This document describes some data types common to all I2P protocols, like [I2NP], [I2CP], [SSU], etc.
Common type specification
Integer
Description
Represents a non-negative integer.
Contents
1 to 8 bytes in network byte order (big endian) representing an unsigned integer.
Date
Description
The number of milliseconds since midnight on January 1, 1970 in the GMT timezone. If the number is 0, the date is undefined or null.
Contents
8 byte Integer
String
Description
Represents a UTF-8 encoded string.
Contents
1 or more bytes where the first byte is the number of bytes (not characters!) in the string and the remaining 0-255 bytes are the non-null terminated UTF-8 encoded character array. Length limit is 255 bytes (not characters). Length may be 0.
PublicKey
Description
This structure is used in ElGamal or other asymmetric encryption, representing only the exponent, not the primes, which are constant and defined in the cryptography specification [ELGAMAL]. Other encryption schemes are in the process of being defined, see the table below.
Contents
Key type and length are inferred from context or are specified in the Key Certificate of a Destination or RouterInfo, or the fields in a LeaseSet2 or other data structure. The default type is ElGamal. As of release 0.9.38, other types may be supported, depending on context. Keys are big-endian unless otherwise noted.
X25519 keys are supported in Destinations and LeaseSet2 as of release 0.9.44. X25519 keys are supported in RouterIdentities as of release 0.9.48.
Type | Length (bytes) | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
ElGamal | 256 | All Router Identities and Destinations | |
P256 | 64 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P384 | 96 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P521 | 132 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
X25519 | 32 | 0.9.38 | Little-endian. See [ECIES] and [ECIES-ROUTERS] |
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/PublicKey.html
PrivateKey
Description
This structure is used in ElGamal or other asymmetric decryption, representing only the exponent, not the primes which are constant and defined in the cryptography specification [ELGAMAL]. Other encryption schemes are in the process of being defined, see the table below.
Contents
Key type and length are inferred from context or are stored separately in a data structure or a private key file. The default type is ElGamal. As of release 0.9.38, other types may be supported, depending on context. Keys are big-endian unless otherwise noted.
Type | Length (bytes) | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
ElGamal | 256 | All Router Identities and Destinations | |
P256 | 32 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P384 | 48 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P521 | 66 | TBD | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
X25519 | 32 | 0.9.38 | Little-endian. See [ECIES] and [ECIES-ROUTERS] |
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/PrivateKey.html
SessionKey
Description
This structure is used for symmetric AES256 encryption and decryption.
SigningPublicKey
Description
This structure is used for verifying signatures.
Contents
Key type and length are inferred from context or are specified in the Key Certificate of a Destination. The default type is DSA_SHA1. As of release 0.9.12, other types may be supported, depending on context.
Type | Length (bytes) | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
DSA_SHA1 | 128 | Legacy Router Identities and Destinations | |
ECDSA_SHA256_P256 | 64 | 0.9.12 | Recent Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA384_P384 | 96 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA512_P521 | 132 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
RSA_SHA256_2048 | 256 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA384_3072 | 384 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA512_4096 | 512 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 32 | 0.9.15 | Recent Router Identities and Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519ph | 32 | 0.9.25 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RedDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 32 | 0.9.39 | For Destinations and encrypted leasesets only, never used for Router Identities |
Notes
- When a key is composed of two elements (for example points X,Y), it is serialized by padding each element to length/2 with leading zeros if necessary.
- All types are Big Endian, except for EdDSA and RedDSA, which are stored and transmitted in a Little Endian format.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/SigningPublicKey.html
SigningPrivateKey
Description
This structure is used for creating signatures.
Contents
Key type and length are specified when created. The default type is DSA_SHA1. As of release 0.9.12, other types may be supported, depending on context.
Type | Length (bytes) | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
DSA_SHA1 | 20 | Legacy Router Identities and Destinations | |
ECDSA_SHA256_P256 | 32 | 0.9.12 | Recent Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA384_P384 | 48 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA512_P521 | 66 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
RSA_SHA256_2048 | 512 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA384_3072 | 768 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA512_4096 | 1024 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 32 | 0.9.15 | Recent Router Identities and Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519ph | 32 | 0.9.25 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RedDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 32 | 0.9.39 | For Destinations and encrypted leasesets only, never used for Router Identities |
Notes
- When a key is composed of two elements (for example points X,Y), it is serialized by padding each element to length/2 with leading zeros if necessary.
- All types are Big Endian, except for EdDSA and RedDSA, which are stored and transmitted in a Little Endian format.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/SigningPrivateKey.html
Signature
Description
This structure represents the signature of some data.
Contents
Signature type and length are inferred from the type of key used. The default type is DSA_SHA1. As of release 0.9.12, other types may be supported, depending on context.
