Some #include statements were not properly protected. This will go unnoted
on most systems as openssl/comp.h tends to be installed as a system header
file by default but may become visible when cross compiling.
knock-on work than expected - they've been extracted into a patch
series that can be completed elsewhere, or in a different branch,
before merging back to HEAD.
with the appropriate parameters which calls OBJ_bsearch(). A compiler will
typically inline this.
This avoids the need for cmp_xxx variables and fixes unchecked const issues
with CHECKED_PTR_OF()
(Firstly... ommitted)
Secondly, it wasn't even _dropping_ the offending packets, in the
non-blocking case. It was just returning garbage instead.
PR: #1752
Submitted by: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org>
offending record queued as 'pending'. The DTLS code doesn't expect this,
and we end up hitting an OPENSSL_assert() in do_dtls1_write().
The simple fix is just _not_ to leave it queued. In DTLS, dropping
packets is perfectly acceptable -- and even preferable. If we wanted a
service with retries and guaranteed delivery, we'd be using TCP.
PR: #1703
Submitted by: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org>
deprecate the original (numeric-only) scheme, and replace with the
CRYPTO_THREADID object. This hides the platform-specifics and should reduce
the possibility for programming errors (where failing to explicitly check
both thread ID forms could create subtle, platform-specific bugs).
Thanks to Bodo, for invaluable review and feedback.
Also, get rid of compile-time switch OPENSSL_NO_RELEASE_BUFFERS
because it was rather pointless (the new behavior has to be explicitly
requested by setting SSL_MODE_RELEASE_BUFFERS anyway).
Fix flaw if 'Server Key exchange message' is omitted from a TLS
handshake which could lead to a cilent crash as found using the
Codenomicon TLS test suite (CVE-2008-1672)
Reviewed by: openssl-security@openssl.org
Obtained from: mark@awe.com
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
to 'unsigned long' (ie. odd platforms/compilers), so a pointer-typed
version was added but it required portable code to check *both* modes to
determine equality. This commit maintains the availability of both thread
ID types, but deprecates the type-specific accessor APIs that invoke the
callbacks - instead a single type-independent API is used. This simplifies
software that calls into this interface, and should also make it less
error-prone - as forgetting to call and compare *both* thread ID accessors
could have led to hard-to-debug/infrequent bugs (that might only affect
certain platforms or thread implementations). As the CHANGES note says,
there were corresponding deprecations and replacements in the
thread-related functions for BN_BLINDING and ERR too.
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.
ciphersuite string such as "DEFAULT:RSA" cannot enable
authentication-only ciphersuites.
Also, change ssl_create_cipher_list() so that it no longer
starts with an arbitrary ciphersuite ordering, but instead
uses the logic that we previously had in SSL_DEFEAULT_CIPHER_LIST.
SSL_DEFAULT_CIPHER_LIST simplifies into just "ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL".
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.
(CVE-2006-3738) [Tavis Ormandy and Will Drewry, Google Security Team]
Fix SSL client code which could crash if connecting to a
malicious SSLv2 server. (CVE-2006-4343)
[Tavis Ormandy and Will Drewry, Google Security Team]
1) Certificate Message with no certs
OpenSSL implementation sends the Certificate message during SSL
handshake, however as per the specification, these have been omitted.
-- RFC 2712 --
CertificateRequest, and the ServerKeyExchange shown in Figure 1
will be omitted since authentication and the establishment of a
master secret will be done using the client's Kerberos credentials
for the TLS server. The client's certificate will be omitted for
the same reason.
-- RFC 2712 --
3) Pre-master secret Protocol version
The pre-master secret generated by OpenSSL does not have the correct
client version.
RFC 2712 says, if the Kerberos option is selected, the pre-master
secret structure is the same as that used in the RSA case.
TLS specification defines pre-master secret as:
struct {
ProtocolVersion client_version;
opaque random[46];
} PreMasterSecret;
where client_version is the latest protocol version supported by the
client
The pre-master secret generated by OpenSSL does not have the correct
client version. The implementation does not update the first 2 bytes
of random secret for Kerberos Cipher suites. At the server-end, the
client version from the pre-master secret is not validated.
PR: 1336
and PQ_64BIT_IS_BIGNUM with the values 0 (for false) and 1 (for true),
depending on which is true. Use those flags everywhere else to provide
the correct implementation for handling certain operations in q PQ_64BIT.
have a uniform representation for those over all architectures, so a
little bit of hackery is needed.
