Technical Reports |
Version | 11.0.0 |
Editors | Mark
Davis (markdavis@google.com), Michel Suignard (michel@suignard.com) |
Date | 2018-05-22 |
This Version | http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr39/tr39-17.html |
Previous Version | http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr39/tr39-15.html |
Latest Version | http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr39/ |
Latest Proposed Update | http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr39/proposed.html |
Revision | 17 |
Because Unicode contains such a large number of characters and incorporates the varied writing systems of the world, incorrect usage can expose programs or systems to possible security attacks. This document specifies mechanisms that can be used to detect possible security problems.
This document has been reviewed by Unicode members and other interested parties, and has been approved for publication by the Unicode Consortium. This is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited as a normative reference by other specifications.
A Unicode Technical Standard (UTS) is an independent specification. Conformance to the Unicode Standard does not imply conformance to any UTS.
Please submit corrigenda and other comments with the online reporting form [Feedback]. Related information that is useful in understanding this document is found in the References. For the latest version of the Unicode Standard, see [Unicode]. For a list of current Unicode Technical Reports, see [Reports]. For more information about versions of the Unicode Standard, see [Versions].
Unicode Technical Report #36, "Unicode Security Considerations" [UTR36] provides guidelines for detecting and avoiding security problems connected with the use of Unicode. This document specifies mechanisms that are used in that document, and can be used elsewhere. Readers should be familiar with [UTR36] before continuing. See also the Unicode FAQ on Security Issues [FAQSec].
An implementation claiming conformance to this specification must do so in conformance to the following clauses:
C1 An implementation claiming to implement the General Profile for Identifiers shall do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 3.1, General Security Profile for Identifiers.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise list of characters that are added to or removed from the profile.
C1.1 An implementation claiming to implement the IDN Security Profiles for Identifiers shall do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 3.2, IDN Security Profiles for Identifiers.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise list of characters that are added to or removed from the profile.
C1.2 An implementation claiming to implement the Email Security Profiles for Identifiers shall do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 3.3, Email Security Profiles for Identifiers.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise list of characters that are added to or removed from the profile.
C2 An implementation claiming to implement any of the following confusable-detection functions must do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 4, Confusable Detection.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise list of character mappings that are added to or removed from the provided ones.
C3 An implementation claiming to detect mixed scripts must do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 5.1, Mixed-Script Detection.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise specification of the differences in behavior.
C4 An implementation claiming to detect Restriction Levels must do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 5.2, Restriction-Level Detection.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise specification of the differences in behavior.
C5 An implementation claiming to detect mixed numbers must do so in accordance with the specifications in Section 5.3, Mixed-Number Detection.
Alternatively, it shall declare that it uses a modification, and provide a precise specification of the differences in behavior.
Identifiers are special-purpose strings used for identification—strings that are deliberately limited to particular repertoires for that purpose. Exclusion of characters from identifiers does not affect the general use of those characters, such as within documents. Unicode Standard Annex #31, "Identifier and Pattern Syntax" [UAX31] provides a recommended method of determining which strings should qualify as identifiers. The UAX #31 specification extends the common practice of defining identifiers in terms of letters and numbers to the Unicode repertoire.
That specification also permits other protocols to use that method as a base, and to define a profile that adds or removes characters. For example, identifiers for specific programming languages typically add some characters like "$", and remove others like "-" (because of the use as minus), while IDNA removes "_" (among others)—see Unicode Technical Standard #46, "Unicode IDNA Compatibility Processing" [UTS46], as well as [IDNA2003], and [IDNA2008].
This document provides for additional identifier profiles for environments where security is an issue. These are profiles of the extended identifiers based on properties and specifications of the Unicode Standard [Unicode], including:
The data files used in defining these profiles follow the UCD File Format, which has a semicolon-delimited list of data fields associated with given characters, with each field referenced by number. For more details, see [UCDFormat].
The files under [idmod] provides data for a profile of identifiers in environments where security is at issue. The file contains a set of characters recommended to be restricted from use. It also contains a small set of characters that are recommended as additions to the list of characters defined by the XID_Start and XID_Continue properties, because they may be used in identifiers in a broader context than programming identifiers.
The Restricted characters are characters not in common use, and they can be blocked to further reduce the possibilities for visual confusion. They include the following:
The principle has been to be more conservative initially, allowing for the set to be modified in the future as requirements for characters are refined. For information on handling modifications over time, see Section 2.9.1, Backward Compatibility in Unicode Technical Report #36, "Unicode Security Considerations" [UTR36].
An implementation following the General Security Profile does not permit Restricted characters, unless it documents the additional characters that it does allow. Common candidates for such additions include characters for scripts listed in Table 7, Limited Use Scripts of [UAX31]. However, characters from these scripts have not been a priority for examination for confusables or to determine specialized, non-modern, or uncommon-use characters.
Canonical equivalence is applied when testing candidate identifiers for inclusion of Allowed characters. For example, suppose the candidate string is the sequence
<u, combining-diaeresis>
The target string would be Allowed in either of the following 2 situations:
For details of the format for the [idmod] files, see Section 7, Data Files.
