requests in response to HTTP errors generally understood
 as transient.
 Clients that encounter frequent network errors may experience
 additional challenges when interacting with servers with stricter
 nonce validation implementations.

8. Authorization Server-Provided Nonce

 This section specifies a mechanism using opaque nonces provided by
 the server that can be used to limit the lifetime of DPoP proofs.
 Without employing such a mechanism, a malicious party controlling the
 client (potentially including the end-user) can create DPoP proofs
 for use arbitrarily far in the future.
 Including a nonce value contributed by the authorization server in
 the DPoP proof MAY be used by authorization servers to limit the
 lifetime of DPoP proofs.  The server determines when to issue a new
 DPoP nonce challenge and if it is needed, thereby requiring the use
 of the nonce value in subsequent DPoP proofs.  The logic through
 which the server makes that determination is out of scope of this
 document.
 An authorization server MAY supply a nonce value to be included by
 the client in DPoP proofs sent.  In this case, the authorization
 server responds to requests that do not include a nonce with an HTTP
 400 (Bad Request) error response per Section 5.2 of [RFC6749] using
 use_dpop_nonce as the error code value.  The authorization server
 includes a DPoP-Nonce HTTP header in the response supplying a nonce
 value to be used when sending the subsequent request.  Nonce values
 MUST be unpredictable.  This same error code is used when supplying a
 new nonce value when there was a nonce mismatch.  The client will
 typically retry the request with the new nonce value supplied upon
 receiving a use_dpop_nonce error with an accompanying nonce value.
 For example, in response to a token request without a nonce when the
 authorization server requires one, the authorization server can
 respond with a DPoP-Nonce value such as the following to provide a
 nonce value to include in the DPoP proof:
  HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
  DPoP-Nonce: eyJ7S_zG.eyJH0-Z.HX4w-7v
  {
   "error": "use_dpop_nonce",
   "error_description":
     "Authorization server requires nonce in DPoP proof"
  }
    Figure 20: HTTP 400 Response to a Token Request without a Nonce
 Other HTTP headers and JSON fields MAY also be included in the error
 response, but there MUST NOT be more than one DPoP-Nonce header.
 Upon receiving the nonce, the client is expected to retry its token
 request using a DPoP proof including the supplied nonce value in the
 nonce claim of the DPoP proof.  An example unencoded JWT payload of
 such a DPoP proof including a nonce is shown below.
  {
   "jti": "-BwC3ESc6acc2lTc",
   "htm": "POST",
   "htu": "https://server.example.com/token",
   "iat": 1562262616,
   "nonce": "eyJ7S_zG.eyJH0-Z.HX4w-7v"
  }
         Figure 21: DPoP Proof Payload including a Nonce Value
 The nonce is opaque to the client.
 If the nonce claim in the DPoP proof does not exactly match a nonce
 recently supplied by the authorization server to the client, the
 authorization server MUST reject the request.  The rejection response
 MAY include a DPoP-Nonce HTTP header providing a new nonce value to
 use for subsequent requests.
 The intent is that clients need to keep only one nonce value and
 servers need to keep a window of recent nonces.  That said, transient
 circumstances may arise in which the stored nonce values for the
 server and the client differ.  However, this situation is self-
 correcting.  With any rejection message, the server can send the
 client the nonce value it wants to use to the client, and the client
 can store that nonce value and retry the request with it.  Even if
 the client and/or server discard their stored nonce values, that
 situation is also self-correcting because new nonce values can be
 communicated when responding to or retrying failed requests.
 Note that browser-based client applications using CORS [WHATWG.Fetch]
 only have access to CORS-safelisted response HTTP headers by default.
 In order for the application to obtain and use the DPoP-Nonce HTTP
 response header value, the server needs to make it available to the
 application by including DPoP-Nonce in the Access-Control-Expose-
 Headers response header list value.

8.1. Nonce Syntax

 The nonce syntax in ABNF as used by [RFC6749] (which is the same as
 the scope-token syntax) is shown below.
 nonce = 1*NQCHAR
                         Figure 22: Nonce ABNF