Contributed by nagendra modadugu <nagendra@cs.stanford.edu>
- hide the EC_KEY structure definition in ec_lcl.c + add
some functions to use/access the EC_KEY fields
- change the way how method specific data (ecdsa/ecdh) is
attached to a EC_KEY
- add ECDSA_sign_ex and ECDSA_do_sign_ex functions with
additional parameters for pre-computed values
- rebuild libeay.num from 0.9.7
during "make errors" and thus during "make update".
Fix lots of bugs that util/ck_errf.pl can detect automatically.
Various others of these are still left to fix; that's why
"make update" will complain loudly when run now.
1. "unsigned long long" isn't portable changed: to BN_ULLONG.
2. The LL prefix isn't allowed in VC++ but it isn't needed where it is used.
2. Avoid lots of compiler warnings about signed/unsigned mismatches.
3. Include new library directory pqueue in mk1mf build system.
4. Update symbols.
gets _POSIX_C_SOURC and _ANSI_C_SOURCE defined, which stops u_int from
being defined, and that breaks havock into the rest of the standard
headers... *sigh*
- Enforce that there should be no policy settings when the language
is one of id-ppl-independent or id-ppl-inheritAll.
- Add functionality to ssltest.c so that it can process proxy rights
and check that they are set correctly. Rights consist of ASCII
letters, and the condition is a boolean expression that includes
letters, parenthesis, &, | and ^.
- Change the proxy certificate configurations so they get proxy
rights that are understood by ssltest.c.
- Add a script that tests proxy certificates with SSL operations.
Other changes:
- Change the copyright end year in mkerr.pl.
- make update.
This tidies up verify parameters and adds support for integrated policy
checking.
Add support for policy related command line options. Currently only in smime
application.
WARNING: experimental code subject to change.
proposed the change and submitted the patch, I jiggled it slightly and
adjusted the other parts of openssl that were affected.
PR: 867
Submitted by: Jelte Jansen
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
functions and macros.
This change has associated tags: LEVITTE_before_const and
LEVITTE_after_const. Those will be removed when this change has been
properly reviewed.
I have tried to convert 'len' type variable declarations to unsigned as a
means to address these warnings when appropriate, but when in doubt I have
used casts in the comparisons instead. The better solution (that would get
us all lynched by API users) would be to go through and convert all the
function prototypes and structure definitions to use unsigned variables
except when signed is necessary. The proliferation of (signed) "int" for
strictly non-negative uses is unfortunate.
compression identity is already present among the registered
compression methods, and if so, reject the addition request.
Declare SSL_COMP_get_compression_method() so it can be used properly.
Change ssltest.c so it checks what compression methods are available
and enumerates them. As a side-effect, built-in compression methods
will be automagically loaded that way. Additionally, change the
identities for ZLIB and RLE to be conformant to
draft-ietf-tls-compression-05.txt.
Finally, make update.
Next on my list: have the built-in compression methods added
"automatically" instead of requiring that the author call
SSL_COMP_add_compression_method() or
SSL_COMP_get_compression_methods().
defined in DECC$TYPES.H. If _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined, certain types do
not get defined (u_char, u_int, ...). DECC.H gets included by assert.h
and others. Now, in6.h uses the types u_char, u_int and so on, and gets
included as part of other header inclusions, and will of course fail because
of the missing types.
On the other hand, _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is needed to get gethostname()
properly declared...
Solution: define _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED much later, so DECC$TYPES.H has
a chance to be included *first*, so the otherwise missing types get defined
properly.
Personal: *mumble* *mumble*
key-generation and prime-checking functions. Rather than explicitly passing
callback functions and caller-defined context data for the callbacks, a new
structure BN_GENCB is defined that encapsulates this; a pointer to the
structure is passed to all such functions instead.
This wrapper structure allows the encapsulation of "old" and "new" style
callbacks - "new" callbacks return a boolean result on the understanding
that returning FALSE should terminate keygen/primality processing. The
BN_GENCB abstraction will allow future callback modifications without
needing to break binary compatibility nor change the API function
prototypes. The new API functions have been given names ending in "_ex" and
the old functions are implemented as wrappers to the new ones. The
OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED symbol has been introduced so that, if defined,
declaration of the older functions will be skipped. NB: Some
openssl-internal code will stick with the older callbacks for now, so
appropriate "#undef" logic will be put in place - this is in case the user
is *building* openssl (rather than *including* its headers) with this
symbol defined.
