Those points of confusion strike me as somewhat hypothetical or hyperbolic.
But your general point is taken and your position of being anti additional
metadata on this issue is noted.

All of which leaves me a bit uncertain about how to proceed. There seem to
be a range of opinions on this point and gauging consensus is proving
elusive for me. That's confounded by my own opinion on it being somewhat
fluid.

And I'd really like to post an update to this draft about a month or two
ago.






On Fri, Feb 1, 2019 at 5:03 PM Richard Backman, Annabelle <richanna=
40amazon....@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote:

> Confusion from the AS’s perspective:
>
>    1. If I only support mTLS, do I need to include both
>    token_endpoint_uri and mtls_endpoints? Should I omit token_endpoint_uri? Or
>    set it to the empty string?
>    2. What if I only support mTLS for the token endpoint, but not
>    revocation or user info?
>    3. How do I specify authentication methods for the mTLS token
>    endpoint? Does token_endpoint_auth_methods apply to both the mTLS and
>    non-mTLS endpoints?
>    4. I’m using the OAuth 2.0 Device Flow. Do I include a mTLS-enabled
>    device_authorization_endpoint under mtls_endpoints?
>
>
>
> Confusion from the client’s perspective:
>
>    1. As far as I know, I’m a public client, and don’t know anything
>    about mTLS, but the IT admins installed client certs in their users’
>    browsers and the AS expects to use that to authenticate me.
>    2. My AS metadata parser crashed because the mTLS-only AS omitted
>    token_endpoint_uri.
>    3. My AS metadata parser crashed because it didn’t expect to encounter
>    a JSON object as a parameter value.
>    4. The mTLS-only AS didn’t provide a value for mtls_endpoints, what do
>    I do?
>    5. I don’t know what that “m” means, but they told me to use HTTPS, so
>    I should use the one with “tls” in its name, right?
>
>
>
> Yes, you can write normative text that answers most of these. But you’ll
> have to clearly cover a lot of similar-but-slightly-different scenarios and
> be very explicit. And implementers will still get it wrong. The metadata
> change introduces opportunities for confusion and failure that do not exist
> now, and forces them on everyone who supports mTLS. In contrast, the 307
> redirect is only required when an AS wants to support both, and is
> unambiguous in its behavior and meaning.
>
>
>
> --
>
> Annabelle Richard Backman
>
> AWS Identity
>
>
>
>
>
> *From: *Brian Campbell <bcampbell=40pingidentity....@dmarc.ietf.org>
> *Date: *Friday, February 1, 2019 at 3:17 PM
> *To: *"Richard Backman, Annabelle" <richa...@amazon.com>
> *Cc: *George Fletcher <gffle...@aol.com>, oauth <oauth@ietf.org>
> *Subject: *[UNVERIFIED SENDER] Re: [OAUTH-WG] MTLS and in-browser clients
> using the token endpoint
>
>
>
> It doesn't seem like that confusing or large of a change to me - if the
> client is doing MTLS and the given endpoint is present in `mtls_endpoints`,
> then it uses that one.  Otherwise it uses the regular endpoint. It gives an
> AS a lot of flexibility in deployment options. I personally think getting a
> 307 approach deployed and working would be more complicated and error
> prone.
>
>
>
> It is a minority use case at the moment but there are forces in play, like
> the push for increased security in general and to have javascript clients
> use the code flow, that suggest it won't be terribly unusual to see an AS
> that wants to support MTLS clients and javascript/spa clients at the same
> time.
>
>
>
> I've personally wavered back and forth in this thread on whether or not to
> add the new metadata (or something like it). With my reasoning each way
> kinda explained somewhere back in the 40 or so messages that make up this
> thread.  But it seems like the rough consensus of the group here is in
> favor of it.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 1, 2019 at 3:18 PM Richard Backman, Annabelle <richanna=
> 40amazon....@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote:
>
> This strikes me as a very prominent and confusing change to support what
> seems to be a minority use case. I’m getting a headache just thinking about
> the text needed to clarify when the AS should provide `mtls_endpoints` and
> when the client should use that versus using `token_endpoint.` Why is the
> 307 status code insufficient to cover the case where a single AS supports
> both mTLS and non-mTLS?
>
>
>
> --
>
> Annabelle Richard Backman
>
> AWS Identity
>
>
>
>
>
> *From: *OAuth <oauth-boun...@ietf.org> on behalf of Brian Campbell
> <bcampbell=40pingidentity....@dmarc.ietf.org>
> *Date: *Friday, February 1, 2019 at 1:31 PM
> *To: *George Fletcher <gffletch=40aol....@dmarc.ietf.org
> <40aol....@dmarc..ietf.org>>
> *Cc: *oauth <oauth@ietf.org>
> *Subject: *Re: [OAUTH-WG] MTLS and in-browser clients using the token
> endpoint
>
>
>
> Yes, that would work.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 1, 2019 at 2:28 PM George Fletcher <gffletch=
> 40aol....@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote:
>
> What if the AS wants to ONLY support MTLS connections. Does it not specify
> the optional "mtls_endpoints" and just use the normal metadata values?
>
> On 1/15/19 8:48 AM, Brian Campbell wrote:
>
> It would definitely be optional, apologies if that wasn't made clear. It'd
> be something to the effect of optional for the AS to include and clients
> doing MTLS would use it when present in AS metadata.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 2:04 AM Dave Tonge <dave.to...@momentumft.co.uk>
> wrote:
>
> I'm in favour of the `mtls_endpoints` metadata parameter - although it
> should be optional.
>
>
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