Apple Platform Security Guide b
Apple Platform Security Guide b
Platform Security
May 2022
Contents
System security 28
Glossary 198
Copyright 210
Every Apple device combines hardware, software and services designed to work together
for maximum security and a transparent user experience in service of the ultimate goal
of keeping personal information safe. For example, Apple-designed silicon and security
hardware powers critical security features. And software protections work to keep the
operating system and third-party apps protected. Finally, services provide a mechanism
for secure and timely software updates, power a protected app ecosystem, and facilitate
secure communications and payments. As a result, Apple devices protect not only the
device and its data but the entire ecosystem, including everything users do locally, on
networks and with key internet services.
Just as we design our products to be simple, intuitive and capable, we design them to
be secure. Key security features, such as hardware-based device encryption, can’t be
disabled by mistake. Other features, such as Face ID and Touch ID, enhance the user
experience by making it simpler and more intuitive to secure the device. And because many
of these features are enabled by default, users or IT departments don’t need to perform
extensive configurations.
This documentation provides details about how security technology and features are
implemented within Apple platforms. It also helps organisations combine Apple platform
security technology and features with their own policies and procedures to meet their
specific security needs.
• Hardware security and biometrics: The silicon and hardware that forms the
foundation for security on Apple devices, including Apple silicon, the Secure Enclave,
cryptographic engines, Face ID and Touch ID
• System security: The integrated hardware and software functions that provide for the
safe boot, update and ongoing operation of Apple operating systems
• Encryption and Data Protection: The architecture and design that protects user data
if the device is lost or stolen or if an unauthorised person or process attempts to use or
modify it
• App security: The software and services that provide a safe app ecosystem and enable
apps to run securely and without compromising platform integrity
• Developer kit security: Framework “kits” for secure and private management of home and
health, as well as extension of Apple device and service capabilities to third-party apps
• Secure device management: Methods that allow management of Apple devices, help
prevent unauthorised use and enable remote wipe if a device is lost or stolen
A commitment to security
Apple is committed to helping protect customers with leading privacy and security
technologies — designed to safeguard personal information — and comprehensive
methods, to help protect corporate data in an enterprise environment. Apple rewards
researchers for the work they do to uncover vulnerabilities by offering the Apple
Security Bounty. Details of the programme and bounty categories are available at
https://developer.apple.com/security-bounty/.
We maintain a dedicated security team to support all Apple products. The team provides
security auditing and testing for products, both under development and released. The
Apple team also provides security tools and training and actively monitors for threats and
reports of new security issues. Apple is a member of the Forum of Incident Response and
Security Teams (FIRST).
Apple continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible in security and privacy. It uses
custom silicon across its product lineup — from Apple Watch to iPhone and iPad, to the
T2 Security Chip and Apple silicon in Mac — powering not only efficient computation but
also security. For example, Apple silicon forms the foundation for secure boot, Face ID
and Touch ID, and Data Protection. In addition, security features on devices powered by
Apple silicon — such as Kernel Integrity Protection, Pointer Authentication Codes and Fast
Permission Restrictions — help thwart common types of cyberattack. Therefore, even if
attacker code somehow executes, the damage it can do is dramatically reduced.
To make the most of the extensive security features built into our platforms, organisations
are encouraged to review their IT and security policies to ensure that they are taking full
advantage of the layers of security technology offered by these platforms.
To learn more about reporting issues to Apple and subscribing to security notifications,
see Report a security or privacy vulnerability.
Apple believes privacy is a fundamental human right and has numerous built-in controls
and options that allow users to decide how and when apps use their information,
as well as what information is being used. To learn more about Apple’s approach
to privacy, privacy controls on Apple devices and the Apple privacy policy, see
https://www.apple.com/uk/privacy.
Note: Unless otherwise noted, this documentation covers the following operating system
versions: iOS 15.4, iPadOS 15.4, macOS 12.3, tvOS 15.4 and watchOS 8.5.
Storage encryption must be fast and efficient. At the same time, it can’t expose the data
(or keying material) it uses to establish cryptographic keying relationships. The AES
hardware engine solves this problem by performing fast inline encryption and decryption
as files are written or read. A special channel from the Secure Enclave provides necessary
keying material to the AES engine without exposing this information to the Application
Processor (or CPU) or overall operating system. This helps ensure that the Apple Data
Protection and FileVault technologies protect users’ files without exposing long-lived
encryption keys.
Apple has designed secure boot to protect the lowest levels of software against tampering
and to allow only trusted operating system software from Apple to load at startup. Secure
boot begins in immutable code called the Boot ROM, which is laid down during Apple SoC
fabrication and is known as the hardware root of trust. On Mac computers with a T2 chip,
trust for macOS secure boot begins with the T2. (Both the T2 chip and the Secure Enclave
also execute their own secure boot processes using their own separate Boot ROM — this is
an exact analogue to how the A-series and M1 family of chips boot securely.)
The Secure Enclave also processes face and fingerprint data from Face ID and Touch ID
sensors in Apple devices. This provides secure authentication while keeping user biometric
data private and secure. It also allows users to benefit from the security of longer and
more complex passcodes and passwords with, in many situations, the convenience of swift
authentication for access or purchases.
Apple silicon has been designed and fabricated to specifically enable the system security
features detailed below.
Kernel
Integrity
Protection
Fast
Permission
Restrictions
System
Coprocessor
Integrity
Protection
Pointer
Authentication
Codes
Note: Page Protection Layer (PPL) requires that the platform execute only signed and
trusted code; this is a security model that isn’t applicable in macOS.
Apple-designed silicon also specifically enables the Data Protection capabilities detailed
below.
Sealed Key
Protection (SKP)
recoveryOS — All
Data Protection
Classes
protected
Alternative
boots of DFU,
Diagnostics and
Update — Class
A, B and C data
protected
Overview
The Secure Enclave is a dedicated secure subsystem integrated into Apple systems on chip
(SoCs). The Secure Enclave is isolated from the main processor to provide an extra layer
of security and is designed to keep sensitive user data secure even when the Application
Processor kernel becomes compromised. It follows the same design principles as the
SoC — a Boot ROM to establish a hardware root of trust, an AES engine for efficient and
secure cryptographic operations, and protected memory. Although the Secure Enclave
doesn’t include storage, it has a mechanism to store information securely on attached
storage separate from the NAND flash storage that’s used by the Application Processor
and operating system.
• iPhone 5s or later
• MacBook Pro computers with Touch Bar (2016 and 2017) that contain the Apple T1 Chip
• Apple TV HD or later
The Secure Enclave Processor runs an Apple-customised version of the L4 microkernel. It’s
designed to operate efficiently at a lower clock speed that helps protect it against clock
and power attacks. The Secure Enclave Processor, starting with the A11 and S4, includes
a memory-protected engine and encrypted memory with anti-replay capabilities, secure
boot, a dedicated random number generator and its own AES engine.
When the device starts up, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM generates a random ephemeral
memory protection key for the Memory Protection Engine. Whenever the Secure Enclave
writes to its dedicated memory region, the Memory Protection Engine encrypts the block
of memory using AES in Mac XEX (xor-encrypt-xor) mode, and calculates a Cipher-
based Message Authentication Code (CMAC) authentication tag for the memory. The
Memory Protection Engine stores the authentication tag alongside the encrypted memory.
When the Secure Enclave reads the memory, the Memory Protection Engine verifies the
authentication tag. If the authentication tag matches, the Memory Protection Engine
decrypts the block of memory. If the tag doesn’t match, the Memory Protection Engine
signals an error to the Secure Enclave. After a memory authentication error, the Secure
Enclave stops accepting requests until the system is rebooted.
On Apple A14, A15, the M1 family and later SoCs, the Memory Protection Engine supports
two ephemeral memory protection keys. The first is used for data private to the Secure
Enclave and the second is used for data shared with the Secure Neural Engine.
The Memory Protection Engine operates inline and transparently to the Secure Enclave.
The Secure Enclave reads and writes memory as if it were regular unencrypted
DRAM, whereas an observer outside the Secure Enclave sees only the encrypted and
authenticated version of the memory. The result is strong memory protection without
performance or software complexity tradeoffs.
On system startup, iBoot assigns a dedicated region of memory to the Secure Enclave.
Before using the memory, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM initialises the Memory Protection
Engine to provide cryptographic protection of the Secure Enclave protected memory.
The Application Processor then sends the sepOS image to the Secure Enclave Boot ROM.
After copying the sepOS image into the Secure Enclave protected memory, the Secure
Enclave Boot ROM checks the cryptographic hash and signature of the image to verify that
the sepOS is authorised to run on the device. If the sepOS image is properly signed to run
on the device, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM transfers control to sepOS. If the signature
isn’t valid, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM is designed to prevent any further use of the
Secure Enclave until the next chip reset.
On Apple A10 and later SoCs, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM locks a hash of the sepOS
into a register dedicated to this purpose. The Public Key Accelerator uses this hash for
operating-system-bound (OS-bound) keys.
When boot completes, the Boot Monitor finalises the running hash and sends it to the
Public Key Accelerator to use for OS-bound keys. This process is designed so that
operating system key binding can’t be bypassed even with a vulnerability in the Secure
Enclave Boot ROM.
A randomly generated UID is fused into the SoC at manufacturing time. Starting with A9
SoCs, the UID is generated by the Secure Enclave TRNG during manufacturing and written
to the fuses using a software process that runs entirely in the Secure Enclave. This process
protects the UID from being visible outside the device during manufacturing and therefore
isn’t available for access or storage by Apple or any of its suppliers.
sepOS uses the UID to protect device-specific secrets. The UID allows data to be
cryptographically tied to a particular device. For example, the key hierarchy protecting the
file system includes the UID, so if the internal SSD storage is physically moved from one
device to another, the files are inaccessible. Other protected device-specific secrets include
Face ID or Touch ID data. On a Mac, only fully internal storage linked to the AES engine
receives this level of encryption. For example, neither external storage devices connected
over USB nor PCIe-based storage added to the 2019 Mac Pro are encrypted in this fashion.
The Secure Enclave also has a device group ID (GID), which is common to all devices that
use a given SoC (for example, all devices using the Apple A15 SoC share the same GID).
The UID and GID aren’t available through Joint Test Action Group (JTAG) or other
debugging interfaces.
The AES Engine supports hardware and software keys. Hardware keys are derived from
the Secure Enclave UID or GID. These keys stay within the AES Engine and aren’t made
visible even to sepOS software. Although software can request encryption and decryption
operations with hardware keys, it can’t extract the keys.
On Apple A10 and newer SoCs, the AES Engine includes lockable seed bits that diversify
keys derived from the UID or GID. This allows data access to be conditioned on the
device’s mode of operation. For example, lockable seed bits are used to deny access to
password-protected data when booting from Device Firmware Update (DFU) mode. For
more information, see Passcodes and passwords.
AES Engine
Every Apple device with a Secure Enclave also has a dedicated AES256 crypto engine
(the “AES Engine”) built into the direct memory access (DMA) path between the NAND
(non-volatile) flash storage and main system memory, making file encryption highly efficient.
On A9 or later A-series processors, the flash storage subsystem is on an isolated bus that’s
granted access only to memory containing user data through the DMA crypto engine.
At boot time, sepOS generates an ephemeral wrapping key using the TRNG. The Secure
Enclave transmits this key to the AES Engine using dedicated wires designed to prevent it
from being accessed by any software outside the Secure Enclave. sepOS can then use the
ephemeral wrapping key to wrap file keys for use by the Application Processor file-system
driver. When the file-system driver reads or writes a file, it sends the wrapped key to the
AES Engine, which unwraps the key. The AES Engine never exposes the unwrapped key to
software.
Note: The AES Engine is a separate component to both the Secure Enclave and the Secure
Enclave AES Engine, but its operation is closely tied to the Secure Enclave, as shown below.
The PKA supports software and hardware keys. Hardware keys are derived from the Secure
Enclave UID or GID. These keys stay within the PKA and aren’t made visible even to sepOS
software.
Starting with A13 SoCs, the PKA’s encryption implementations have been proved to be
mathematically correct using formal verification techniques.
On Apple A10 and later SoCs, the PKA supports OS-bound keys, also referred to as
Sealed Key Protection (SKP). These keys are generated using a combination of the device’s
UID and the hash of the sepOS in use on the device. The hash is provided by the Secure
Enclave Boot ROM, or by the Secure Enclave Boot Monitor on Apple A13 and later SoCs.
These keys are also used to verify the sepOS version when making requests to certain
Apple services and are also used to improve the security of passcode-protected data by
helping to prevent access to keying material if critical changes are made to the system
without user authorisation.
In devices with A12, S4 and later SoCs, the Secure Enclave is paired with a Secure
Storage Component for entropy storage. The Secure Storage Component is itself
designed with immutable ROM code, a hardware random number generator, a per-device
unique cryptographic key, cryptography engines and physical tamper detection. The
Secure Enclave and Secure Storage Component communicate using an encrypted and
authenticated protocol that provides exclusive access to the entropy.
Devices first released in autumn 2020 or later are equipped with a 2nd-generation Secure
Storage Component. The 2nd-generation Secure Storage Component adds counter
lockboxes. Each counter lockbox stores a 128-bit salt, a 128-bit passcode verifier, an 8-bit
counter and an 8-bit maximum attempt value. Access to the counter lockboxes is through
an encrypted and authenticated protocol.
Counter lockboxes hold the entropy needed to unlock passcode-protected user data. To
access the user data, the paired Secure Enclave must derive the correct passcode entropy
value from the user’s passcode and the Secure Enclave’s UID. The user’s passcode can’t
be learned using unlock attempts sent from a source other than the paired Secure Enclave.
If the passcode attempt limit is exceeded (for example, 10 attempts on iPhone), the
passcode-protected data is erased completely by the Secure Storage Component.
To retrieve the lockbox entropy value from a counter lockbox later, the Secure Enclave
sends the Secure Storage Component the passcode entropy. The Secure Storage
Component first increments the counter for the lockbox. If the incremented counter
exceeds the maximum attempt value, the Secure Storage Component completely erases
the counter lockbox. If the maximum attempt count hasn’t been reached, the Secure
Storage Component attempts to derive the passcode verifier value and lockbox entropy
value with the same algorithm used to create the counter lockbox. If the derived passcode
verifier value matches the stored passcode verifier value, the Secure Storage Component
returns the lockbox entropy value to the Secure Enclave and resets the counter to 0.
The keys used to access password-protected data are rooted in the entropy stored in
counter lockboxes. For more information, see Data Protection overview.
The secure non-volatile storage is used for all anti-replay services in the Secure Enclave.
Anti-replay services on the Secure Enclave are used for revocation of data over events that
mark anti-replay boundaries including, but not limited to, the following:
• Passcode change
On A11 up to A13 SoCs, the Secure Neural Engine is integrated into the Secure Enclave.
The Secure Neural Engine uses direct memory access (DMA) for high performance. An
input-output memory management unit (IOMMU) under the sepOS kernel’s control limits
this direct access to authorised memory regions.
Starting with A14 and the M1 family, the Secure Neural Engine is implemented as a secure
mode in the Application Processor’s Neural Engine. A dedicated hardware security
controller switches between Application Processor and Secure Enclave tasks, resetting
Neural Engine state on each transition to keep Face ID data secure. A dedicated engine
applies memory encryption, authentication and access control. At the same time, it uses
a separate cryptographic key and memory range to limit the Secure Neural Engine to
authorised memory regions.
A12 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys
released before authentication and Component gen 1 lockable seed bits
autumn 2020) replay prevention
A12 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys
released after authentication and Component gen 2 lockable seed bits
autumn 2020) replay prevention
A13 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys and
released before authentication and Component gen 1 lockable seed bits Boot Monitor
autumn 2020) replay prevention
A13 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys and
released after authentication and Component gen 2 lockable seed bits Boot Monitor
autumn 2020) replay prevention
A14, A15 Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys and
authentication and Component gen 2 lockable seed bits Boot Monitor
replay prevention
S5 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys
released before authentication and Component gen 1 lockable seed bits
autumn 2020) replay prevention
S5 (Apple devices Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys
released after authentication and Component gen 2 lockable seed bits
autumn 2020) replay prevention
M1 Family Encryption, Secure Storage DPA protection and OS-bound keys and
authentication and Component gen 2 lockable seed bits Boot Monitor
replay prevention
Face ID security
With a simple glance, Face ID securely unlocks supported Apple devices. It provides
intuitive and secure authentication enabled by the TrueDepth camera system, which uses
advanced technologies to accurately map the geometry of a user’s face. Face ID uses
neural networks for determining attention, matching and anti-spoofing, so a user can
unlock their phone with a glance, even with a mask on when using supported devices.
Face ID automatically adapts to changes in appearance and carefully safeguards the
privacy and security of a user’s biometric data.
Face ID is designed to confirm user attention, provide robust authentication with a low
false-match rate and mitigate both digital and physical spoofing.
The TrueDepth camera automatically looks for the user’s face when the user wakes an
Apple device that features Face ID (by raising it or tapping the screen), as well as when
those devices attempt to authenticate the user in order to display an incoming notification
or when a supported app requests Face ID authentication. When a face is detected, Face ID
confirms attention and intent to unlock by detecting that the user’s eyes are open and
their attention is directed at their device. For accessibility, the Face ID attention check is
disabled when VoiceOver is activated and, if required, can be disabled separately. Attention
detection is always required when using Face ID with a mask.
Touch ID security
Touch ID is the fingerprint sensing system that makes secure access to supported Apple
devices faster and easier. This technology reads fingerprint data from any angle and
learns more about a user’s fingerprint over time, with the sensor continuing to expand the
fingerprint map as additional overlapping nodes are identified with each use.
Apple devices with a Touch ID sensor can be unlocked using a fingerprint. Touch ID doesn’t
replace the need for a device passcode or user password, which is still required after
device startup, restart or logout (on a Mac). In some apps, Touch ID can also be used in
place of a device passcode or user password — for example, to unlock password-protected
notes in the Notes app, to unlock keychain-protected websites and to unlock supported
app passwords. However, a device passcode or user password is always required in some
scenarios (for example, to change an existing device passcode or user password or to
remove existing fingerprint enrolments or create new ones).
When the fingerprint sensor detects the touch of a finger, it triggers the advanced imaging
array to scan the finger and sends the scan to the Secure Enclave. The channel used to
secure this connection varies, depending on whether the Touch ID sensor is built into the
device with the Secure Enclave or is located in a separate peripheral.
While the fingerprint scan is being vectorised for analysis, the raster scan is temporarily
stored in encrypted memory within the Secure Enclave and then it’s discarded. The
analysis uses subdermal ridge flow angle mapping, a lossy process that discards “finger
minutiae data” that would be required to reconstruct the user’s actual fingerprint. During
enrolment, the resulting map of nodes is stored in an encrypted format that can be read
only by the Secure Enclave as a template to compare against for future matches, but
without any identity information. This data never leaves the device. It’s not sent to Apple,
nor is it included in device backups.
The Magic Keyboard with Touch ID and built-in Touch ID sensors are compatible. If a finger
that was enrolled on a built-in Mac Touch ID sensor is presented on a Magic Keyboard with
Touch ID, the Secure Enclave in the Mac successfully processes the match — and vice versa.
To support secure pairing and thus communication between the Mac Secure Enclave and
the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID, the keyboard is equipped with a hardware Public Key
Accelerator (PKA) block to provide attestation, and with hardware-based keys to perform
the necessary cryptographic processes.
Secure pairing
Before a Magic Keyboard with Touch ID can be used for Touch ID operations, it needs to
be securely paired to the Mac. To pair, the Secure Enclave on the Mac and the PKA block
in the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID exchange public keys, rooted in the trusted Appl CA,
and they use hardware-held attestation keys and ephemeral ECDH to securely attest to
their identity. On the Mac, this data is protected by the Secure Enclave; on the Magic
Keyboard with Touch ID, this data is protected by the PKA block. After secure pairing, all
Touch ID data communicated between the Mac and the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID is
encrypted by AES-GCM with a key length of 256 bits, and with ephemeral ECDH keys using
NIST P-256 curve based on the stored identities. (Normal keystrokes are exchanged using
Bluetooth security in the same way that any Bluetooth keyboard does.)
Apple Pay transactions can be authorised with a Touch ID match or by entering the macOS
user password and pressing twice on the Touch ID button on the Magic Keyboard with
Touch ID. The latter allows the user to confirm physical intent even without a Touch ID match.
• The secure pairing between the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID PKA block and the
Secure Enclave as described above
• A secure channel between the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID sensor and its PKA block
The secure channel between the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID sensor and its PKA block is
established in the factory by using a unique key shared between the two. (This is the same
technique used to create the secure channel between the Secure Enclave on the Mac and
its built-in sensor for Mac computers with Touch ID built-in.)
• Unlocking the Users & Groups pane in System Preferences on Mac (if FileVault is turned on)
• The user has logged out of their Mac account (or hasn’t yet logged in).
• The user hasn’t unlocked their device for more than 48 hours.
• The user hasn’t used their passcode or password to unlock their device for 156 hours
(six and a half days), and the user hasn’t used a biometric to unlock their device in
4 hours.
• The user exited power off / Emergency SOS by pressing and holding either volume button
and the Sleep/Wake button simultaneously for 2 seconds and then pressing Cancel.
• There were five unsuccessful biometric match attempts (though for usability, the device
might offer entering a passcode or password instead of using biometrics after a smaller
number of failures).
When Face ID with a mask is enabled on an iPhone, it’s available for the next 6.5 hours
after one of the following user actions:
Any of these actions extends the period by an additional 6.5 hours when performed.
When Face ID or Touch ID is enabled on iPhone or iPad, the device immediately locks
when the Sleep/Wake button is pressed, and the device locks every time it goes to sleep.
Face ID and Touch ID require a successful match — or optionally, use of the passcode — at
every wake.
The probability that a random person in the population could unlock a user’s iPhone or
iPad is less than 1 in 1,000,000 with Face ID — including when Face ID with a mask is
turned on. For a user’s iPhone, iPad, and Mac models with Touch ID and those paired with a
Magic Keyboard, it’s less than 1 in 50,000. This probability increases with multiple enrolled
fingerprints (up to 1 in 10,000 with five fingerprints) or appearances (up to 1 in 500,000
with two appearances). For additional protection, both Face ID and Touch ID allow only five
unsuccessful match attempts before a passcode or password is required to obtain access
to the user’s device or account. With Face ID, the probability of a false match is higher for:
• Children under the age of 13 (because their distinct facial features may not have fully
developed)
The probability is further increased in these two cases when Face ID with a mask is used.
If a user is concerned about a false match, Apple recommends using a passcode to
authenticate.
Face images captured during normal operation aren’t saved but are instead immediately
discarded after the mathematical representation is calculated for either enrolment or
comparison with the enrolled Face ID data.
With Face ID or Touch ID turned on, the keys aren’t discarded when the device or
account locks; instead, they’re wrapped with a key that’s given to the Face ID or Touch ID
subsystem inside the Secure Enclave. When a user attempts to unlock the device or
account, if the device detects a successful match it provides the key for unwrapping
the Data Protection keys and the device or account is unlocked. This process provides
additional protection by requiring cooperation between the Data Protection and Face ID or
Touch ID subsystems to unlock the device.
When the device restarts, the keys required for Face ID or Touch ID to unlock the device or
account are lost; they’re discarded by the Secure Enclave after any condition is met that
requires passcode or password entry.
• Using Face ID in shops: To authorise an in-store payment with Face ID, the user must
first confirm intent to pay by double-clicking the side button. This double-click captures
user intent using a physical gesture directly linked to the Secure Enclave and is resistant
to forgery by a malicious process. The user then authenticates using Face ID before
placing the device near the contactless payment reader. A different Apple Pay payment
method can be selected after Face ID authentication, which requires re-authentication,
but the user won’t have to double-click the side button again.
• Using Face ID in apps and on the web: To make a payment within apps and on the
web, the user confirms their intent to pay by double-clicking the side button and then
authenticates using Face ID to authorise the payment. If the Apple Pay transaction
isn’t completed within 60 seconds of double-clicking the side button, the user must
reconfirm intent to pay by double-clicking again.
• Using Touch ID: For Touch ID, the intent to pay is confirmed using the gesture of activating
the Touch ID sensor combined with successfully matching the user’s fingerprint.
• Require that authentication API operations don’t fall back to an app password or the
device passcode. They can query whether a user is enrolled, allowing Face ID or
Touch ID to be used as a second factor in security-sensitive apps.
• Generate and use Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) keys inside the Secure Enclave
that can be protected by Face ID or Touch ID. Operations with these keys are always
performed inside the Secure Enclave after it authorises their use.
• iPhone X or later
With this link, users can confirm their intent to complete an operation in a way designed
such that even software with root privileges or in the kernel can’t spoof.
This feature is used to confirm user intent during Apple Pay transactions and when
finalising pairing Magic Keyboard with Touch ID to a Mac with Apple silicon. A double-press
on the appropriate button (for Face ID) or a fingerprint scan (for Touch ID) when prompted
by the user interface signals confirmation of user intent. For more information, see
Securing purchases with Apple Pay. A similar mechanism — based on the Secure Enclave
and T2 firmware — is supported on MacBook models with the Apple T2 Security Chip and
no Touch Bar.
iPad models from 2020 onwards also feature the hardware microphone disconnect. When
an MFi-compliant case (including those sold by Apple) is attached to the iPad and closed,
the microphone is disconnected in hardware. This is designed to prevent microphone audio
data being made available to any software — even with root or kernel privileges in iPadOS
or any device firmware.
The protections in this section are implemented directly with hardware logic, according to
the following circuit diagram:
In each product with a hardware microphone cutoff, one or more lid sensors detects
the physical closure of the lid or case using some physical property (for example, a Hall
effect sensor or a hinge angle sensor) of the interaction. For sensors where calibration is
necessary, parameters are set during production of the device and the calibration process
includes a non-reversible hardware lockout of any subsequent changes to sensitive
parameters on the sensor. These sensors emit a direct hardware signal that goes through
a simple set of non-reprogrammable hardware logic. This logic provides debounce,
hysteresis and/or a delay of up to 500ms before disabling the microphone. Depending on
the product, this signal can be implemented either by disabling the lines transporting data
between the microphone and the System on Chip (SoC) or by disabling one of the input
lines to the microphone module that’s allowing it to be active — for example, the clock line
or a similar effective control.
Pressing the side button (or on iPhone SE 2nd generation, the Home button), displays the
low-battery icon as well as text indicating that Express Cards are available to use. The
NFC controller performs Express Card transactions under the same conditions as when
iOS is in use, except that transactions are indicated only with haptic notification (no visible
notification is shown). On iPhone SE 2nd generation, completed transactions may take a
few seconds to appear onscreen. This feature isn’t available when a standard user-initiated
shutdown is performed.
The most recent versions of Apple operating systems are the most secure. An important
part of Apple security is secure boot, which protects the system from malware infection
at boot time. Secure boot begins in hardware and builds a chain of trust through software,
where each step is designed to ensure that the next is functioning properly before handing
over control. This security model supports not only the default boot of Apple devices, but
also the various modes for recovery and timely updates on Apple devices. Subcomponents
like the T2 Chip and the Secure Enclave also perform their own secure boot to help
ensure they only boot known-good code from Apple. The update system is designed to
prevent downgrade attacks, so that devices can’t be rolled back to an older version of the
operating system (which an attacker knows how to compromise) as a method of stealing
user data.
Apple devices also include boot and runtime protections so they maintain their integrity
during ongoing operation. Apple-designed silicon on iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Apple TV,
HomePod and a Mac with Apple silicon provide a common architecture for protecting
operating system integrity. macOS also features an expanded and configurable set of
protection capabilities in support of its differing computing model, as well as capabilities
supported on all Mac hardware platforms.
Secure boot
• Boot ROM can’t load LLB (older devices): Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) mode
In either case, the device must be connected to the Finder (macOS 10.15 or later) or iTunes
(macOS 10.14 or earlier) through USB and restored to factory default settings.
The Boot Progress Register (BPR) is used by the Secure Enclave to limit access to user
data in different modes and is updated before entering the following modes:
• DFU mode: Set by Boot ROM on devices with Apple A12 or later SoCs
• Recovery mode: Set by iBoot on devices with Apple A10, S2 or later SoCs
On devices with mobile access, a mobile baseband subsystem performs additional secure
booting using signed software and keys verified by the baseband processor.
The Secure Enclave also performs a secure boot that checks its software (sepOS) is
verified and signed by Apple.
• Buffer overflows, by ensuring that all pointers carry bounds information that is verified
when accessing memory
• Heap exploitation, by separating heap data from its metadata and accurately detecting
error conditions such as double free errors
• Type confusion, by ensuring that all pointers carry runtime type information that’s
verified during pointer cast operations
• Type confusion caused by use after free errors, by segregating all dynamic memory
allocations by static type
This technology is available on iPhone with Apple A13 Bionic or later, and iPad with the A14
Bionic chip.