Status | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Restricted | Not_Character | Unassigned characters, private use characters, surrogates, most control characters |
Deprecated | Characters with the Unicode property Deprecated=Yes | |
Default_Ignorable | Characters with the Unicode property Default_Ignorable_Code_Point=Yes | |
Not_NFKC | Characters that cannot occur in strings normalized to NFKC. | |
Not_XID | Other characters that do not qualify as default Unicode identifiers; that is, they do not have the Unicode property XID_Continue=True. | |
Exclusion | Characters from Table 4, Candidate Characters for Exclusion from Identifiers from [UAX31] | |
Obsolete | Characters that are no longer in modern use. | |
Technical | Specialized usage: technical, liturgical, etc. | |
Uncommon_Use | Characters whose status is uncertain, or that are not commonly used in modern text. | |
Limited_Use | Characters from scripts that are in limited use: Table 7, Limited Use Scripts in [UAX31]. | |
Allowed | Inclusion | Exceptional allowed characters, including Table 3, Candidate Characters for Inclusion in Identifiers in [UAX31], and some characters for IDNA2008, except for those characters that are Restricted above. |
Recommended | Table 5, Recommended Scripts in [UAX31], except for those characters that are Restricted above. |
For stability considerations, see Migrating Persistent Data.
The distinctions among the Type values is not strict; if there are multiple Types for restricting a character only one is given. The important characteristic is the Status: whether or not the character is Restricted. As more information is gathered about characters, this data may change in successive versions. That can cause either the Status or Type to change for a particular character. Thus users of this data should be prepared for changes in successive versions, such as by having a grandfathering policy in place for previously supported characters or registrations. Both Status and Type values are to be compared case-insensitively and ignoring hyphens and underbars.
Restricted characters should be treated with caution in registration, and disallowed unless there is good reason to allow them in the environment in question. However, the set of Status=Allowed characters are not typically used as is by implementations. Instead, they are applied as filters to the set of characters C that are supported by the identifier syntax, generating a new set C′. Typically there are also particular characters or classes of characters from C that are retained as Exception characters.
C′ = (C ∩ {Status=Allowed}) ∪ Exceptions
The implementation may simply restrict use of new identifiers to C′, or may apply some other strategy. For example, there might be an appeal process for registrations of ids that contain characters outside of C′ (but still inside of C), or in user interfaces for lookup of identifiers, warnings of some kind may be appropriate. For more information, see [UTR36].
The Exception characters would be implementation-specific. For example, a particular implementation might extend the default Unicode identifier syntax by adding Exception characters with the Unicode property XID_Continue=False, such as “$”, “-”, and “.”. Those characters are specific to that identifier syntax, and would be retained even though they are not in the Status=Allowed set. Some implementations may also wish to add some [CLDR] exemplar characters for particular supported languages that have unusual characters.
The Type=Inclusion characters already contain some characters that are not letters or numbers, but that are used within words in some languages. For example, it is recommended that U+00B7 (·) MIDDLE DOT be allowed in identifiers, because it is required for Catalan.
The implementation may also apply other restrictions discussed in this document, such as checking for confusable characters or doing mixed-script detection.
The determination of whether ZWJ and ZWNJ are allowed or restricted depends on the context, as described in Section 2.3, Layout and Format Control Characters of [UAX31]. At a minimum, implementations should test for the conditions A1, A2, and B listed in that section of [UAX31].
More advanced implementations may use script-specific information for more detailed testing. In particular, they can:
1. Disallow joining controls in sequences that meet the conditions of A1, A2, and B, where in common fonts the resulting appearance of the sequence is normally not distinct from appearance in the same sequences with the joining controls removed.
2. Allow joining controls in sequences that don't meet the conditions of A1, A2, and B (such as the following), where in common fonts the resulting appearance of the sequence is normally distinct from the appearance in the same sequences with the joining controls removed.
/$L ZWNJ $V $L/
/$L ZWJ $V $L/
The notation is from [UAX31].
Version 1 of this document defined operations and data that apply to [IDNA2003], which has been superseded by [IDNA2008] and Unicode Technical Standard #46, "Unicode IDNA Compatibility Processing" [UTS46]. The identifier modification data can be applied to whichever specification of IDNA is being used. For more information, see the [IDN FAQ].
However, implementations can claim conformance to other features of this document as applied to domain names, such as Restriction Levels.
The SMTP Extension for Internationalized Email provides for specifications of internationalized email addresses [EAI]. However, it does not provide for testing those addresses for security issues. This section provides an email security profiles that may be used for that. It can be applied for different purposes, such as:
This profile does not exclude characters from EAI. Instead, it provides a profile that can be used for registration, linkification, and notification. The goal is to flag "structurally unsound" and “unexpectedly garbagy” addresses.
An email address is formed from three main parts. (There are more elements of an email address, but these are the ones for which Unicode security is important.) For example:
"Joey" <joe31834@gmail.com>
- The domain-part is "gmail.com"
- The local-part is "joe31834"
- The quoted-string-part is "Joey"
To meet the requirements of the Email Security Profiles for Identifiers section of this specification, an identifier must satisfy the following conditions for the specified <restriction level>.
The domain-part of an email address must satisfy Section 3.2, IDN Security Profiles for Identifiers, and satisfy the conformance clauses of [UTS46].
