This was done by the following
find . -name '*.[ch]' | /tmp/pl
where /tmp/pl is the following three-line script:
print unless $. == 1 && m@/\* .*\.[ch] \*/@;
close ARGV if eof; # Close file to reset $.
And then some hand-editing of other files.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
The protocol selection code is now consolidated in a few consecutive
short functions in a single file and is table driven. Protocol-specific
constraints that influence negotiation are moved into the flags
field of the method structure. The same protocol version constraints
are now applied in all code paths. It is now much easier to add
new protocol versions without reworking the protocol selection
logic.
In the presence of "holes" in the list of enabled client protocols
we no longer select client protocols below the hole based on a
subset of the constraints and then fail shortly after when it is
found that these don't meet the remaining constraints (suiteb, FIPS,
security level, ...). Ideally, with the new min/max controls users
will be less likely to create "holes" in the first place.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
If DSA parameters are absent return -1 (for unknown) in DSA_security_bits.
If parameters are absent when a certificate is set in an SSL/SSL_CTX
structure this will reject the certificate by default. This will cause DSA
certificates which omit parameters to be rejected but that is never (?)
done in practice.
Thanks to Brian 'geeknik' Carpenter for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Move all calls of the OCSP callback into one place, rather than repeating it
in two different places.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
It makes no sense to call the OCSP status callback if we are resuming a
session because no certificates will be sent.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
If a server sends the status_request extension then it may choose
to send the CertificateStatus message. However this is optional.
We were treating it as mandatory and the connection was failing.
Thanks to BoringSSL for reporting this issue.
RT#4120
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
Rename BUF_{strdup,strlcat,strlcpy,memdup,strndup,strnlen}
to OPENSSL_{strdup,strlcat,strlcpy,memdup,strndup,strnlen}
Add #define's for the old names.
Add CRYPTO_{memdup,strndup}, called by OPENSSL_{memdup,strndup} macros.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
If the call to OBJ_find_sigid_by_algs fails to find the relevant NID then
we should set the NID to NID_undef.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Add new flag TLS1_FLAGS_RECEIVED_EXTMS which is set when the peer sends
the extended master secret extension.
Server now sends extms if and only if the client sent extms.
Check consistency of extms extension when resuming sessions following (where
practical) RFC7627.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
This change required some special treatment, as HMAC is intertwined
with EVP_MD. For now, all local HMAC_CTX variables MUST be
initialised with HMAC_CTX_EMPTY, or whatever happens to be on the
stack will be mistaken for actual pointers to EVP_MD_CTX. This will
change as soon as HMAC_CTX becomes opaque.
Also, since HMAC_CTX_init() can fail now, its return type changes from
void to int, and it will return 0 on failure, 1 on success.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
SSL_{CTX}_set_tmp_ecdh() allows to set 1 EC curve and then tries to use it. On
the other hand SSL_{CTX_}set1_curves() allows you to set a list of curves, but
only when SSL_{CTX_}set_ecdh_auto() was called to turn it on.
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
This only gets used to set a specific curve without actually checking that the
peer supports it or not and can therefor result in handshake failures that can
be avoided by selecting a different cipher.
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
Don't hard code EVP_sha* etc for signature algorithms: use table
indices instead. Add SHA224 and SHA512 to tables.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
This patch contains the necessary changes to provide GOST 2012
ciphersuites in TLS. It requires the use of an external GOST 2012 engine.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
There are lots of calls to EVP functions from within libssl There were
various places where we should probably check the return value but don't.
This adds these checks.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
This disables some ciphersuites which aren't supported in SSL v3:
specifically PSK ciphersuites which use SHA256 or SHA384 for the MAC.
Thanks to the Open Crypto Audit Project for identifying this issue.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
The function tls1_get_curvelist() has an explicit check to see if s->cert
is NULL or not. However the check appears *after* calling the tls1_suiteb
macro which derefs s->cert. In reality s->cert can never be NULL because
it is created in SSL_new(). If the malloc fails then the SSL_new call fails
and no SSL object is created.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
if we have a malloc |x = OPENSSL_malloc(...)| sometimes we check |x|
for NULL and sometimes we treat it as a boolean |if(!x) ...|. Standardise
the approach in libssl.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
This OPENSSL_assert in (d)tls1_hearbeat is trivially always going to be
true because it is testing the sum of values that have been set as
constants just a few lines above and nothing has changed them. Therefore
remove this.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
The SSL variable |in_handshake| seems misplaced. It would be better to have
it in the STATEM structure.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
The function ssl_check_for_safari fingerprints the incoming extensions
to see whether it is one of the broken versions of safari. However it was
failing to reset the PACKET back to the same position it started in, hence
causing some extensions to be skipped incorrectly.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Move all packet parsing to the beginning of the method. This limits the
SSLv2 compatibility soup to the parsing, and makes the rest of the
processing uniform.