The chip executes code from the Boot ROM in the first step in the chain of trust. macOS
secure boot on a Mac with Apple silicon verifies not only the operating system code itself,
but also the security policies and even kexts (supported, though not recommended)
configured by authorised users.
When LLB (Low Level Bootstrap) is launched, it then verifies the signatures and loads
system-paired firmware for intra-SoC cores such as the storage, display, system
management and Thunderbolt controllers. LLB is also responsible for loading the
LocalPolicy, which is a file signed by the Secure Enclave Processor. The LocalPolicy file
describes the configuration that the user has chosen for the system boot and runtime
security policies. The LocalPolicy has the same data structure format as all other boot
objects, but it’s signed locally by a private key that’s available only within a particular
computer’s Secure Enclave instead of being signed by a central Apple server (like software
updates).
To help prevent replay of any previous LocalPolicy, LLB must look up a nonce from the
Secure Enclave–attached Secure Storage Component. To do this, it uses the Secure
Enclave Boot ROM and makes sure the nonce in the LocalPolicy matches the nonce in the
Secure Storage Component. This helps prevent an old LocalPolicy — which could have
been configured for lower security — from being reapplied to the system after security has
been upgraded. The result is that secure boot on a Mac with Apple silicon helps protect
not only against rollback of operating system versions but also against security policy
downgrades.
• Full Security: The system behaves like iOS and iPadOS, and allows only booting
software that was known to be the latest that was available at install time.
• Reduced Security: LLB is directed to trust “global” signatures, which are bundled with
the operating system. This allows the system to run older versions of macOS. Because
older versions of macOS inevitably have unpatched vulnerabilities, this security mode
is described as Reduced. This is also the policy level required to support booting kernel
extensions (kexts).
• Permissive Security: The system behaves like Reduced Security in that it uses global
signature verification for iBoot and beyond, but it also tells iBoot that it should accept
some boot objects being signed by the Secure Enclave with the same key used to sign
the LocalPolicy. This policy level supports users that are building, signing and booting
their own custom XNU kernels.
If the LocalPolicy indicates to LLB that the selected operating system is running in Full
Security, LLB evaluates the personalised signature for iBoot. If it’s running in Reduced
Security or Permissive Security, it evaluates the global signature. Any signature verification
errors cause the system to boot to recoveryOS to provide repair options.
After LLB hands off to iBoot, it loads macOS-paired firmware such as that for the Secure
Neural Engine, the Always On Processor and other firmware. iBoot also looks at information
about the LocalPolicy handed to it from LLB. If the LocalPolicy indicates that there should
be an Auxiliary Kernel Collection (AuxKC), iBoot looks for it on the file system, verifies that
it was signed by the Secure Enclave with the same key as the LocalPolicy, and verifies that
its hash matches a hash stored in the LocalPolicy. If the AuxKC is verified, iBoot places it
into memory with the Boot Kernel Collection before locking the full memory region covering
the Boot Kernel Collection and AuxKC with the System Coprocessor Integrity Protection
(SCIP). If the policy indicates that an AuxKC should be present but it isn’t found, the
system continues to boot into macOS without it. iBoot is also responsible for verifying the
root hash for the signed system volume (SSV) to check that the file system the kernel will
mount is fully integrity verified.
macOS From a shutdown state, press 1. Boot ROM hands off to LLB.
and release the power button. 2. LLB loads system-paired firmware and the Local Policy
for the selected macOS.
3. LLB locks an indication into the Boot Progress
Register (BPR) that it’s booting into macOS, and
hands off to i Boot.
4. iBoot loads the macOS-paired firmware, the static
trust cache, the device tree and the Boot Kernel
Collection.
5. If the LocalPolicy allows it, i Boot loads the Auxiliary
Kernel Collection (Aux KC) of third-party kexts.
6. If the LocalPolicy didn’t disable it, i Boot verifies the
root signature hash for the signed system volume
(SSV).
Paired recovery OS From a shutdown state, press 1. Boot ROM hands off to LLB.
and hold the power button. 2. LLB loads system-paired firmware and the Local Policy
for the recovery OS.
3. LLB locks an indication into the Boot Progress
Register that it’s booting into paired recovery OS, and
hands off to i Boot for paired recovery OS.
4. iBoot loads the macOS-paired firmware, the trust
cache, the device tree and the Boot Kernel Collection.
5. If paired recovery OS boot fails, booting into fallback
recoveryOS is attempted.
Note: Security downgrades aren’t allowed on the paired
recoveryOS Local Policy.
Fallback recoveryOS From a shutdown state, 1. Boot ROM hands off to LLB.
double-press and hold the 2. LLB loads system-paired firmware and the Local Policy
power button. for the recovery OS.
3. LLB locks an indication into the Boot Progress
Register that it’s booting into paired recovery OS, and
hands off to i Boot for recovery OS.
4. iBoot loads the macOS-paired firmware, the trust
cache, the device tree and the Boot Kernel Collection.
Note: Security downgrades aren’t allowed on the paired
recoveryOS Local Policy.
Safe mode Boot into recovery OS per the 1. Boots to recovery OS as per the above.
above, then hold Shift while 2. Holding the Shift key while selecting a volume causes
selecting the startup volume. the Boot Picker app to approve that macOS for
booting, as normal; it also sets an nvram variable that
tells i Boot to not load the Aux KC on the next boot.
3. System reboots and boots to the targeted volume, but
iBoot doesn’t load Aux KC.
To boot into a paired recoveryOS for any macOS installation, that installation needs to
be selected as the default, which is done using Startup Disk in System Preferences or by
starting any recoveryOS and holding Option while selecting a volume.
Note: Fallback recoveryOS can’t perform downgrades for any macOS installations.
Startup Disk security policy control for a Mac with Apple silicon
Overview
Unlike security policies on an Intel-based Mac, security policies on a Mac with Apple
silicon are for each installed operating system. This means that multiple installed macOS
instances with different versions and security policies are supported on the same Mac. For
this reason, an operating system picker has been added to Startup Security Utility.
On a Mac with Apple silicon, System Security Utility indicates the overall user-configured
security state of macOS, such as the booting of a kext or the configuration of System
Integrity Protection (SIP). If changing a security setting would significantly degrade
security or make the system easier to compromise, users must enter into recoveryOS
by holding the power button (so that malware can’t trigger the signal, only a human with
physical access can) to make the change. Because of this, an Apple silicon–based Mac also
won’t require (or support) a firmware password — all critical changes are already gated by
user authorisation. For more information on SIP, see System Integrity Protection.
Using an online signing server also provides better protection against rollback attacks
than typical global signature approaches. In a global signing system, the security epoch
could have rolled many times but a system that has never seen the latest firmware won’t
know this. For example, a computer that currently believes it’s in security epoch 1 accepts
software from security epoch 2, even if the current actual security epoch is 5. With an
Apple silicon online signing system, the signing server can reject creating signatures for
software that’s in anything except the latest security epoch.
In addition to enabling users to run older versions of macOS, Reduced Security is required
for other actions that can put a user’s system security at risk, such as introducing third-
party kernel extensions (kexts). Kexts have the same privileges as the kernel, and thus
any vulnerabilities in third-party kexts can lead to full operating system compromise. This
is why developers are being strongly encouraged to adopt system extensions before kext
support is removed from macOS for future Mac computers with Apple silicon. Even when
third-party kexts are enabled, they can’t be loaded into the kernel on demand. Instead,
the kexts are merged into an Auxiliary Kernel Collection (AuxKC) — whose hash is stored
in the LocalPolicy — and thus they require a reboot. For more information about AuxKC
generation, see Kernel extensions in macOS.
There’s another way that Permissive Security differs from No Security on an Intel-based
Mac with a T2 chip: it’s a prerequisite for some security downgrades that in the past have
been independently controllable. Most notably, to disable System Integrity Protection (SIP)
on a Mac with Apple silicon, a user must acknowledge that they’re putting the system into
Permissive Security. This is required because disabling SIP has always put the system into
a state that makes the kernel much easier to compromise. In particular, disabling SIP on a
Mac with Apple silicon disables kext signature enforcement during AuxKC generation time,
thus allowing any arbitrary kext to be loaded into kernel memory. Another improvement to
SIP that’s been made on a Mac with Apple silicon is that the policy store has been moved
out of NVRAM and into the LocalPolicy. So now, disabling SIP requires authentication by a
user who has access to the LocalPolicy signing key from recoveryOS (reached by pressing
and holding the power button). This makes it significantly more difficult for a software-only
attacker, or even a physically present attacker, to disable SIP.
It isn’t possible to downgrade to Permissive Security from the Startup Security Utility app.
Users can downgrade only by running command-line tools from Terminal in recoveryOS,
such as csrutil (to disable SIP). After the user has downgraded, the fact that it’s
occurred is reflected in Startup Security Utility, and so a user can easily set the security to
a more secure mode.
Note: A Mac with Apple silicon doesn’t require or support a specific media boot policy
because technically all boots are performed locally. If a user chooses to boot from external
media, that operating system version must first be personalised using an authenticated
reboot from recoveryOS. This reboot creates a LocalPolicy file on the internal drive that’s
used to perform a trusted boot from the operating system stored on the external media.
This means the configuration of booting from external media is always explicitly enabled
on a per-operating system basis, and already requires user authorisation, so no additional
secure configuration is necessary.
Creation
When macOS is first installed in the factory, or when a tethered erase-install is performed,
the Mac runs code from temporary restore RAM disk to initialise the default state. During
this process, the restore environment creates a new pair of public and private keys,
which are held in the Secure Enclave. The private key is referred to as the Owner Identity
Key (OIK). If any OIK already exists, it’s destroyed as part of this process. The restore
environment also initialises the key used for Activation Lock; the User Identity Key (UIK).
Part of that process that is unique to a Mac with Apple silicon is when UIK certification is
requested for Activation Lock, a set of requested constraints to be enforced at validation-
time on the LocalPolicy are included. If the device can’t get a UIK certified for Activation
Lock (for example, because the device is currently associated with a Find My Mac account
and reported as lost), it’s unable to proceed further to create a LocalPolicy. If a device
is issued a User identity Certificate (ucrt), that ucrt contains server-imposed policy
constraints and user-requested policy constraints in an X.509 v3 extension.
RemotePolicy constraints
All Image4 files, not just Local Policies, contain constraints on Image4 manifest evaluation.
These constraints are encoded using special object identifiers (OIDs) in the leaf certificate.
The Image4 verification library looks up the special certificate constraint OID from a
certificate during signature evaluation and then mechanically evaluates the constraints
specified in it. The constraints are of the form:
• X must exist
So, for instance, for “personalised” signatures, the certificate constraints will contain
“ECID must exist”, and for “global” signatures, it will contain “ECID must not exist”. These
constraints are designed to ensure that all Image4 files signed by a given key must
conform to certain requirements to avoid erroneous signed Image4 manifest generation.
Note: Apple uses the term Paired One True recoveryOS (1TR) to indicate a boot into the
paired recoveryOS using a physical power button single-press-and-hold. This differs from
a normal recoveryOS boot, which happens using NVRAM or double-press-and-hold, or
which may happen when errors occur on startup. The physical button press of a specific
kind increases trust in that the boot environment isn’t reachable by a software-only
attacker who has broken into macOS.
• Description: The rpnh behaves the same way as the lpnh but is updated only when the
remote policy is updated, such as when changing the state of Find My enrolment. This
change happens when the user changes the state of Find My on their Mac.
• Description: The ronh behaves the same way as the lpnh, but is found exclusively in
the LocalPolicy for system recoveryOS. It’s updated when the system recoveryOS is
updated, such as on software updates. A separate nonce from the lpnh and rpnh is
used so that when a device is put into a disabled state by Find My, existing operating
systems can be disabled (by removing their LPN and RPN from the Secure Storage
Component), while still leaving the system recoveryOS bootable. In this way, the
operating systems can be re-enabled when the system owner proves their control over
the system by putting in their iCloud password used for the Find My account. This
change happens when a user updates the system recoveryOS or creates new operating
systems.
• Description: The nsih field represents an SHA384 hash of the Image4 manifest data
structure that describes the booted macOS. The macOS Image4 manifest contains
measurements for all the boot objects — such as iBoot, the static trust cache, device
tree, Boot Kernel Collection and signed system volume (SSV) volume root hash. When
LLB is directed to boot a given macOS, it’s designed to ensure that the hash of the
macOS Image4 manifest attached to iBoot matches what’s captured in the nsih field
of the LocalPolicy. In this way, the nsih captures the user intention of what operating
system the user has created a LocalPolicy for. Users change the nsih value implicitly
when they perform a software update.
• Description: The auxp is an SHA384 hash of the user-authorised kext list (UAKL) policy.
This is used at AuxKC generation time to help ensure that only user-authorised kexts
are included in the AuxKC. smb2 is a prerequisite for setting this field. Users change
the auxp value implicitly when they change the UAKL by approving a kext from the
Security & Privacy pane in System Preferences.
• Description: After the system verifies that the UAKL hash matches what’s found in
the auxp field of the LocalPolicy, it requests that the AuxKC be signed by the Secure
Enclave processor application that’s responsible for LocalPolicy signing. Next, an
SHA384 hash of the AuxKC Image4 manifest signature is placed into the LocalPolicy to
avoid the potential for mixing and matching previously signed AuxKCs to an operating
system at boot time. If iBoot finds the auxi field in the LocalPolicy, it attempts to load
the AuxKC from storage and validate its signature. It also verifies that the hash of the
Image4 manifest attached to the AuxKC matches the value found in the auxi field. If
the AuxKC fails to load for any reason, the system continues to boot without this boot
object and so without any third-party kexts loaded. The auxp field is a prerequisite for
setting the auxi field in the LocalPolicy. Users change the auxi value implicitly when
they change the UAKL by approving a kext from the Security & Privacy pane in System
Preferences.
• Description: The auxr is an SHA384 hash of the AuxKC receipt, which indicates the
exact set of kexts that were included into the AuxKC. The AuxKC receipt can be a
subset of the UAKL, because kexts can be excluded from the AuxKC even if they’re
user authorised if they’re known to be used for attacks. In addition, some kexts that can
be used to break the user-kernel boundary may lead to decreased functionality, such
as an inability to use Apple Pay or play 4K and HDR content. Users who want these
capabilities opt in to a more restrictive AuxKC inclusion. The auxp field is a prerequisite
for setting the auxr field in the LocalPolicy. Users change the auxr value implicitly
when they build a new AuxKC from the Security & Privacy pane in System Preferences.
• Description: The coih is an SHA384 hash of CustomOS Image4 manifest. The payload
for that manifest is used by iBoot (instead of the XNU kernel) to transfer control.
Users change the coih value implicitly when they use the kmutil configure-boot
command-line tool in 1TR.
• Description: The vuid indicates the volume group the kernel should use as root. This
field is primarily informational and isn’t used for security constraints. This vuid is set
by the user implicitly when creating a new operating system install.
• Description: The kuid indicates the volume that was booted. The key encryption key
has typically been used for Data Protection. For each LocalPolicy, it’s used to protect
the LocalPolicy signing key. The kuid is set by the user implicitly when creating a new
operating system install.
• Description: The hrlp indicates whether or not the prot value (above) is the
measurement of a Secure Enclave–signed recoveryOS LocalPolicy. If not, then the
recoveryOS LocalPolicy is signed by the Apple online signing server, which signs things
such as macOS Image4 files.
• Description: The love indicates the OS version that the LocalPolicy is created for. The
version is obtained from the next state manifest during LocalPolicy creation and is used
to enforce recoveryOS pairing restrictions.
• Description: If smb0 is present and true, LLB allows the next stage Image4 manifest to
be globally signed instead of requiring a personalised signature. Users can change this
field with Startup Security Utility or bputil to downgrade to Reduced Security.
• Description: If smb1 is present and true, iBoot allows objects such as a custom kernel
collection to be Secure Enclave signed with the same key as the LocalPolicy. Presence
of smb0 is a prerequisite for presence of smb1. Users can change this field using
command-line tools such as csrutil or bputil to downgrade to Permissive Security.
• Description: If smb2 is present and true, iBoot allows the Auxiliary Kernel Collection to
be Secure Enclave signed with the same key as the LocalPolicy. The presence of smb0
is a prerequisite for the presence of smb2. Users can change this field using Startup
Security Utility or bputil to downgrade to Reduced Security and enable third-party
kexts.
• Description: If smb3 is present and true, a user at the device has opted in to mobile
device management (MDM) control of their system. Presence of this field makes
the LocalPolicy-controlling Secure Enclave processor application accept MDM
authentication instead of requiring local user authentication. Users can change this field
using Startup Security Utility or bputil to enable managed control over third-party
kexts and software updates. (In macOS 11.2 or later, MDM can also initiate an update to
the latest macOS version if the current security mode is Full Security.)
• Description: If smb4 is present and true, the device has opted in to MDM control of
the operating system using the Apple School Manager, Apple Business Manager or
Apple Business Essentials. Presence of this field makes the LocalPolicy-controlling
Secure Enclave application accept MDM authentication instead of requiring local
user authentication. This field is changed by the MDM solution when it detects that a
device’s serial number appears in any of those three services.
• Description: The sip0 holds the existing System Integrity Protection (SIP) policy bits
that previously were stored in NVRAM. New SIP policy bits are added here (instead of
using LocalPolicy fields like the below) if they’re used only in macOS and not used by
LLB. Users can change this field using csrutil from 1TR to disable SIP and downgrade
to Permissive Security.
• Description: If sip1 is present and true, iBoot will allow failures to verify the SSV
volume root hash. Users can change this field using csrutil or bputil from 1TR.
• Description: If sip2 is present and true, iBoot will not lock the Configurable Text Read-
only Region (CTRR) hardware register that marks kernel memory as non-writable. Users
can change this field using csrutil or bputil from 1TR.
• Description: If sip3 is present and true, iBoot will not enforce its built-in allow list for
the boot-args NVRAM variable, which would otherwise filter the options passed to the
kernel. Users can change this field using csrutil or bputil from 1TR.
After verification, the UEFI firmware image is mapped into a portion of the T2 chip memory.
This memory is made available to the Intel CPU through the enhanced Serial Peripheral
Interface (eSPI). When the Intel CPU first boots, it fetches the UEFI firmware through the eSPI
from the integrity-checked, memory-mapped copy of the firmware located on the T2 chip.
The evaluation of the chain of trust continues on the Intel CPU, with the UEFI firmware
evaluating the signature for boot.efi, which is the macOS bootloader. The Intel-resident
macOS secure boot signatures are stored in the same Image4 format used for iOS, iPadOS
and T2 chip secure boot, and the code that parses the Image4 files is the same hardened
code from the current iOS and iPadOS secure boot implementation. Boot.efi in turn verifies
the signature of a new file, called immutablekernel. When secure boot is enabled, the
immutablekernel file represents the complete set of Apple kernel extensions required to
boot macOS. The secure boot policy terminates at the handoff to the immutablekernel and,
after that, macOS security policies (such as System Integrity Protection and signed kernel
extensions) take effect.
Note: There is currently no trust provided for the Microsoft Corporation UEFI CA 2011 that
would allow verification of code signed by Microsoft partners. This UEFI CA is commonly
used to verify the authenticity of bootloaders for other operating systems such as Linux
variants.
Support for secure boot of Windows isn’t enabled by default; instead, it’s enabled using
Boot Camp Assistant (BCA). When a user runs BCA, macOS is reconfigured to trust
Microsoft first-party signed code during boot. After BCA completes, if macOS fails to
pass the Apple first-party trust evaluation during secure boot, the UEFI firmware attempts
to evaluate the trust of the object according to UEFI secure boot formatting. If the trust
evaluation succeeds, the Mac proceeds and boots Windows. If not, the Mac enters
recoveryOS and informs the user of the trust evaluation failure.
• System Integrity Protection (SIP): Enabled by default, this protects the booter and
kernel against malicious writes from within a running macOS.
• FileVault: This can be enabled in two ways: by the user or by a mobile device
management (MDM) administrator. This protects against a physically present attacker
using Target Disk Mode to overwrite the booter.
• Firmware Password: This can be enabled in two ways: by the user or by an MDM
administrator. This helps prevent a physically present attacker from launching
alternative boot modes such as recoveryOS, Single User Mode or Target Disk Mode
from which the booter can be overwritten. This also helps prevent booting from
alternative media, by which an attacker could run code to overwrite the booter.
macOS boot None The UEFI firmware hands off to the macOS booter
(a UEFI application), which hands off to the macOS
kernel. On standard booting of a Mac with FileVault
enabled, the macOS booter presents the Login Window
interface, which takes the password to decrypt the
storage.
Startup Manager Option ( ) The UEFI firmware launches the built-in UEFI
application that presents the user with a boot device
selection interface.
Target Disk Mode T The UEFI firmware launches the built-in UEFI
(TDM) application that exposes the internal storage device
as a raw, block-based storage device over FireWire,
Thunderbolt, USB or any combination of the three
(depending on the Mac model).
Single User Mode Command ( )-S The macOS kernel passes the -s flag in launchd’s
argument vector, then launchd creates the single-user
shell in the Console app’s tty.
Note: If the user exits the shell, macOS continues boot
to the Login Window.
recoveryOS Command ( )-R The UEFI firmware loads a minimal macOS from a
signed disk image (.dmg) file on the internal storage
device.
Internet recovery OS Option ( )-Command ( )-R The signed disk image is downloaded from the internet
using HTTP.
Internet Diagnostics Option ( )-D The signed disk image is downloaded from the internet
using HTTP.
Windows boot None If Windows has been installed using Boot Camp, the
UEFI firmware hands off to the Windows booter, which
hands off to the Windows kernel.
Overview
On an Intel-based Mac with an Apple T2 Security Chip, Startup Security Utility handles a
number of security policy settings. The utility is accessible by booting into recoveryOS and
selecting Startup Security Utility from the Utilities menu and protects supported security
settings from easy manipulation by an attacker.
Critical policy changes require authentication, even in Recovery mode. When Startup Security
Utility is first opened, it prompts the user to enter an administrator password from the primary
macOS installation associated with the currently booted recoveryOS. If no administrator
exists, one must be created before the policy can be changed. The T2 chip requires that
the Mac computer be currently booted into recoveryOS and that an authentication with a
Secure Enclave–backed credential has occurred before such a policy change can be made.
Security policy changes have two implicit requirements. RecoveryOS must:
• Be booted from a storage device directly connected to the T2 chip, because partitions
on other devices don’t have Secure Enclave–backed credentials bound to the internal
storage device.
• Reside on an APFS-based volume, because there is support only for storing the
Authentication in Recovery credentials sent to the Secure Enclave on the “Preboot”
APFS volume of a drive. HFS plus-formatted volumes can’t use secure boot.
This policy is shown only in Startup Security Utility on an Intel-based Mac with a T2 chip.
Although most use cases shouldn’t require changes to the secure boot policy, users are
ultimately in control of their device’s settings and may choose, depending on their needs,
to disable or downgrade the secure boot functionality on their Mac.
Secure boot policy changes made from within this app apply only to the evaluation of the
chain of trust being verified on the Intel processor. The option “Secure boot the T2 chip” is
always in effect.
Secure boot policy can be configured to one of three settings: Full Security, Medium
Security and No Security. No Security completely disables secure boot evaluation on the
Intel processor and allows the user to boot whatever they want.
Note: The firmware password isn’t required on a Mac with Apple silicon because the critical
firmware functionality it restricted has been moved into the recoveryOS and (when FileVault
is enabled) recoveryOS requires user authentication before its critical functionality can be
reached.
The most basic mode of firmware password can be reached from the recoveryOS Firmware
Password Utility on an Intel-based Mac without a T2 chip, and from the Startup Security
Utility on an Intel-based Mac with a T2 chip. Advanced options (such as the ability to
prompt for the password at every boot) are available from the firmwarepasswd command-
line tool in macOS.
Setting a Firmware Password is especially important to reduce the risk of attacks on Intel-
based Mac computers without a T2 chip from a physically present attacker. The Firmware
Password can help prevent an attacker from booting to recoveryOS, from where they could
otherwise disable System Integrity Protection (SIP). And by restricting boot of alternative
media, an attacker can’t execute privileged code from another operating system to attack
peripheral firmwares.
For users who want no one but themselves to remove their firmware password by
software means, the -disable-reset-capability option has been added to the
firmwarepasswd command-line tool in macOS 10.15. Before setting this option, users
must acknowledge that if the password is forgotten and needs removal, the user must
bear the cost of the logic board replacement necessary to achieve this. Organisations that
want to protect their Mac computers from external attackers and from employees must set
a firmware password on organisation-owned systems. This can be accomplished on the
device in any of the following ways:
• With third-party management tools that use the firmwarepasswd command-line tool
recoveryOS
The recoveryOS is completely separate from the main macOS and the entire contents
are stored in a disk image file named BaseSystem.dmg. There is also an associated
BaseSystem.chunklist, which is used to verify the integrity of the BaseSystem.dmg. The
chunklist is a series of hashes for 10MB chunks of the BaseSystem.dmg. The Unified
Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFi) firmware evaluates the signature of the chunklist file
and then evaluates the hash one chunk at a time from the BaseSystem.dmg. This helps
ensure that it matches the signed content present in the chunklist. If any of these hashes
don’t match, booting from the local recoveryOS is aborted and the UEFI firmware attempts
to boot from Internet recoveryOS instead.
If the verification is successfully completed, the UEFI firmware mounts the BaseSystem.
dmg as a RAM disk and launches the boot.efi file that’s in it. There’s no need for the UEFI
firmware to do a specific check of the boot.efi, nor for the boot.efi to do a check of the
kernel, because the completed contents of the operating system (of which these elements
are only a subset) have already been integrity checked.
Apple Diagnostics
The procedure for booting the local diagnostic environment is mostly the same as
launching the recoveryOS. Separate AppleDiagnostics.dmg and AppleDiagnostics.chunklist
files are used, but they’re verified in the same way as the BaseSystem files. Instead of
launching boot.efi, the UEFI firmware launches a file inside the disk image (.dmg file)
named diags.efi, which is in turn responsible for invoking a variety of other UEFI drivers
that can interface with and check for errors in the hardware.
While the connection to the OS Recovery Server is done using HTTP, the complete
downloaded contents are still integrity checked as previously described, and as such are
protected against manipulation by an attacker with control of the network. In the event
that an individual chunk fails integrity verification, it is re-requested from the OS Recovery
Server 11 times, before giving up and displaying an error.
When the internet recovery and diagnostic modes were added to Mac computers in 2011, it
was decided that it would be better to use the simpler HTTP transport and handle content
authentication using the chunklist mechanism, rather than implement the more complicated
HTTPS functionality in the UEFI firmware and thus increase the firmware’s attack surface.
SSV not only helps prevent tampering with any Apple software that’s part of the operating
system, it also makes macOS software updates more reliable and much safer. And because
SSV uses APFS (Apple File System) snapshots, if an update can’t be performed, the old
system version can be restored without reinstallation.
Since its introduction, APFS has provided file-system metadata integrity using non-
cryptographic checksums on the internal storage device. SSV strengthens the integrity
mechanism by adding cryptographic hashes, thus extending it to encompass every byte
of file data. Data from the internal storage device (including file-system metadata) is
cryptographically hashed in the read path, and the hash is then compared with an expected
value in the file-system metadata. In case of mismatch, the system assumes the data has
been tampered with and won’t return it to the requesting software.
Each SSV SHA256 hash is stored in the main file-system metadata tree, which is itself
hashed. And because each node of the tree recursively verifies the integrity of the hashes
of its children — similar to a binary hash (Merkle) tree — the root node’s hash value,
called a seal, therefore encompasses every byte of data in the SSV, which means the
cryptographic signature covers the entire system volume.
During iOS and iPadOS software updates, the system volume is prepared and recomputed
in a similar fashion. The iOS and iPadOS bootloaders verify that the seal is intact and that it
matches an Apple-signed value before allowing the device to start the kernel. Mismatches
at boot prompt the user to update the system software on the device. Users aren’t allowed
to disable the protection of a signed system volume on iOS and iPadOS.
If the user chooses to disable the SSV, the system at rest becomes vulnerable to
tampering, and this tampering could enable an attacker to extract encrypted user data
when the system next starts up. Therefore the system won’t permit the user to disable the
SSV if FileVault is enabled. Protection while at rest must be enabled or disabled for both
volumes in a consistent manner.
In macOS 10.15 or earlier, FileVault protects operating system software while at rest by
encrypting user and system content with a key protected by a user-provided secret.
This protects against an attacker with physical access to the device from accessing or
effectively modifying the file system containing system software.
For greater software update security, when the device to be upgraded is physically
connected to a Mac, a full copy of iOS or iPadOS is downloaded and installed. But for over-
the-air (OTA) software updates, only the components required to complete an update are
downloaded, improving network efficiency by not downloading the entire operating system.