There is another change in the new _ex functions; the key-generation
functions do not return key structures but operate on structures passed by
the caller, the return value is a boolean. This will allow for a smoother
transition to having key-generation as "virtual function" in the various
***_METHOD tables.
from external cache (using d2i_SSL_SESSION). Perform comparison based on
the cipher's id instead.
Submitted by: Steve Haslam <araqnid@innocent.com>
Reviewed by:
PR: 288
relates to SSL_CTX flags and the use of "external" session caching. The
existing flag, "SSL_SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_LOOKUP" remains but is
supplemented with a complimentary flag, "SSL_SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_STORE".
The bitwise OR of the two flags is also defined as
"SSL_SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL" and is the flag that should be used by most
applications wanting to implement session caching *entirely* by its own
provided callbacks. As the documented behaviour contradicted actual
behaviour up until recently, and since that point behaviour has itself been
inconsistent anyway, this change should not introduce any compatibility
problems. I've adjusted the relevant documentation to elaborate about how
this works.
Kudos to "Nadav Har'El" <nyh@math.technion.ac.il> for diagnosing these
anomalies and testing this patch for correctness.
PR: 311
become rather large. This becomes a problem when the default 1024
character large buffer that WRITE uses isn't enough. WRITE/SYMBOL
uses a 2048 byte large buffer instead.
Changes marked "(CHATS)" were sponsored by the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Air Force Research Laboratory,
Air Force Materiel Command, USAF, under agreement number
F30602-01-2-0537.
(the same keys can be used for ECC schemes other than ECDSA)
and add some new options.
Similarly, use string "EC PARAMETERS" instead of "ECDSA PARAMETERS"
in 'PEM' format.
Fix ec_asn1.c (take into account the desired conversion form).
'make update'.
Submitted by: Nils Larsch
des_old.h redefines crypt:
#define crypt(b,s)\
DES_crypt((b),(s))
This scheme leads to failure, if header files with the OS's true definition
of crypt() are processed _after_ des_old.h was processed. This is e.g. the
case on HP-UX with unistd.h.
As evp.h now again includes des.h (which includes des_old.h), this problem
only came up after this modification.
Solution: move header files (indirectly) including e_os.h before the header
files (indirectly) including evp.h.
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
PR:
sooner and the programs get built against the shared libraries.
This requires a bit more work. Things like -rpath and the possibility
to still link the programs statically should be included. Some
cleanup is also needed. This will be worked on.
New macros SSL[_CTX]_set_msg_callback_arg().
Message callback imlementation for SSL 3.0/TLS 1.0 (no SSL 2.0 yet).
New '-msg' option for 'openssl s_client' and 'openssl s_server'
that enable a message callback that displays all protocol messages.
In ssl3_get_client_hello (ssl/s3_srvr.c), generate a fatal alert if
client_version is smaller than the protocol version in use.
Also change ssl23_get_client_hello (ssl/s23_srvr.c) to select TLS 1.0
if the client demanded SSL 3.0 but only TLS 1.0 is enabled; then the
client will at least see that alert.
Fix SSL[_CTX]_ctrl prototype (void * instead of char * for generic
pointer).
Add/update some OpenSSL copyright notices.
Both have per-SSL_CTX defaults.
These new values can be set by calling SSL[_CTX]_[callback_]ctrl
with codes SSL_CTRL_SET_MSG_CALLBACK and SSL_CTRL_SET_MSG_CALLBACK_ARG.
So far, the callback is never actually called.
Also rearrange some SSL_CTX struct members (some exist just in
SSL_CTXs, others are defaults for SSLs and are either copied
during SSL_new, or used if the value in the SSL is not set;
these three classes of members were not in a logical order),
and add some missing assignments to SSL_dup.
SSL 2.0 client hellos added with the previous commit was totally wrong --
it must start with the message type, not the protocol version.
(Not that this particular header is actually used anywhere ...)
'Handshake' protocol structures are kept in memory, including
'msg_type' and 'length'.
(This is in preparation of future support for callbacks that get to
peek at handshake messages and the like.)
reveal whether illegal block cipher padding was found or a MAC
verification error occured.
In ssl/s2_pkt.c, verify that the purported number of padding bytes is in
the legal range.
CRYPTO_set_mem_debug_options() instead of CRYPTO_dbg_set_options(),
which is the default implementation of the former and should usually
not be directly used by applications (at least if we assume that the
options accepted by the default implementation will also be meaningful
to any other implementations).