This is also needed for simpler EMS support: EMS servers need to do an
early scan for EMS to make resumption decisions. This'll be easier when
the entire ClientHello is parsed in the beginning.
As a side effect,
1) PACKETize ssl_get_prev_session and tls1_process_ticket; and
2) Delete dead code for SSL_OP_NETSCAPE_REUSE_CIPHER_CHANGE_BUG.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
The bookmark API results in a lot of boilerplate error checking that can
be much more easily achieved with a simple struct copy. It also lays the
path for removing the third PACKET field.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Commit 9ceb2426b0 (PACKETise ClientHello) broke session tickets by failing
to detect the session ticket extension in an incoming ClientHello. This
commit fixes the bug.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Enhance the PACKET code readability, and fix a stale comment. Thanks
to Ben Kaduk (bkaduk@akamai.com) for pointing this out.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
It is valid for an extension block to be present in a ClientHello, but to
be of zero length.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
This adds additional checks to the processing of extensions in a ClientHello
to ensure that either no extensions are present, or if they are then they
take up the exact amount of space expected.
With thanks to the Open Crypto Audit Project for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
The size of the SRP extension can never be negative (the variable
|size| is unsigned). Therefore don't check if it is less than zero.
RT#3862
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Given the pervasive nature of TLS extensions it is inadvisable to run
OpenSSL without support for them. It also means that maintaining
the OPENSSL_NO_TLSEXT option within the code is very invasive (and probably
not well tested). Therefore it is being removed.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Also reorder preferences to prefer prime curves to binary curves, and P-256 to everything else.
The result:
$ openssl s_server -named_curves "auto"
This command will negotiate an ECDHE ciphersuite with P-256:
$ openssl s_client
This command will negotiate P-384:
$ openssl s_client -curves "P-384"
This command will not negotiate ECDHE because P-224 is disabled with "auto":
$ openssl s_client -curves "P-224"
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Move per-connection state out of the CERT structure: which should just be
for shared configuration data (e.g. certificates to use).
In particular move temporary premaster secret, raw ciphers, peer signature
algorithms and shared signature algorithms.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Following the version negotiation rewrite all of the previous code that was
dedicated to version negotiation can now be deleted - all six source files
of it!!
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
Remove RFC2712 Kerberos support from libssl. This code and the associated
standard is no longer considered fit-for-purpose.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
For the various string-compare routines (strcmp, strcasecmp, str.*cmp)
use "strcmp()==0" instead of "!strcmp()"
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Compiling OpenSSL code with MSVC and /W4 results in a number of warnings.
One category of warnings is particularly interesting - C4701 (potentially
uninitialized local variable 'name' used). This warning pretty much means
that there's a code path which results in uninitialized variables being used
or returned. Depending on compiler, its options, OS, values in registers
and/or stack, the results can be nondeterministic. Cases like this are very
hard to debug so it's rational to fix these issues.
This patch contains a set of trivial fixes for all the C4701 warnings (just
initializing variables to 0 or NULL or appropriate error code) to make sure
that deterministic values will be returned from all the execution paths.
RT#3835
Signed-off-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Matt's note: All of these appear to be bogus warnings, i.e. there isn't
actually a code path where an unitialised variable could be used - its just
that the compiler hasn't been able to figure that out from the logic. So
this commit is just about silencing spurious warnings.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Don't check for NULL before calling a free routine. This gets X509_.*free:
x509_name_ex_free X509_policy_tree_free X509_VERIFY_PARAM_free
X509_STORE_free X509_STORE_CTX_free X509_PKEY_free
X509_OBJECT_free_contents X509_LOOKUP_free X509_INFO_free
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
The recent updates to libssl to enforce stricter return code checking, left
a small number of instances behind where return codes were being swallowed
(typically because the function they were being called from was declared as
void). This commit fixes those instances to handle the return codes more
appropriately.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Ensure that all functions have their return values checked where
appropriate. This covers all functions defined and called from within
libssl.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Don't check that the curve appears in the list of acceptable curves for the
peer, if they didn't send us such a list (RFC 4492 does not require that the
extension be sent).