What’s more, software updates can be cached on a Mac with macOS 10.13 or later with
Content Caching turned on, so that iOS and iPadOS devices don’t need to re-download the
necessary update over the internet. (They still need to contact Apple servers to complete
the update process.)
The boot-time chain-of-trust evaluation verifies that the signature comes from Apple and
that the measurement of the item loaded from the storage device, combined with the
device’s ECID, matches what was covered by the signature. These steps are designed to
ensure that, on devices that support personalisation, the authorisation is for a specific
device and that an older operating system or firmware version from one device can’t be
copied to another. The nonce helps prevent an attacker from saving the server’s response
and using it to tamper with a device or otherwise alter the system software.
Finally, the user’s data volume is never mounted during a software update to help prevent
anything being read from or written to that volume during updates.
On devices with the Secure Enclave, that hardware similarly uses system software
authorisation to check the integrity of its software and is designed to prevent downgrade
installations.
Kernel
Integrity
Protection
Fast
Permission
Restrictions
System
Coprocessor
Integrity
Protection
Pointer
Authentication
Codes
Note: Page Protection Layer (PPL) requires that the platform execute only signed and
trusted code; this is a security model that isn’t applicable on macOS.
To prevent reconfiguration, the hardware used to enable KIP is locked after the boot
process is complete.
SCIP works much like Kernel Integrity Protection (KIP): at boot time, iBoot loads each
coprocessor’s firmware into a protected memory region, one that’s reserved and separate
from the KIP region. iBoot configures each coprocessor’s memory unit to help prevent:
Also at boot time, to configure SCIP for the Secure Enclave, the Secure Enclave operating
system is used. After the boot process is complete, the hardware used to enable SCIP is
locked. This is designed to prevent reconfiguration.
Function Pointers IA 0
The following capabilities support and help secure the varied needs of macOS users.
They include:
• Trust caches
• Rosetta 2 (automatic translation) support and security for a Mac with Apple silicon
Mandatory access controls aren’t visible to users but they’re the underlying technology
that helps enable several important features, including sandboxing, parental controls,
managed preferences, extensions and System Integrity Protection.
Trust caches
One of the objects included in the Secure Boot chain is the static trust cache, a trusted
record of all the Mach-O binaries that are mastered into the signed system volume. Each
Mach-O is represented by a code directory hash. For efficient searching, these hashes are
sorted before being inserted into the trust cache. The code directory is the result of the
signing operation performed by codesign(1). To enforce the trust cache, SIP must remain
enabled. To disable trust cache enforcement on a Mac with Apple silicon, secure boot must
be configured to Permissive Security.
All binaries shipped within macOS are signed with a platform identifier. On a Mac with
Apple silicon, this identifier is used to indicate that even though the binary is signed by
Apple, its code directory hash must be present in the trust cache in order to execute. On an
Intel-based Mac, the platform identifier is used to perform targeted revocation of binaries
from an older release of macOS; this targeted revocation helps prevent those binaries from
executing on newer versions.
The static trust cache completely locks a set of binaries to a given version of macOS. This
behaviour helps prevent legitimately Apple-signed binaries from older operating systems
from being introduced into newer ones in order for an attacker to gain advantage.
These trust caches are authenticated either through the same mechanism that
authenticates boot firmware (personalisation using the Apple trusted signing service), or as
globally signed objects (whose signatures don’t bind them to a particular device).
One example of a personalised trust cache is the cache shipped with the disk image
that’s used to perform field diagnostics on a Mac with Apple silicon. This trust cache is
personalised along with the disk image and loaded into the subject Mac computer’s kernel
while it’s booted into a diagnostic mode. The trust cache allows the software within the
disk image to run with platform privilege.
An example of a globally signed trust cache is shipped with macOS software updates. This
trust cache permits a chunk of code within the software update — the update brain — to
run with platform privilege. The update brain performs any work to stage the software
update that the host system lacks the capacity to perform in a consistent fashion across
versions.
Whenever possible, Apple works to reduce the number of peripheral processors necessary
and to avoid designs that require firmware. But when separate processors with their own
firmware are required, efforts are taken to help ensure an attacker can’t persist on that
processor. This can be by verifying the processor in one of two ways:
• Running the processor so that it downloads verified firmware from the primary CPU on
startup
• Having the peripheral processor implement its own secure boot chain to verify the
peripheral processor firmware every time the Mac starts up
Apple works with vendors to audit their implementations and enhance their designs to
include desired properties such as:
• Signing the firmware with cryptographic keys that are stored in Apple-controlled
hardware security modules (HSMs)
In recent years, Apple has worked with some external vendors to adopt the same “Image4”
data structures, verification code and signing infrastructure used by Apple silicon.
When neither storage-free operation nor storage plus secure boot is an option, the design
mandates that firmware updates be cryptographically signed and verified before the
persistent storage can be updated.
Just-in-time translation
In the just-in-time (JIT) translation pipeline, an x86_64 Mach object is identified early in
the image execution path. When these images are encountered, the kernel transfers control
to a special Rosetta translation stub rather than to the dynamic link editor, dyld(1).
The translation stub then translates x86_64 pages during the image’s execution. This
translation takes place entirely within the process. The kernel still verifies the code hashes
of each x86_64 page against the code signature attached to the binary as the page is
faulted in. In the event of a hash mismatch, the kernel enforces the remediation policy
appropriate for that process.
In this model, the AOT artefact derives all of its identity information from the original
x86_64 executable image. To enforce this binding, a privileged userspace entity signs the
translation artefact using a device-specific key that’s managed by the Secure Enclave. This
key is released only to the privileged userspace entity, which is identified as such using
a restricted entitlement. The code directory created for the translation artefact includes
the code directory hash of the original x86_64 executable image. The signature on the
translation artefact itself is known as the supplemental signature.
The AOT pipeline begins similarly to the JIT pipeline, with the kernel transferring control
to the Rosetta runtime rather than to the dynamic link editor, dyld(1). But the Rosetta
runtime then sends an inter-process communication (IPC) query to the Rosetta system
service, which asks whether there’s an AOT translation available for the current executable
image. If found, the Rosetta service provides a handle to that translation and it’s mapped
into the process and executed. During execution, the kernel enforces the code directory
hashes of the translation artefact which are authenticated by the signature rooted in the
device-specific signing key. The original x86_64 image’s code directory hashes aren’t
involved in this process.
Translated artefacts are stored in a Data Vault which isn’t running time-accessible by any
entity except for the Rosetta service. The Rosetta service manages access to its cache by
distributing read-only file descriptors to individual translation artefacts; this limits access
to the AOT artefact cache. This service’s inter-process communication and dependent
footprint are kept intentionally very narrow to limit its attack surface.
If the code directory hash of the original x86_64 image doesn’t match with the one
encoded into the AOT translation artefact’s signature, this result is considered the
equivalent of an invalid code signature, and appropriate enforcement action is taken.
If a remote process queries the kernel for the entitlements or other code identity properties
of an AOT-translated executable, the identity properties of the original x86_64 image are
returned to it.
During the macOS build, every Mach object file is run through the Rosetta AOT translation
pipeline associated with the version of macOS being built and the resulting code directory
hash is recorded into the trust cache. For efficiency, the actual translated products
don’t ship with the operating system and are reconstituted on demand when the user
requests them.
When an x86_64 image is being executed on a Mac with Apple silicon, if that image’s code
directory hash is in the static trust cache, the resulting AOT artefact’s code directory hash
is also expected to be in the static trust cache. Such products aren’t signed by the device-
specific key because the signing authority is rooted in the Apple secure boot chain.
For binary compatibility, translated x86_64 code is permitted to execute through Rosetta
with no signature information at all. No specific identity is conveyed to this code through
the device-specific Secure Enclave signing procedure, and it executes with precisely the
same limitations as native unsigned code executing on an Intel-based Mac.
Note: Interrupt remapping for PCIe isn’t necessary on a Mac with Apple silicon because
each IOMMU handles MSIs for its own peripherals.
Starting in macOS 11, all Mac computers with an Apple T2 Security Chip run UEFI drivers
that facilitate DMA in a restricted ring 3 environment when these drivers are pairing with
external devices. This property helps mitigate security vulnerabilities that may occur
when a malicious device interacts with a UEFI driver in an unexpected way at boot time.
In particular, it reduces the impact of vulnerabilities in a driver’s handling of DMA buffers.
Important: Kexts are no longer recommended for macOS. Kexts risk the integrity and
reliability of the operating system and Apple recommends users select solutions that don’t
require extending the kernel.
After a user authorises kexts to load, the above User-Approved Kernel Extension Loading
flow is used to authorise the installation of kexts. The authorisation used for the above
flow is also used to capture an SHA384 hash of the user-authorised kext list (UAKL) in the
LocalPolicy. The kernel management daemon (kmd) is then responsible for validating only
those kexts found in the UAKL for inclusion into the AuxKC.
• If System Integrity Protection (SIP) is enabled, the signature of each kext is verified
before being included in the AuxKC.
This approach allows Permissive Security flows for developers or users who aren’t part of
the Apple Developer Programme to test kexts before they are signed.
• Are allowed to load without user consent by using the spctl command-line tool
available when a Mac was booted from recoveryOS
Starting with macOS 10.13.2, users can use MDM to specify a list of kernel extensions
that load without user consent. This option requires a Mac with macOS 10.13.2 that’s
enrolled in MDM — through Apple School Manager, Apple Business Manager or MDM
enrolment done by the user.
However, because OROMs are generally rewritable, if an attacker overwrites the OROM of a
legitimate peripheral, the attacker’s code executes early in the boot process and is able to
tamper with the execution environment and violate the integrity of software that’s loaded
later. Likewise, if the attacker introduces their own malicious device to the system, they’re
also able to execute malicious code.
In macOS 10.12.3, the behaviour of Mac computers sold after 2011 was changed to not
execute OROMs by default at the time the Mac booted unless a special key combination
was pressed. This key combination protected against malicious OROMs being inadvertently
introduced into the macOS boot sequence. The default behaviour of the Firmware
Password Utility was also changed so that when the user set a firmware password, OROMs
couldn’t execute even if the key combination was pressed. This protected against a
physically present attacker intentionally introducing a malicious OROM. For users who still
need to run OROMs while they have a firmware password set, a non-default option can be
configured using the firmwarepasswd command-line tool in macOS.
The sandbox further significantly restricts both the interfaces that the OROMs can call
(much like system call filtering in kernels) and the type of device that an OROM can
register as (much like app approval). The benefit of this design is that malicious OROMs
can no longer directly write anywhere within ring 0 memory. Instead, they are limited to a
very narrow and well-defined sandbox interface. This limited interface significantly reduces
attack surface and forces attackers to first escape the sandbox and escalate privilege.
Overview
Since 2006, Mac computers with an Intel-based CPU use an Intel firmware based on the
Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) Development Kit (EDK) version 1 or version 2. EDK2-
based code conforms to the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) specification.
This section refers to the Intel firmware as the UEFI firmware. The UEFI firmware was the
first code to execute on the Intel chip.
For an Intel-based Mac without the Apple T2 Security Chip, the root of trust for the UEFI
firmware is the chip where the firmware is stored. UEFI firmware updates are digitally
signed by Apple and verified by the firmware before updating the storage. To help prevent
rollback attacks, updates must always have a version newer than the existing one. However,
an attacker with physical access to the Mac could potentially use hardware to attach to
the firmware storage chip and update the chip to contain malicious content. Likewise,
if vulnerabilities are found in the early boot process of the UEFI firmware (before it write-
restricts the storage chip), this could also lead to persistent infection of the UEFI firmware.
This is a hardware architectural limitation common in most Intel-based PCs and present in
all Intel-based Mac computers without the T2 chip.
To help prevent physical attacks that subvert UEFI firmware, Mac computers were
rearchitected to root the trust in the UEFI firmware in the T2 chip. On these Mac
computers, the root of trust for the UEFI firmware is specifically the T2 firmware, as
described in Boot process for an Intel-based Mac.
Updating watchOS
watchOS can be configured to update overnight. For more information on how the
Apple Watch passcode gets stored and used during the update, see Keybags.
Wrist detection
If wrist detection is enabled, the device locks automatically soon after it’s removed from
the user’s wrist. If wrist detection is disabled, Control Centre provides an option for locking
Apple Watch. When Apple Watch is locked, Apple Pay can be used only by entering the
passcode on the Apple Watch. Wrist detection is turned off using the Apple Watch app on
iPhone. This setting can also be enforced using a mobile device management (MDM) solution.
Activation Lock
When Find My is turned on on iPhone, its paired Apple Watch can use Activation Lock.
Activation Lock makes it harder for anyone to use or sell an Apple Watch that’s been lost
or stolen. Activation Lock requires the user’s Apple ID and password to unpair, erase or
reactivate an Apple Watch.
Pairing Apple Watch with iPhone is secured using an out-of-band process to exchange
public keys, followed by the Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) link shared secret. Apple Watch
displays an animated pattern which is captured by the camera on iPhone. The pattern
contains an encoded secret that’s used for BLE 4.1 out-of-band pairing. Standard BLE
Passkey Entry is used as a fallback pairing method, if necessary.
After the BLE session is established and encrypted using the highest security protocol available
in the Bluetooth Core Specification, iPhone and Apple Watch exchange keys using either:
• A process adapted from Apple IDentity Service (IDS) as described in the iMessage
security overview.
• A key exchange using IKEv2/IPsec. The initial key exchange is authenticated using either
the Bluetooth session key (for pairing scenarios) or the IDS keys (for operating system
update scenarios). Each device generates a random public and private 256-bit Ed25519
key pair and, during the initial key exchange process, the public keys are exchanged.
• The Bluetooth session key is discarded and all communications between iPhone and
Apple Watch are encrypted using one of the methods listed above — with the encrypted
Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and mobile data links providing a secondary encryption layer.
• (IKEv2/IPsec only) The keys are stored in the System keychain and used for
authenticating future IKEv2/IPsec sessions between the devices. Further communication
between these devices is encrypted and integrity protected using AES-256-GCM or
ChaCha20-Poly1305 (256-bit keys) on iPhone devices using iOS 15 or later paired with
an Apple Watch Series 4 or later using watchOS 8 or later.
The Bluetooth Low Energy device address is rotated at 15-minute intervals to reduce the
risk of the device being locally tracked if someone broadcasts a persistent identifier.
To support apps that need streaming data, encryption is provided with methods described
in FaceTime security using either the Apple IDentity Service (IDS) provided by the paired
iPhone or a direct internet connection.
Unlocking
A complete unlock sequence can be broken down into two phases. First, the device being
unlocked (the “target”) generates a cryptographic unlock secret and sends it to the device
performing the unlock (the “initiator”). Later, the initiator performs the unlock using the
previously generated secret.
To perform the unlock, the devices initiate a new BLE connection and then use peer-to-
peer Wi-Fi to securely approximate the distance between each other. If the devices are
within the specified range and the required security policies are met, the initiator sends
its unlock secret to the target through the STS tunnel. The target then generates a new
32-byte unlock secret and returns it to the initiator. If the current unlock secret sent by the
initiator successfully decrypts the unlock record, the target device is unlocked and the PDK
is rewrapped with a new unlock secret. Finally, the new unlock secret and PDK are then
discarded from the target’s memory.
For added convenience, Apple Watch can be unlocked by an iPhone directly after initial
startup, without requiring the user to first enter the passcode on the Apple Watch itself.
To achieve this, the random unlock secret (generated during the very first unlock sequence
after enablement of the feature) is used to create a long-term escrow record, which
is stored in the Apple Watch keybag. The escrow record secret is stored in the iPhone
keychain and used to bootstrap a new session after each Apple Watch restart.
Additional security policies apply to iPhone Auto Unlock with Apple Watch. Apple Watch
can’t be used in place of Face ID on iPhone for other operations, such as Apple Pay or
app authorisations. When Apple Watch successfully unlocks a paired iPhone, the watch
displays a notification and plays an associated haptic. If the user taps the Lock iPhone
button in the notification, the watch sends the iPhone a lock command over BLE. When the
iPhone receives the lock command, it locks and disables both Face ID and unlock using
Apple Watch. The next iPhone unlock must be performed with the iPhone passcode.
Successfully unlocking a paired iPhone from Apple Watch (when enabled) requires the
following criteria be met:
• iPhone must have been unlocked using another method at least once after the
associated Apple Watch was placed on wrist and unlocked.
• Sensors must be able to detect that the nose and mouth are covered.
• Distance measured must be 2–3 metres or less
• Apple Watch or iPhone must have been unlocked recently, or Apple Watch must have
experienced physical motion indicating that the wearer is active (for example, not asleep).
• iPhone must have been unlocked at least once in the past 6.5 hours.
• Secure Notes
When Apple Watch and iPhone are out of range, Apple Watch connects directly to iCloud
and Gmail servers to fetch Mail, as opposed to syncing Mail data with the paired iPhone
over the internet. For Gmail accounts, the user must authenticate to Google in the Mail
section of the Watch app on iPhone. The OAuth token received from Google is sent over to
Apple Watch in encrypted format over Apple IDentity Service (IDS) so that it can be used to
fetch Mail. This OAuth token is never used for connectivity with the Gmail server from the
paired iPhone.
Entropy sources
The kernel CPRNG is seeded from multiple entropy sources during boot and over the
lifetime of the device. These include (contingent on availability):
The kernel CPRNG accepts user-supplied entropy through writes to the random device.
To help ensure that user devices aren’t affected by the security research device execution
policy, the policy changes are implemented in a variant of iBoot and in the Boot Kernel
Collection. These fail to boot on user hardware. The research iBoot checks for a new fusing
state and enters a panic loop if it’s being run on non-research-fused hardware.
The cryptex subsystem allows a researcher to load a personalised trust cache and a disk
image containing corresponding content. A number of in-depth defence measures have
been implemented that are designed to ensure that this subsystem doesn’t allow execution
on user devices:
• launchd doesn’t load the cryptexd launchd property list if it detects a normal
customer device.
• AppleImage4 doesn’t vend the nonce used for verifying a research cryptex on a normal
customer device.
• The signing server refuses to personalise a cryptex disk image for a device not on an
explicit allow list.
To respect the privacy of the security researcher, only the measurements (for example,
hashes) of the executables or kernel cache and the security research device identifiers
are sent to Apple during personalisation. Apple doesn’t receive the content of the cryptex
being loaded onto the device.
• The security research device starts up only while charging. This can be using a
Lightning cable or a Qi-compatible charger. If the device isn’t charging during startup,
the device enters Recovery mode. If the user starts charging and restarts the device, it
starts up as normal. As soon as XNU starts, the device doesn’t need to be charging to
continue operation.
• The words Security Research Device are displayed below the Apple logo during iBoot
startup.
• The device is etched on the side with the message “Property of Apple. Confidential and
Proprietary. Call +1 877 595 1125”.
The following are additional measures that are implemented in software that appears
after boot:
• The words Security Research Device are displayed during device setup.
• The words Security Research Device are displayed on the Lock Screen and in the
Settings app.
The Security Research Device affords researchers the following abilities that a user device
doesn’t. Researchers can:
• Side-load executable code onto the device with arbitrary entitlements at the same
permission level as Apple operating system components
iOS and iPadOS devices use a file encryption methodology called Data Protection, whereas
the data on an Intel-based Mac is protected with a volume encryption technology called
FileVault. A Mac with Apple silicon uses a hybrid model that supports Data Protection,
with two caveats: The lowest protection level (Class D) isn’t supported, and the default
level (Class C) uses a volume key and acts just like the FileVault on an Intel-based Mac. In
all cases, key management hierarchies are rooted in the dedicated silicon of the Secure
Enclave, and a dedicated AES Engine supports line-speed encryption and helps ensure that
long-lived encryption keys aren’t exposed to the kernel operating system or CPU (where
they might be compromised). (An Intel-based Mac with a T1 or lacking a Secure Enclave
doesn’t use dedicated silicon to protect its FileVault encryption keys.)
Besides using Data Protection and FileVault to help prevent unauthorised access to data,
Apple uses operating system kernels to enforce protection and security. The kernel uses
access controls to sandbox apps (which restricts what data an app can access) and a
mechanism called a Data Vault (which rather than restricting the calls an app can make,
restricts access to the data of an app from all other requesting apps).
In iOS and iPadOS, when setting up a device passcode or password, the user automatically
enables Data Protection. Data Protection is also enabled on other devices that feature
an Apple system on chip (SoC) — such as a Mac with Apple silicon, Apple TV and
Apple Watch. In macOS, Apple uses the built-in volume encryption program FileVault.
The passcode or password is entangled with the device’s UID, so brute-force attempts
must be performed on the device under attack. A large iteration count is used to make each
attempt slower. The iteration count is calibrated so that one attempt takes approximately 80
milliseconds. In fact, it would take more than five and a half years to try all combinations of a
six-character alphanumeric passcode with lowercase letters and numbers.
The stronger the user passcode is, the stronger the encryption key becomes. And by
using Face ID and Touch ID, the user can establish a much stronger passcode than would
otherwise be practical. The stronger passcode increases the effective amount of entropy
protecting the encryption keys used for Data Protection, without adversely affecting the
user experience of unlocking a device multiple times throughout the day.
If a long password that contains only numbers is entered, a numeric keypad is displayed at
the Lock Screen instead of the full keyboard. A longer numeric passcode may be easier to
enter than a shorter alphanumeric passcode, while providing similar security.
1–4 None
5 1 minute
6 5 minutes
7–8 15 minutes
9 1 hour
If the Erase Data option is turned on (in Settings > Touch ID & Passcode), after 10
consecutive incorrect attempts to enter the passcode, all content and settings are removed
from storage. Consecutive attempts of the same incorrect passcode don’t count towards
the limit. This setting is also available as an administrative policy through a mobile device
management (MDM) solution that supports this feature and through Microsoft Exchange
ActiveSync, and can be set to a lower threshold.
On devices with Secure Enclave, the delays are enforced by the Secure Enclave. If the
device is restarted during a timed delay, the delay is still enforced, with the timer starting
again for the current period.
The table below shows delays between password attempts on a Mac with Apple silicon and
a Mac with a T2 chip.
5 1 minute
6 5 minutes
7 15 minutes
8 15 minutes
9 1 hour
10 Disabled
To help prevent malware from causing permanent data loss by trying to attack the user’s
password, these limits aren’t enforced after the user has successfully logged in to the Mac,
but they are reimposed after reboot. If the 10 attempts are exhausted, 10 more attempts
are available after booting into recoveryOS. And if those are also exhausted, then 10
additional attempts are available for each FileVault recovery mechanism (iCloud recovery,
FileVault recovery key and institutional key), for a maximum of 30 additional attempts.
After those additional attempts are exhausted, the Secure Enclave no longer processes any
requests to decrypt the volume or verify the password and the data on the drive becomes
unrecoverable.
To help protect data in an enterprise setting, IT should define and enforce FileVault
configuration policies using an MDM solution. Organisations have several options for
managing encrypted volumes, including institutional recovery keys, personal recovery keys
(that can optionally be stored with MDM for escrow) or a combination of both. Key rotation
can also be set as a policy in MDM.
On a Mac with the Apple T2 Security Chip, the password serves a similar function except
that the key generated is used for FileVault encryption rather than Data Protection. macOS
also offers additional password recovery options:
• iCloud recovery
• FileVault recovery
Implementation
Data Protection is implemented by constructing and managing a hierarchy of keys and
builds on the hardware encryption technologies built into Apple devices. Data Protection is
controlled on a per-file basis by assigning each file to a class; accessibility is determined
according to whether the class keys have been unlocked. APFS (Apple File System) allows
the file system to further subdivide the keys into a per-extent basis (where portions of a
file can have different keys).
Every time a file on the data volume is created, Data Protection creates a new 256-bit key
(the per-file key) and gives it to the hardware AES Engine, which uses the key to encrypt
the file as it’s written to flash storage. On A14, A15 and M1 family devices, the encryption
uses AES-256 in XTS mode, where the 256-bit per-file key goes through a Key Derivation
Function (NIST Special Publication 800-108) to derive a 256-bit tweak and a 256-bit
cipher key. The hardware generations of A9 to A13, S5, S6 and S7 use AES-128 in XTS
mode, where the 256-bit per-file key is split to provide a 128-bit tweak and a 128-bit
cipher key.
On a Mac with Apple silicon, Data Protection defaults to Class C (see Data Protection
classes) but utilises a volume key rather than a per-extent or per-file key — effectively
recreating the security model of FileVault for user data. Users must still opt in to FileVault
to receive the full protection of entangling the encryption key hierarchy with their
password. Developers can also opt in to a higher protection class that uses a per-file or
per-extent key.
Devices with APFS format may support cloning of files (zero-cost copies using copy-
on-write technology). If a file is cloned, each half of the clone gets a new key to accept
incoming writes so that new data is written to the media with a new key. Over time, the file
may become composed of various extents (or fragments), each mapping to different keys.
However, all the extents that comprise a file are guarded by the same class key.
The metadata of all files in the data volume file system are encrypted with a random
volume key, which is created when the operating system is first installed or when the
device is wiped by a user. This key is encrypted and wrapped by a key-wrapping key that
is known only to the Secure Enclave for long-term storage. The key-wrapping key changes
every time a user erases their device. On A9 (and newer) SoCs, Secure Enclave relies upon
entropy, backed by anti-replay systems, to achieve effaceability and to protect its key
wrapping key, among other assets. For more information, see Secure non-volatile storage.
Just like per-file or per-extent keys, the metadata key of the data volume is never directly
exposed to the Application Processor; the Secure Enclave provides an ephemeral, per-boot
version instead. When stored, the encrypted file system key is additionally wrapped by an
“effaceable key” stored in Effaceable Storage or using a media key-wrapping key, protected
by Secure Enclave anti-replay mechanism. This key doesn’t provide additional confidentiality
of data. Instead, it’s designed to be quickly erased on demand (by the user with the “Erase
All Content and Settings” option, or by a user or administrator issuing a remote wipe
command from a mobile device management (MDM) solution, Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync
or iCloud). Erasing the key in this manner renders all files cryptographically inaccessible.
The contents of a file may be encrypted with one or more per-file (or per-extent) keys that
are wrapped with a class key and stored in a file’s metadata, which in turn is encrypted
with the file system key. The class key is protected with the hardware UID and, for some
classes, the user’s passcode. This hierarchy provides both flexibility and performance. For
example, changing a file’s class only requires rewrapping its per-file key and a change of
passcode just rewraps the class key.
In macOS, shortly after the last user is logged out, the decrypted class key is discarded,
rendering all data in this class inaccessible until a user enters the passcode again or logs in
to the device using Touch ID.
The ephemeral public key for the Agreement is stored alongside the wrapped per-file key. The
KDF is Concatenation Key Derivation Function (Approved Alternative 1) as described in 5.8.1
of NIST SP 800-56A. AlgorithmID is omitted. PartyUInfo and PartyVInfo are the ephemeral and
static public keys, respectively. SHA256 is used as the hashing function. As soon as the file
is closed, the per-file key is wiped from memory. To open the file again, the shared secret is
re-created using the Protected Unless Open class’s private key and the file’s ephemeral public
key, which are used to unwrap the per-file key that is then used to decrypt the file.
In macOS, this class utilises a volume key that is accessible as long as the volume is
mounted, and acts just like FileVault.
No Protection
NSFileProtectionNone: This class key is protected only with the UID and is kept in Effaceable
Storage. Since all the keys needed to decrypt files in this class are stored on the device, the
encryption only affords the benefit of fast remote wipe. If a file isn’t assigned a Data Protection
class, it is still stored in encrypted form (as is all data on an iOS and iPadOS device).
Note: In macOS, for volumes that don’t correspond to a booted operating system, all data
protection classes are accessible as long as the volume is mounted. The default data
protection class is NSFileProtectionCompleteUntilFirstUserAuthentication. Per-extent key
functionality is available to both Rosetta 2 and native apps.
User keybag
The user keybag is where the wrapped class keys used in the normal operation of the
device are stored. For example, when a passcode is entered, NSFileProtectionComplete is
loaded from the user keybag and unwrapped. It is a binary property list (.plist) file stored in
the No Protection class.
For devices with SoCs earlier than the A9, the .plist file contents are encrypted with a
key held in Effaceable Storage. To give forward security to keybags, this key is wiped and
regenerated each time a user changes their passcode.
For devices with the A9 or later SoCs, the .plist file contains a key that indicates the
keybag is stored in a locker protected by the Secure Enclave–controlled anti-replay nonce.
The Secure Enclave manages the user keybag and can be queried regarding a device’s lock
state. It reports that the device is unlocked only if all the class keys in the user keybag are
accessible and have been unwrapped successfully.