The local-part of an email address must satisfy all the following conditions:
Where C ≤ U+007F, C is defined as in §3.2.3. (That is, C ∈ [!#-'*+\-/-9=?A-Z\^-~]. This list copies what is already in §3.2.3, and follows HTML5 for ASCII.)
Where C > U+007F, both of the following conditions are true:
- C has IdentifierStatus=Allowed from General_Security_Profile
- If C is the first character, it must be XID_Start from Default_Identifier_Syntax in [UAX31]
Note that in RFC 5322 §3.2.3:
dot-atom-text =
1*atext *("." 1*atext)
That is, dots can also occur in the local-part, but not leading, trailing, or two in a row. In more conventional regex syntax, this would be:
dot-atom-text =
atext+ ("." atext+)*
Note that bidirectional controls and other format characters are specifically disallowed in the local-part, according to the above.
The quoted-string-part of an email address must satisfy the following conditions:
The restrictions above are insufficient to prevent bidirectional-reordering that could intermix the quoted-string-part with the local-part or the domain-part in display. To prevent that, implementations could use bidirectional isolates (or equivalent) around the each of these parts in display.
Implementations may also want to use other checks, such as for confusability, or services such as Safe Browsing.
A serious practical issue is that clients do not know what the identity rules are for any particular email server: that is, when two email addresses are considered equivalent. For example, are mark@macchiato.com and Mark@macchiato.com treated the same by the server? Unfortunately, there is no way to query a server to see what identity rules it follows. One of the techniques used to deal with this problem is having whitelists of email providers indicating which of them are case-insensitive, dot-insensitive, or both.
The data in [confusables] provide a mechanism for determining when two strings are visually confusable. The data in these files may be refined and extended over time. For information on handling modifications over time, see Section 2.9.1, Backward Compatibility in Unicode Technical Report #36, "Unicode Security Considerations" [UTR36] and the Migration section of this document.
Collection of data for detecting gatekeeper-confusable strings is not currently a goal for the confusable detection mechanism in this document. For more information, see Section 2, Visual Security Issues in [UTR36].
The data provides a mapping from source characters to their prototypes. A prototype should be thought of as a sequence of one or more classes of symbols, where each class has an exemplar character. For example, the character U+0153 (œ), LATIN SMALL LIGATURE OE, has a prototype consisting of two symbol classes: the one with exemplar character U+006F (o), and the one with exemplar character U+0065 (e). If an input character does not have a prototype explicitly defined in the data file, the prototype is assumed to consist of the class of symbols with the input character as the exemplar character.
For an input string X, define skeleton(X) to be the following transformation on the string:
The strings X and Y are defined to be confusable if and only if skeleton(X) = skeleton(Y). This is abbreviated as X ≅ Y.
This mechanism imposes transitivity on the data, so if X ≅ Y and Y ≅ Z, then X ≅ Z. It is possible to provide a more sophisticated confusable detection, by providing a metric between given characters, indicating their "closeness." However, that is computationally much more expensive, and requires more sophisticated data, so at this point in time the simpler mechanism has been chosen. That means that in some cases the test may be overly inclusive.
Note: The strings skeleton(X) and skeleton(Y) are not intended for display, storage or transmission. They should be thought of as an intermediate processing form, similar to a hashcode. The exemplar characters are not guaranteed to be identifier characters.
Definitions
Confusables are divided into three classes: single-script confusables, mixed-script confusables, and whole-script confusables, defined below. All confusables are either a single-script confusable or a mixed-script confusable, but not both. All whole-script confusables are also mixed-script confusables.
The definitions of these three classes of confusables depend on the definitions of resolved script set and single-script, which are provided in Section 5, Mixed-Script Detection.
X and Y are single-script confusables if and only if they are confusable, and their resolved script sets have at least one element in common.
Examples: “ljeto” and “ljeto” in Latin (the Croatian word for “summer”), where the first word uses only four codepoints, the first of which is U+01C9 (lj) LATIN SMALL LETTER LJ.
X and Y are mixed-script confusables if and only if they are confusable but their resolved script sets have no elements in common.
Examples: "paypal" and "pаypаl", where the second word has the character U+0430 ( а ) CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER A.
X and Y are whole-script confusables if and only if they are mixed-script confusables, and each of them is a single-script string.
Example: "scope" in Latin and "ѕсоре" in Cyrillic.
As noted in Section 5, the resolved script set ignores characters with Script_Extensions {Common} and {Inherited} and augments characters with CJK scripts with their respective writing systems. Characters with the Script_Extension property values COMMON or INHERITED are ignored when testing for differences in script.
Each line in the data file has the following format: Field 1 is the source, Field 2 is the target, and Field 3 is obsolete, always containing the letters “MA” for backwards compatibility. For example:
0441 ; 0063 ; MA # ( с → c ) CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER ES → LATIN SMALL LETTER C #
2CA5 ; 0063 ; MA # ( ⲥ → c ) COPTIC SMALL LETTER SIMA → LATIN SMALL LETTER C # →ϲ→
Everything after the # is a comment and is purely informative. A asterisk after the comment indicates that the character is not an XID character [UAX31]. The comments provide the character names.