Type | Length (bytes) | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
DSA_SHA1 | 40 | Legacy Router Identities and Destinations | |
ECDSA_SHA256_P256 | 64 | 0.9.12 | Recent Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA384_P384 | 96 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA512_P521 | 132 | 0.9.12 | Rarely used for Destinations |
RSA_SHA256_2048 | 256 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA384_3072 | 384 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA512_4096 | 512 | 0.9.12 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 64 | 0.9.15 | Recent Router Identities and Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519ph | 64 | 0.9.25 | Offline signing, never used for Router Identities or Destinations |
RedDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 64 | 0.9.39 | For Destinations and encrypted leasesets only, never used for Router Identities |
Notes
- When a signature is composed of two elements (for example values R,S), it is serialized by padding each element to length/2 with leading zeros if necessary.
- All types are Big Endian, except for EdDSA and RedDSA, which are stored and transmitted in a Little Endian format.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/Signature.html
Hash
Description
Represents the SHA256 of some data.
Session Tag
Note: Session Tags for ECIES-X25519 destinations (ratchet) and ECIES-X25519 routers are 8 bytes. See [ECIES] and [ECIES-ROUTERS].
Description
A random number
TunnelId
Description
Defines an identifier that is unique to each router in a tunnel. A Tunnel ID is generally greater than zero; do not use a value of zero except in special cases.
Certificate
Description
A certificate is a container for various receipts or proof of works used throughout the I2P network.
Contents
1 byte Integer specifying certificate type, followed by a 2 byte Integer specifying the size of the certificate payload, then that many bytes.
Notes
- For Router Identities, the Certificate is always NULL through version 0.9.15. As of 0.9.16, a Key Certificate may be used to specify the signing public key type. See below.
- For Garlic Cloves, the Certificate is always NULL, no others are currently implemented.
- For Garlic Messages, the Certificate is always NULL, no others are currently implemented.
- For Destinations, the Certificate may be non-NULL. As of 0.9.12, a Key Certificate may be used to specify the signing public key type. See below.
- Implementers are cautioned to prohibit excess data in Certificates. The appropriate length for each certificate type should be enforced.
Certificate Types
The following certificate types are defined:
Type | Type Code | Payload Length | Total Length | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Null | 0 | 0 | 3 | |
HashCash | 1 | varies | varies | Experimental, unused. Payload contains an ASCII colon-separated hashcash string. |
Hidden | 2 | 0 | 3 | Experimental, unused. Hidden routers generally do not announce that they are hidden. |
Signed | 3 | 40 or 72 | 43 or 75 | Experimental, unused. Payload contains a 40-byte DSA signature, optionally followed by the 32-byte Hash of the signing Destination. |
Multiple | 4 | varies | varies | Experimental, unused. Payload contains multiple certificates. |
Key | 5 | 4+ | 7+ | Since 0.9.12. See below for details. |
Key Certificates
Key certificates were introduced in release 0.9.12. Prior to that release, all PublicKeys were 256-byte ElGamal keys, and all SigningPublicKeys were 128-byte DSA-SHA1 keys. A key certificate provides a mechanism to indicate the type of the PublicKey and SigningPublicKey in the Destination or RouterIdentity, and to package any key data in excess of the standard lengths.
By maintaining exactly 384 bytes before the certificate, and putting any excess key data inside the certificate, we maintain compatibility for any software that parses Destinations and Router Identities.