Also fix apps/openssl.c and ssl/ssltest such that environment variable
setting 'OPENSSL_DEBUG_MEMORY=off' actively disables the compiled-in
library defaults (i.e. such that CRYPTO_MDEBUG is ignored in this
case).
See the commit log message for that for more information.
NB: X509_STORE_CTX's use of "ex_data" support was actually misimplemented
(initialisation by "memset" won't/can't/doesn't work). This fixes that but
requires that X509_STORE_CTX_init() be able to handle errors - so its
prototype has been changed to return 'int' rather than 'void'. All uses of
that function throughout the source code have been tracked down and
adjusted.
this construct, and Ulf provided the following insight as to why;
> ANSI C compliant compilers must substitute "??)" for "]" because your
> terminal might not have a "]" key if you bought it in the early 1970s.
So we escape the final '?' to avoid this pathological case.
setting stack (actually, array) values in ex_data. So only increment the
global counters if the underlying CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index() call succeeds.
This change doesn't make "ex_data" right (see the comment at the head of
ex_data.c to know why), but at least makes the source code marginally less
frustrating.
His comments are:
First, it corrects a problem introduced in the last patch where the
kssl_map_enc() would intentionally return NULL for valid ENCTYPE
values. This was done to prevent verification of the kerberos 5
authenticator from being performed when Derived Key ciphers were
in use. Unfortunately, the authenticator verification routine was
not the only place that function was used. And it caused core dumps.
Second, it attempt to add to SSL_SESSION the Kerberos 5 Client
Principal Name.
His comments are:
This patch fixes the problem of modern Kerberos using "derived keys"
to encrypt the authenticator by disabling the authenticator check
for all derived keys enctypes.
I think I've got all the bugfixes that Jeffrey and I discussed rolled
into this. There were some problems with Jeffrey's code to convert
the authenticator's Kerberos timestring into struct tm (e.g. Z, -1900;
it helps to have an actual decryptable authenticator to play with).
So I've shamelessly pushed in my code, while stealing some bits from
Jeffrey.
Note that since some private kssl functions were exported, the
simplest way to rebuild the number table was to toss everything that
was new since OpenSSL 0.9.6b. This is safe, since those functions
have not yet been exported in an OpenSSL release. Beware, people who
trust intermediary snapshots!
His comments are:
. adds use of replay cache to protect against replay attacks
. adds functions kssl_tgt_is_available() and
kssl_keytab_is_available() which are used within s3_lib.c
and ssl_lib.c to determine at runtime whether or not
KRB5 ciphers can be supported during the current session.
Jeffrey Altman <jaltman@columbia.edu>
(Really, the time that's being parsed is a GeneralizedTime, so if
ASN1_GENERALIZEDTIME_get() ever gets implemented, it should be used
instead)
His comments are:
. Fixed all of the Windows dynamic loading functions, prototypes, etc.
. Corrected all of the unsigned/signed comparison warnings
. Replaced the references to krb5_cksumarray[] for two reasons.
First, it was an internal variable that should not have been
referenced outside the library; nor could it have been with
a shared library with restricted exports. Second, the
variable is no longer used in current Kerberos implementations.
I replaced the code with equivalent functionality using functions
that are exported from the library.
SSL according to RFC 2712. His comment is:
This is a patch to openssl-SNAP-20010702 to support Kerberized SSL
authentication. I'm expecting to have the full kssl-0.5 kit up on
sourceforge by the end of the week. The full kit includes patches
for mod-ssl, apache, and a few text clients. The sourceforge URL
is http://sourceforge.net/projects/kssl/ .
Thanks to a note from Simon Wilkinson I've replaced my KRB5 AP_REQ
message with a real KerberosWrapper struct. I think this is fully
RFC 2712 compliant now, including support for the optional
authenticator field. I also added openssl-style ASN.1 macros for
a few Kerberos structs; see crypto/krb5/ if you're interested.
applications to use EVP. Add missing calls to HMAC_cleanup() and
don't assume HMAC_CTX can be copied using memcpy().
Note: this is almost identical to the patch submitted to openssl-dev
by Verdon Walker <VWalker@novell.com> except some redundant
EVP_add_digest_()/EVP_cleanup() calls were removed and some changes
made to avoid compiler warnings.
compiler bug reported in <01032110293775.22278@weba3.iname.net>
(the '++seq[i]' condition is evaluated as 256 rather than 0
when the previous value is 255).
an SSL_CTX's session cache, it is necessary to compare the ssl_version at
the same time (a conflict is defined, courtesy of SSL_SESSION_cmp(), as a
matching id/id_length pair and a matching ssl_version). However, the
SSL_SESSION that will result from the current negotiation does not
necessarily have the same ssl version as the "SSL_METHOD" in use by the
SSL_CTX - part of the work in a handshake is to agree on an ssl version!