Implementations that use the confusable data do not have to recursively apply the mappings, because the transforms are idempotent. That is,
skeleton(skeleton(X)) = skeleton(X)
If the data was derived via transitivity, there is an extra comment at the end. For instance, in the above example the derivation was:
To reduce security risks, it is advised that identifiers use casefolded forms, thus eliminating uppercase variants where possible.
The data may change between versions. Even where the data is the same, the order of lines in the files may change between versions. For more information, see Migration.
For some applications, it is useful to determine if a given input string has any whole-script confusable. For example, the identifier "ѕсоре" using Cyrillic characters would pass the single-script test described in Section 5.2, Restriction-Level Detection, even though it is likely to be a spoof attempt.
It is possible to determine whether a single-script string X has a whole-script confusable:
The logical description above can be used for a reference implementation for testing, but is not particularly efficient. A production implementation can be optimized as long as it produces the same results.
Note that the confusables data include a large number of mappings between Latin and Cyrillic text. For this reason, the above algorithm is likely to flag a large number of legitimate strings written in Latin or Cyrillic as potential whole-script confusables. To effectively use whole-script confusables, it is often useful to determine both whether a string has a whole-script confusable, and which scripts those whole-script confusables have.
This information can be used, for example, to distinguish between reasonable versus suspect whole-script confusables. Consider the Latin-script domain-name label “circle”. It would be appropropriate to have that in the domain name “circle.com”. It would also be appropriate to have the Cyrillic confusable “сігсӀе” in the Cyrillic domain name “сігсӀе.рф”. However, a browser may want to alert the user to possible spoofs if the Cyrillic “сігсӀе” is used with .com or the Latin “circle” is used with .рф.
The process of determining suspect usage of whole-script confusables is more complicated than simply looking at the scripts of the labels in a domain name. For example, it can be perfectly legitimate to have scripts in a SLD (second level domain) not be the same as scripts in a TLD (top-level domain), such as:
The following high-level algorithm can be used to determine all scripts that contain a whole-script confusable with a string X:
As usual, this algorithm is intended only as a definition; implementations should use an optimized routine that produces the same result.
To determine the existence of a mixed-script confusable, a similar process could be used:
The logical description above can be used for a reference implementation for testing, but is not particularly efficient. A production implementation can be optimized as long as it produces the same results.
Note that due to the number of mappings provided by the confusables data, the above algorithm is likely to flag a large number of legitimate strings as potential mixed-script confusables.
The Unicode Standard supplies information that can be used for determining the script of characters and detecting mixed-script text. The determination of script is according to the UAX #24, Unicode Script Property [UAX24], using data from the Unicode Character Database [UCD].
Define a character's augmented script set to be a character's Script_Extensions with the following two modifications.
The Script_Extensions data is from the Unicode Character Database [UCD]. For more information on the Script_Extensions property and Jpan, Kore, and Hanb, see UAX #24, Unicode Script Property [UAX24].
Define the resolved script set for a string to be the intersection of the augmented script sets over all characters in the string.
A string is defined to be mixed-script if its resolved script set is empty and defined to be single-script if its resolved script set is nonempty.
Note that the term “single-script string” may be confusing. It means that there is at least one script in the resolved script set, not that there is only one. For example, the string “〆切” is single-script, because it has four scripts {Hani, Hanb, Jpan, Kore} in its resolved script set.
As well as providing an API to detect whether a string has mixed-scripts, is also useful to offer an API that returns those scripts. Look at the examples below.
String | Code Point | Script_Extensions | Augmented Script Sets | Resolved Script Set | Single-Script? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Circle | U+0043 U+0069 U+0072 U+0063 U+006C U+0065 |
{Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} |
{Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} |
{Latn} | Yes |
СігсӀе | U+0421 U+0456 U+0433 U+0441 U+04C0 U+0435 |
{Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} |
{Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} {Cyrl} |
{Cyrl} | Yes |
Сirсlе | U+0421 U+0069 U+0072 U+0441 U+006C U+0435 |
{Cyrl} {Latn} {Latn} {Cyrl} {Latn} {Cyrl} |
{Cyrl} {Latn} {Latn} {Cyrl} {Latn} {Cyrl} |
∅ | No |
Circ1e | U+0043 U+0069 U+0072 U+0063 U+0031 U+0065 |
{Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Zyyy} {Latn} |
{Latn} {Latn} {Latn} {Latn} ALL {Latn} |
{Latn} | Yes |
C𝗂𝗋𝖼𝗅𝖾 | U+0043 U+1D5C2 U+1D5CB U+1D5BC U+1D5C5 U+1D5BE |
{Latn} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} |
{Latn} ALL ALL ALL ALL ALL |
{Latn} | Yes |
𝖢𝗂𝗋𝖼𝗅𝖾 | U+1D5A2 U+1D5C2 U+1D5CB U+1D5BC U+1D5C5 U+1D5BE |
{Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} {Zyyy} |
ALL ALL ALL ALL ALL ALL |
ALL | Yes |
〆切 | U+3006 U+5207 |
{Hani, Hira, Kata} {Hani} |
{Hani, Hira, Kata, Hanb, Jpan, Kore} {Hani, Hanb, Jpan, Kore} |
{Hani, Hanb, Jpan, Kore} | Yes |
ねガ | U+306D U+30AC |
{Hira} {Kata} |
{Hira, Jpan} {Kata, Jpan} |
{Jpan} | Yes |
A set of scripts is defined to cover a string if the intersection of that set with the augmented script sets of all characters in the string is nonempty; in other words, if every character in the string shares at least one script with the cover set. For example, {Latn, Cyrl} covers "Сirсlе", the third example in Table 1a.