The key certificate payload contains:
Data | Length |
---|---|
Signing Public Key Type (Integer) | 2 |
Crypto Public Key Type (Integer) | 2 |
Excess Signing Public Key Data | 0+ |
Excess Crypto Public Key Data | 0+ |
The defined Signing Public Key types are:
Type | Type Code | Total Public Key Length | Since | Usage |
---|---|---|---|---|
DSA_SHA1 | 0 | 128 | 0.9.12 | Legacy Router Identities and Destinations, never explicitly set |
ECDSA_SHA256_P256 | 1 | 64 | 0.9.12 | Older Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA384_P384 | 2 | 96 | 0.9.12 | Rarely if ever used for Destinations |
ECDSA_SHA512_P521 | 3 | 132 | 0.9.12 | Rarely if ever used for Destinations |
RSA_SHA256_2048 | 4 | 256 | 0.9.12 | Offline only; never used in Key Certificates for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA384_3072 | 5 | 384 | 0.9.12 | Offline only; never used in Key Certificates for Router Identities or Destinations |
RSA_SHA512_4096 | 6 | 512 | 0.9.12 | Offline only; never used in Key Certificates for Router Identities or Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 7 | 32 | 0.9.15 | Recent Router Identities and Destinations |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519ph | 8 | 32 | 0.9.25 | Offline only; never used in Key Certificates for Router Identities or Destinations |
reserved (GOST) | 9 | 64 | Reserved, see proposal 134 | |
reserved (GOST) | 10 | 128 | Reserved, see proposal 134 | |
RedDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 11 | 32 | 0.9.39 | For Destinations and encrypted leasesets only; never used for Router Identities |
reserved | 65280-65534 | Reserved for experimental use | ||
reserved | 65535 | Reserved for future expansion |
The defined Crypto Public Key types are:
Type | Type Code | Total Public Key Length | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
ElGamal | 0 | 256 | All Router Identities and Destinations |
P256 | 1 | 64 | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P384 | 2 | 96 | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
P521 | 3 | 132 | Reserved, see proposal 145 |
X25519 | 4 | 32 | See [ECIES] and proposal 156 |
reserved | 65280-65534 | Reserved for experimental use | |
reserved | 65535 | Reserved for future expansion |
When a Key Certificate is not present, the preceeding 384 bytes in the Destination or RouterIdentity are defined as the 256-byte ElGamal PublicKey followed by the 128-byte DSA-SHA1 SigningPublicKey. When a Key Certificate is present, the preceeding 384 bytes are redefined as follows:
- Complete or first portion of Crypto Public Key
- Random padding if the total lengths of the two keys are less than 384 bytes
- Complete or first portion of Signing Public Key
The Crypto Public Key is aligned at the start and the Signing Public Key is aligned at the end. The padding (if any) is in the middle. The lengths and boundaries of the initial key data, the padding, and the excess key data portions in the certificates are not explicitly specified, but are derived from the lengths of the specified key types. If the total lengths of the Crypto and Signing Public Keys exceed 384 bytes, the remainder will be contained in the Key Certificate. If the Crypto Public Key length is not 256 bytes, the method for determining the boundary between the two keys is to be specified in a future revision of this document.
Example layouts using an ElGamal Crypto Public Key and the Signing Public Key type indicated:
Signing Key Type | Padding Length | Excess Signing Key Data in Cert |
---|---|---|
DSA_SHA1 | 0 | 0 |
ECDSA_SHA256_P256 | 64 | 0 |
ECDSA_SHA384_P384 | 32 | 0 |
ECDSA_SHA512_P521 | 0 | 4 |
RSA_SHA256_2048 | 0 | 128 |
RSA_SHA384_3072 | 0 | 256 |
RSA_SHA512_4096 | 0 | 384 |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519 | 96 | 0 |
EdDSA_SHA512_Ed25519ph | 96 | 0 |
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/Certificate.html
Notes
- Implementers are cautioned to prohibit excess data in Key Certificates. The appropriate length for each certificate type should be enforced.
Mapping
Description
A set of key/value mappings or properties
Contents
A 2-byte size Integer followed by a series of String=String; pairs
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| size | key_string (len + data)| = |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| val_string (len + data) | ; | ...
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
size :: Integer
length -> 2 bytes
Total number of bytes that follow
key_string :: String
A string (one byte length followed by UTF-8 encoded characters)
= :: A single byte containing '='
val_string :: String
A string (one byte length followed by UTF-8 encoded characters)
; :: A single byte containing ';'
Notes
- The encoding isn't optimal - we either need the '=' and ';' characters, or the string lengths, but not both
- Some documentation says that the strings may not include '=' or ';' but this encoding supports them
- Strings are defined to be UTF-8 but in the current implementation, I2CP uses UTF-8 but I2NP does not. For example, UTF-8 strings in a RouterInfo options mapping in a I2NP Database Store Message will be corrupted.
- The encoding allows duplicate keys, however in any usage where the mapping is signed, duplicates may cause a signature failure.
- Mappings contained in I2NP messages (i.e. in a RouterAddress or RouterInfo) must be sorted by key so that the signature will be invariant. Duplicate keys are not allowed.
- Mappings contained in an I2CP SessionConfig must be sorted by key so that the signature will be invariant. Duplicate keys are not allowed.
- The sort method is defined as in Java String.compareTo(), using the Unicode value of the characters.
- While it is application-dependent, keys and values are generally case-sensitive.
- Key and value string length limits are 255 bytes (not characters) each, plus the length byte. Length byte may be 0.
- Total length limit is 65535 bytes, plus the 2 byte size field, or 65537 total.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/DataHelper.html
Common structure specification
KeysAndCert
Description
An encryption public key, a signing public key, and a certificate, used as either a RouterIdentity or a Destination.