This is fixed by having the check function accept an SSL pointer rather
than the SSL_CTX it belongs to.
[Thanks to Lutz for illuminating the full extent of my stupidity]
and make all files the depend on it include it without prefixing it
with openssl/.
This means that all Makefiles will have $(TOP) as one of the include
directories.
the ID will be padded out to 16 bytes if the callback attempted to generate
a shorter one. The problem is that the uniqueness checking function used in
callbacks may mistakenly think a 9-byte ID is unique when in fact its
padded 16-byte version is not. This makes the checking function detect
SSLv2 cases, and ensures the padded form is checked rather than the shorter
one passed by the callback.
SSL/TLS session IDs in a server. According to RFC2246, the session ID is an
arbitrary value chosen by the server. It can be useful to have some control
over this "arbitrary value" so as to choose it in ways that can aid in
things like external session caching and balancing (eg. clustering). The
default session ID generation is to fill the ID with random data.
The callback used by default is built in to ssl_sess.c, but registering a
callback in an SSL_CTX or in a particular SSL overrides this. BTW: SSL
callbacks will override SSL_CTX callbacks, and a new SSL structure inherits
any callback set in its 'parent' SSL_CTX. The header comments describe how
this mechanism ticks, and source code comments describe (hopefully) why it
ticks the way it does.
Man pages are on the way ...
[NB: Lutz was also hacking away and helping me to figure out how best to do
this.]
sure they are available in opensslconf.h, by giving them names starting
with "OPENSSL_" to avoid conflicts with other packages and by making
sure e_os2.h will cover all platform-specific cases together with
opensslconf.h.
I've checked fairly well that nothing breaks with this (apart from
external software that will adapt if they have used something like
NO_KRB5), but I can't guarantee it completely, so a review of this
change would be a good thing.
"doall" functions to using type-safe wrappers. As and where required, this
can be replaced by redeclaring the underlying callbacks to use the
underlying "void"-based prototypes (eg. if performance suffers from an
extra level of function invocation).
objects) or OPENSSL_BUILD_SHLIBSSL (for files that end up as libssl
objects) is defined, redefine OPENSSL_EXTERN to be OPENSSL_EXPORT.
This is actually only important on Win32, and can safely be ignored in
all other cases, at least for now.
DECLARE/IMPLEMENT macros now exist to create type (and prototype) safe
wrapper functions that avoid the use of function pointer casting yet retain
type-safety for type-specific callbacks. However, most of the usage within
OpenSSL itself doesn't really require the extra function because the hash
and compare callbacks are internal functions declared only for use by the
hash table. So this change catches all those cases and reimplements the
functions using the base-level LHASH prototypes and does per-variable
casting inside those functions to convert to the appropriate item type.
The exception so far is in ssl_lib.c where the hash and compare callbacks
are not static - they're exposed in ssl.h so their prototypes should not be
changed. In this last case, the IMPLEMENT_LHASH_*** macros have been left
intact.
casts) used in the lhash code are about as horrible and evil as they can
be. For starters, the callback prototypes contain empty parameter lists.
Yuck.
This first change defines clearer prototypes - including "typedef"'d
function pointer types to use as "hash" and "compare" callbacks, as well as
the callbacks passed to the lh_doall and lh_doall_arg iteration functions.
Now at least more explicit (and clear) casting is required in all of the
dependant code - and that should be included in this commit.
The next step will be to hunt down and obliterate some of the function
pointer casting being used when it's not necessary - a particularly evil
variant exists in the implementation of lh_doall.
test was never triggered due to an off-by-one error.
In s23_clnt.c, don't use special rollback-attack detection padding
(RSA_SSLV23_PADDING) if SSL 2.0 is the only protocol enabled in the
client; similarly, in s23_srvr.c, don't do the rollback check if
SSL 2.0 is the only protocol enabled in the server.
could be done automagically, much like the numbering in libeay.num and
ssleay.num. The solution works as follows:
- New object identifiers are inserted in objects.txt, following the
syntax given in objects.README.
- objects.pl is used to process obj_mac.num and create a new
obj_mac.h.