Device keybag
The device keybag is used to store the wrapped class keys used for operations involving
device-specific data. iPadOS devices configured for shared use sometimes need access to
credentials before any user has logged in; therefore, a keybag that isn’t protected by the
user’s passcode is required.
iOS and iPadOS don’t support cryptographic separation of per-user file system content,
which means the system uses class keys from the device keybag to wrap per-file keys.
The keychain, however, uses class keys from the user keybag to protect items in the
user keychain. In iOS and iPadOS devices configured for use by a single user (the default
configuration), the device keybag and the user keybag are one and the same and are
protected by the user’s passcode.
Backup keybag
The backup keybag is created when an encrypted backup is made by the Finder (in macOS 10.15
or later) or iTunes (in macOS 10.14 or earlier) and stored on the computer to which the
device is backed up. A new keybag is created with a new set of keys, and the backed-up
data is re-encrypted to these new keys. As explained previously, non-migratory keychain
items remain wrapped with the UID-derived key, allowing them to be restored to the device
they were originally backed up from but rendering them inaccessible on a different device.
The keybag — protected with the password set — is run through 10 million iterations of
the key derivation function PBKDF2. Despite this large iteration count, there’s no tie to
a specific device and therefore a brute-force attack parallelised across many computers
could theoretically be attempted on the backup keybag. This threat can be mitigated with a
sufficiently strong password.
If a user chooses not to encrypt the backup, the files aren’t encrypted regardless of their
Data Protection class but the keychain remains protected with a UID-derived key. This is
why keychain items migrate to a new device only if a backup password is set.
The escrow keybag improves the user experience during device syncing, which potentially
requires access to all classes of data. When a passcode-locked device is first connected
to the Finder or iTunes, the user is prompted to enter a passcode. The device then creates
an escrow keybag containing the same class keys used on the device, protected by a newly
generated key. The escrow keybag and the key protecting it are split between the device
and the host or server, with the data stored on the device in the Protected Until First User
Authentication class. This is why the device passcode must be entered before the user
backs up with the Finder or iTunes for the first time after a reboot.
In the case of an over-the-air (OTA) software update, the user is prompted for their
passcode when initiating the update. This is used to securely create a single-use unlock
token, which unlocks the user keybag after the update. This token can’t be generated
without entering the user’s passcode, and any previously generated token is invalidated if
the user’s passcode is changed.
Single-use unlock tokens are either for attended or unattended installation of a software
update. They’re encrypted with a key derived from the current value of a monotonic
counter in the Secure Enclave, the UUID of the keybag and the Secure Enclave UID.
The single-use unlock token for attended software updates expires after 20 minutes. In
iOS 13 and iPadOS 13.1 or later, the token is stored in a locker protected by the Secure
Enclave. Prior to iOS 13, this token was exported from the Secure Enclave and written
to Effaceable Storage or was protected by the Secure Enclave anti-replay mechanism.
A policy timer incremented the counter if the device hadn’t rebooted within 20 minutes.
Unattended software updates occur when the system detects an update is available and
when one of the following is true:
After the user enters their passcode, a single-use unlock token is generated and can
remain valid in the Secure Enclave for up to 8 hours. If the update hasn’t yet occurred, this
single-use unlock token is destroyed on every lock and re-created on every subsequent
unlock. Each unlock restarts the 8-hour window. After 8 hours, a policy timer invalidates
the single-use unlock token.
Recovery: All
Data Protection
Classes
protected
Alternative
boots of DFU
mode, Recovery
and software
updates: Class
A, B and C data
protected
The Secure Enclave AES Engine is equipped with lockable software seed bits. When keys
are created from the UID, these seed bits are included in the key derivation function to
create additional key hierarchies. How the seed bit is used varies according to the system
on chip:
• Starting with the Apple A10 and S3 SoCs, a seed bit is dedicated to distinguish keys
protected by the user’s passcode. The seed bit is set for keys that require the user’s
passcode (including Data Protection Class A, Class B and Class C keys) and cleared for
keys that don’t require the user’s passcode (including the file-system metadata key and
Class D keys).
• In iOS 13 or later and iPadOS 13.1 or later on devices with an A10 or later, all user data
is rendered cryptographically inaccessible when devices are booted into Diagnostics
mode. This is achieved by introducing an additional seed bit whose setting governs
the ability to access the media key, which itself is needed to access the metadata (and
therefore the contents of all files) on the data volume encrypted with Data Protection.
This protection encompasses files protected in all classes (A, B, C and D), not just
those that required the user’s passcode.
• On A12 SoCs, the Secure Enclave Boot ROM locks the passcode seed bit if the
Application Processor has entered Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) mode or Recovery
mode. When the passcode seed bit is locked, no operation to change it is allowed. This
is designed to prevent access to data protected with the user’s passcode.
Restoring a device after it enters DFU mode returns it to a known good state with the
certainty that only unmodified Apple-signed code is present. DFU mode can be entered
manually.
Device Article
A Mac with Apple silicon Revive or restore a Mac with Apple silicon with Apple
Configurator 2
Apple devices support a technology called Sealed Key Protection (SKP) that’s designed
to ensure that cryptographic material is rendered unavailable off device, or that’s used
if manipulations are made to operating system versions or security settings without
appropriate user authorisation. This feature is not provided by the Secure Enclave; instead,
it’s supported by hardware registers that exist at a lower layer in order to provide an
additional layer of protection to the keys necessary to decrypt user data independent of
the Secure Enclave.
Sealed Key
Protection
iPhone and iPad can also be configured to only activate data connections in conditions
more likely to indicate the device is still under the physical control of the authorised owner.
The Secure Enclave Boot Monitor captures the measurement of the Secure Enclave OS
that is loaded. When the Application Processor Boot ROM measures the Image4 manifest
attached to LLB, that manifest contains a measurement of all other system-paired firmware
that is loaded as well. The LocalPolicy contains the core security configurations for the
macOS that are loaded. The LocalPolicy also contains the nsih field, which is a hash of the
macOS Image4 manifest. The macOS Image4 manifest contains measurements of all the
macOS-paired firmware and core macOS boot objects such as the Boot Kernel Collection
or signed system volume (SSV) root hash.
However, when the system isn’t under attack, it must accommodate legitimate software
updates that change the firmware measurements and the nsih field in the LocalPolicy to
point at new macOS measurements. In other systems that attempt to incorporate firmware
measurements but that don’t have a known good source of truth, the user is required
to disable the security, update firmware and then re-enable so that a new measurement
baseline can be captured. This significantly increases the risk that the attacker could
tamper with firmware during a software update. The system is helped by the fact that
the Image4 manifest contains all the measurements needed. The hardware that decrypts
the SMDK with the SMRK when the measurements match during a normal boot can also
encrypt the SMDK to a proposed future SMRK. By specifying the measurements that are
expected after a software update, the hardware can encrypt an SMDK, which is accessible
in a current operating system, so that it remains accessible in a future operating system.
Similarly, when a customer legitimately changes their security settings in the LocalPolicy,
the SMDK must be encrypted to the future SMRK based on the measurement for the
LocalPolicy, which LLB computes on the next restart.
• Helps ensure that frequent users of connections to a Mac or PC, to accessories or wired
to CarPlay won’t need to enter their passcodes every time they attach their device
In addition, if it’s been more than 3 days since a data connection has been established with
an accessory, the device will disallow new data connections immediately after it locks. This
is to increase protection for users who don’t often make use of such accessories. Data
connections over Lightning, USB and Smart Connector are also disabled whenever the
device is in a state where it requires a passcode to re-enable biometric authentication.
The user can choose to re-enable always-on data connections in Settings (setting up some
assistive devices does this automatically).
Space sharing
APFS allocates storage space on demand. When a single APFS container has multiple
volumes, the container’s free space is shared and can be allocated to any of the individual
volumes as needed. Each volume uses only part of the overall container, so the available
space is the total size of the container minus the space used in all volumes in the
container.
• Preboot volume: This volume is unencrypted and contains data needed for booting each
system volume in the container.
• VM volume: This volume is unencrypted and is used by macOS for storing encrypted
swap files.
• Recovery volume: This volume is unencrypted and must be available without unlocking a
system volume in order to start up in recoveryOS.
• All apps installed natively by macOS (apps that used to reside in the /Applications
folder now reside in /System/Applications)
Note: By default, no processes can write to the System volume, including Apple system
processes.
• Any data inside the user’s folder, including photos, music, videos and documents
• Custom frameworks and daemons installed by the user, organisation or third-party apps
• Other locations owned and writable by the user, such as /Applications, /Library,
/Users, /Volumes, /usr/local, /private, /var and /tmp
A data volume is created for each additional system volume. The preboot, VM and recovery
volumes are all shared and not duplicated.
In macOS 11 or later, the system volume is captured in a snapshot. The operating system
boots from a snapshot of the system volume, not just from a read-only mount of the
mutable system volume.
In iOS and iPadOS, storage is divided into at least two APFS volumes:
• System volume
• Data volume
The keychain is implemented as a SQLite database, stored on the file system. There is only
one database and the securityd daemon determines which keychain items each process
or app can access. Keychain Access APIs result in calls to the daemon, which queries
the app’s “Keychain-access-groups”, “application-identifier” and “application-group”
entitlements. Rather than limiting access to a single process, access groups allow keychain
items to be shared between apps.
Keychain items can be shared only between apps from the same developer. To share
keychain items, third-party apps use access groups with a prefix allocated to them through
the Apple Developer Programme in their application groups. The prefix requirement and
application group uniqueness are enforced through code signing, provisioning profiles and
the Apple Developer Programme.
Keychain data is protected using a class structure similar to the one used in file Data
Protection. These classes have behaviours equivalent to file Data Protection classes but
use distinct keys and functions.
Apps that use background refresh services can use kSecAttrAccessibleAfterFirstUnlock for
keychain items that need to be accessed during background updates.
• Aren’t backed up
If the passcode is removed or reset, the items are rendered useless by discarding the
class keys.
Item Accessible
Voicemail Always
FileVault
FileVault on a Mac with Apple silicon is implemented using Data Protection Class C with a
volume key. On a Mac with the Apple T2 Security Chip as well as a Mac with Apple silicon,
encrypted internal storage devices directly connected to the Secure Enclave leverage
its hardware security capabilities as well as that of the AES engine. After a user turns on
FileVault on a Mac, their credentials are required during the boot process.
• Protect the system from a brute-force attack directly against storage media removed
from Mac
• Provide a swift and secure method for wiping content via deletion of necessary
cryptographic material
• Enable users to change their password (and in turn the cryptographic keys used to
protect their files) without requiring re-encryption of the entire volume
On a Mac with Apple silicon and those with the T2 chip, all FileVault key handling occurs
in the Secure Enclave; encryption keys are never directly exposed to the Intel CPU. All
APFS volumes are created with a volume encryption key by default. Volume and metadata
contents are encrypted with this volume encryption key, which is wrapped with the class
key. The class key is protected by a combination of the user’s password and the hardware
UID when FileVault is turned on.
On a Mac with Apple silicon and those with the T2 chip, the media key is guaranteed to
be erased by the Secure Enclave–supported technology — for example by remote MDM
commands. Erasing the media key in this manner renders the volume cryptographically
inaccessible.
• Use existing tools and processes, such as a personal recovery key (PRK) that can be
stored with a mobile device management (MDM) solution for escrow
• Create and use an institutional recovery key (IRK)
• Defer enablement of FileVault until a user logs in to or out of the Mac
In macOS 11, setting the initial password for the very first user on the Mac results in
that user being granted a secure token. In some workflows, that may not be the desired
behaviour as previously, granting the first secure token would have required the user
account to log in. To prevent this from happening, add ;DisabledTags;SecureToken to
the programmatically created user’s AuthenticationAuthority attribute prior to setting
the user’s password, as shown below:
• Mac enrolment in MDM using Apple School Manager or Apple Business Manager, which
makes the Mac supervised
In macOS 10.15.4 or later, a bootstrap token is generated and escrowed to MDM on the first
login by any user who is Secure Token–enabled if the MDM solution supports the feature.
A bootstrap token can also be generated and escrowed to MDM using the profiles
command-line tool, if needed.
In macOS 11, a bootstrap token may also be used for more than just granting secure token
to user accounts. On a Mac with Apple silicon, a bootstrap token, if available, can be used
to authorise the installation of both kernel extensions and software updates when managed
using MDM.
• iOS, iPadOS and macOS: Calendars, Camera, Contacts, Microphone, Photos, Reminders,
Speech recognition
• iOS and iPadOS: Bluetooth, Home, Media, Media apps and Apple Music, Motion and
fitness
• iOS and watchOS: Health
• macOS: Input monitoring (for example, keyboard strokes), Prompt, Screen recording
(for example, static screen shots and video), System Preferences
In iOS 13.4 or later and iPadOS 13.4 or later, all third-party apps automatically have their
data protected in a Data Vault. Data Vault helps protect against unauthorised access to the
data, even from processes that aren’t themselves sandboxed. Additional classes in iOS 15
or later include Local Network, Nearby Interactions, Research Sensor & Usage Data, and
Focus.
If the user signs in to iCloud, apps in iOS and iPadOS are granted access to iCloud Drive
by default. Users may control each app’s access under iCloud in Settings. iOS and iPadOS
also provide restrictions designed to prevent data movement between apps and accounts
installed by a mobile device management (MDM) solution and those installed by the user.
Health data can be stored in iCloud. End-to-end encryption for Health data requires
iOS 12 or later and two-factor authentication. Otherwise, the user’s data is still encrypted
in storage and transmission but isn’t encrypted end-to-end. After the user turns on
two-factor authentication and updates to iOS 12 or later, the user’s health data is migrated
to end-to-end encryption.
If the user backs up their device using the Finder (macOS 10.15 or later) or iTunes
(macOS 10.14 or earlier), health data is stored only if the backup is encrypted.
Access to health data by apps is controlled by the user’s Privacy settings. Users are asked
to grant access when apps request access to health data, similar to Contacts, Photos and
other iOS data sources. However, with health data, apps are granted separate access for
reading and writing data as well as separate access for each type of health data. Users can
view, and revoke, permissions they’ve granted for accessing health data under Settings >
Health > Data Access & Devices.
If granted permission to write data, apps can also read the data they write. If granted
permission to read data, apps can read data written by all sources. However, apps can’t
determine access granted to other apps. In addition, apps can’t conclusively tell whether
they’ve been granted read access to health data. When an app doesn’t have read access,
all queries return no data — the same response that an empty database would return. This
is designed to prevent apps from inferring the user’s health status by learning which types
of data the user is tracking.
The Medical ID information is viewed by tapping the Emergency button on the Lock Screen.
The information is stored on the device using the Data Protection class No Protection so
that it’s accessible without having to enter the device passcode. Medical ID is an optional
feature that lets users decide how to balance both safety and privacy concerns. This
data is backed up in iCloud Backup in iOS 13 or earlier. In iOS 14, Medical ID is synced
between devices using CloudKit and has the same encryption characteristics as the rest of
health data.
Health sharing
In iOS 15, the Health app gives users the option of sharing their Health data with other
users. Health data is shared between the two users using end-to-end iCloud encryption,
and Apple can’t access data that is sent through Health sharing. To use the feature,
both the sending and receiving users must be using iOS 15 or later and have two-factor
authentication enabled.
Users can also choose to share their Health data with their healthcare provider using
the Share with Provider feature in the Health app. Data shared using this feature is made
available only to the health institutions selected by the user using end-to-end encryption,
and Apple doesn’t maintain or have access to the encryption keys to decrypt, view or
otherwise access the Health data shared through the Share with Provider feature. Further
details about how the design of this service protects users’ Health data can be found in the
Security and Privacy section of the Apple Registration Guide for Healthcare Organizations.
Mail
In the Mail app, users can send messages that are digitally signed and encrypted. Mail
automatically discovers appropriate RFC 5322 case-sensitive email address subject
or subject alternative names on digital signing and encryption certificates on attached
Personal Identification Verification (PIV) tokens in compatible smart cards. If a configured
email account matches an email address on a digital signing or encryption certificate on an
attached PIV token, Mail automatically displays the signing button in the toolbar of a new
message window. If Mail has the recipient’s email encryption certificate or can discover it
in the Microsoft Exchange global address list (GAL), an unlocked icon appears in the new
message toolbar. A locked lock icon indicates the message will be sent encrypted with the
recipient’s public key.
Per-message S/MIME
iOS, iPadOS and macOS support per-message S/MIME. This means that S/MIME users can
choose to always sign and encrypt messages by default or to selectively sign and encrypt
individual messages.
Identities used with S/MIME can be delivered to Apple devices using a configuration profile,
a mobile device management (MDM) solution, the Simple Certificate Enrolment Protocol
(SCEP) or Microsoft Active Directory Certificate Authority.
Smart cards include one or more digital identities that have a pair of public and private
keys and an associated certificate. Unlocking a smart card with the personal identification
number (PIN) provides access to the private keys used for authentication, encryption and
signing operations. The certificate determines what a key can be used for, what attributes
are associated with it and whether it’s validated (signed) by a certificate authority (CA)
certificate.
Smart cards can be used for two-factor authentication. The two factors needed to unlock
a card are “something the user has” (the card) and “something the user knows” (the PIN).
macOS 10.12 or later also has native support for smart card Login Window authentication
and client certificate authentication to websites on Safari. It also supports Kerberos
authentication using key pairs (PKINIT) for single sign-on to Kerberos-supported services.
To learn more about smart cards and macOS, see Intro to smart card integration in
Apple Platform Deployment.
Because of this, Apple provides layers of protection to help ensure that apps are free
of known malware and haven’t been tampered with. Additional protections enforce that
access from apps to user data is carefully mediated. These security controls provide a
stable, secure platform for apps, enabling thousands of developers to deliver hundreds of
thousands of apps for iOS, iPadOS and macOS — all without impacting system integrity.
And users can access these apps on their Apple devices without undue fear of viruses,
malware or unauthorised attacks.
On iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, all apps are obtained from the App Store — and all apps
are sandboxed — to provide the tightest controls.
On Mac, many apps are obtained from the App Store, but Mac users also download and use
apps from the internet. To safely support internet downloading, macOS layers additional
controls. First, by default in macOS 10.15 or later, all Mac apps need to be notarised by
Apple to launch. This requirement helps to ensure these apps are free of known malware,
without requiring that the apps be provided through the App Store. In addition, macOS
includes state-of-the-art antivirus protection to block — and if necessary remove —
malware.
After an app is verified to be from an approved source, iOS and iPadOS enforce security
measures designed to prevent it from compromising other apps or the rest of the system.
• Certificate validation: To develop and install apps in iOS or iPadOS devices, developers
must register with Apple and join the Apple Developer Programme. The real-world
identity of each developer, whether an individual or a business, is verified by Apple
before their certificate is issued. This certificate allows developers to sign apps and
submit them to the App Store for distribution. As a result, all apps in the App Store
have been submitted by an identifiable person or organisation, serving as a deterrent to
the creation of malicious apps. They have also been reviewed by Apple to help ensure
they generally operate as described and don’t contain obvious bugs or other notable
problems. In addition to the technology already discussed, this curation process gives
users confidence in the quality of the apps they buy.
• Code signature validation: iOS and iPadOS allow developers to embed frameworks
inside of their apps, which can be used by the app itself or by extensions embedded
within the app. To protect the system and other apps from loading third-party code
inside their address space, the system performs a code signature validation of all
the dynamic libraries that a process links against at launch time. This verification
is accomplished through the team identifier (Team ID), which is extracted from an
Apple-issued certificate. A team identifier is a 10-character alphanumeric string — for
example, 1A2B3C4D5F. A program may link against any platform library that ships with
the system or any library with the same team identifier in its code signature as the main
executable. Since the executables shipping as part of the system don’t have a team
identifier, they can only link against libraries that ship with the system itself.
Users must have the provisioning profile installed to run these apps. This helps ensure that
only the organisation’s intended users are able to load the apps onto their iOS and iPadOS
devices. Apps installed through mobile device management (MDM) are implicitly trusted
because the relationship between the organisation and the device is already established.
Otherwise, users have to approve the app’s provisioning profile in Settings. Organisations
can also restrict users from approving apps from unknown developers. On first launch of
any proprietary in-house app, the device must receive positive confirmation from Apple
that the app is allowed to run.
Sandboxing
All third-party apps are “sandboxed”, so they are restricted from accessing files stored by
other apps or from making changes to the device. Sandboxing is designed to prevent apps
from gathering or modifying information stored by other apps. Each app has a unique home
directory for its files, which is randomly assigned when the app is installed. If a third-party
app needs to access information other than its own, it does so only by using services
explicitly provided by iOS and iPadOS.
System files and resources are also shielded from the users’ apps. Most iOS and iPadOS
system files and resources run as the non-privileged user “mobile”, as do all third-party
apps. The entire operating system partition is mounted as read-only. Unnecessary tools,
such as remote login services, aren’t included in the system software, and APIs don’t allow
apps to escalate their own privileges to modify other apps or iOS and iPadOS.
Use of entitlements
Access by third-party apps to user information, and to features such as iCloud and
extensibility, is controlled using declared entitlements. Entitlements are key value pairs that
are signed in to an app and allow authentication beyond runtime factors, like UNIX user
ID. Since entitlements are digitally signed, they can’t be changed. Entitlements are used
extensively by system apps and daemons to perform specific privileged operations that
would otherwise require the process to run as root. This greatly reduces the potential for
privilege escalation by a compromised system app or daemon.
In addition, apps can only perform background processing through system-provided APIs.
This allows apps to continue to function without degrading performance or dramatically
impacting battery life.
Extension points
A system area that supports extensions is called an extension point. Each extension point
provides APIs and enforces policies for that area. The system determines which extensions
are available based on extension point–specific matching rules. The system automatically
launches extension processes as needed and manages their lifetime. Entitlements can be
used to restrict extension availability to particular system apps. For example, a Today view
widget appears only in Notification Centre and a sharing extension is available only from
the Sharing pane. Examples of extension points are Today widgets, Share, Actions, Photo
Editing, File Provider and Custom Keyboard.
The Mail app database (including attachments), managed books, Safari bookmarks, app
launch images and location data are also stored through encryption, with keys protected
by the user’s passcode on their device. Calendar (excluding attachments), Contacts,
Reminders, Notes, Messages and Photos implement the Data Protection entitlement
Protected Until First User Authentication.
User-installed apps that don’t opt in to a specific Data Protection class receive Protected
Until First User Authentication by default.
• A shared on-volume container for storage which stays on the device as long as at least
one app from the group is installed
• Shared preferences
The Apple Developer Portal helps ensure that App group IDs (GIDs) are unique across the
app ecosystem.
When an MFi accessory communicates with an iOS or iPadOS device using a Lightning or
USB-C connector or through Bluetooth, the device asks the accessory to prove it’s been
authorised by Apple by responding with an Apple-provided certificate, which is verified by
the device. The device then sends a challenge which the accessory must answer with a
signed response. This process is entirely handled by a custom integrated circuit (IC) that
Apple provides to approved accessory manufacturers and is transparent to the accessory
itself.
Accessories can request access to different transport methods and functionality — for
example, access to digital audio streams over the Lightning or USB-C cable, or location
information provided over Bluetooth. An authentication IC is designed to ensure that
only approved accessories are granted full access to the device. If an accessory doesn’t
support authentication, its access is limited to analogue audio and a small subset of serial
(UART) audio playback controls.
AirPlay also uses the authentication IC to verify that receivers have been approved by
Apple. AirPlay audio and CarPlay video streams use the MFi-SAP (Secure Association
Protocol), which encrypts communication between the accessory and device using
AES128 in counter (CTR) mode. Ephemeral keys are exchanged using ECDH key exchange
(Curve25519) and signed using the authentication IC’s 1024-bit RSA key as part of the
Station-to-Station (STS) protocol.
In macOS 10.15, all apps distributed outside the App Store must be signed by the developer
using an Apple-issued Developer ID certificate (combined with a private key) and notarised
by Apple to run under the default Gatekeeper settings. Apps developed in-house should
also be signed with an Apple-issued Developer ID so that users can validate their integrity.
In macOS, code signing and notarisation work independently — and can be performed by
different actors — for different goals. Code signing is performed by the developer using
their Developer ID certificate (issued by Apple) and verification of this signature proves
to the user that a developer’s software hasn’t been tampered with since the developer
built and signed it. Notarisation can be performed by anyone in the software distribution
chain and proves that Apple has been provided a copy of the code to check for malware
and no known malware was found. The output of Notarisation is a ticket which is stored on
Apple servers and can be optionally stapled to the app (by anyone) without invalidating the
signature of the developer.
Mandatory Access Controls (MACs) require code signing to enable entitlements protected
by the system. For example, apps requiring access through the firewall must be code
signed with the appropriate MAC entitlement.
Gatekeeper
macOS includes a security technology called Gatekeeper, which is designed to help ensure
that only trusted software runs on a user’s Mac. When a user downloads and opens an
app, a plug-in or an installer package from outside the App Store, Gatekeeper verifies that
the software is from an identified developer, is notarised by Apple to be free of known
malicious content and hasn’t been altered. Gatekeeper also requests user approval before
opening downloaded software for the first time to make sure the user hasn’t been tricked
into running executable code they believed to simply be a data file.
By default, Gatekeeper helps ensure that all downloaded software has been signed by the
App Store or signed by a registered developer and notarised by Apple. Both the App Store
review process and the notarisation pipeline are designed to ensure that apps contain
no known malware. Therefore, by default all software in macOS is checked for known
malicious content the first time it’s opened, regardless of how it arrived on the Mac.
Users and organisations have the option to allow only software installed from the
App Store. Alternatively, users can override Gatekeeper policies to open any software
unless restricted by a mobile device management (MDM) solution. Organisations can use
MDM to configure Gatekeeper settings, including allowing software signed with alternative
identities. Gatekeeper can also be completely disabled, if necessary.
Gatekeeper also protects against the distribution of malicious plug-ins with benign apps.
Here, using the app triggers the loading of a malicious plug-in without the user’s knowledge.
When necessary, Gatekeeper opens apps from randomised, read-only locations. This is
designed to prevent the automatic loading of plug-ins distributed alongside the app.
2. Block malware from running on customer systems: Gatekeeper, Notarisation and XProtect
The first layer of defence is designed to inhibit the distribution of malware, and prevent it
from launching even once — this is the goal of the App Store, and Gatekeeper combined
with Notarisation.
The next layer of defence is to help ensure that if malware appears on any Mac, it’s
quickly identified and blocked, both to halt spread and to remediate the Mac systems it’s
already gained a foothold on. XProtect adds to this defence, along with Gatekeeper and
Notarisation.
Finally, XProtect acts to remediate malware that has managed to successfully execute.
Notarisation
Notarisation is a malware scanning service provided by Apple. Developers who want to
distribute apps for macOS outside the App Store submit their apps for scanning as part
of the distribution process. Apple scans this software for known malware and, if none is
found, issues a Notarisation ticket. Typically, developers staple this ticket to their app so
Gatekeeper can verify and launch the app, even offline.
Apple can also issue a revocation ticket for apps known to be malicious — even if they’ve
been previously notarised. macOS regularly checks for new revocation tickets so that
Gatekeeper has the latest information and can block the launch of such files. This process
can very quickly block malicious apps because updates happen in the background much
more frequently than even the background updates that push new XProtect signatures. In
addition, this protection can be applied to both apps that have been previously and those
that haven’t.
When XProtect detects known malware, the software is blocked and the user is notified
and given the option to move the software to the Bin.
Note: Notarisation is effective against known files (or file hashes) and can be used on
apps that have been previously launched. The signature-based rules of XProtect are more
generic than a specific file hash, so it can find variants that Apple has not seen. XProtect
scans only apps that have been changed or apps at first launch.
Should malware make its way onto a Mac, XProtect also includes technology to remediate
infections. For example, it includes an engine that remediates infections based on updates
automatically delivered from Apple (as part of automatic updates of system data files
and security updates). It also removes malware upon receiving updated information, and
it continues to periodically check for infections. XProtect doesn’t automatically reboot
the Mac.
• Notarisation revocation tickets are issued for all files (apps and associated files).
These signatures are also applied retroactively to previously notarised software, and
any new detections can result in one or more of the previous actions occurring.
Ultimately, a malware detection launches a series of steps over the next seconds, hours
and days that follow to propagate the best protections possible to Mac users.
Accessibility
Items in the user’s Bin are protected from any apps that are using Full Disk Access; the
user won’t get prompted for app access. If the user wants apps to access the files, they
must be moved from the Bin to another location.
A user who turns on FileVault on a Mac is asked to provide valid credentials before
continuing the boot process and gaining access to specialised startup modes. Without
valid login credentials or a recovery key, the entire volume remains encrypted and is
protected from unauthorised access even if the physical storage device is removed and
connected to another computer.
Secure notes
Secure notes are end-to-end encrypted using a user-provided passphrase that is required
to view the notes on iOS, iPadOS and macOS devices, and the iCloud website. Each iCloud
account (including “On my” device accounts) can have a separate passphrase.