Contents
A PublicKey followed by a SigningPublicKey and then a Certificate.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| public_key |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| padding (optional) |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signing_key |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| certificate |
+----+----+----+-//
public_key :: PublicKey (partial or full)
length -> 256 bytes or as specified in key certificate
padding :: random data
length -> 0 bytes or as specified in key certificate
public_key length + padding length + signing_key length == 384 bytes
signing__key :: SigningPublicKey (partial or full)
length -> 128 bytes or as specified in key certificate
certificate :: Certificate
length -> >= 3 bytes
total length: 387+ bytes
Padding Generation Guidelines
These guidelines were proposed in Proposal 161 and implemented in API version 0.9.57. These guidelines are backward-compatible with all versions since 0.6 (2005). See Proposal 161 for background and further information.
For any currently-used combination of key types other than ElGamal + DSA-SHA1, padding will be present. Additionally, for destinations, the 256-byte public key field has been unused since version 0.6 (2005).
Implementers should generate the random data for Destination public keys, and Destination and Router Identity padding, so that it is compressible in various I2P protocols while still being secure, and without having Base 64 representations appear to be corrupt or insecure. This provides most of the benefits of removing the padding fields without any disruptive protocol changes.
Strictly speaking, the 32-byte signing public key alone (in both Destinations and Router Identities) and the 32-byte encryption public key (in Router Identities only) is a random number that provides all the entropy necessary for the SHA-256 hashes of these structures to be cryptographically strong and randomly distributed in the network database DHT.
However, out of an abundance of caution, we recommend a minimum of 32 bytes of random data be used in the ElG public key field and padding. Additionally, if the fields were all zeros, Base 64 destinations would contain long runs of AAAA characters, which may cause alarm or confusion to users.
Repeat the 32 bytes of random data as necessary so the full KeysAndCert structure is highly compressible in I2P protocols such as I2NP Database Store Message, Streaming SYN, SSU2 handshake, and repliable Datagrams.
Examples:
- A Router Identity with X25519 encryption type and Ed25519 signature type will contain 10 copies (320 bytes) of the random data, for a savings of approximately 288 bytes when compressed.
- A Destination with Ed25519 signature type will contain 11 copies (352 bytes) of the random data, for a savings of approximately 320 bytes when compressed.
Implementations must, of course, store the full 387+ byte structure because the SHA-256 hash of the structure covers the full contents.
Notes
- Do not assume that these are always 387 bytes! They are 387 bytes plus the certificate length specified at bytes 385-386, which may be non-zero.
- As of release 0.9.12, if the certificate is a Key Certificate, the boundaries of the key fields may vary. See the Key Certificate section above for details.
- The Crypto Public Key is aligned at the start and the Signing Public Key is aligned at the end. The padding (if any) is in the middle.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/KeysAndCert.html
RouterIdentity
Description
Defines the way to uniquely identify a particular router
Contents
Identical to KeysAndCert.
See KeysAndCert for guidelines on generating the random data for the padding field.
Notes
- The certificate for a RouterIdentity was always NULL until release 0.9.12.
- Do not assume that these are always 387 bytes! They are 387 bytes plus the certificate length specified at bytes 385-386, which may be non-zero.
- As of release 0.9.12, if the certificate is a Key Certificate, the boundaries of the key fields may vary. See the Key Certificate section above for details.
- The Crypto Public Key is aligned at the start and the Signing Public Key is aligned at the end. The padding (if any) is in the middle.
- RouterIdentities with a key certificate and a ECIES_X25519 public key are supported as of release 0.9.48. Prior to that, all RouterIdentities were ElGamal.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/router/RouterIdentity.html
Destination
Description
A Destination defines a particular endpoint to which messages can be directed for secure delivery.
Contents
Identical to KeysAndCert, except that the public key is never used, and may contain random data instead of a valid ElGamal Public Key.
See KeysAndCert for guidelines on generating the random data for the public key and padding fields.
Notes
- The public key of the destination was used for the old i2cp-to-i2cp encryption which was disabled in version 0.6 (2005), it is currently unused except for the IV for LeaseSet encryption, which is deprecated. The public key in the LeaseSet is used instead.
- Do not assume that these are always 387 bytes! They are 387 bytes plus the certificate length specified at bytes 385-386, which may be non-zero.
- As of release 0.9.12, if the certificate is a Key Certificate, the boundaries of the key fields may vary. See the Key Certificate section above for details.
- The Crypto Public Key is aligned at the start and the Signing Public Key is aligned at the end. The padding (if any) is in the middle.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/Destination.html
Lease
Description
Defines the authorization for a particular tunnel to receive messages targeting a Destination.