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
If a client renegotiates using an invalid signature algorithms extension
it will crash a server with a NULL pointer dereference.
Thanks to David Ramos of Stanford University for reporting this bug.
CVE-2015-0291
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
If SSL_check_chain is called with a NULL X509 object or a NULL EVP_PKEY
or the type of the public key is unrecognised then the local variable
|cpk| in tls1_check_chain does not get initialised. Subsequently an
attempt is made to deref it (after the "end" label), and a seg fault will
result.
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
I left many "#if 0" lines, usually because I thought we would
probably want to revisit them later, or because they provided
some useful internal documentation tips.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Add and retrieve extended master secret extension, setting the flag
SSL_SESS_FLAG_EXTMS appropriately.
Note: this just sets the flag and doesn't include the changes to
master secret generation.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
An expired IETF Internet-Draft (seven years old) that nobody
implements, and probably just as good as NSA DRBG work.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Remove support for SHA0 and DSS0 (they were broken), and remove
the ability to attempt to build without SHA (it didn't work).
For simplicity, remove the option of not building various SHA algorithms;
you could argue that SHA_224/256/384/512 should be kept, since they're
like crypto algorithms, but I decided to go the other way.
So these options are gone:
GENUINE_DSA OPENSSL_NO_SHA0
OPENSSL_NO_SHA OPENSSL_NO_SHA1
OPENSSL_NO_SHA224 OPENSSL_NO_SHA256
OPENSSL_NO_SHA384 OPENSSL_NO_SHA512
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Sometimes it fails to format them very well, and sometimes it corrupts them!
This commit moves some particularly problematic ones.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
When parsing ClientHello clear any existing extension state from
SRP login and SRTP profile.
Thanks to Karthikeyan Bhargavan for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Odd-length lists should be rejected everywhere upon parsing. Nevertheless,
be extra careful and add guards against off-by-one reads.
Also, drive-by replace inexplicable double-negation with an explicit comparison.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
The Supported Elliptic Curves extension contains a vector of NamedCurves
of 2 bytes each, so the total length must be even. Accepting odd-length
lists was observed to lead to a non-exploitable one-byte out-of-bounds
read in the latest development branches (1.0.2 and master). Released
versions of OpenSSL are not affected.
Thanks to Felix Groebert of the Google Security Team for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
once the ChangeCipherSpec message is received. Previously, the server would
set the flag once at SSL3_ST_SR_CERT_VRFY and again at SSL3_ST_SR_FINISHED.
This would allow a second CCS to arrive and would corrupt the server state.
(Because the first CCS would latch the correct keys and subsequent CCS
messages would have to be encrypted, a MitM attacker cannot exploit this,
though.)
Thanks to Joeri de Ruiter for reporting this issue.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
This ensures that it's zeroed even if the SSL object is reused
(as in ssltest.c). It also ensures that it applies to DTLS, too.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Don't send or parse any extensions other than RI (which is needed
to handle secure renegotation) for SSLv3.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
The supported signature algorithms extension needs to be processed before
the certificate to use is decided and before a cipher is selected (as the
set of shared signature algorithms supported may impact the choice).
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 56e8dc542b)
Conflicts:
ssl/ssl.h
ssl/ssl_err.c
CVE-2014-3513
This issue was reported to OpenSSL on 26th September 2014, based on an original
issue and patch developed by the LibreSSL project. Further analysis of the issue
was performed by the OpenSSL team.
The fix was developed by the OpenSSL team.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Support separate parse and add callback arguments.
Add new callback so an application can free extension data.
Change return value for send functions so < 0 is an error 0
omits extension and > 0 includes it. This is more consistent
with the behaviour of other functions in OpenSSL.
Modify parse_cb handling so <= 0 is an error.
Make SSL_CTX_set_custom_cli_ext and SSL_CTX_set_custom_cli_ext argument
order consistent.
NOTE: these changes WILL break existing code.