When a user secures a note, a 16-byte key is derived from the user’s passphrase using
PBKDF2 and SHA256. The note and all of its attachments are encrypted using AES with
Galois/Counter Mode (AES-GCM). New records are created in Core Data and CloudKit to
store the encrypted note, attachments, tag and initialisation vector. After the new records
are created, the original unencrypted data is deleted. Attachments that support encryption
include images, sketches, tables, maps and websites. Notes containing other types of
attachments can’t be encrypted and unsupported attachments can’t be added to secure notes.
To view a secure note, the user must enter their passphrase or authenticate using Face ID
or Touch ID. After successfully authenticating the user, whether to view or create a secure
note, Notes opens a secure session. While the secure session is open, the user can view or
secure other notes without additional authentication. However, the secure session applies
only to notes protected with the provided passphrase. The user still needs to authenticate
for notes protected by a different passphrase. The secure session is closed when:
• Notes is switched to the background for more than 3 minutes (8 minutes in macOS)
To change the passphrase on a secure note, the user must enter the current passphrase
because Face ID and Touch ID aren’t available when changing the passphrase. After
choosing a new passphrase, the Notes app rewraps, in the same account, the keys of all
existing notes that are encrypted by the previous passphrase.
If a user mistypes the passphrase three times in a row, Notes shows a user-supplied hint if
one was provided by the user at setup. If the user still doesn’t remember their passphrase,
they can reset it in Notes settings. This feature allows users to create new secure
notes with a new passphrase but it won’t allow them to see previously secured notes.
The previously secured notes can still be viewed if the old passphrase is remembered.
Resetting the passphrase requires the user’s iCloud account passphrase.
Shared notes
Notes that aren’t end-to-end encrypted with a passphrase can be shared with others.
Shared notes still use the CloudKit encrypted data type for any text or attachments
that the user puts in a note. Assets are always encrypted with a key that’s encrypted in
the CKRecord. Metadata, such as the creation and modification dates, isn’t encrypted.
CloudKit manages the process by which participants can encrypt and decrypt each
other’s data.
Custom shortcuts are versatile — they’re similar to scripts or programs. When downloading
shortcuts from the internet, the user is warned that the shortcut hasn’t been reviewed by
Apple and is given the opportunity to inspect the shortcut. To protect against malicious
shortcuts, updated malware definitions are downloaded to identify malicious shortcuts at
runtime.
Custom shortcuts can also run user-specified JavaScript on websites in Safari when
invoked from the share sheet. To protect against malicious JavaScript that, for example,
tricks the user into running a script on a social media website that harvests their data,
the JavaScript is validated against the aforementioned malware definitions. The first time
a user runs JavaScript on a domain, the user is prompted to allow shortcuts containing
JavaScript to run on the current web page for that domain.
This chapter covers security technologies used in iCloud, Sign in with Apple, Apple Pay,
iMessage, Apple Messages for Business, FaceTime, Find My and Continuity.
Note: Not all Apple services and content are available in all countries or regions.
Users are encouraged to exceed these guidelines by adding extra characters and
punctuation marks to make their passwords even stronger.
Apple also notifies users by email or push notifications, or both, when important changes
are made to their account — for example, if a password or billing information has been
changed or the Apple ID has been used to sign in on a new device. If anything looks
unfamiliar, users are instructed to change their Apple ID password immediately.
In addition, Apple employs a variety of policies and procedures designed to protect user
accounts. These include limiting the number of retries for sign-in and password reset
attempts, active fraud monitoring to help identify attacks as they occur and regular policy
reviews that allow Apple to adapt to any new information that could affect user security.
Note: The Managed Apple ID password policy is set by an administrator in Apple School
Manager or Apple Business Manager.
When a user signs in to an Apple website using a web browser, a second factor request is
sent to all trusted devices associated with the user’s iCloud account, requesting approval
of the web session. If the user is signing in to an Apple website from a browser on a trusted
device, they see the verification code displayed locally on the device they’re using. When
the user enters the code on that device, the web session is approved.
For Managed Apple IDs, some services are disabled (for example, Apple Pay, iCloud
Keychain, HomeKit and Find My).
Inspectors can only monitor accounts that are below them in the organisation’s hierarchy.
For example, teachers can monitor students, managers can inspect teachers and students,
and administrators can inspect managers, teachers and students.
iCloud
iCloud uses strong security methods and employs strict policies to protect user data. Most
iCloud data is first encrypted on the user’s device, using device-generated iCloud keys,
before being uploaded to iCloud servers. For data that isn’t end-to-end encrypted, the
user’s device securely uploads these iCloud keys to iCloud Hardware Security Modules
in Apple data centres. This allows Apple to help the user with data recovery and decrypt
the data on the user’s behalf whenever they need it (for example, when they sign in on a
new device, restore from a backup or access their iCloud data on the web). Data moving
between the user’s devices and iCloud servers is separately encrypted in transit with TLS,
and iCloud servers store user data with an additional layer of encryption at rest.
Encryption keys, when available to Apple, are secured in Apple data centres. When
processing data stored in a third-party data centre, these encryption keys are accessed
only by Apple software in use on secure servers, and only while conducting the necessary
processing. For additional privacy and security, many Apple services use end-to-end
encryption, which means the user’s iCloud data can be accessed only by the users
themselves, and only from the trusted devices where they are signed in with their Apple ID.
• Standard data protection (the default setting): The user’s iCloud data is encrypted,
the encryption keys are secured in Apple data centres, and Apple can assist with data
and account recovery. Only certain iCloud data — 14 data categories, including Health
data and passwords in iCloud Keychain — is end-to-end encrypted.
• Advanced Data Protection for iCloud: An optional setting that offers Apple’s highest
level of cloud data security. If a user chooses to turn on Advanced Data Protection, their
trusted devices retain sole access to the encryption keys for the majority of their iCloud
data, thereby protecting it using end-to-end encryption. When you turn on Advanced
Data Protection, the number of data categories that use end-to-end encryption rises to
23 and includes your iCloud Backup, Photos, Notes and more.
The specific categories of iCloud data protected with end-to-end encryption are listed in
the Apple Support article iCloud data security overview.
iCloud encryption
Data encryption in iCloud is closely tied to the data storage model, starting with the
CloudKit frameworks and APIs that allow apps and system software to store data in iCloud
on behalf of the user, and keep everything up to date across devices and on the web.
CloudKit encryption
CloudKit is a framework that lets app developers store key-value data, structured data
and assets (large data stored separately from the database, such as images or videos) in
iCloud. CloudKit supports both public and private databases, grouped in containers. Public
databases are globally shared, typically used for generic assets, and aren’t encrypted.
Private databases store each user’s iCloud data.
CloudKit uses a hierarchy of keys that matches the structure of the data. Each container’s
private database is protected by a key hierarchy, rooted in an asymmetric key called a
CloudKit Service key. These keys are unique to each iCloud user and generated on their
trusted device. When data is written to CloudKit, all record keys are generated on the user’s
trusted device and wrapped to the appropriate key hierarchy before any data is uploaded.
Many Apple services, listed in the Apple Support article iCloud data security overview, use
end-to-end encryption with a CloudKit service key protected by iCloud Keychain syncing.
For these CloudKit containers, the service keys are stored in the user’s iCloud Keychain
and share the security characteristics of iCloud Keychain; the service keys are available
only on the user’s trusted devices, and can’t be accessed by Apple or any third party. In
the event of device loss, users can recover their iCloud Keychain data through the use of
Secure iCloud Keychain recovery, Account Recovery Contacts or an Account Recovery Key.
Advanced Data Protection for iCloud will be available to US users by the end of 2022 and
will start rolling out to the rest of the world in early 2023.
Conceptually, Advanced Data Protection is simple: All CloudKit Service keys that were
generated on device and later uploaded to the available-after-authentication iCloud
Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) in Apple data centres are deleted from those HSMs
and instead kept entirely within the account’s iCloud Keychain protection domain. They are
handled like the existing end-to-end encrypted service keys, which means Apple can no
longer read or access these keys.
Advanced Data Protection also automatically protects CloudKit fields that third-party
developers choose to mark as encrypted, and all CloudKit assets.
Second, the device initiates the removal of the available-after-authentication service keys
from Apple data centres. As these keys are protected by iCloud HSMs, this deletion is
immediate, permanent and irrevocable. After the keys are deleted, Apple can no longer
access any of the data protected by the user’s service keys. At this time, the device
begins an asynchronous key rotation operation, which creates a new service key for each
service whose key was previously available to Apple servers. If the key rotation fails, due
to network interruption or any other error, the device retries the key rotation until it’s
successful.
After the service key rotation is successful, new data written to the service can’t be
decrypted with the old service key. It’s protected with the new key, which is controlled
solely by the user’s trusted devices, and was never available to Apple.
After turning on web access, the user must authorise the web sign-in on one of their
trusted devices each time they visit iCloud.com. The authorisation “arms” the device for
web access. For the next hour, this device accepts requests from specific Apple servers
to upload individual service keys, but only those corresponding to an allow list of services
normally accessible on iCloud.com. In other words, even after the user authorises a web
sign-in, a server request is unable to induce the user’s device to upload service keys for
data that isn’t intended to be viewed on iCloud.com (such as Health data or passwords
in iCloud Keychain). Apple servers request only the service keys needed to decrypt the
specific data the user is requesting to access on the web. Every time a service key is
uploaded, it is encrypted using an ephemeral key bound to the web session that the user
authorised, and a notification is displayed on the user’s device, showing the iCloud service
whose data is temporarily being made available to Apple servers.
Selecting the “anyone with a link” option when enabling collaboration will make the content
available to Apple servers under standard data protection, as the servers need to be able
to provide access to anyone who opens the URL.
iWork collaboration and the Shared Albums feature in Photos don’t support Advanced Data
Protection. When users collaborate on an iWork document, or open an iWork document
from a shared folder in iCloud Drive, the encryption keys for the document are securely
uploaded to iWork servers in Apple data centres. This is because real-time collaboration
in iWork requires server-side mediation to coordinate document changes between
participants. Photos added to Shared Albums are stored with standard data protection as
the feature permits albums to be publicly shared on the web.
1. The user’s device first records their new choice in iCloud Keychain participation
metadata, and this setting is securely synchronised to all their devices.
2. The user’s device securely uploads the service keys for all available-after-authentication
services to the iCloud HSMs in Apple data centres. This never includes keys for services
that are end-to-end encrypted under standard data protection, such as iCloud Keychain
and Health.
The device uploads both the original service keys, generated before Advanced Data
Protection had been turned on, and the new service keys that were generated after
the user turned on the feature. This makes all data in these services accessible after
authentication and returns the account to standard data protection, where Apple can once
again help the user recover most of their data should they lose access to their account.
iCloud stores some data without the protection of user-specific CloudKit service keys, even
when Advanced Data Protection is turned on. CloudKit Record fields must be explicitly
declared as “encrypted” in the container’s schema to be protected, and reading and writing
encrypted fields requires the use of dedicated APIs. Dates and times when a file or object
was modified are used to sort a user’s information, and checksums of file and photo data
are used to help Apple de-duplicate and optimise the user’s iCloud and device storage —
all without having access to the files and photos themselves. Details about how encryption
is used for specific data categories is available in the Apple Support article iCloud data
security overview.
• Devices where the user is signed in with their Apple ID must be updated to iOS 16.2,
iPadOS 16.2, macOS 13.1, tvOS 16.2, watchOS 9.2, and the latest version of iCloud for
Windows. This requirement prevents a previous version of iOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS or
watchOS from mishandling the newly created service keys by re-uploading them to the
available-after-authentication HSMs in a misguided attempt to repair the account state.
• The user must set up at least one alternative recovery method — one or more recovery
contacts or a recovery key — which they can use to recover their iCloud data if they lose
access to their account.
If the recovery methods fail, such as if the recovery contact’s information is out of date,
or the user forgets them, Apple can’t help recover the user’s end-to-end encrypted
iCloud data.
Advanced Data Protection for iCloud can be turned on only for Apple IDs.
Managed Apple IDs and child accounts (varies by country or region) aren’t supported.
When files are created in Data Protection classes that aren’t accessible when the
device is locked, their per-file keys are encrypted using the class keys from the
iCloud Backup keybag and backing the files up to iCloud in their original, encrypted state.
All files are encrypted during transport and, when stored, encrypted using account-based
keys as described in CloudKit encryption.
On restore, the backed-up files, iCloud Backup keybag and the key for the keybag are
retrieved from the user’s iCloud account. The iCloud Backup keybag is decrypted using
its key, then the per-file keys in the keybag are used to decrypt the files in the backup set,
which are written as new files to the file system, thus re-encrypting them according to their
Data Protection class.
• Records for purchased music, movies, TV shows, apps and books. A user’s
iCloud Backup includes information about purchased content present on the
user’s device, but not the purchased content itself. When the user restores from
an iCloud Backup, their purchased content is automatically downloaded from the
iTunes Store, the App Store, the Apple TV app or Apple Books. Some types of content
aren’t downloaded automatically in all countries or regions, and previous purchases may
be unavailable if they have been refunded or are no longer available in their respective
store. Full purchase history is associated with a user’s Apple ID.
• Photos and videos on a user’s devices. Note that if a user turns on iCloud Photos in
iOS 8.1, iPadOS 13.1 or OS X 10.10.3, or later, their photos and videos are already stored
in iCloud, so they aren’t included in the user’s iCloud Backup.
• Device settings
• App data
• HomeKit configuration
• Medical ID data
• Voice Memos password (if necessary; requires the physical SIM card that was in use
during backup)
• Message, Apple Messages for Business, text (SMS) and MMS messages (if necessary;
requires the physical SIM card that was in use during backup)
iCloud Backup is also used to back up the local device keychain, encrypted with a key
derived from the Secure Enclave UID root cryptographic key of the device. This key is
unique to the device and not known to Apple. This allows the database to be restored only
to the same device from which it originated, and it means no one else, including Apple, can
read it. For more information, see Secure Enclave.
With Advanced Data Protection, Messages in iCloud is always end-to-end encrypted. When
iCloud Backup is turned on, everything inside it is end-to-end encrypted, including the
Messages in iCloud encryption key. The iCloud Backup service key, as well as the Messages
in iCloud container key, are both rolled when the user turns on Advanced Data Protection.
For more information, see the Apple Support article iCloud data security overview.
Recovery Contact is designed with user privacy in mind. A user’s chosen recovery contacts
aren’t known to Apple. Apple servers only learn information about a recovery contact
late in the course of a recovery attempt after the user asks the contact for help and their
contact begins actually assisting with the recovery. That information isn’t retained after the
recovery completes.
To set up an Account Recovery Contact, the user’s device communicates with Apple
servers to upload the share of the keying information Apple will hold. It then establishes an
end-to-end encrypted CloudKit container with the recovery contact to share the portion
the recovery contact needs. Both Apple and the recovery contact also receive the same
authorisation secret from the user, which is needed later for recovery. The communication
to invite and accept recovery contacts takes places through a mutually authenticated IDS
channel. The recovery contact automatically stores the received information in their iCloud
Keychain. Apple can’t access either the contents of the CloudKit container or the iCloud
Keychain that stores this information. When the sharing is performed, Apple servers view
only an anonymous ID for the recovery contact.
After the secure connection is established and all required security checks are completed,
the recovery contact’s device returns their portion of the keying information and the
previously established authorisation secret back to the user requesting recovery. The
user presents this authorisation secret to an Apple server, which grants access to the
keying information Apple is keeping. Providing the authorisation secret also authorises the
account password reset to restore account access.
Finally, the user’s device recombines the keying information received from Apple and the
Account Recovery Contact, and then uses it to decrypt and recover their iCloud data.
There are safeguards in place to prevent a recovery contact from initiating recovery
without the user’s consent, which include a liveness check on the user’s account. If the
account is in active use, recovery using a recovery contact also requires knowledge of a
recent device passcode or the iCloud Security Code.
After the user’s death, Legacy Contacts sign in to the Apple claim website to initiate
access. This requires a death certificate and is authorised in part with the authorisation
secret mentioned in the previous section. After all the security checks are completed,
Apple issues a username and password for the new account and releases the necessary
keying information to the Legacy Contact.
To more easily input the access key when needed, it’s presented as an alphanumeric code
with an associated QR code. After it’s entered, access to the deceased’s iCloud data is
restored. This can be performed on a device or access can be established online. For more
information, see the Apple Support article Request access to an Apple account as a Legacy
Contact.
In macOS, saved passwords can be managed in Safari Passwords preferences. This sync
system can also be used to sync passwords that are manually created by the user.
Sign in with Apple allows users to set up an account and sign in to apps and websites
using the Apple ID they already have and it gives them more control over their personal
information. Apps can only ask for the user’s name and email address when setting up an
account, and the user always has a choice: They can share their personal email address
with an app or choose to keep their personal email private and use the new Apple private
email relay service instead. This email relay service shares a unique, anonymised email
address that forwards to the user’s personal address so they can still receive useful
communication from the developer while maintaining a degree of privacy and control over
their personal information.
Sign in with Apple is built for security. Every Sign in with Apple user is required to have
two-factor authentication enabled for their Apple ID. Two-factor authentication helps
secure not only the user’s Apple ID but also the accounts they establish with their apps.
Furthermore, Apple has developed and integrated a privacy-friendly anti-fraud signal into
Sign in with Apple. This signal gives developers confidence that the new users they acquire
are real people and not bots or scripted accounts.
By default, passwords generated by iOS and iPadOS are 20 characters long. They contain
one digit, one uppercase character, two hyphens and 16 lowercase characters. These
generated passwords are strong, containing 71 bits of entropy.
To help ensure that generated passwords are compatible with the relevant services,
apps and websites can provide rules. Developers provide these rules using
UITextInputPasswordRules or the passwordrules attribute on their input elements.
Devices then generate the strongest password they can that fulfils these rules.
When an app is strongly associated with a website that uses the same app-website
association mechanism and that’s powered by the same apple-app-site-association
file, the iOS and iPadOS QuickType bar and macOS drop-down menu directly suggest
credentials for the app, if any are saved to the Password AutoFill Keychain. This allows
users to choose to disclose Safari-saved credentials to apps with the same security
properties, without those apps having to adopt an API.
When an app and website have a trusted relationship and a user submits credentials within
an app, iOS and iPadOS may prompt the user to save those credentials to the Password
AutoFill keychain for later use.
Apps can access saved passwords only if the app developer and website administrator
have given their approval and the user has given consent. App developers express their
intent to access Safari-saved passwords by including an entitlement in their app. The
entitlement lists the fully qualified domain names of associated websites, and the websites
must place a file on their server listing the unique app identifiers of apps approved by Apple.
• apple-app-site-association
• .well-known/apple-app-site-association
If the file lists the app identifier of the app being installed then iOS and iPadOS mark the
website and app as having a trusted relationship. Only with a trusted relationship will calls
to these two APIs result in a prompt to the user, who must agree before any passwords are
released to the app, updated or deleted.
Overview
Using the same password for more than one service may leave those accounts vulnerable
to a credential-stuffing attack. If a service is breached and passwords are leaked, attackers
may try the same credentials on other services to compromise additional accounts.
• Passwords are marked reused if the same password is seen used for more than one
saved password across different domains.
• Passwords are marked weak if they may be easily guessed by an attacker. iOS, iPadOS,
and macOS detect common patterns used to create memorable passwords, such as
using words found in a dictionary, common character substitutions (such as using
“p4ssw0rd” instead of “password”), patterns found on a keyboard (such as “q12we34r”
from a QWERTY keyboard), or repeated sequences (such as “123123”). These patterns
are often used to create passwords that satisfy minimum password requirements for
services but are also commonly used by attackers attempting to obtain a password
using brute force.
• Passwords are marked leaked if the Password Monitoring feature can claim they have
been present in a data leak. For more information, see Password Monitoring.
Weak, reused and leaked passwords are either indicated in the list of passwords (macOS)
or present in the dedicated Security Recommendations interface (iOS and iPadOS). If the
user logs in to a website in Safari using a previously saved password that’s very weak or
that’s been compromised by a data leak, they’re shown an alert strongly encouraging them
to upgrade to an automatic strong password.
If an app has implemented the extension point and is installed on device, users see
extension upgrade options when viewing Security Recommendations for credentials
associated with the app in the iCloud Keychain password manager in Settings. The
upgrades are also offered when users sign in to the app with the at-risk credential. Apps
have the ability to tell the system not to prompt users with upgrade options after signing in.
Using new AuthenticationServices API, apps can also invoke their extensions and perform
upgrades themselves, ideally from an account settings or account management screen in
the app.
Apps can choose to support strong password upgrades, Sign in with Apple upgrades or
both. In a strong password upgrade, the system generates an automatic strong password
for the user. If necessary, the app can provide custom password rules to follow when
generating the new password. When a user switches an account from using a password to
using Sign in with Apple, the system provides a new Sign in with Apple credential to the
extension to associate the account with. The user’s Apple ID email isn’t provided as part
of the credential. After a successful Sign in with Apple upgrade, the system deletes the
previously used password credential from the user’s keychain if it’s saved there.
If the password isn’t contained on the most frequent list, it’s matched against less
frequently leaked passwords.
The underlying protocol partitions the list of curated passwords, which contained
approximately 1.5 billion passwords at the time of writing, into 215 different buckets. The
bucket a password belongs to is based on the first 15 bits of the SHA256 hash value of
the password. Additionally, each leaked password, pw, is associated with an elliptic curve
point on the NIST P256 curve: Ppw = "HSWU(pw), where is a secret random key known
only to Apple and HSWU is a random oracle function that maps passwords to curve points
based on the Shallue-van de Woestijne-Ulas method. This transformation is designed to
computationally hide the values of passwords and helps prevent revealing newly leaked
passwords through Password Monitoring.
The returned information allows the device to compute B’λ = {β"Ppw | Ppw Bλ}, and
ascertains that the user’s password has been leaked if Pc B'λ.
Any nearby iPhone, iPad or iPod touch displays a prompt inviting the user to share a
credential with Apple TV. Here’s how the encryption method is established:
• If the device and Apple TV use the same iCloud account, encryption between the
devices happens automatically.
• If the device is signed in to an iCloud account other than the one used by Apple TV,
the user is prompted to establish an encrypted connection through use of a PIN code.
To receive this prompt, the iPhone must be unlocked and in close proximity to the Siri
Remote paired to that Apple TV.
After the encrypted connection is made using BLE link encryption, the credential is sent to
Apple TV and is automatically filled in to the relevant text fields on the app.
iCloud Keychain
Apple designed iCloud Keychain and keychain recovery so that a user’s passwords are still
protected under the following conditions:
For two-factor authentication accounts, each device’s syncing list is stored in CloudKit.
The lists can’t be read without knowing the user’s iCloud password, and they can’t be
modified without having the private keys of the owning device.
During the pairing flows, the applicant device creates new syncing identities for both the
syncing circle and the syncing lists (for two-factor authentication accounts) and presents
them to the sponsor. The sponsor adds the public key of the new member to the syncing
circle and signs it again with both its syncing identity and the key derived from the user’s
iCloud password. The new syncing circle is placed in iCloud, where it’s similarly signed by
the new member of the circle. In two-factor authentication accounts, the sponsor device
also provides the joining device with a voucher signed by its identity keys, showing that
the applicant device should be trusted. It then updates its individual list of trusted syncing
identities to include the applicant.
There are now two members of the signing circle and each member has the public key of
its peer. They now begin to exchange individual keychain items through iCloud key-value
storage, or they store them in CloudKit, whichever is most appropriate for the situation. If
both circle members have updates to the same item, one or the other is chosen, resulting
in eventual consistency. Each item that’s synced is encrypted so it can be decrypted only
by a device within the user’s circle of trust; it can’t be decrypted by any other devices or
by Apple.
As new devices join the syncing circle, this “join process” is repeated. For example, when
a third device joins, it can be paired with either of the existing devices. As new peers are
added, each peer syncs with the new one. This is designed to ensure that all members
have the same keychain items.
Apple sets this attribute for Safari user data (including usernames, passwords and credit
card numbers) as well as for Wi-Fi passwords, HomeKit encryption keys, and other
keychain items supporting end-to-end iCloud encryption.
Additionally, by default, keychain items added by third-party apps don’t sync. Developers
must set the kSecAttrSynchronizable attribute when adding items to the keychain.
• If two-factor authentication is enabled for the user’s account, the device’s passcode is
used to recover an escrowed keychain.
• If two-factor authentication isn’t set up, the user is asked to create an iCloud security
code by providing a six-digit passcode. Alternatively, without two-factor authentication,
users can specify their own, longer code or they can let their devices create a
cryptographically random code that they can record and keep on their own.
The contents of the escrow record also allow the recovering device to rejoin iCloud
Keychain, proving to any existing devices that the recovering device successfully
performed the escrow process and so is authorised by the account’s owner.
Note: If the user decides to accept a cryptographically random security code instead of
specifying their own or using a four-digit value, no escrow record is necessary. Instead, the
iCloud security code is used to wrap the random key directly.
Besides establishing a security code, users must register a phone number. This provides
a secondary level of authentication during keychain recovery. The user receives an SMS
message that must be replied to for the recovery to proceed.
To recover a keychain, users must authenticate with their iCloud account and password and
respond to an SMS sent to their registered phone number. After this is done, users must
enter their iCloud security code. The HSM cluster verifies that a user knows their iCloud
security code using the Secure Remote Password (SRP) protocol; the code itself isn’t sent
to Apple. Each member of the cluster independently verifies that the user hasn’t exceeded
the maximum number of attempts allowed to retrieve their record, as discussed below. If a
majority agree, the cluster unwraps the escrow record and sends it to the user’s device.
Next, the device uses the iCloud security code to unwrap the random keys used to encrypt
the user’s keychain. With that key, the keychain — retrieved from iCloud key-value storage
and CloudKit — is decrypted and restored onto the device. iOS, iPadOS and macOS
allow only 10 attempts to authenticate and retrieve an escrow record. After several failed
attempts, the record is locked and the user must call Apple Support to be granted more
attempts. After the 10th failed attempt, the HSM cluster destroys the escrow record and
the keychain is lost forever. This provides protection against a brute-force attempt to
retrieve the record, at the expense of sacrificing the keychain data in response.
These policies are coded in the HSM firmware. The administrative access cards that permit
the firmware to be changed have been destroyed. Any attempt to alter the firmware or
access the private key causes the HSM cluster to delete the private key. Should this occur,
the owner of each keychain protected by the cluster receives a message informing them
that their escrow record has been lost. They can then choose to re-enrol.
Apple Pay
Apple Pay is also designed to protect the user’s personal information. Apple Pay doesn’t
collect any transaction information that can be tied back to the user. Payment transactions
are between the user, the merchant and the card issuer.
The Secure Element IC has been certified based on the Common Criteria standard. For
more information, see Secure Enclave Processor security certifications in Apple Platform
Certifications.
NFC controller
The NFC controller handles Near Field Communication protocols and routes communication
between the Application Processor and the Secure Element, and between the Secure
Element and the point-of-sale terminal.
Apple Wallet
The Apple Wallet app is used to add and manage credit, debit and store cards, and to make
payments with Apple Pay. Users can view their cards and may be able to view additional
information provided by their card issuer, such as their card issuer’s privacy policy, recent
transactions and more in Apple Wallet. Users can also add cards to Apple Pay in:
• Wallet & Apple Pay in System Preferences for Mac computers with Touch ID
In addition, Apple Wallet allows users to add and manage travel cards, rewards cards,
boarding passes, tickets, gift cards, student ID cards, access cards and more.
Secure Enclave
On iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac computers with Touch ID, and Mac computers with
Apple silicon that use the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID, the Secure Enclave manages the
authentication process and allows a payment transaction to proceed.
On Apple Watch, the device must be unlocked and the user must double-click the side
button. The double-click is detected and passed directly to the Secure Element or Secure
Enclave, where available, without going through the Application Processor.
Secure Element
The Secure Element hosts a specially designed applet to manage Apple Pay. It also
includes applets certified by payment networks or card issuers. Credit, debit or pre-paid
card data is sent from the payment network or card issuer encrypted to these applets using
keys that are known only to the payment network or card issuer and the applets’ security
domain. This data is stored within these applets and protected using the Secure Element’s
security features. During a transaction, the terminal communicates directly with the
Secure Element through the Near Field Communication (NFC) controller over a dedicated
hardware bus.
NFC controller
As the gateway to the Secure Element, the NFC controller helps ensure that all contactless
payment transactions are conducted using a point-of-sale terminal that’s in close proximity
to the device. Only payment requests arriving from an in-field terminal are marked by the
NFC controller as contactless transactions.