Contents
SHA256 Hash of the RouterIdentity of the gateway router, then the TunnelId, and finally an end Date.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| tunnel_gw |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| tunnel_id | end_date
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|
+----+----+----+----+
tunnel_gw :: Hash of the RouterIdentity of the tunnel gateway
length -> 32 bytes
tunnel_id :: TunnelId
length -> 4 bytes
end_date :: Date
length -> 8 bytes
LeaseSet
Description
Contains all of the currently authorized Leases for a particular Destination, the PublicKey to which garlic messages can be encrypted, and then the SigningPublicKey that can be used to revoke this particular version of the structure. The LeaseSet is one of the two structures stored in the network database (the other being RouterInfo), and is keyed under the SHA256 of the contained Destination.
Contents
Destination, followed by a PublicKey for encryption, then a SigningPublicKey which can be used to revoke this version of the LeaseSet, then a 1 byte Integer specifying how many Lease structures are in the set, followed by the actual Lease structures and finally a Signature of the previous bytes signed by the Destination's SigningPrivateKey.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| destination |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| encryption_key |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signing_key |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| num| Lease 0 |
+----+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| Lease 1 |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| Lease ($num-1) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signature |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
destination :: Destination
length -> >= 387+ bytes
encryption_key :: PublicKey
length -> 256 bytes
signing_key :: SigningPublicKey
length -> 128 bytes or as specified in destination's key
certificate
num :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
Number of leases to follow
value: 0 <= num <= 16
leases :: [Lease]
length -> $num*44 bytes
signature :: Signature
length -> 40 bytes or as specified in destination's key
certificate
Notes
- The public key of the destination was used for the old I2CP-to-I2CP encryption which was disabled in version 0.6, it is currently unused.
- The encryption key is used for end-to-end ElGamal/AES+SessionTag encryption [ELGAMAL-AES]. It is currently generated anew at every router startup, it is not persistent.
- The signature may be verified using the signing public key of the destination.
- A LeaseSet with zero Leases is allowed but is unused. It was intended for LeaseSet revocation, which is unimplemented. All LeaseSet2 variants require at least one Lease.
- The signing_key is currently unused. It was intended for LeaseSet revocation, which is unimplemented. It is currently generated anew at every router startup, it is not persistent. The signing key type is always the same as the destination's signing key type.
- The earliest expiration of all the Leases is treated as the timestamp or version of the LeaseSet. Routers will generally not accept a store of a LeaseSet unless it is "newer" than the current one. Take care when publishing a new LeaseSet where the oldest Lease is the same as the oldest Lease in the previous LeaseSet. The publishing router should generally increment the expiration of the oldest Lease by at least 1 ms in that case.
- Prior to release 0.9.7, when included in a DatabaseStore Message sent by the originating router, the router set all the published leases' expirations to the same value, that of the earliest lease. As of release 0.9.7, the router publishes the actual lease expiration for each lease. This is an implementation detail and not part of the structures specification.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/LeaseSet.html
Lease2
Description
Defines the authorization for a particular tunnel to receive messages targeting a Destination. Same as Lease but with a 4-byte end_date. Used by LeaseSet2. Supported as of 0.9.38; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contents
SHA256 Hash of the RouterIdentity of the gateway router, then the TunnelId, and finally a 4 byte end date.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| tunnel_gw |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| tunnel_id | end_date |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
tunnel_gw :: Hash of the RouterIdentity of the tunnel gateway
length -> 32 bytes
tunnel_id :: TunnelId
length -> 4 bytes
end_date :: 4 byte date
length -> 4 bytes
Seconds since the epoch, rolls over in 2106.
OfflineSignature
Description
This is an optional part of the LeaseSet2Header. Also used in streaming and I2CP. Supported as of 0.9.38; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contents
Contains an expiration, a sigtype and transient SigningPublicKey, and a Signature.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| expires | sigtype | |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+ +
| transient_public_key |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signature |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
expires :: 4 byte date
length -> 4 bytes
Seconds since the epoch, rolls over in 2106.
sigtype :: 2 byte type of the transient_public_key
length -> 2 bytes
transient_public_key :: SigningPublicKey
length -> As inferred from the sigtype
signature :: Signature
length -> As inferred from the sigtype of the signing public key
in the Destination that preceded this offline signature.
Signature of expires timestamp, transient sig type, and public key,
by the destination public key.
Notes
- This section can, and should, be generated offline.
LeaseSet2Header
Description
This is the common part of the LeaseSet2 and MetaLeaseSet. Supported as of 0.9.38; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contents
Contains the Destination, two timestamps, and an optional OfflineSignature.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| destination |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| published | expires | flags |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| offline_signature (optional) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
destination :: Destination
length -> >= 387+ bytes
published :: 4 byte date
length -> 4 bytes
Seconds since the epoch, rolls over in 2106.
expires :: 2 byte time
length -> 2 bytes
Offset from published timestamp in seconds, 18.2 hours max
flags :: 2 bytes
Bit order: 15 14 ... 3 2 1 0
Bit 0: If 0, no offline keys; if 1, offline keys
Bit 1: If 0, a standard published leaseset.