8.2. Providing a New Nonce Value

 It is up to the authorization server when to supply a new nonce value
 for the client to use.  The client is expected to use the existing
 supplied nonce in DPoP proofs until the server supplies a new nonce
 value.
 The authorization server MAY supply the new nonce in the same way
 that the initial one was supplied: by using a DPoP-Nonce HTTP header
 in the response.  The DPoP-Nonce HTTP header field uses the nonce
 syntax defined in Section 8.1.  Each time this happens, it requires
 an extra protocol round trip.
 A more efficient manner of supplying a new nonce value is also
 defined by including a DPoP-Nonce HTTP header in the HTTP 200 (OK)
 response from the previous request.  The client MUST use the new
 nonce value supplied for the next token request and for all
 subsequent token requests until the authorization server supplies a
 new nonce.
 Responses that include the DPoP-Nonce HTTP header should be
 uncacheable (e.g., using Cache-Control: no-store in response to a GET
 request) to prevent the response from being used to serve a
 subsequent request and a stale nonce value from being used as a
 result.
 An example 200 OK response providing a new nonce value is shown
 below.
  HTTP/1.1 200 OK
  Cache-Control: no-store
  DPoP-Nonce: eyJ7S_zG.eyJbYu3.xQmBj-1
      Figure 23: HTTP 200 Response Providing the Next Nonce Value

9. Resource Server-Provided Nonce

 Resource servers can also choose to provide a nonce value to be
 included in DPoP proofs sent to them.  They provide the nonce using
 the DPoP-Nonce header in the same way that authorization servers do
 as described in Sections 8 and 8.2.  The error signaling is performed
 as described in Section 7.1.  Resource servers use an HTTP 401
 (Unauthorized) error code with an accompanying WWW-Authenticate: DPoP
 value and DPoP-Nonce value to accomplish this.
 For example, in response to a resource request without a nonce when
 the resource server requires one, the resource server can respond
 with a DPoP-Nonce value such as the following to provide a nonce
 value to include in the DPoP proof.  The example below uses "\" line
 wrapping per [RFC8792].
  HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
  WWW-Authenticate: DPoP error="use_dpop_nonce", \
    error_description="Resource server requires nonce in DPoP proof"
  DPoP-Nonce: eyJ7S_zG.eyJH0-Z.HX4w-7v
   Figure 24: HTTP 401 Response to a Resource Request without a Nonce
 Note that the nonces provided by an authorization server and a
 resource server are different and should not be confused with one
 another since nonces will be only accepted by the server that issued
 them.  Likewise, should a client use multiple authorization servers
 and/or resource servers, a nonce issued by any of them should be used
 only at the issuing server.  Developers should also be careful to not
 confuse DPoP nonces with the OpenID Connect [OpenID.Core] ID Token
 nonce.

10. Authorization Code Binding to a DPoP Key

 Binding the authorization code issued to the client's proof-of-
 possession key can enable end-to-end binding of the entire
 authorization flow.  This specification defines the dpop_jkt
 authorization request parameter for this purpose.  The value of the
 dpop_jkt authorization request parameter is the JWK Thumbprint
 [RFC7638] of the proof-of-possession public key using the SHA-256
 hash function, which is the same value as used for the jkt
 confirmation method defined in Section 6.1.
 When a token request is received, the authorization server computes
 the JWK Thumbprint of the proof-of-possession public key in the DPoP
 proof and verifies that it matches the dpop_jkt parameter value in
 the authorization request.  If they do not match, it MUST reject the
 request.
 An example authorization request using the dpop_jkt authorization
 request parameter is shown below and uses "\" line wrapping per
 [RFC8792].
 GET /authorize?response_type=code&client_id=s6BhdRkqt3&state=xyz\
     &redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fclient%2Eexample%2Ecom%2Fcb\
     &code_challenge=E9Melhoa2OwvFrEMTJguCHaoeK1t8URWbuGJSstw-cM\
     &code_challenge_method=S256\
     &dpop_jkt=NzbLsXh8uDCcd-6MNwXF4W_7noWXFZAfHkxZsRGC9Xs HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com
     Figure 25: Authorization Request Using the dpop_jkt Parameter
 Use of the dpop_jkt authorization request parameter is OPTIONAL.
 Note that the dpop_jkt authorization request parameter MAY also be
 used in combination with Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE)
 [RFC7636], which is recommended by [SECURITY-TOPICS] as a
 countermeasure to authorization code injection.  The dpop_jkt
 authorization request parameter only provides similar protections
 when a unique DPoP key is used for each authorization request.