After a credit, debit or pre-paid card (including store cards) payment is authorised by
the cardholder using Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode, or on an unlocked Apple Watch
by double-clicking the side button, contactless responses prepared by the payment
applets within the Secure Element are exclusively routed by the controller to the NFC
field. Consequently, payment authorisation details for contactless payment transactions
are contained to the local NFC field and are never exposed to the Application Processor.
In contrast, payment authorisation details for payments within apps and on the web are
routed to the Application Processor, but only after encryption by the Secure Element to the
Apple Pay server.
• Required Fields
• Check Card
Cards for use with Apple Watch are provisioned for Apple Pay using the Apple Watch app
on iPhone or within a card issuer’s iPhone app. Adding a card to Apple Watch requires that
the watch be within Bluetooth communications range. Cards are specifically enrolled for
use with Apple Watch and have their own Device Account Numbers which are stored within
the Secure Element on the Apple Watch.
When credit, debit or pre-paid cards (including store cards) are added, they appear on
a list of cards during Setup Assistant on devices that are signed in to the same iCloud
account. These cards remain on this list for as long as they are active on at least one
device. Cards are removed from this list after they have been removed from all devices for
7 days. This feature requires two-factor authentication to be enabled on the respective
iCloud account.
If a terms and conditions ID is returned with the Check Card process, Apple downloads
and displays the terms and conditions of the card issuer to the user. If the user accepts
the terms and conditions, Apple sends the ID of the terms that were accepted as well as
the CVV to the Link and Provision process. Additionally, as part of the Link and Provision
process, Apple shares information from the device with the card issuer or network. This
includes information about (a) the user’s iTunes and App Store account activity (for
example, whether the user has a long history of transactions within iTunes), (b) the user’s
device (for example, the phone number, name and model of the user’s device plus any
companion Apple device necessary to set up Apple Pay), and (c) the user’s approximate
location at the time the user adds their card (if the user has Location Services enabled).
Using this information, the card issuer determines whether to approve adding the card to
Apple Pay.
• The device begins to download the Apple Wallet pass file representing the credit or
debit card.
The pass file contains URLs to download card art, metadata about the card such as contact
information, the related issuer’s app and supported features. It also contains the pass
state, which includes information such as whether the personalising of the Secure Element
has completed, whether the card is currently suspended by the card issuer or whether
additional verification is required before the card can make payments with Apple Pay.
These security codes are provided to the payment network and to the card issuer, which
allows the issuer to verify each transaction. The length of these security codes may vary
based on the type of transaction.
• Use Accessibility features that allow Apple Pay from the Lock Screen
Next, before information is transmitted, the user must authenticate using Face ID, Touch ID
or their passcode. When Apple Watch is unlocked, double-clicking the side button
activates the default card for payment. No payment information is sent without user
authentication.
After the user authenticates, the Device Account Number and a transaction-specific
dynamic security code are used when processing the payment. Neither Apple nor a user’s
device sends the full credit or debit card numbers to merchants. Apple may receive
anonymous transaction information such as the approximate time and location of the
transaction, which helps improve Apple Pay and other Apple products and services.
When an app initiates an Apple Pay payment transaction, the Apple Pay servers receive the
encrypted transaction from the device prior to the merchant receiving it. The Apple Pay
servers then re-encrypt the transaction with a merchant-specific key before relaying it to
the merchant.
When an app requests a payment, it calls an API to determine whether the device supports
Apple Pay and whether the user has credit or debit cards that can make payments on a
payment network accepted by the merchant. The app requests any pieces of information
it needs to process and fulfil the transaction, such as the billing and shipping address, and
contact information. The app then asks iOS, iPadOS or watchOS to present the Apple Pay
sheet, which requests information for the app as well as other necessary information, such
as the card to use.
At this time, the app is presented with town/city, county and postcode information to
calculate the final shipping cost. The full set of requested information isn’t provided to the
app until the user authorises the payment with Face ID, Touch ID or the device passcode.
After the payment is authorised, the information presented in the Apple Pay sheet is
transferred to the merchant.
The APIs require an entitlement that specifies the supported Merchant IDs. An app can
also include additional data (such as an order number or customer identity) to send to the
Secure Element to be signed, ensuring that the transaction can’t be diverted to a different
customer. This is accomplished by the app developer, who can specify applicationData on
the PKPaymentRequest. A hash of this data is included in the encrypted payment data. The
merchant is then responsible for verifying that their applicationData hash matches what’s
included in the payment data.
Apple Pay on the web requires that all participating websites register with Apple. After
the domain is registered, domain name validation is performed only after Apple issues a
TLS client certificate. Websites supporting Apple Pay are required to serve their content
over HTTPS. For each payment transaction, websites need to obtain a secure and unique
merchant session with an Apple server using the Apple-issued TLS client certificate.
Merchant session data is signed by Apple. After a merchant session signature is verified,
a website may query whether the user has an Apple Pay–capable device and whether they
have a credit, debit or pre-paid card activated on the device. No other details are shared.
If the user doesn’t want to share this information, they can disable Apple Pay queries in
Safari privacy settings on iPhone, iPad and Mac devices.
After a merchant session is validated, all privacy and security measures are the same as
when a user pays within an app.
After the user authorises payment using Face ID, Touch ID, a passcode, or by double-
clicking the side button on Apple Watch, a payment token uniquely encrypted to
each website’s merchant certificate is securely transmitted from the user’s iPhone or
Apple Watch to their Mac, and then delivered to the merchant’s website.
Only devices in proximity to each other may request and complete payment. Proximity is
determined through Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) advertisements.
When the device is held near the NFC terminal, the terminal initiates receiving the pass
information by sending a request for a pass. If the user has a pass with the pass provider’s
identifier, the user is asked to authorise its use using Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode. The
pass information, a timestamp and a single-use random ECDH P-256 key are used with the
pass provider’s public key to derive an encryption key for the pass data, which is sent to
the terminal.
From iOS 12.0.1 up to and including iOS 13, users may manually select a pass before
presenting it to the merchant’s NFC terminal. In iOS 13.1 or later, pass providers can
configure manually selected passes to either require user authentication or be used
without authentication.
Method Device
The user signs out of i Cloud. iPhone, i Pad, Mac, Apple Watch
The user selects Erase All Content and Settings. iPhone, i Pad, Mac, Apple Watch
The device is restored from Recovery Mode. iPhone, i Pad, Mac, Apple Watch
When a user erases the entire device — using Erase All Content and Settings, using
Find My or restoring their device — iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac and Apple Watch instruct
the Secure Element to mark all cards as deleted. This has the effect of immediately
changing the cards to an unusable state until the Apple Pay servers can be contacted to
fully erase the cards from the Secure Element. Independently, the Secure Enclave marks
the AR as invalid so that further payment authorisations for previously enrolled cards aren’t
possible. When the device is online, it attempts to contact the Apple Pay servers to help
ensure that all cards in the Secure Element are erased.
To apply for Apple Card, the user must be signed in to their iCloud account on an
Apple Pay–compatible iOS or iPadOS device and have two-factor authentication set
up on the iCloud account. When the application is approved, Apple Card is available in
Apple Wallet or within Settings > Wallet & Apple Pay across any of the eligible devices the
user has signed in with their Apple ID.
When a user applies for Apple Card, user identity information is securely verified by Apple’s
identity provider partners and then shared with Goldman Sachs Bank USA for the purposes
of identity and credit evaluation.
Information such as the social security number or ID document image provided during the
application is securely transmitted to Apple’s identity provider partners and/or Goldman
Sachs Bank USA encrypted with their respective keys. Apple can’t decrypt this data.
The income information provided during the application and the bank account information
used for bill payments are securely transmitted to Goldman Sachs Bank USA encrypted
with their key. The bank account information is saved in the keychain. Apple can’t decrypt
this data.
When adding Apple Card to Apple Wallet, the same information as when a user adds a
credit or debit card may be shared with Apple’s partner bank Goldman Sachs Bank USA,
and with Apple Payments Inc. This information is used only for troubleshooting, fraud
prevention and regulatory purposes.
In iOS 14.6 or later, iPadOS 14.6 or later, and watchOS 7.5 or later, the organiser of an
iCloud family with an Apple Card can share their card with their iCloud Family members
over the age of 13. User authentication is required to confirm the invitation. Apple Wallet
uses a key in the Secure Enclave to compute a signature that binds the owner and the
invitee. That signature is validated on Apple servers.
Optionally, the organiser can set a transaction limit for the participants. Participant cards
can also be locked to pause their spending at any time through Apple Wallet. When a
co-owner or participant over the age of 18 accepts the invitation and applies, they go
through the same application process as defined in the Apple Card application section in
Apple Wallet.
The Apple Card number is retrieved by Apple Wallet by presenting a certificate. The
Apple Pay Server validates the certificate to confirm the key was generated in the Secure
Enclave. It then uses this key to encrypt the Apple Card number before returning it to
Apple Wallet, so that only the iPhone that requested the Apple Card number can decrypt it.
After decryption, the Apple Card number is saved in iCloud Keychain.
Displaying the Apple Card number details in the pass using Apple Wallet requires user
authentication with Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode. It can be replaced by the user in the
card information section, which disables the previous one.
In iOS 14, iPadOS 14 and watchOS 7, the organiser of an iCloud family who has verified
their identity with Apple Cash can enable Apple Cash for their family members under the
age of 18. Optionally, the organiser can restrict the money sending capabilities of these
users to family members only or contacts only. If the family member under the age of 18
goes through an Apple ID account recovery, the organiser of the family must manually re-
enable the Apple Cash card for that user. If the family member under the age of 18 is no
longer part of the iCloud family, their Apple Cash balance is automatically transferred to
the organiser’s account.
When the user sets up Apple Cash, the same information as when the user adds a credit or
debit card may be shared with our partner bank Green Dot Bank and with Apple Payments
Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary created to protect the user’s privacy by storing and
processing information separately from the rest of Apple and in a way that the rest of
Apple doesn’t know. This information is used only for troubleshooting, fraud prevention and
regulatory purposes.
Apple Payments Inc. stores and may use, the user’s transaction data for troubleshooting,
fraud prevention and regulatory purposes once a transaction is completed. The rest of
Apple doesn’t know who the user sent money to, received money from or where the user
made a purchase with their Apple Cash card.
When the user sends money with Apple Pay, adds money to an Apple Cash account or
transfers money to a bank account, a call is made to the Apple Pay servers to obtain a
cryptographic nonce, which is similar to the value returned for Apple Pay within apps. The
nonce, along with other transaction data, is passed to the Secure Element to compute a
payment signature. The signature is returned to the Apple Pay servers. The authentication,
integrity and correctness of the transaction is verified through the payment signature and
the nonce by Apple Pay servers. Money transfer is then initiated and the user is notified of
a completed transaction.
An encrypted payment credential is also produced and sent to Apple Pay servers, similar to
how Apple Pay works within apps and websites.
After the balance of the Apple Cash account exceeds a certain amount or if unusual activity
is detected, the user is prompted to verify their identity. Information provided to verify the
user’s identity — such as social security number or answers to questions (for example, to
confirm a street name the user lived on previously) — is securely transmitted to the Apple
partner and encrypted using their key. Apple can’t decrypt this data. The user is prompted
to verify their identity again if they perform an Apple ID account recovery, before regaining
access to their Apple Cash balance.
Tap to Pay on iPhone is designed to protect the payer’s personal information. This service
doesn’t collect transaction information that can be tied back to the payer. Payment card
information such as Credit/Debit Card Number (PAN) is secured by the Secure Element
and isn’t available to the merchant. The payment card information stays between the
merchant’s Payment Service Provider, the payer and the card issuer. In addition, the Tap to
Pay service doesn’t collect payer’s names, addresses or phone numbers.
Tap to Pay on iPhone has been assessed externally by an accredited security laboratory
and approved by American Express, Discover, Mastercard and Visa.
• NFC Controller: The NFC controller handles Near Field Communication protocols and
routes communication between the Application Processor and the Secure Element, and
between the Secure Element and the contactless payment card.
• Tap to Pay on iPhone servers: The Tap to Pay on iPhone servers manage the setup and
provisioning of the payment kernels in the device. The servers also monitor the security
of the Tap to Pay on iPhone devices in a manner compatible with the Contactless
Payments on COTS (CPoC) standard from the Payment Card Industry Security
Standards Council (PCI SSC), and are PCI DSS compliant.
Upon first use of Tap to Pay on iPhone using a sufficiently entitled app, the Tap to Pay
on iPhone server determines whether the device meets the eligibility criteria such as
Device Model, iOS version and whether a passcode has been set. After this verification
is complete, the payment acceptance applet is downloaded from the Tap to Pay on
iPhone server and installed on the Secure Element, along with the associated payment
kernel configuration. This operation is performed securely between the Tap to Pay on
iPhone servers and the Secure Element. The Secure Element validates the integrity and
authenticity of this data prior to installation.
When a Tap to Pay on iPhone app requests a card read from ProximityReader framework, a
sheet — controlled by iOS — is displayed and prompts the user to tap a payment card. iOS
initialises the Payment Card Reader and then requests the payment kernels in the Secure
Element to initiate a card read.
After the payment acceptance applet on the Secure Element has completed the card read,
it encrypts and signs the card data. The card data remains encrypted and authenticated
until it reaches the Payment Service Provider. Only the Payment Service Provider used by
the app to request the card read can decrypt the card data. The Payment Service Provider
must request the card data decryption key from the Tap to Pay on iPhone server. The
Tap to Pay on iPhone server emits decryption keys to the Payment Service Provider after
validation of the integrity and authenticity of the data, and after verifying that the card read
was within 60 seconds of the card read on the device.
This model helps ensure that the card data can’t be decrypted by anyone other than the
Payment Service Provider, which processes this transaction for the merchant.
User convenience
When a key, pass, student ID card or corporate badge is added to Apple Wallet, Express
Mode is turned on by default. Cards in Express Mode interact with accepting terminals
without Face ID, Touch ID, passcode authentication, or double-clicking the side button on
Apple Watch. To disable this feature, users can turn off Express Mode by tapping the More
button on the front of the card in Apple Wallet. To turn Express Mode back on, they must
use Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode.
Before provisioning any access keys, a user must be signed in to their iCloud account on a
compatible iPhone and have two-factor authentication turned on for their iCloud account,
with the exception of a student ID, which doesn’t require two-factor authentication to be
turned on.
When a user initiates the provisioning process, similar steps to those involved in credit
and debit card provisioning take place, such as link and provisioning. During a transaction,
the reader communicates with the Secure Element through the Near Field Communication
(NFC) controller using an established secure channel.
In iOS 15.4 or later, when a user double-clicks the side button on an iPhone with Face ID
or double-clicks the Home button on an iPhone with Touch ID, their passes and access
key details aren’t displayed until they authenticate to the device. Either Face ID, Touch ID
or passcode authentication is required before pass-specific information, including hotel
booking details, are displayed in Apple Wallet.
Hospitality
Hotel room keys in Apple Wallet help deliver an easy and contactless experience from
check-in to check-out, while providing additional privacy and security benefits for guests
on top of traditional plastic hotel key cards. Hotel guests at supported locations can tap to
unlock with room keys in Apple Wallet on their compatible iPhone devices and Apple Watch
Series 4 or later.
The capabilities in Apple Wallet are specifically designed to reduce friction for the
customer:
• Pre-arrival provisioning from the hotel’s app to add a pass to Apple Wallet ahead of a stay
• Check-in pass tiles to initiate check-ins and room assignments from Apple Wallet
Employee badge takes advantage of Apple’s access capabilities, allowing users to:
• Automatically add an employee badge to their paired Apple Watch through push
provisioning that doesn’t require installing a partner’s app
• Gain access to the workplace even after their iPhone runs out of battery
Student ID cards
In iOS 12 or later, students and staff at participating schools and campuses can add their
student ID card to Apple Wallet on supported models of iPhone and Apple Watch to access
locations and pay wherever their card is accepted.
A user adds their student ID card to Apple Wallet through an app provided by the card
issuer or participating institution. The technical process by which this occurs is the same
as the one described in Adding credit or debit cards from a card issuer’s app. In addition,
issuing apps must support two-factor authentication on the accounts that guard access to
their student IDs. A card may be set up simultaneously on up to any two supported Apple
devices signed in with the same Apple ID.
Multi-family homes
Tenants and staff of supported partner facilities can use their home key in Apple Wallet to
access their building, unit and common areas. The home key can be provisioned from the
app provided by the partner. For partners that support frictionless provisioning, property
managers can send tenants a link to initiate provisioning using their preferred messaging
channel (for example, email or SMS) so that the tenant only needs to click the link to
redeem the key. App Clips also provide a secure and seamless experience, making it
possible to provision a key without installing a partner’s app. For more information, see the
Apple Support article Use App Clips on iPhone.
Home key
A home key in Apple Wallet can be used with supported NFC-enabled door locks with a simple
tap of an iPhone or Apple Watch. For more information about how a user can set up and use a
home key, see the Apple Support article Unlock your door with a home key on iPhone.
When a user sets up a home key, all residents in their household also automatically receive
the home key. To further share a home key or remove a member of a shared home, the
owner of a home can use the Home app to manage invitations and members. When a user
chooses to accept an invitation to join a home with a home key, this initiates provisioning
of the home key into Apple Wallet on their devices. If a user chooses to leave a home or
if the home owner withdraws their access, these actions also remove the home key from
Apple Wallet.
Car keys can be used to unlock and lock the vehicle and to start the engine or set the
vehicle into drive mode. The “standard transaction” offers mutual authentication and is
mandatory for engine start. Unlock and lock transactions may use the “fast transaction”
when required for performance reasons.
Keys are created through pairing an iPhone with an owned and supported vehicle. All
keys are created on the embedded Secure Element based on elliptic curve (NIST P-256)
onboard key generation (ECC-OBKG), and the private keys never leave the Secure Element.
Communication between devices and the vehicle use either NFC or a combination of
Bluetooth LE and UWB, and key management uses an Apple-to-carmaker server API with
mutually authenticated TLS. After a key is paired to an iPhone, any Apple Watch paired to
that iPhone can also receive a key. When a key is deleted either in the vehicle or on the
device, it can’t be restored. Keys on lost or stolen devices can be suspended and resumed,
but reprovisioning them on a new device requires a new pairing or sharing.
Owner pairing
The owner must prove possession of the vehicle (the method is dependent on the
carmaker) and can start the pairing process in the carmaker’s app using an email link
received from the carmaker or from the vehicle menu. In all cases, the owner must present
a confidential single-use pairing password to the iPhone, which is used to generate a
secure pairing channel using the SPAKE2+ protocol with the NIST P-256 curve. When using
the app or the email link, the password is automatically transferred to the iPhone, where it
must be entered manually when pairing is started from the vehicle.
Key sharing
The owner’s paired iPhone can share keys to eligible family members’ and friends’ iPhone
devices (and their paired Apple Watch devices) by sending a device-specific invitation
using iMessage and the Apple IDentity Service (IDS). All sharing commands are exchanged
using the end-to-end encrypted IDS feature. The owner’s paired iPhone keeps the IDS
channel from changing during the sharing process in order to protect against invitation
forwarding.
Key deletion
Keys can be deleted on the keyholder device from the owner device and in the vehicle.
Deletions on the keyholder iPhone are effective immediately, even if the keyholder is using
the key. Therefore a strong warning is shown before the deletion. Deletion of keys in the
vehicle may be possible anytime or only when the vehicle is online.
In both cases, the deletion on keyholder device or vehicle is reported to a key inventory
server (KIS) on the carmaker side, which registers issued keys for a vehicle for insurance
purposes.
The owner can request a deletion from the back of the owner pass. The request is first sent
to the carmaker for key removal in the vehicle. The conditions for removing the key from
the vehicle are defined by the carmaker. Only when the key is removed in the vehicle will
the carmaker server send a remote termination request to the keyholder device.
When a key is terminated in a device, the applet that manages the digital car keys creates a
cryptographically signed termination attestation, which is used as proof of deletion by the
carmaker and used to remove the key from the KIS.
The ephemeral public key generated on the vehicle side is signed with the reader’s long-
term private key, which results in an authentication of the reader by the iPhone. From the
iPhone perspective, this protocol is designed to prevent privacy-sensitive data from being
revealed to an adversary intercepting the communication.
Finally, the iPhone uses the established secure channel to encrypt its public key identifier
along with the signature computed on a reader’s data-derived challenge and some
additional app-specific data. This verification of the iPhone signature by the reader allows
the reader to authenticate the device.
Privacy
The carmaker’s key inventory server (KIS) doesn’t store the device ID, SEID or Apple ID. It
stores only a mutable identifier — the instance CA identifier. This identifier isn’t bound to
any private data in the device or by the server, and it’s deleted when the user wipes their
device completely (using Erase All Contents and Settings).
During the process of transferring the balance from a physical card to Apple Wallet, users
are required to enter card-specific information. Users may also need to provide personal
information for proof of card possession. When transferring passes from iPhone to
Apple Watch, both devices must be online.
If provisioning from a physical card is supported, the travel or eMoney card issuer has the
cryptographic keys needed to authenticate the physical card and verify the user’s entered
data. After the data is verified, the system can create a Device Account Number for the
Secure Element and activate the newly added pass in Apple Wallet with the transferred
balance. For some cards, after provisioning from the physical card is complete, the
physical card is disabled.
At the end of either type of provisioning, if the card balance is stored on the device, it’s
encrypted and stored to a designated applet in the Secure Element. The operator has the
keys to perform cryptographic operations on the card data for balance transactions.
By default, travel card users benefit from the seamless Express Travel experience that
allows them to pay and go without requiring Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode. Information
such as recently visited stations, transaction history and additional tickets may be
accessed by any nearby contactless card reader with Express Mode enabled. Users can
turn on the Face ID, Touch ID or passcode authorisation requirement in the Wallet &
Apple Pay settings by disabling Express Travel. Express mode is not supported for eMoney
cards.
As with other Apple Pay cards, users can suspend or remove eMoney cards by:
In iOS 12.3 or later, some existing EMV credit/debit cards in Apple Wallet can be enabled for
Express Travel. Express Travel lets users pay for a trip at supported travel operators without
requiring Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode. When a user provisions an EMV credit or debit
card, the first card provisioned to Apple Wallet is enabled for Express Travel. The user can
tap the More button on the front of the card in Apple Wallet and disable Express Travel for
that card by setting Express Travel Settings to None. The user can also select a different
credit or debit card as their Express Travel card using Apple Wallet. Face ID, Touch ID or a
passcode is required to re-enable or select a different card for Express Travel.
Apple Card and Apple Cash are eligible for Express Travel.
IDs in Apple Wallet use security features built into the hardware and software of the user’s
device to help protect their identity and help keep their personal information secure.
Users are first asked to use their iPhone to scan the front and back of their physical driving
licence or state ID card. iPhone evaluates the quality and type of images provided to help
ensure they are acceptable by the state issuing authority. These identity card images are
encrypted to the state issuing authority’s key on the device and then sent to the state
issuing authority.
Next, the user is asked to complete a series of facial and head movements. These
movements are evaluated by the user’s device and by Apple to help reduce the risk
of someone using a photograph, video or mask to try to add someone else’s ID to
Apple Wallet. Results from the analysis of these movements are then sent to the state
issuing authority, but not the video of the movements themselves.
Lastly, users are asked to perform a Face ID or Touch ID authentication. The user’s device
ties this single matched Face ID or Touch ID biometric to the state ID to help ensure that
only the person who added the ID to this iPhone can present it; other enrolled biometric
information cannot be used to authorise presentation of the ID. This occurs strictly on
device and isn’t sent to the state issuing authority.
The state issuing authority will receive information necessary to set up the digital ID. This
includes images of the front and back of the user’s ID, data read from the PDF417 barcode
and the selfie the user took as part of the ID verification process. The issuing state also
receives a single-digit value, used to help prevent fraud, that’s based on the user’s device
use patterns, settings data and information about their personal Apple ID. It’s then ultimately
the issuing state’s decision to approve or deny the ID being added to Apple Wallet.
After the state issuing authority authorises adding the state ID or driving licence to
Apple Wallet, a key pair is generated in the Secure Element by the iPhone that anchors the
user’s ID to that specific device. If adding to Apple Watch, a key pair is generated in the
Secure Element by Apple Watch.
After the ID is on iPhone, the information reflected on the user’s ID in Apple Wallet is
stored in an encrypted format protected by the Secure Enclave.
To use their ID in Apple Wallet on Apple Watch, users need to unlock their iPhone using
the associated Face ID appearance or Touch ID fingerprint each time they put on their
Apple Watch. Then, they can use their ID in Apple Wallet without authenticating until
they take their Apple Watch off again. This capability leverages foundational Auto Unlock
capabilities detailed in System security for watchOS.
When users hold their iPhone or Apple Watch near the identity reader, they’ll see a prompt
on their device displaying which specific information is being requested, by whom, and
if they intend on storing it. After authorising with the associated Face ID or Touch ID, the
requested identity information is released from the device.
Important: Users don’t need to unlock, show or hand over their device to present their ID.
If users have an accessibility feature like Voice Control, Switch Control or AssistiveTouch
instead of having Face ID or Touch ID enabled, they can use their passcode to access and
present their information.
Transmission of identity data to the identity reader follows the ISO/IEC 18013-5 standard,
which provides for multiple security mechanisms available that are able to detect, deter
and mitigate security risks. These consist of identity data integrity and anti-forgery, device
binding, informed consent and user data confidentiality over radio links.
Device binding
IDs in Apple Wallet authentication uses a device signature to protect against cloning of
an ID and replay of an identity transaction. By storing the private key for ID authentication
in the iPhone device’s Secure Element, the ID is bound to the same device that the state
issuing authority created the ID for.
Informed consent
IDs in Apple Wallet reader authentication authenticates the identity reader using the
protocol defined in the ISO/IEC 18013-5 standard. During presentation, an icon derived
from the reader’s certificate is shown to them to give the user an assurance they’re
interacting with the intended party.
When a user turns on iMessage on a device, the device generates encryption and signing
pairs of keys for use with the service. For encryption, there is an encryption RSA 1280-
bit key as well as an encryption EC 256-bit key on the NIST P-256 curve. For signatures,
Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) 256-bit signing keys are used. The
private keys are saved in the device’s keychain and only available after first unlock. The
public keys are sent to Apple IDentity Service (IDS) where they are associated with the
user’s phone number or email address, along with the device’s APNs address.
As users enable additional devices for use with iMessage, their encryption and signing
public keys, APNs addresses and associated phone numbers are added to the directory
service. Users can also add more email addresses which are verified by sending a
confirmation link. Phone numbers are verified by the network provider's network and SIM.
With some networks, this requires using SMS (the user is presented with a confirmation
dialogue if the SMS isn’t zero rated). Phone number verification may be required for several
system services in addition to iMessage, such as FaceTime and iCloud. All the user’s
registered devices display an alert message when a new device, phone number or email
address is added.
The resulting messages, one for each receiving device, consist of the encrypted message
text, the encrypted message key and the sender’s digital signature. They are then
dispatched to the APNs for delivery. Metadata, such as the timestamp and APNs routing
information, isn’t encrypted. Communication with APNs is encrypted using a forward-
secret TLS channel.
APNs can only relay messages up to 4 or 16KB in size, depending on the iOS or iPadOS
version. If the message text is too long or if an attachment such as a photo is included, the
attachment is encrypted using AES in CTR mode with a randomly generated 256-bit key
and uploaded to iCloud. The AES key for the attachment, its Uniform Resource Identifier
(URI) and an SHA-1 hash of its encrypted form are then sent to the recipient as the
contents of an iMessage, with their confidentiality and integrity protected through normal
iMessage encryption, as shown in the following diagram.
On the receiving side, each device receives its copy of the message from APNs and, if
necessary, retrieves the attachment from iCloud. The incoming phone number or email
address of the sender is matched to the receiver’s contacts so that a name can be
displayed when possible.
As with all push notifications, the message is deleted from APNs when it’s delivered. Unlike
other APNs notifications, however, iMessage messages are queued for delivery to offline
devices. Messages are stored on Apple servers for up to 30 days.
The data is subdivided into fields, each encrypted and authenticated separately as well as
authenticated together with the below process. There are three fields:
• Name
• Photo
• Photo filename
One of the first steps in creating the data is to randomly generate a record 128-bit key
on the device. This record key is then derived with HKDF-HMAC-SHA256 to create three
subkeys: Key 1:Key 2:Key 3 = HKDF(record key, “nicknames”). For each field, a random
96-bit Initialisation Vector (IV) is generated and the data is encrypted using AES-CTR and
Key 1. A message authentication code (MAC) is then computed with HMAC-SHA256 using
Key 2 and covering the field name, the field IV and the field ciphertext. Finally, the set
of individual field MAC values are concatenated and their MAC is computed with HMAC-
SHA256 using Key 3. The 256-bit MAC is stored alongside the encrypted data. The first
128 bits of this MAC is used as RecordID.
This encrypted record is then stored in the CloudKit public database under the RecordID.