Remove (now inaccurate) in line documentation.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Since sanity checks are performed for all custom extensions the
serverinfo checks are no longer needed.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Reject attempts to use extensions handled internally.
Add flags to each extension structure to indicate if an extension
has been sent or received. Enforce RFC5246 compliance by rejecting
duplicate extensions and unsolicited extensions and only send a
server extension if we have sent the corresponding client extension.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Use the same structure for client and server custom extensions.
Add utility functions in new file t1_ext.c.
Use new utility functions to handle custom server and client extensions
and remove a lot of code duplication.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Add a dozen more const declarations where appropriate.
These are from Justin; while adding his patch, I noticed
ASN1_BIT_STRING_check could be fixed, too.
Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
Move custom extension structures from SSL_CTX to CERT structure.
This change means the form can be revised in future without binary
compatibility issues. Also since CERT is part of SSL structures
so per-SSL custom extensions could be supported in future as well as
per SSL_CTX.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
If a client attempted to use an SRP ciphersuite and it had not been
set up correctly it would crash with a null pointer read. A malicious
server could exploit this in a DoS attack.
Thanks to Joonas Kuorilehto and Riku Hietamäki from Codenomicon
for reporting this issue.
CVE-2014-2970
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Add TLS padding extension to SSL_OP_ALL so it is used with other
"bugs" options and can be turned off.
This replaces SSL_OP_SSLREF2_REUSE_CERT_TYPE_BUG which is an ancient
option referring to SSLv2 and SSLREF.
PR#3336
A missing bounds check in the handling of the TLS heartbeat extension
can be used to reveal up to 64k of memory to a connected client or
server.
Thanks for Neel Mehta of Google Security for discovering this bug and to
Adam Langley <agl@chromium.org> and Bodo Moeller <bmoeller@acm.org> for
preparing the fix (CVE-2014-0160)
(cherry picked from commit 96db9023b8)
Security callback: selects which parameters are permitted including
sensible defaults based on bits of security.
The "parameters" which can be selected include: ciphersuites,
curves, key sizes, certificate signature algorithms, supported
signature algorithms, DH parameters, SSL/TLS version, session tickets
and compression.
In some cases prohibiting the use of a parameters will mean they are
not advertised to the peer: for example cipher suites and ECC curves.
In other cases it will abort the handshake: e.g DH parameters or the
peer key size.
Documentation to follow...
New function ssl_cipher_disabled.
Check for disabled client ciphers using ssl_cipher_disabled.
New function to return only supported ciphers.
New option to ciphers utility to print only supported ciphers.
Add auto DH parameter support. This is roughly equivalent to the
ECDH auto curve selection but for DH. An application can just call
SSL_CTX_set_auto_dh(ctx, 1);
and appropriate DH parameters will be used based on the size of the
server key.
Unlike ECDH there is no way a peer can indicate the range of DH parameters
it supports. Some peers cannot handle DH keys larger that 1024 bits for
example. In this case if you call:
SSL_CTX_set_auto_dh(ctx, 2);
Only 1024 bit DH parameters will be used.
If the server key is 7680 bits or more in size then 8192 bit DH parameters
will be used: these will be *very* slow.
The old export ciphersuites aren't supported but those are very
insecure anyway.
If multiple TLS extensions are expected but not received, the TLS extension and supplemental data 'generate' callbacks are the only chance for the receive-side to trigger a specific TLS alert during the handshake.
Removed logic which no-op'd TLS extension generate callbacks (as the generate callbacks need to always be called in order to trigger alerts), and updated the serverinfo-specific custom TLS extension callbacks to track which custom TLS extensions were received by the client, where no-ops for 'generate' callbacks are appropriate.
ECDHE is the standard term used by the RFCs and by other TLS
implementations. It's useful to have the internal variables use the
standard terminology.
This patch leaves a synonym SSL_kEECDH in place, though, so that older
code can still be built against it, since that has been the
traditional API. SSL_kEECDH should probably be deprecated at some
point, though.
Based on a suggested workaround for the "TLS hang bug" (see FAQ and PR#2771):
if the TLS Client Hello record length value would otherwise be > 255 and less
that 512 pad with a dummy extension containing zeroes so it is at least 512.