10.1. DPoP with Pushed Authorization Requests

 When Pushed Authorization Requests (PARs) [RFC9126] are used in
 conjunction with DPoP, there are two ways in which the DPoP key can
 be communicated in the PAR request:
  • The dpop_jkt parameter can be used as described in Section 10 to

bind the issued authorization code to a specific key. In this

    case, dpop_jkt MUST be included alongside other authorization
    request parameters in the POST body of the PAR request.
 *  Alternatively, the DPoP header can be added to the PAR request.
    In this case, the authorization server MUST check the provided
    DPoP proof JWT as defined in Section 4.3.  It MUST further behave
    as if the contained public key's thumbprint was provided using
    dpop_jkt, i.e., reject the subsequent token request unless a DPoP
    proof for the same key is provided.  This can help to simplify the
    implementation of the client, as it can "blindly" attach the DPoP
    header to all requests to the authorization server regardless of
    the type of request.  Additionally, it provides a stronger
    binding, as the DPoP header contains a proof of possession of the
    private key.
 Both mechanisms MUST be supported by an authorization server that
 supports PAR and DPoP.  If both mechanisms are used at the same time,
 the authorization server MUST reject the request if the JWK
 Thumbprint in dpop_jkt does not match the public key in the DPoP
 header.
 Allowing both mechanisms ensures that clients using dpop_jkt do not
 need to distinguish between front-channel and pushed authorization
 requests, and at the same time, clients that only have one code path
 for protecting all calls to authorization server endpoints do not
 need to distinguish between requests to the PAR endpoint and the
 token endpoint.

11. Security Considerations

 In DPoP, the prevention of token replay at a different endpoint (see
 Section 2) is achieved through authentication of the server per
 [RFC6125] and the binding of the DPoP proof to a certain URI and HTTP
 method.  However, DPoP has a somewhat different nature of protection
 than TLS-based methods such as OAuth Mutual TLS [RFC8705] or OAuth
 Token Binding [TOKEN-BINDING] (see also Sections 11.1 and 11.7).
 TLS-based mechanisms can leverage a tight integration between the TLS
 layer and the application layer to achieve strong message integrity,
 authenticity, and replay protection.

11.1. DPoP Proof Replay

 If an adversary is able to get hold of a DPoP proof JWT, the
 adversary could replay that token at the same endpoint (the HTTP
 endpoint and method are enforced via the respective claims in the
 JWTs).  To limit this, servers MUST only accept DPoP proofs for a
 limited time after their creation (preferably only for a relatively
 brief period on the order of seconds or minutes).
 In the context of the target URI, servers can store the jti value of
 each DPoP proof for the time window in which the respective DPoP
 proof JWT would be accepted to prevent multiple uses of the same DPoP
 proof.  HTTP requests to the same URI for which the jti value has
 been seen before would be declined.  When strictly enforced, such a
 single-use check provides a very strong protection against DPoP proof
 replay, but it may not always be feasible in practice, e.g., when
 multiple servers behind a single endpoint have no shared state.
 In order to guard against memory exhaustion attacks, a server that is
 tracking jti values should reject DPoP proof JWTs with unnecessarily
 large jti values or store only a hash thereof.
 Note: To accommodate for clock offsets, the server MAY accept DPoP
 proofs that carry an iat time in the reasonably near future (on the
 order of seconds or minutes).  Because clock skews between servers
 and clients may be large, servers MAY limit DPoP proof lifetimes by
 using server-provided nonce values containing the time at the server
 rather than comparing the client-supplied iat time to the time at the
 server.  Nonces created in this way yield the same result even in the
 face of arbitrarily large clock skews.
 Server-provided nonces are an effective means for further reducing
 the chances for successful DPoP proof replay.  Unlike cryptographic
 nonces, it is acceptable for clients to use the same nonce multiple
 times and for the server to accept the same nonce multiple times.  As
 long as the jti value is tracked and duplicates are rejected for the
 lifetime of the nonce, there is no additional risk of token replay.

11.2. DPoP Proof Pre-generation

 An attacker in control of the client can pre-generate DPoP proofs for
 specific endpoints arbitrarily far into the future by choosing the
 iat value in the DPoP proof to be signed by the proof-of-possession
 key.  Note that one such attacker is the person who is the legitimate
 user of the client.  The user may pre-generate DPoP proofs to
 exfiltrate from the machine possessing the proof-of-possession key
 upon which they were generated and copy them to another machine that
 does not possess the key.  For instance, a bank employee might pre-
 generate DPoP proofs on a bank computer and then copy them to another
 machine for use in the future, thereby bypassing bank audit controls.
 When DPoP proofs can be pre-generated and exfiltrated, all that is
 actually being proved in DPoP protocol interactions is possession of
 a DPoP proof -- not of the proof-of-possession key.
 Use of server-provided nonce values that are not predictable by
 attackers can prevent this attack.  By providing new nonce values at
 times of its choosing, the server can limit the lifetime of DPoP
 proofs, preventing pre-generated DPoP proofs from being used.  When
 server-provided nonces are used, possession of the proof-of-
 possession key is being demonstrated -- not just possession of a DPoP
 proof.
 The ath claim limits the use of pre-generated DPoP proofs to the
 lifetime of the access token.  Deployments that do not utilize the
 nonce mechanism SHOULD NOT issue long-lived DPoP constrained access
 tokens, preferring instead to use short-lived access tokens and
 refresh tokens.  Whilst an attacker could pre-generate DPoP proofs to
 use the refresh token to obtain a new access token, they would be
 unable to realistically pre-generate DPoP proofs to use a newly
 issued access token.