This record is never mutated and when the user chooses to change their name and photo,
a new encrypted record is generated each time. When user 1 chooses to share their
name and photo with user 2, they send the record key along with the recordID inside their
iMessage payload, which is encrypted.
When user 2’s device receives this iMessage payload, it notices that the payload contains a
Nickname and Photo recordID and key. User 2’s device then goes out to the public CloudKit
database to retrieve the encrypted name and photo at the record ID and sends it across
using iMessage.
After the message is retrieved, user 2’s device decrypts the payload and verifies the
signature using the recordID itself. If this passes, user 2 is presented with the name and
photo and they can choose to add this to their contacts or use it for Messages.
Apple Messages for Business supports Managed Apple IDs from Apple Business Manager
and determines whether they are enabled for iMessage and FaceTime in Apple School
Manager.
Messages sent to the business are encrypted between the user’s device and Apple’s
messaging servers using the same security and Apple messaging servers as iMessages.
Apple messaging servers decrypt these messages in RAM and relay them to the business
over an encrypted link using TLS 1.2. Messages are never stored in unencrypted form while
transiting through the Apple Messages for Business service. Businesses’ replies are also
sent using TLS 1.2 to the Apple messaging servers, where they are encrypted using the
unique public keys of each recipient device.
If user devices are online, the message is delivered immediately and isn’t cached on the
Apple messaging servers. If a user’s device isn’t online, the encrypted message is cached
for up to 30 days to enable the user to receive it when the device is back online. As soon
as the device is back online, the message is delivered and deleted from cache. After 30
days, an undelivered cached message expires and is permanently deleted.
FaceTime security
FaceTime is Apple’s video and audio calling service. Like iMessage, FaceTime calls use
the Apple Push Notification service (APNs) to establish an initial connection to the user’s
registered devices. The audio/video contents of FaceTime calls are protected by end-
to-end encryption, so no one but the sender and receiver can access them. Apple can’t
decrypt the data.
The initial FaceTime connection is made through an Apple server infrastructure that relays
data packets between the users’ registered devices. Using APNs notifications and Session
Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) messages over the relayed connection, the devices
verify their identity certificates and establish a shared secret for each session. The shared
secret is used to derive session keys for media channels streamed using the Secure Real-
time Transport Protocol (SRTP). SRTP packets are encrypted using AES256 in Counter
Mode and authenticated with HMAC-SHA1. After the initial connection and security setup,
FaceTime uses STUN and Internet Connectivity Establishment (ICE) to establish a peer-to-
peer connection between devices, if possible.
When a new phone number or email address is added to an ongoing Group FaceTime call,
active devices establish new media keys and never share previously used keys with the
newly invited devices.
Find My
Find My security
The Find My app for Apple devices is built on a foundation of advanced public key
cryptography.
Overview
The Find My app combines Find My iPhone and Find My Friends into a single app in iOS,
iPadOS and macOS. Find My can help users locate a missing device, even an offline Mac.
An online device can simply report its location to the user via iCloud. Find My works offline
by sending out short range Bluetooth signals from the missing device that can be detected
by other Apple devices in use nearby. Those nearby devices then relay the detected
location of the missing device to iCloud so users can locate it in the Find My app — all
while protecting the privacy and security of all the users involved. Find My even works with
a Mac that is offline and asleep.
Using Bluetooth and the hundreds of millions of iOS, iPadOS and macOS devices in active
use around the world, a user can locate their missing device even if it can’t connect to
a Wi-Fi or mobile data network. Any iOS, iPadOS or macOS device with “offline finding”
enabled in Find My settings can act as a “finder device”. This means the device can detect
the presence of another missing offline device using Bluetooth and then use its network
connection to report an approximate location back to the owner. When a device has offline
finding enabled, it also means that it can be located by other participants in the same way.
This entire interaction is end-to-end encrypted, anonymous, and designed to be battery
and data efficient. There is minimal impact on battery life and data plan usage, and user
privacy is better protected.
Based on the key SKi, two large integers ui and vi are computed with (ui,vi) = KDF(SKi,
“diversify”). Both the P-224 private key denoted d and corresponding public key referred
to as P are then derived using an affine relation involving the two integers to compute a
short-lived key pair: The derived private key is di, where di = ui * d + vi (modulo the order of
the P-224 curve) and the corresponding public part is Pi and verifies that Pi = ui*P + vi*G.
When a device goes missing and can’t connect to Wi-Fi or mobile data — for example,
a MacBook Pro is left on a park bench — it begins periodically broadcasting the derived
public key Pi for a limited period of time in a Bluetooth payload. By using P-224, the public
key representation can fit into a single Bluetooth payload. The surrounding devices can
then help in the finding of the offline device by encrypting their location to the public
key. Approximately every 15 minutes, the public key is replaced by a new one using an
incremented value of the counter and the process above so that the user can’t be tracked
by a persistent identifier. The derivation mechanism is designed to prevent the various
public keys Pi from being linked to the same device.
When trying to locate the missing device, an expected range of counter values is estimated
for the location search period. With the knowledge of the original private P-224 key d
and secret values SKi in the range of counter values of the search period, the owner can
then reconstruct the set of values {di, SHA256(Pi)} for the entire search period. The owner
device used to locate the missing device can then perform queries to the server using the
set of index values SHA256(Pi) and download the encrypted locations from the server. The
Find My app then locally decrypts the encrypted locations with the matching private keys
di and shows an approximate location of the missing device in the app. Location reports
from multiple finder devices are combined by the owner’s app to generate a more precise
location.
When a missing offline device is located, the user receives a notification and email
message to let them know the device has been found. To view the location of the missing
device, the user opens the Find My app and selects the Devices tab. Rather than showing
the device on a blank map as it would have prior to the device being located, Find My
shows a map location with an approximate address and information on how long ago
the device was detected. If more location reports come in, the current location and time
stamp both update automatically. Although users can’t play a sound on an offline device or
erase it remotely, they can use the location information to retrace their steps or take other
actions to help them recover it.
Continuity
Handoff security
Apple handles handoffs securely, whether from one device to another, between a native
app and a website — even handoffs of large amounts of data.
When a user signs in to iCloud on a second Handoff-capable device, the two devices
establish a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) 4.2 pairing out-of-band using APNs. The individual
messages are encrypted much like messages in iMessage are. After the devices are paired,
each device generates a symmetric 256-bit AES key that gets stored in the device’s
keychain. This key can encrypt and authenticate the BLE advertisements that communicate
the device’s current activity to other iCloud-paired devices using AES256 in GCM mode,
with replay protection measures.
To help prevent native apps from claiming to resume websites not controlled by the
developer, the app must demonstrate legitimate control over the web domains it wants to
resume. Control over a website domain is established using the mechanism for shared web
credentials. For details, see App access to saved passwords. The system must validate an
app’s domain name control before the app is permitted to accept user activity Handoff.
The source of a web page Handoff can be any browser that has adopted the Handoff APIs.
When the user views a web page, the system advertises the domain name of the web page
in the encrypted Handoff advertisement bytes. Only the user’s other devices can decrypt
the advertisement bytes.
On a receiving device, the system detects that an installed native app accepts Handoff
from the advertised domain name and displays that native app icon as the Handoff option.
When launched, the native app receives the full URL and the title of the web page. No other
information is passed from the browser to the native app.
In the opposite direction, a native app may specify a fallback URL when a Handoff receiving
device doesn’t have the same native app installed. In this case, the system displays the
user’s default browser as the Handoff app option (if that browser has adopted Handoff
APIs). When Handoff is requested, the browser is launched and given the fallback URL
provided by the source app. There is no requirement that the fallback URL be limited to
domain names controlled by the native app developer.
When an app uses these APIs, the exchange between the two devices starts off just as
in Handoff. But after receiving the initial payload using Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), the
receiving device initiates a new connection over Wi-Fi. This connection is encrypted (with
TLS), and it derives trust through an identity shared through iCloud Keychain. The identity
in the certificates is verified against the user’s identity. Further payload data is sent over
this encrypted connection until the transfer is complete.
Apps have access to clipboard data regardless of whether the user has pasted the
clipboard into the app. With Universal Clipboard, this data access extends to apps on the
user’s other devices (as established by their iCloud sign-in).
When an incoming call arrives, all configured devices are notified using the Apple Push
Notification service (APNs), with each notification using the same end-to-end encryption
as iMessage. Devices that are on the same network present the incoming call notification
user interface. When the user answers the call, the audio is seamlessly transmitted from
the user’s iPhone using a secure peer-to-peer connection between the two devices.
Outgoing calls are also relayed to iPhone using APNs and audio is similarly transmitted
over the secure peer-to-peer link between devices. Users can disable phone call relay on a
device by turning off iPhone Mobile Calls in FaceTime settings.
After devices are linked, iPhone encrypts and forwards incoming SMS text messages
to each device, utilising the methods described in iMessage security overview. Replies
are sent back to iPhone using the same method and then iPhone sends the reply as a
text message using the network provider’s SMS transmission mechanism. Text Message
Forwarding can be turned on or off in Messages settings.
Initially, when a user enters Wi-Fi settings on a device, it emits a BLE advertisement
containing an identifier that all devices signed in to the same iCloud account agree upon.
The identifier is generated from a DSID (Destination Signaling Identifier) that’s tied to the
iCloud account and rotated periodically. When other devices signed in to the same iCloud
account are in close proximity and support Personal Hotspot, they detect the signal and
respond, indicating the availability to use Instant Hotspot.
When a user who isn’t part of Family Sharing chooses an iPhone or iPad for Personal
Hotspot, a request to turn on Personal Hotspot is sent to that device. The request is sent
across a link that is encrypted using BLE encryption, and the request is encrypted in a
fashion similar to iMessage encryption. The device then responds across the same BLE link
using the same per-message encryption with Personal Hotspot connection information.
For users that are part of Family Sharing, Personal Hotspot connection information is
securely shared using a mechanism similar to that used by HomeKit devices to sync
information. Specifically, the connection that shares hotspot information between users is
secured with an ECDH (Curve25519) ephemeral key that is authenticated with the users’
respective device-specific Ed25519 public keys. The public keys used are those that had
previously synced between the members of Family Sharing using IDS when the Family
Share was established.
Because users must be able to access corporate networks from anywhere in the world,
it’s important to help ensure that they are authorised and that their data is protected
during transmission. To accomplish these security objectives, iOS, iPadOS and macOS
integrate proven technologies and the latest standards for both Wi-Fi and mobile data
network connections. That’s why our operating systems use — and provide developer
access to — standard networking protocols for authenticated, authorised and encrypted
communications.
TLS security
iOS, iPadOS and macOS support Transport Layer Security (TLS 1.0, TLS 1.1, TLS 1.2,
TLS 1.3) and Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS). The TLS protocol supports
both AES128 and AES256, and prefers cipher suites with forward secrecy. Internet apps
such as Safari, Calendar and Mail automatically use this protocol to enable an encrypted
communication channel between the device and network services. High-level APIs (such
as CFNetwork) make it easy for developers to adopt TLS in their apps, while low-level APIs
(such as Network.framework) provide fine-grained control. CFNetwork disallows SSL 3, and
apps that use WebKit (such as Safari) are prohibited from making an SSL 3 connection.
In iOS 11 or later and macOS 10.13 or later, SHA-1 certificates are no longer allowed for
TLS connections unless trusted by the user. Certificates with RSA keys shorter than 2048
bits are also disallowed. The RC4 symmetric cipher suite is deprecated in iOS 10 and
macOS 10.12. By default, TLS clients or servers implemented with SecureTransport APIs
don’t have RC4 cipher suites enabled and are unable to connect when RC4 is the only
cipher suite available. To be more secure, services or apps that require RC4 should be
upgraded to use secure cipher suites. In iOS 12.1, certificates issued after 15 October 2018
from a system-trusted root certificate must be logged in a trusted Certificate Transparency
log to be allowed for TLS connections. In iOS 12.2, TLS 1.3 is enabled by default for
Network.framework and NSURLSession APIs. TLS clients using the SecureTransport APIs
can’t use TLS 1.3.
Apps are able to disable the forward secrecy requirement per domain, in which case RSA_
AES is added to the set of available ciphers.
Servers must support TLS 1.2 and forward secrecy, and certificates must be valid and
signed using SHA256 or stronger with a minimum 2048-bit RSA key or 256-bit elliptic
curve key.
Network connections that don’t meet these requirements will fail unless the app
overrides App Transport Security. Invalid certificates always result in a hard failure and no
connection. App Transport Security is automatically applied to apps that are compiled for
iOS 9 or later and macOS 10.11 or later.
IPv6 security
All Apple operating systems support IPv6, implementing several mechanisms to protect
the privacy of users and the stability of the networking stack. When Stateless Address
Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) is used, the IPv6 addresses of all interfaces are generated in
a way that helps prevent tracking devices across networks, and at the same time allows
for a good user experience by ensuring address stability when no network changes
take place. The address generation algorithm is based on cryptographically generated
addresses as of RFC 3972, enhanced by an interface-specific modifier to warrant that even
different interfaces on the same network eventually have different addresses. Furthermore,
temporary addresses are created with a preferred lifetime of 24 hours, and these are
used by default for any new connections. Aligned with the Private Wi-Fi address feature
introduced in iOS 14, iPadOS 14 and watchOS 7, a unique link-local address is generated
for every Wi-Fi network that a device joins. The network’s SSID is incorporated as an
additional element for the address generation, similar to the Network_ID parameter as of
RFC 7217. This approach is used in iOS 14, iPadOS 14 and watchOS 7.
In addition, to help ensure the reliability of the IPv6 stack of Apple operating systems,
Apple devices enforce various limits on IPv6-related data structures, such as the number
of prefixes per interface.
Protocols supported
These devices work with VPN servers that support the following protocols and
authentication methods:
• IKEv2/IPsec with authentication by shared secret, RSA Certificates, Elliptic Curve Digital
Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) Certificates, EAP-MSCHAPv2 or EAP-TLS
• SSL-VPN using the appropriate client app from the App Store
• L2TP/IPsec with user authentication by MS-CHAPV2 password and machine
authentication by shared secret (iOS, iPadOS and macOS) and RSA SecurID or
CRYPTOCard (macOS only)
• Cisco IPsec with user authentication by password, RSA SecurID or CRYPTOCard, and
machine authentication by shared secret and certificates (macOS only)
• Per App VPN: For facilitating VPN connections on a much more granular basis. Mobile
device management (MDM) solutions can specify a connection for each managed app
and specific domains in Safari. This helps ensure that secure data always goes to and
from the corporate network — and that a user’s personal data doesn’t.
• Always On VPN: For devices managed through an MDM solution and supervised
using Apple Configurator for Mac, Apple School Manager or Apple Business Manager.
Always On VPN eliminates the need for users to turn on VPN to enable protection when
connecting to mobile and Wi-Fi networks. It also gives an organisation full control
over device traffic by tunnelling all IP traffic back to the organisation. The default
exchange of parameters and keys for the subsequent encryption, IKEv2, secures traffic
transmission with data encryption. The organisation can monitor and filter traffic to
and from its devices, secure data within its network and restrict device access to the
internet.
Wi-Fi security
• WPA2 Personal
• WPA2 Enterprise
• WPA2/WPA3 Transitional
• WPA3 Personal
• WPA3 Enterprise
• WPA3 Enterprise 192-bit security
WPA2 and WPA3 authenticate each connection and provide 128-bit AES encryption to
help ensure confidentiality of data sent over the air. This grants users the highest level
of assurance that their data remains protected when they’re sending and receiving
communications over a Wi-Fi network connection.
• iPhone 7 or later
• Apple TV 4K or later
Newer devices support authentication with WPA3 Enterprise 192-bit security, including
support for 256-bit AES encryption when connecting to compatible wireless access
points (APs). This provides even stronger confidentiality protections for traffic sent
over the air. WPA3 Enterprise 192-bit security is supported on iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro,
iPhone 11 Pro Max, and later iOS and iPadOS devices.
PMF support
In addition to protecting data sent over the air, Apple platforms extend WPA2 and WPA3
level protections to unicast and multicast management frames through the Protected
Management Frame (PMF) service defined in 802.11w. PMF support is available on the
following Apple devices:
• iPhone 6 or later
• Apple TV HD or later
With support for 802.1X, Apple devices can be integrated into a broad range of RADIUS
authentication environments. 802.1X wireless authentication methods supported include
EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-FAST, EAP-SIM, PEAPv0 and PEAPv1.
Platform protections
Apple operating systems protect the device from vulnerabilities in network processor
firmware. This means network controllers with Wi-Fi have limited access to Application
Processor memory.
• When USB or SDIO (Secure Digital Input Output) is used to interface with the
network processor, the network processor can’t initiate direct memory access (DMA)
transactions to the Application Processor.
• When PCIe is used, each network processor is on its own isolated PCIe bus. An Input/
Output Memory Management Unit (IOMMU) on each PCIe bus further limits the network
processor’s DMA access to only memory and resources containing its network packets
and control structures.
• Dynamic WEP
• WPA
• WPA/WPA2 Transitional
These protocols are no longer considered secure and their use is strongly discouraged
for compatibility, reliability, performance and security reasons. They are supported for
backward compatibility purposes only and may be removed in future software versions.
It’s recommended that all Wi-Fi implementations be migrated to WPA3 Personal or WPA3
Enterprise, to provide the most robust, secure and compatible Wi-Fi connections possible.
Wi-Fi privacy
Apple platforms also use a randomised MAC address when conducting enhanced Preferred
Network Offload (ePNO) scans when a device isn’t associated with a Wi-Fi network or its
processor is asleep. ePNO scans are run when a device uses Location Services for apps
that use geofences, such as location-based reminders that determine whether the device
is near a specific location.
Because a device’s MAC address changes when disconnected from a Wi-Fi network,
it can’t be used to persistently track a device by passive observers of Wi-Fi traffic,
even when the device is connected to a mobile network. Apple has informed Wi-Fi
manufacturers that iOS and iPadOS Wi-Fi scans use a randomised MAC address and that
neither Apple nor manufacturers can predict these randomised MAC addresses.
In iOS 14 or later, iPadOS 14 or later, and watchOS 7 or later, when an iPhone, iPad,
iPod touch or Apple Watch connects to a Wi-Fi network, it identifies itself with a unique
(random) MAC address per network. This feature can be disabled either by the user or by
using a new option in the Wi-Fi payload. Under certain circumstances, the device will fall
back to the actual MAC address.
For more information, see the Apple Support article Use private Wi-Fi addresses on iPhone,
iPad, iPod touch and Apple Watch.
To guard against this, Apple devices randomise the sequence numbers whenever a MAC
address is changed to a new randomised address. This includes randomising the sequence
numbers for each new scan request that’s initiated while the device is unassociated. This
randomisation is supported on the following devices:
• iPhone 7 or later
• Apple TV 4K or later
Wi-Fi connections
Apple generates randomised MAC addresses for the Peer-to-Peer Wi-Fi connections
that are used for AirDrop and AirPlay. Randomised addresses are also used for Personal
Hotspot in iOS and iPadOS (with a SIM card) and Internet Sharing in macOS.
New random addresses are generated whenever these network interfaces are started, and
unique addresses are independently generated for each interface as needed.
Hidden networks
Wi-Fi networks are identified by their network name, known as a service set identifier
(SSID). Some Wi-Fi networks are configured to hide their SSID, which results in the wireless
access point not broadcasting the network’s name. These are known as hidden networks.
iPhone 6s and later devices automatically detect when a network is hidden. If a network is
hidden, the iOS or iPadOS device sends a probe with the SSID included in the request —
not otherwise. This helps prevent the device from broadcasting the name of previously
hidden networks a user was connected to, thereby further ensuring privacy.
• Pairing: The process for creating one or more shared secret keys
• Bonding: The act of storing the keys created during pairing for use in subsequent
connections to form a trusted device pair
• Authentication: Verifying that the two devices have the same keys
• Secure Simple Pairing: Protection against passive eavesdropping and protection against
man-in-the-middle attacks
Bluetooth version 4.1 added the Secure Connections feature to Bluetooth Classic (BR/EDR)
physical transport.
The security features for each type of Bluetooth are listed below.
Message integrity AES-CCM, used for message AES-CCM, used for message integrity
integrity
Secure Simple Pairing: Protection Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman Exchange
against passive eavesdropping Exchange Ephemeral (ECDHE) (ECDHE)
Secure Simple Pairing: Protection Two user-assisted numeric Two user-assisted numeric methods:
against man-in-the-middle methods: numerical comparison or numerical comparison or passkey entry
(MITM) attacks passkey entry Pairings require a user response,
including all non-MITM pairing modes
Address randomisation is a feature that reduces the ability to track a BLE device over a
period of time by changing the Bluetooth device address on a frequent basis. For a device
using the privacy feature to reconnect to known devices, the device address, referred
to as the private address, must be resolvable by the other device. The private address
is generated using the device’s identity resolving key exchanged during the pairing
procedure.
iOS 13 or later and iPadOS 13.1 or later have the ability to derive link keys across
transports, a feature known as cross-transport key derivation. For example, a link key
generated with BLE can be used to derive a Bluetooth Classic link key. In addition, Apple
added Bluetooth Classic to BLE support for devices that support the Secured Connections
feature that was introduced in the Bluetooth Core Specification 4.1 (see the Bluetooth Core
Specification 5.1).
Single sign-on
Single sign-on
iOS and iPadOS support authentication to enterprise networks through Single sign-on
(SSO). SSO works with Kerberos-based networks to authenticate users to services they
are authorised to access. SSO can be used for a range of network activities, from secure
Safari sessions to third-party apps. Certificate-based authentication such as PKINIT is also
supported.
macOS supports authentication to enterprise networks using Kerberos. Apps can use
Kerberos to authenticate users to services they’re authorised to access. Kerberos can also
be used for a range of network activities, from secure Safari sessions and network file
system authentication to third-party apps. Certificate-based authentication is supported,
although app adoption of a developer API is required.
iOS, iPadOS and macOS SSO use SPNEGO tokens and the HTTP Negotiate protocol to work
with Kerberos-based authentication gateways and Windows Integrated Authentication systems
that support Kerberos tickets. SSO support is based on the open source Heimdal project.
• AES-128-CTS-HMAC-SHA1-96
• AES-256-CTS-HMAC-SHA1-96
• DES3-CBC-SHA1
• ARCFOUR-HMAC-MD5
Safari supports SSO, and third-party apps that use standard iOS and iPadOS networking
APIs can also be configured to use it. To configure SSO, iOS and iPadOS support a
configuration profile payload that allows mobile device management (MDM) solutions to
push down the necessary settings. This includes setting the user principal name (that
is, the Active Directory user account) and Kerberos realm settings as well as configuring
which apps and Safari web URLs should be allowed to use SSO.
To configure Kerberos in macOS, acquire tickets with Ticket Viewer, log in to a Windows
Active Directory domain or use the kinit command-line tool.
To use a Single sign-on extension, an app can either use the AuthenticationServices API or
can rely on the URL interception mechanism offered by the operating system. WebKit and
CFNetwork provide an interception layer that permits seamless support of Single sign-on
for any native or WebKit app. For a Single sign-on extension to be invoked, a configuration
provided by an administrator has to be installed though a mobile device management
(MDM) profile. In addition, redirect type extensions must use the Associated Domains
payload to prove that the identity server they support is aware of their existence.
The only extension provided with the operating system is the Kerberos SSO extension.
AirDrop security
Apple devices that support AirDrop use Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and Apple-created
peer-to-peer Wi-Fi technology to send files and information to nearby devices, including
AirDrop-capable iOS devices and iPad devices with iOS 7 or later and Mac computers
with OS X 10.11 or later. The Wi-Fi radio is used to communicate directly between devices
without using any internet connection or wireless access point (AP). This connection is
encrypted with TLS.
AirDrop is set to share with Contacts Only by default. Users can also choose to use AirDrop
to share with everyone, or turn off the feature entirely. Organisations can restrict the use of
AirDrop for devices or apps being managed by using a mobile device management (MDM)
solution.
When a user chooses AirDrop as the method for sharing an item, the sending device emits
an AirDrop signal over BLE that includes the user’s AirDrop short identity hash. Other Apple
devices that are awake, in close proximity and have AirDrop turned on detect the signal and
respond using peer-to-peer Wi-Fi so that the sending device can discover the identity of
any responding devices.
In Contacts Only mode, the received AirDrop short identity hash is compared with hashes
of people in the receiving device’s Contacts app. If a match is found, the receiving device
responds over peer-to-peer Wi-Fi with its identity information. If there is no match, the
device doesn’t respond.
In Everyone mode, the same overall process is used. However, the receiving device
responds even if there is no match in the device’s Contacts app.
The sending device then initiates an AirDrop connection using peer-to-peer Wi-Fi, using
this connection to send a long identity hash to the receiving device. If the long identity
hash matches the hash of a known person in the receiver’s Contacts, then the receiver
responds with its long identity hashes.
If the hashes are verified, the recipient’s first name and photo (if present in Contacts) are
displayed in the sender’s AirDrop share sheet. In iOS and iPadOS, they are shown in the
“People” or “Devices” section. Devices that aren’t verified or authenticated are displayed in
the sender’s AirDrop share sheet with a silhouette icon and the device’s name, as defined
in Settings > General > About > Name. In iOS and iPadOS, they are placed in the “Other
People” section of the AirDrop share sheet.
The sending user may then select who they want to share with. Upon user selection, the
sending device initiates an encrypted (TLS) connection with the receiving device, which
exchanges their iCloud identity certificates. The identity in the certificates is verified
against each user’s Contacts app.
If the certificates are verified, the receiving user is asked to accept the incoming transfer
from the identified user or device. If multiple recipients have been selected, this process is
repeated for each destination.
When a user selects a Wi-Fi network (requestor) and is prompted for the Wi-Fi password,
the Apple device starts a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) advertisement indicating that it
wants the Wi-Fi password. Other Apple devices that are awake, in close proximity and have
the password for the selected Wi-Fi network connect using BLE to the requesting device.
The device that has the Wi-Fi password (grantor) requires the Contact information of
the requestor, and the requestor must prove their identity using a similar mechanism to
AirDrop. After identity is proven, the grantor sends the requestor the passcode which can
be used to join the network.
Organisations can restrict the use of Wi-Fi password sharing for devices or apps being
managed through a mobile device management (MDM) solution.
• Prevent the Mac from responding to ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) probing
and portscan requests.
• HomeKit
• CloudKit
• SiriKit
• DriverKit
• ReplayKit
• ARKit
HomeKit security
HomeKit identity and security are based on Ed25519 public-private key pairs. An Ed25519
key pair is generated on the iOS, iPadOS and macOS device for each user for HomeKit,
which becomes their HomeKit identity. It’s used to authenticate communication between
iOS, iPadOS and macOS devices, and between iOS, iPadOS and macOS devices and
accessories.
The keys — stored in keychain and are included only in encrypted Keychain backups — are
kept up to date between devices using iCloud Keychain, where available. HomePod and
Apple TV receive keys using tap-to-set-up or the setup mode described below. Keys are
shared from an iPhone to a paired Apple Watch using Apple IDentity Service (IDS).
To establish a relationship between an iOS, iPadOS and macOS device and a HomeKit
accessory, keys are exchanged using Secure Remote Password (3072-bit) protocol
utilising an eight-digit code provided by the accessory’s manufacturer, entered on the iOS
or iPadOS device by the user, and then encrypted using ChaCha20-Poly1305 AEAD with
HKDF-SHA512 derived keys. The accessory’s MFi certification is also verified during setup.
Accessories without an MFi chip can build in support for software authentication in iOS 11.3
or later.
When the iOS, iPadOS and macOS device and the HomeKit accessory communicate during
use, each authenticates the other using the keys exchanged in the above process. Each
session is established using the Station-to-Station protocol and is encrypted with HKDF-
SHA512 derived keys based on per-session Curve25519 keys. This applies to both IP-
based and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) accessories.
For BLE devices that support broadcast notifications, the accessory is provisioned with
a broadcast encryption key by a paired iOS, iPadOS and macOS device over a secure
session. This key is used to encrypt the data about state changes on the accessory, which
are notified using the BLE advertisements. The broadcast encryption key is an HKDF-
SHA512 derived key, and the data is encrypted using ChaCha20-Poly1305 AEAD algorithm.
The broadcast encryption key is periodically changed by the iOS, iPadOS and macOS
device and updated to other devices using iCloud as described in HomeKit data security.
When Listen for Hey Siri is turned on, the accessory listens for the “Hey Siri” phrase using
a locally running trigger-phrase detection engine. If this engine detects the phrase, it
sends the audio frames directly to a paired HomePod using HomeKit. The HomePod does a
second check on the audio and may cancel the audio session if the phrase doesn’t appear
to contain the trigger phrase.
When Touch for Siri is turned on, the user can press a dedicated button on the accessory
to start a conversation with Siri. The audio frames are sent directly to the paired HomePod.