To enable it use an unused extension number (for example 0x4242) using
e.g. -DTLSEXT_TYPE_wtf=0x4242
WARNING: EXPERIMENTAL, SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
Don't require a public key in tls1_set_ec_id if compression status is
not needed. This fixes a bug where SSL_OP_SINGLE_ECDH_USE wouldn't work.
(cherry picked from commit 5ff68e8f6d)
Removing RSA+MD5 from the default signature algorithm list
prevents its use by default.
If a broken implementation attempts to use RSA+MD5 anyway the sanity
checking of signature algorithms will cause a fatal alert.
Experimental support for encrypt then mac from
draft-gutmann-tls-encrypt-then-mac-02.txt
To enable it set the appropriate extension number (0x10 for the test server)
using e.g. -DTLSEXT_TYPE_encrypt_then_mac=0x10
For non-compliant peers (i.e. just about everything) this should have no
effect.
Removed prior audit proof logic - audit proof support was implemented using the generic TLS extension API
Tests exercising the new supplemental data registration and callback api can be found in ssltest.c.
Implemented changes to s_server and s_client to exercise supplemental data callbacks via the -auth argument, as well as additional flags to exercise supplemental data being sent only during renegotiation.
This change adds support for ALPN[1] in OpenSSL. ALPN is the IETF
blessed version of NPN and we'll be supporting both ALPN and NPN for
some time yet.
[1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-applayerprotoneg-00
Conflicts:
ssl/ssl3.h
ssl/t1_lib.c
Since s->method does not reflect the final client version when a client
hello is sent for SSLv23_client_method it can't be relied on to indicate
if TLS 1.2 ciphers should be used. So use the client version instead.
Use the enc_flags field to determine whether we should use explicit IV,
signature algorithms or SHA256 default PRF instead of hard coding which
versions support each requirement.
Revise DTLS code. There was a *lot* of code duplication in the
DTLS code that generates records. This makes it harder to maintain and
sometimes a TLS update is omitted by accident from the DTLS code.
Specifically almost all of the record generation functions have code like
this:
some_pointer = buffer + HANDSHAKE_HEADER_LENGTH;
... Record creation stuff ...
set_handshake_header(ssl, SSL_MT_SOMETHING, message_len);
...
write_handshake_message(ssl);
Where the "Record creation stuff" is identical between SSL/TLS and DTLS or
in some cases has very minor differences.
By adding a few fields to SSL3_ENC to include the header length, some flags
and function pointers for handshake header setting and handshake writing the
code can cope with both cases.
Note: although this passes "make test" and some simple DTLS tests there may
be some minor differences in the DTLS code that have to be accounted for.
This change adds CRYPTO_memcmp, which compares two vectors of bytes in
an amount of time that's independent of their contents. It also changes
several MAC compares in the code to use this over the standard memcmp,
which may leak information about the size of a matching prefix.
(cherry picked from commit 2ee798880a)
some invalid operations for testing purposes. Currently this can be used
to sign using digests the peer doesn't support, EC curves the peer
doesn't support and use certificates which don't match the type associated
with a ciphersuite.
by a certificate chain. Add additional tests to handle client
certificates: checks for matching certificate type and issuer name
comparison.
Print out results of checks for each candidate chain tested in
s_server/s_client.
the permitted signature algorithms for server and client authentication
are the same but it is now possible to set different algorithms for client
authentication only.
is required by client or server. An application can decide which
certificate chain to present based on arbitrary criteria: for example
supported signature algorithms. Add very simple example to s_server.
This fixes many of the problems and restrictions of the existing client
certificate callback: for example you can now clear existing certificates
and specify the whole chain.
the certificate can be used for (if anything). Set valid_flags field
in new tls1_check_chain function. Simplify ssl_set_cert_masks which used
to have similar checks in it.
Add new "cert_flags" field to CERT structure and include a "strict mode".
This enforces some TLS certificate requirements (such as only permitting
certificate signature algorithms contained in the supported algorithms
extension) which some implementations ignore: this option should be used
with caution as it could cause interoperability issues.
Only store encoded versions of peer and configured signature algorithms.
Determine shared signature algorithms and cache the result along with NID
equivalents of each algorithm.
TLS v1.2. These are sent as an extension for clients and during a certificate
request for servers.