11.3. DPoP Nonce Downgrade

 A server MUST NOT accept any DPoP proofs without the nonce claim when
 a DPoP nonce has been provided to the client.

11.4. Untrusted Code in the Client Context

 If an adversary is able to run code in the client's execution
 context, the security of DPoP is no longer guaranteed.  Common issues
 in web applications leading to the execution of untrusted code are
 XSS and remote code inclusion attacks.
 If the private key used for DPoP is stored in such a way that it
 cannot be exported, e.g., in a hardware or software security module,
 the adversary cannot exfiltrate the key and use it to create
 arbitrary DPoP proofs.  The adversary can, however, create new DPoP
 proofs as long as the client is online and uses these proofs
 (together with the respective tokens) either on the victim's device
 or on a device under the attacker's control to send arbitrary
 requests that will be accepted by servers.
 To send requests even when the client is offline, an adversary can
 try to pre-compute DPoP proofs using timestamps in the future and
 exfiltrate these together with the access or refresh token.
 An adversary might further try to associate tokens issued from the
 token endpoint with a key pair under the adversary's control.  One
 way to achieve this is to modify existing code, e.g., by replacing
 cryptographic APIs.  Another way is to launch a new authorization
 grant between the client and the authorization server in an iframe.
 This grant needs to be "silent", i.e., not require interaction with
 the user.  With code running in the client's origin, the adversary
 has access to the resulting authorization code and can use it to
 associate their own DPoP keys with the tokens returned from the token
 endpoint.  The adversary is then able to use the resulting tokens on
 their own device even if the client is offline.
 Therefore, protecting clients against the execution of untrusted code
 is extremely important even if DPoP is used.  Besides secure coding
 practices, Content Security Policy [W3C.CSP] can be used as a second
 layer of defense against XSS.

11.5. Signed JWT Swapping

 Servers accepting signed DPoP proof JWTs MUST verify that the typ
 field is dpop+jwt in the headers of the JWTs to ensure that
 adversaries cannot use JWTs created for other purposes.

11.6. Signature Algorithms

 Implementers MUST ensure that only asymmetric digital signature
 algorithms (such as ES256) that are deemed secure can be used for
 signing DPoP proofs.  In particular, the algorithm none MUST NOT be
 allowed.

11.7. Request Integrity

 DPoP does not ensure the integrity of the payload or headers of
 requests.  The DPoP proof only contains claims for the HTTP URI and
 method, but not the message body or general request headers, for
 example.
 This is an intentional design decision intended to keep DPoP simple
 to use, but as described, it makes DPoP potentially susceptible to
 replay attacks where an attacker is able to modify message contents
 and headers.  In many setups, the message integrity and
 confidentiality provided by TLS is sufficient to provide a good level
 of protection.
 Note: While signatures covering other parts of requests are out of
 the scope of this specification, additional information to be signed
 can be added into DPoP proofs.

11.8. Access Token and Public Key Binding

 The binding of the access token to the DPoP public key, as specified
 in Section 6, uses a cryptographic hash of the JWK representation of
 the public key.  It relies on the hash function having sufficient
 second-preimage resistance so as to make it computationally
 infeasible to find or create another key that produces to the same
 hash output value.  The SHA-256 hash function was used because it
 meets the aforementioned requirement while being widely available.
 Similarly, the binding of the DPoP proof to the access token uses a
 hash of that access token as the value of the ath claim in the DPoP
 proof (see Section 4.2).  This relies on the value of the hash being
 sufficiently unique so as to reliably identify the access token.  The
 collision resistance of SHA-256 meets that requirement.