The accessory is required to have a visual indicator to signal to a user when it’s actively
listening (for example, an LED indicator). The accessory has no knowledge of the intent of
the Siri request, except for access to the audio streams, and no user data is stored on the
accessory.
HomeKit data is also synced between multiple users of the same home. This process uses
authentication and encryption that is the same as that used between an iOS, iPadOS and
macOS device and a HomeKit accessory. The authentication is based on Ed25519 public
keys that are exchanged between the devices when a user is added to a home. After a new
user is added to a home, all further communication is authenticated and encrypted using
Station-to-Station protocol and per-session keys.
The user who initially created the home in HomeKit or another user with editing
permissions can add new users. The owner’s device configures the accessories with the
public key of the new user so that the accessory can authenticate and accept commands
from the new user. When a user with editing permissions adds a new user, the process is
delegated to a home hub to complete the operation.
If a user doesn’t have multiple devices and doesn’t grant additional users access to their
home, no HomeKit data is transmitted to iCloud.
Using the Home app, a user can configure access restrictions for groups of accessories as
follows:
• No restriction: Allow unrestricted access to the internet and the local network.
• Automatic: This is the default setting. Allow access to the internet and the local network
based on a list of internet sites and local ports provided to Apple by the accessory
manufacturer. This list includes all sites and ports needed by the accessory to function
properly. (No Restriction is in place until such a list is available.)
• Restrict to Home: No access to the internet or the local network except for the
connections required by HomeKit to discover and control the accessory from the local
network (including from the home hub to support remote control).
As an additional security measure, users must configure the HomeKit router using the
router manufacturer’s app, so that the app can validate that users have access to the
router and can add it to the Home app.
For face classification, HomeKit stores all data used to classify a particular person’s face in
CloudKit using iCloud end-to-end encryption. The data stored includes information about
each person, such as name, as well as images representing that person’s face. These face
images can be sourced from a user’s Photos if they opt in, or they can be collected from
previously analysed IP camera video. A HomeKit Secure Video analysis session uses this
classification data to identify faces in the secure video stream it receives directly from
the IP camera and includes that identification information in the clip metadata mentioned
previously.
When the Home app is used to view the clips of a camera, the data is downloaded from
iCloud and the keys to decrypt the streams are unwrapped locally using iCloud end-to-
end decryption. The encrypted video content is streamed from the servers and decrypted
locally on the iOS device before displaying it in the viewer. Each video clip session may be
broken down into subsections, with each subsection encrypting the content stream with its
own unique key.
When a setting is turned on, the iTunes account of the user is made available on the
Apple TV. When a setting is turned off, all account and data pertaining to that user is
deleted on the Apple TV. The initial CloudKit share is initiated by the user’s device and the
token to establish the secure CloudKit share is sent over the same secure channel that is
used to sync data between users of the home.
However, if the user has granted the app access to contact information, the app would
receive resolved information about the user’s mother. If a relationship is referenced in the
body portion of a message — for example, “Tell my mother on MessageApp that my brother
is awesome” — Siri doesn’t resolve “my brother” regardless of the app’s permissions.
For an utterance like “Get me a ride to my mum’s home using RideShareApp”, the request
requires location data from the user’s contacts. For that request only, Siri provides the
required information to the app’s extension regardless of the user permission settings for
location or contact information for the app.
The user simply downloads the app (installers aren’t necessary when using system
extensions or DriverKit) and the extension is enabled only when required. These replace
kexts for many use cases, which require administrator privileges to install in /System/
Library or /Library.
IT administrators who use device drivers, cloud storage solutions, networking, and security
apps that require kernel extensions are encouraged to move to newer versions that are
built on system extensions. These newer versions greatly reduce the possibility of kernel
panics on the Mac as well as reduce the attack surface. These new extensions run in the
user space, won’t require special privileges required for installation and are automatically
removed when the bundling app is moved to the Bin.
The DriverKit framework provides C++ classes for I/O services, device matching, memory
descriptors and dispatch queues. It also defines I/O-appropriate types for numbers,
collections, strings and other common types. The user uses these with family-specific
driver frameworks like USBDriverKit and HIDDriverKit. Use the System Extensions
framework to install and upgrade a driver.
• Permissions dialogue: Before recording starts, ReplayKit presents a user consent alert
requesting that the user acknowledge their intent to record the screen, the microphone
and the front-facing camera. This alert is presented once per app process and it’s
presented again if the app is left in the background for longer than 8 minutes.
• Screen and audio capture: Screen and audio capture occurs out of the app’s process in
the ReplayKit daemon replayd. This is designed to ensure the recorded content is never
accessible to the app process.
• In-app screen and audio capture: This allows an app to get video and sample buffers,
which are guarded by the permissions dialogue.
• Movie creation and storage: The movie file is written to a directory that’s only
accessible to the ReplayKit subsystems and is never accessible to any apps. This helps
prevent recordings being used by third parties without the user’s consent.
• End-user preview and sharing: The user has the ability to preview and share the movie
with a user interface vended by ReplayKit. The user interface is presented out-of-
process through the iOS Extension infrastructure and has access to the generated
movie file.
ReplayKit broadcasting
There are several layers of security built into broadcasting a video:
• Screen and audio capture: The screen and audio capture mechanism during
broadcasting is identical to movie recording and occurs in replayd.
• A user interface extension that allows the user to set up their broadcast
• An upload extension that handles uploading video and audio data to the service’s
back-end servers
The architecture helps ensure that hosting apps have no privileges to the broadcasted video
and audio contents. Only ReplayKit and the third-party broadcast extensions have access.
• Broadcast picker: With the broadcast picker, users initiate system broadcasts directly
from their app using the same system-defined user interface that’s accessible using
Control Centre. The user interface is implemented using a private API and is an
extension that lives within the ReplayKit framework. It is out-of-process from the
hosting app.
Apple designed cameras with privacy in mind and third-party apps must obtain the user’s
consent before accessing the camera. In iOS and iPadOS, when a user grants an app
access to their camera, that app can access real-time images from the front and rear
cameras. Apps aren’t allowed to use the camera without transparency that the camera is
in use.
Photos and videos taken with the camera may contain other information, such as where
and when they were taken, the depth of field and overcapture. If users don’t want photos
and videos taken with the Camera app to include location, they can control this at any time
by going to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > Camera. If users don’t want photos
and video to include location when shared, they can turn location off in the Options menu
in the share sheet.
To better position the user’s AR experience, apps that use ARKit can use world- or face-
tracking information from the other camera. World tracking uses algorithms on the user’s
device to process information from these sensors to determine their position relative to a
physical space. World tracking enables features such as Optical Heading in Maps.
In iOS 13 or later, iPadOS 13.1 or later, and macOS 10.15 or later, Apple devices support a
new user enrolment option specifically designed for BYOD programmes. User enrolments
provide more autonomy for users on their own devices, while increasing the security of
enterprise data by storing it on a separate, cryptographically protected APFS (Apple File
System) volume. This provides a better balance of security, privacy and user experience for
BYOD programmes.
• That require pairing can’t be started until after the device has been unlocked by the user
• May require the device to be unlocked to begin (such as with photo syncing)
A user can clear the list of trusted hosts with the Reset Network Settings or Reset Location
& Privacy options.
In addition to the traditional device enrolments supported by iOS, iPadOS, macOS and
tvOS, an enrolment type has been added in iOS 13 or later, iPadOS 13.1 or later, and
macOS 10.15 or later — User Enrolment. User enrolments are MDM enrolments specifically
targeting “bring your own device” (BYOD) deployments where the device is personally
owned but used in a managed environment. User enrolments grant the MDM solution more
limited privileges than unsupervised device enrolments do and provide cryptographic
separation of user and corporate data.
• Device Enrolment: Device Enrolment allows organisations to have users manually enrol
devices and then manage many different aspects of device use, including the ability to
erase the device. Device Enrolment also has a larger set of payloads and restrictions
that can be applied to the device. When a user removes an enrolment profile, all
configuration profiles, their settings and managed apps based on that enrolment profile
are removed with it.
• User Enrolment: User Enrolment is designed for devices owned by the user and
is integrated with Managed Apple IDs to establish a user identity on the device.
Managed Apple IDs are part of the User Enrolment profile, and the user must
successfully authenticate in order for enrolment to be completed. Managed Apple IDs
can be used alongside a personal Apple ID that the user has already signed in with.
Managed apps and accounts use a Managed Apple ID, and personal apps and accounts
use a personal Apple ID.
Device restrictions
Restrictions can be enabled — or in some cases, disabled — by administrators to help
prevent users from accessing a specific app, service or function of an iPhone, iPad,
Mac or Apple TV that’s enrolled in an MDM solution. Restrictions are sent to devices in
a restrictions payload which is part of a configuration profile. Certain restrictions on an
iPhone may be mirrored on a paired Apple Watch.
Administrators can enforce complex passcode requirements and other policies using MDM
or Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync, or by requiring users to manually install configuration
profiles. An administrator password is needed for the macOS passcode policy payload
installation. Some passcode policies can require a certain passcode length, composition or
other attributes.
Configuration profiles
A configuration profile is an XML file (ending in .mobileconfig) that consists of payloads
that load settings and authorisation information onto Apple devices. Configuration profiles
automate the configuration of settings, accounts, restrictions and credentials. These files
can be created by an MDM solution or Apple Configurator for Mac, or they can be created
manually. Before organisations send a configuration profile to an Apple device, they must
enrol the device in the MDM solution using an enrolment profile.
Enrolment profiles
An enrolment profile is a configuration profile with an MDM payload that enrols the device
in the MDM solution specified for that device. This allows the MDM solution to send
commands and configuration profiles to the device and to query certain aspects of the
device. When a user removes an enrolment profile, all configuration profiles, their settings
and managed apps based on that enrolment profile are removed with it. There can be only
one enrolment profile on a device at a time.
• Mail settings
• Account settings
• Software updates
Profile installation
Users can install configuration profiles directly on their devices using Apple Configurator
for Mac, or they can be downloaded using Safari, sent attached to a mail message,
transferred using AirDrop or the Files app in iOS and iPadOS, or sent over the air using
a mobile device management (MDM) solution. When a user sets up a device in Apple
School Manager or Apple Business Manager, the device downloads and installs a profile
for MDM enrolment. For information on how to remove profiles, see Intro to mobile device
management in Apple Platform Deployment.
Note: On supervised devices, configuration profiles can also be locked to a device. This
is designed to prevent their removal or to allow removal only with a passcode. Because
many organisations own their iOS and iPadOS devices, configuration profiles that bind
a device to an MDM solution can be removed — but doing so also removes all managed
configuration information, data and apps.
• Have users authenticate as part of the initial setup flow in the Apple device’s Setup
Assistant during activation.
• Provide a preliminary configuration with limited access and require additional device
configuration to access sensitive data.
After a user has been assigned, any MDM-specified configurations, restrictions or controls
are automatically installed. All communications between devices and Apple servers are
encrypted in transit through HTTPS (TLS).
The setup process for users can be further simplified by removing specific steps in the
Setup Assistant for devices so that users are up and running quickly. Administrators can
also control whether users can remove the MDM profile from the device and help ensure
that device restrictions are in place throughout the life cycle of the device. Once the
device is unboxed and activated, it can enrol in the organisation’s MDM solution — and all
management settings, apps and books are installed as defined by the MDM administrator.
When used with an MDM solution, administrators can simplify the setup process for
users, configure device settings, and distribute apps and books purchased in these three
services. Apple School Manager also integrates with Student Information Systems (SISs)
directly or using SFTP, and all three services can use System for Cross-domain Identity
Management (SCIM) or federated authentication with Microsoft Azure Active Directory
(Azure AD) so administrators can quickly create accounts.
Apple maintains certifications in compliance with the ISO/IEC 27001 and 27018 standards
to enable Apple customers to address their regulatory and contractual obligations.
These certifications provide our customers with an independent attestation over Apple’s
Information Privacy and Security practices for in-scope systems. For more information, see
Apple internet services security certifications in Apple Platform Certifications.
Device supervision
Supervision generally denotes that the device is owned by the organisation, giving them
additional control over the device’s configuration and restrictions. For more information,
see About Apple device supervision in Apple Platform Deployment.
• The LocalPolicy nonce hash values don’t match the hashes of values stored in the
Secure Storage Component
recoveryOS detects that the Mac computer isn’t activated and contacts the activation
server to get an activation certificate. If the device is Activation Locked, recoveryOS
prompts the user for iCloud credentials of the user that enabled Activation Lock at this
time. After a valid activation certificate is obtained, that activation certificate key is used
to obtain a RemotePolicy certificate. The Mac computer uses the LocalPolicy key and
RemotePolicy certificate to produce a valid LocalPolicy. LLB won’t allow booting of macOS
unless a valid LocalPolicy is present.
When a remote wipe command is triggered by MDM or iCloud, the iPhone, iPad, iPod touch
or Mac device sends an acknowledgement back to the MDM solution and performs
the wipe.
• Using Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync when the account that was installed with User
Enrolment
• Using Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync if the device is supervised
Users can also wipe iOS and iPadOS devices in their possession using the Settings app.
And as mentioned, iOS and iPadOS devices can be set to automatically wipe after a series
of failed passcode attempts.
With Shared iPad, a user can sign in to any organisationally owned device that is
configured for use by multiple users. User data is partitioned into separate directories,
each in their own data protection domains and protected by both UNIX permissions and
sandboxing. In iPadOS 13.4 or later, users can also sign in to a temporary session. When
the user signs out of a temporary session, their APFS volume is deleted and its reserved
space is returned to the system.
If the user hasn’t used the device before or is using the temporary session feature,
Shared iPad provisions a new UNIX user ID, an APFS volume to store the user’s personal
data and a local keychain. As storage is allocated (reserved) for the user at the time the
APFS volume is created, there may be insufficient space to create a new volume. In such an
event, the system identifies an existing user whose data has finished syncing to the cloud
and evicts that user from the device so the new user can sign in. In the unlikely event that
all existing users haven’t completed uploading their cloud data, the new user sign-in fails.
To sign in, the new user will need to wait for one user’s data to finish syncing or ask an
administrator to forcibly delete an existing user account, thereby risking data loss.
If the device isn’t connected to the internet (for example, if the user has no Wi-Fi access
point), authentication can occur against the local account for a limited number of days. In
that situation, only users with previously existing local accounts or a temporary session can
sign in. After the time limit has expired, users are required to authenticate online, even if a
local account already exists.
After a user’s local account has been unlocked or created, if it’s remotely authenticated,
the short-lived token issued by Apple’s servers is converted to an iCloud token that permits
sign-in to iCloud. Next, the users’ settings are restored and their documents and data are
synced from iCloud.
While a user session is active and the device remains online, documents and data are
stored on iCloud as they are created or modified. In addition, a background syncing
mechanism helps ensure that changes are pushed to iCloud, or to other web services using
NSURLSession background sessions, after the user signs out. After background syncing for
that user is complete, the user’s APFS volume is unmounted and can’t be mounted again
without the user signing back in.
Temporary sessions don’t sync data with iCloud, and although a temporary session can
sign in to a third-party syncing service such as Box or Google Drive, there’s no facility to
continue syncing data when the temporary session ends.
When a temporary session ends, Shared iPad performs the full logout sequence and
deletes the temporary session’s APFS volume immediately.
Apple Configurator for Mac can also revive or restore Mac computers with Apple silicon
and those with the Apple T2 Security Chip. When a Mac is revived or restored in this
manner, the file containing the latest minor updates to the operating systems (macOS,
recoveryOS for Apple silicon or sepOS for T2) is securely downloaded from Apple servers
and installed directly on the Mac. After a successful revive or restore, the file is deleted
from the Mac using Apple Configurator. At no time can the user inspect or use this file
outside Apple Configurator.
Administrators can also choose to add devices to Apple School Manager, Apple
Business Manager or Apple Business Essentials using Apple Configurator for Mac or
Apple Configurator for iPhone, even if the devices weren’t purchased directly from Apple,
an Apple Authorised Reseller or an authorised network provider. When the administrator
sets up a device that has been manually enrolled, it behaves like any other device in one
of those services, with mandatory supervision and mobile device management (MDM)
enrolment. For devices that weren’t purchased directly, the user has a 30-day provisional
period to release the device from one of those services, supervision and MDM.
Organisations can also use Apple Configurator for Mac to activate iOS, iPadOS and tvOS
devices that have absolutely no internet connection by connecting them to a host Mac
with an internet connection while the devices are being set up. Administrators can restore,
activate and prepare devices with their necessary configuration including apps, profiles
and documents without ever needing to connect to either Wi-Fi or mobile networks. This
feature doesn’t allow an administrator to bypass any existing Activation Lock requirements
normally required during non-tethered activation.
Although Screen Time isn’t a new system security feature, it’s important to understand
how it protects the privacy and security of the data gathered and shared between devices.
Screen Time is available in iOS 12 or later, iPadOS 13.1 or later, macOS 10.15 or later, and
some features of watchOS 6 or later.
For users managing their own device usage, Screen Time controls and usage data can be
synced across devices associated with the same iCloud account using CloudKit end-to-
end encryption. This requires the user’s account to have two-factor authentication enabled
(syncing is on by default). Screen Time replaces the Restrictions feature found in previous
versions of iOS and iPadOS, and the Parental Controls feature found in previous versions of
macOS.
In iOS 13 or later, iPadOS 13.1 or later, and macOS 10.15 or later, Screen Time users and
managed children automatically share their usage across devices if their iCloud account
has two-factor authentication enabled. When a user clears Safari history or deletes an app,
the corresponding usage data is removed from the device and all synced devices.
Usage data and configuration settings are transferred between the parent’s and child’s
devices using the end-to-end encrypted Apple IDentity Service (IDS) protocol. Encrypted
data may be briefly stored on IDS servers until it’s read by the receiving device (for
example, as soon as the iPhone, iPad or iPod touch is turned on, if it was off). This data
isn’t readable by Apple.
• Is Downtime enabled
• Number of times users viewed usage in the Screen Time settings, per user type and per
view type (local, remote, widget)
No specific app or web usage data is gathered by Apple. When a user sees a list of apps in
Screen Time usage information, the app icons are pulled directly from the App Store, which
doesn’t retain any data from these requests.
AES-XTS A mode of AES defined in IEEE 1619-2007 meant to work for encrypting storage
media.
APFS (Apple File System) The default file system for iOS, iPadOS, tvOS, watchOS and
Mac computers using macOS 10.13 or later. APFS features strong encryption, space
sharing, snapshots, fast directory sizing and improved file system fundamentals.
Apple Business Manager A simple, web-based portal for IT administrators that provides
a fast, streamlined way for organisations to deploy Apple devices they have purchased
directly from Apple or from a participating Apple Authorised Reseller or network provider.
They can automatically enrol devices in their mobile device management (MDM) solution
without having to physically touch or prepare the devices before users get them.
Apple IDentity Service (IDS) Apple’s directory of iMessage public keys, APNs addresses,
and phone numbers and email addresses that are used to look up the keys and device
addresses.
Apple Push Notification service (APNs) A worldwide service provided by Apple that
delivers push notifications to Apple devices.
Apple School Manager A simple, web-based portal for IT administrators that provides
a fast, streamlined way for organisations to deploy Apple devices they have purchased
directly from Apple or from a participating Apple Authorised Reseller or network provider.
They can automatically enrol devices in their mobile device management (MDM) solution
without having to physically touch or prepare the devices before users get them.
Apple Security Bounty A reward given by Apple to researchers who report a vulnerability
that affects the latest shipping operating systems and, where relevant, the latest hardware.
Boot Camp A Mac utility that supports the installation of Microsoft Windows on supported
Mac computers.
Boot ROM The very first code executed by a device’s processor when it first boots. As an
integral part of the processor, it can’t be altered by either Apple or an attacker.
CKRecord A dictionary of key-value pairs that contain data saved to or fetched from
CloudKit.
Data Protection A file and keychain protection mechanism for supported Apple devices.
It can also refer to the APIs that apps use to protect files and keychain items.
Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) mode A mode in which a device’s Boot ROM code waits
to be recovered via USB. The screen is black when in DFU mode, but upon connecting to
a computer using iTunes or the Finder, the following prompt is presented: “iTunes (or the
Finder) has detected an (iPad, iPhone or iPod touch) in Recovery mode. The user must
restore this (iPad, iPhone or iPod touch) before it can be used with iTunes (or the Finder).”
direct memory access (DMA) A feature that allows hardware subsystems to access main
memory directly, bypassing the CPU.
Effaceable Storage A dedicated area of NAND storage, used to store cryptographic keys,
that can be addressed directly and wiped securely. While it doesn’t provide protection if an
attacker has physical possession of a device, keys held in Effaceable Storage can be used
as part of a key hierarchy to facilitate fast wipe and forward security.
Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) A digital signature algorithm based on
elliptic curve cryptography.
Enhanced Serial Peripheral Interface (eSPI) An all-in-one bus designed for synchronous
serial communication.
Exclusive Chip Identification (ECID) A 64-bit identifier that’s unique to the processor
in each iOS and iPadOS device. When a call is answered on one device, the ringing of
nearby iCloud-paired devices is terminated by briefly advertising through Bluetooth Low
Energy (BLE) 4.0. The advertising bytes are encrypted using the same method as Handoff
advertisements. Used as part of the personalisation process, it’s not considered a secret.
file system key The key that encrypts each file’s metadata, including its class key. This is
kept in Effaceable Storage to facilitate fast wipe rather than confidentiality.
Gatekeeper In macOS, a technology designed to help ensure that only trusted software
runs on a user’s Mac.
group ID (GID) Like the UID but common to every processor in a class.
iBoot The stage 2 boot loader for all Apple devices. Code that loads XNU as part of the
secure boot chain. Depending on the system on chip (SoC) generation, iBoot may be
loaded by the Low Level Bootloader or directly by the Boot ROM.
Joint Test Action Group (JTAG) A standard hardware debugging tool used by
programmers and circuit developers.
key wrapping Encrypting one key with another. iOS and iPadOS use NIST AES key
wrapping, in accordance with RFC 3394.
keybag A data structure used to store a collection of class keys. Each type (user, device,
system, backup, escrow or iCloud Backup) has the same format.
A header containing: Version (set to four in iOS 12 or later), Type (system, backup, escrow
or iCloud Backup), Keybag UUID, an HMAC, if the keybag is signed, and the method used
for wrapping the class keys — tangling with the UID or PBKDF2, along with the salt and
iteration count.
A list of class keys: Key UUID, Class (which file or Keychain Data Protection class),
wrapping type (UID-derived key only; UID-derived key and passcode-derived key),
wrapped class key and a public key for asymmetric classes.
keychain The infrastructure and a set of APIs used by Apple operating systems and third-
party apps to store and retrieve passwords, keys and other sensitive credentials.
Low Level Bootloader (LLB) On Mac computers with a two-stage boot architecture, LLB
contains the code that’s invoked by the Boot ROM, and that in turn loads iBoot as part of
the secure boot chain.
media key Part of the encryption key hierarchy that helps provide for a secure and
instant wipe. In iOS, iPadOS, tvOS and watchOS, the media key wraps the metadata on the
data volume (and thus without it access to all per-file keys is impossible, rendering files
protected with Data Protection inaccessible). In macOS, the media key wraps the keying
material, all metadata and data on the FileVault protected volume. In either case, wipe of
the media key renders encrypted data inaccessible.
memory controller The subsystem in a system on chip that controls the interface between
the system on chip and its main memory.
mobile device management (MDM) A service that lets an administrator remotely manage
enrolled devices. After a device is enrolled, the administrator can use the MDM service
over the network to configure settings and perform other tasks on the device without user
interaction.
Passcode-derived key (PDK) The encryption key derived from the entangling of the user
password with the long-term SKP key and the UID of the Secure Enclave.
provisioning profile A property list (.plist file) signed by Apple that contains a set of
entities and entitlements allowing apps to be installed and tested on an iOS or iPadOS
device. A development provisioning profile lists the devices that a developer has chosen
for ad hoc distribution, and a distribution provisioning profile contains the app ID of an
enterprise-developed app.
Recovery mode A mode used to restore many Apple devices if it doesn’t recognise the
user’s device so the user can reinstall the operating system.
ridge flow angle mapping A mathematical representation of the direction and width of the
ridges extracted from a portion of a fingerprint.
Sealed Key Protection (SKP) A technology in Data Protection that protects, or seals,
encryption keys with measurements of system software and keys available only in hardware
(such as the UID of the Secure Enclave).
Secure Storage Component A chip designed with immutable RO code, a hardware random
number generator, cryptography engines and physical tamper detection. On supported
devices, the Secure Enclave is paired with a Secure Storage Component for anti-replay
nonce storage. To read and update nonces, the Secure Enclave and storage chip employ
a secure protocol that helps ensure exclusive access to the nonces. There are multiple
generations of this technology with differing security guarantees.
software seed bits Dedicated bits in the Secure Enclave AES Engine that get appended to
the UID when generating keys from the UID. Each software seed bit has a corresponding
lock bit. The Secure Enclave Boot ROM and operating system can independently change
the value of each software seed bit as long as the corresponding lock bit hasn’t been set.
After the lock bit is set, neither the software seed bit nor the lock bit can be modified. The
software seed bits and their locks are reset when the Secure Enclave reboots.
SSD controller A hardware subsystem that manages the storage media (solid-state drive).
system on chip (SoC) An integrated circuit (IC) that incorporates multiple components
into a single chip. The Application Processor, the Secure Enclave and other coprocessors
are components of the SoC.
tangling The process by which a user’s passcode is turned into a cryptographic key and
strengthened with the device’s UID. This process helps ensure that a brute-force attack
must be performed on a given device, and thus is rate limited and can’t be performed in
parallel. The tangling algorithm is PBKDF2, which uses AES keyed with the device UID as
the pseudo-random function (PRF) for each iteration.
unique ID (UID) A 256-bit AES key that’s burned into each processor at manufacture. It
can’t be read by firmware or software and it’s used only by the processor’s hardware AES
Engine. To obtain the actual key, an attacker would have to mount a highly sophisticated
and expensive physical attack against the processor’s silicon. The UID isn’t related to any
other identifier on the device including, but not limited to, the UDID.
xART An abbreviation for eXtended Anti-Replay Technology. A set of services that provide
encrypted, authenticated persistent storage for the Secure Enclave with anti-replay
capabilities based on the physical storage architecture. See Secure Storage Component.
XNU The kernel at the heart of the Apple operating systems. It’s assumed to be trusted,
and it enforces security measures such as code signing, sandboxing, entitlement checking
and Address Space Layout Randomisation (ASLR).
December 2019 Merged the iOS Security Guide, macOS Security Overview
and the Apple T2 Security Chip Overview
Updated for:
• iOS 13.3
• iPadOS 13.3
• macOS 10.15.2
• tvOS 13.3
• watchOS 6.1.1
Privacy Controls, Siri and Siri Suggestions, and Safari
Intelligent Tracking Prevention have been removed. See
https://www.apple.com/uk/privacy/ for the latest on those
features.
Use of the “keyboard” Apple logo (Option-Shift-K) for commercial purposes without the prior written consent of
Apple may constitute trademark infringement and unfair competition in violation of federal and state laws.
Apple, the Apple logo, AirDrop, AirPlay, Apple Books, Apple Card, Apple Music, Apple Pay, Apple TV, Apple Wallet,
Apple Watch, AppleScript, ARKit, Bonjour, Boot Camp, CarPlay, Face ID, FaceTime, FileVault, Finder, FireWire,
Handoff, HealthKit, HomeKit, HomePod, HomePod mini, iMac, iMac Pro, iMessage, iPad, iPadOS, iPad Air, iPad Pro,
iPhone, iPod touch, iTunes, Keychain, Lightning, Mac, Mac Catalyst, Mac mini, Mac Pro, MacBook, MacBook Air,
MacBook Pro, macOS, Magic Keyboard, Objective-C, OS X, QuickType, Retina, Rosetta, Safari, Siri, Siri Remote,
SiriKit, Swift, Spotlight, Touch ID, TrueDepth, tvOS, watchOS and Xcode are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in
the US and other countries and regions.
App Clips, Find My and Touch Bar are trademarks of Apple Inc.
App Store, AppleCare, CloudKit, iCloud, iCloud Drive, iCloud Keychain and iTunes Store are service marks of
Apple Inc., registered in the US and other countries and regions.
Apple
One Apple Park Way
Cupertino, CA 95014
apple.com
IOS is a trademark or registered trademark of Cisco in the US and other countries and is used under licence.
The Bluetooth® word mark and logos are registered trademarks owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and any use of such
marks by Apple is under licence.
Other product and company names mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective companies.
Every effort has been made to ensure that the information in this manual is accurate. Apple is not responsible for
printing or clerical errors.
Some apps are not available in all areas. App availability is subject to change.
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