A cover set is defined to be minimal if there is no smaller cover set. For example, {Hira, Hani} covers "〆切", the seventh example in Table 1a, but it is not minimal, since {Hira} also covers the string, and {Hira} is smaller than {Hira, Hani}. Note that minimal cover sets are not unique: a string may have different minimal cover sets.
Typically an API that returns the scripts in a string will return one of the minimal cover sets.
For computational efficiency, a set of script sets (SOSS) can be computed, where the augmented script sets for each character in the string map to one entry in the SOSS. For example, { {Latn}, {Cyrl} } would be the SOSS for "Сirсlе". A set of scripts that covers the SOSS also covers the input string. Likewise, the intersection of all entries of the SOSS will be the input string's resolved script set.
Restriction Levels 1-5 are defined here for use in implementations. These place restrictions on the use of identifiers according to the appropriate Identifier Profile as specified in Section 3, Identifier Characters. The lists of Recommended scripts are taken from Table 5, Recommended Scripts of [UAX31]. For more information on the use of Restriction Levels, see Section 2.9, Restriction Levels and Alerts in [UTR36].
For each of the Restriction Levels 1-6, the identifier must be well-formed according to whatever general syntactic constraints are in force, such as the Default Identifier Syntax in [UAX31].
In addition, an application may provide an Identifier Profile such as the General Security Profile for Identifiers, which restricts the allowed characters further. For each of the Restriction Levels 1-5, characters in the string must also be in the Identifier Profile. Where there is no such Identifier Profile, Levels 5 and 6 are identical.
Note that in all levels except ASCII-Only, any character having Script_Extensions {Common} or {Inherited} are allowed in the identifier, as long as those characters meet the Identifier Profile requirements.
These levels can be detected by reusing some of the mechanisms of Section 5.1. For a given input string, the Restriction Level is determined by the following logical process:
The actual implementation of this algorithm can be optimized; as usual, the specification only depends on the results.
There are three different types of numbers in Unicode. Only numbers with General_Category = Decimal_Numbers (Nd) should be allowed in identifiers. However, characters from different decimal number systems can be easily confused. For example, U+0660 ( ٠ ) ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO can be confused with U+06F0 ( ۰ ) EXTENDED ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO, and U+09EA ( ৪ ) BENGALI DIGIT FOUR can be confused with U+0038 ( 8 ) DIGIT EIGHT.
For a given input string which does not contain non-decimal numbers, the logical process of detecting mixed numbers is the following:
For each character in the string:
If there is more than one such zero character, then the string contains multiple decimal number systems.
The actual implementation of this algorithm can be optimized; as usual, the specification only depends on the results. The following Java sample using [ICU] shows how this can be done :
public UnicodeSet getNumberRepresentatives(String identifier) {
int cp;
UnicodeSet numerics = new UnicodeSet();
for (int i = 0; i < identifier.length(); i += Character.charCount(i)) {
cp = Character.codePointAt(identifier, i);
// Store a representative character for each kind of decimal digit
switch (UCharacter.getType(cp)) {
case UCharacterCategory.DECIMAL_DIGIT_NUMBER:
// Just store the zero character as a representative for comparison.
// Unicode guarantees it is cp - value.
numerics.add(cp - UCharacter.getNumericValue(cp));
break;
case UCharacterCategory.OTHER_NUMBER:
case UCharacterCategory.LETTER_NUMBER:
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Should not be in identifiers.");
}
}
return numerics;
} ... UnicodeSet numerics = getMixedNumbers(String identifier); if (numerics.size() > 1) reject(identifer, numerics);
There are additional enhancements that may be useful in spoof detection. This includes such mechanisms as marking strings as "mixed script" where they contain simplified-only and traditional-only Chinese characters, using the Unihan data in the Unicode Character Database [UCD], or detecting sequences of the same nonspacing mark.
Other enhancements useful in spoof detection include the following:
The characters U+0BB6 TAMIL LETTER SHA and U+0BB8 TAMIL LETTER SA are normally quite distinct. However, they can both be used in the representation of the the Tamil word shri. On some very common platforms, the following sequences result in exactly the same visual appearance:
U+0BB6 | U+0BCD | U+0BB0 | U+0BC0 | |
SHA | VIRAMA | RA | II | |
ஶ | ் | ர | ◌ீ | = ஶ்ரீ |
U+0BB8 | U+0BCD | U+0BB0 | U+0BC0 | |
SA | VIRAMA | RA | II | |
ஸ | ் | ர | ◌ீ | = ஸ்ரீ |
As discussed in Unicode Technical Report #36, "Unicode Security Considerations" [UTR36], confusability among characters cannot be an exact science. There are many factors that make confusability a matter of degree:
In-script confusability is extremely user-dependent. For example, in the Latin script, characters with accents or appendices may look similar to the unadorned characters for some users, especially if they are not familiar with their meaning in a particular language. However, most users will have at least a minimum understanding of the range of characters in their own script, and there are separate mechanisms available to deal with other scripts, as discussed in [UTR36].