11.9. Authorization Code and Public Key Binding

 Cryptographic binding of the authorization code to the DPoP public
 key is specified in Section 10.  This binding prevents attacks in
 which the attacker captures the authorization code and creates a DPoP
 proof using a proof-of-possession key other than the one held by the
 client and redeems the authorization code using that DPoP proof.  By
 ensuring end to end that only the client's DPoP key can be used, this
 prevents captured authorization codes from being exfiltrated and used
 at locations other than the one to which the authorization code was
 issued.
 Authorization codes can, for instance, be harvested by attackers from
 places where the HTTP messages containing them are logged.  Even when
 efforts are made to make authorization codes one-time-use, in
 practice, there is often a time window during which attackers can
 replay them.  For instance, when authorization servers are
 implemented as scalable replicated services, some replicas may
 temporarily not yet have the information needed to prevent replay.
 DPoP binding of the authorization code solves these problems.
 If an authorization server does not (or cannot) strictly enforce the
 single-use limitation for authorization codes and an attacker can
 access the authorization code (and if PKCE is used, the
 code_verifier), the attacker can create a forged token request,
 binding the resulting token to an attacker-controlled key.  For
 example, using XSS, attackers might obtain access to the
 authorization code and PKCE parameters.  Use of the dpop_jkt
 parameter prevents this attack.
 The binding of the authorization code to the DPoP public key uses a
 JWK Thumbprint of the public key, just as the access token binding
 does.  The same JWK Thumbprint considerations apply.

11.10. Hash Algorithm Agility

 The jkt confirmation method member, the ath JWT claim, and the
 dpop_jkt authorization request parameter defined herein all use the
 output of the SHA-256 hash function as their value.  The use of a
 single hash function by this specification was intentional and aimed
 at simplicity and avoidance of potential security and
 interoperability issues arising from common mistakes implementing and
 deploying parameterized algorithm agility schemes.  However, the use
 of a different hash function is not precluded if future circumstances
 change and make SHA-256 insufficient for the requirements of this
 specification.  Should that need arise, it is expected that a short
 specification will be produced that updates this one.  Using the
 output of an appropriate hash function as the value, that
 specification will likely define a new confirmation method member, a
 new JWT claim, and a new authorization request parameter.  These
 items will be used in place of, or alongside, their respective
 counterparts in the same message structures and flows of the larger
 protocol defined by this specification.

11.11. Binding to Client Identity

 In cases where DPoP is used with client authentication, it is only
 bound to authentication by being coincident in the same TLS tunnel.
 Since the DPoP proof is not directly bound to the authentication
 cryptographically, it's possible that the authentication or the DPoP
 messages were copied into the tunnel.  While including the URI in the
 DPoP can partially mitigate some of this risk, modifying the
 authentication mechanism to provide cryptographic binding between
 authentication and DPoP could provide better protection.  However,
 providing additional binding with authentication through the
 modification of authentication mechanisms or other means is beyond
 the scope of this specification.

12. IANA Considerations

12.1. OAuth Access Token Types Registration

 IANA has registered the following access token type in the "OAuth
 Access Token Types" registry [IANA.OAuth.Params] established by
 [RFC6749].
 Name:  DPoP
 Additional Token Endpoint Response Parameters:  (none)
 HTTP Authentication Scheme(s):  DPoP
 Change Controller:  IETF
 Reference:  RFC 9449

12.2. OAuth Extensions Error Registration

 IANA has registered the following error values in the "OAuth
 Extensions Error" registry [IANA.OAuth.Params] established by
 [RFC6749].
 Invalid DPoP proof:
    Name:  invalid_dpop_proof
    Usage Location:  token error response, resource access error
       response
    Protocol Extension:  Demonstrating Proof of Possession (DPoP)
    Change Controller:  IETF
    Reference:  RFC 9449
 Use DPoP nonce:
    Name:  use_dpop_nonce
    Usage Location:  token error response, resource access error
       response
    Protocol Extension:  Demonstrating Proof of Possession (DPoP)
    Change Controller:  IETF
    Reference:  RFC 9449

12.3. OAuth Parameters Registration

 IANA has registered the following authorization request parameter in
 the "OAuth Parameters" registry [IANA.OAuth.Params] established by
 [RFC6749].
 Name:  dpop_jkt
 Parameter Usage Location:  authorization request
 Change Controller:  IETF
 Reference:  Section 10 of RFC 9449

12.4. HTTP Authentication Schemes Registration

 IANA has registered the following scheme in the "HTTP Authentication
 Schemes" registry [IANA.HTTP.AuthSchemes] established by [RFC9110],
 Section 16.4.1.
 Authentication Scheme Name:  DPoP
 Reference:  Section 7.1 of RFC 9449