If 1, an unpublished leaseset. Should not be flooded, published, or
sent in response to a query. If this leaseset expires, do not query the
netdb for a new one, unless bit 2 is set.
Bit 2: If 0, a standard published leaseset.
If 1, this unencrypted leaseset will be blinded and encrypted when published.
If this leaseset expires, query the blinded location in the netdb for a new one.
If this bit is set to 1, set bit 1 to 1 also.
As of release 0.9.42.
Bits 15-3: set to 0 for compatibility with future uses
offline_signature :: OfflineSignature
length -> varies
Optional, only present if bit 0 is set in the flags.
Notes
- Total size: 395 bytes minimum
- Maximum actual expires time is about 660 (11 minutes) for LeaseSet2 and 65535 (the full 18.2 hours) for MetaLeaseSet.
- LeaseSet (1) did not have a 'published' field, so versioning required a search for the earliest lease. LeaseSet2 adds a 'published' field with a resolution of one second. Routers should rate-limit sending new leasesets to floodfills to a rate much slower than once a second (per destination). If this is not implemented, then the code must ensure that each new leaseset has a 'published' time at least one second later than the one before, or else floodills will not store or flood the new leaseset.
LeaseSet2
Description
Contained in a I2NP DatabaseStore message of type 3. Supported as of 0.9.38; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contains all of the currently authorized Lease2 for a particular Destination, and the PublicKey to which garlic messages can be encrypted. A LeaseSet is one of the two structures stored in the network database (the other being RouterInfo), and is keyed under the SHA256 of the contained Destination.
Contents
LeaseSet2Header, followed by a options, then one or more PublicKey for encryption, Integer specifying how many Lease2 structures are in the set, followed by the actual Lease2 structures and finally a Signature of the previous bytes signed by the Destination's SigningPrivateKey or the transient key.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| ls2_header |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| options |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|numk| keytype0| keylen0 | |
+----+----+----+----+----+ +
| encryption_key_0 |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| keytypen| keylenn | |
+----+----+----+----+ +
| encryption_key_n |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| num| Lease2 0 |
+----+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| Lease2($num-1) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signature |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
ls2header :: LeaseSet2Header
length -> varies
options :: Mapping
length -> varies, 2 bytes minimum
numk :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
Number of key types, key lengths, and PublicKeys to follow
value: 1 <= numk <= max TBD
keytype :: The encryption type of the PublicKey to follow.
length -> 2 bytes
keylen :: The length of the PublicKey to follow.
Must match the specified length of the encryption type.
length -> 2 bytes
encryption_key :: PublicKey
length -> 256 bytes
num :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
Number of Lease2s to follow
value: 0 <= num <= 16
leases :: [Lease2]
length -> $num*40 bytes
signature :: Signature
length -> 40 bytes or as specified in destination's key
certificate, or by the sigtype of the transient public key,
if present in the header
Notes
- The public key of the destination was used for the old I2CP-to-I2CP encryption which was disabled in version 0.6, it is currently unused.
- The encryption keys are used for end-to-end ElGamal/AES+SessionTag encryption [ELGAMAL-AES] (type 0) or other end-to-end encryption schemes. See [ECIES] and proposals 145 and 156. They may be generated anew at every router startup or they may be persistent. X25519 (type 4, see [ECIES]) is supported as of release 0.9.44.
- The signature is over the data above, PREPENDED with the single byte containing the DatabaseStore type (3).
- The signature may be verified using the signing public key of the destination, or the transient signing public key, if an offline signature is included in the leaseset2 header.
- The key length is provided for each key, so that floodfills and clients may parse the structure even if not all encryption types are known or supported.
- See note on the 'published' field in LeaseSet2Header
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/LeaseSet2.html
MetaLease
Description
Defines the authorization for a particular tunnel to receive messages targeting a Destination. Same as Lease2 but with flags and cost instead of a tunnel id. Used by MetaLeaseSet. Contained in a I2NP DatabaseStore message of type 7. Supported as of 0.9.38; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contents
SHA256 Hash of the RouterIdentity of the gateway router, then flags and cost, and finally a 4 byte end date.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| tunnel_gw |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| flags |cost| end_date |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
tunnel_gw :: Hash of the RouterIdentity of the tunnel gateway,
or the hash of another MetaLeaseSet.
length -> 32 bytes
flags :: 3 bytes of flags
Bit order: 23 22 ... 3 2 1 0
Bits 3-0: Type of the entry.