TODO: add support for shared signature algorithms, respect shared algorithms
when deciding which ciphersuites and certificates to permit.
enabled instead of requiring an application to hard code a (possibly
inappropriate) parameter set and delve into EC internals we just
automatically use the preferred curve.
Tidy some code up.
Don't allocate a structure to handle ECC extensions when it is used for
default values.
Make supported curves configurable.
Add ctrls to retrieve shared curves: not fully integrated with rest of
ECC code yet.
algorithms extension (including everything we support). Swicth to new
signature format where needed and relax ECC restrictions.
Not TLS v1.2 client certifcate support yet but client will handle case
where a certificate is requested and we don't have one.
signature algorithms extension and correct signature format for
server key exchange.
All ciphersuites should now work on the server but no client support and
no client certificate support yet.
Submitted by: Jack Lloyd <lloyd@randombit.net>, "Mounir IDRASSI" <mounir.idrassi@idrix.net>, steve
Reviewed by: steve
As required by RFC4492 an absent supported points format by a server is
not an error: it should be treated as equivalent to an extension only
containing uncompressed.
initial connection to unpatched servers. There are no additional security
concerns in doing this as clients don't see renegotiation during an
attack anyway.
work in SSLv3: initial handshake has no extensions but includes MCSV, if
server indicates RI support then renegotiation handshakes include RI.
NB: current MCSV value is bogus for testing only, will be updated when we
have an official value.
Change mismatch alerts to handshake_failure as required by spec.
Also have some debugging fprintfs so we can clearly see what is going on
if OPENSSL_RI_DEBUG is set.
Fix double-free in TLS server name extensions which could lead to a remote
crash found by Codenomicon TLS test suite (CVE-2008-0891)
Reviewed by: openssl-security@openssl.org
Obtained from: jorton@redhat.com
of handshake failure
2. Changes to x509_certificate_type function (crypto/x509/x509type.c) to
make it recognize GOST certificates as EVP_PKT_SIGN|EVP_PKT_EXCH
(required for s3_srvr to accept GOST client certificates).
3. Changes to EVP
- adding of function EVP_PKEY_CTX_get0_peerkey
- Make function EVP_PKEY_derive_set_peerkey work for context with
ENCRYPT operation, because we use peerkey field in the context to
pass non-ephemeral secret key to GOST encrypt operation.
- added EVP_PKEY_CTRL_SET_IV control command. It is really
GOST-specific, but it is used in SSL code, so it has to go
in some header file, available during libssl compilation
4. Fix to HMAC to avoid call of OPENSSL_cleanse on undefined data
5. Include des.h if KSSL_DEBUG is defined into some libssl files, to
make debugging output which depends on constants defined there, work
and other KSSL_DEBUG output fixes
6. Declaration of real GOST ciphersuites, two authentication methods
SSL_aGOST94 and SSL_aGOST2001 and one key exchange method SSL_kGOST
7. Implementation of these methods.
8. Support for sending unsolicited serverhello extension if GOST
ciphersuite is selected. It is require for interoperability with
CryptoPro CSP 3.0 and 3.6 and controlled by
SSL_OP_CRYPTOPRO_TLSEXT_BUG constant.
This constant is added to SSL_OP_ALL, because it does nothing, if
non-GOST ciphersuite is selected, and all implementation of GOST
include compatibility with CryptoPro.
9. Support for CertificateVerify message without length field. It is
another CryptoPro bug, but support is made unconditional, because it
does no harm for draft-conforming implementation.
10. In tls1_mac extra copy of stream mac context is no more done.
When I've written currently commited code I haven't read
EVP_DigestSignFinal manual carefully enough and haven't noticed that
it does an internal digest ctx copying.
This implementation was tested against
1. CryptoPro CSP 3.6 client and server
2. Cryptopro CSP 3.0 server
(draft-rescorla-tls-opaque-prf-input-00.txt), and do some cleanups and
bugfixes on the way. In particular, this fixes the buffer bounds
checks in ssl_add_clienthello_tlsext() and in ssl_add_serverhello_tlsext().
Note that the opaque PRF Input TLS extension is not compiled by default;
see CHANGES.
This change resolves a number of problems and obviates multiple kludges.
A new feature is that you can now say "AES256" or "AES128" (not just
"AES", which enables both).
In some cases the ciphersuite list generated from a given string is
affected by this change. I hope this is just in those cases where the
previous behaviour did not make sense.