12.5. Media Type Registration

 IANA has registered the application/dpop+jwt media type [RFC2046] in
 the "Media Types" registry [IANA.MediaTypes] in the manner described
 in [RFC6838], which is used to indicate that the content is a DPoP
 JWT.
 Type name:  application
 Subtype name:  dpop+jwt
 Required parameters:  n/a
 Optional parameters:  n/a
 Encoding considerations:  binary.  A DPoP JWT is a JWT; JWT values
    are encoded as a series of base64url-encoded values (some of which
    may be the empty string) separated by period ('.') characters.
 Security considerations:  See Section 11 of RFC 9449
 Interoperability considerations:  n/a
 Published specification:  RFC 9449
 Applications that use this media type:  Applications using RFC 9449
    for application-level proof of possession
 Fragment identifier considerations:  n/a
 Additional information:
    File extension(s):  n/a
    Macintosh file type code(s):  n/a
 Person & email address to contact for further information:  Michael
    B. Jones, michael_b_jones@hotmail.com
 Intended usage:  COMMON
 Restrictions on usage:  none
 Author:  Michael B. Jones, michael_b_jones@hotmail.com
 Change controller:  IETF

12.6. JWT Confirmation Methods Registration

 IANA has registered the following JWT cnf member value in the "JWT
 Confirmation Methods" registry [IANA.JWT] established by [RFC7800].
 Confirmation Method Value:  jkt
 Confirmation Method Description:  JWK SHA-256 Thumbprint
 Change Controller:  IETF
 Reference:  Section 6 of RFC 9449

12.7. JSON Web Token Claims Registration

 IANA has registered the following Claims in the "JSON Web Token
 Claims" registry [IANA.JWT] established by [RFC7519].
 HTTP method:
    Claim Name:  htm
    Claim Description:  The HTTP method of the request
    Change Controller:  IETF
    Reference:  Section 4.2 of RFC 9449
 HTTP URI:
    Claim Name:  htu
    Claim Description:  The HTTP URI of the request (without query and
       fragment parts)
    Change Controller:  IETF
    Reference:  Section 4.2 of RFC 9449
 Access token hash:
    Claim Name:  ath
    Claim Description:  The base64url-encoded SHA-256 hash of the
       ASCII encoding of the associated access token's value
    Change Controller:  IETF
    Reference:  Section 4.2 of RFC 9449

12.7.1. "nonce" Registration Update

 The Internet Security Glossary [RFC4949] provides a useful definition
 of nonce as a random or non-repeating value that is included in data
 exchanged by a protocol, usually for the purpose of guaranteeing
 liveness and thus detecting and protecting against replay attacks.
 However, the initial registration of the nonce claim by [OpenID.Core]
 used language that was contextually specific to that application,
 which was potentially limiting to its general applicability.
 Therefore, IANA has updated the entry for nonce in the "JSON Web
 Token Claims" registry [IANA.JWT] with an expanded definition to
 reflect that the claim can be used appropriately in other contexts
 and with the addition of this document as a reference, as follows.
 Claim Name:  nonce
 Claim Description:  Value used to associate a Client session with an
    ID Token (MAY also be used for nonce values in other applications
    of JWTs)
 Change Controller:  OpenID Foundation Artifact Binding Working Group,
    openid-specs-ab@lists.openid.net
 Specification Document(s):  Section 2 of [OpenID.Core] and RFC 9449

12.8. Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Field Name Registration

 IANA has registered the following HTTP header fields, as specified by
 this document, in the "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Field Name
 Registry" [IANA.HTTP.Fields] established by [RFC9110]:
 DPoP:
    Field Name:  DPoP
    Status:  permanent
    Reference:  RFC 9449
 DPoP-Nonce:
    Field Name:  DPoP-Nonce
    Status:  permanent
    Reference:  RFC 9449

12.9. OAuth Authorization Server Metadata Registration

 IANA has registered the following value in the "OAuth Authorization
 Server Metadata" registry [IANA.OAuth.Params] established by
 [RFC8414].
 Metadata Name:  dpop_signing_alg_values_supported
 Metadata Description:  JSON array containing a list of the JWS
    algorithms supported for DPoP proof JWTs
 Change Controller:  IETF
 Reference:  Section 5.1 of RFC 9449

12.10. OAuth Dynamic Client Registration Metadata

 IANA has registered the following value in the IANA "OAuth Dynamic
 Client Registration Metadata" registry [IANA.OAuth.Params]
 established by [RFC7591].
 Client Metadata Name:  dpop_bound_access_tokens
 Client Metadata Description:  Boolean value specifying whether the
    client always uses DPoP for token requests
 Change Controller:  IETF
 Reference:  Section 5.2 of RFC 9449