As described elsewhere, there are cases where the confusable data may be different than expected. Sometimes this is because two characters or two strings may only be confusable in some fonts. In other cases, it is because of transitivity. For example, the dotless and dotted I are considered equivalent (ı ↔ i), because they look the same when accents such as an acute are applied to each. However, for practical implementation usage, transitivity is sufficiently important that some oddities are accepted.
The data may be enhanced in future versions of this specification. For information on handling changes in data over time, see Section 2.9.1, Backward Compatibility of [UTR36].
The confusability data was created by collecting a number of prospective confusables, examining those confusables according to a set of common fonts, and processing the result for transitive closure.
The primary goal is to include characters that would be Status=Allowed as in Table 1, Identifier Status and Type. Other characters, such as NFKC variants, are not a primary focus for data collection. However, such variants may certainly be included in the data, and may be submitted using the online forms at [Feedback].
The prospective confusables were gathered from a number of sources. Erik van der Poel contributed a list derived from running a program over a large number of fonts to catch characters that shared identical glyphs within a font, and Mark Davis did the same more recently for fonts on Windows and the Macintosh. Volunteers from Google, IBM, Microsoft and other companies gathered other lists of characters. These included native speakers for languages with different writing systems. The Unicode compatibility mappings were also used as a source. The process of gathering visual confusables is ongoing: the Unicode Consortium welcomes submission of additional mappings. The complex scripts of South and Southeast Asia need special attention. The focus is on characters that can be in the Recommended profile for identifiers, because they are of most concern.
The fonts used to assess the confusables included those used by the major operating systems in user interfaces. In addition, the representative glyphs used in the Unicode Standard were also considered. Fonts used for the user interface in operating systems are an important source, because they are the ones that will usually be seen by users in circumstances where confusability is important, such such as when using IRIS (Internationalized Resource Identifiers) and their sub-elements (such as domain names). These fonts have a number of other relevant characteristics:
Pairs of prospective confusables were removed if they were always visually distinct at common sizes, both within and across fonts. The data was then closed under transitivity, so that if X≅Y and Y≅Z, then X≅Z. In addition, the data was closed under substring operations, so that if X≅Y then AXB≅AYB. It was then processed to produce the in-script and cross-script data, so that a single data table can be used to map an input string to a resulting skeleton.
A skeleton is intended only for internal use for testing confusability of strings; the resulting text is not suitable for display to users, because it will appear to be a hodgepodge of different scripts. In particular, the result of mapping an identifier will not necessary be an identifier. Thus the confusability mappings can be used to test whether two identifiers are confusable (if their skeletons are the same), but should definitely not be used as a "normalization" of identifiers.
The idmod data is gathered in the following way. The basic assignments are derived based on UCD character properties, information in [UAX31], and a curated list of exceptions based on information from various sources, including the core specification of the Unicode Standard, annotations in the code charts, information regarding CLDR exemplar characters, and external feedback.
The first condition that matches in the order of the items from top to bottom in Table 1. Identifier Status and Type is used, with a few exceptions:
The script information in Table 4, Table 5, and Table 7 is in machine-readable form in CLDR, as scriptMetadata.txt.
The following files provide data used to implement the recommendations in this document. The data may be refined in future versions of this specification. For more information, see Section 2.9.1, Backward Compatibility of [UTR36].
The Unicode Consortium welcomes feedback on additional confusables or identifier restrictions. There are online forms at [Feedback] where you can suggest additional characters or corrections.
The files are in http://www.unicode.org/Public/security/. The directories there contain data files associated with a given version. The directory for this version is:
The data files for the latest approved version are also in the directory:
The format for IdentifierStatus.txt follows the normal conventions for UCD data files, and is described in the header of that file. All characters not listed in the file default to IdentifierType=Restricted. Thus the file only lists characters with IdentifierStatus=Allowed. For example:
002D..002E ; Allowed # 1.1 HYPHEN-MINUS..FULL STOP
The format for IdentifierType.txt follows the normal conventions for UCD data files, and is described in the header of that file. The value is a set whose elements are delimited by spaces. This format is identical to that used for ScriptExtensions.txt. This differs from prior versions which only listed the strongest reason for exclusion. This new convention allows the values to be used for more nuanced filtering. For example, if an implementation wants to allow an Exclusion script, it could still exclude Obsolete and Deprecated characters in that script. All characters not listed in the file default to IdentifierType=Recommended. For example:
2460..24EA ; Technical Not_XID Not_NFKC # 1.1 CIRCLED DIGIT ONE..CIRCLED DIGIT ZERO
Reference | File Name(s) | Contents |
---|---|---|
[idmod] | IdentifierStatus.txt IdentifierType.txt |
Identifier Type and Status: Provides the list of additions and restrictions recommended for building a profile of identifiers for environments where security is at issue. |
[confusables] | confusables.txt | Visually Confusable Characters: Provides a mapping for visual confusables for use in detecting possible security problems. The usage of the file is described in Section 4, Confusable Detection. |
[confusablesSummary] | confusablesSummary.txt | A summary view of the confusables: Groups each set of confusables together, listing them first on a line starting with #, then individually with names and code points. See Section 4, Confusable Detection |
[intentional] | intentional.txt | Intentional Confusable Mappings: A selection of characters whose glyphs in any particular typeface would probably be designed to be identical in shape when using a harmonized typeface design. |
Beginning with version 6.3.0, the version numbering of this document has been changed to indicate the version of the UCD that the data is based on. For versions up to and including 6.3.0, the following table shows the correspondence between the versions of this document and UCD versions that they were based on.