If 0, unknown.
If 1, a LeaseSet.
If 3, a LeaseSet2.
If 5, a MetaLeaseSet.
Bits 23-4: set to 0 for compatibility with future uses
length -> 3 bytes
cost :: 1 byte, 0-255. Lower value is higher priority.
length -> 1 byte
end_date :: 4 byte date
length -> 4 bytes
Seconds since the epoch, rolls over in 2106.
MetaLeaseSet
Description
Contained in a I2NP DatabaseStore message of type 7. Defined as of 0.9.38; scheduled to be working as of 0.9.40; see proposal 123 for more information.
Contains all of the currently authorized MetaLease for a particular Destination, and the PublicKey to which garlic messages can be encrypted. A LeaseSet is one of the two structures stored in the network database (the other being RouterInfo), and is keyed under the SHA256 of the contained Destination.
Contents
LeaseSet2Header, followed by a options, Integer specifying how many Lease2 structures are in the set, followed by the actual Lease2 structures and finally a Signature of the previous bytes signed by the Destination's SigningPrivateKey or the transient key.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| ls2_header |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| options |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| num| MetaLease 0 |
+----+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| MetaLease($num-1) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|numr| |
+----+ +
| revocation_0 |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| revocation_n |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signature |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
ls2header :: LeaseSet2Header
length -> varies
options :: Mapping
length -> varies, 2 bytes minimum
num :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
Number of MetaLeases to follow
value: 1 <= num <= max TBD
leases :: MetaLeases
length -> $numr*40 bytes
numr :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
Number of Hashes to follow
value: 0 <= numr <= max TBD
revocations :: [Hash]
length -> $numr*32 bytes
signature :: Signature
length -> 40 bytes or as specified in destination's key
certificate, or by the sigtype of the transient public key,
if present in the header
Notes
- The public key of the destination was used for the old I2CP-to-I2CP encryption which was disabled in version 0.6, it is currently unused.
- The signature is over the data above, PREPENDED with the single byte containing the DatabaseStore type (7).
- The signature may be verified using the signing public key of the destination, or the transient signing public key, if an offline signature is included in the leaseset2 header.
- See note on the 'published' field in LeaseSet2Header
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/MetaLeaseSet.html
EncryptedLeaseSet
Description
Contained in a I2NP DatabaseStore message of type 5. Defined as of 0.9.38; working as of 0.9.39; see proposal 123 for more information.
Only the blinded key and expiration are visible in cleartext. The actual lease set is encrypted.
Contents
A two byte signature type, the blinded SigningPrivateKey, published time, expiration, and flags. Then, a two byte length followed by encrypted data. Finally, a Signature of the previous bytes signed by the blinded SigningPrivateKey or the transient key.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| sigtype | |
+----+----+ +
| blinded_public_key |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| published | expires | flags |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| offline_signature (optional) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| len | |
+----+----+ +
| encrypted_data |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| signature |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
sigtype :: A two byte signature type of the public key to follow
length -> 2 bytes
blinded_public_key :: SigningPublicKey
length -> As inferred from the sigtype
published :: 4 byte date
length -> 4 bytes
Seconds since the epoch, rolls over in 2106.
expires :: 2 byte time
length -> 2 bytes
Offset from published timestamp in seconds, 18.2 hours max
flags :: 2 bytes
Bit order: 15 14 ... 3 2 1 0
Bit 0: If 0, no offline keys; if 1, offline keys
Bit 1: If 0, a standard published leaseset.
If 1, an unpublished leaseset. Should not be flooded, published, or
sent in response to a query. If this leaseset expires, do not query the
netdb for a new one.
Bits 15-2: set to 0 for compatibility with future uses
offline_signature :: OfflineSignature
length -> varies
Optional, only present if bit 0 is set in the flags.
len :: Integer
length -> 2 bytes
length of encrypted_data to follow
value: 1 <= num <= max TBD
encrypted_data :: Data encrypted
length -> len bytes
signature :: Signature
length -> As specified by the sigtype of the blinded pubic key,
or by the sigtype of the transient public key,
if present in the header
Notes
- The public key of the destination was used for the old I2CP-to-I2CP encryption which was disabled in version 0.6, it is currently unused.
- The signature is over the data above, PREPENDED with the single byte containing the DatabaseStore type (5).
- The signature may be verified using the signing public key of the destination, or the transient signing public key, if an offline signature is included in the leaseset2 header.
- Blinding and encryption are specified in EncryptedLeaseSet
- This structure does not use the LeaseSet2Header.
- Maximum actual expires time is about 660 (11 minutes), unless it is an encrypted MetaLeaseSet.
