By using non-DER or invalid encodings outside the signed portion of a
certificate the fingerprint can be changed without breaking the signature.
Although no details of the signed portion of the certificate can be changed
this can cause problems with some applications: e.g. those using the
certificate fingerprint for blacklists.
1. Reject signatures with non zero unused bits.
If the BIT STRING containing the signature has non zero unused bits reject
the signature. All current signature algorithms require zero unused bits.
2. Check certificate algorithm consistency.
Check the AlgorithmIdentifier inside TBS matches the one in the
certificate signature. NB: this will result in signature failure
errors for some broken certificates.
3. Check DSA/ECDSA signatures use DER.
Reencode DSA/ECDSA signatures and compare with the original received
signature. Return an error if there is a mismatch.
This will reject various cases including garbage after signature
(thanks to Antti Karjalainen and Tuomo Untinen from the Codenomicon CROSS
program for discovering this case) and use of BER or invalid ASN.1 INTEGERs
(negative or with leading zeroes).
CVE-2014-8275
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
This change documents the world as-is, by turning all warnings on,
and then turning warnings that trigger off again.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
This facilitates "universal" builds, ones that target multiple
architectures, e.g. ARMv5 through ARMv7. See commentary in
Configure for details.
Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
MS Server gated cryptography is obsolete and dates from the time of export
restrictions on strong encryption and is only used by ancient versions of
MSIE.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@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>
We need this for the freebsd kernel with glibc as used in the Debian kfreebsd
ports. There shouldn't be a problem defining this on systems not using glibc.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
This commit removes DG-UX.
It also flushes out some left-behinds in config.
And regenerates TABLE from Configure (hadn't been done in awhile).
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
* adds links to various related documents.
* fixes a few typos.
* rewords a few sentences.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Return an error code for I/O errors instead of an assertion failure.
PR#3470
Reviewed-by: Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Also introduce OPENSSL_USE_DEPRECATED. If OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED is
defined at config stage then OPENSSL_USE_DEPRECATED has no effect -
deprecated functions are not available.
If OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED is not defined at config stage then
applications must define OPENSSL_USE_DEPRECATED in order to access
deprecated functions.
Also introduce compiler warnings for gcc for applications using
deprecated functions
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
According to X6.90 null, object identifier, boolean, integer and enumerated
types can only have primitive encodings: return an error if any of
these are received with a constructed encoding.
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Causes more problems than it fixes: even though error codes
are not part of the stable API, several users rely on the
specific error code, and the change breaks them. Conversely,
we don't have any concrete use-cases for constant-time behaviour here.
This reverts commit 4aac102f75.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Various build fixes, mostly uncovered by clang's unused-const-variable
and unused-function errors.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 0e1c318ece)
From BoringSSL
- Send an alert when the client key exchange isn't correctly formatted.
- Reject overly short RSA ciphertexts to avoid a (benign) out-of-bounds memory access.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>