- obj_dat.pl is used to create a new obj_dat.h, using the data in
obj_mac.h.
This is currently kind of a hack, and the perl code in objects.pl
isn't very elegant, but it works as I intended. The simplest way to
check that it worked correctly is to look in obj_dat.h and check the
array nid_objs and make sure the objects haven't moved around (this is
important!). Additions are OK, as well as consistent name changes.
This is mostly a work around for the old VC++ problem
that it treats func() as func(void).
Various prototypes had been added to 'compare' function
pointers that triggered this. This could be fixed by removing
the prototype, adding function pointer casts to every call or
changing the passed function to use the expected arguments.
I mostly did the latter.
The mkdef.pl script was modified to remove the typesafe
functions which no longer exist.
Oh and some functions called OPENSSL_freeLibrary() were
changed back to FreeLibrary(), wonder how that happened :-)
After some messing around this seems to work but needs
a few more tests. Working out the syntax for sk_set_cmp_func()
(cast it to a function that itself returns a function pointer)
was painful :-(
Needs some testing to see what other compilers think of this
syntax.
Also needs similar stuff for ASN1_SET_OF etc etc.
Also, "make update" has added some missing functions to libeay.num,
updated the TABLE for the alpha changes, and updated thousands of
dependancies that have changed from recent commits.
was a really bad idea. For example, the following:
#include <x509.h>
#include <bio.h>
#include <asn1.h>
would make sure that things like ASN1_UTCTIME_print() wasn't defined
unless you moved the inclusion of bio.h to above the inclusion of
x509.h. The reason is that x509.h includes asn1.h, and the
declaration of ASN1_UTCTIME_print() depended on the definition of
HEADER_BIO_H. That's what I call an obscure bug.
Instead, this change makes sure that whatever header files are needed
for the correct process of one header file are included automagically,
and that the definitions of, for example, BIO-related things are
dependent on the absence of the NO_{foo} macros. This is also
consistent with the way parts of OpenSSL can be excluded at will.
like Malloc, Realloc and especially Free conflict with already existing names
on some operating systems or other packages. That is reason enough to change
the names of the OpenSSL memory allocation macros to something that has a
better chance of being unique, like prepending them with OPENSSL_.
This change includes all the name changes needed throughout all C files.
yet tighter, and also put some heat on the rest of the library by
insisting (correctly) that compare callbacks used in stacks are prototyped
with "const" parameters. This has led to a depth-first explosion of
compiler warnings in the code where 1 constification has led to 3 or 4
more. Fortunately these have all been resolved to completion and the code
seems cleaner as a result - in particular many of the _cmp() functions
should have been prototyped with "const"s, and now are. There was one
little problem however;
X509_cmp() should by rights compare "const X509 *" pointers, and it is now
declared as such. However, it's internal workings can involve
recalculating hash values and extensions if they have not already been
setup. Someone with a more intricate understanding of the flow control of
X509 might be able to tighten this up, but for now - this seemed the
obvious place to stop the "depth-first" constification of the code by
using an evil cast (they have migrated all the way here from safestack.h).
Fortunately, this is the only place in the code where this was required
to complete these type-safety changes, and it's reasonably clear and
commented, and seemed the least unacceptable of the options. Trying to
take the constification further ends up exploding out considerably, and
indeed leads directly into generalised ASN functions which are not likely
to cooperate well with this.
"Jan Mikkelsen" <janm@transactionsite.com> correctly states that the
OpenSSL header files have #include's and extern "C"'s in an incorrect
order. Thusly fixed.
in SSL_new.
If SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE is set, don't waste time in SSL_[CTX_]set_tmp_dh
on computing a DH key that will be ignored anyway.
ssltest -dhe1024dsa (w/ 160-bit sub-prime) had an unfair performance
advantage over -dhe1024 (safe prime): SSL_OP_SINGLE_DH_USE was
effectively always enabled because SSL_new ignored the DH key set in
the SSL_CTX. Now -dhe1024 takes the server only about twice as long
as -dhe1024dsa instead of three times as long (for 1024 bit RSA
with 1024 bit DH).
don't dynamically create them. This allows using ssltest
for approximate performance comparisons:
$ time ./ssltest -num 50 -tls1 -cert ../apps/server2.pem \
[-no_dhe|-dhe1024dsa|-dhe1024]
(server2.pem contains a 1024 bit RSA key, the default has only
512 bits.) Note that these timings contain both the server's and
the client's computations, they are not a good indicator for
server workload in different configurations.