- See proposal 123 for notes on using offline signatures with encrypted leasesets.
- See note on the 'published' field in LeaseSet2Header (same issue, even though we do not use the LeaseSet2Header format here)
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/EncryptedLeaseSet.html
RouterAddress
Description
This structure defines the means to contact a router through a transport protocol.
Contents
1 byte Integer defining the relative cost of using the address, where 0 is free and 255 is expensive, followed by the expiration Date after which the address should not be used, or if null, the address never expires. After that comes a String defining the transport protocol this router address uses. Finally there is a Mapping containing all of the transport specific options necessary to establish the connection, such as IP address, port number, email address, URL, etc.
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|cost| expiration
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| transport_style |
+----+----+----+----+-//-+----+----+----+
| |
+ +
| options |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
cost :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
case 0 -> free
case 255 -> expensive
expiration :: Date (must be all zeros, see notes below)
length -> 8 bytes
case null -> never expires
transport_style :: String
length -> 1-256 bytes
options :: Mapping
Notes
- Cost is typically 5 or 6 for SSU, and 10 or 11 for NTCP.
- Expiration is currently unused, always null (all zeroes). As of release 0.9.3, the expiration is assumed zero and not stored, so any non-zero expiration will fail in the RouterInfo signature verification. Implementing expiration (or another use for these bytes) will be a backwards-incompatible change. Routers MUST set this field to all zeros. As of release 0.9.12, a non-zero expiration field is again recognized, however we must wait several releases to use this field, until the vast majority of the network recognizes it.
- The following options, while not required, are standard and expected to be present in most router addresses: "host" (an IPv4 or IPv6 address or host name) and "port".
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/router/RouterAddress.html
RouterInfo
Description
Defines all of the data that a router wants to publish for the network to see. The RouterInfo is one of two structures stored in the network database (the other being LeaseSet), and is keyed under the SHA256 of the contained RouterIdentity.
Contents
RouterIdentity followed by the Date, when the entry was published
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| router_ident |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| published |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
|size| RouterAddress 0 |
+----+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| RouterAddress 1 |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| RouterAddress ($size-1) |
+ +
| |
~ ~
~ ~
| |
+----+----+----+----+-//-+----+----+----+
|psiz| options |
+----+----+----+----+-//-+----+----+----+
| signature |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+ +
| |
+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
router_ident :: RouterIdentity
length -> >= 387+ bytes
published :: Date
length -> 8 bytes
size :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
The number of RouterAddresses to follow, 0-255
addresses :: [RouterAddress]
length -> varies
peer_size :: Integer
length -> 1 byte
The number of peer Hashes to follow, 0-255, unused, always zero
value -> 0
options :: Mapping
signature :: Signature
length -> 40 bytes or as specified in router_ident's key
certificate
Notes
- The peer_size Integer may be followed by a list of that many router hashes. This is currently unused. It was intended for a form of restricted routes, which is unimplemented. Certain implementations may require the list to be sorted so the signature is invariant. To be researched before enabling this feature.
- The signature may be verified using the signing public key of the router_ident.
- See the network database page [NETDB-ROUTERINFO] for standard options that are expected to be present in all router infos.
- Very old routers required the addresses to be sorted by the SHA256 of their data so the signature is invariant. This is no longer required, and not worth implementing for backward compatibility.
JavaDoc: http://docs.i2p-projekt.de/javadoc/net/i2p/data/router/RouterInfo.html
Delivery Instructions
Tunnel Message Delivery Instructions are defined in the Tunnel Message Specification [TUNNEL-DELIVERY].
Garlic Message Delivery Instructions are defined in the I2NP Message Specification [GARLIC-DELIVERY].
References
[ECIES] | (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) http://i2p.net/spec/ecies |
[ECIES-ROUTERS] | (1, 2, 3) http://i2p.net/spec/ecies-routers |
[ELGAMAL] | (1, 2) http://i2p.net/en/docs/how/cryptography#elgamal |
[ELGAMAL-AES] | (1, 2) http://i2p.net/en/docs/how/elgamal-aes |
[GARLIC-DELIVERY] | http://i2p.net/spec/i2np#struct-garlicclovedeliveryinstructions |
[I2CP] | http://i2p.net/en/docs/protocol/i2cp |
[I2NP] | http://i2p.net/en/docs/protocol/i2np |
[NETDB-ROUTERINFO] | http://i2p.net/en/docs/how/network-database#routerInfo |
[SSU] | http://i2p.net/en/docs/transport/ssu |
[TUNNEL-DELIVERY] | http://i2p.net/spec/tunnel-message#struct-tunnelmessagedeliveryinstructions |