Version | Release Date | Data File Directory | UCD Version | UCD Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Version 1 | 2006-08-15 | /Public/security/revision-02/ | 5.1.0 | 2008-04 |
draft only | 2006-08-11 | /Public/security/revision-03/ | n/a | n/a |
Version 2 | 2010-08-05 | /Public/security/revision-04/ | 6.0.0 | 2010-10 |
Version 3 | 2012-07-23 | /Public/security/revision-05/ | 6.1.0 | 2012-01 |
6.3.0 | 2013-11-11 | /Public/security/6.3.0/ | 6.3.0 | 2013-09 |
If an update version of this standard is required between
the associated UCD versions, the version numbering will include an
update number in the 3rd field. For example, if a version of this
document and its associated data is needed between UCD 6.3.0 and UCD
7.0.0, then a version 6.3.1 could be used.
Implementations must migrate their persistent data stores (such as database indexes) whenever those implementations update to use the data files from a new version of this specification.
Stability is never guaranteed between versions, although it is maintained where feasible. In particular, an updated version of confusable mapping data may use a mapping for a particular character that is different from the mapping used for that character in an earlier version. Thus there may be cases where X → Y in Version N, and X → Z in Version N+1, where Z may or may not have mapped to Y in Version N. Even in cases where the logical data has not changed between versions, the order of lines in the data files may have been changed.
The Identifier Status does not have stability guarantees (such as “Once a character is Allowed, it will not become Restricted in future versions”), because the data is changing over time as we find out more about character usage. Certain of the Type values, such as Not_XID, are backward compatible but most may change as new data becomes available. The identifier data may also not appear to be completely consistent when just viewed from the perspective of script and general category. For example, it may well be that one character out of a set of nonspacing marks in a script is Restricted, while others are not. But that can be just a reflection of the fact that that character is obsolete and the others are not.
For identifier lookup, the data is aimed more at flagging possibly questionable characters, thus serving as one factor (among perhaps many, like using the "Safe Browsing" service) in determining whether the user should be notified in some way. For registration, flagged characters can result in a "soft no", that is, require the user to appeal a denial with more information.
For dealing with characters whose status changes to Restricted, implementations can use a grandfathering mechanism to maintain backwards compatibility.
Implementations should therefore have a strategy for migrating their persistent data stores (such as database indexes) that use any of the confusable mapping data or other data files.
As of Unicode 10.0, Type=Aspirational is now empty; for more information, see [UAX31].
There is an important data format change between versions 8.0 and 9.0. In particular, the xidmodifications.txt file from Version 8.0 has been split into two files for Version 9.0: IdentifierStatus.txt and IdentifierType.txt.
Version 9.0 | Version 8.0 |
---|---|
Field 1 of IdentifierStatus.txt | Field 1 of xidmodifications.txt |
Field 1 of IdentifierType.txt | Field 2 of xidmodifications.txt |
Multiple values are listed in field 1 of IdentifierType.txt. To convert to the old format of xidmodifications.txt, use the last value of that field. For example, the following values would correspond:
File | Field | Content |
---|---|---|
IdentifierType.txt | 1 | 180A ; Limited_Use Exclusion Not_XID |
xidmodifications.txt | 2 | 180A ; Restricted ; Not_XID |
In Version 8.0, the following changes were made to the Identifier Status and Type:
Due to production problems, versions of the confusable mapping tables before 7.0 did not maintain idempotency in all cases, so updating to version 8.0 is strongly advised.
Anyone using the skeleton mappings needs to rebuild any persistent uses of skeletons, such as in database indexes.
The SL, SA, and ML mappings in 7.0 were significantly changed to address the idempotency problem. However, the tables SL, SA, and ML were still problematic, and discouraged from use in 7.0. They were thus removed from version 8.0.
All of the data necessary for an implementation to recreate the removed tables is available in the remaining data (MA) plus the Unicode Character Database properties (script, casing, etc.). Such a recreation would examine each of the equivalence classes from the MA data, and filter out instances that did not fit the constraints (of script or casing). For the target character, it would choose the most neutral character, typically a symbol. However, the reasons for deprecating them still stand, so it is not recommended that implementations recreate them.
Note also that as the Script_Extensions data is made more complete, it may cause characters in the whole-script confusables data file to no longer match. For more information, see Section 4, Confusable Detection.
Mark Davis and Michel Suignard authored the bulk of the text, under direction from the Unicode Technical Committee. Steven Loomis and other people on the ICU team were very helpful in developing the original proposal for this technical report. Shane Carr analyzed the algorithms and supplied the source text for the rewrite of Sections 4 and 5 in version 10.