13. References

13.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
            Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
            RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.
 [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
            Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.
 [RFC6125]  Saint-Andre, P. and J. Hodges, "Representation and
            Verification of Domain-Based Application Service Identity
            within Internet Public Key Infrastructure Using X.509
            (PKIX) Certificates in the Context of Transport Layer
            Security (TLS)", RFC 6125, DOI 10.17487/RFC6125, March
            2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6125>.
 [RFC6749]  Hardt, D., Ed., "The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework",
            RFC 6749, DOI 10.17487/RFC6749, October 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6749>.
 [RFC6750]  Jones, M. and D. Hardt, "The OAuth 2.0 Authorization
            Framework: Bearer Token Usage", RFC 6750,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6750, October 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6750>.
 [RFC7515]  Jones, M., Bradley, J., and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web
            Signature (JWS)", RFC 7515, DOI 10.17487/RFC7515, May
            2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7515>.
 [RFC7517]  Jones, M., "JSON Web Key (JWK)", RFC 7517,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7517, May 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7517>.
 [RFC7519]  Jones, M., Bradley, J., and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web Token
            (JWT)", RFC 7519, DOI 10.17487/RFC7519, May 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7519>.
 [RFC7638]  Jones, M. and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web Key (JWK)
            Thumbprint", RFC 7638, DOI 10.17487/RFC7638, September
            2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7638>.
 [RFC7800]  Jones, M., Bradley, J., and H. Tschofenig, "Proof-of-
            Possession Key Semantics for JSON Web Tokens (JWTs)",
            RFC 7800, DOI 10.17487/RFC7800, April 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7800>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
 [SHS]      National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Secure
            Hash Standard (SHS)", FIPS PUB 180-4,
            DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.180-4, August 2015,
            <http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/NIST.FIPS.180-4>.

13.2. Informative References

 [BREACH]   CVE, "CVE-2013-3587", <https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/
            cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-3587>.
 [Cloudbleed]
            Graham-Cumming, J., "Incident report on memory leak caused
            by Cloudflare parser bug", February 2017,
            <https://blog.cloudflare.com/incident-report-on-memory-
            leak-caused-by-cloudflare-parser-bug/>.
 [CRIME]    CVE, "CVE-2012-4929", <https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/
            cvename.cgi?name=cve-2012-4929>.
 [GitHub.Tokens]
            Hanley, M., "Security alert: Attack campaign involving
            stolen OAuth user tokens issued to two third-party
            integrators", April 2022, <https://github.blog/2022-04-15-
            security-alert-stolen-oauth-user-tokens/>.
 [Heartbleed]
            "CVE-2014-0160", <https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/
            cvename.cgi?name=cve-2014-0160>.
 [IANA.HTTP.AuthSchemes]
            IANA, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Authentication
            Scheme Registry",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-authschemes/>.
 [IANA.HTTP.Fields]
            IANA, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Field Name
            Registry",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-fields/>.
 [IANA.JOSE.ALGS]
            IANA, "JSON Web Signature and Encryption Algorithms",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/jose/>.
 [IANA.JWT] IANA, "JSON Web Token Claims",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/jwt/>.
 [IANA.MediaTypes]
            IANA, "Media Types",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/>.
 [IANA.OAuth.Params]
            IANA, "OAuth Parameters",
            <https://www.iana.org/assignments/oauth-parameters/>.
 [OpenID.Core]
            Sakimura, N., Bradley, J., Jones, M., de Medeiros, B., and
            C. Mortimore, "OpenID Connect Core 1.0 incorporating
            errata set 1", November 2014,
            <https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html>.
 [RFC2046]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
            Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2046, November 1996,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2046>.
 [RFC4122]  Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
            Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>.
 [RFC4949]  Shirey, R., "Internet Security Glossary, Version 2",
            FYI 36, RFC 4949, DOI 10.17487/RFC4949, August 2007,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4949>.
 [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
            Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
            RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.
 [RFC7523]  Jones, M., Campbell, B., and C. Mortimore, "JSON Web Token
            (JWT) Profile for OAuth 2.0 Client Authentication and
            Authorization Grants", RFC 7523, DOI 10.17487/RFC7523, May
            2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7523>.
 [RFC7591]  Richer, J., Ed., Jones, M., Bradley, J., Machulak, M., and
            P. Hunt, "OAuth 2.0 Dynamic Client Registration Protocol",
            RFC 7591, DOI 10.17487/RFC7591, July 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7591>.
 [RFC7636]  Sakimura, N., Ed., Bradley, J., and N. Agarwal, "Proof Key
            for Code Exchange by OAuth Public Clients", RFC 7636,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7636, September 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7636>.
 [RFC7662]  Richer, J., Ed., "OAuth 2.0 Token Introspection",
            RFC 7662, DOI 10.17487/RFC7662, October 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7662>.
 [RFC8414]  Jones, M., Sakimura, N., and J. Bradley, "OAuth 2.0
            Authorization Server Metadata", RFC 8414,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8414, June 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8414>.
 [RFC8705]  Campbell, B., Bradley, J., Sakimura, N., and T.
            Lodderstedt, "OAuth 2.0 Mutual-TLS Client Authentication
            and Certificate-Bound Access Tokens", RFC 8705,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8705, February 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8705>.
 [RFC8707]  Campbell, B., Bradley, J., and H. Tschofenig, "Resource
            Indicators for OAuth 2.0", RFC 8707, DOI 10.17487/RFC8707,
            February 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8707>.
 [RFC8725]  Sheffer, Y., Hardt, D., and M. Jones, "JSON Web Token Best
            Current Practices", BCP 225, RFC 8725,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8725, February 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8725>.
 [RFC8792]  Watsen, K., Auerswald, E., Farrel, A., and Q. Wu,
            "Handling Long Lines in Content of Internet-Drafts and
            RFCs", RFC 8792, DOI 10.17487/RFC8792, June 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8792>.
 [RFC9110]  Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke,
            Ed., "HTTP Semantics", STD 97, RFC 9110,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC9110, June 2022,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9110>.
 [RFC9126]  Lodderstedt, T., Campbell, B., Sakimura, N., Tonge, D.,
            and F. Skokan, "OAuth 2.0 Pushed Authorization Requests",
            RFC 9126, DOI 10.17487/RFC9126, September 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9126>.
 [SECURITY-TOPICS]
            Lodderstedt, T., Bradley, J., Labunets, A., and D. Fett,
            "OAuth 2.0 Security Best Current Practice", Work in
            Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-oauth-security-
            topics-23, 5 June 2023,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-oauth-
            security-topics-23>.
 [TOKEN-BINDING]
            Jones, M., Campbell, B., Bradley, J., and W. Denniss,
            "OAuth 2.0 Token Binding", Work in Progress, Internet-
            Draft, draft-ietf-oauth-token-binding-08, 19 October 2018,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-oauth-
            token-binding-08>.
 [W3C.CSP]  West, M., "Content Security Policy Level 3", W3C Working
            Draft, July 2023, <https://www.w3.org/TR/CSP3/>.
 [W3C.WebCryptoAPI]
            Watson, M., "Web Cryptography API", W3C Recommendation,
            January 2017,
            <https://www.w3.org/TR/2017/REC-WebCryptoAPI-20170126>.
 [WHATWG.Fetch]
            WHATWG, "Fetch Living Standard", July 2023,
            <https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/>.