Thanks also to the following people for their feedback or contributions to this document or earlier versions of it, or to the source data for confusables or idmod: Julie Allen, Andrew Arnold, Vernon Cole, David Corbett (specal thanks for the many contributions), Douglas Davidson, Rob Dawson, Alex Dejarnatt, Chris Fynn, Martin Dürst, Asmus Freytag, Deborah Goldsmith, Paul Hoffman, Denis Jacquerye, Cibu Johny, Patrick L. Jones, Peter Karlsson, Mike Kaplinskiy, Gervase Markham, Eric Muller, David Patterson, Erik van der Poel, Roozbeh Pournader, Michael van Riper, Marcos Sanz, Alexander Savenkov, Dominikus Scherkl, Manuel Strehl, Chris Weber, Ken Whistler, and Waïl Yahyaoui. Thanks to Peter Peng for his assistance with font confusables.
[CLDR] | Unicode Locales Project
(Unicode Common Locale Data Repository) http://www.unicode.org/cldr/ |
[DCore] | Derived Core Properties http://www.unicode.org/Public/UCD/latest/ucd/DerivedCoreProperties.txt |
[DemoConf] | http://unicode.org/cldr/utility/confusables.jsp |
[DemoIDN] | http://unicode.org/cldr/utility/idna.jsp |
[DemoIDNChars] | http://unicode.org/cldr/utility/list-unicodeset.jsp?a=\p{age%3D3.2}-\p{cn}-\p{cs}-\p{co}&abb=on&uts46+idna+idna2008 |
[FAQSec] | Unicode FAQ on Security
Issues http://www.unicode.org/faq/security.html |
[ICANN] | ICANN Documents: Internationalized Domain Names http://www.icann.org/en/topics/idn/ The IDN Variant Issues Project http://www.icann.org/en/topics/new-gtlds/idn-vip-integrated-issues-23dec11-en.pdf Maximal Starting Repertoire Version 2 (MSR-2) https://www.icann.org/news/announcement-2-2015-04-27-en |
[ICU] | International Components for
Unicode http://site.icu-project.org/ |
[IDNA2003] | The IDNA2003 specification is defined by a cluster of IETF RFCs: |
[IDNA2008] | The IDNA2008 specification is defined by a
cluster of IETF RFCs:
|
[IDN-FAQ] | http://www.unicode.org/faq/idn.html |
[EAI] | https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6531 |
[Feedback] | To suggest additions
or changes to confusables or identifier restriction data, please
see: http://unicode.org/reports/tr39/suggestions.html For issues in the text, please see: Reporting Errors and Requesting Information Online http://www.unicode.org/reporting.html |
[Reports] | Unicode Technical Reports http://www.unicode.org/reports/ For information on the status and development process for technical reports, and for a list of technical reports. |
[RFC3454] | P. Hoffman, M. Blanchet.
"Preparation of Internationalized Strings
("stringprep")", RFC 3454, December 2002. http://ietf.org/rfc/rfc3454.txt |
[RFC3490] | Faltstrom, P., Hoffman, P.
and A. Costello, "Internationalizing Domain Names in
Applications (IDNA)", RFC 3490, March 2003. http://ietf.org/rfc/rfc3490.txt |
[RFC3491] | Hoffman, P. and M. Blanchet,
"Nameprep: A Stringprep Profile for Internationalized Domain
Names (IDN)", RFC 3491, March 2003. http://ietf.org/rfc/rfc3491.txt |
[RFC3492] | Costello, A., "Punycode:
A Bootstring encoding of Unicode for Internationalized Domain Names
in Applications (IDNA)", RFC 3492, March 2003. http://ietf.org/rfc/rfc3492.txt |
[Security-FAQ] | http://www.unicode.org/faq/security.html |
[UCD] | Unicode Character Database. http://www.unicode.org/ucd/ For an overview of the Unicode Character Database and a list of its associated files. |
[UCDFormat] | UCD File Format http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr44/#Format_Conventions |
[UAX15] | UAX #15: Unicode
Normalization Forms http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/ |
[UAX24] | UAX #24: Unicode Script
Property http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr24/ |
[UAX29] | UAX #29: Unicode Text
Segmentation http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr29/ |
[UAX31] | UAX #31: Unicode
Identifier and Pattern Syntax http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr31/ |
[Unicode] | The Unicode Standard For the latest version, see: http://www.unicode.org/versions/latest/ |
[UTR36] | UTR #36: Unicode
Security Considerations http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr36/ |
[UTS18] | UTS #18: Unicode
Regular Expressions http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr18/ |
[UTS39] | UTS #39: Unicode Security
Mechanisms http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr39/ |
[UTS46] | Unicode IDNA Compatibility
Processing http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr46/ |
[Versions] | Versions of the Unicode
Standard http://www.unicode.org/standard/versions/ For information on version numbering, and citing and referencing the Unicode Standard, the Unicode Character Database, and Unicode Technical Reports. |
The following summarizes modifications from the previous published version of this document.
Revision 17
Revision 16 being a proposed update, only changes between revisions 15 and 17 are noted here.
Modifications for previous versions are listed in those respective versions.
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