Acknowledgements

 We would like to thank Brock Allen, Annabelle Backman, Dominick
 Baier, Spencer Balogh, Vittorio Bertocci, Jeff Corrigan, Domingos
 Creado, Philippe De Ryck, Andrii Deinega, William Denniss, Vladimir
 Dzhuvinov, Mike Engan, Nikos Fotiou, Mark Haine, Dick Hardt, Joseph
 Heenan, Bjorn Hjelm, Jacob Ideskog, Jared Jennings, Benjamin Kaduk,
 Pieter Kasselman, Neil Madden, Rohan Mahy, Karsten Meyer zu
 Selhausen, Nicolas Mora, Steinar Noem, Mark Nottingham, Rob Otto,
 Aaron Parecki, Michael Peck, Roberto Polli, Paul Querna, Justin
 Richer, Joseph Salowey, Rifaat Shekh-Yusef, Filip Skokan, Dmitry
 Telegin, Dave Tonge, Jim Willeke, and others for their valuable
 input, feedback, and general support of this work.
 This document originated from discussions at the 4th OAuth Security
 Workshop in Stuttgart, Germany.  We thank the organizers of this
 workshop (Ralf Küsters and Guido Schmitz).

Authors' Addresses

 Daniel Fett
 Authlete
 Email: mail@danielfett.de
 Brian Campbell
 Ping Identity
 Email: bcampbell@pingidentity.com
 John Bradley
 Yubico
 Email: ve7jtb@ve7jtb.com
 Torsten Lodderstedt
 Tuconic
 Email: torsten@lodderstedt.net
 Michael Jones
 Self-Issued Consulting
 Email: michael_b_jones@hotmail.com
 URI:   https://self-issued.info/
 David Waite
 Ping Identity
 Email: david@alkaline-solutions.com
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